summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:15:58 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:15:58 -0700
commit1a78511bc18e5de8f104dea3d52f78449450ef99 (patch)
treef579c0abcdbe4c9c9bfed31f86b5236b7f99fa6d
initial commit of ebook 864HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--864-0.txt9073
-rw-r--r--864-0.zipbin0 -> 192034 bytes
-rw-r--r--864-h.zipbin0 -> 455697 bytes
-rw-r--r--864-h/864-h.htm11483
-rw-r--r--864-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 258018 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/blntr10.txt9389
-rw-r--r--old/blntr10.zipbin0 -> 189392 bytes
10 files changed, 29961 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/864-0.txt b/864-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7b39d2e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/864-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9073 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Master of Ballantrae, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Master of Ballantrae
+ A Winter’s Tale
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: March 26, 1997 [eBook #864]
+[Most recently updated: August 24, 2021]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: David Price
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE ***
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+The Master of Ballantrae
+
+A Winter’s Tale
+
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+Contents
+
+ PREFACE
+ CHAPTER I. SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THIS MASTER’S WANDERINGS
+ CHAPTER II. SUMMARY OF EVENTS (_continued_)
+ CHAPTER III. THE MASTER’S WANDERINGS
+ CHAPTER IV. PERSECUTIONS ENDURED BY MR. HENRY
+ CHAPTER V. ACCOUNT OF ALL THAT PASSED ON THE NIGHT ON FEBRUARY 27TH, 1757
+ CHAPTER VI. SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THE MASTER’S SECOND ABSENCE
+ CHAPTER VII. ADVENTURE OF CHEVALIER BURKE IN INDIA
+ CHAPTER VIII. THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE
+ CHAPTER IX. MR. MACKELLAR’S JOURNEY WITH THE MASTER
+ CHAPTER X. PASSAGES AT NEW YORK
+ CHAPTER XI. THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS
+ _Narrative of the Trader, Mountain_
+ CHAPTER XII. THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS (_continued_)
+
+
+
+
+To Sir Percy Florence and Lady Shelley
+
+
+Here is a tale which extends over many years and travels into many
+countries. By a peculiar fitness of circumstance the writer began,
+continued it, and concluded it among distant and diverse scenes. Above
+all, he was much upon the sea. The character and fortune of the
+fraternal enemies, the hall and shrubbery of Durrisdeer, the problem of
+Mackellar’s homespun and how to shape it for superior flights; these
+were his company on deck in many star-reflecting harbours, ran often in
+his mind at sea to the tune of slatting canvas, and were dismissed
+(something of the suddenest) on the approach of squalls. It is my hope
+that these surroundings of its manufacture may to some degree find
+favour for my story with seafarers and sea-lovers like yourselves.
+
+And at least here is a dedication from a great way off: written by the
+loud shores of a subtropical island near upon ten thousand miles from
+Boscombe Chine and Manor: scenes which rise before me as I write, along
+with the faces and voices of my friends.
+
+Well, I am for the sea once more; no doubt Sir Percy also. Let us make
+the signal B. R. D.!
+
+R. L. S.
+
+Waikiki, _May_ 17, 1889
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Although an old, consistent exile, the editor of the following pages
+revisits now and again the city of which he exults to be a native; and
+there are few things more strange, more painful, or more salutary, than
+such revisitations. Outside, in foreign spots, he comes by surprise and
+awakens more attention than he had expected; in his own city, the
+relation is reversed, and he stands amazed to be so little recollected.
+Elsewhere he is refreshed to see attractive faces, to remark possible
+friends; there he scouts the long streets, with a pang at heart, for
+the faces and friends that are no more. Elsewhere he is delighted with
+the presence of what is new, there tormented by the absence of what is
+old. Elsewhere he is content to be his present self; there he is
+smitten with an equal regret for what he once was and for what he once
+hoped to be.
+
+He was feeling all this dimly, as he drove from the station, on his
+last visit; he was feeling it still as he alighted at the door of his
+friend Mr. Johnstone Thomson, W.S., with whom he was to stay. A hearty
+welcome, a face not altogether changed, a few words that sounded of old
+days, a laugh provoked and shared, a glimpse in passing of the snowy
+cloth and bright decanters and the Piranesis on the dining-room wall,
+brought him to his bed-room with a somewhat lightened cheer, and when
+he and Mr. Thomson sat down a few minutes later, cheek by jowl, and
+pledged the past in a preliminary bumper, he was already almost
+consoled, he had already almost forgiven himself his two unpardonable
+errors, that he should ever have left his native city, or ever returned
+to it.
+
+“I have something quite in your way,” said Mr. Thomson. “I wished to do
+honour to your arrival; because, my dear fellow, it is my own youth
+that comes back along with you; in a very tattered and withered state,
+to be sure, but—well!—all that’s left of it.”
+
+“A great deal better than nothing,” said the editor. “But what is this
+which is quite in my way?”
+
+“I was coming to that,” said Mr. Thomson: “Fate has put it in my power
+to honour your arrival with something really original by way of
+dessert. A mystery.”
+
+“A mystery?” I repeated.
+
+“Yes,” said his friend, “a mystery. It may prove to be nothing, and it
+may prove to be a great deal. But in the meanwhile it is truly
+mysterious, no eye having looked on it for near a hundred years; it is
+highly genteel, for it treats of a titled family; and it ought to be
+melodramatic, for (according to the superscription) it is concerned
+with death.”
+
+“I think I rarely heard a more obscure or a more promising
+annunciation,” the other remarked. “But what is It?”
+
+“You remember my predecessor’s, old Peter M’Brair’s business?”
+
+“I remember him acutely; he could not look at me without a pang of
+reprobation, and he could not feel the pang without betraying it. He
+was to me a man of a great historical interest, but the interest was
+not returned.”
+
+“Ah well, we go beyond him,” said Mr. Thomson. “I daresay old Peter
+knew as little about this as I do. You see, I succeeded to a prodigious
+accumulation of old law-papers and old tin boxes, some of them of
+Peter’s hoarding, some of his father’s, John, first of the dynasty, a
+great man in his day. Among other collections, were all the papers of
+the Durrisdeers.”
+
+“The Durrisdeers!” cried I. “My dear fellow, these may be of the
+greatest interest. One of them was out in the ’45; one had some strange
+passages with the devil—you will find a note of it in Law’s
+_Memorials_, I think; and there was an unexplained tragedy, I know not
+what, much later, about a hundred years ago—”
+
+“More than a hundred years ago,” said Mr. Thomson. “In 1783.”
+
+“How do you know that? I mean some death.”
+
+“Yes, the lamentable deaths of my Lord Durrisdeer and his brother, the
+Master of Ballantrae (attainted in the troubles),” said Mr. Thomson
+with something the tone of a man quoting. “Is that it?”
+
+“To say truth,” said I, “I have only seen some dim reference to the
+things in memoirs; and heard some traditions dimmer still, through my
+uncle (whom I think you knew). My uncle lived when he was a boy in the
+neighbourhood of St. Bride’s; he has often told me of the avenue closed
+up and grown over with grass, the great gates never opened, the last
+lord and his old maid sister who lived in the back parts of the house,
+a quiet, plain, poor, hum-drum couple it would seem—but pathetic too,
+as the last of that stirring and brave house—and, to the country folk,
+faintly terrible from some deformed traditions.”
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Thomson. “Henry Graeme Durie, the last lord, died in
+1820; his sister, the honourable Miss Katherine Durie, in ’27; so much
+I know; and by what I have been going over the last few days, they were
+what you say, decent, quiet people and not rich. To say truth, it was a
+letter of my lord’s that put me on the search for the packet we are
+going to open this evening. Some papers could not be found; and he
+wrote to Jack M’Brair suggesting they might be among those sealed up by
+a Mr. Mackellar. M’Brair answered, that the papers in question were all
+in Mackellar’s own hand, all (as the writer understood) of a purely
+narrative character; and besides, said he, ‘I am bound not to open them
+before the year 1889.’ You may fancy if these words struck me: I
+instituted a hunt through all the M’Brair repositories; and at last hit
+upon that packet which (if you have had enough wine) I propose to show
+you at once.”
+
+In the smoking-room, to which my host now led me, was a packet,
+fastened with many seals and enclosed in a single sheet of strong paper
+thus endorsed:
+
+
+Papers relating to the lives and lamentable deaths of the late Lord
+Durisdeer, and his elder brother James, commonly called Master of
+Ballantrae, attainted in the troubles: entrusted into the hands of John
+M’Brair in the Lawnmarket of Edinburgh, W.S.; this 20th day of
+September Anno Domini 1789; by him to be kept secret until the
+revolution of one hundred years complete, or until the 20th day of
+September 1889: the same compiled and written by me, Ephraim Mackellar,
+
+For near forty years Land Steward on the estates of his Lordship.
+
+
+As Mr. Thomson is a married man, I will not say what hour had struck
+when we laid down the last of the following pages; but I will give a
+few words of what ensued.
+
+“Here,” said Mr. Thomson, “is a novel ready to your hand: all you have
+to do is to work up the scenery, develop the characters, and improve
+the style.”
+
+“My dear fellow,” said I, “they are just the three things that I would
+rather die than set my hand to. It shall be published as it stands.”
+
+“But it’s so bald,” objected Mr. Thomson.
+
+“I believe there is nothing so noble as baldness,” replied I, “and I am
+sure there is nothing so interesting. I would have all literature bald,
+and all authors (if you like) but one.”
+
+“Well, well,” add Mr. Thomson, “we shall see.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THIS MASTER’S WANDERINGS.
+
+
+The full truth of this odd matter is what the world has long been
+looking for, and public curiosity is sure to welcome. It so befell that
+I was intimately mingled with the last years and history of the house;
+and there does not live one man so able as myself to make these matters
+plain, or so desirous to narrate them faithfully. I knew the Master; on
+many secret steps of his career I have an authentic memoir in my hand;
+I sailed with him on his last voyage almost alone; I made one upon that
+winter’s journey of which so many tales have gone abroad; and I was
+there at the man’s death. As for my late Lord Durrisdeer, I served him
+and loved him near twenty years; and thought more of him the more I
+knew of him. Altogether, I think it not fit that so much evidence
+should perish; the truth is a debt I owe my lord’s memory; and I think
+my old years will flow more smoothly, and my white hair lie quieter on
+the pillow, when the debt is paid.
+
+The Duries of Durrisdeer and Ballantrae were a strong family in the
+south-west from the days of David First. A rhyme still current in the
+countryside—
+
+Kittle folk are the Durrisdeers,
+They ride wi’ over mony spears—
+
+
+bears the mark of its antiquity; and the name appears in another, which
+common report attributes to Thomas of Ercildoune himself—I cannot say
+how truly, and which some have applied—I dare not say with how much
+justice—to the events of this narration:
+
+Twa Duries in Durrisdeer,
+ Ane to tie and ane to ride,
+An ill day for the groom
+ And a waur day for the bride.
+
+
+Authentic history besides is filled with their exploits which (to our
+modern eyes) seem not very commendable: and the family suffered its
+full share of those ups and downs to which the great houses of Scotland
+have been ever liable. But all these I pass over, to come to that
+memorable year 1745, when the foundations of this tragedy were laid.
+
+At that time there dwelt a family of four persons in the house of
+Durrisdeer, near St. Bride’s, on the Solway shore; a chief hold of
+their race since the Reformation. My old lord, eighth of the name, was
+not old in years, but he suffered prematurely from the disabilities of
+age; his place was at the chimney side; there he sat reading, in a
+lined gown, with few words for any man, and wry words for none: the
+model of an old retired housekeeper; and yet his mind very well
+nourished with study, and reputed in the country to be more cunning
+than he seemed. The master of Ballantrae, James in baptism, took from
+his father the love of serious reading; some of his tact perhaps as
+well, but that which was only policy in the father became black
+dissimulation in the son. The face of his behaviour was merely popular
+and wild: he sat late at wine, later at the cards; had the name in the
+country of “an unco man for the lasses;” and was ever in the front of
+broils. But for all he was the first to go in, yet it was observed he
+was invariably the best to come off; and his partners in mischief were
+usually alone to pay the piper. This luck or dexterity got him several
+ill-wishers, but with the rest of the country, enhanced his reputation;
+so that great things were looked for in his future, when he should have
+gained more gravity. One very black mark he had to his name; but the
+matter was hushed up at the time, and so defaced by legends before I
+came into those parts, that I scruple to set it down. If it was true,
+it was a horrid fact in one so young; and if false, it was a horrid
+calumny. I think it notable that he had always vaunted himself quite
+implacable, and was taken at his word; so that he had the addition
+among his neighbours of “an ill man to cross.” Here was altogether a
+young nobleman (not yet twenty-four in the year ’45) who had made a
+figure in the country beyond his time of life. The less marvel if there
+were little heard of the second son, Mr. Henry (my late Lord
+Durrisdeer), who was neither very bad nor yet very able, but an honest,
+solid sort of lad like many of his neighbours. Little heard, I say; but
+indeed it was a case of little spoken. He was known among the salmon
+fishers in the firth, for that was a sport that he assiduously
+followed; he was an excellent good horse-doctor besides; and took a
+chief hand, almost from a boy, in the management of the estates. How
+hard a part that was, in the situation of that family, none knows
+better than myself; nor yet with how little colour of justice a man may
+there acquire the reputation of a tyrant and a miser. The fourth person
+in the house was Miss Alison Graeme, a near kinswoman, an orphan, and
+the heir to a considerable fortune which her father had acquired in
+trade. This money was loudly called for by my lord’s necessities;
+indeed the land was deeply mortgaged; and Miss Alison was designed
+accordingly to be the Master’s wife, gladly enough on her side; with
+how much good-will on his, is another matter. She was a comely girl,
+and in those days very spirited and self-willed; for the old lord
+having no daughter of his own, and my lady being long dead, she had
+grown up as best she might.
+
+To these four came the news of Prince Charlie’s landing, and set them
+presently by the ears. My lord, like the chimney-keeper that he was,
+was all for temporising. Miss Alison held the other side, because it
+appeared romantical; and the Master (though I have heard they did not
+agree often) was for this once of her opinion. The adventure tempted
+him, as I conceive; he was tempted by the opportunity to raise the
+fortunes of the house, and not less by the hope of paying off his
+private liabilities, which were heavy beyond all opinion. As for Mr.
+Henry, it appears he said little enough at first; his part came later
+on. It took the three a whole day’s disputation, before they agreed to
+steer a middle course, one son going forth to strike a blow for King
+James, my lord and the other staying at home to keep in favour with
+King George. Doubtless this was my lord’s decision; and, as is well
+known, it was the part played by many considerable families. But the
+one dispute settled, another opened. For my lord, Miss Alison, and Mr.
+Henry all held the one view: that it was the cadet’s part to go out;
+and the Master, what with restlessness and vanity, would at no rate
+consent to stay at home. My lord pleaded, Miss Alison wept, Mr. Henry
+was very plain spoken: all was of no avail.
+
+“It is the direct heir of Durrisdeer that should ride by his King’s
+bridle,” says the Master.
+
+“If we were playing a manly part,” says Mr. Henry, “there might be
+sense in such talk. But what are we doing? Cheating at cards!”
+
+“We are saving the house of Durrisdeer, Henry,” his father said.
+
+“And see, James,” said Mr. Henry, “if I go, and the Prince has the
+upper hand, it will be easy to make your peace with King James. But if
+you go, and the expedition fails, we divide the right and the title.
+And what shall I be then?”
+
+“You will be Lord Durrisdeer,” said the Master. “I put all I have upon
+the table.”
+
+“I play at no such game,” cries Mr. Henry. “I shall be left in such a
+situation as no man of sense and honour could endure. I shall be
+neither fish nor flesh!” he cried. And a little after he had another
+expression, plainer perhaps than he intended. “It is your duty to be
+here with my father,” said he. “You know well enough you are the
+favourite.”
+
+“Ay?” said the Master. “And there spoke Envy! Would you trip up my
+heels—Jacob?” said he, and dwelled upon the name maliciously.
+
+Mr. Henry went and walked at the low end of the hall without reply; for
+he had an excellent gift of silence. Presently he came back.
+
+“I am the cadet and I _should_ go,” said he. “And my lord here is the
+master, and he says I _shall_ go. What say ye to that, my brother?”
+
+“I say this, Harry,” returned the Master, “that when very obstinate
+folk are met, there are only two ways out: Blows—and I think none of us
+could care to go so far; or the arbitrament of chance—and here is a
+guinea piece. Will you stand by the toss of the coin?”
+
+“I will stand and fall by it,” said Mr. Henry. “Heads, I go; shield, I
+stay.”
+
+The coin was spun, and it fell shield. “So there is a lesson for
+Jacob,” says the Master.
+
+“We shall live to repent of this,” says Mr. Henry, and flung out of the
+hall.
+
+As for Miss Alison, she caught up that piece of gold which had just
+sent her lover to the wars, and flung it clean through the family
+shield in the great painted window.
+
+“If you loved me as well as I love you, you would have stayed,” cried
+she.
+
+“‘I could not love you, dear, so well, loved I not honour more,’” sang
+the Master.
+
+“Oh!” she cried, “you have no heart—I hope you may be killed!” and she
+ran from the room, and in tears, to her own chamber.
+
+It seems the Master turned to my lord with his most comical manner, and
+says he, “This looks like a devil of a wife.”
+
+“I think you are a devil of a son to me,” cried his father, “you that
+have always been the favourite, to my shame be it spoken. Never a good
+hour have I gotten of you, since you were born; no, never one good
+hour,” and repeated it again the third time. Whether it was the
+Master’s levity, or his insubordination, or Mr. Henry’s word about the
+favourite son, that had so much disturbed my lord, I do not know; but I
+incline to think it was the last, for I have it by all accounts that
+Mr. Henry was more made up to from that hour.
+
+Altogether it was in pretty ill blood with his family that the Master
+rode to the North; which was the more sorrowful for others to remember
+when it seemed too late. By fear and favour he had scraped together
+near upon a dozen men, principally tenants’ sons; they were all pretty
+full when they set forth, and rode up the hill by the old abbey,
+roaring and singing, the white cockade in every hat. It was a desperate
+venture for so small a company to cross the most of Scotland
+unsupported; and (what made folk think so the more) even as that poor
+dozen was clattering up the hill, a great ship of the king’s navy, that
+could have brought them under with a single boat, lay with her broad
+ensign streaming in the bay. The next afternoon, having given the
+Master a fair start, it was Mr. Henry’s turn; and he rode off, all by
+himself, to offer his sword and carry letters from his father to King
+George’s Government. Miss Alison was shut in her room, and did little
+but weep, till both were gone; only she stitched the cockade upon the
+Master’s hat, and (as John Paul told me) it was wetted with tears when
+he carried it down to him.
+
+In all that followed, Mr. Henry and my old lord were true to their
+bargain. That ever they accomplished anything is more than I could
+learn; and that they were anyway strong on the king’s side, more than
+believe. But they kept the letter of loyalty, corresponded with my Lord
+President, sat still at home, and had little or no commerce with the
+Master while that business lasted. Nor was he, on his side, more
+communicative. Miss Alison, indeed, was always sending him expresses,
+but I do not know if she had many answers. Macconochie rode for her
+once, and found the highlanders before Carlisle, and the Master riding
+by the Prince’s side in high favour; he took the letter (so Macconochie
+tells), opened it, glanced it through with a mouth like a man
+whistling, and stuck it in his belt, whence, on his horse passageing,
+it fell unregarded to the ground. It was Macconochie who picked it up;
+and he still kept it, and indeed I have seen it in his hands. News came
+to Durrisdeer of course, by the common report, as it goes travelling
+through a country, a thing always wonderful to me. By that means the
+family learned more of the Master’s favour with the Prince, and the
+ground it was said to stand on: for by a strange condescension in a man
+so proud—only that he was a man still more ambitious—he was said to
+have crept into notability by truckling to the Irish. Sir Thomas
+Sullivan, Colonel Burke and the rest, were his daily comrades, by which
+course he withdrew himself from his own country-folk. All the small
+intrigues he had a hand in fomenting; thwarted my Lord George upon a
+thousand points; was always for the advice that seemed palatable to the
+Prince, no matter if it was good or bad; and seems upon the whole (like
+the gambler he was all through life) to have had less regard to the
+chances of the campaign than to the greatness of favour he might aspire
+to, if, by any luck, it should succeed. For the rest, he did very well
+in the field; no one questioned that; for he was no coward.
+
+The next was the news of Culloden, which was brought to Durrisdeer by
+one of the tenants’ sons—the only survivor, he declared, of all those
+that had gone singing up the hill. By an unfortunate chance John Paul
+and Macconochie had that very morning found the guinea piece—which was
+the root of all the evil—sticking in a holly bush; they had been “up
+the gait,” as the servants say at Durrisdeer, to the change-house; and
+if they had little left of the guinea, they had less of their wits.
+What must John Paul do but burst into the hall where the family sat at
+dinner, and cry the news to them that “Tam Macmorland was but new
+lichtit at the door, and—wirra, wirra—there were nane to come behind
+him”?
+
+They took the word in silence like folk condemned; only Mr. Henry
+carrying his palm to his face, and Miss Alison laying her head outright
+upon her hands. As for my lord, he was like ashes.
+
+“I have still one son,” says he. “And, Henry, I will do you this
+justice—it is the kinder that is left.”
+
+It was a strange thing to say in such a moment; but my lord had never
+forgotten Mr. Henry’s speech, and he had years of injustice on his
+conscience. Still it was a strange thing, and more than Miss Alison
+could let pass. She broke out and blamed my lord for his unnatural
+words, and Mr. Henry because he was sitting there in safety when his
+brother lay dead, and herself because she had given her sweetheart ill
+words at his departure, calling him the flower of the flock, wringing
+her hands, protesting her love, and crying on him by his name—so that
+the servants stood astonished.
+
+Mr. Henry got to his feet, and stood holding his chair. It was he that
+was like ashes now.
+
+“Oh!” he burst out suddenly, “I know you loved him.”
+
+“The world knows that, glory be to God!” cries she; and then to Mr.
+Henry: “There is none but me to know one thing—that you were a traitor
+to him in your heart.”
+
+“God knows,” groans he, “it was lost love on both sides.”
+
+Time went by in the house after that without much change; only they
+were now three instead of four, which was a perpetual reminder of their
+loss. Miss Alison’s money, you are to bear in mind, was highly needful
+for the estates; and the one brother being dead, my old lord soon set
+his heart upon her marrying the other. Day in, day out, he would work
+upon her, sitting by the chimney-side with his finger in his Latin
+book, and his eyes set upon her face with a kind of pleasant intentness
+that became the old gentleman very well. If she wept, he would condole
+with her like an ancient man that has seen worse times and begins to
+think lightly even of sorrow; if she raged, he would fall to reading
+again in his Latin book, but always with some civil excuse; if she
+offered, as she often did, to let them have her money in a gift, he
+would show her how little it consisted with his honour, and remind her,
+even if he should consent, that Mr. Henry would certainly refuse. _Non
+vi sed sæpe cadendo_ was a favourite word of his; and no doubt this
+quiet persecution wore away much of her resolve; no doubt, besides, he
+had a great influence on the girl, having stood in the place of both
+her parents; and, for that matter, she was herself filled with the
+spirit of the Duries, and would have gone a great way for the glory of
+Durrisdeer; but not so far, I think, as to marry my poor patron, had it
+not been—strangely enough—for the circumstance of his extreme
+unpopularity.
+
+This was the work of Tam Macmorland. There was not much harm in Tam;
+but he had that grievous weakness, a long tongue; and as the only man
+in that country who had been out—or, rather, who had come in again—he
+was sure of listeners. Those that have the underhand in any fighting, I
+have observed, are ever anxious to persuade themselves they were
+betrayed. By Tam’s account of it, the rebels had been betrayed at every
+turn and by every officer they had; they had been betrayed at Derby,
+and betrayed at Falkirk; the night march was a step of treachery of my
+Lord George’s; and Culloden was lost by the treachery of the
+Macdonalds. This habit of imputing treason grew upon the fool, till at
+last he must have in Mr. Henry also. Mr. Henry (by his account) had
+betrayed the lads of Durrisdeer; he had promised to follow with more
+men, and instead of that he had ridden to King George. “Ay, and the
+next day!” Tam would cry. “The puir bonnie Master, and the puir, kind
+lads that rade wi’ him, were hardly ower the scaur, or he was aff—the
+Judis! Ay, weel—he has his way o’t: he’s to be my lord, nae less, and
+there’s mony a cold corp amang the Hieland heather!” And at this, if
+Tam had been drinking, he would begin to weep.
+
+Let anyone speak long enough, he will get believers. This view of Mr.
+Henry’s behaviour crept about the country by little and little; it was
+talked upon by folk that knew the contrary, but were short of topics;
+and it was heard and believed and given out for gospel by the ignorant
+and the ill-willing. Mr. Henry began to be shunned; yet awhile, and the
+commons began to murmur as he went by, and the women (who are always
+the most bold because they are the most safe) to cry out their
+reproaches to his face. The Master was cried up for a saint. It was
+remembered how he had never any hand in pressing the tenants; as,
+indeed, no more he had, except to spend the money. He was a little wild
+perhaps, the folk said; but how much better was a natural, wild lad
+that would soon have settled down, than a skinflint and a sneckdraw,
+sitting, with his nose in an account book, to persecute poor tenants!
+One trollop, who had had a child to the Master, and by all accounts
+been very badly used, yet made herself a kind of champion of his
+memory. She flung a stone one day at Mr. Henry.
+
+“Whaur’s the bonnie lad that trustit ye?” she cried.
+
+Mr. Henry reined in his horse and looked upon her, the blood flowing
+from his lip. “Ay, Jess?” says he. “You too? And yet ye should ken me
+better.” For it was he who had helped her with money.
+
+The woman had another stone ready, which she made as if she would cast;
+and he, to ward himself, threw up the hand that held his riding-rod.
+
+“What, would ye beat a lassie, ye ugly—?” cries she, and ran away
+screaming as though he had struck her.
+
+Next day word went about the country like wildfire that Mr. Henry had
+beaten Jessie Broun within an inch of her life. I give it as one
+instance of how this snowball grew, and one calumny brought another;
+until my poor patron was so perished in reputation that he began to
+keep the house like my lord. All this while, you may be very sure, he
+uttered no complaints at home; the very ground of the scandal was too
+sore a matter to be handled; and Mr. Henry was very proud and strangely
+obstinate in silence. My old lord must have heard of it, by John Paul,
+if by no one else; and he must at least have remarked the altered
+habits of his son. Yet even he, it is probable, knew not how high the
+feeling ran; and as for Miss Alison, she was ever the last person to
+hear news, and the least interested when she heard them.
+
+In the height of the ill-feeling (for it died away as it came, no man
+could say why) there was an election forward in the town of St.
+Bride’s, which is the next to Durrisdeer, standing on the Water of
+Swift; some grievance was fermenting, I forget what, if ever I heard;
+and it was currently said there would be broken heads ere night, and
+that the sheriff had sent as far as Dumfries for soldiers. My lord
+moved that Mr. Henry should be present, assuring him it was necessary
+to appear, for the credit of the house. “It will soon be reported,”
+said he, “that we do not take the lead in our own country.”
+
+“It is a strange lead that I can take,” said Mr. Henry; and when they
+had pushed him further, “I tell you the plain truth,” he said, “I dare
+not show my face.”
+
+“You are the first of the house that ever said so,” cries Miss Alison.
+
+“We will go all three,” said my lord; and sure enough he got into his
+boots (the first time in four years—a sore business John Paul had to
+get them on), and Miss Alison into her riding-coat, and all three rode
+together to St. Bride’s.
+
+The streets were full of the riff-raff of all the countryside, who had
+no sooner clapped eyes on Mr. Henry than the hissing began, and the
+hooting, and the cries of “Judas!” and “Where was the Master?” and
+“Where were the poor lads that rode with him?” Even a stone was cast;
+but the more part cried shame at that, for my old lord’s sake, and Miss
+Alison’s. It took not ten minutes to persuade my lord that Mr. Henry
+had been right. He said never a word, but turned his horse about, and
+home again, with his chin upon his bosom. Never a word said Miss
+Alison; no doubt she thought the more; no doubt her pride was stung,
+for she was a bone-bred Durie; and no doubt her heart was touched to
+see her cousin so unjustly used. That night she was never in bed; I
+have often blamed my lady—when I call to mind that night, I readily
+forgive her all; and the first thing in the morning she came to the old
+lord in his usual seat.
+
+“If Henry still wants me,” said she, “he can have me now.” To himself
+she had a different speech: “I bring you no love, Henry; but God knows,
+all the pity in the world.”
+
+June the 1st, 1748, was the day of their marriage. It was December of
+the same year that first saw me alighting at the doors of the great
+house; and from there I take up the history of events as they befell
+under my own observation, like a witness in a court.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS (_continued_)
+
+
+I made the last of my journey in the cold end of December, in a mighty
+dry day of frost, and who should be my guide but Patey Macmorland,
+brother of Tam! For a tow-headed, bare-legged brat of ten, he had more
+ill tales upon his tongue than ever I heard the match of; having
+drunken betimes in his brother’s cup. I was still not so old myself;
+pride had not yet the upper hand of curiosity; and indeed it would have
+taken any man, that cold morning, to hear all the old clashes of the
+country, and be shown all the places by the way where strange things
+had fallen out. I had tales of Claverhouse as we came through the bogs,
+and tales of the devil, as we came over the top of the scaur. As we
+came in by the abbey I heard somewhat of the old monks, and more of the
+freetraders, who use its ruins for a magazine, landing for that cause
+within a cannon-shot of Durrisdeer; and along all the road the Duries
+and poor Mr. Henry were in the first rank of slander. My mind was thus
+highly prejudiced against the family I was about to serve, so that I
+was half surprised when I beheld Durrisdeer itself, lying in a pretty,
+sheltered bay, under the Abbey Hill; the house most commodiously built
+in the French fashion, or perhaps Italianate, for I have no skill in
+these arts; and the place the most beautified with gardens, lawns,
+shrubberies, and trees I had ever seen. The money sunk here
+unproductively would have quite restored the family; but as it was, it
+cost a revenue to keep it up.
+
+Mr. Henry came himself to the door to welcome me: a tall dark young
+gentleman (the Duries are all black men) of a plain and not cheerful
+face, very strong in body, but not so strong in health: taking me by
+the hand without any pride, and putting me at home with plain kind
+speeches. He led me into the hall, booted as I was, to present me to my
+lord. It was still daylight; and the first thing I observed was a
+lozenge of clear glass in the midst of the shield in the painted
+window, which I remember thinking a blemish on a room otherwise so
+handsome, with its family portraits, and the pargeted ceiling with
+pendants, and the carved chimney, in one corner of which my old lord
+sat reading in his Livy. He was like Mr. Henry, with much the same
+plain countenance, only more subtle and pleasant, and his talk a
+thousand times more entertaining. He had many questions to ask me, I
+remember, of Edinburgh College, where I had just received my mastership
+of arts, and of the various professors, with whom and their proficiency
+he seemed well acquainted; and thus, talking of things that I knew, I
+soon got liberty of speech in my new home.
+
+In the midst of this came Mrs. Henry into the room; she was very far
+gone, Miss Katharine being due in about six weeks, which made me think
+less of her beauty at the first sight; and she used me with more of
+condescension than the rest; so that, upon all accounts, I kept her in
+the third place of my esteem.
+
+It did not take long before all Patey Macmorland’s tales were blotted
+out of my belief, and I was become, what I have ever since remained, a
+loving servant of the house of Durrisdeer. Mr. Henry had the chief part
+of my affection. It was with him I worked; and I found him an exacting
+master, keeping all his kindness for those hours in which we were
+unemployed, and in the steward’s office not only loading me with work,
+but viewing me with a shrewd supervision. At length one day he looked
+up from his paper with a kind of timidness, and says he, “Mr.
+Mackellar, I think I ought to tell you that you do very well.” That was
+my first word of commendation; and from that day his jealousy of my
+performance was relaxed; soon it was “Mr. Mackellar” here, and “Mr.
+Mackellar” there, with the whole family; and for much of my service at
+Durrisdeer, I have transacted everything at my own time, and to my own
+fancy, and never a farthing challenged. Even while he was driving me, I
+had begun to find my heart go out to Mr. Henry; no doubt, partly in
+pity, he was a man so palpably unhappy. He would fall into a deep muse
+over our accounts, staring at the page or out of the window; and at
+those times the look of his face, and the sigh that would break from
+him, awoke in me strong feelings of curiosity and commiseration. One
+day, I remember, we were late upon some business in the steward’s room.
+
+This room is in the top of the house, and has a view upon the bay, and
+over a little wooded cape, on the long sands; and there, right over
+against the sun, which was then dipping, we saw the freetraders, with a
+great force of men and horses, scouring on the beach. Mr. Henry had
+been staring straight west, so that I marvelled he was not blinded by
+the sun; suddenly he frowns, rubs his hand upon his brow, and turns to
+me with a smile.
+
+“You would not guess what I was thinking,” says he. “I was thinking I
+would be a happier man if I could ride and run the danger of my life,
+with these lawless companions.”
+
+I told him I had observed he did not enjoy good spirits; and that it
+was a common fancy to envy others and think we should be the better of
+some change; quoting Horace to the point, like a young man fresh from
+college.
+
+“Why, just so,” said he. “And with that we may get back to our
+accounts.”
+
+It was not long before I began to get wind of the causes that so much
+depressed him. Indeed a blind man must have soon discovered there was a
+shadow on that house, the shadow of the Master of Ballantrae. Dead or
+alive (and he was then supposed to be dead) that man was his brother’s
+rival: his rival abroad, where there was never a good word for Mr.
+Henry, and nothing but regret and praise for the Master; and his rival
+at home, not only with his father and his wife, but with the very
+servants.
+
+They were two old serving-men that were the leaders. John Paul, a
+little, bald, solemn, stomachy man, a great professor of piety and
+(take him for all in all) a pretty faithful servant, was the chief of
+the Master’s faction. None durst go so far as John. He took a pleasure
+in disregarding Mr. Henry publicly, often with a slighting comparison.
+My lord and Mrs. Henry took him up, to be sure, but never so resolutely
+as they should; and he had only to pull his weeping face and begin his
+lamentations for the Master—“his laddie,” as he called him—to have the
+whole condoned. As for Henry, he let these things pass in silence,
+sometimes with a sad and sometimes with a black look. There was no
+rivalling the dead, he knew that; and how to censure an old serving-man
+for a fault of loyalty, was more than he could see. His was not the
+tongue to do it.
+
+Macconochie was chief upon the other side; an old, ill-spoken,
+swearing, ranting, drunken dog; and I have often thought it an odd
+circumstance in human nature that these two serving-men should each
+have been the champion of his contrary, and blackened their own faults
+and made light of their own virtues when they beheld them in a master.
+Macconochie had soon smelled out my secret inclination, took me much
+into his confidence, and would rant against the Master by the hour, so
+that even my work suffered. “They’re a’ daft here,” he would cry, “and
+be damned to them! The Master—the deil’s in their thrapples that should
+call him sae! it’s Mr. Henry should be master now! They were nane sae
+fond o’ the Master when they had him, I’ll can tell ye that. Sorrow on
+his name! Never a guid word did I hear on his lips, nor naebody else,
+but just fleering and flyting and profane cursing—deil hae him! There’s
+nane kent his wickedness: him a gentleman! Did ever ye hear tell, Mr.
+Mackellar, o’ Wully White the wabster? No? Aweel, Wully was an unco
+praying kind o’ man; a dreigh body, nane o’ my kind, I never could
+abide the sight o’ him; onyway he was a great hand by his way of it,
+and he up and rebukit the Master for some of his on-goings. It was a
+grand thing for the Master o’ Ball’ntrae to tak up a feud wi’ a’
+wabster, wasnae’t?” Macconochie would sneer; indeed, he never took the
+full name upon his lips but with a sort of a whine of hatred. “But he
+did! A fine employ it was: chapping at the man’s door, and crying ‘boo’
+in his lum, and puttin’ poother in his fire, and pee-oys [1] in his
+window; till the man thocht it was auld Hornie was come seekin’ him.
+Weel, to mak a lang story short, Wully gaed gyte. At the hinder end,
+they couldnae get him frae his knees, but he just roared and prayed and
+grat straucht on, till he got his release. It was fair murder, a’body
+said that. Ask John Paul—he was brawly ashamed o’ that game, him that’s
+sic a Christian man! Grand doin’s for the Master o’ Ball’ntrae!” I
+asked him what the Master had thought of it himself. “How would I ken?”
+says he. “He never said naething.” And on again in his usual manner of
+banning and swearing, with every now and again a “Master of Ballantrae”
+sneered through his nose. It was in one of these confidences that he
+showed me the Carlisle letter, the print of the horse-shoe still
+stamped in the paper. Indeed, that was our last confidence; for he then
+expressed himself so ill-naturedly of Mrs. Henry that I had to
+reprimand him sharply, and must thenceforth hold him at a distance.
+
+My old lord was uniformly kind to Mr. Henry; he had even pretty ways of
+gratitude, and would sometimes clap him on the shoulder and say, as if
+to the world at large: “This is a very good son to me.” And grateful he
+was, no doubt, being a man of sense and justice. But I think that was
+all, and I am sure Mr. Henry thought so. The love was all for the dead
+son. Not that this was often given breath to; indeed, with me but once.
+My lord had asked me one day how I got on with Mr. Henry, and I had
+told him the truth.
+
+“Ay,” said he, looking sideways on the burning fire, “Henry is a good
+lad, a very good lad,” said he. “You have heard, Mr. Mackellar, that I
+had another son? I am afraid he was not so virtuous a lad as Mr. Henry;
+but dear me, he’s dead, Mr. Mackellar! and while he lived we were all
+very proud of him, all very proud. If he was not all he should have
+been in some ways, well, perhaps we loved him better!” This last he
+said looking musingly in the fire; and then to me, with a great deal of
+briskness, “But I am rejoiced you do so well with Mr. Henry. You will
+find him a good master.” And with that he opened his book, which was
+the customary signal of dismission. But it would be little that he
+read, and less that he understood; Culloden field and the Master, these
+would be the burthen of his thought; and the burthen of mine was an
+unnatural jealousy of the dead man for Mr. Henry’s sake, that had even
+then begun to grow on me.
+
+I am keeping Mrs. Henry for the last, so that this expression of my
+sentiment may seem unwarrantably strong: the reader shall judge for
+himself when I have done. But I must first tell of another matter,
+which was the means of bringing me more intimate. I had not yet been
+six months at Durrisdeer when it chanced that John Paul fell sick and
+must keep his bed; drink was the root of his malady, in my poor
+thought; but he was tended, and indeed carried himself, like an
+afflicted saint; and the very minister, who came to visit him,
+professed himself edified when he went away. The third morning of his
+sickness, Mr. Henry comes to me with something of a hang-dog look.
+
+“Mackellar,” says he, “I wish I could trouble you upon a little
+service. There is a pension we pay; it is John’s part to carry it, and
+now that he is sick I know not to whom I should look unless it was
+yourself. The matter is very delicate; I could not carry it with my own
+hand for a sufficient reason; I dare not send Macconochie, who is a
+talker, and I am—I have—I am desirous this should not come to Mrs.
+Henry’s ears,” says he, and flushed to his neck as he said it.
+
+To say truth, when I found I was to carry money to one Jessie Broun,
+who was no better than she should be, I supposed it was some trip of
+his own that Mr. Henry was dissembling. I was the more impressed when
+the truth came out.
+
+It was up a wynd off a side street in St. Bride’s that Jessie had her
+lodging. The place was very ill inhabited, mostly by the freetrading
+sort. There was a man with a broken head at the entry; half-way up, in
+a tavern, fellows were roaring and singing, though it was not yet nine
+in the day. Altogether, I had never seen a worse neighbourhood, even in
+the great city of Edinburgh, and I was in two minds to go back.
+Jessie’s room was of a piece with her surroundings, and herself no
+better. She would not give me the receipt (which Mr. Henry had told me
+to demand, for he was very methodical) until she had sent out for
+spirits, and I had pledged her in a glass; and all the time she carried
+on in a light-headed, reckless way—now aping the manners of a lady, now
+breaking into unseemly mirth, now making coquettish advances that
+oppressed me to the ground. Of the money she spoke more tragically.
+
+“It’s blood money!” said she; “I take it for that: blood money for the
+betrayed! See what I’m brought down to! Ah, if the bonnie lad were back
+again, it would be changed days. But he’s deid—he’s lyin’ deid amang
+the Hieland hills—the bonnie lad, the bonnie lad!”
+
+She had a rapt manner of crying on the bonnie lad, clasping her hands
+and casting up her eyes, that I think she must have learned of
+strolling players; and I thought her sorrow very much of an
+affectation, and that she dwelled upon the business because her shame
+was now all she had to be proud of. I will not say I did not pity her,
+but it was a loathing pity at the best; and her last change of manner
+wiped it out. This was when she had had enough of me for an audience,
+and had set her name at last to the receipt. “There!” says she, and
+taking the most unwomanly oaths upon her tongue, bade me begone and
+carry it to the Judas who had sent me. It was the first time I had
+heard the name applied to Mr. Henry; I was staggered besides at her
+sudden vehemence of word and manner, and got forth from the room, under
+this shower of curses, like a beaten dog. But even then I was not quit,
+for the vixen threw up her window, and, leaning forth, continued to
+revile me as I went up the wynd; the freetraders, coming to the tavern
+door, joined in the mockery, and one had even the inhumanity to set
+upon me a very savage small dog, which bit me in the ankle. This was a
+strong lesson, had I required one, to avoid ill company; and I rode
+home in much pain from the bite and considerable indignation of mind.
+
+Mr. Henry was in the steward’s room, affecting employment, but I could
+see he was only impatient to hear of my errand.
+
+“Well?” says he, as soon as I came in; and when I had told him
+something of what passed, and that Jessie seemed an undeserving woman
+and far from grateful: “She is no friend to me,” said he; “but, indeed,
+Mackellar, I have few friends to boast of, and Jessie has some cause to
+be unjust. I need not dissemble what all the country knows: she was not
+very well used by one of our family.” This was the first time I had
+heard him refer to the Master even distantly; and I think he found his
+tongue rebellious even for that much, but presently he resumed—“This is
+why I would have nothing said. It would give pain to Mrs. Henry . . .
+and to my father,” he added, with another flush.
+
+“Mr. Henry,” said I, “if you will take a freedom at my hands, I would
+tell you to let that woman be. What service is your money to the like
+of her? She has no sobriety and no economy—as for gratitude, you will
+as soon get milk from a whinstone; and if you will pretermit your
+bounty, it will make no change at all but just to save the ankles of
+your messengers.”
+
+Mr. Henry smiled. “But I am grieved about your ankle,” said he, the
+next moment, with a proper gravity.
+
+“And observe,” I continued, “I give you this advice upon consideration;
+and yet my heart was touched for the woman in the beginning.”
+
+“Why, there it is, you see!” said Mr. Henry. “And you are to remember
+that I knew her once a very decent lass. Besides which, although I
+speak little of my family, I think much of its repute.”
+
+And with that he broke up the talk, which was the first we had together
+in such confidence. But the same afternoon I had the proof that his
+father was perfectly acquainted with the business, and that it was only
+from his wife that Mr. Henry kept it secret.
+
+“I fear you had a painful errand to-day,” says my lord to me, “for
+which, as it enters in no way among your duties, I wish to thank you,
+and to remind you at the same time (in case Mr. Henry should have
+neglected) how very desirable it is that no word of it should reach my
+daughter. Reflections on the dead, Mr. Mackellar, are doubly painful.”
+
+Anger glowed in my heart; and I could have told my lord to his face how
+little he had to do, bolstering up the image of the dead in Mrs.
+Henry’s heart, and how much better he were employed to shatter that
+false idol; for by this time I saw very well how the land lay between
+my patron and his wife.
+
+My pen is clear enough to tell a plain tale; but to render the effect
+of an infinity of small things, not one great enough in itself to be
+narrated; and to translate the story of looks, and the message of
+voices when they are saying no great matter; and to put in half a page
+the essence of near eighteen months—this is what I despair to
+accomplish. The fault, to be very blunt, lay all in Mrs. Henry. She
+felt it a merit to have consented to the marriage, and she took it like
+a martyrdom; in which my old lord, whether he knew it or not, fomented
+her. She made a merit, besides, of her constancy to the dead, though
+its name, to a nicer conscience, should have seemed rather disloyalty
+to the living; and here also my lord gave her his countenance. I
+suppose he was glad to talk of his loss, and ashamed to dwell on it
+with Mr. Henry. Certainly, at least, he made a little coterie apart in
+that family of three, and it was the husband who was shut out. It seems
+it was an old custom when the family were alone in Durrisdeer, that my
+lord should take his wine to the chimney-side, and Miss Alison, instead
+of withdrawing, should bring a stool to his knee, and chatter to him
+privately; and after she had become my patron’s wife the same manner of
+doing was continued. It should have been pleasant to behold this
+ancient gentleman so loving with his daughter, but I was too much a
+partisan of Mr. Henry’s to be anything but wroth at his exclusion.
+Many’s the time I have seen him make an obvious resolve, quit the
+table, and go and join himself to his wife and my Lord Durrisdeer; and
+on their part, they were never backward to make him welcome, turned to
+him smilingly as to an intruding child, and took him into their talk
+with an effort so ill-concealed that he was soon back again beside me
+at the table, whence (so great is the hall of Durrisdeer) we could but
+hear the murmur of voices at the chimney. There he would sit and watch,
+and I along with him; and sometimes by my lord’s head sorrowfully
+shaken, or his hand laid on Mrs. Henry’s head, or hers upon his knee as
+if in consolation, or sometimes by an exchange of tearful looks, we
+would draw our conclusion that the talk had gone to the old subject and
+the shadow of the dead was in the hall.
+
+I have hours when I blame Mr. Henry for taking all too patiently; yet
+we are to remember he was married in pity, and accepted his wife upon
+that term. And, indeed, he had small encouragement to make a stand.
+Once, I remember, he announced he had found a man to replace the pane
+of the stained window, which, as it was he that managed all the
+business, was a thing clearly within his attributions. But to the
+Master’s fancies, that pane was like a relic; and on the first word of
+any change, the blood flew to Mrs. Henry’s face.
+
+“I wonder at you!” she cried.
+
+“I wonder at myself,” says Mr. Henry, with more of bitterness than I
+had ever heard him to express.
+
+Thereupon my old lord stepped in with his smooth talk, so that before
+the meal was at an end all seemed forgotten; only that, after dinner,
+when the pair had withdrawn as usual to the chimney-side, we could see
+her weeping with her head upon his knee. Mr. Henry kept up the talk
+with me upon some topic of the estates—he could speak of little else
+but business, and was never the best of company; but he kept it up that
+day with more continuity, his eye straying ever and again to the
+chimney, and his voice changing to another key, but without check of
+delivery. The pane, however, was not replaced; and I believe he counted
+it a great defeat.
+
+Whether he was stout enough or no, God knows he was kind enough. Mrs.
+Henry had a manner of condescension with him, such as (in a wife) would
+have pricked my vanity into an ulcer; he took it like a favour. She
+held him at the staff’s end; forgot and then remembered and unbent to
+him, as we do to children; burthened him with cold kindness; reproved
+him with a change of colour and a bitten lip, like one shamed by his
+disgrace: ordered him with a look of the eye, when she was off her
+guard; when she was on the watch, pleaded with him for the most natural
+attentions, as though they were unheard-of favours. And to all this he
+replied with the most unwearied service, loving, as folk say, the very
+ground she trod on, and carrying that love in his eyes as bright as a
+lamp. When Miss Katharine was to be born, nothing would serve but he
+must stay in the room behind the head of the bed. There he sat, as
+white (they tell me) as a sheet, and the sweat dropping from his brow;
+and the handkerchief he had in his hand was crushed into a little ball
+no bigger than a musket-bullet. Nor could he bear the sight of Miss
+Katharine for many a day; indeed, I doubt if he was ever what he should
+have been to my young lady; for the which want of natural feeling he
+was loudly blamed.
+
+Such was the state of this family down to the 7th April, 1749, when
+there befell the first of that series of events which were to break so
+many hearts and lose so many lives.
+
+ On that day I was sitting in my room a little before supper, when John
+ Paul burst open the door with no civility of knocking, and told me
+ there was one below that wished to speak with the steward; sneering at
+ the name of my office.
+
+I asked what manner of man, and what his name was; and this disclosed
+the cause of John’s ill-humour; for it appeared the visitor refused to
+name himself except to me, a sore affront to the major-domo’s
+consequence.
+
+“Well,” said I, smiling a little, “I will see what he wants.”
+
+I found in the entrance hall a big man, very plainly habited, and
+wrapped in a sea-cloak, like one new landed, as indeed he was. Not, far
+off Macconochie was standing, with his tongue out of his mouth and his
+hand upon his chin, like a dull fellow thinking hard; and the stranger,
+who had brought his cloak about his face, appeared uneasy. He had no
+sooner seen me coming than he went to meet me with an effusive manner.
+
+“My dear man,” said he, “a thousand apologies for disturbing you, but
+I’m in the most awkward position. And there’s a son of a ramrod there
+that I should know the looks of, and more betoken I believe that he
+knows mine. Being in this family, sir, and in a place of some
+responsibility (which was the cause I took the liberty to send for
+you), you are doubtless of the honest party?”
+
+“You may be sure at least,” says I, “that all of that party are quite
+safe in Durrisdeer.”
+
+“My dear man, it is my very thought,” says he. “You see, I have just
+been set on shore here by a very honest man, whose name I cannot
+remember, and who is to stand off and on for me till morning, at some
+danger to himself; and, to be clear with you, I am a little concerned
+lest it should be at some to me. I have saved my life so often, Mr. —,
+I forget your name, which is a very good one—that, faith, I would be
+very loath to lose it after all. And the son of a ramrod, whom I
+believe I saw before Carlisle . . . ”
+
+“Oh, sir,” said I, “you can trust Macconochie until to-morrow.”
+
+“Well, and it’s a delight to hear you say so,” says the stranger. “The
+truth is that my name is not a very suitable one in this country of
+Scotland. With a gentleman like you, my dear man, I would have no
+concealments of course; and by your leave I’ll just breathe it in your
+ear. They call me Francis Burke—Colonel Francis Burke; and I am here,
+at a most damnable risk to myself, to see your masters—if you’ll excuse
+me, my good man, for giving them the name, for I’m sure it’s a
+circumstance I would never have guessed from your appearance. And if
+you would just be so very obliging as to take my name to them, you
+might say that I come bearing letters which I am sure they will be very
+rejoiced to have the reading of.”
+
+Colonel Francis Burke was one of the Prince’s Irishmen, that did his
+cause such an infinity of hurt, and were so much distasted of the Scots
+at the time of the rebellion; and it came at once into my mind, how the
+Master of Ballantrae had astonished all men by going with that party.
+In the same moment a strong foreboding of the truth possessed my soul.
+
+“If you will step in here,” said I, opening a chamber door, “I will let
+my lord know.”
+
+“And I am sure it’s very good of you, Mr. What-is-your-name,” says the
+Colonel.
+
+Up to the hall I went, slow-footed. There they were, all three—my old
+lord in his place, Mrs. Henry at work by the window, Mr. Henry (as was
+much his custom) pacing the low end. In the midst was the table laid
+for supper. I told them briefly what I had to say. My old lord lay back
+in his seat. Mrs. Henry sprang up standing with a mechanical motion,
+and she and her husband stared at each other’s eyes across the room; it
+was the strangest, challenging look these two exchanged, and as they
+looked, the colour faded in their faces. Then Mr. Henry turned to me;
+not to speak, only to sign with his finger; but that was enough, and I
+went down again for the Colonel.
+
+When we returned, these three were in much the same position I same
+left them in; I believe no word had passed.
+
+“My Lord Durrisdeer, no doubt?” says the Colonel, bowing, and my lord
+bowed in answer. “And this,” continues the Colonel, “should be the
+Master of Ballantrae?”
+
+“I have never taken that name,” said Mr. Henry; “but I am Henry Durie,
+at your service.”
+
+Then the Colonel turns to Mrs. Henry, bowing with his hat upon his
+heart and the most killing airs of gallantry. “There can be no mistake
+about so fine a figure of a lady,” says he. “I address the seductive
+Miss Alison, of whom I have so often heard?”
+
+Once more husband and wife exchanged a look.
+
+“I am Mrs. Henry Durie,” said she; “but before my marriage my name was
+Alison Graeme.”
+
+Then my lord spoke up. “I am an old man, Colonel Burke,” said he, “and
+a frail one. It will be mercy on your part to be expeditious. Do you
+bring me news of—” he hesitated, and then the words broke from him with
+a singular change of voice—“my son?”
+
+“My dear lord, I will be round with you like a soldier,” said the
+Colonel. “I do.”
+
+My lord held out a wavering hand; he seemed to wave a signal, but
+whether it was to give him time or to speak on, was more than we could
+guess. At length he got out the one word, “Good?”
+
+“Why, the very best in the creation!” cries the Colonel. “For my good
+friend and admired comrade is at this hour in the fine city of Paris,
+and as like as not, if I know anything of his habits, he will be
+drawing in his chair to a piece of dinner.—Bedad, I believe the lady’s
+fainting.”
+
+Mrs. Henry was indeed the colour of death, and drooped against the
+window-frame. But when Mr. Henry made a movement as if to run to her,
+she straightened with a sort of shiver. “I am well,” she said, with her
+white lips.
+
+Mr. Henry stopped, and his face had a strong twitch of anger. The next
+moment he had turned to the Colonel. “You must not blame yourself,”
+says he, “for this effect on Mrs. Durie. It is only natural; we were
+all brought up like brother and sister.”
+
+Mrs. Henry looked at her husband with something like relief or even
+gratitude. In my way of thinking, that speech was the first step he
+made in her good graces.
+
+“You must try to forgive me, Mrs. Durie, for indeed and I am just an
+Irish savage,” said the Colonel; “and I deserve to be shot for not
+breaking the matter more artistically to a lady. But here are the
+Master’s own letters; one for each of the three of you; and to be sure
+(if I know anything of my friend’s genius) he will tell his own story
+with a better grace.”
+
+He brought the three letters forth as he spoke, arranged them by their
+superscriptions, presented the first to my lord, who took it greedily,
+and advanced towards Mrs. Henry holding out the second.
+
+But the lady waved it back. “To my husband,” says she, with a choked
+voice.
+
+The Colonel was a quick man, but at this he was somewhat nonplussed.
+“To be sure!” says he; “how very dull of me! To be sure!” But he still
+held the letter.
+
+At last Mr. Henry reached forth his hand, and there was nothing to be
+done but give it up. Mr. Henry took the letters (both hers and his
+own), and looked upon their outside, with his brows knit hard, as if he
+were thinking. He had surprised me all through by his excellent
+behaviour; but he was to excel himself now.
+
+“Let me give you a hand to your room,” said he to his wife. “This has
+come something of the suddenest; and, at any rate, you will wish to
+read your letter by yourself.”
+
+Again she looked upon him with the same thought of wonder; but he gave
+her no time, coming straight to where she stood. “It will be better so,
+believe me,” said he; “and Colonel Burke is too considerate not to
+excuse you.” And with that he took her hand by the fingers, and led her
+from the hall.
+
+Mrs. Henry returned no more that night; and when Mr. Henry went to
+visit her next morning, as I heard long afterwards, she gave him the
+letter again, still unopened.
+
+“Oh, read it and be done!” he had cried.
+
+“Spare me that,” said she.
+
+And by these two speeches, to my way of thinking, each undid a great
+part of what they had previously done well. But the letter, sure
+enough, came into my hands, and by me was burned, unopened.
+
+ To be very exact as to the adventures of the Master after Culloden, I
+ wrote not long ago to Colonel Burke, now a Chevalier of the Order of
+ St. Louis, begging him for some notes in writing, since I could scarce
+ depend upon my memory at so great an interval. To confess the truth, I
+ have been somewhat embarrassed by his response; for he sent me the
+ complete memoirs of his life, touching only in places on the Master;
+ running to a much greater length than my whole story, and not
+ everywhere (as it seems to me) designed for edification. He begged in
+ his letter, dated from Ettenheim, that I would find a publisher for
+ the whole, after I had made what use of it I required; and I think I
+ shall best answer my own purpose and fulfil his wishes by printing
+ certain parts of it in full. In this way my readers will have a
+ detailed, and, I believe, a very genuine account of some essential
+ matters; and if any publisher should take a fancy to the Chevalier’s
+ manner of narration, he knows where to apply for the rest, of which
+ there is plenty at his service. I put in my first extract here, so
+ that it may stand in the place of what the Chevalier told us over our
+ wine in the hall of Durrisdeer; but you are to suppose it was not the
+ brutal fact, but a very varnished version that he offered to my lord.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+THE MASTER’S WANDERINGS.
+
+
+_From the Memoirs of the Chevalier de Burke_.
+
+
+. . . I left Ruthven (it’s hardly necessary to remark) with much
+greater satisfaction than I had come to it; but whether I missed my way
+in the deserts, or whether my companions failed me, I soon found myself
+alone. This was a predicament very disagreeable; for I never understood
+this horrid country or savage people, and the last stroke of the
+Prince’s withdrawal had made us of the Irish more unpopular than ever.
+I was reflecting on my poor chances, when I saw another horseman on the
+hill, whom I supposed at first to have been a phantom, the news of his
+death in the very front at Culloden being current in the army
+generally. This was the Master of Ballantrae, my Lord Durrisdeer’s son,
+a young nobleman of the rarest gallantry and parts, and equally
+designed by nature to adorn a Court and to reap laurels in the field.
+Our meeting was the more welcome to both, as he was one of the few
+Scots who had used the Irish with consideration, and as he might now be
+of very high utility in aiding my escape. Yet what founded our
+particular friendship was a circumstance, by itself as romantic as any
+fable of King Arthur.
+
+This was on the second day of our flight, after we had slept one night
+in the rain upon the inclination of a mountain. There was an Appin man,
+Alan Black Stewart (or some such name, [2] but I have seen him since in
+France) who chanced to be passing the same way, and had a jealousy of
+my companion. Very uncivil expressions were exchanged; and Stewart
+calls upon the Master to alight and have it out.
+
+“Why, Mr. Stewart,” says the Master, “I think at the present time I
+would prefer to run a race with you.” And with the word claps spurs to
+his horse.
+
+Stewart ran after us, a childish thing to do, for more than a mile; and
+I could not help laughing, as I looked back at last and saw him on a
+hill, holding his hand to his side, and nearly burst with running.
+
+“But, all the same,” I could not help saying to my companion, “I would
+let no man run after me for any such proper purpose, and not give him
+his desire. It was a good jest, but it smells a trifle cowardly.”
+
+He bent his brows at me. “I do pretty well,” says he, “when I saddle
+myself with the most unpopular man in Scotland, and let that suffice
+for courage.”
+
+“O, bedad,” says I, “I could show you a more unpopular with the naked
+eye. And if you like not my company, you can ‘saddle’ yourself on some
+one else.”
+
+“Colonel Burke,” says he, “do not let us quarrel; and, to that effect,
+let me assure you I am the least patient man in the world.”
+
+“I am as little patient as yourself,” said I. “I care not who knows
+that.”
+
+“At this rate,” says he, reining in, “we shall not go very far. And I
+propose we do one of two things upon the instant: either quarrel and be
+done; or make a sure bargain to bear everything at each other’s hands.”
+
+“Like a pair of brothers?” said I.
+
+“I said no such foolishness,” he replied. “I have a brother of my own,
+and I think no more of him than of a colewort. But if we are to have
+our noses rubbed together in this course of flight, let us each dare to
+be ourselves like savages, and each swear that he will neither resent
+nor deprecate the other. I am a pretty bad fellow at bottom, and I find
+the pretence of virtues very irksome.”
+
+“O, I am as bad as yourself,” said I. “There is no skim milk in Francis
+Burke. But which is it to be? Fight or make friends?”
+
+“Why,” says he, “I think it will be the best manner to spin a coin for
+it.”
+
+This proposition was too highly chivalrous not to take my fancy; and,
+strange as it may seem of two well-born gentlemen of to-day, we span a
+half-crown (like a pair of ancient paladins) whether we were to cut
+each other’s throats or be sworn friends. A more romantic circumstance
+can rarely have occurred; and it is one of those points in my memoirs,
+by which we may see the old tales of Homer and the poets are equally
+true to-day—at least, of the noble and genteel. The coin fell for
+peace, and we shook hands upon our bargain. And then it was that my
+companion explained to me his thought in running away from Mr. Stewart,
+which was certainly worthy of his political intellect. The report of
+his death, he said, was a great guard to him; Mr. Stewart having
+recognised him, had become a danger; and he had taken the briefest road
+to that gentleman’s silence. “For,” says he, “Alan Black is too vain a
+man to narrate any such story of himself.”
+
+Towards afternoon we came down to the shores of that loch for which we
+were heading; and there was the ship, but newly come to anchor. She was
+the _Sainte-Marie-des-Anges_, out of the port of Havre-de-Grace. The
+Master, after we had signalled for a boat, asked me if I knew the
+captain. I told him he was a countryman of mine, of the most
+unblemished integrity, but, I was afraid, a rather timorous man.
+
+“No matter,” says he. “For all that, he should certainly hear the
+truth.”
+
+I asked him if he meant about the battle? for if the captain once knew
+the standard was down, he would certainly put to sea again at once.
+
+“And even then!” said he; “the arms are now of no sort of utility.”
+
+“My dear man,” said I, “who thinks of the arms? But, to be sure, we
+must remember our friends. They will be close upon our heels, perhaps
+the Prince himself, and if the ship be gone, a great number of valuable
+lives may be imperilled.”
+
+“The captain and the crew have lives also, if you come to that,” says
+Ballantrae.
+
+This I declared was but a quibble, and that I would not hear of the
+captain being told; and then it was that Ballantrae made me a witty
+answer, for the sake of which (and also because I have been blamed
+myself in this business of the _Sainte-Marie-des-Anges_) I have related
+the whole conversation as it passed.
+
+“Frank,” says he, “remember our bargain. I must not object to your
+holding your tongue, which I hereby even encourage you to do; but, by
+the same terms, you are not to resent my telling.”
+
+I could not help laughing at this; though I still forewarned him what
+would come of it.
+
+“The devil may come of it for what I care,” says the reckless fellow.
+“I have always done exactly as I felt inclined.”
+
+As is well known, my prediction came true. The captain had no sooner
+heard the news than he cut his cable and to sea again; and before
+morning broke, we were in the Great Minch.
+
+The ship was very old; and the skipper, although the most honest of men
+(and Irish too), was one of the least capable. The wind blew very
+boisterous, and the sea raged extremely. All that day we had little
+heart whether to eat or drink; went early to rest in some concern of
+mind; and (as if to give us a lesson) in the night the wind chopped
+suddenly into the north-east, and blew a hurricane. We were awaked by
+the dreadful thunder of the tempest and the stamping of the mariners on
+deck; so that I supposed our last hour was certainly come; and the
+terror of my mind was increased out of all measure by Ballantrae, who
+mocked at my devotions. It is in hours like these that a man of any
+piety appears in his true light, and we find (what we are taught as
+babes) the small trust that can be set in worldly friends. I would be
+unworthy of my religion if I let this pass without particular remark.
+For three days we lay in the dark in the cabin, and had but a biscuit
+to nibble. On the fourth the wind fell, leaving the ship dismasted and
+heaving on vast billows. The captain had not a guess of whither we were
+blown; he was stark ignorant of his trade, and could do naught but
+bless the Holy Virgin; a very good thing, too, but scarce the whole of
+seamanship. It seemed, our one hope was to be picked up by another
+vessel; and if that should prove to be an English ship, it might be no
+great blessing to the Master and myself.
+
+The fifth and sixth days we tossed there helpless. The seventh some
+sail was got on her, but she was an unwieldy vessel at the best, and we
+made little but leeway. All the time, indeed, we had been drifting to
+the south and west, and during the tempest must have driven in that
+direction with unheard-of violence. The ninth dawn was cold and black,
+with a great sea running, and every mark of foul weather. In this
+situation we were overjoyed to sight a small ship on the horizon, and
+to perceive her go about and head for the _Sainte-Marie_. But our
+gratification did not very long endure; for when she had laid to and
+lowered a boat, it was immediately filled with disorderly fellows, who
+sang and shouted as they pulled across to us, and swarmed in on our
+deck with bare cutlasses, cursing loudly. Their leader was a horrible
+villain, with his face blacked and his whiskers curled in ringlets;
+Teach, his name; a most notorious pirate. He stamped about the deck,
+raving and crying out that his name was Satan, and his ship was called
+Hell. There was something about him like a wicked child or a
+half-witted person, that daunted me beyond expression. I whispered in
+the ear of Ballantrae that I would not be the last to volunteer, and
+only prayed God they might be short of hands; he approved my purpose
+with a nod.
+
+“Bedad,” said I to Master Teach, “if you are Satan, here is a devil for
+ye.”
+
+The word pleased him; and (not to dwell upon these shocking incidents)
+Ballantrae and I and two others were taken for recruits, while the
+skipper and all the rest were cast into the sea by the method of
+walking the plank. It was the first time I had seen this done; my heart
+died within me at the spectacle; and Master Teach or one of his
+acolytes (for my head was too much lost to be precise) remarked upon my
+pale face in a very alarming manner. I had the strength to cut a step
+or two of a jig, and cry out some ribaldry, which saved me for that
+time; but my legs were like water when I must get down into the skiff
+among these miscreants; and what with my horror of my company and fear
+of the monstrous billows, it was all I could do to keep an Irish tongue
+and break a jest or two as we were pulled aboard. By the blessing of
+God, there was a fiddle in the pirate ship, which I had no sooner seen
+than I fell upon; and in my quality of crowder I had the heavenly good
+luck to get favour in their eyes. _Crowding Pat_ was the name they
+dubbed me with; and it was little I cared for a name so long as my skin
+was whole.
+
+What kind of a pandemonium that vessel was, I cannot describe, but she
+was commanded by a lunatic, and might be called a floating Bedlam.
+Drinking, roaring, singing, quarrelling, dancing, they were never all
+sober at one time; and there were days together when, if a squall had
+supervened, it must have sent us to the bottom; or if a king’s ship had
+come along, it would have found us quite helpless for defence. Once or
+twice we sighted a sail, and, if we were sober enough, overhauled it,
+God forgive us! and if we were all too drunk, she got away, and I would
+bless the saints under my breath. Teach ruled, if you can call that
+rule which brought no order, by the terror he created; and I observed
+the man was very vain of his position. I have known marshals of
+France—ay, and even Highland chieftains—that were less openly puffed
+up; which throws a singular light on the pursuit of honour and glory.
+Indeed, the longer we live, the more we perceive the sagacity of
+Aristotle and the other old philosophers; and though I have all my life
+been eager for legitimate distinctions, I can lay my hand upon my
+heart, at the end of my career, and declare there is not one—no, nor
+yet life itself—which is worth acquiring or preserving at the slightest
+cost of dignity.
+
+It was long before I got private speech of Ballantrae; but at length
+one night we crept out upon the boltsprit, when the rest were better
+employed, and commiserated our position.
+
+“None can deliver us but the saints,” said I.
+
+“My mind is very different,” said Ballantrae; “for I am going to
+deliver myself. This Teach is the poorest creature possible; we make no
+profit of him, and lie continually open to capture; and,” says he, “I
+am not going to be a tarry pirate for nothing, nor yet to hang in
+chains if I can help it.” And he told me what was in his mind to better
+the state of the ship in the way of discipline, which would give us
+safety for the present, and a sooner hope of deliverance when they
+should have gained enough and should break up their company.
+
+I confessed to him ingenuously that my nerve was quite shook amid these
+horrible surroundings, and I durst scarce tell him to count upon me.
+
+“I am not very easy frightened,” said he, “nor very easy beat.”
+
+A few days after, there befell an accident which had nearly hanged us
+all; and offers the most extraordinary picture of the folly that ruled
+in our concerns. We were all pretty drunk: and some bedlamite spying a
+sail, Teach put the ship about in chase without a glance, and we began
+to bustle up the arms and boast of the horrors that should follow. I
+observed Ballantrae stood quiet in the bows, looking under the shade of
+his hand; but for my part, true to my policy among these savages, I was
+at work with the busiest and passing Irish jests for their diversion.
+
+“Run up the colours,” cries Teach. “Show the —s the Jolly Roger!”
+
+It was the merest drunken braggadocio at such a stage, and might have
+lost us a valuable prize; but I thought it no part of mine to reason,
+and I ran up the black flag with my own hand.
+
+Ballantrae steps presently aft with a smile upon his face.
+
+“You may perhaps like to know, you drunken dog,” says he, “that you are
+chasing a king’s ship.”
+
+Teach roared him the lie; but he ran at the same time to the bulwarks,
+and so did they all. I have never seen so many drunken men struck
+suddenly sober. The cruiser had gone about, upon our impudent display
+of colours; she was just then filling on the new tack; her ensign blew
+out quite plain to see; and even as we stared, there came a puff of
+smoke, and then a report, and a shot plunged in the waves a good way
+short of us. Some ran to the ropes, and got the _Sarah_ round with an
+incredible swiftness. One fellow fell on the rum barrel, which stood
+broached upon the deck, and rolled it promptly overboard. On my part, I
+made for the Jolly Roger, struck it, tossed it in the sea; and could
+have flung myself after, so vexed was I with our mismanagement. As for
+Teach, he grew as pale as death, and incontinently went down to his
+cabin. Only twice he came on deck that afternoon; went to the taffrail;
+took a long look at the king’s ship, which was still on the horizon
+heading after us; and then, without speech, back to his cabin. You may
+say he deserted us; and if it had not been for one very capable sailor
+we had on board, and for the lightness of the airs that blew all day,
+we must certainly have gone to the yard-arm.
+
+It is to be supposed Teach was humiliated, and perhaps alarmed for his
+position with the crew; and the way in which he set about regaining
+what he had lost, was highly characteristic of the man. Early next day
+we smelled him burning sulphur in his cabin and crying out of “Hell,
+hell!” which was well understood among the crew, and filled their minds
+with apprehension. Presently he comes on deck, a perfect figure of fun,
+his face blacked, his hair and whiskers curled, his belt stuck full of
+pistols; chewing bits of glass so that the blood ran down his chin, and
+brandishing a dirk. I do not know if he had taken these manners from
+the Indians of America, where he was a native; but such was his way,
+and he would always thus announce that he was wound up to horrid deeds.
+The first that came near him was the fellow who had sent the rum
+overboard the day before; him he stabbed to the heart, damning him for
+a mutineer; and then capered about the body, raving and swearing and
+daring us to come on. It was the silliest exhibition; and yet dangerous
+too, for the cowardly fellow was plainly working himself up to another
+murder.
+
+All of a sudden Ballantrae stepped forth. “Have done with this
+play-acting,” says he. “Do you think to frighten us with making faces?
+We saw nothing of you yesterday, when you were wanted; and we did well
+without you, let me tell you that.”
+
+There was a murmur and a movement in the crew, of pleasure and alarm, I
+thought, in nearly equal parts. As for Teach, he gave a barbarous howl,
+and swung his dirk to fling it, an art in which (like many seamen) he
+was very expert.
+
+“Knock that out of his hand!” says Ballantrae, so sudden and sharp that
+my arm obeyed him before my mind had understood.
+
+Teach stood like one stupid, never thinking on his pistols.
+
+“Go down to your cabin,” cries Ballantrae, “and come on deck again when
+you are sober. Do you think we are going to hang for you, you
+black-faced, half-witted, drunken brute and butcher? Go down!” And he
+stamped his foot at him with such a sudden smartness that Teach fairly
+ran for it to the companion.
+
+“And now, mates,” says Ballantrae, “a word with you. I don’t know if
+you are gentlemen of fortune for the fun of the thing, but I am not. I
+want to make money, and get ashore again, and spend it like a man. And
+on one thing my mind is made up: I will not hang if I can help it.
+Come: give me a hint; I’m only a beginner! Is there no way to get a
+little discipline and common sense about this business?”
+
+One of the men spoke up: he said by rights they should have a
+quartermaster; and no sooner was the word out of his mouth than they
+were all of that opinion. The thing went by acclamation, Ballantrae was
+made quartermaster, the rum was put in his charge, laws were passed in
+imitation of those of a pirate by the name of Roberts, and the last
+proposal was to make an end of Teach. But Ballantrae was afraid of a
+more efficient captain, who might be a counterweight to himself, and he
+opposed this stoutly. Teach, he said, was good enough to board ships
+and frighten fools with his blacked face and swearing; we could scarce
+get a better man than Teach for that; and besides, as the man was now
+disconsidered and as good as deposed, we might reduce his proportion of
+the plunder. This carried it; Teach’s share was cut down to a mere
+derision, being actually less than mine; and there remained only two
+points: whether he would consent, and who was to announce to him this
+resolution.
+
+“Do not let that stick you,” says Ballantrae, “I will do that.”
+
+And he stepped to the companion and down alone into the cabin to face
+that drunken savage.
+
+“This is the man for us,” cries one of the hands. “Three cheers for the
+quartermaster!” which were given with a will, my own voice among the
+loudest, and I dare say these plaudits had their effect on Master Teach
+in the cabin, as we have seen of late days how shouting in the streets
+may trouble even the minds of legislators.
+
+What passed precisely was never known, though some of the heads of it
+came to the surface later on; and we were all amazed, as well as
+gratified, when Ballantrae came on deck with Teach upon his arm, and
+announced that all had been consented.
+
+I pass swiftly over those twelve or fifteen months in which we
+continued to keep the sea in the North Atlantic, getting our food and
+water from the ships we over-hauled, and doing on the whole a pretty
+fortunate business. Sure, no one could wish to read anything so
+ungenteel as the memoirs of a pirate, even an unwilling one like me!
+Things went extremely better with our designs, and Ballantrae kept his
+lead, to my admiration, from that day forth. I would be tempted to
+suppose that a gentleman must everywhere be first, even aboard a rover:
+but my birth is every whit as good as any Scottish lord’s, and I am not
+ashamed to confess that I stayed Crowding Pat until the end, and was
+not much better than the crew’s buffoon. Indeed, it was no scene to
+bring out my merits. My health suffered from a variety of reasons; I
+was more at home to the last on a horse’s back than a ship’s deck; and,
+to be ingenuous, the fear of the sea was constantly in my mind,
+battling with the fear of my companions. I need not cry myself up for
+courage; I have done well on many fields under the eyes of famous
+generals, and earned my late advancement by an act of the most
+distinguished valour before many witnesses. But when we must proceed on
+one of our abordages, the heart of Francis Burke was in his boots; the
+little eggshell skiff in which we must set forth, the horrible heaving
+of the vast billows, the height of the ship that we must scale, the
+thought of how many might be there in garrison upon their legitimate
+defence, the scowling heavens which (in that climate) so often looked
+darkly down upon our exploits, and the mere crying of the wind in my
+ears, were all considerations most unpalatable to my valour. Besides
+which, as I was always a creature of the nicest sensibility, the scenes
+that must follow on our success tempted me as little as the chances of
+defeat. Twice we found women on board; and though I have seen towns
+sacked, and of late days in France some very horrid public tumults,
+there was something in the smallness of the numbers engaged, and the
+bleak dangerous sea-surroundings, that made these acts of piracy far
+the most revolting. I confess ingenuously I could never proceed unless
+I was three parts drunk; it was the same even with the crew; Teach
+himself was fit for no enterprise till he was full of rum; and it was
+one of the most difficult parts of Ballantrae’s performance, to serve
+us with liquor in the proper quantities. Even this he did to
+admiration; being upon the whole the most capable man I ever met with,
+and the one of the most natural genius. He did not even scrape favour
+with the crew, as I did, by continual buffoonery made upon a very
+anxious heart; but preserved on most occasions a great deal of gravity
+and distance; so that he was like a parent among a family of young
+children, or a schoolmaster with his boys. What made his part the
+harder to perform, the men were most inveterate grumblers; Ballantrae’s
+discipline, little as it was, was yet irksome to their love of licence;
+and what was worse, being kept sober they had time to think. Some of
+them accordingly would fall to repenting their abominable crimes; one
+in particular, who was a good Catholic, and with whom I would sometimes
+steal apart for prayer; above all in bad weather, fogs, lashing rain
+and the like, when we would be the less observed; and I am sure no two
+criminals in the cart have ever performed their devotions with more
+anxious sincerity. But the rest, having no such grounds of hope, fell
+to another pastime, that of computation. All day long they would be
+telling up their shares or grooming over the result. I have said we
+were pretty fortunate. But an observation fails to be made: that in
+this world, in no business that I have tried, do the profits rise to a
+man’s expectations. We found many ships and took many; yet few of them
+contained much money, their goods were usually nothing to our
+purpose—what did we want with a cargo of ploughs, or even of
+tobacco?—and it is quite a painful reflection how many whole crews we
+have made to walk the plank for no more than a stock of biscuit or an
+anker or two of spirit.
+
+In the meanwhile our ship was growing very foul, and it was high time
+we should make for our _port de carrénage_, which was in the estuary of
+a river among swamps. It was openly understood that we should then
+break up and go and squander our proportions of the spoil; and this
+made every man greedy of a little more, so that our decision was
+delayed from day to day. What finally decided matters, was a trifling
+accident, such as an ignorant person might suppose incidental to our
+way of life. But here I must explain: on only one of all the ships we
+boarded, the first on which we found women, did we meet with any
+genuine resistance. On that occasion we had two men killed and several
+injured, and if it had not been for the gallantry of Ballantrae we had
+surely been beat back at last. Everywhere else the defence (where there
+was any at all) was what the worst troops in Europe would have laughed
+at; so that the most dangerous part of our employment was to clamber up
+the side of the ship; and I have even known the poor souls on board to
+cast us a line, so eager were they to volunteer instead of walking the
+plank. This constant immunity had made our fellows very soft, so that I
+understood how Teach had made so deep a mark upon their minds; for
+indeed the company of that lunatic was the chief danger in our way of
+life. The accident to which I have referred was this:—We had sighted a
+little full-rigged ship very close under our board in a haze; she
+sailed near as well as we did—I should be nearer truth if I said, near
+as ill; and we cleared the bow-chaser to see if we could bring a spar
+or two about their ears. The swell was exceeding great; the motion of
+the ship beyond description; it was little wonder if our gunners should
+fire thrice and be still quite broad of what they aimed at. But in the
+meanwhile the chase had cleared a stern gun, the thickness of the air
+concealing them; and being better marksmen, their first shot struck us
+in the bows, knocked our two gunners into mince-meat, so that we were
+all sprinkled with the blood, and plunged through the deck into the
+forecastle, where we slept. Ballantrae would have held on; indeed,
+there was nothing in this _contretemps_ to affect the mind of any
+soldier; but he had a quick perception of the men’s wishes, and it was
+plain this lucky shot had given them a sickener of their trade. In a
+moment they were all of one mind: the chase was drawing away from us,
+it was needless to hold on, the _Sarah_ was too foul to overhaul a
+bottle, it was mere foolery to keep the sea with her; and on these
+pretended grounds her head was incontinently put about and the course
+laid for the river. It was strange to see what merriment fell on that
+ship’s company, and how they stamped about the deck jesting, and each
+computing what increase had come to his share by the death of the two
+gunners.
+
+We were nine days making our port, so light were the airs we had to
+sail on, so foul the ship’s bottom; but early on the tenth, before
+dawn, and in a light lifting haze, we passed the head. A little after,
+the haze lifted, and fell again, showing us a cruiser very close. This
+was a sore blow, happening so near our refuge. There was a great debate
+of whether she had seen us, and if so whether it was likely they had
+recognised the _Sarah_. We were very careful, by destroying every
+member of those crews we overhauled, to leave no evidence as to our own
+persons; but the appearance of the _Sarah_ herself we could not keep so
+private; and above all of late, since she had been foul, and we had
+pursued many ships without success, it was plain that her description
+had been often published. I supposed this alert would have made us
+separate upon the instant. But here again that original genius of
+Ballantrae’s had a surprise in store for me. He and Teach (and it was
+the most remarkable step of his success) had gone hand in hand since
+the first day of his appointment. I often questioned him upon the fact,
+and never got an answer but once, when he told me he and Teach had an
+understanding “which would very much surprise the crew if they should
+hear of it, and would surprise himself a good deal if it was carried
+out.” Well, here again he and Teach were of a mind; and by their joint
+procurement the anchor was no sooner down than the whole crew went off
+upon a scene of drunkenness indescribable. By afternoon we were a mere
+shipful of lunatical persons, throwing of things overboard, howling of
+different songs at the same time, quarrelling and falling together, and
+then forgetting our quarrels to embrace. Ballantrae had bidden me drink
+nothing, and feign drunkenness, as I valued my life; and I have never
+passed a day so wearisomely, lying the best part of the time upon the
+forecastle and watching the swamps and thickets by which our little
+basin was entirely surrounded for the eye. A little after dusk
+Ballantrae stumbled up to my side, feigned to fall, with a drunken
+laugh, and before he got his feet again, whispered me to “reel down
+into the cabin and seem to fall asleep upon a locker, for there would
+be need of me soon.” I did as I was told, and coming into the cabin,
+where it was quite dark, let myself fall on the first locker. There was
+a man there already; by the way he stirred and threw me off, I could
+not think he was much in liquor; and yet when I had found another
+place, he seemed to continue to sleep on. My heart now beat very hard,
+for I saw some desperate matter was in act. Presently down came
+Ballantrae, lit the lamp, looked about the cabin, nodded as if pleased,
+and on deck again without a word. I peered out from between my fingers,
+and saw there were three of us slumbering, or feigning to slumber, on
+the lockers: myself, one Dutton and one Grady, both resolute men. On
+deck the rest were got to a pitch of revelry quite beyond the bounds of
+what is human; so that no reasonable name can describe the sounds they
+were now making. I have heard many a drunken bout in my time, many on
+board that very _Sarah_, but never anything the least like this, which
+made me early suppose the liquor had been tampered with. It was a long
+while before these yells and howls died out into a sort of miserable
+moaning, and then to silence; and it seemed a long while after that
+before Ballantrae came down again, this time with Teach upon his heels.
+The latter cursed at the sight of us three upon the lockers.
+
+“Tut,” says Ballantrae, “you might fire a pistol at their ears. You
+know what stuff they have been swallowing.”
+
+There was a hatch in the cabin floor, and under that the richest part
+of the booty was stored against the day of division. It fastened with a
+ring and three padlocks, the keys (for greater security) being divided;
+one to Teach, one to Ballantrae, and one to the mate, a man called
+Hammond. Yet I was amazed to see they were now all in the one hand; and
+yet more amazed (still looking through my fingers) to observe
+Ballantrae and Teach bring up several packets, four of them in all,
+very carefully made up and with a loop for carriage.
+
+“And now,” says Teach, “let us be going.”
+
+“One word,” says Ballantrae. “I have discovered there is another man
+besides yourself who knows a private path across the swamp; and it
+seems it is shorter than yours.”
+
+Teach cried out, in that case, they were undone.
+
+“I do not know for that,” says Ballantrae. “For there are several other
+circumstances with which I must acquaint you. First of all, there is no
+bullet in your pistols, which (if you remember) I was kind enough to
+load for both of us this morning. Secondly, as there is someone else
+who knows a passage, you must think it highly improbable I should
+saddle myself with a lunatic like you. Thirdly, these gentlemen (who
+need no longer pretend to be asleep) are those of my party, and will
+now proceed to gag and bind you to the mast; and when your men awaken
+(if they ever do awake after the drugs we have mingled in their
+liquor), I am sure they will be so obliging as to deliver you, and you
+will have no difficulty, I daresay, to explain the business of the
+keys.”
+
+Not a word said Teach, but looked at us like a frightened baby as we
+gagged and bound him.
+
+“Now you see, you moon-calf,” says Ballantrae, “why we made four
+packets. Heretofore you have been called Captain Teach, but I think you
+are now rather Captain Learn.”
+
+That was our last word on board the _Sarah_. We four, with our four
+packets, lowered ourselves softly into a skiff, and left that ship
+behind us as silent as the grave, only for the moaning of some of the
+drunkards. There was a fog about breast-high on the waters; so that
+Dutton, who knew the passage, must stand on his feet to direct our
+rowing; and this, as it forced us to row gently, was the means of our
+deliverance. We were yet but a little way from the ship, when it began
+to come grey, and the birds to fly abroad upon the water. All of a
+sudden Dutton clapped down upon his hams, and whispered us to be silent
+for our lives, and hearken. Sure enough, we heard a little faint creak
+of oars upon one hand, and then again, and further off, a creak of oars
+upon the other. It was clear we had been sighted yesterday in the
+morning; here were the cruiser’s boats to cut us out; here were we
+defenceless in their very midst. Sure, never were poor souls more
+perilously placed; and as we lay there on our oars, praying God the
+mist might hold, the sweat poured from my brow. Presently we heard one
+of the boats where we might have thrown a biscuit in her. “Softly,
+men,” we heard an officer whisper; and I marvelled they could not hear
+the drumming of my heart.
+
+“Never mind the path,” says Ballantrae; “we must get shelter anyhow;
+let us pull straight ahead for the sides of the basin.”
+
+This we did with the most anxious precaution, rowing, as best we could,
+upon our hands, and steering at a venture in the fog, which was (for
+all that) our only safety. But Heaven guided us; we touched ground at a
+thicket; scrambled ashore with our treasure; and having no other way of
+concealment, and the mist beginning already to lighten, hove down the
+skiff and let her sink. We were still but new under cover when the sun
+rose; and at the same time, from the midst of the basin, a great
+shouting of seamen sprang up, and we knew the _Sarah_ was being
+boarded. I heard afterwards the officer that took her got great honour;
+and it’s true the approach was creditably managed, but I think he had
+an easy capture when he came to board. [3]
+
+I was still blessing the saints for my escape, when I became aware we
+were in trouble of another kind. We were here landed at random in a
+vast and dangerous swamp; and how to come at the path was a concern of
+doubt, fatigue, and peril. Dutton, indeed, was of opinion we should
+wait until the ship was gone, and fish up the skiff; for any delay
+would be more wise than to go blindly ahead in that morass. One went
+back accordingly to the basin-side and (peering through the thicket)
+saw the fog already quite drunk up, and English colours flying on the
+_Sarah_, but no movement made to get her under way. Our situation was
+now very doubtful. The swamp was an unhealthful place to linger in; we
+had been so greedy to bring treasures that we had brought but little
+food; it was highly desirable, besides, that we should get clear of the
+neighbourhood and into the settlements before the news of the capture
+went abroad; and against all these considerations, there was only the
+peril of the passage on the other side. I think it not wonderful we
+decided on the active part.
+
+It was already blistering hot when we set forth to pass the marsh, or
+rather to strike the path, by compass. Dutton took the compass, and one
+or other of us three carried his proportion of the treasure. I promise
+you he kept a sharp eye to his rear, for it was like the man’s soul
+that he must trust us with. The thicket was as close as a bush; the
+ground very treacherous, so that we often sank in the most terrifying
+manner, and must go round about; the heat, besides, was stifling, the
+air singularly heavy, and the stinging insects abounded in such myriads
+that each of us walked under his own cloud. It has often been commented
+on, how much better gentlemen of birth endure fatigue than persons of
+the rabble; so that walking officers who must tramp in the dirt beside
+their men, shame them by their constancy. This was well to be observed
+in the present instance; for here were Ballantrae and I, two gentlemen
+of the highest breeding, on the one hand; and on the other, Grady, a
+common mariner, and a man nearly a giant in physical strength. The case
+of Dutton is not in point, for I confess he did as well as any of us.
+[4] But as for Grady, he began early to lament his case, tailed in the
+rear, refused to carry Dutton’s packet when it came his turn, clamoured
+continually for rum (of which we had too little), and at last even
+threatened us from behind with a cocked pistol, unless we should allow
+him rest. Ballantrae would have fought it out, I believe; but I
+prevailed with him the other way; and we made a stop and ate a meal. It
+seemed to benefit Grady little; he was in the rear again at once,
+growling and bemoaning his lot; and at last, by some carelessness, not
+having followed properly in our tracks, stumbled into a deep part of
+the slough where it was mostly water, gave some very dreadful screams,
+and before we could come to his aid had sunk along with his booty. His
+fate, and above all these screams of his, appalled us to the soul; yet
+it was on the whole a fortunate circumstance and the means of our
+deliverance, for it moved Dutton to mount into a tree, whence he was
+able to perceive and to show me, who had climbed after him, a high
+piece of the wood, which was a landmark for the path. He went forward
+the more carelessly, I must suppose; for presently we saw him sink a
+little down, draw up his feet and sink again, and so twice. Then he
+turned his face to us, pretty white.
+
+“Lend a hand,” said he, “I am in a bad place.”
+
+“I don’t know about that,” says Ballantrae, standing still.
+
+Dutton broke out into the most violent oaths, sinking a little lower as
+he did, so that the mud was nearly to his waist, and plucking a pistol
+from his belt, “Help me,” he cries, “or die and be damned to you!”
+
+“Nay,” says Ballantrae, “I did but jest. I am coming.” And he set down
+his own packet and Dutton’s, which he was then carrying. “Do not
+venture near till we see if you are needed,” said he to me, and went
+forward alone to where the man was bogged. He was quiet now, though he
+still held the pistol; and the marks of terror in his countenance were
+very moving to behold.
+
+“For the Lord’s sake,” says he, “look sharp.”
+
+Ballantrae was now got close up. “Keep still,” says he, and seemed to
+consider; and then, “Reach out both your hands!”
+
+Dutton laid down his pistol, and so watery was the top surface that it
+went clear out of sight; with an oath he stooped to snatch it; and as
+he did so, Ballantrae leaned forth and stabbed him between the
+shoulders. Up went his hands over his head—I know not whether with the
+pain or to ward himself; and the next moment he doubled forward in the
+mud.
+
+Ballantrae was already over the ankles; but he plucked himself out, and
+came back to me, where I stood with my knees smiting one another. “The
+devil take you, Francis!” says he. “I believe you are a half-hearted
+fellow, after all. I have only done justice on a pirate. And here we
+are quite clear of the _Sarah_! Who shall now say that we have dipped
+our hands in any irregularities?”
+
+I assured him he did me injustice; but my sense of humanity was so much
+affected by the horridness of the fact that I could scarce find breath
+to answer with.
+
+“Come,” said he, “you must be more resolved. The need for this fellow
+ceased when he had shown you where the path ran; and you cannot deny I
+would have been daft to let slip so fair an opportunity.”
+
+I could not deny but he was right in principle; nor yet could I refrain
+from shedding tears, of which I think no man of valour need have been
+ashamed; and it was not until I had a share of the rum that I was able
+to proceed. I repeat, I am far from ashamed of my generous emotion;
+mercy is honourable in the warrior; and yet I cannot altogether censure
+Ballantrae, whose step was really fortunate, as we struck the path
+without further misadventure, and the same night, about sundown, came
+to the edge of the morass.
+
+We were too weary to seek far; on some dry sands, still warm with the
+day’s sun, and close under a wood of pines, we lay down and were
+instantly plunged in sleep.
+
+We awaked the next morning very early, and began with a sullen spirit a
+conversation that came near to end in blows. We were now cast on shore
+in the southern provinces, thousands of miles from any French
+settlement; a dreadful journey and a thousand perils lay in front of
+us; and sure, if there was ever need for amity, it was in such an hour.
+I must suppose that Ballantrae had suffered in his sense of what is
+truly polite; indeed, and there is nothing strange in the idea, after
+the sea-wolves we had consorted with so long; and as for myself, he
+fubbed me off unhandsomely, and any gentleman would have resented his
+behaviour.
+
+I told him in what light I saw his conduct; he walked a little off, I
+following to upbraid him; and at last he stopped me with his hand.
+
+“Frank,” says he, “you know what we swore; and yet there is no oath
+invented would induce me to swallow such expressions, if I did not
+regard you with sincere affection. It is impossible you should doubt me
+there: I have given proofs. Dutton I had to take, because he knew the
+pass, and Grady because Dutton would not move without him; but what
+call was there to carry you along? You are a perpetual danger to me
+with your cursed Irish tongue. By rights you should now be in irons in
+the cruiser. And you quarrel with me like a baby for some trinkets!”
+
+I considered this one of the most unhandsome speeches ever made; and
+indeed to this day I can scarce reconcile it to my notion of a
+gentleman that was my friend. I retorted upon him with his Scotch
+accent, of which he had not so much as some, but enough to be very
+barbarous and disgusting, as I told him plainly; and the affair would
+have gone to a great length, but for an alarming intervention.
+
+We had got some way off upon the sand. The place where we had slept,
+with the packets lying undone and the money scattered openly, was now
+between us and the pines; and it was out of these the stranger must
+have come. There he was at least, a great hulking fellow of the
+country, with a broad axe on his shoulder, looking open-mouthed, now at
+the treasure, which was just at his feet, and now at our disputation,
+in which we had gone far enough to have weapons in our hands. We had no
+sooner observed him than he found his legs and made off again among the
+pines.
+
+This was no scene to put our minds at rest: a couple of armed men in
+sea-clothes found quarrelling over a treasure, not many miles from
+where a pirate had been captured—here was enough to bring the whole
+country about our ears. The quarrel was not even made up; it was
+blotted from our minds; and we got our packets together in the
+twinkling of an eye, and made off, running with the best will in the
+world. But the trouble was, we did not know in what direction, and must
+continually return upon our steps. Ballantrae had indeed collected what
+he could from Dutton; but it’s hard to travel upon hearsay; and the
+estuary, which spreads into a vast irregular harbour, turned us off
+upon every side with a new stretch of water.
+
+We were near beside ourselves, and already quite spent with running,
+when, coming to the top of a dune, we saw we were again cut off by
+another ramification of the bay. This was a creek, however, very
+different from those that had arrested us before; being set in rocks,
+and so precipitously deep that a small vessel was able to lie
+alongside, made fast with a hawser; and her crew had laid a plank to
+the shore. Here they had lighted a fire, and were sitting at their
+meal. As for the vessel herself, she was one of those they build in the
+Bermudas.
+
+The love of gold and the great hatred that everybody has to pirates
+were motives of the most influential, and would certainly raise the
+country in our pursuit. Besides, it was now plain we were on some sort
+of straggling peninsula, like the fingers of a hand; and the wrist, or
+passage to the mainland, which we should have taken at the first, was
+by this time not improbably secured. These considerations put us on a
+bolder counsel. For as long as we dared, looking every moment to hear
+sounds of the chase, we lay among some bushes on the top of the dune;
+and having by this means secured a little breath and recomposed our
+appearance, we strolled down at last, with a great affectation of
+carelessness, to the party by the fire.
+
+It was a trader and his negroes, belonging to Albany, in the province
+of New York, and now on the way home from the Indies with a cargo; his
+name I cannot recall. We were amazed to learn he had put in here from
+terror of the _Sarah_; for we had no thought our exploits had been so
+notorious. As soon as the Albanian heard she had been taken the day
+before, he jumped to his feet, gave us a cup of spirits for our good
+news, and sent big negroes to get sail on the Bermudan. On our side, we
+profited by the dram to become more confidential, and at last offered
+ourselves as passengers. He looked askance at our tarry clothes and
+pistols, and replied civilly enough that he had scarce accommodation
+for himself; nor could either our prayers or our offers of money, in
+which we advanced pretty far, avail to shake him.
+
+“I see, you think ill of us,” says Ballantrae, “but I will show you how
+well we think of you by telling you the truth. We are Jacobite
+fugitives, and there is a price upon our heads.”
+
+At this, the Albanian was plainly moved a little. He asked us many
+questions as to the Scotch war, which Ballantrae very patiently
+answered. And then, with a wink, in a vulgar manner, “I guess you and
+your Prince Charlie got more than you cared about,” said he.
+
+“Bedad, and that we did,” said I. “And, my dear man, I wish you would
+set a new example and give us just that much.”
+
+This I said in the Irish way, about which there is allowed to be
+something very engaging. It’s a remarkable thing, and a testimony to
+the love with which our nation is regarded, that this address scarce
+ever fails in a handsome fellow. I cannot tell how often I have seen a
+private soldier escape the horse, or a beggar wheedle out a good alms
+by a touch of the brogue. And, indeed, as soon as the Albanian had
+laughed at me I was pretty much at rest. Even then, however, he made
+many conditions, and—for one thing—took away our arms, before he
+suffered us aboard; which was the signal to cast off; so that in a
+moment after, we were gliding down the bay with a good breeze, and
+blessing the name of God for our deliverance. Almost in the mouth of
+the estuary, we passed the cruiser, and a little after the poor _Sarah_
+with her prize crew; and these were both sights to make us tremble. The
+Bermudan seemed a very safe place to be in, and our bold stroke to have
+been fortunately played, when we were thus reminded of the case of our
+companions. For all that, we had only exchanged traps, jumped out of
+the frying-pan into the fire, ran from the yard-arm to the block, and
+escaped the open hostility of the man-of-war to lie at the mercy of the
+doubtful faith of our Albanian merchant.
+
+From many circumstances, it chanced we were safer than we could have
+dared to hope. The town of Albany was at that time much concerned in
+contraband trade across the desert with the Indians and the French.
+This, as it was highly illegal, relaxed their loyalty, and as it
+brought them in relation with the politest people on the earth, divided
+even their sympathies. In short, they were like all the smugglers in
+the world, spies and agents ready-made for either party. Our Albanian,
+besides, was a very honest man indeed, and very greedy; and, to crown
+our luck, he conceived a great delight in our society. Before we had
+reached the town of New York we had come to a full agreement, that he
+should carry us as far as Albany upon his ship, and thence put us on a
+way to pass the boundaries and join the French. For all this we were to
+pay at a high rate; but beggars cannot be choosers, nor outlaws
+bargainers.
+
+We sailed, then, up the Hudson River, which, I protest, is a very fine
+stream, and put up at the “King’s Arms” in Albany. The town was full of
+the militia of the province, breathing slaughter against the French.
+Governor Clinton was there himself, a very busy man, and, by what I
+could learn, very near distracted by the factiousness of his Assembly.
+The Indians on both sides were on the war-path; we saw parties of them
+bringing in prisoners and (what was much worse) scalps, both male and
+female, for which they were paid at a fixed rate; and I assure you the
+sight was not encouraging. Altogether, we could scarce have come at a
+period more unsuitable for our designs; our position in the chief inn
+was dreadfully conspicuous; our Albanian fubbed us off with a thousand
+delays, and seemed upon the point of a retreat from his engagements;
+nothing but peril appeared to environ the poor fugitives, and for some
+time we drowned our concern in a very irregular course of living.
+
+This, too, proved to be fortunate; and it’s one of the remarks that
+fall to be made upon our escape, how providentially our steps were
+conducted to the very end. What a humiliation to the dignity of man! My
+philosophy, the extraordinary genius of Ballantrae, our valour, in
+which I grant that we were equal—all these might have proved
+insufficient without the Divine blessing on our efforts. And how true
+it is, as the Church tells us, that the Truths of Religion are, after
+all, quite applicable even to daily affairs! At least, it was in the
+course of our revelry that we made the acquaintance of a spirited youth
+by the name of Chew. He was one of the most daring of the Indian
+traders, very well acquainted with the secret paths of the wilderness,
+needy, dissolute, and, by a last good fortune, in some disgrace with
+his family. Him we persuaded to come to our relief; he privately
+provided what was needful for our flight, and one day we slipped out of
+Albany, without a word to our former friend, and embarked, a little
+above, in a canoe.
+
+To the toils and perils of this journey, it would require a pen more
+elegant than mine to do full justice. The reader must conceive for
+himself the dreadful wilderness which we had now to thread; its
+thickets, swamps, precipitous rocks, impetuous rivers, and amazing
+waterfalls. Among these barbarous scenes we must toil all day, now
+paddling, now carrying our canoe upon our shoulders; and at night we
+slept about a fire, surrounded by the howling of wolves and other
+savage animals. It was our design to mount the headwaters of the
+Hudson, to the neighbourhood of Crown Point, where the French had a
+strong place in the woods, upon Lake Champlain. But to have done this
+directly were too perilous; and it was accordingly gone upon by such a
+labyrinth of rivers, lakes, and portages as makes my head giddy to
+remember. These paths were in ordinary times entirely desert; but the
+country was now up, the tribes on the war-path, the woods full of
+Indian scouts. Again and again we came upon these parties when we least
+expected them; and one day, in particular, I shall never forget, how,
+as dawn was coming in, we were suddenly surrounded by five or six of
+these painted devils, uttering a very dreary sort of cry, and
+brandishing their hatchets. It passed off harmlessly, indeed, as did
+the rest of our encounters; for Chew was well known and highly valued
+among the different tribes. Indeed, he was a very gallant, respectable
+young man; but even with the advantage of his companionship, you must
+not think these meetings were without sensible peril. To prove
+friendship on our part, it was needful to draw upon our stock of
+rum—indeed, under whatever disguise, that is the true business of the
+Indian trader, to keep a travelling public-house in the forest; and
+when once the braves had got their bottle of _scaura_ (as they call
+this beastly liquor), it behoved us to set forth and paddle for our
+scalps. Once they were a little drunk, goodbye to any sense or decency;
+they had but the one thought, to get more _scaura_. They might easily
+take it in their heads to give us chase, and had we been overtaken, I
+had never written these memoirs.
+
+We were come to the most critical portion of our course, where we might
+equally expect to fall into the hands of French or English, when a
+terrible calamity befell us. Chew was taken suddenly sick with symptoms
+like those of poison, and in the course of a few hours expired in the
+bottom of the canoe. We thus lost at once our guide, our interpreter,
+our boatman, and our passport, for he was all these in one; and found
+ourselves reduced, at a blow, to the most desperate and irremediable
+distress. Chew, who took a great pride in his knowledge, had indeed
+often lectured us on the geography; and Ballantrae, I believe, would
+listen. But for my part I have always found such information highly
+tedious; and beyond the fact that we were now in the country of the
+Adirondack Indians, and not so distant from our destination, could we
+but have found the way, I was entirely ignorant. The wisdom of my
+course was soon the more apparent; for with all his pains, Ballantrae
+was no further advanced than myself. He knew we must continue to go up
+one stream; then, by way of a portage, down another; and then up a
+third. But you are to consider, in a mountain country, how many streams
+come rolling in from every hand. And how is a gentleman, who is a
+perfect stranger in that part of the world, to tell any one of them
+from any other? Nor was this our only trouble. We were great novices,
+besides, in handling a canoe; the portages were almost beyond our
+strength, so that I have seen us sit down in despair for half an hour
+at a time without one word; and the appearance of a single Indian,
+since we had now no means of speaking to them, would have been in all
+probability the means of our destruction. There is altogether some
+excuse if Ballantrae showed something of a grooming disposition; his
+habit of imputing blame to others, quite as capable as himself, was
+less tolerable, and his language it was not always easy to accept.
+Indeed, he had contracted on board the pirate ship a manner of address
+which was in a high degree unusual between gentlemen; and now, when you
+might say he was in a fever, it increased upon him hugely.
+
+The third day of these wanderings, as we were carrying the canoe upon a
+rocky portage, she fell, and was entirely bilged. The portage was
+between two lakes, both pretty extensive; the track, such as it was,
+opened at both ends upon the water, and on both hands was enclosed by
+the unbroken woods; and the sides of the lakes were quite impassable
+with bog: so that we beheld ourselves not only condemned to go without
+our boat and the greater part of our provisions, but to plunge at once
+into impenetrable thickets and to desert what little guidance we still
+had—the course of the river. Each stuck his pistols in his belt,
+shouldered an axe, made a pack of his treasure and as much food as he
+could stagger under; and deserting the rest of our possessions, even to
+our swords, which would have much embarrassed us among the woods, we
+set forth on this deplorable adventure. The labours of Hercules, so
+finely described by Homer, were a trifle to what we now underwent. Some
+parts of the forest were perfectly dense down to the ground, so that we
+must cut our way like mites in a cheese. In some the bottom was full of
+deep swamp, and the whole wood entirely rotten. I have leaped on a
+great fallen log and sunk to the knees in touchwood; I have sought to
+stay myself, in falling, against what looked to be a solid trunk, and
+the whole thing has whiffed away at my touch like a sheet of paper.
+Stumbling, falling, bogging to the knees, hewing our way, our eyes
+almost put out with twigs and branches, our clothes plucked from our
+bodies, we laboured all day, and it is doubtful if we made two miles.
+What was worse, as we could rarely get a view of the country, and were
+perpetually justled from our path by obstacles, it was impossible even
+to have a guess in what direction we were moving.
+
+A little before sundown, in an open place with a stream, and set about
+with barbarous mountains, Ballantrae threw down his pack. “I will go no
+further,” said he, and bade me light the fire, damning my blood in
+terms not proper for a chairman.
+
+I told him to try to forget he had ever been a pirate, and to remember
+he had been a gentleman.
+
+“Are you mad?” he cried. “Don’t cross me here!” And then, shaking his
+fist at the hills, “To think,” cries he, “that I must leave my bones in
+this miserable wilderness! Would God I had died upon the scaffold like
+a gentleman!” This he said ranting like an actor; and then sat biting
+his fingers and staring on the ground, a most unchristian object.
+
+I took a certain horror of the man, for I thought a soldier and a
+gentleman should confront his end with more philosophy. I made him no
+reply, therefore, in words; and presently the evening fell so chill
+that I was glad, for my own sake, to kindle a fire. And yet God knows,
+in such an open spot, and the country alive with savages, the act was
+little short of lunacy. Ballantrae seemed never to observe me; but at
+last, as I was about parching a little corn, he looked up.
+
+“Have you ever a brother?” said be.
+
+“By the blessing of Heaven,” said I, “not less than five.”
+
+“I have the one,” said he, with a strange voice; and then presently,
+“He shall pay me for all this,” he added. And when I asked him what was
+his brother’s part in our distress, “What!” he cried, “he sits in my
+place, he bears my name, he courts my wife; and I am here alone with a
+damned Irishman in this tooth-chattering desert! Oh, I have been a
+common gull!” he cried.
+
+The explosion was in all ways so foreign to my friend’s nature that I
+was daunted out of all my just susceptibility. Sure, an offensive
+expression, however vivacious, appears a wonderfully small affair in
+circumstances so extreme! But here there is a strange thing to be
+noted. He had only once before referred to the lady with whom he was
+contracted. That was when we came in view of the town of New York, when
+he had told me, if all had their rights, he was now in sight of his own
+property, for Miss Graeme enjoyed a large estate in the province. And
+this was certainly a natural occasion; but now here she was named a
+second time; and what is surely fit to be observed, in this very month,
+which was November, ’47, and _I believe upon that very day as we sat
+among these barbarous mountains_, his brother and Miss Graeme were
+married. I am the least superstitious of men; but the hand of
+Providence is here displayed too openly not to be remarked. [5]
+
+The next day, and the next, were passed in similar labours; Ballantrae
+often deciding on our course by the spinning of a coin; and once, when
+I expostulated on this childishness, he had an odd remark that I have
+never forgotten. “I know no better way,” said he, “to express my scorn
+of human reason.” I think it was the third day that we found the body
+of a Christian, scalped and most abominably mangled, and lying in a
+pudder of his blood; the birds of the desert screaming over him, as
+thick as flies. I cannot describe how dreadfully this sight affected
+us; but it robbed me of all strength and all hope for this world. The
+same day, and only a little after, we were scrambling over a part of
+the forest that had been burned, when Ballantrae, who was a little
+ahead, ducked suddenly behind a fallen trunk. I joined him in this
+shelter, whence we could look abroad without being seen ourselves; and
+in the bottom of the next vale, beheld a large war party of the savages
+going by across our line. There might be the value of a weak battalion
+present; all naked to the waist, blacked with grease and soot, and
+painted with white lead and vermilion, according to their beastly
+habits. They went one behind another like a string of geese, and at a
+quickish trot; so that they took but a little while to rattle by, and
+disappear again among the woods. Yet I suppose we endured a greater
+agony of hesitation and suspense in these few minutes than goes usually
+to a man’s whole life. Whether they were French or English Indians,
+whether they desired scalps or prisoners, whether we should declare
+ourselves upon the chance, or lie quiet and continue the heart-breaking
+business of our journey: sure, I think these were questions to have
+puzzled the brains of Aristotle himself. Ballantrae turned to me with a
+face all wrinkled up and his teeth showing in his mouth, like what I
+have read of people starving; he said no word, but his whole appearance
+was a kind of dreadful question.
+
+“They may be of the English side,” I whispered; “and think! the best we
+could then hope, is to begin this over again.”
+
+“I know—I know,” he said. “Yet it must come to a plunge at last.” And
+he suddenly plucked out his coin, shook it in his closed hands, looked
+at it, and then lay down with his face in the dust.
+
+_Addition by Mr. Mackellar_.—I drop the Chevalier’s narration at this
+point because the couple quarrelled and separated the same day; and the
+Chevalier’s account of the quarrel seems to me (I must confess) quite
+incompatible with the nature of either of the men. Henceforth they
+wandered alone, undergoing extraordinary sufferings; until first one
+and then the other was picked up by a party from Fort St. Frederick.
+Only two things are to be noted. And first (as most important for my
+purpose) that the Master, in the course of his miseries buried his
+treasure, at a point never since discovered, but of which he took a
+drawing in his own blood on the lining of his hat. And second, that on
+his coming thus penniless to the Fort, he was welcomed like a brother
+by the Chevalier, who thence paid his way to France. The simplicity of
+Mr. Burke’s character leads him at this point to praise the Master
+exceedingly; to an eye more worldly wise, it would seem it was the
+Chevalier alone that was to be commended. I have the more pleasure in
+pointing to this really very noble trait of my esteemed correspondent,
+as I fear I may have wounded him immediately before. I have refrained
+from comments on any of his extraordinary and (in my eyes) immoral
+opinions, for I know him to be jealous of respect. But his version of
+the quarrel is really more than I can reproduce; for I knew the Master
+myself, and a man more insusceptible of fear is not conceivable. I
+regret this oversight of the Chevalier’s, and all the more because the
+tenor of his narrative (set aside a few flourishes) strikes me as
+highly ingenuous.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+PERSECUTIONS ENDURED BY MR. HENRY.
+
+
+You can guess on what part of his adventures the Colonel principally
+dwelled. Indeed, if we had heard it all, it is to be thought the
+current of this business had been wholly altered; but the pirate ship
+was very gently touched upon. Nor did I hear the Colonel to an end even
+of that which he was willing to disclose; for Mr. Henry, having for
+some while been plunged in a brown study, rose at last from his seat
+and (reminding the Colonel there were matters that he must attend to)
+bade me follow him immediately to the office.
+
+Once there, he sought no longer to dissemble his concern, walking to
+and fro in the room with a contorted face, and passing his hand
+repeatedly upon his brow.
+
+“We have some business,” he began at last; and there broke off,
+declared we must have wine, and sent for a magnum of the best. This was
+extremely foreign to his habitudes; and what was still more so, when
+the wine had come, he gulped down one glass upon another like a man
+careless of appearances. But the drink steadied him.
+
+“You will scarce be surprised, Mackellar,” says he, “when I tell you
+that my brother—whose safety we are all rejoiced to learn—stands in
+some need of money.”
+
+I told him I had misdoubted as much; but the time was not very
+fortunate, as the stock was low.
+
+“Not mine,” said he. “There is the money for the mortgage.”
+
+I reminded him it was Mrs. Henry’s.
+
+“I will be answerable to my wife,” he cried violently.
+
+“And then,” said I, “there is the mortgage.”
+
+“I know,” said he; “it is on that I would consult you.”
+
+I showed him how unfortunate a time it was to divert this money from
+its destination; and how, by so doing, we must lose the profit of our
+past economies, and plunge back the estate into the mire. I even took
+the liberty to plead with him; and when he still opposed me with a
+shake of the head and a bitter dogged smile, my zeal quite carried me
+beyond my place. “This is midsummer madness,” cried I; “and I for one
+will be no party to it.”
+
+“You speak as though I did it for my pleasure,” says he. “But I have a
+child now; and, besides, I love order; and to say the honest truth,
+Mackellar, I had begun to take a pride in the estates.” He gloomed for
+a moment. “But what would you have?” he went on. “Nothing is mine,
+nothing. This day’s news has knocked the bottom out of my life. I have
+only the name and the shadow of things—only the shadow; there is no
+substance in my rights.”
+
+“They will prove substantial enough before a court,” said I.
+
+He looked at me with a burning eye, and seemed to repress the word upon
+his lips; and I repented what I had said, for I saw that while he spoke
+of the estate he had still a side-thought to his marriage. And then, of
+a sudden, he twitched the letter from his pocket, where it lay all
+crumpled, smoothed it violently on the table, and read these words to
+me with a trembling tongue: “‘My dear Jacob’—This is how he begins!”
+cries he—“‘My dear Jacob, I once called you so, you may remember; and
+you have now done the business, and flung my heels as high as Criffel.’
+What do you think of that, Mackellar,” says he, “from an only brother?
+I declare to God I liked him very well; I was always staunch to him;
+and this is how he writes! But I will not sit down under the
+imputation”—walking to and fro—“I am as good as he; I am a better man
+than he, I call on God to prove it! I cannot give him all the monstrous
+sum he asks; he knows the estate to be incompetent; but I will give him
+what I have, and it is more than he expects. I have borne all this too
+long. See what he writes further on; read it for yourself: ‘I know you
+are a niggardly dog.’ A niggardly dog! I niggardly? Is that true,
+Mackellar? You think it is?” I really thought he would have struck me
+at that. “Oh, you all think so! Well, you shall see, and he shall see,
+and God shall see. If I ruin the estate and go barefoot, I shall stuff
+this bloodsucker. Let him ask all—all, and he shall have it! It is all
+his by rights. Ah!” he cried, “and I foresaw all this, and worse, when
+he would not let me go.” He poured out another glass of wine, and was
+about to carry it to his lips, when I made so bold as to lay a finger
+on his arm. He stopped a moment. “You are right,” said he, and flung
+glass and all in the fireplace. “Come, let us count the money.”
+
+I durst no longer oppose him; indeed, I was very much affected by the
+sight of so much disorder in a man usually so controlled; and we sat
+down together, counted the money, and made it up in packets for the
+greater ease of Colonel Burke, who was to be the bearer. This done, Mr.
+Henry returned to the hall, where he and my old lord sat all night
+through with their guest.
+
+A little before dawn I was called and set out with the Colonel. He
+would scarce have liked a less responsible convoy, for he was a man who
+valued himself; nor could we afford him one more dignified, for Mr.
+Henry must not appear with the freetraders. It was a very bitter
+morning of wind, and as we went down through the long shrubbery the
+Colonel held himself muffled in his cloak.
+
+“Sir,” said I, “this is a great sum of money that your friend requires.
+I must suppose his necessities to be very great.”
+
+“We must suppose so,” says he, I thought drily; but perhaps it was the
+cloak about his mouth.
+
+“I am only a servant of the family,” said I. “You may deal openly with
+me. I think we are likely to get little good by him?”
+
+“My dear man,” said the Colonel, “Ballantrae is a gentleman of the most
+eminent natural abilities, and a man that I admire, and that I revere,
+to the very ground he treads on.” And then he seemed to me to pause
+like one in a difficulty.
+
+“But for all that,” said I, “we are likely to get little good by him?”
+
+“Sure, and you can have it your own way, my dear man,” says the
+Colonel.
+
+By this time we had come to the side of the creek, where the boat
+awaited him. “Well,” said be, “I am sure I am very much your debtor for
+all your civility, Mr. Whatever-your-name-is; and just as a last word,
+and since you show so much intelligent interest, I will mention a small
+circumstance that may be of use to the family. For I believe my friend
+omitted to mention that he has the largest pension on the Scots Fund of
+any refugee in Paris; and it’s the more disgraceful, sir,” cries the
+Colonel, warming, “because there’s not one dirty penny for myself.”
+
+He cocked his hat at me, as if I had been to blame for this partiality;
+then changed again into his usual swaggering civility, shook me by the
+hand, and set off down to the boat, with the money under his arms, and
+whistling as he went the pathetic air of _Shule Aroon_. It was the
+first time I had heard that tune; I was to hear it again, words and
+all, as you shall learn, but I remember how that little stave of it ran
+in my head after the freetraders had bade him “Wheesht, in the deil’s
+name,” and the grating of the oars had taken its place, and I stood and
+watched the dawn creeping on the sea, and the boat drawing away, and
+the lugger lying with her foresail backed awaiting it.
+
+ The gap made in our money was a sore embarrassment, and, among other
+ consequences, it had this: that I must ride to Edinburgh, and there
+ raise a new loan on very questionable terms to keep the old afloat;
+ and was thus, for close upon three weeks, absent from the house of
+ Durrisdeer.
+
+What passed in the interval I had none to tell me, but I found Mrs.
+Henry, upon my return, much changed in her demeanour. The old talks
+with my lord for the most part pretermitted; a certain deprecation
+visible towards her husband, to whom I thought she addressed herself
+more often; and, for one thing, she was now greatly wrapped up in Miss
+Katharine. You would think the change was agreeable to Mr. Henry; no
+such matter! To the contrary, every circumstance of alteration was a
+stab to him; he read in each the avowal of her truant fancies. That
+constancy to the Master of which she was proud while she supposed him
+dead, she had to blush for now she knew he was alive, and these blushes
+were the hated spring of her new conduct. I am to conceal no truth; and
+I will here say plainly, I think this was the period in which Mr. Henry
+showed the worst. He contained himself, indeed, in public; but there
+was a deep-seated irritation visible underneath. With me, from whom he
+had less concealment, he was often grossly unjust, and even for his
+wife he would sometimes have a sharp retort: perhaps when she had
+ruffled him with some unwonted kindness; perhaps upon no tangible
+occasion, the mere habitual tenor of the man’s annoyance bursting
+spontaneously forth. When he would thus forget himself (a thing so
+strangely out of keeping with the terms of their relation), there went
+a shook through the whole company, and the pair would look upon each
+other in a kind of pained amazement.
+
+All the time, too, while he was injuring himself by this defect of
+temper, he was hurting his position by a silence, of which I scarce
+know whether to say it was the child of generosity or pride. The
+freetraders came again and again, bringing messengers from the Master,
+and none departed empty-handed. I never durst reason with Mr. Henry; he
+gave what was asked of him in a kind of noble rage. Perhaps because he
+knew he was by nature inclining to the parsimonious, he took a
+backforemost pleasure in the recklessness with which he supplied his
+brother’s exigence. Perhaps the falsity of the position would have
+spurred a humbler man into the same excess. But the estate (if I may
+say so) groaned under it; our daily expenses were shorn lower and
+lower; the stables were emptied, all but four roadsters; servants were
+discharged, which raised a dreadful murmuring in the country, and
+heated up the old disfavour upon Mr. Henry; and at last the yearly
+visit to Edinburgh must be discontinued.
+
+This was in 1756. You are to suppose that for seven years this
+bloodsucker had been drawing the life’s blood from Durrisdeer, and that
+all this time my patron had held his peace. It was an effect of
+devilish malice in the Master that he addressed Mr. Henry alone upon
+the matter of his demands, and there was never a word to my lord. The
+family had looked on, wondering at our economies. They had lamented, I
+have no doubt, that my patron had become so great a miser—a fault
+always despicable, but in the young abhorrent, and Mr. Henry was not
+yet thirty years of age. Still, he had managed the business of
+Durrisdeer almost from a boy; and they bore with these changes in a
+silence as proud and bitter as his own, until the coping-stone of the
+Edinburgh visit.
+
+At this time I believe my patron and his wife were rarely together,
+save at meals. Immediately on the back of Colonel Burke’s announcement
+Mrs. Henry made palpable advances; you might say she had laid a sort of
+timid court to her husband, different, indeed, from her former manner
+of unconcern and distance. I never had the heart to blame Mr. Henry
+because he recoiled from these advances; nor yet to censure the wife,
+when she was cut to the quick by their rejection. But the result was an
+entire estrangement, so that (as I say) they rarely spoke, except at
+meals. Even the matter of the Edinburgh visit was first broached at
+table, and it chanced that Mrs. Henry was that day ailing and
+querulous. She had no sooner understood her husband’s meaning than the
+red flew in her face.
+
+“At last,” she cried, “this is too much! Heaven knows what pleasure I
+have in my life, that I should be denied my only consolation. These
+shameful proclivities must be trod down; we are already a mark and an
+eyesore in the neighbourhood. I will not endure this fresh insanity.”
+
+“I cannot afford it,” says Mr. Henry.
+
+“Afford?” she cried. “For shame! But I have money of my own.”
+
+“That is all mine, madam, by marriage,” he snarled, and instantly left
+the room.
+
+My old lord threw up his hands to Heaven, and he and his daughter,
+withdrawing to the chimney, gave me a broad hint to be gone. I found
+Mr. Henry in his usual retreat, the steward’s room, perched on the end
+of the table, and plunging his penknife in it with a very ugly
+countenance.
+
+“Mr. Henry,” said I, “you do yourself too much injustice, and it is
+time this should cease.”
+
+“Oh!” cries he, “nobody minds here. They think it only natural. I have
+shameful proclivities. I am a niggardly dog,” and he drove his knife up
+to the hilt. “But I will show that fellow,” he cried with an oath, “I
+will show him which is the more generous.”
+
+“This is no generosity,” said I; “this is only pride.”
+
+“Do you think I want morality?” he asked.
+
+I thought he wanted help, and I should give it him, willy-nilly; and no
+sooner was Mrs. Henry gone to her room than I presented myself at her
+door and sought admittance.
+
+She openly showed her wonder. “What do you want with me, Mr.
+Mackellar?” said she.
+
+“The Lord knows, madam,” says I, “I have never troubled you before with
+any freedoms; but this thing lies too hard upon my conscience, and it
+will out. Is it possible that two people can be so blind as you and my
+lord? and have lived all these years with a noble gentleman like Mr.
+Henry, and understand so little of his nature?”
+
+“What does this mean?” she cried.
+
+“Do you not know where his money goes to? his—and yours—and the money
+for the very wine he does not drink at table?” I went on. “To Paris—to
+that man! Eight thousand pounds has he had of us in seven years, and my
+patron fool enough to keep it secret!”
+
+“Eight thousand pounds!” she repeated. “It in impossible; the estate is
+not sufficient.”
+
+“God knows how we have sweated farthings to produce it,” said I. “But
+eight thousand and sixty is the sum, beside odd shillings. And if you
+can think my patron miserly after that, this shall be my last
+interference.”
+
+“You need say no more, Mr. Mackellar,” said she. “You have done most
+properly in what you too modestly call your interference. I am much to
+blame; you must think me indeed a very unobservant wife” (looking upon
+me with a strange smile), “but I shall put this right at once. The
+Master was always of a very thoughtless nature; but his heart is
+excellent; he is the soul of generosity. I shall write to him myself.
+You cannot think how you have pained me by this communication.”
+
+“Indeed, madam, I had hoped to have pleased you,” said I, for I raged
+to see her still thinking of the Master.
+
+“And pleased,” said she, “and pleased me of course.”
+
+That same day (I will not say but what I watched) I had the
+satisfaction to see Mr. Henry come from his wife’s room in a state most
+unlike himself; for his face was all bloated with weeping, and yet he
+seemed to me to walk upon the air. By this, I was sure his wife had
+made him full amends for once. “Ah,” thought I to myself, “I have done
+a brave stroke this day.”
+
+On the morrow, as I was seated at my books, Mr. Henry came in softly
+behind me, took me by the shoulders, and shook me in a manner of
+playfulness. “I find you are a faithless fellow after all,” says he,
+which was his only reference to my part; but the tone he spoke in was
+more to me than any eloquence of protestation. Nor was this all I had
+effected; for when the next messenger came (as he did not long
+afterwards) from the Master, he got nothing away with him but a letter.
+For some while back it had been I myself who had conducted these
+affairs; Mr. Henry not setting pen to paper, and I only in the dryest
+and most formal terms. But this letter I did not even see; it would
+scarce be pleasant reading, for Mr. Henry felt he had his wife behind
+him for once, and I observed, on the day it was despatched, he had a
+very gratified expression.
+
+Things went better now in the family, though it could scarce be
+pretended they went well. There was now at least no misconception;
+there was kindness upon all sides; and I believe my patron and his wife
+might again have drawn together if he could but have pocketed his
+pride, and she forgot (what was the ground of all) her brooding on
+another man. It is wonderful how a private thought leaks out; it is
+wonderful to me now how we should all have followed the current of her
+sentiments; and though she bore herself quietly, and had a very even
+disposition, yet we should have known whenever her fancy ran to Paris.
+And would not any one have thought that my disclosure must have rooted
+up that idol? I think there is the devil in women: all these years
+passed, never a sight of the man, little enough kindness to remember
+(by all accounts) even while she had him, the notion of his death
+intervening, his heartless rapacity laid bare to her; that all should
+not do, and she must still keep the best place in her heart for this
+accursed fellow, is a thing to make a plain man rage. I had never much
+natural sympathy for the passion of love; but this unreason in my
+patron’s wife disgusted me outright with the whole matter. I remember
+checking a maid because she sang some bairnly kickshaw while my mind
+was thus engaged; and my asperity brought about my ears the enmity of
+all the petticoats about the house; of which I reeked very little, but
+it amused Mr. Henry, who rallied me much upon our joint unpopularity.
+It is strange enough (for my own mother was certainly one of the salt
+of the earth, and my Aunt Dickson, who paid my fees at the University,
+a very notable woman), but I have never had much toleration for the
+female sex, possibly not much understanding; and being far from a bold
+man, I have ever shunned their company. Not only do I see no cause to
+regret this diffidence in myself, but have invariably remarked the most
+unhappy consequences follow those who were less wise. So much I thought
+proper to set down, lest I show myself unjust to Mrs. Henry. And,
+besides, the remark arose naturally, on a re-perusal of the letter
+which was the next step in these affairs, and reached me, to my sincere
+astonishment, by a private hand, some week or so after the departure of
+the last messenger.
+
+
+_Letter from Colonel_ Burke (_afterwards Chevalier_) _to_ Mr.
+Mackellar.
+Troyes in Champagne,
+_July_ 12, 1756
+
+
+My Dear Sir,—You will doubtless be surprised to receive a communication
+from one so little known to you; but on the occasion I had the good
+fortune to rencounter you at Durrisdeer, I remarked you for a young man
+of a solid gravity of character: a qualification which I profess I
+admire and revere next to natural genius or the bold chivalrous spirit
+of the soldier. I was, besides, interested in the noble family which
+you have the honour to serve, or (to speak more by the book) to be the
+humble and respected friend of; and a conversation I had the pleasure
+to have with you very early in the morning has remained much upon my
+mind.
+
+Being the other day in Paris, on a visit from this famous city, where I
+am in garrison, I took occasion to inquire your name (which I profess I
+had forgot) at my friend, the Master of B.; and a fair opportunity
+occurring, I write to inform you of what’s new.
+
+The Master of B. (when we had last some talk of him together) was in
+receipt, as I think I then told you, of a highly advantageous pension
+on the Scots Fund. He next received a company, and was soon after
+advanced to a regiment of his own. My dear sir, I do not offer to
+explain this circumstance; any more than why I myself, who have rid at
+the right hand of Princes, should be fubbed off with a pair of colours
+and sent to rot in a hole at the bottom of the province. Accustomed as
+I am to Courts, I cannot but feel it is no atmosphere for a plain
+soldier; and I could never hope to advance by similar means, even could
+I stoop to the endeavour. But our friend has a particular aptitude to
+succeed by the means of ladies; and if all be true that I have heard,
+he enjoyed a remarkable protection. It is like this turned against him;
+for when I had the honour to shake him by the hand, he was but newly
+released from the Bastille, where he had been cast on a sealed letter;
+and, though now released, has both lost his regiment and his pension.
+My dear sir, the loyalty of a plain Irishman will ultimately succeed in
+the place of craft; as I am sure a gentleman of your probity will
+agree.
+
+Now, sir, the Master is a man whose genius I admire beyond expression,
+and, besides, he is my friend; but I thought a little word of this
+revolution in his fortunes would not come amiss, for, in my opinion,
+the man’s desperate. He spoke, when I saw him, of a trip to India
+(whither I am myself in some hope of accompanying my illustrious
+countryman, Mr. Lally); but for this he would require (as I understood)
+more money than was readily at his command. You may have heard a
+military proverb: that it is a good thing to make a bridge of gold to a
+flying enemy? I trust you will take my meaning and I subscribe myself,
+with proper respects to my Lord Durrisdeer, to his son, and to the
+beauteous Mrs. Durie,
+
+My dear Sir,
+Your obedient humble servant,
+Francis Burke.
+
+
+This missive I carried at once to Mr. Henry; and I think there was but
+the one thought between the two of us: that it had come a week too
+late. I made haste to send an answer to Colonel Burke, in which I
+begged him, if he should see the Master, to assure him his next
+messenger would be attended to. But with all my haste I was not in time
+to avert what was impending; the arrow had been drawn, it must now fly.
+I could almost doubt the power of Providence (and certainly His will)
+to stay the issue of events; and it is a strange thought, how many of
+us had been storing up the elements of this catastrophe, for how long a
+time, and with how blind an ignorance of what we did.
+
+ From the coming of the Colonel’s letter, I had a spyglass in my room,
+ began to drop questions to the tenant folk, and as there was no great
+ secrecy observed, and the freetrade (in our part) went by force as
+ much as stealth, I had soon got together a knowledge of the signals in
+ use, and knew pretty well to an hour when any messenger might be
+ expected. I say, I questioned the tenants; for with the traders
+ themselves, desperate blades that went habitually armed, I could never
+ bring myself to meddle willingly. Indeed, by what proved in the sequel
+ an unhappy chance, I was an object of scorn to some of these
+ braggadocios; who had not only gratified me with a nickname, but
+ catching me one night upon a by-path, and being all (as they would
+ have said) somewhat merry, had caused me to dance for their diversion.
+ The method employed was that of cruelly chipping at my toes with naked
+ cutlasses, shouting at the same time “Square-Toes”; and though they
+ did me no bodily mischief, I was none the less deplorably affected,
+ and was indeed for several days confined to my bed: a scandal on the
+ state of Scotland on which no comment is required.
+
+It happened on the afternoon of November 7th, in this same unfortunate
+year, that I espied, during my walk, the smoke of a beacon fire upon
+the Muckleross. It was drawing near time for my return; but the
+uneasiness upon my spirits was that day so great that I must burst
+through the thickets to the edge of what they call the Craig Head. The
+sun was already down, but there was still a broad light in the west,
+which showed me some of the smugglers treading out their signal fire
+upon the Ross, and in the bay the lugger lying with her sails brailed
+up. She was plainly but new come to anchor, and yet the skiff was
+already lowered and pulling for the landing-place at the end of the
+long shrubbery. And this I knew could signify but one thing, the coming
+of a messenger for Durrisdeer.
+
+I laid aside the remainder of my terrors, clambered down the brae—a
+place I had never ventured through before, and was hid among the
+shore-side thickets in time to see the boat touch. Captain Crail
+himself was steering, a thing not usual; by his side there sat a
+passenger; and the men gave way with difficulty, being hampered with
+near upon half a dozen portmanteaus, great and small. But the business
+of landing was briskly carried through; and presently the baggage was
+all tumbled on shore, the boat on its return voyage to the lugger, and
+the passenger standing alone upon the point of rock, a tall slender
+figure of a gentleman, habited in black, with a sword by his side and a
+walking-cane upon his wrist. As he so stood, he waved the cane to
+Captain Crail by way of salutation, with something both of grace and
+mockery that wrote the gesture deeply on my mind.
+
+No sooner was the boat away with my sworn enemies than I took a sort of
+half courage, came forth to the margin of the thicket, and there halted
+again, my mind being greatly pulled about between natural diffidence
+and a dark foreboding of the truth. Indeed, I might have stood there
+swithering all night, had not the stranger turned, spied me through the
+mists, which were beginning to fall, and waved and cried on me to draw
+near. I did so with a heart like lead.
+
+“Here, my good man,” said he, in the English accent, “there are some
+things for Durrisdeer.”
+
+I was now near enough to see him, a very handsome figure and
+countenance, swarthy, lean, long, with a quick, alert, black look, as
+of one who was a fighter, and accustomed to command; upon one cheek he
+had a mole, not unbecoming; a large diamond sparkled on his hand; his
+clothes, although of the one hue, were of a French and foppish design;
+his ruffles, which he wore longer than common, of exquisite lace; and I
+wondered the more to see him in such a guise when he was but newly
+landed from a dirty smuggling lugger. At the same time he had a better
+look at me, toised me a second time sharply, and then smiled.
+
+“I wager, my friend,” says he, “that I know both your name and your
+nickname. I divined these very clothes upon your hand of writing, Mr.
+Mackellar.”
+
+At these words I fell to shaking.
+
+“Oh,” says he, “you need not be afraid of me. I bear no malice for your
+tedious letters; and it is my purpose to employ you a good deal. You
+may call me Mr. Bally: it is the name I have assumed; or rather (since
+I am addressing so great a precision) it is so I have curtailed my own.
+Come now, pick up that and that”—indicating two of the portmanteaus.
+“That will be as much as you are fit to bear, and the rest can very
+well wait. Come, lose no more time, if you please.”
+
+His tone was so cutting that I managed to do as he bid by a sort of
+instinct, my mind being all the time quite lost. No sooner had I picked
+up the portmanteaus than he turned his back and marched off through the
+long shrubbery, where it began already to be dusk, for the wood is
+thick and evergreen. I followed behind, loaded almost to the dust,
+though I profess I was not conscious of the burthen; being swallowed up
+in the monstrosity of this return, and my mind flying like a weaver’s
+shuttle.
+
+On a sudden I set the portmanteaus to the ground and halted. He turned
+and looked back at me.
+
+“Well?” said he.
+
+“You are the Master of Ballantrae?”
+
+“You will do me the justice to observe,” says he, “I have made no
+secret with the astute Mackellar.”
+
+“And in the name of God,” cries I, “what brings you here? Go back,
+while it is yet time.”
+
+“I thank you,” said he. “Your master has chosen this way, and not I;
+but since he has made the choice, he (and you also) must abide by the
+result. And now pick up these things of mine, which you have set down
+in a very boggy place, and attend to that which I have made your
+business.”
+
+But I had no thought now of obedience; I came straight up to him. “If
+nothing will move you to go back,” said I; “though, sure, under all the
+circumstances, any Christian or even any gentleman would scruple to go
+forward . . . ”
+
+“These are gratifying expressions,” he threw in.
+
+“If nothing will move you to go back,” I continued, “there are still
+some decencies to be observed. Wait here with your baggage, and I will
+go forward and prepare your family. Your father is an old man; and . .
+. ” I stumbled . . . “there are decencies to be observed.”
+
+“Truly,” said he, “this Mackellar improves upon acquaintance. But look
+you here, my man, and understand it once for all—you waste your breath
+upon me, and I go my own way with inevitable motion.”
+
+“Ah!” says I. “Is that so? We shall see then!”
+
+And I turned and took to my heels for Durrisdeer. He clutched at me and
+cried out angrily, and then I believe I heard him laugh, and then I am
+certain he pursued me for a step or two, and (I suppose) desisted. One
+thing at least is sure, that I came but a few minutes later to the door
+of the great house, nearly strangled for the lack of breath, but quite
+alone. Straight up the stair I ran, and burst into the hall, and
+stopped before the family without the power of speech; but I must have
+carried my story in my looks, for they rose out of their places and
+stared on me like changelings.
+
+“He has come,” I panted out at last.
+
+“He?” said Mr. Henry.
+
+“Himself,” said I.
+
+“My son?” cried my lord. “Imprudent, imprudent boy! Oh, could he not
+stay where he was safe!”
+
+Never a word says Mrs. Henry; nor did I look at her, I scarce knew why.
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Henry, with a very deep breath, “and where is he?”
+
+“I left him in the long shrubbery,” said I.
+
+“Take me to him,” said he.
+
+So we went out together, he and I, without another word from any one;
+and in the midst of the gravelled plot encountered the Master strolling
+up, whistling as he came, and beating the air with his cane. There was
+still light enough overhead to recognise, though not to read, a
+countenance.
+
+“Ah! Jacob,” says the Master. “So here is Esau back.”
+
+“James,” says Mr. Henry, “for God’s sake, call me by my name. I will
+not pretend that I am glad to see you; but I would fain make you as
+welcome as I can in the house of our fathers.”
+
+“Or in _my_ house? or _yours_?” says the Master. “Which were you about
+to say? But this is an old sore, and we need not rub it. If you would
+not share with me in Paris, I hope you will yet scarce deny your elder
+brother a corner of the fire at Durrisdeer?”
+
+“That is very idle speech,” replied Mr. Henry. “And you understand the
+power of your position excellently well.”
+
+“Why, I believe I do,” said the other with a little laugh. And this,
+though they had never touched hands, was (as we may say) the end of the
+brothers’ meeting; for at this the Master turned to me and bade me
+fetch his baggage.
+
+I, on my side, turned to Mr. Henry for a confirmation; perhaps with
+some defiance.
+
+“As long as the Master is here, Mr. Mackellar, you will very much
+oblige me by regarding his wishes as you would my own,” says Mr. Henry.
+“We are constantly troubling you: will you be so good as send one of
+the servants?”—with an accent on the word.
+
+If this speech were anything at all, it was surely a well-deserved
+reproof upon the stranger; and yet, so devilish was his impudence, he
+twisted it the other way.
+
+“And shall we be common enough to say ‘Sneck up’?” inquires he softly,
+looking upon me sideways.
+
+Had a kingdom depended on the act, I could not have trusted myself in
+words; even to call a servant was beyond me; I had rather serve the man
+myself than speak; and I turned away in silence and went into the long
+shrubbery, with a heart full of anger and despair. It was dark under
+the trees, and I walked before me and forgot what business I was come
+upon, till I near broke my shin on the portmanteaus. Then it was that I
+remarked a strange particular; for whereas I had before carried both
+and scarce observed it, it was now as much as I could do to manage one.
+And this, as it forced me to make two journeys, kept me the longer from
+the hall.
+
+When I got there, the business of welcome was over long ago; the
+company was already at supper; and by an oversight that cut me to the
+quick, my place had been forgotten. I had seen one side of the Master’s
+return; now I was to see the other. It was he who first remarked my
+coming in and standing back (as I did) in some annoyance. He jumped
+from his seat.
+
+“And if I have not got the good Mackellar’s place!” cries he. “John,
+lay another for Mr. Bally; I protest he will disturb no one, and your
+table is big enough for all.”
+
+I could scarce credit my ears, nor yet my senses, when he took me by
+the shoulders and thrust me, laughing, into my own place—such an
+affectionate playfulness was in his voice. And while John laid the
+fresh place for him (a thing on which he still insisted), he went and
+leaned on his father’s chair and looked down upon him, and the old man
+turned about and looked upwards on his son, with such a pleasant mutual
+tenderness that I could have carried my hand to my head in mere
+amazement.
+
+Yet all was of a piece. Never a harsh word fell from him, never a sneer
+showed upon his lip. He had laid aside even his cutting English accent,
+and spoke with the kindly Scots’ tongue, that set a value on
+affectionate words; and though his manners had a graceful elegance
+mighty foreign to our ways in Durrisdeer, it was still a homely
+courtliness, that did not shame but flattered us. All that, he did
+throughout the meal, indeed, drinking wine with me with a notable
+respect, turning about for a pleasant word with John, fondling his
+father’s hand, breaking into little merry tales of his adventures,
+calling up the past with happy reference—all he did was so becoming,
+and himself so handsome, that I could scarce wonder if my lord and Mrs.
+Henry sat about the board with radiant faces, or if John waited behind
+with dropping tears.
+
+As soon as supper was over, Mrs. Henry rose to withdraw.
+
+“This was never your way, Alison,” said he.
+
+“It is my way now,” she replied: which was notoriously false, “and I
+will give you a good-night, James, and a welcome—from the dead,” said
+she, and her voice dropped and trembled.
+
+Poor Mr. Henry, who had made rather a heavy figure through the meal,
+was more concerned than ever; pleased to see his wife withdraw, and yet
+half displeased, as he thought upon the cause of it; and the next
+moment altogether dashed by the fervour of her speech.
+
+On my part, I thought I was now one too many; and was stealing after
+Mrs. Henry, when the Master saw me.
+
+“Now, Mr. Mackellar,” says he, “I take this near on an unfriendliness.
+I cannot have you go: this is to make a stranger of the prodigal son;
+and let me remind you where—in his own father’s house! Come, sit ye
+down, and drink another glass with Mr. Bally.”
+
+“Ay, ay, Mr. Mackellar,” says my lord, “we must not make a stranger
+either of him or you. I have been telling my son,” he added, his voice
+brightening as usual on the word, “how much we valued all your friendly
+service.”
+
+So I sat there, silent, till my usual hour; and might have been almost
+deceived in the man’s nature but for one passage, in which his perfidy
+appeared too plain. Here was the passage; of which, after what he knows
+of the brothers’ meeting, the reader shall consider for himself. Mr.
+Henry sitting somewhat dully, in spite of his best endeavours to carry
+things before my lord, up jumps the Master, passes about the board, and
+claps his brother on the shoulder.
+
+“Come, come, _Hairry lad_,” says he, with a broad accent such as they
+must have used together when they were boys, “you must not be downcast
+because your brother has come home. All’s yours, that’s sure enough,
+and little I grudge it you. Neither must you grudge me my place beside
+my father’s fire.”
+
+“And that is too true, Henry,” says my old lord with a little frown, a
+thing rare with him. “You have been the elder brother of the parable in
+the good sense; you must be careful of the other.”
+
+“I am easily put in the wrong,” said Mr. Henry.
+
+“Who puts you in the wrong?” cried my lord, I thought very tartly for
+so mild a man. “You have earned my gratitude and your brother’s many
+thousand times: you may count on its endurance; and let that suffice.”
+
+“Ay, Harry, that you may,” said the Master; and I thought Mr. Henry
+looked at him with a kind of wildness in his eye.
+
+On all the miserable business that now followed, I have four questions
+that I asked myself often at the time and ask myself still:—Was the man
+moved by a particular sentiment against Mr. Henry? or by what he
+thought to be his interest? or by a mere delight in cruelty such as
+cats display and theologians tell us of the devil? or by what he would
+have called love? My common opinion halts among the three first; but
+perhaps there lay at the spring of his behaviour an element of all. As
+thus:—Animosity to Mr. Henry would explain his hateful usage of him
+when they were alone; the interests he came to serve would explain his
+very different attitude before my lord; that and some spice of a design
+of gallantry, his care to stand well with Mrs. Henry; and the pleasure
+of malice for itself, the pains he was continually at to mingle and
+oppose these lines of conduct.
+
+Partly because I was a very open friend to my patron, partly because in
+my letters to Paris I had often given myself some freedom of
+remonstrance, I was included in his diabolical amusement. When I was
+alone with him, he pursued me with sneers; before the family he used me
+with the extreme of friendly condescension. This was not only painful
+in itself; not only did it put me continually in the wrong; but there
+was in it an element of insult indescribable. That he should thus leave
+me out in his dissimulation, as though even my testimony were too
+despicable to be considered, galled me to the blood. But what it was to
+me is not worth notice. I make but memorandum of it here; and chiefly
+for this reason, that it had one good result, and gave me the quicker
+sense of Mr. Henry’s martyrdom.
+
+It was on him the burthen fell. How was he to respond to the public
+advances of one who never lost a chance of gibing him in private? How
+was he to smile back on the deceiver and the insulter? He was condemned
+to seem ungracious. He was condemned to silence. Had he been less
+proud, had he spoken, who would have credited the truth? The acted
+calumny had done its work; my lord and Mrs. Henry were the daily
+witnesses of what went on; they could have sworn in court that the
+Master was a model of long-suffering good-nature, and Mr. Henry a
+pattern of jealousy and thanklessness. And ugly enough as these must
+have appeared in any one, they seemed tenfold uglier in Mr. Henry; for
+who could forget that the Master lay in peril of his life, and that he
+had already lost his mistress, his title, and his fortune?
+
+“Henry, will you ride with me?” asks the Master one day.
+
+And Mr. Henry, who had been goaded by the man all morning, raps out: “I
+will not.”
+
+“I sometimes wish you would be kinder, Henry,” says the other,
+wistfully.
+
+I give this for a specimen; but such scenes befell continually. Small
+wonder if Mr. Henry was blamed; small wonder if I fretted myself into
+something near upon a bilious fever; nay, and at the mere recollection
+feel a bitterness in my blood.
+
+Sure, never in this world was a more diabolical contrivance: so
+perfidious, so simple, so impossible to combat. And yet I think again,
+and I think always, Mrs. Henry might have read between the lines; she
+might have had more knowledge of her husband’s nature; after all these
+years of marriage she might have commanded or captured his confidence.
+And my old lord, too—that very watchful gentleman—where was all his
+observation? But, for one thing, the deceit was practised by a master
+hand, and might have gulled an angel. For another (in the case of Mrs.
+Henry), I have observed there are no persons so far away as those who
+are both married and estranged, so that they seem out of ear-shot or to
+have no common tongue. For a third (in the case of both of these
+spectators), they were blinded by old ingrained predilection. And for a
+fourth, the risk the Master was supposed to stand in (supposed, I
+say—you will soon hear why) made it seem the more ungenerous to
+criticise; and, keeping them in a perpetual tender solicitude about his
+life, blinded them the more effectually to his faults.
+
+It was during this time that I perceived most clearly the effect of
+manner, and was led to lament most deeply the plainness of my own. Mr.
+Henry had the essence of a gentleman; when he was moved, when there was
+any call of circumstance, he could play his part with dignity and
+spirit; but in the day’s commerce (it is idle to deny it) he fell short
+of the ornamental. The Master (on the other hand) had never a movement
+but it commanded him. So it befell that when the one appeared gracious
+and the other ungracious, every trick of their bodies seemed to call
+out confirmation. Not that alone: but the more deeply Mr. Henry
+floundered in his brother’s toils, the more clownish he grew; and the
+more the Master enjoyed his spiteful entertainment, the more
+engagingly, the more smilingly, he went! So that the plot, by its own
+scope and progress, furthered and confirmed itself.
+
+It was one of the man’s arts to use the peril in which (as I say) he
+was supposed to stand. He spoke of it to those who loved him with a
+gentle pleasantry, which made it the more touching. To Mr. Henry he
+used it as a cruel weapon of offence. I remember his laying his finger
+on the clean lozenge of the painted window one day when we three were
+alone together in the hall. “Here went your lucky guinea, Jacob,” said
+he. And when Mr. Henry only looked upon him darkly, “Oh!” he added,
+“you need not look such impotent malice, my good fly. You can be rid of
+your spider when you please. How long, O Lord? When are you to be
+wrought to the point of a denunciation, scrupulous brother? It is one
+of my interests in this dreary hole. I ever loved experiment.” Still
+Mr. Henry only stared upon him with a grooming brow, and a changed
+colour; and at last the Master broke out in a laugh and clapped him on
+the shoulder, calling him a sulky dog. At this my patron leaped back
+with a gesture I thought very dangerous; and I must suppose the Master
+thought so too, for he looked the least in the world discountenance,
+and I do not remember him again to have laid hands on Mr. Henry.
+
+But though he had his peril always on his lips in the one way or the
+other, I thought his conduct strangely incautious, and began to fancy
+the Government—who had set a price upon his head—was gone sound asleep.
+I will not deny I was tempted with the wish to denounce him; but two
+thoughts withheld me: one, that if he were thus to end his life upon an
+honourable scaffold, the man would be canonised for good in the minds
+of his father and my patron’s wife; the other, that if I was anyway
+mingled in the matter, Mr. Henry himself would scarce escape some
+glancings of suspicion. And in the meanwhile our enemy went in and out
+more than I could have thought possible, the fact that he was home
+again was buzzed about all the country-side, and yet he was never
+stirred. Of all these so-many and so-different persons who were
+acquainted with his presence, none had the least greed—as I used to say
+in my annoyance—or the least loyalty; and the man rode here and
+there—fully more welcome, considering the lees of old unpopularity,
+than Mr. Henry—and considering the freetraders, far safer than myself.
+
+Not but what he had a trouble of his own; and this, as it brought about
+the gravest consequences, I must now relate. The reader will scarce
+have forgotten Jessie Broun; her way of life was much among the
+smuggling party; Captain Crail himself was of her intimates; and she
+had early word of Mr. Bally’s presence at the house. In my opinion, she
+had long ceased to care two straws for the Master’s person; but it was
+become her habit to connect herself continually with the Master’s name;
+that was the ground of all her play-acting; and so now, when he was
+back, she thought she owed it to herself to grow a haunter of the
+neighbourhood of Durrisdeer. The Master could scarce go abroad but she
+was there in wait for him; a scandalous figure of a woman, not often
+sober; hailing him wildly as “her bonny laddie,” quoting pedlar’s
+poetry, and, as I receive the story, even seeking to weep upon his
+neck. I own I rubbed my hands over this persecution; but the Master,
+who laid so much upon others, was himself the least patient of men.
+There were strange scenes enacted in the policies. Some say he took his
+cane to her, and Jessie fell back upon her former weapons—stones. It is
+certain at least that he made a motion to Captain Crail to have the
+woman trepanned, and that the Captain refused the proposition with
+uncommon vehemence. And the end of the matter was victory for Jessie.
+Money was got together; an interview took place, in which my proud
+gentleman must consent to be kissed and wept upon; and the woman was
+set up in a public of her own, somewhere on Solway side (but I forget
+where), and, by the only news I ever had of it, extremely
+ill-frequented.
+
+This is to look forward. After Jessie had been but a little while upon
+his heels, the Master comes to me one day in the steward’s office, and
+with more civility than usual, “Mackellar,” says he, “there is a damned
+crazy wench comes about here. I cannot well move in the matter myself,
+which brings me to you. Be so good as to see to it: the men must have a
+strict injunction to drive the wench away.”
+
+“Sir,” said I, trembling a little, “you can do your own dirty errands
+for yourself.”
+
+He said not a word to that, and left the room.
+
+Presently came Mr. Henry. “Here is news!” cried he. “It seems all is
+not enough, and you must add to my wretchedness. It seems you have
+insulted Mr. Bally.”
+
+“Under your kind favour, Mr. Henry,” said I, “it was he that insulted
+me, and, as I think, grossly. But I may have been careless of your
+position when I spoke; and if you think so when you know all, my dear
+patron, you have but to say the word. For you I would obey in any point
+whatever, even to sin, God pardon me!” And thereupon I told him what
+had passed.
+
+Mr. Henry smiled to himself; a grimmer smile I never witnessed. “You
+did exactly well,” said he. “He shall drink his Jessie Broun to the
+dregs.” And then, spying the Master outside, he opened the window, and
+crying to him by the name of Mr. Bally, asked him to step up and have a
+word.
+
+“James,” said he, when our persecutor had come in and closed the door
+behind him, looking at me with a smile, as if he thought I was to be
+humbled, “you brought me a complaint against Mr. Mackellar, into which
+I have inquired. I need not tell you I would always take his word
+against yours; for we are alone, and I am going to use something of
+your own freedom. Mr. Mackellar is a gentleman I value; and you must
+contrive, so long as you are under this roof, to bring yourself into no
+more collisions with one whom I will support at any possible cost to me
+or mine. As for the errand upon which you came to him, you must deliver
+yourself from the consequences of your own cruelty, and, none of my
+servants shall be at all employed in such a case.”
+
+“My father’s servants, I believe,” says the Master.
+
+“Go to him with this tale,” said Mr. Henry.
+
+The Master grew very white. He pointed at me with his finger. “I want
+that man discharged,” he said.
+
+“He shall not be,” said Mr. Henry.
+
+“You shall pay pretty dear for this,” says the Master.
+
+“I have paid so dear already for a wicked brother,” said Mr. Henry,
+“that I am bankrupt even of fears. You have no place left where you can
+strike me.”
+
+“I will show you about that,” says the Master, and went softly away.
+
+“What will he do next, Mackellar?” cries Mr. Henry.
+
+“Let me go away,” said I. “My dear patron, let me go away; I am but the
+beginning of fresh sorrows.”
+
+“Would you leave me quite alone?” said he.
+
+ We were not long in suspense as to the nature of the new assault. Up
+ to that hour the Master had played a very close game with Mrs. Henry;
+ avoiding pointedly to be alone with her, which I took at the time for
+ an effect of decency, but now think to be a most insidious art;
+ meeting her, you may say, at meal-time only; and behaving, when he did
+ so, like an affectionate brother. Up to that hour, you may say he had
+ scarce directly interfered between Mr. Henry and his wife; except in
+ so far as he had manoeuvred the one quite forth from the good graces
+ of the other. Now all that was to be changed; but whether really in
+ revenge, or because he was wearying of Durrisdeer and looked about for
+ some diversion, who but the devil shall decide?
+
+From that hour, at least, began the siege of Mrs. Henry; a thing so
+deftly carried on that I scarce know if she was aware of it herself,
+and that her husband must look on in silence. The first parallel was
+opened (as was made to appear) by accident. The talk fell, as it did
+often, on the exiles in France; so it glided to the matter of their
+songs.
+
+“There is one,” says the Master, “if you are curious in these matters,
+that has always seemed to me very moving. The poetry is harsh; and yet,
+perhaps because of my situation, it has always found the way to my
+heart. It is supposed to be sung, I should tell you, by an exile’s
+sweetheart; and represents perhaps, not so much the truth of what she
+is thinking, as the truth of what he hopes of her, poor soul! in these
+far lands.” And here the Master sighed, “I protest it is a pathetic
+sight when a score of rough Irish, all common sentinels, get to this
+song; and you may see, by their falling tears, how it strikes home to
+them. It goes thus, father,” says he, very adroitly taking my lord for
+his listener, “and if I cannot get to the end of it, you must think it
+is a common case with us exiles.” And thereupon he struck up the same
+air as I had heard the Colonel whistle; but now to words, rustic
+indeed, yet most pathetically setting forth a poor girl’s aspirations
+for an exiled lover; of which one verse indeed (or something like it)
+still sticks by me:—
+
+O, I will dye my petticoat red,
+With my dear boy I’ll beg my bread,
+Though all my friends should wish me dead,
+ For Willie among the rushes, O!
+
+
+He sang it well, even as a song; but he did better yet a performer. I
+have heard famous actors, when there was not a dry eye in the Edinburgh
+theatre; a great wonder to behold; but no more wonderful than how the
+Master played upon that little ballad, and on those who heard him, like
+an instrument, and seemed now upon the point of failing, and now to
+conquer his distress, so that words and music seemed to pour out of his
+own heart and his own past, and to be aimed directly at Mrs. Henry. And
+his art went further yet; for all was so delicately touched, it seemed
+impossible to suspect him of the least design; and so far from making a
+parade of emotion, you would have sworn he was striving to be calm.
+When it came to an end, we all sat silent for a time; he had chosen the
+dusk of the afternoon, so that none could see his neighbour’s face; but
+it seemed as if we held our breathing; only my old lord cleared his
+throat. The first to move was the singer, who got to his feet suddenly
+and softly, and went and walked softly to and fro in the low end of the
+hall, Mr. Henry’s customary place. We were to suppose that he there
+struggled down the last of his emotion; for he presently returned and
+launched into a disquisition on the nature of the Irish (always so much
+miscalled, and whom he defended) in his natural voice; so that, before
+the lights were brought, we were in the usual course of talk. But even
+then, methought Mrs. Henry’s face was a shade pale; and, for another
+thing, she withdrew almost at once.
+
+The next sign was a friendship this insidious devil struck up with
+innocent Miss Katharine; so that they were always together, hand in
+hand, or she climbing on his knee, like a pair of children. Like all
+his diabolical acts, this cut in several ways. It was the last stroke
+to Mr. Henry, to see his own babe debauched against him; it made him
+harsh with the poor innocent, which brought him still a peg lower in
+his wife’s esteem; and (to conclude) it was a bond of union between the
+lady and the Master. Under this influence, their old reserve melted by
+daily stages. Presently there came walks in the long shrubbery, talks
+in the Belvedere, and I know not what tender familiarity. I am sure
+Mrs. Henry was like many a good woman; she had a whole conscience but
+perhaps by the means of a little winking. For even to so dull an
+observer as myself, it was plain her kindness was of a more moving
+nature than the sisterly. The tones of her voice appeared more
+numerous; she had a light and softness in her eye; she was more gentle
+with all of us, even with Mr. Henry, even with myself; methought she
+breathed of some quiet melancholy happiness.
+
+To look on at this, what a torment it was for Mr. Henry! And yet it
+brought our ultimate deliverance, as I am soon to tell.
+
+ The purport of the Master’s stay was no more noble (gild it as they
+ might) than to wring money out. He had some design of a fortune in the
+ French Indies, as the Chevalier wrote me; and it was the sum required
+ for this that he came seeking. For the rest of the family it spelled
+ ruin; but my lord, in his incredible partiality, pushed ever for the
+ granting. The family was now so narrowed down (indeed, there were no
+ more of them than just the father and the two sons) that it was
+ possible to break the entail and alienate a piece of land. And to
+ this, at first by hints, and then by open pressure, Mr. Henry was
+ brought to consent. He never would have done so, I am very well
+ assured, but for the weight of the distress under which he laboured.
+ But for his passionate eagerness to see his brother gone, he would not
+ thus have broken with his own sentiment and the traditions of his
+ house. And even so, he sold them his consent at a dear rate, speaking
+ for once openly, and holding the business up in its own shameful
+ colours.
+
+“You will observe,” he said, “this is an injustice to my son, if ever I
+have one.”
+
+“But that you are not likely to have,” said my lord.
+
+“God knows!” says Mr. Henry. “And considering the cruel falseness of
+the position in which I stand to my brother, and that you, my lord, are
+my father, and have the right to command me, I set my hand to this
+paper. But one thing I will say first: I have been ungenerously pushed,
+and when next, my lord, you are tempted to compare your sons, I call on
+you to remember what I have done and what he has done. Acts are the
+fair test.”
+
+My lord was the most uneasy man I ever saw; even in his old face the
+blood came up. “I think this is not a very wisely chosen moment, Henry,
+for complaints,” said he. “This takes away from the merit of your
+generosity.”
+
+“Do not deceive yourself, my lord,” said Mr. Henry. “This injustice is
+not done from generosity to him, but in obedience to yourself.”
+
+“Before strangers . . . ” begins my lord, still more unhappily
+affected.
+
+“There is no one but Mackellar here,” said Mr. Henry; “he is my friend.
+And, my lord, as you make him no stranger to your frequent blame, it
+were hard if I must keep him one to a thing so rare as my defence.”
+
+Almost I believe my lord would have rescinded his decision; but the
+Master was on the watch.
+
+“Ah! Henry, Henry,” says he, “you are the best of us still. Rugged and
+true! Ah! man, I wish I was as good.”
+
+And at that instance of his favourite’s generosity my lord desisted
+from his hesitation, and the deed was signed.
+
+As soon as it could he brought about, the land of Ochterhall was sold
+for much below its value, and the money paid over to our leech and sent
+by some private carriage into France. Or so he said; though I have
+suspected since it did not go so far. And now here was all the man’s
+business brought to a successful head, and his pockets once more
+bulging with our gold; and yet the point for which we had consented to
+this sacrifice was still denied us, and the visitor still lingered on
+at Durrisdeer. Whether in malice, or because the time was not yet come
+for his adventure to the Indies, or because he had hopes of his design
+on Mrs. Henry, or from the orders of the Government, who shall say? but
+linger he did, and that for weeks.
+
+You will observe I say: from the orders of Government; for about this
+time the man’s disreputable secret trickled out.
+
+The first hint I had was from a tenant, who commented on the Master’s
+stay, and yet more on his security; for this tenant was a Jacobitish
+sympathiser, and had lost a son at Culloden, which gave him the more
+critical eye. “There is one thing,” said he, “that I cannot but think
+strange; and that is how he got to Cockermouth.”
+
+“To Cockermouth?” said I, with a sudden memory of my first wonder on
+beholding the man disembark so point-de-vice after so long a voyage.
+
+“Why, yes,” says the tenant, “it was there he was picked up by Captain
+Crail. You thought he had come from France by sea? And so we all did.”
+
+I turned this news a little in my head, and then carried it to Mr.
+Henry. “Here is an odd circumstance,” said I, and told him.
+
+“What matters how he came, Mackellar, so long as he is here?” groans
+Mr. Henry.
+
+“No, sir,” said I, “but think again! Does not this smack a little of
+some Government connivance? You know how much we have wondered already
+at the man’s security.”
+
+“Stop,” said Mr. Henry. “Let me think of this.” And as he thought,
+there came that grim smile upon his face that was a little like the
+Master’s. “Give me paper,” said he. And he sat without another word and
+wrote to a gentleman of his acquaintance—I will name no unnecessary
+names, but he was one in a high place. This letter I despatched by the
+only hand I could depend upon in such a case—Macconochie’s; and the old
+man rode hard, for he was back with the reply before even my eagerness
+had ventured to expect him. Again, as he read it, Mr. Henry had the
+same grim smile.
+
+“This is the best you have done for me yet, Mackellar,” says he. “With
+this in my hand I will give him a shog. Watch for us at dinner.”
+
+At dinner accordingly Mr. Henry proposed some very public appearance
+for the Master; and my lord, as he had hoped, objected to the danger of
+the course.
+
+“Oh!” says Mr. Henry, very easily, “you need no longer keep this up
+with me. I am as much in the secret as yourself.”
+
+“In the secret?” says my lord. “What do you mean, Henry? I give you my
+word, I am in no secret from which you are excluded.”
+
+The Master had changed countenance, and I saw he was struck in a joint
+of his harness.
+
+“How?” says Mr. Henry, turning to him with a huge appearance of
+surprise. “I see you serve your masters very faithfully; but I had
+thought you would have been humane enough to set your father’s mind at
+rest.”
+
+“What are you talking of? I refuse to have my business publicly
+discussed. I order this to cease,” cries the Master very foolishly and
+passionately, and indeed more like a child than a man.
+
+“So much discretion was not looked for at your hands, I can assure
+you,” continued Mr. Henry. “For see what my correspondent
+writes”—unfolding the paper—“‘It is, of course, in the interests both
+of the Government and the gentleman whom we may perhaps best continue
+to call Mr. Bally, to keep this understanding secret; but it was never
+meant his own family should continue to endure the suspense you paint
+so feelingly; and I am pleased mine should be the hand to set these
+fears at rest. Mr. Bally is as safe in Great Britain as yourself.’”
+
+“Is this possible?” cries my lord, looking at his son, with a great
+deal of wonder and still more of suspicion in his face.
+
+“My dear father,” says the Master, already much recovered. “I am
+overjoyed that this may be disclosed. My own instructions, direct from
+London, bore a very contrary sense, and I was charged to keep the
+indulgence secret from every one, yourself not excepted, and indeed
+yourself expressly named—as I can show in black and white unless I have
+destroyed the letter. They must have changed their mind very swiftly,
+for the whole matter is still quite fresh; or rather, Henry’s
+correspondent must have misconceived that part, as he seems to have
+misconceived the rest. To tell you the truth, sir,” he continued,
+getting visibly more easy, “I had supposed this unexplained favour to a
+rebel was the effect of some application from yourself; and the
+injunction to secrecy among my family the result of a desire on your
+part to conceal your kindness. Hence I was the more careful to obey
+orders. It remains now to guess by what other channel indulgence can
+have flowed on so notorious an offender as myself; for I do not think
+your son need defend himself from what seems hinted at in Henry’s
+letter. I have never yet heard of a Durrisdeer who was a turncoat or a
+spy,” says he, proudly.
+
+And so it seemed he had swum out of this danger unharmed; but this was
+to reckon without a blunder he had made, and without the pertinacity of
+Mr. Henry, who was now to show he had something of his brother’s
+spirit.
+
+“You say the matter is still fresh,” says Mr. Henry.
+
+“It is recent,” says the Master, with a fair show of stoutness and yet
+not without a quaver.
+
+“Is it so recent as that?” asks Mr. Henry, like a man a little puzzled,
+and spreading his letter forth again.
+
+In all the letter there was no word as to the date; but how was the
+Master to know that?
+
+“It seemed to come late enough for me,” says he, with a laugh. And at
+the sound of that laugh, which rang false, like a cracked bell, my lord
+looked at him again across the table, and I saw his old lips draw
+together close.
+
+“No,” said Mr. Henry, still glancing on his letter, “but I remember
+your expression. You said it was very fresh.”
+
+And here we had a proof of our victory, and the strongest instance yet
+of my lord’s incredible indulgence; for what must he do but interfere
+to save his favourite from exposure!
+
+“I think, Henry,” says he, with a kind of pitiful eagerness, “I think
+we need dispute no more. We are all rejoiced at last to find your
+brother safe; we are all at one on that; and, as grateful subjects, we
+can do no less than drink to the king’s health and bounty.”
+
+Thus was the Master extricated; but at least he had been put to his
+defence, he had come lamely out, and the attraction of his personal
+danger was now publicly plucked away from him. My lord, in his heart of
+hearts, now knew his favourite to be a Government spy; and Mrs. Henry
+(however she explained the tale) was notably cold in her behaviour to
+the discredited hero of romance. Thus in the best fabric of duplicity,
+there is some weak point, if you can strike it, which will loosen all;
+and if, by this fortunate stroke, we had not shaken the idol, who can
+say how it might have gone with us at the catastrophe?
+
+And yet at the time we seemed to have accomplished nothing. Before a
+day or two he had wiped off the ill-results of his discomfiture, and,
+to all appearance, stood as high as ever. As for my Lord Durrisdeer, he
+was sunk in parental partiality; it was not so much love, which should
+be an active quality, as an apathy and torpor of his other powers; and
+forgiveness (so to mis-apply a noble word) flowed from him in sheer
+weakness, like the tears of senility. Mrs. Henry’s was a different
+case; and Heaven alone knows what he found to say to her, or how he
+persuaded her from her contempt. It is one of the worst things of
+sentiment, that the voice grows to be more important than the words,
+and the speaker than that which is spoken. But some excuse the Master
+must have found, or perhaps he had even struck upon some art to wrest
+this exposure to his own advantage; for after a time of coldness, it
+seemed as if things went worse than ever between him and Mrs. Henry.
+They were then constantly together. I would not be thought to cut one
+shadow of blame, beyond what is due to a half-wilful blindness, on that
+unfortunate lady; but I do think, in these last days, she was playing
+very near the fire; and whether I be wrong or not in that, one thing is
+sure and quite sufficient: Mr. Henry thought so. The poor gentleman sat
+for days in my room, so great a picture of distress that I could never
+venture to address him; yet it is to be thought he found some comfort
+even in my presence and the knowledge of my sympathy. There were times,
+too, when we talked, and a strange manner of talk it was; there was
+never a person named, nor an individual circumstance referred to; yet
+we had the same matter in our minds, and we were each aware of it. It
+is a strange art that can thus be practised; to talk for hours of a
+thing, and never name nor yet so much as hint at it. And I remember I
+wondered if it was by some such natural skill that the Master made love
+to Mrs. Henry all day long (as he manifestly did), yet never startled
+her into reserve.
+
+To show how far affairs had gone with Mr. Henry, I will give some words
+of his, uttered (as I have cause not to forget) upon the 26th of
+February, 1757. It was unseasonable weather, a cast back into Winter:
+windless, bitter cold, the world all white with rime, the sky low and
+gray: the sea black and silent like a quarry-hole. Mr. Henry sat close
+by the fire, and debated (as was now common with him) whether “a man”
+should “do things,” whether “interference was wise,” and the like
+general propositions, which each of us particularly applied. I was by
+the window, looking out, when there passed below me the Master, Mrs.
+Henry, and Miss Katharine, that now constant trio. The child was
+running to and fro, delighted with the frost; the Master spoke close in
+the lady’s ear with what seemed (even from so far) a devilish grace of
+insinuation; and she on her part looked on the ground like a person
+lost in listening. I broke out of my reserve.
+
+“If I were you, Mr. Henry,” said I, “I would deal openly with my lord.”
+
+“Mackellar, Mackellar,” said he, “you do not see the weakness of my
+ground. I can carry no such base thoughts to any one—to my father least
+of all; that would be to fall into the bottom of his scorn. The
+weakness of my ground,” he continued, “lies in myself, that I am not
+one who engages love. I have their gratitude, they all tell me that; I
+have a rich estate of it! But I am not present in their minds; they are
+moved neither to think with me nor to think for me. There is my loss!”
+He got to his feet, and trod down the fire. “But some method must be
+found, Mackellar,” said he, looking at me suddenly over his shoulder;
+“some way must be found. I am a man of a great deal of patience—far too
+much—far too much. I begin to despise myself. And yet, sure, never was
+a man involved in such a toil!” He fell back to his brooding.
+
+“Cheer up,” said I. “It will burst of itself.”
+
+“I am far past anger now,” says he, which had so little coherency with
+my own observation that I let both fall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+ACCOUNT OF ALL THAT PASSED ON THE NIGHT ON FEBRUARY 27TH, 1757.
+
+
+On the evening of the interview referred to, the Master went abroad; he
+was abroad a great deal of the next day also, that fatal 27th; but
+where he went, or what he did, we never concerned ourselves to ask
+until next day. If we had done so, and by any chance found out, it
+might have changed all. But as all we did was done in ignorance, and
+should be so judged, I shall so narrate these passages as they appeared
+to us in the moment of their birth, and reserve all that I since
+discovered for the time of its discovery. For I have now come to one of
+the dark parts of my narrative, and must engage the reader’s indulgence
+for my patron.
+
+All the 27th that rigorous weather endured: a stifling cold; the folk
+passing about like smoking chimneys; the wide hearth in the hall piled
+high with fuel; some of the spring birds that had already blundered
+north into our neighbourhood, besieging the windows of the house or
+trotting on the frozen turf like things distracted. About noon there
+came a blink of sunshine, showing a very pretty, wintry, frosty
+landscape of white hills and woods, with Crail’s lugger waiting for a
+wind under the Craig Head, and the smoke mounting straight into the air
+from every farm and cottage. With the coming of night, the haze closed
+in overhead; it fell dark and still and starless, and exceeding cold: a
+night the most unseasonable, fit for strange events.
+
+Mrs. Henry withdrew, as was now her custom, very early. We had set
+ourselves of late to pass the evening with a game of cards; another
+mark that our visitor was wearying mightily of the life at Durrisdeer;
+and we had not been long at this when my old lord slipped from his
+place beside the fire, and was off without a word to seek the warmth of
+bed. The three thus left together had neither love nor courtesy to
+share; not one of us would have sat up one instant to oblige another;
+yet from the influence of custom, and as the cards had just been dealt,
+we continued the form of playing out the round. I should say we were
+late sitters; and though my lord had departed earlier than was his
+custom, twelve was already gone some time upon the clock, and the
+servants long ago in bed. Another thing I should say, that although I
+never saw the Master anyway affected with liquor, he had been drinking
+freely, and was perhaps (although he showed it not) a trifle heated.
+
+Anyway, he now practised one of his transitions; and so soon as the
+door closed behind my lord, and without the smallest change of voice,
+shifted from ordinary civil talk into a stream of insult.
+
+“My dear Henry, it is yours to play,” he had been saying, and now
+continued: “It is a very strange thing how, even in so small a matter
+as a game of cards, you display your rusticity. You play, Jacob, like a
+bonnet laird, or a sailor in a tavern. The same dulness, the same petty
+greed, _cette lenteur d’hebété qui me fait rager_; it is strange I
+should have such a brother. Even Square-toes has a certain vivacity
+when his stake is imperilled; but the dreariness of a game with you I
+positively lack language to depict.”
+
+Mr. Henry continued to look at his cards, as though very maturely
+considering some play; but his mind was elsewhere.
+
+“Dear God, will this never be done?” cries the Master. “_Quel
+lourdeau_! But why do I trouble you with French expressions, which are
+lost on such an ignoramus? A _lourdeau_, my dear brother, is as we
+might say a bumpkin, a clown, a clodpole: a fellow without grace,
+lightness, quickness; any gift of pleasing, any natural brilliancy:
+such a one as you shall see, when you desire, by looking in the mirror.
+I tell you these things for your good, I assure you; and besides,
+Square-toes” (looking at me and stifling a yawn), “it is one of my
+diversions in this very dreary spot to toast you and your master at the
+fire like chestnuts. I have great pleasure in your case, for I observe
+the nickname (rustic as it is) has always the power to make you writhe.
+But sometimes I have more trouble with this dear fellow here, who seems
+to have gone to sleep upon his cards. Do you not see the applicability
+of the epithet I have just explained, dear Henry? Let me show you. For
+instance, with all those solid qualities which I delight to recognise
+in you, I never knew a woman who did not prefer me—nor, I think,” he
+continued, with the most silken deliberation, “I think—who did not
+continue to prefer me.”
+
+Mr. Henry laid down his cards. He rose to his feet very softly, and
+seemed all the while like a person in deep thought. “You coward!” he
+said gently, as if to himself. And then, with neither hurry nor any
+particular violence, he struck the Master in the mouth.
+
+The Master sprang to his feet like one transfigured; I had never seen
+the man so beautiful. “A blow!” he cried. “I would not take a blow from
+God Almighty!”
+
+“Lower your voice,” said Mr. Henry. “Do you wish my father to interfere
+for you again?”
+
+“Gentlemen, gentlemen,” I cried, and sought to come between them.
+
+The Master caught me by the shoulder, held me at arm’s length, and
+still addressing his brother: “Do you know what this means?” said he.
+
+“It was the most deliberate act of my life,” says Mr. Henry.
+
+“I must have blood, I must have blood for this,” says the Master.
+
+“Please God it shall be yours,” said Mr. Henry; and he went to the wall
+and took down a pair of swords that hung there with others, naked.
+These he presented to the Master by the points. “Mackellar shall see us
+play fair,” said Mr. Henry. “I think it very needful.”
+
+“You need insult me no more,” said the Master, taking one of the swords
+at random. “I have hated you all my life.”
+
+“My father is but newly gone to bed,” said Mr. Henry. “We must go
+somewhere forth of the house.”
+
+“There is an excellent place in the long shrubbery,” said the Master.
+
+“Gentlemen,” said I, “shame upon you both! Sons of the same mother,
+would you turn against the life she gave you?”
+
+“Even so, Mackellar,” said Mr. Henry, with the same perfect quietude of
+manner he had shown throughout.
+
+“It is what I will prevent,” said I.
+
+And now here is a blot upon my life. At these words of mine the Master
+turned his blade against my bosom; I saw the light run along the steel;
+and I threw up my arms and fell to my knees before him on the floor.
+“No, no,” I cried, like a baby.
+
+“We shall have no more trouble with him,” said the Master. “It is a
+good thing to have a coward in the house.”
+
+“We must have light,” said Mr. Henry, as though there had been no
+interruption.
+
+“This trembler can bring a pair of candles,” said the Master.
+
+To my shame be it said, I was still so blinded with the flashing of
+that bare sword that I volunteered to bring a lantern.
+
+“We do not need a l-l-lantern,” says the Master, mocking me. “There is
+no breath of air. Come, get to your feet, take a pair of lights, and go
+before. I am close behind with this—” making. the blade glitter as he
+spoke.
+
+I took up the candlesticks and went before them, steps that I would
+give my hand to recall; but a coward is a slave at the best; and even
+as I went, my teeth smote each other in my mouth. It was as he had
+said: there was no breath stirring; a windless stricture of frost had
+bound the air; and as we went forth in the shine of the candles, the
+blackness was like a roof over our heads. Never a word was said; there
+was never a sound but the creaking of our steps along the frozen path.
+The cold of the night fell about me like a bucket of water; I shook as
+I went with more than terror; but my companions, bare-headed like
+myself, and fresh from the warm ball, appeared not even conscious of
+the change.
+
+“Here is the place,” said the Master. “Set down the candles.”
+
+I did as he bid me, and presently the flames went up, as steady as in a
+chamber, in the midst of the frosted trees, and I beheld these two
+brothers take their places.
+
+“The light is something in my eyes,” said the Master.
+
+“I will give you every advantage,” replied Mr. Henry, shifting his
+ground, “for I think you are about to die.” He spoke rather sadly than
+otherwise, yet there was a ring in his voice.
+
+“Henry Durie,” said the Master, “two words before I begin. You are a
+fencer, you can hold a foil; you little know what a change it makes to
+hold a sword! And by that I know you are to fall. But see how strong is
+my situation! If you fall, I shift out of this country to where my
+money is before me. If I fall, where are you? My father, your wife—who
+is in love with me, as you very well know—your child even, who prefers
+me to yourself:—how will these avenge me! Had you thought of that, dear
+Henry?” He looked at his brother with a smile; then made a fencing-room
+salute.
+
+Never a word said Mr. Henry, but saluted too, and the swords rang
+together.
+
+I am no judge of the play; my head, besides, was gone with cold and
+fear and horror; but it seems that Mr. Henry took and kept the upper
+hand from the engagement, crowding in upon his foe with a contained and
+glowing fury. Nearer and nearer he crept upon the man, till of a sudden
+the Master leaped back with a little sobbing oath; and I believe the
+movement brought the light once more against his eyes. To it they went
+again, on the fresh ground; but now methought closer, Mr. Henry
+pressing more outrageously, the Master beyond doubt with shaken
+confidence. For it is beyond doubt he now recognised himself for lost,
+and had some taste of the cold agony of fear; or he had never attempted
+the foul stroke. I cannot say I followed it, my untrained eye was never
+quick enough to seize details, but it appears he caught his brother’s
+blade with his left hand, a practice not permitted. Certainly Mr. Henry
+only saved himself by leaping on one side; as certainly the Master,
+lunging in the air, stumbled on his knee, and before he could move the
+sword was through his body.
+
+I cried out with a stifled scream, and ran in; but the body was already
+fallen to the ground, where it writhed a moment like a trodden worm,
+and then lay motionless.
+
+“Look at his left hand,” said Mr. Henry.
+
+“It is all bloody,” said I.
+
+“On the inside?” said he.
+
+“It is cut on the inside,” said I.
+
+“I thought so,” said he, and turned his back.
+
+I opened the man’s clothes; the heart was quite still, it gave not a
+flutter.
+
+“God forgive us, Mr. Henry!” said I. “He is dead.”
+
+“Dead?” he repeated, a little stupidly; and then with a rising tone,
+“Dead? dead?” says he, and suddenly cast his bloody sword upon the
+ground.
+
+“What must we do?” said I. “Be yourself, sir. It is too late now: you
+must be yourself.”
+
+He turned and stared at me. “Oh, Mackellar!” says he, and put his face
+in his hands.
+
+I plucked him by the coat. “For God’s sake, for all our sakes, be more
+courageous!” said I. “What must we do?”
+
+He showed me his face with the same stupid stare.
+
+“Do?” says he. And with that his eye fell on the body, and “Oh!” he
+cries out, with his hand to his brow, as if he had never remembered;
+and, turning from me, made off towards the house of Durrisdeer at a
+strange stumbling run.
+
+I stood a moment mused; then it seemed to me my duty lay most plain on
+the side of the living; and I ran after him, leaving the candles on the
+frosty ground and the body lying in their light under the trees. But
+run as I pleased, he had the start of me, and was got into the house,
+and up to the hall, where I found him standing before the fire with his
+face once more in his hands, and as he so stood he visibly shuddered.
+
+“Mr. Henry, Mr. Henry,” I said, “this will be the ruin of us all.”
+
+“What is this that I have done?” cries he, and then looking upon me
+with a countenance that I shall never forget, “Who is to tell the old
+man?” he said.
+
+The word knocked at my heart; but it was no time for weakness. I went
+and poured him out a glass of brandy. “Drink that,” said I, “drink it
+down.” I forced him to swallow it like a child; and, being still
+perished with the cold of the night, I followed his example.
+
+“It has to be told, Mackellar,” said he. “It must be told.” And he fell
+suddenly in a seat—my old lord’s seat by the chimney-side—and was
+shaken with dry sobs.
+
+Dismay came upon my soul; it was plain there was no help in Mr. Henry.
+“Well,” said I, “sit there, and leave all to me.” And taking a candle
+in my hand, I set forth out of the room in the dark house. There was no
+movement; I must suppose that all had gone unobserved; and I was now to
+consider how to smuggle through the rest with the like secrecy. It was
+no hour for scruples; and I opened my lady’s door without so much as a
+knock, and passed boldly in.
+
+“There is some calamity happened,” she cried, sitting up in bed.
+
+“Madam,” said I, “I will go forth again into the passage; and do you
+get as quickly as you can into your clothes. There is much to be done.”
+
+She troubled me with no questions, nor did she keep me waiting. Ere I
+had time to prepare a word of that which I must say to her, she was on
+the threshold signing me to enter.
+
+“Madam,” said I, “if you cannot be very brave, I must go elsewhere; for
+if no one helps me to-night, there is an end of the house of
+Durrisdeer.”
+
+“I am very courageous,” said she; and she looked at me with a sort of
+smile, very painful to see, but very brave too.
+
+“It has come to a duel,” said I.
+
+“A duel?” she repeated. “A duel! Henry and—”
+
+“And the Master,” said I. “Things have been borne so long, things of
+which you know nothing, which you would not believe if I should tell.
+But to-night it went too far, and when he insulted you—”
+
+“Stop,” said she. “He? Who?”
+
+“Oh! madam,” cried I, my bitterness breaking forth, “do you ask me such
+a question? Indeed, then, I may go elsewhere for help; there is none
+here!”
+
+“I do not know in what I have offended you,” said she. “Forgive me; put
+me out of this suspense.”
+
+But I dared not tell her yet; I felt not sure of her; and at the doubt,
+and under the sense of impotence it brought with it, I turned on the
+poor woman with something near to anger.
+
+“Madam,” said I, “we are speaking of two men: one of them insulted you,
+and you ask me which. I will help you to the answer. With one of these
+men you have spent all your hours: has the other reproached you? To one
+you have been always kind; to the other, as God sees me and judges
+between us two, I think not always: has his love ever failed you?
+To-night one of these two men told the other, in my hearing—the hearing
+of a hired stranger,—that you were in love with him. Before I say one
+word, you shall answer your own question: Which was it? Nay, madam, you
+shall answer me another: If it has come to this dreadful end, whose
+fault is it?”
+
+She stared at me like one dazzled. “Good God!” she said once, in a kind
+of bursting exclamation; and then a second time in a whisper to
+herself: “Great God!—In the name of mercy, Mackellar, what is wrong?”
+she cried. “I am made up; I can hear all.”
+
+“You are not fit to hear,” said I. “Whatever it was, you shall say
+first it was your fault.”
+
+“Oh!” she cried, with a gesture of wringing her hands, “this man will
+drive me mad! Can you not put me out of your thoughts?”
+
+“I think not once of you,” I cried. “I think of none but my dear
+unhappy master.”
+
+“Ah!” she cried, with her hand to her heart, “is Henry dead?”
+
+“Lower your voice,” said I. “The other.”
+
+I saw her sway like something stricken by the wind; and I know not
+whether in cowardice or misery, turned aside and looked upon the floor.
+“These are dreadful tidings,” said I at length, when her silence began
+to put me in some fear; “and you and I behove to be the more bold if
+the house is to be saved.” Still she answered nothing. “There is Miss
+Katharine, besides,” I added: “unless we bring this matter through, her
+inheritance is like to be of shame.”
+
+I do not know if it was the thought of her child or the naked word
+shame, that gave her deliverance; at least, I had no sooner spoken than
+a sound passed her lips, the like of it I never heard; it was as though
+she had lain buried under a hill and sought to move that burthen. And
+the next moment she had found a sort of voice.
+
+“It was a fight,” she whispered. “It was not—” and she paused upon the
+word.
+
+“It was a fair fight on my dear master’s part,” said I. “As for the
+other, he was slain in the very act of a foul stroke.”
+
+“Not now!” she cried.
+
+“Madam,” said I, “hatred of that man glows in my bosom like a burning
+fire; ay, even now he is dead. God knows, I would have stopped the
+fighting, had I dared. It is my shame I did not. But when I saw him
+fall, if I could have spared one thought from pitying of my master, it
+had been to exult in that deliverance.”
+
+I do not know if she marked; but her next words were, “My lord?”
+
+“That shall be my part,” said I.
+
+“You will not speak to him as you have to me?” she asked.
+
+“Madam,” said I, “have you not some one else to think of? Leave my lord
+to me.”
+
+“Some one else?” she repeated.
+
+“Your husband,” said I. She looked at me with a countenance illegible.
+“Are you going to turn your back on him?” I asked.
+
+Still she looked at me; then her hand went to her heart again. “No,”
+said she.
+
+“God bless you for that word!” I said. “Go to him now, where he sits in
+the hall; speak to him—it matters not what you say; give him your hand;
+say, ‘I know all;’—if God gives you grace enough, say, ‘Forgive me.’”
+
+“God strengthen you, and make you merciful,” said she. “I will go to my
+husband.”
+
+“Let me light you there,” said I, taking up the candle.
+
+“I will find my way in the dark,” she said, with a shudder, and I think
+the shudder was at me.
+
+So we separated—she down stairs to where a little light glimmered in
+the hall-door, I along the passage to my lord’s room. It seems hard to
+say why, but I could not burst in on the old man as I could on the
+young woman; with whatever reluctance, I must knock. But his old
+slumbers were light, or perhaps he slept not; and at the first summons
+I was bidden enter.
+
+He, too, sat up in bed; very aged and bloodless he looked; and whereas
+he had a certain largeness of appearance when dressed for daylight, he
+now seemed frail and little, and his face (the wig being laid aside)
+not bigger than a child’s. This daunted me; nor less, the haggard
+surmise of misfortune in his eye. Yet his voice was even peaceful as he
+inquired my errand. I set my candle down upon a chair, leaned on the
+bed-foot, and looked at him.
+
+“Lord Durrisdeer,” said I, “it is very well known to you that I am a
+partisan in your family.”
+
+“I hope we are none of us partisans,” said he. “That you love my son
+sincerely, I have always been glad to recognise.”
+
+“Oh! my lord, we are past the hour of these civilities,” I replied. “If
+we are to save anything out of the fire, we must look the fact in its
+bare countenance. A partisan I am; partisans we have all been; it is as
+a partisan that I am here in the middle of the night to plead before
+you. Hear me; before I go, I will tell you why.”
+
+“I would always hear you, Mr. Mackellar,” said he, “and that at any
+hour, whether of the day or night, for I would be always sure you had a
+reason. You spoke once before to very proper purpose; I have not
+forgotten that.”
+
+“I am here to plead the cause of my master,” I said. “I need not tell
+you how he acts. You know how he is placed. You know with what
+generosity, he has always met your other—met your wishes,” I corrected
+myself, stumbling at that name of son. “You know—you must know—what he
+has suffered—what he has suffered about his wife.”
+
+“Mr. Mackellar!” cried my lord, rising in bed like a bearded lion.
+
+“You said you would hear me,” I continued. “What you do not know, what
+you should know, one of the things I am here to speak of, is the
+persecution he must bear in private. Your back is not turned before one
+whom I dare not name to you falls upon him with the most unfeeling
+taunts; twits him—pardon me, my lord—twits him with your partiality,
+calls him Jacob, calls him clown, pursues him with ungenerous raillery,
+not to be borne by man. And let but one of you appear, instantly he
+changes; and my master must smile and courtesy to the man who has been
+feeding him with insults; I know, for I have shared in some of it, and
+I tell you the life is insupportable. All these months it has endured;
+it began with the man’s landing; it was by the name of Jacob that my
+master was greeted the first night.”
+
+My lord made a movement as if to throw aside the clothes and rise. “If
+there be any truth in this—” said he.
+
+“Do I look like a man lying?” I interrupted, checking him with my hand.
+
+“You should have told me at first,” he odd.
+
+“Ah, my lord! indeed I should, and you may well hate the face of this
+unfaithful servant!” I cried.
+
+“I will take order,” said he, “at once.” And again made the movement to
+rise.
+
+Again I checked him. “I have not done,” said I. “Would God I had! All
+this my dear, unfortunate patron has endured without help or
+countenance. Your own best word, my lord, was only gratitude. Oh, but
+he was your son, too! He had no other father. He was hated in the
+country, God knows how unjustly. He had a loveless marriage. He stood
+on all hands without affection or support—dear, generous, ill-fated,
+noble heart!”
+
+“Your tears do you much honour and me much shame,” says my lord, with a
+palsied trembling. “But you do me some injustice. Henry has been ever
+dear to me, very dear. James (I do not deny it, Mr. Mackellar), James
+is perhaps dearer; you have not seen my James in quite a favourable
+light; he has suffered under his misfortunes; and we can only remember
+how great and how unmerited these were. And even now his is the more
+affectionate nature. But I will not speak of him. All that you say of
+Henry is most true; I do not wonder, I know him to be very magnanimous;
+you will say I trade upon the knowledge? It is possible; there are
+dangerous virtues: virtues that tempt the encroacher. Mr. Mackellar, I
+will make it up to him; I will take order with all this. I have been
+weak; and, what is worse, I have been dull!”
+
+“I must not hear you blame yourself, my lord, with that which I have
+yet to tell upon my conscience,” I replied. “You have not been weak;
+you have been abused by a devilish dissembler. You saw yourself how he
+had deceived you in the matter of his danger; he has deceived you
+throughout in every step of his career. I wish to pluck him from your
+heart; I wish to force your eyes upon your other son; ah, you have a
+son there!”
+
+“No, no,” said he, “two sons—I have two sons.”
+
+I made some gesture of despair that struck him; he looked at me with a
+changed face. “There is much worse behind?” he asked, his voice dying
+as it rose upon the question.
+
+“Much worse,” I answered. “This night he said these words to Mr. Henry:
+‘I have never known a woman who did not prefer me to you, and I think
+who did not continue to prefer me.’”
+
+“I will hear nothing against my daughter,” he cried; and from his
+readiness to stop me in this direction, I conclude his eyes were not so
+dull as I had fancied, and he had looked not without anxiety upon the
+siege of Mrs. Henry.
+
+“I think not of blaming her,” cried I. “It is not that. These words
+were said in my hearing to Mr. Henry; and if you find them not yet
+plain enough, these others but a little after: Your wife, who is in
+love with me!’”
+
+“They have quarrelled?” he said.
+
+I nodded.
+
+“I must fly to them,” he said, beginning once again to leave his bed.
+
+“No, no!” I cried, holding forth my hands.
+
+“You do not know,” said he. “These are dangerous words.”
+
+“Will nothing make you understand, my lord?” said I.
+
+His eyes besought me for the truth.
+
+I flung myself on my knees by the bedside. “Oh, my lord,” cried I,
+“think on him you have left; think of this poor sinner whom you begot,
+whom your wife bore to you, whom we have none of us strengthened as we
+could; think of him, not of yourself; he is the other sufferer—think of
+him! That is the door for sorrow—Christ’s door, God’s door: oh! it
+stands open. Think of him, even as he thought of you. ‘_Who is to tell
+the old man_?’—these were his words. It was for that I came; that is
+why I am here pleading at your feet.”
+
+“Let me get up,” he cried, thrusting me aside, and was on his feet
+before myself. His voice shook like a sail in the wind, yet he spoke
+with a good loudness; his face was like the snow, but his eyes were
+steady and dry.
+
+“Here is too much speech,” said he. “Where was it?”
+
+“In the shrubbery,” said I.
+
+“And Mr. Henry?” he asked. And when I had told him he knotted his old
+face in thought.
+
+“And Mr. James?” says he.
+
+“I have left him lying,” said I, “beside the candles.”
+
+“Candles?” he cried. And with that he ran to the window, opened it, and
+looked abroad. “It might be spied from the road.”
+
+“Where none goes by at such an hour,” I objected.
+
+“It makes no matter,” he said. “One might. Hark!” cries he. “What is
+that?”
+
+It was the sound of men very guardedly rowing in the bay; and I told
+him so.
+
+“The freetraders,” said my lord. “Run at once, Mackellar; put these
+candles out. I will dress in the meanwhile; and when you return we can
+debate on what is wisest.”
+
+I groped my way downstairs, and out at the door. From quite a far way
+off a sheen was visible, making points of brightness in the shrubbery;
+in so black a night it might have been remarked for miles; and I blamed
+myself bitterly for my incaution. How much more sharply when I reached
+the place! One of the candlesticks was overthrown, and that taper
+quenched. The other burned steadily by itself, and made a broad space
+of light upon the frosted ground. All within that circle seemed, by the
+force of contrast and the overhanging blackness, brighter than by day.
+And there was the bloodstain in the midst; and a little farther off Mr.
+Henry’s sword, the pommel of which was of silver; but of the body, not
+a trace. My heart thumped upon my ribs, the hair stirred upon my scalp,
+as I stood there staring—so strange was the sight, so dire the fears it
+wakened. I looked right and left; the ground was so hard, it told no
+story. I stood and listened till my ears ached, but the night was
+hollow about me like an empty church; not even a ripple stirred upon
+the shore; it seemed you might have heard a pin drop in the county.
+
+I put the candle out, and the blackness fell about me groping dark; it
+was like a crowd surrounding me; and I went back to the house of
+Durrisdeer, with my chin upon my shoulder, startling, as I went, with
+craven suppositions. In the door a figure moved to meet me, and I had
+near screamed with terror ere I recognised Mrs. Henry.
+
+“Have you told him?” says she.
+
+“It was he who sent me,” said I. “It is gone. But why are you here?”
+
+“It is gone!” she repeated. “What is gone?”
+
+“The body,” said I. “Why are you not with your husband?”
+
+“Gone!” said she. “You cannot have looked. Come back.”
+
+“There is no light now,” said I. “I dare not.”
+
+“I can see in the dark. I have been standing here so long—so long,”
+said she. “Come, give me your hand.”
+
+We returned to the shrubbery hand in hand, and to the fatal place.
+
+“Take care of the blood,” said I.
+
+“Blood?” she cried, and started violently back.
+
+“I suppose it will be,” said I. “I am like a blind man.”
+
+“No!” said she, “nothing! Have you not dreamed?”
+
+“Ah, would to God we had!” cried I.
+
+She spied the sword, picked it up, and seeing the blood, let it fall
+again with her hands thrown wide. “Ah!” she cried. And then, with an
+instant courage, handled it the second time, and thrust it to the hilt
+into the frozen ground. “I will take it back and clean it properly,”
+says she, and again looked about her on all sides. “It cannot be that
+he was dead?” she added.
+
+“There was no flutter of his heart,” said I, and then remembering: “Why
+are you not with your husband?”
+
+“It is no use,” said she; “he will not speak to me.”
+
+“Not speak to you?” I repeated. “Oh! you have not tried.”
+
+“You have a right to doubt me,” she replied, with a gentle dignity.
+
+At this, for the first time, I was seized with sorrow for her. “God
+knows, madam,” I cried, “God knows I am not so hard as I appear; on
+this dreadful night who can veneer his words? But I am a friend to all
+who are not Henry Durie’s enemies.”
+
+“It is hard, then, you should hesitate about his wife,” said she.
+
+I saw all at once, like the rending of a veil, how nobly she had borne
+this unnatural calamity, and how generously my reproaches.
+
+“We must go back and tell this to my lord,” said I.
+
+“Him I cannot face,” she cried.
+
+“You will find him the least moved of all of us,” said I.
+
+“And yet I cannot face him,” said she.
+
+“Well,” said I, “you can return to Mr. Henry; I will see my lord.”
+
+As we walked back, I bearing the candlesticks, she the sword—a strange
+burthen for that woman—she had another thought. “Should we tell Henry?”
+she asked.
+
+“Let my lord decide,” said I.
+
+My lord was nearly dressed when I came to his chamber. He heard me with
+a frown. “The freetraders,” said he. “But whether dead or alive?”
+
+“I thought him—” said I, and paused, ashamed of the word.
+
+“I know; but you may very well have been in error. Why should they
+remove him if not living?” he asked. “Oh! here is a great door of hope.
+It must be given out that he departed—as he came—without any note of
+preparation. We must save all scandal.”
+
+I saw he had fallen, like the rest of us, to think mainly of the house.
+Now that all the living members of the family were plunged in
+irremediable sorrow, it was strange how we turned to that conjoint
+abstraction of the family itself, and sought to bolster up the airy
+nothing of its reputation: not the Duries only, but the hired steward
+himself.
+
+“Are we to tell Mr. Henry?” I asked him.
+
+“I will see,” said he. “I am going first to visit him; then I go forth
+with you to view the shrubbery and consider.”
+
+We went downstairs into the hall. Mr. Henry sat by the table with his
+head upon his hand, like a man of stone. His wife stood a little back
+from him, her hand at her mouth; it was plain she could not move him.
+My old lord walked very steadily to where his son was sitting; he had a
+steady countenance, too, but methought a little cold. When he was come
+quite up, he held out both his hands and said, “My son!”
+
+With a broken, strangled cry, Mr. Henry leaped up and fell on his
+father’s neck, crying and weeping, the most pitiful sight that ever a
+man witnessed. “Oh! father,” he cried, “you know I loved him; you know
+I loved him in the beginning; I could have died for him—you know that!
+I would have given my life for him and you. Oh! say you know that. Oh!
+say you can forgive me. O father, father, what have I done—what have I
+done? And we used to be bairns together!” and wept and sobbed, and
+fondled the old man, and clutched him about the neck, with the passion
+of a child in terror.
+
+And then he caught sight of his wife (you would have thought for the
+first time), where she stood weeping to hear him, and in a moment had
+fallen at her knees. “And O my lass,” he cried, “you must forgive me,
+too! Not your husband—I have only been the ruin of your life. But you
+knew me when I was a lad; there was no harm in Henry Durie then; he
+meant aye to be a friend to you. It’s him—it’s the old bairn that
+played with you—oh, can ye never, never forgive him?”
+
+Throughout all this my lord was like a cold, kind spectator with his
+wits about him. At the first cry, which was indeed enough to call the
+house about us, he had said to me over his shoulder, “Close the door.”
+And now he nodded to himself.
+
+“We may leave him to his wife now,” says he. “Bring a light, Mr.
+Mackellar.”
+
+Upon my going forth again with my lord, I was aware of a strange
+phenomenon; for though it was quite dark, and the night not yet old,
+methought I smelt the morning. At the same time there went a tossing
+through the branches of the evergreens, so that they sounded like a
+quiet sea, and the air pulled at times against our faces, and the flame
+of the candle shook. We made the more speed, I believe, being
+surrounded by this bustle; visited the scene of the duel, where my lord
+looked upon the blood with stoicism; and passing farther on toward the
+landing-place, came at last upon some evidences of the truth. For,
+first of all, where there was a pool across the path, the ice had been
+trodden in, plainly by more than one man’s weight; next, and but a
+little farther, a young tree was broken, and down by the landing-place,
+where the traders’ boats were usually beached, another stain of blood
+marked where the body must have been infallibly set down to rest the
+bearers.
+
+This stain we set ourselves to wash away with the sea-water, carrying
+it in my lord’s hat; and as we were thus engaged there came up a sudden
+moaning gust and left us instantly benighted.
+
+“It will come to snow,” says my lord; “and the best thing that we could
+hope. Let us go back now; we can do nothing in the dark.”
+
+As we went houseward, the wind being again subsided, we were aware of a
+strong pattering noise about us in the night; and when we issued from
+the shelter of the trees, we found it raining smartly.
+
+Throughout the whole of this, my lord’s clearness of mind, no less than
+his activity of body, had not ceased to minister to my amazement. He
+set the crown upon it in the council we held on our return. The
+freetraders had certainly secured the Master, though whether dead or
+alive we were still left to our conjectures; the rain would, long
+before day, wipe out all marks of the transaction; by this we must
+profit. The Master had unexpectedly come after the fall of night; it
+must now be given out he had as suddenly departed before the break of
+day; and, to make all this plausible, it now only remained for me to
+mount into the man’s chamber, and pack and conceal his baggage. True,
+we still lay at the discretion of the traders; but that was the
+incurable weakness of our guilt.
+
+I heard him, as I said, with wonder, and hastened to obey. Mr. and Mrs.
+Henry were gone from the hall; my lord, for warmth’s sake, hurried to
+his bed; there was still no sign of stir among the servants, and as I
+went up the tower stair, and entered the dead man’s room, a horror of
+solitude weighed upon my mind. To my extreme surprise, it was all in
+the disorder of departure. Of his three portmanteaux, two were already
+locked; the third lay open and near full. At once there flashed upon me
+some suspicion of the truth. The man had been going, after all; he had
+but waited upon Crail, as Crail waited upon the wind; early in the
+night the seamen had perceived the weather changing; the boat had come
+to give notice of the change and call the passenger aboard, and the
+boat’s crew had stumbled on him dying in his blood. Nay, and there was
+more behind. This pre-arranged departure shed some light upon his
+inconceivable insult of the night before; it was a parting shot, hatred
+being no longer checked by policy. And, for another thing, the nature
+of that insult, and the conduct of Mrs. Henry, pointed to one
+conclusion, which I have never verified, and can now never verify until
+the great assize—the conclusion that he had at last forgotten himself,
+had gone too far in his advances, and had been rebuffed. It can never
+be verified, as I say; but as I thought of it that morning among his
+baggage, the thought was sweet to me like honey.
+
+Into the open portmanteau I dipped a little ere I closed it. The most
+beautiful lace and linen, many suits of those fine plain clothes in
+which he loved to appear; a book or two, and those of the best, Cæsar’s
+“Commentaries,” a volume of Mr. Hobbes, the “Henriade” of M. de
+Voltaire, a book upon the Indies, one on the mathematics, far beyond
+where I have studied: these were what I observed with very mingled
+feelings. But in the open portmanteau, no papers of any description.
+This set me musing. It was possible the man was dead; but, since the
+traders had carried him away, not likely. It was possible he might
+still die of his wound; but it was also possible he might not. And in
+this latter case I was determined to have the means of some defence.
+
+One after another I carried his portmanteaux to a loft in the top of
+the house which we kept locked; went to my own room for my keys, and,
+returning to the loft, had the gratification to find two that fitted
+pretty well. In one of the portmanteaux there was a shagreen
+letter-case, which I cut open with my knife; and thenceforth (so far as
+any credit went) the man was at my mercy. Here was a vast deal of
+gallant correspondence, chiefly of his Paris days; and, what was more
+to the purpose, here were the copies of his own reports to the English
+Secretary, and the originals of the Secretary’s answers: a most damning
+series: such as to publish would be to wreck the Master’s honour and to
+set a price upon his life. I chuckled to myself as I ran through the
+documents; I rubbed my hands, I sang aloud in my glee. Day found me at
+the pleasing task; nor did I then remit my diligence, except in so far
+as I went to the window—looked out for a moment, to see the frost quite
+gone, the world turned black again, and the rain and the wind driving
+in the bay—and to assure myself that the lugger was gone from its
+anchorage, and the Master (whether dead or alive) now tumbling on the
+Irish Sea.
+
+It is proper I should add in this place the very little I have
+subsequently angled out upon the doings of that night. It took me a
+long while to gather it; for we dared not openly ask, and the
+freetraders regarded me with enmity, if not with scorn. It was near six
+months before we even knew for certain that the man survived; and it
+was years before I learned from one of Crail’s men, turned publican on
+his ill-gotten gain, some particulars which smack to me of truth. It
+seems the traders found the Master struggled on one elbow, and now
+staring round him, and now gazing at the candle or at his hand which
+was all bloodied, like a man stupid. Upon their coming, he would seem
+to have found his mind, bade them carry him aboard, and hold their
+tongues; and on the captain asking how he had come in such a pickle,
+replied with a burst of passionate swearing, and incontinently fainted.
+They held some debate, but they were momently looking for a wind, they
+were highly paid to smuggle him to France, and did not care to delay.
+Besides which, he was well enough liked by these abominable wretches:
+they supposed him under capital sentence, knew not in what mischief he
+might have got his wound, and judged it a piece of good nature to
+remove him out of the way of danger. So he was taken aboard, recovered
+on the passage over, and was set ashore a convalescent at the Havre de
+Grace. What is truly notable: he said not a word to anyone of the duel,
+and not a trader knows to this day in what quarrel, or by the hand of
+what adversary, he fell. With any other man I should have set this down
+to natural decency; with him, to pride. He could not bear to avow,
+perhaps even to himself, that he had been vanquished by one whom he had
+so much insulted whom he so cruelly despised.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THE MASTER’S SECOND ABSENCE.
+
+
+Of the heavy sickness which declared itself next morning I can think
+with equanimity, as of the last unmingled trouble that befell my
+master; and even that was perhaps a mercy in disguise; for what pains
+of the body could equal the miseries of his mind? Mrs. Henry and I had
+the watching by the bed. My old lord called from time to time to take
+the news, but would not usually pass the door. Once, I remember, when
+hope was nigh gone, he stepped to the bedside, looked awhile in his
+son’s face, and turned away with a gesture of the head and hand thrown
+up, that remains upon my mind as something tragic; such grief and such
+a scorn of sublunary things were there expressed. But the most of the
+time Mrs. Henry and I had the room to ourselves, taking turns by night,
+and bearing each other company by day, for it was dreary watching. Mr.
+Henry, his shaven head bound in a napkin, tossed fro without remission,
+beating the bed with his hands. His tongue never lay; his voice ran
+continuously like a river, so that my heart was weary with the sound of
+it. It was notable, and to me inexpressibly mortifying, that he spoke
+all the while on matters of no import: comings and goings, horses—which
+he was ever calling to have saddled, thinking perhaps (the poor soul!)
+that he might ride away from his discomfort—matters of the garden, the
+salmon nets, and (what I particularly raged to hear) continually of his
+affairs, cyphering figures and holding disputation with the tenantry.
+Never a word of his father or his wife, nor of the Master, save only
+for a day or two, when his mind dwelled entirely in the past, and he
+supposed himself a boy again and upon some innocent child’s play with
+his brother. What made this the more affecting: it appeared the Master
+had then run some peril of his life, for there was a cry—“Oh! Jamie
+will be drowned—Oh, save Jamie!” which he came over and over with a
+great deal of passion.
+
+This, I say, was affecting, both to Mrs. Henry and myself; but the
+balance of my master’s wanderings did him little justice. It seemed he
+had set out to justify his brother’s calumnies; as though he was bent
+to prove himself a man of a dry nature, immersed in money-getting. Had
+I been there alone, I would not have troubled my thumb; but all the
+while, as I listened, I was estimating the effect on the man’s wife,
+and telling myself that he fell lower every day. I was the one person
+on the surface of the globe that comprehended him, and I was bound
+there should be yet another. Whether he was to die there and his
+virtues perish: or whether he should save his days and come back to
+that inheritance of sorrows, his right memory: I was bound he should be
+heartily lamented in the one case, and unaffectedly welcomed in the
+other, by the person he loved the most, his wife.
+
+Finding no occasion of free speech, I bethought me at last of a kind of
+documentary disclosure; and for some nights, when I was off duty and
+should have been asleep, I gave my time to the preparation of that
+which I may call my budget. But this I found to be the easiest portion
+of my task, and that which remained—namely, the presentation to my
+lady—almost more than I had fortitude to overtake. Several days I went
+about with my papers under my arm, spying for some juncture of talk to
+serve as introduction. I will not deny but that some offered; only when
+they did my tongue clove to the roof of my mouth; and I think I might
+have been carrying about my packet till this day, had not a fortunate
+accident delivered me from all my hesitations. This was at night, when
+I was once more leaving the room, the thing not yet done, and myself in
+despair at my own cowardice.
+
+“What do you carry about with you, Mr. Mackellar?” she asked. “These
+last days, I see you always coming in and out with the same armful.”
+
+I returned upon my steps without a word, laid the papers before her on
+the table, and left her to her reading. Of what that was, I am now to
+give you some idea; and the best will be to reproduce a letter of my
+own which came first in the budget and of which (according to an
+excellent habitude) I have preserved the scroll. It will show, too, the
+moderation of my part in these affairs, a thing which some have called
+recklessly in question.
+
+
+“Durrisdeer.
+“1757.
+
+
+“Honoured Madam,
+
+“I trust I would not step out of my place without occasion; but I see
+how much evil has flowed in the past to all of your noble house from
+that unhappy and secretive fault of reticency, and the papers on which
+I venture to call your attention are family papers, and all highly
+worthy your acquaintance.
+
+“I append a schedule with some necessary observations,
+
+“And am,
+“Honoured Madam,
+“Your ladyship’s obliged, obedient servant,
+“Ephraim Mackellar.
+
+
+“Schedule of Papers.
+
+
+“A. Scroll of ten letters from Ephraim Mackellar to the Hon. James
+Durie, Esq., by courtesy Master of Ballantrae during the latter’s
+residence in Paris: under dates . . . ” (follow the dates) . . . “Nota:
+to be read in connection with B. and C.
+
+“B. Seven original letters from the said Mr of Ballantrae to the said
+E. Mackellar, under dates . . . ” (follow the dates.)
+
+“C. Three original letters from the Mr of Ballantrae to the Hon. Henry
+Durie, Esq., under dates . . . ” (follow the dates) . . . “Nota: given
+me by Mr. Henry to answer: copies of my answers A 4, A 5, and A 9 of
+these productions. The purport of Mr. Henry’s communications, of which
+I can find no scroll, may be gathered from those of his unnatural
+brother.
+
+“D. A correspondence, original and scroll, extending over a period of
+three years till January of the current year, between the said Mr of
+Ballantrae and — —, Under Secretary of State; twenty-seven in all.
+Nota: found among the Master’s papers.”
+
+
+Weary as I was with watching and distress of mind, it was impossible
+for me to sleep. All night long I walked in my chamber, revolving what
+should be the issue, and sometimes repenting the temerity of my
+immixture in affairs so private; and with the first peep of the morning
+I was at the sick-room door. Mrs. Henry had thrown open the shutters
+and even the window, for the temperature was mild. She looked
+steadfastly before her; where was nothing to see, or only the blue of
+the morning creeping among woods. Upon the stir of my entrance she did
+not so much as turn about her face: a circumstance from which I augured
+very ill.
+
+“Madam,” I began; and then again, “Madam;” but could make no more of
+it. Nor yet did Mrs. Henry come to my assistance with a word. In this
+pass I began gathering up the papers where they lay scattered on the
+table; and the first thing that struck me, their bulk appeared to have
+diminished. Once I ran them through, and twice; but the correspondence
+with the Secretary of State, on which I had reckoned so much against
+the future, was nowhere to be found. I looked in the chimney; amid the
+smouldering embers, black ashes of paper fluttered in the draught; and
+at that my timidity vanished.
+
+“Good God, madam,” cried I, in a voice not fitting for a sick-room,
+“Good God, madam, what have you done with my papers?”
+
+“I have burned them,” said Mrs. Henry, turning about. “It is enough, it
+is too much, that you and I have seen them.”
+
+“This is a fine night’s work that you have done!” cried I. “And all to
+save the reputation of a man that ate bread by the shedding of his
+comrades’ blood, as I do by the shedding of ink.”
+
+“To save the reputation of that family in which you are a servant, Mr.
+Mackellar,” she returned, “and for which you have already done so
+much.”
+
+“It is a family I will not serve much longer,” I cried, “for I am
+driven desperate. You have stricken the sword out of my hands; you have
+left us all defenceless. I had always these letters I could shake over
+his head; and now—What is to do? We are so falsely situate we dare not
+show the man the door; the country would fly on fire against us; and I
+had this one hold upon him—and now it is gone—now he may come back
+to-morrow, and we must all sit down with him to dinner, go for a stroll
+with him on the terrace, or take a hand at cards, of all things, to
+divert his leisure! No, madam! God forgive you, if He can find it in
+His heart; for I cannot find it in mine.”
+
+“I wonder to find you so simple, Mr. Mackellar,” said Mrs. Henry. “What
+does this man value reputation? But he knows how high we prize it; he
+knows we would rather die than make these letters public; and do you
+suppose he would not trade upon the knowledge? What you call your
+sword, Mr. Mackellar, and which had been one indeed against a man of
+any remnant of propriety, would have been but a sword of paper against
+him. He would smile in your face at such a threat. He stands upon his
+degradation, he makes that his strength; it is in vain to struggle with
+such characters.” She cried out this last a little desperately, and
+then with more quiet: “No, Mr. Mackellar; I have thought upon this
+matter all night, and there is no way out of it. Papers or no papers,
+the door of this house stands open for him; he is the rightful heir,
+forsooth! If we sought to exclude him, all would redound against poor
+Henry, and I should see him stoned again upon the streets. Ah! if Henry
+dies, it is a different matter! They have broke the entail for their
+own good purposes; the estate goes to my daughter; and I shall see who
+sets a foot upon it. But if Henry lives, my poor Mr. Mackellar, and
+that man returns, we must suffer: only this time it will be together.”
+
+On the whole I was well pleased with Mrs. Henry’s attitude of mind; nor
+could I even deny there was some cogency in that which she advanced
+about the papers.
+
+“Let us say no more about it,” said I. “I can only be sorry I trusted a
+lady with the originals, which was an unbusinesslike proceeding at the
+best. As for what I said of leaving the service of the family, it was
+spoken with the tongue only; and you may set your mind at rest. I
+belong to Durrisdeer, Mrs. Henry, as if I had been born there.”
+
+I must do her the justice to say she seemed perfectly relieved; so that
+we began this morning, as we were to continue for so many years, on a
+proper ground of mutual indulgence and respect.
+
+The same day, which was certainly prededicate to joy, we observed the
+first signal of recovery in Mr. Henry; and about three of the following
+afternoon he found his mind again, recognising me by name with the
+strongest evidences of affection. Mrs. Henry was also in the room, at
+the bedfoot; but it did not appear that he observed her. And indeed
+(the fever being gone) he was so weak that he made but the one effort
+and sank again into lethargy. The course of his restoration was now
+slow but equal; every day his appetite improved; every week we were
+able to remark an increase both of strength and flesh; and before the
+end of the month he was out of bed and had even begun to be carried in
+his chair upon the terrace.
+
+It was perhaps at this time that Mrs. Henry and I were the most uneasy
+in mind. Apprehension for his days was at an end; and a worse fear
+succeeded. Every day we drew consciously nearer to a day of reckoning;
+and the days passed on, and still there was nothing. Mr. Henry bettered
+in strength, he held long talks with us on a great diversity of
+subjects, his father came and sat with him and went again; and still
+there was no reference to the late tragedy or to the former troubles
+which had brought it on. Did he remember, and conceal his dreadful
+knowledge? or was the whole blotted from his mind? This was the problem
+that kept us watching and trembling all day when we were in his company
+and held us awake at night when we were in our lonely beds. We knew not
+even which alternative to hope for, both appearing so unnatural and
+pointing so directly to an unsound brain. Once this fear offered, I
+observed his conduct with sedulous particularity. Something of the
+child he exhibited: a cheerfulness quite foreign to his previous
+character, an interest readily aroused, and then very tenacious, in
+small matters which he had heretofore despised. When he was stricken
+down, I was his only confidant, and I may say his only friend, and he
+was on terms of division with his wife; upon his recovery, all was
+changed, the past forgotten, the wife first and even single in his
+thoughts. He turned to her with all his emotions, like a child to its
+mother, and seemed secure of sympathy; called her in all his needs with
+something of that querulous familiarity that marks a certainty of
+indulgence; and I must say, in justice to the woman, he was never
+disappointed. To her, indeed, this changed behaviour was inexpressibly
+affecting; and I think she felt it secretly as a reproach; so that I
+have seen her, in early days, escape out of the room that she might
+indulge herself in weeping. But to me the change appeared not natural;
+and viewing it along with all the rest, I began to wonder, with many
+head-shakings, whether his reason were perfectly erect.
+
+As this doubt stretched over many years, endured indeed until my
+master’s death, and clouded all our subsequent relations, I may well
+consider of it more at large. When he was able to resume some charge of
+his affairs, I had many opportunities to try him with precision. There
+was no lack of understanding, nor yet of authority; but the old
+continuous interest had quite departed; he grew readily fatigued, and
+fell to yawning; and he carried into money relations, where it is
+certainly out of place, a facility that bordered upon slackness. True,
+since we had no longer the exactions of the Master to contend against,
+there was the less occasion to raise strictness into principle or do
+battle for a farthing. True, again, there was nothing excessive in
+these relaxations, or I would have been no party to them. But the whole
+thing marked a change, very slight yet very perceptible; and though no
+man could say my master had gone at all out of his mind, no man could
+deny that he had drifted from his character. It was the same to the
+end, with his manner and appearance. Some of the heat of the fever
+lingered in his veins: his movements a little hurried, his speech
+notably more voluble, yet neither truly amiss. His whole mind stood
+open to happy impressions, welcoming these and making much of them; but
+the smallest suggestion of trouble or sorrow he received with visible
+impatience and dismissed again with immediate relief. It was to this
+temper that he owed the felicity of his later days; and yet here it
+was, if anywhere, that you could call the man insane. A great part of
+this life consists in contemplating what we cannot cure; but Mr. Henry,
+if he could not dismiss solicitude by an effort of the mind, must
+instantly and at whatever cost annihilate the cause of it; so that he
+played alternately the ostrich and the bull. It is to this strenuous
+cowardice of pain that I have to set down all the unfortunate and
+excessive steps of his subsequent career. Certainly this was the reason
+of his beating McManus, the groom, a thing so much out of all his
+former practice, and which awakened so much comment at the time. It is
+to this, again, that I must lay the total loss of near upon two hundred
+pounds, more than the half of which I could have saved if his
+impatience would have suffered me. But he preferred loss or any
+desperate extreme to a continuance of mental suffering.
+
+All this has led me far from our immediate trouble: whether he
+remembered or had forgotten his late dreadful act; and if he
+remembered, in what light he viewed it. The truth burst upon us
+suddenly, and was indeed one of the chief surprises of my life. He had
+been several times abroad, and was now beginning to walk a little with
+an arm, when it chanced I should be left alone with him upon the
+terrace. He turned to me with a singular furtive smile, such as
+schoolboys use when in fault; and says he, in a private whisper and
+without the least preface: “Where have you buried him?”
+
+I could not make one sound in answer.
+
+“Where have you buried him?” he repeated. “I want to see his grave.”
+
+I conceived I had best take the bull by the horns. “Mr. Henry,” said I,
+“I have news to give that will rejoice you exceedingly. In all human
+likelihood, your hands are clear of blood. I reason from certain
+indices; and by these it should appear your brother was not dead, but
+was carried in a swound on board the lugger. But now he may be
+perfectly recovered.”
+
+What there was in his countenance I could not read. “James?” he asked.
+
+“Your brother James,” I answered. “I would not raise a hope that may be
+found deceptive, but in my heart I think it very probable he is alive.”
+
+“Ah!” says Mr. Henry; and suddenly rising from his seat with more
+alacrity than he had yet discovered, set one finger on my breast, and
+cried at me in a kind of screaming whisper, “Mackellar”—these were his
+words—“nothing can kill that man. He is not mortal. He is bound upon my
+back to all eternity—to all eternity!” says he, and, sitting down
+again, fell upon a stubborn silence.
+
+A day or two after, with the same secret smile, and first looking about
+as if to be sure we were alone, “Mackellar,” said he, “when you have
+any intelligence, be sure and let me know. We must keep an eye upon
+him, or he will take us when we least expect.”
+
+“He will not show face here again,” said I.
+
+“Oh yes he will,” said Mr. Henry. “Wherever I am, there will he be.”
+And again he looked all about him.
+
+“You must not dwell upon this thought, Mr. Henry,” said I.
+
+“No,” said he, “that is a very good advice. We will never think of it,
+except when you have news. And we do not know yet,” he added; “he may
+be dead.”
+
+The manner of his saying this convinced me thoroughly of what I had
+scarce ventured to suspect: that, so far from suffering any penitence
+for the attempt, he did but lament his failure. This was a discovery I
+kept to myself, fearing it might do him a prejudice with his wife. But
+I might have saved myself the trouble; she had divined it for herself,
+and found the sentiment quite natural. Indeed, I could not but say that
+there were three of us, all of the same mind; nor could any news have
+reached Durrisdeer more generally welcome than tidings of the Master’s
+death.
+
+This brings me to speak of the exception, my old lord. As soon as my
+anxiety for my own master began to be relaxed, I was aware of a change
+in the old gentleman, his father, that seemed to threaten mortal
+consequences.
+
+His face was pale and swollen; as he sat in the chimney-side with his
+Latin, he would drop off sleeping and the book roll in the ashes; some
+days he would drag his foot, others stumble in speaking. The amenity of
+his behaviour appeared more extreme; full of excuses for the least
+trouble, very thoughtful for all; to myself, of a most flattering
+civility. One day, that he had sent for his lawyer and remained a long
+while private, he met me as he was crossing the hall with painful
+footsteps, and took me kindly by the hand. “Mr. Mackellar,” said he, “I
+have had many occasions to set a proper value on your services; and
+to-day, when I re-cast my will, I have taken the freedom to name you
+for one of my executors. I believe you bear love enough to our house to
+render me this service.” At that very time he passed the greater
+portion of his days in slumber, from which it was often difficult to
+rouse him; seemed to have lost all count of years, and had several
+times (particularly on waking) called for his wife and for an old
+servant whose very gravestone was now green with moss. If I had been
+put to my oath, I must have declared he was incapable of testing; and
+yet there was never a will drawn more sensible in every trait, or
+showing a more excellent judgment both of persons and affairs.
+
+His dissolution, though it took not very long, proceeded by
+infinitesimal gradations. His faculties decayed together steadily; the
+power of his limbs was almost gone, he was extremely deaf, his speech
+had sunk into mere mumblings; and yet to the end he managed to discover
+something of his former courtesy and kindness, pressing the hand of any
+that helped him, presenting me with one of his Latin books, in which he
+had laboriously traced my name, and in a thousand ways reminding us of
+the greatness of that loss which it might almost be said we had already
+suffered. To the end, the power of articulation returned to him in
+flashes; it seemed he had only forgotten the art of speech as a child
+forgets his lesson, and at times he would call some part of it to mind.
+On the last night of his life he suddenly broke silence with these
+words from Virgil: “Gnatique pratisque, alma, precor, miserere,”
+perfectly uttered, and with a fitting accent. At the sudden clear sound
+of it we started from our several occupations; but it was in vain we
+turned to him; he sat there silent, and, to all appearance, fatuous. A
+little later he was had to bed with more difficulty than ever before;
+and some time in the night, without any more violence, his spirit fled.
+
+At a far later period I chanced to speak of these particulars with a
+doctor of medicine, a man of so high a reputation that I scruple to
+adduce his name. By his view of it father and son both suffered from
+the affection: the father from the strain of his unnatural sorrows—the
+son perhaps in the excitation of the fever; each had ruptured a vessel
+on the brain, and there was probably (my doctor added) some
+predisposition in the family to accidents of that description. The
+father sank, the son recovered all the externals of a healthy man; but
+it is like there was some destruction in those delicate tissues where
+the soul resides and does her earthly business; her heavenly, I would
+fain hope, cannot be thus obstructed by material accidents. And yet,
+upon a more mature opinion, it matters not one jot; for He who shall
+pass judgment on the records of our life is the same that formed us in
+frailty.
+
+The death of my old lord was the occasion of a fresh surprise to us who
+watched the behaviour of his successor. To any considering mind, the
+two sons had between them slain their father, and he who took the sword
+might be even said to have slain him with his hand, but no such thought
+appeared to trouble my new lord. He was becomingly grave; I could
+scarce say sorrowful, or only with a pleasant sorrow; talking of the
+dead with a regretful cheerfulness, relating old examples of his
+character, smiling at them with a good conscience; and when the day of
+the funeral came round, doing the honours with exact propriety. I could
+perceive, besides, that he found a solid gratification in his accession
+to the title; the which he was punctilious in exacting.
+
+ And now there came upon the scene a new character, and one that played
+ his part, too, in the story; I mean the present lord, Alexander, whose
+ birth (17th July, 1757) filled the cup of my poor master’s happiness.
+ There was nothing then left him to wish for; nor yet leisure to wish
+ for it. Indeed, there never was a parent so fond and doting as he
+ showed himself. He was continually uneasy in his son’s absence. Was
+ the child abroad? the father would be watching the clouds in case it
+ rained. Was it night? he would rise out of his bed to observe its
+ slumbers. His conversation grew even wearyful to strangers, since he
+ talked of little but his son. In matters relating to the estate, all
+ was designed with a particular eye to Alexander; and it would be:—“Let
+ us put it in hand at once, that the wood may be grown against
+ Alexander’s majority;” or, “This will fall in again handsomely for
+ Alexander’s marriage.” Every day this absorption of the man’s nature
+ became more observable, with many touching and some very blameworthy
+ particulars. Soon the child could walk abroad with him, at first on
+ the terrace, hand in hand, and afterward at large about the policies;
+ and this grew to be my lord’s chief occupation. The sound of their two
+ voices (audible a great way off, for they spoke loud) became familiar
+ in the neighbourhood; and for my part I found it more agreeable than
+ the sound of birds. It was pretty to see the pair returning, full of
+ briars, and the father as flushed and sometimes as bemuddied as the
+ child, for they were equal sharers in all sorts of boyish
+ entertainment, digging in the beach, damming of streams, and what not;
+ and I have seen them gaze through a fence at cattle with the same
+ childish contemplation.
+
+The mention of these rambles brings me to a strange scene of which I
+was a witness. There was one walk I never followed myself without
+emotion, so often had I gone there upon miserable errands, so much had
+there befallen against the house of Durrisdeer. But the path lay handy
+from all points beyond the Muckle Ross; and I was driven, although much
+against my will, to take my use of it perhaps once in the two months.
+It befell when Mr. Alexander was of the age of seven or eight, I had
+some business on the far side in the morning, and entered the
+shrubbery, on my homeward way, about nine of a bright forenoon. It was
+that time of year when the woods are all in their spring colours, the
+thorns all in flower, and the birds in the high season of their
+singing. In contrast to this merriment, the shrubbery was only the more
+sad, and I the more oppressed by its associations. In this situation of
+spirit it struck me disagreeably to hear voices a little way in front,
+and to recognise the tones of my lord and Mr. Alexander. I pushed
+ahead, and came presently into their view. They stood together in the
+open space where the duel was, my lord with his hand on his son’s
+shoulder, and speaking with some gravity. At least, as he raised his
+head upon my coming, I thought I could perceive his countenance to
+lighten.
+
+“Ah!” says he, “here comes the good Mackellar. I have just been telling
+Sandie the story of this place, and how there was a man whom the devil
+tried to kill, and how near he came to kill the devil instead.”
+
+I had thought it strange enough he should bring the child into that
+scene; that he should actually be discoursing of his act, passed
+measure. But the worst was yet to come; for he added, turning to his
+son—“You can ask Mackellar; he was here and saw it.”
+
+“Is it true, Mr. Mackellar?” asked the child. “And did you really see
+the devil?”
+
+“I have not heard the tale,” I replied; “and I am in a press of
+business.” So far I said a little sourly, fencing with the
+embarrassment of the position; and suddenly the bitterness of the past,
+and the terror of that scene by candle-light, rushed in upon my mind. I
+bethought me that, for a difference of a second’s quickness in parade,
+the child before me might have never seen the day; and the emotion that
+always fluttered round my heart in that dark shrubbery burst forth in
+words. “But so much is true,” I cried, “that I have met the devil in
+these woods, and seen him foiled here. Blessed be God that we escaped
+with life—blessed be God that one stone yet stands upon another in the
+walls of Durrisdeer! And, oh! Mr. Alexander, if ever you come by this
+spot, though it was a hundred years hence, and you came with the gayest
+and the highest in the land, I would step aside and remember a bit
+prayer.”
+
+My lord bowed his head gravely. “Ah!” says he, “Mackellar is always in
+the right. Come, Alexander, take your bonnet off.” And with that he
+uncovered, and held out his hand. “O Lord,” said he, “I thank Thee, and
+my son thanks Thee, for Thy manifold great mercies. Let us have peace
+for a little; defend us from the evil man. Smite him, O Lord, upon the
+lying mouth!” The last broke out of him like a cry; and at that,
+whether remembered anger choked his utterance, or whether he perceived
+this was a singular sort of prayer, at least he suddenly came to a full
+stop; and, after a moment, set back his hat upon his head.
+
+“I think you have forgot a word, my lord,” said I. “‘Forgive us our
+trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us. For Thine is
+the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. Amen.’”
+
+“Ah! that is easy saying,” said my lord. “That is very easy saying,
+Mackellar. But for me to forgive!—I think I would cut a very silly
+figure if I had the affectation to pretend it.”
+
+“The bairn, my lord!” said I, with some severity, for I thought his
+expressions little fitted for the care of children.
+
+“Why, very true,” said he. “This is dull work for a bairn. Let’s go
+nesting.”
+
+I forget if it was the same day, but it was soon after, my lord,
+finding me alone, opened himself a little more on the same head.
+
+“Mackellar,” he said, “I am now a very happy man.”
+
+“I think so indeed, my lord,” said I, “and the sight of it gives me a
+light heart.”
+
+“There is an obligation in happiness—do you not think so?” says he,
+musingly.
+
+“I think so indeed,” says I, “and one in sorrow, too. If we are not
+here to try to do the best, in my humble opinion the sooner we are away
+the better for all parties.”
+
+“Ay, but if you were in my shoes, would you forgive him?” asks my lord.
+
+The suddenness of the attack a little gravelled me.
+
+“It is a duty laid upon us strictly,” said I.
+
+“Hut!” said he. “These are expressions! Do you forgive the man
+yourself?”
+
+“Well—no!” said I. “God forgive me, I do not.”
+
+“Shake hands upon that!” cries my lord, with a kind of joviality.
+
+“It is an ill sentiment to shake hands upon,” said I, “for Christian
+people. I think I will give you mine on some more evangelical
+occasion.”
+
+This I said, smiling a little; but as for my lord, he went from the
+room laughing aloud.
+
+ For my lord’s slavery to the child, I can find no expression adequate.
+ He lost himself in that continual thought: business, friends, and wife
+ being all alike forgotten, or only remembered with a painful effort,
+ like that of one struggling with a posset. It was most notable in the
+ matter of his wife. Since I had known Durrisdeer, she had been the
+ burthen of his thought and the loadstone of his eyes; and now she was
+ quite cast out. I have seen him come to the door of a room, look
+ round, and pass my lady over as though she were a dog before the fire.
+ It would be Alexander he was seeking, and my lady knew it well. I have
+ heard him speak to her so ruggedly that I nearly found it in my heart
+ to intervene: the cause would still be the same, that she had in some
+ way thwarted Alexander. Without doubt this was in the nature of a
+ judgment on my lady. Without doubt she had the tables turned upon her,
+ as only Providence can do it; she who had been cold so many years to
+ every mark of tenderness, it was her part now to be neglected: the
+ more praise to her that she played it well.
+
+An odd situation resulted: that we had once more two parties in the
+house, and that now I was of my lady’s. Not that ever I lost the love I
+bore my master. But, for one thing, he had the less use for my society.
+For another, I could not but compare the case of Mr. Alexander with
+that of Miss Katharine; for whom my lord had never found the least
+attention. And for a third, I was wounded by the change he discovered
+to his wife, which struck me in the nature of an infidelity. I could
+not but admire, besides, the constancy and kindness she displayed.
+Perhaps her sentiment to my lord, as it had been founded from the first
+in pity, was that rather of a mother than a wife; perhaps it pleased
+her—if I may so say—to behold her two children so happy in each other;
+the more as one had suffered so unjustly in the past. But, for all
+that, and though I could never trace in her one spark of jealousy, she
+must fall back for society on poor neglected Miss Katharine; and I, on
+my part, came to pass my spare hours more and more with the mother and
+daughter. It would be easy to make too much of this division, for it
+was a pleasant family, as families go; still the thing existed; whether
+my lord knew it or not, I am in doubt. I do not think he did; he was
+bound up so entirely in his son; but the rest of us knew it, and in a
+manner suffered from the knowledge.
+
+What troubled us most, however, was the great and growing danger to the
+child. My lord was his father over again; it was to be feared the son
+would prove a second Master. Time has proved these fears to have been
+quite exaggerate. Certainly there is no more worthy gentleman to-day in
+Scotland than the seventh Lord Durrisdeer. Of my own exodus from his
+employment it does not become me to speak, above all in a memorandum
+written only to justify his father. . . .
+
+[_Editor’s Note_. _Five pages of Mr. Mackellar’s MS. are here omitted_.
+_I have gathered from their perusal an impression that Mr. Mackellar_,
+_in his old age_, _was rather an exacting servant_. _Against the
+seventh Lord Durrisdeer_ (_with whom_, _at any rate_, _we have no
+concern_) _nothing material is alleged_.—R. L. S.]
+
+. . . But our fear at the time was lest he should turn out, in the
+person of his son, a second edition of his brother. My lady had tried
+to interject some wholesome discipline; she had been glad to give that
+up, and now looked on with secret dismay; sometimes she even spoke of
+it by hints; and sometimes, when there was brought to her knowledge
+some monstrous instance of my lord’s indulgence, she would betray
+herself in a gesture or perhaps an exclamation. As for myself, I was
+haunted by the thought both day and night: not so much for the child’s
+sake as for the father’s. The man had gone to sleep, he was dreaming a
+dream, and any rough wakening must infallibly prove mortal. That he
+should survive its death was inconceivable; and the fear of its
+dishonour made me cover my face.
+
+It was this continual preoccupation that screwed me up at last to a
+remonstrance: a matter worthy to be narrated in detail. My lord and I
+sat one day at the same table upon some tedious business of detail; I
+have said that he had lost his former interest in such occupations; he
+was plainly itching to be gone, and he looked fretful, weary, and
+methought older than I had ever previously observed. I suppose it was
+the haggard face that put me suddenly upon my enterprise.
+
+“My lord,” said I, with my head down, and feigning to continue my
+occupation—“or, rather, let me call you again by the name of Mr. Henry,
+for I fear your anger and want you to think upon old times—”
+
+“My good Mackellar!” said he; and that in tones so kindly that I had
+near forsook my purpose. But I called to mind that I was speaking for
+his good, and stuck to my colours.
+
+“Has it never come in upon your mind what you are doing?” I asked.
+
+“What I am doing?” he repeated; “I was never good at guessing riddles.”
+
+“What you are doing with your son?” said I.
+
+“Well,” said he, with some defiance in his tone, “and what am I doing
+with my son?”
+
+“Your father was a very good man,” says I, straying from the direct
+path. “But do you think he was a wise father?”
+
+There was a pause before he spoke, and then: “I say nothing against
+him,” he replied. “I had the most cause perhaps; but I say nothing.”
+
+“Why, there it is,” said I. “You had the cause at least. And yet your
+father was a good man; I never knew a better, save on the one point,
+nor yet a wiser. Where he stumbled, it is highly possible another man
+should fail. He had the two sons—”
+
+My lord rapped suddenly and violently on the table.
+
+“What is this?” cried he. “Speak out!”
+
+“I will, then,” said I, my voice almost strangled with the thumping of
+my heart. “If you continue to indulge Mr. Alexander, you are following
+in your father’s footsteps. Beware, my lord, lest (when he grows up)
+your son should follow in the Master’s.”
+
+I had never meant to put the thing so crudely; but in the extreme of
+fear, there comes a brutal kind of courage, the most brutal indeed of
+all; and I burnt my ships with that plain word. I never had the answer.
+When I lifted my head, my lord had risen to his feet, and the next
+moment he fell heavily on the floor. The fit or seizure endured not
+very long; he came to himself vacantly, put his hand to his head, which
+I was then supporting, and says he, in a broken voice: “I have been
+ill,” and a little after: “Help me.” I got him to his feet, and he
+stood pretty well, though he kept hold of the table. “I have been ill,
+Mackellar,” he said again. “Something broke, Mackellar—or was going to
+break, and then all swam away. I think I was very angry. Never you
+mind, Mackellar; never you mind, my man. I wouldnae hurt a hair upon
+your head. Too much has come and gone. It’s a certain thing between us
+two. But I think, Mackellar, I will go to Mrs. Henry—I think I will go
+to Mrs. Henry,” said he, and got pretty steadily from the room, leaving
+me overcome with penitence.
+
+Presently the door flew open, and my lady swept in with flashing eyes.
+“What is all this?” she cried. “What have you done to my husband? Will
+nothing teach you your position in this house? Will you never cease
+from making and meddling?”
+
+“My lady,” said I, “since I have been in this house I have had plenty
+of hard words. For a while they were my daily diet, and I swallowed
+them all. As for to-day, you may call me what you please; you will
+never find the name hard enough for such a blunder. And yet I meant it
+for the best.”
+
+I told her all with ingenuity, even as it is written here; and when she
+had heard me out, she pondered, and I could see her animosity fall.
+“Yes,” she said, “you meant well indeed. I have had the same thought
+myself, or the same temptation rather, which makes me pardon you. But,
+dear God, can you not understand that he can bear no more? He can bear
+no more!” she cried. “The cord is stretched to snapping. What matters
+the future if he have one or two good days?”
+
+“Amen,” said I. “I will meddle no more. I am pleased enough that you
+should recognise the kindness of my meaning.”
+
+“Yes,” said my lady; “but when it came to the point, I have to suppose
+your courage failed you; for what you said was said cruelly.” She
+paused, looking at me; then suddenly smiled a little, and said a
+singular thing: “Do you know what you are, Mr. Mackellar? You are an
+old maid.”
+
+ No more incident of any note occurred in the family until the return
+ of that ill-starred man the Master. But I have to place here a second
+ extract from the memoirs of Chevalier Burke, interesting in itself,
+ and highly necessary for my purpose. It is our only sight of the
+ Master on his Indian travels; and the first word in these pages of
+ Secundra Dass. One fact, it is to observe, appears here very clearly,
+ which if we had known some twenty years ago, how many calamities and
+ sorrows had been spared!—that Secundra Dass spoke English.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+ADVENTURE OF CHEVALIER BURKE IN INDIA.
+
+
+_Extracted from his Memoirs_.
+
+
+. . . Here was I, therefore, on the streets of that city, the name of
+which I cannot call to mind, while even then I was so ill-acquainted
+with its situation that I knew not whether to go south or north. The
+alert being sudden, I had run forth without shoes or stockings; my hat
+had been struck from my head in the mellay; my kit was in the hands of
+the English; I had no companion but the cipaye, no weapon but my sword,
+and the devil a coin in my pocket. In short, I was for all the world
+like one of those calendars with whom Mr. Galland has made us
+acquainted in his elegant tales. These gentlemen, you will remember,
+were for ever falling in with extraordinary incidents; and I was myself
+upon the brink of one so astonishing that I protest I cannot explain it
+to this day.
+
+The cipaye was a very honest man; he had served many years with the
+French colours, and would have let himself be cut to pieces for any of
+the brave countrymen of Mr. Lally. It is the same fellow (his name has
+quite escaped me) of whom I have narrated already a surprising instance
+of generosity of mind—when he found Mr. de Fessac and myself upon the
+ramparts, entirely overcome with liquor, and covered us with straw
+while the commandant was passing by. I consulted him, therefore, with
+perfect freedom. It was a fine question what to do; but we decided at
+last to escalade a garden wall, where we could certainly sleep in the
+shadow of the trees, and might perhaps find an occasion to get hold of
+a pair of slippers and a turban. In that part of the city we had only
+the difficulty of the choice, for it was a quarter consisting entirely
+of walled gardens, and the lanes which divided them were at that hour
+of the night deserted. I gave the cipaye a back, and we had soon
+dropped into a large enclosure full of trees. The place was soaking
+with the dew, which, in that country, is exceedingly unwholesome, above
+all to whites; yet my fatigue was so extreme that I was already half
+asleep, when the cipaye recalled me to my senses. In the far end of the
+enclosure a bright light had suddenly shone out, and continued to burn
+steadily among the leaves. It was a circumstance highly unusual in such
+a place and hour; and, in our situation, it behoved us to proceed with
+some timidity. The cipaye was sent to reconnoitre, and pretty soon
+returned with the intelligence that we had fallen extremely amiss, for
+the house belonged to a white man, who was in all likelihood English.
+
+“Faith,” says I, “if there is a white man to be seen, I will have a
+look at him; for, the Lord be praised! there are more sorts than the
+one!”
+
+The cipaye led me forward accordingly to a place from which I had a
+clear view upon the house. It was surrounded with a wide verandah; a
+lamp, very well trimmed, stood upon the floor of it, and on either side
+of the lamp there sat a man, cross-legged, after the Oriental manner.
+Both, besides, were bundled up in muslin like two natives; and yet one
+of them was not only a white man, but a man very well known to me and
+the reader, being indeed that very Master of Ballantrae of whose
+gallantry and genius I have had to speak so often. Word had reached me
+that he was come to the Indies, though we had never met at least, and I
+heard little of his occupations. But, sure, I had no sooner recognised
+him, and found myself in the arms of so old a comrade, than I supposed
+my tribulations were quite done. I stepped plainly forth into the light
+of the moon, which shone exceeding strong, and hailing Ballantrae by
+name, made him in a few words master of my grievous situation. He
+turned, started the least thing in the world, looked me fair in the
+face while I was speaking, and when I had done addressed himself to his
+companion in the barbarous native dialect. The second person, who was
+of an extraordinary delicate appearance, with legs like walking canes
+and fingers like the stalk of a tobacco pipe, [6] now rose to his feet.
+
+“The Sahib,” says he, “understands no English language. I understand it
+myself, and I see you make some small mistake—oh! which may happen very
+often. But the Sahib would be glad to know how you come in a garden.”
+
+“Ballantrae!” I cried, “have you the damned impudence to deny me to my
+face?”
+
+Ballantrae never moved a muscle, staring at me like an image in a
+pagoda.
+
+“The Sahib understands no English language,” says the native, as glib
+as before. “He be glad to know how you come in a garden.”
+
+“Oh! the divil fetch him,” says I. “He would be glad to know how I come
+in a garden, would he? Well, now, my dear man, just have the civility
+to tell the Sahib, with my kind love, that we are two soldiers here
+whom he never met and never heard of, but the cipaye is a broth of a
+boy, and I am a broth of a boy myself; and if we don’t get a full meal
+of meat, and a turban, and slippers, and the value of a gold mohur in
+small change as a matter of convenience, bedad, my friend, I could lay
+my finger on a garden where there is going to be trouble.”
+
+They carried their comedy so far as to converse awhile in Hindustanee;
+and then says the Hindu, with the same smile, but sighing as if he were
+tired of the repetition, “The Sahib would be glad to know how you come
+in a garden.”
+
+“Is that the way of it?” says I, and laying my hand on my sword-hilt I
+bade the cipaye draw.
+
+Ballantrae’s Hindu, still smiling, pulled out a pistol from his bosom,
+and though Ballantrae himself never moved a muscle I knew him well
+enough to be sure he was prepared.
+
+“The Sahib thinks you better go away,” says the Hindu.
+
+Well, to be plain, it was what I was thinking myself; for the report of
+a pistol would have been, under Providence, the means of hanging the
+pair of us.
+
+“Tell the Sahib I consider him no gentleman,” says I, and turned away
+with a gesture of contempt.
+
+I was not gone three steps when the voice of the Hindu called me back.
+“The Sahib would be glad to know if you are a dam low Irishman,” says
+he; and at the words Ballantrae smiled and bowed very low.
+
+“What is that?” says I.
+
+“The Sahib say you ask your friend Mackellar,” says the Hindu. “The
+Sahib he cry quits.”
+
+“Tell the Sahib I will give him a cure for the Scots fiddle when next
+we meet,” cried I.
+
+The pair were still smiling as I left.
+
+There is little doubt some flaws may be picked in my own behaviour; and
+when a man, however gallant, appeals to posterity with an account of
+his exploits, he must almost certainly expect to share the fate of
+Cæsar and Alexander, and to meet with some detractors. But there is one
+thing that can never be laid at the door of Francis Burke: he never
+turned his back on a friend. . . .
+
+(Here follows a passage which the Chevalier Burke has been at the pains
+to delete before sending me his manuscript. Doubtless it was some very
+natural complaint of what he supposed to be an indiscretion on my part;
+though, indeed, I can call none to mind. Perhaps Mr. Henry was less
+guarded; or it is just possible the Master found the means to examine
+my correspondence, and himself read the letter from Troyes: in revenge
+for which this cruel jest was perpetrated on Mr. Burke in his extreme
+necessity. The Master, for all his wickedness, was not without some
+natural affection; I believe he was sincerely attached to Mr. Burke in
+the beginning; but the thought of treachery dried up the springs of his
+very shallow friendship, and his detestable nature appeared naked.—E.
+McK.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE.
+
+
+It is a strange thing that I should be at a stick for a date—the date,
+besides, of an incident that changed the very nature of my life, and
+sent us all into foreign lands. But the truth is, I was stricken out of
+all my habitudes, and find my journals very ill redd-up, [7] the day
+not indicated sometimes for a week or two together, and the whole
+fashion of the thing like that of a man near desperate. It was late in
+March at least, or early in April, 1764. I had slept heavily, and
+wakened with a premonition of some evil to befall. So strong was this
+upon my spirit that I hurried downstairs in my shirt and breeches, and
+my hand (I remember) shook upon the rail. It was a cold, sunny morning,
+with a thick white frost; the blackbirds sang exceeding sweet and loud
+about the house of Durrisdeer, and there was a noise of the sea in all
+the chambers. As I came by the doors of the hall, another sound
+arrested me—of voices talking. I drew nearer, and stood like a man
+dreaming. Here was certainly a human voice, and that in my own master’s
+house, and yet I knew it not; certainly human speech, and that in my
+native land; and yet, listen as I pleased, I could not catch one
+syllable. An old tale started up in my mind of a fairy wife (or perhaps
+only a wandering stranger), that came to the place of my fathers some
+generations back, and stayed the matter of a week, talking often in a
+tongue that signified nothing to the hearers; and went again, as she
+had come, under cloud of night, leaving not so much as a name behind
+her. A little fear I had, but more curiosity; and I opened the
+hall-door, and entered.
+
+The supper-things still lay upon the table; the shutters were still
+closed, although day peeped in the divisions; and the great room was
+lighted only with a single taper and some lurching reverberation of the
+fire. Close in the chimney sat two men. The one that was wrapped in a
+cloak and wore boots, I knew at once: it was the bird of ill omen back
+again. Of the other, who was set close to the red embers, and made up
+into a bundle like a mummy, I could but see that he was an alien, of a
+darker hue than any man of Europe, very frailly built, with a singular
+tall forehead, and a secret eye. Several bundles and a small valise
+were on the floor; and to judge by the smallness of this luggage, and
+by the condition of the Master’s boots, grossly patched by some
+unscrupulous country cobbler, evil had not prospered.
+
+He rose upon my entrance; our eyes crossed; and I know not why it
+should have been, but my courage rose like a lark on a May morning.
+
+“Ha!” said I, “is this you?”—and I was pleased with the unconcern of my
+own voice.
+
+“It is even myself, worthy Mackellar,” says the Master.
+
+“This time you have brought the black dog visibly upon your back,” I
+continued.
+
+“Referring to Secundra Dass?” asked the Master. “Let me present you. He
+is a native gentleman of India.”
+
+“Hum!” said I. “I am no great lover either of you or your friends, Mr.
+Bally. But I will let a little daylight in, and have a look at you.”
+And so saying, I undid the shutters of the eastern window.
+
+By the light of the morning I could perceive the man was changed.
+Later, when we were all together, I was more struck to see how lightly
+time had dealt with him; but the first glance was otherwise.
+
+“You are getting an old man,” said I.
+
+A shade came upon his face. “If you could see yourself,” said he, “you
+would perhaps not dwell upon the topic.”
+
+“Hut!” I returned, “old age is nothing to me. I think I have been
+always old; and I am now, I thank God, better known and more respected.
+It is not every one that can say that, Mr. Bally! The lines in your
+brow are calamities; your life begins to close in upon you like a
+prison; death will soon be rapping at the door; and I see not from what
+source you are to draw your consolations.”
+
+Here the Master addressed himself to Secundra Dass in Hindustanee, from
+which I gathered (I freely confess, with a high degree of pleasure)
+that my remarks annoyed him. All this while, you may be sure, my mind
+had been busy upon other matters, even while I rallied my enemy; and
+chiefly as to how I should communicate secretly and quickly with my
+lord. To this, in the breathing-space now given me, I turned all the
+forces of my mind; when, suddenly shifting my eyes, I was aware of the
+man himself standing in the doorway, and, to all appearance, quite
+composed. He had no sooner met my looks than he stepped across the
+threshold. The Master heard him coming, and advanced upon the other
+side; about four feet apart, these brothers came to a full pause, and
+stood exchanging steady looks, and then my lord smiled, bowed a little
+forward, and turned briskly away.
+
+“Mackellar,” says he, “we must see to breakfast for these travellers.”
+
+It was plain the Master was a trifle disconcerted; but he assumed the
+more impudence of speech and manner. “I am as hungry as a hawk,” says
+he. “Let it be something good, Henry.”
+
+My lord turned to him with the same hard smile.
+
+“Lord Durrisdeer,” says he.
+
+“Oh! never in the family,” returned the Master.
+
+“Every one in this house renders me my proper title,” says my lord. “If
+it please you to make an exception, I will leave you to consider what
+appearance it will bear to strangers, and whether it may not be
+translated as an effect of impotent jealousy.”
+
+I could have clapped my hands together with delight: the more so as my
+lord left no time for any answer, but, bidding me with a sign to follow
+him, went straight out of the hall.
+
+“Come quick,” says he; “we have to sweep vermin from the house.” And he
+sped through the passages, with so swift a step that I could scarce
+keep up with him, straight to the door of John Paul, the which he
+opened without summons and walked in. John was, to all appearance,
+sound asleep, but my lord made no pretence of waking him.
+
+“John Paul,” said he, speaking as quietly as ever I heard him, “you
+served my father long, or I would pack you from the house like a dog.
+If in half an hour’s time I find you gone, you shall continue to
+receive your wages in Edinburgh. If you linger here or in St.
+Bride’s—old man, old servant, and altogether—I shall find some very
+astonishing way to make you smart for your disloyalty. Up and begone.
+The door you let them in by will serve for your departure. I do not
+choose my son shall see your face again.”
+
+“I am rejoiced to find you bear the thing so quietly,” said I, when we
+were forth again by ourselves.
+
+“Quietly!” cries he, and put my hand suddenly against his heart, which
+struck upon his bosom like a sledge.
+
+At this revelation I was filled with wonder and fear. There was no
+constitution could bear so violent a strain—his least of all, that was
+unhinged already; and I decided in my mind that we must bring this
+monstrous situation to an end.
+
+“It would be well, I think, if I took word to my lady,” said I. Indeed,
+he should have gone himself, but I counted—not in vain—on his
+indifference.
+
+“Aye,” says he, “do. I will hurry breakfast: we must all appear at the
+table, even Alexander; it must appear we are untroubled.”
+
+I ran to my lady’s room, and with no preparatory cruelty, disclosed my
+news.
+
+“My mind was long ago made up,” said she. “We must make our packets
+secretly to-day, and leave secretly to-night. Thank Heaven, we have
+another house! The first ship that sails shall bear us to New York.”
+
+“And what of him?” I asked.
+
+“We leave him Durrisdeer,” she cried. “Let him work his pleasure upon
+that.”
+
+“Not so, by your leave,” said I. “There shall be a dog at his heels
+that can hold fast. Bed he shall have, and board, and a horse to ride
+upon, if he behave himself; but the keys—if you think well of it, my
+lady—shall be left in the hands of one Mackellar. There will be good
+care taken; trust him for that.”
+
+“Mr. Mackellar,” she cried, “I thank you for that thought. All shall be
+left in your hands. If we must go into a savage country, I bequeath it
+to you to take our vengeance. Send Macconochie to St. Bride’s, to
+arrange privately for horses and to call the lawyer. My lord must leave
+procuration.”
+
+At that moment my lord came to the door, and we opened our plan to him.
+
+“I will never hear of it,” he cried; “he would think I feared him. I
+will stay in my own house, please God, until I die. There lives not the
+man can beard me out of it. Once and for all, here I am, and here I
+stay in spite of all the devils in hell.” I can give no idea of the
+vehemency of his words and utterance; but we both stood aghast, and I
+in particular, who had been a witness of his former self-restraint.
+
+My lady looked at me with an appeal that went to my heart and recalled
+me to my wits. I made her a private sign to go, and when my lord and I
+were alone, went up to him where he was racing to and fro in one end of
+the room like a half-lunatic, and set my hand firmly on his shoulder.
+
+“My lord,” says I, “I am going to be the plain-dealer once more; if for
+the last time, so much the better, for I am grown weary of the part.”
+
+“Nothing will change me,” he answered. “God forbid I should refuse to
+hear you; but nothing will change me.” This he said firmly, with no
+signal of the former violence, which already raised my hopes.
+
+“Very well,” said I “I can afford to waste my breath.” I pointed to a
+chair, and he sat down and looked at me. “I can remember a time when my
+lady very much neglected you,” said I.
+
+“I never spoke of it while it lasted,” returned my lord, with a high
+flush of colour; “and it is all changed now.”
+
+“Do you know how much?” I said. “Do you know how much it is all
+changed? The tables are turned, my lord! It is my lady that now courts
+you for a word, a look—ay, and courts you in vain. Do you know with
+whom she passes her days while you are out gallivanting in the
+policies? My lord, she is glad to pass them with a certain dry old
+grieve [8] of the name of Ephraim Mackellar; and I think you may be
+able to remember what that means, for I am the more in a mistake or you
+were once driven to the same company yourself.”
+
+“Mackellar!” cries my lord, getting to his feet. “O my God, Mackellar!”
+
+“It is neither the name of Mackellar nor the name of God that can
+change the truth,” said I; “and I am telling you the fact. Now for you,
+that suffered so much, to deal out the same suffering to another, is
+that the part of any Christian? But you are so swallowed up in your new
+friend that the old are all forgotten. They are all clean vanished from
+your memory. And yet they stood by you at the darkest; my lady not the
+least. And does my lady ever cross your mind? Does it ever cross your
+mind what she went through that night?—or what manner of a wife she has
+been to you thenceforward?—or in what kind of a position she finds
+herself to-day? Never. It is your pride to stay and face him out, and
+she must stay along with you. Oh! my lord’s pride—that’s the great
+affair! And yet she is the woman, and you are a great hulking man! She
+is the woman that you swore to protect; and, more betoken, the own
+mother of that son of yours!”
+
+“You are speaking very bitterly, Mackellar,” said he; “but, the Lord
+knows, I fear you are speaking very true. I have not proved worthy of
+my happiness. Bring my lady back.”
+
+My lady was waiting near at hand to learn the issue. When I brought her
+in, my lord took a hand of each of us, and laid them both upon his
+bosom. “I have had two friends in my life,” said he. “All the comfort
+ever I had, it came from one or other. When you two are in a mind, I
+think I would be an ungrateful dog—” He shut his mouth very hard, and
+looked on us with swimming eyes. “Do what ye like with me,” says he,
+“only don’t think—” He stopped again. “Do what ye please with me: God
+knows I love and honour you.” And dropping our two hands, he turned his
+back and went and gazed out of the window. But my lady ran after,
+calling his name, and threw herself upon his neck in a passion of
+weeping.
+
+I went out and shut the door behind me, and stood and thanked God from
+the bottom of my heart.
+
+ At the breakfast board, according to my lord’s design, we were all
+ met. The Master had by that time plucked off his patched boots and
+ made a toilet suitable to the hour; Secundra Dass was no longer
+ bundled up in wrappers, but wore a decent plain black suit, which
+ misbecame him strangely; and the pair were at the great window,
+ looking forth, when the family entered. They turned; and the black man
+ (as they had already named him in the house) bowed almost to his
+ knees, but the Master was for running forward like one of the family.
+ My lady stopped him, curtseying low from the far end of the hall, and
+ keeping her children at her back. My lord was a little in front: so
+ there were the three cousins of Durrisdeer face to face. The hand of
+ time was very legible on all; I seemed to read in their changed faces
+ a _memento mori_; and what affected me still more, it was the wicked
+ man that bore his years the handsomest. My lady was quite transfigured
+ into the matron, a becoming woman for the head of a great tableful of
+ children and dependents. My lord was grown slack in his limbs; he
+ stooped; he walked with a running motion, as though he had learned
+ again from Mr. Alexander; his face was drawn; it seemed a trifle
+ longer than of old; and it wore at times a smile very singularly
+ mingled, and which (in my eyes) appeared both bitter and pathetic. But
+ the Master still bore himself erect, although perhaps with effort; his
+ brow barred about the centre with imperious lines, his mouth set as
+ for command. He had all the gravity and something of the splendour of
+ Satan in the “Paradise Lost.” I could not help but see the man with
+ admiration, and was only surprised that I saw him with so little fear.
+
+But indeed (as long as we were at the table) it seemed as if his
+authority were quite vanished and his teeth all drawn. We had known him
+a magician that controlled the elements; and here he was, transformed
+into an ordinary gentleman, chatting like his neighbours at the
+breakfast-board. For now the father was dead, and my lord and lady
+reconciled, in what ear was he to pour his calumnies? It came upon me
+in a kind of vision how hugely I had overrated the man’s subtlety. He
+had his malice still; he was false as ever; and, the occasion being
+gone that made his strength, he sat there impotent; he was still the
+viper, but now spent his venom on a file. Two more thoughts occurred to
+me while yet we sat at breakfast: the first, that he was abashed—I had
+almost said, distressed—to find his wickedness quite unavailing; the
+second, that perhaps my lord was in the right, and we did amiss to fly
+from our dismasted enemy. But my poor man’s leaping heart came in my
+mind, and I remembered it was for his life we played the coward.
+
+When the meal was over, the Master followed me to my room, and, taking
+a chair (which I had never offered him), asked me what was to be done
+with him.
+
+“Why, Mr. Bally,” said I, “the house will still be open to you for a
+time.”
+
+“For a time?” says he. “I do not know if I quite take your meaning.”
+
+“It is plain enough,” said I. “We keep you for our reputation; as soon
+as you shall have publicly disgraced yourself by some of your
+misconduct, we shall pack you forth again.”
+
+“You are become an impudent rogue,” said the Master, bending his brows
+at me dangerously.
+
+“I learned in a good school,” I returned. “And you must have perceived
+yourself that with my old lord’s death your power is quite departed. I
+do not fear you now, Mr. Bally; I think even—God forgive me—that I take
+a certain pleasure in your company.”
+
+He broke out in a burst of laughter, which I clearly saw to be assumed.
+
+“I have come with empty pockets,” says he, after a pause.
+
+“I do not think there will be any money going,” I replied. “I would
+advise you not to build on that.”
+
+“I shall have something to say on the point,” he returned.
+
+“Indeed?” said I. “I have not a guess what it will be, then.”
+
+“Oh! you affect confidence,” said the Master. “I have still one strong
+position—that you people fear a scandal, and I enjoy it.”
+
+“Pardon me, Mr. Bally,” says I. “We do not in the least fear a scandal
+against you.”
+
+He laughed again. “You have been studying repartee,” he said. “But
+speech is very easy, and sometimes very deceptive. I warn you fairly:
+you will find me vitriol in the house. You would do wiser to pay money
+down and see my back.” And with that he waved his hand to me and left
+the room.
+
+A little after, my lord came with the lawyer, Mr. Carlyle; a bottle of
+old wine was brought, and we all had a glass before we fell to
+business. The necessary deeds were then prepared and executed, and the
+Scotch estates made over in trust to Mr. Carlyle and myself.
+
+“There is one point, Mr. Carlyle,” said my lord, when these affairs had
+been adjusted, “on which I wish that you would do us justice. This
+sudden departure coinciding with my brother’s return will be certainly
+commented on. I wish you would discourage any conjunction of the two.”
+
+“I will make a point of it, my lord,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The Mas— Bally
+does not, then, accompany you?”
+
+“It is a point I must approach,” said my lord. “Mr. Bally remains at
+Durrisdeer, under the care of Mr. Mackellar; and I do not mean that he
+shall even know our destination.”
+
+“Common report, however—” began the lawyer.
+
+“Ah! but, Mr. Carlyle, this is to be a secret quite among ourselves,”
+interrupted my lord. “None but you and Mackellar are to be made
+acquainted with my movements.”
+
+“And Mr. Bally stays here? Quite so,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The powers you
+leave—” Then he broke off again. “Mr. Mackellar, we have a rather heavy
+weight upon us.”
+
+“No doubt,” said I.
+
+“No doubt,” said he. “Mr. Bally will have no voice?”
+
+“He will have no voice,” said my lord; “and, I hope, no influence. Mr.
+Bally is not a good adviser.”
+
+“I see,” said the lawyer. “By the way, has Mr. Bally means?”
+
+“I understand him to have nothing,” replied my lord. “I give him table,
+fire, and candle in this house.”
+
+“And in the matter of an allowance? If I am to share the
+responsibility, you will see how highly desirable it is that I should
+understand your views,” said the lawyer. “On the question of an
+allowance?”
+
+“There will be no allowance,” said my lord. “I wish Mr. Bally to live
+very private. We have not always been gratified with his behaviour.”
+
+“And in the matter of money,” I added, “he has shown himself an
+infamous bad husband. Glance your eye upon that docket, Mr. Carlyle,
+where I have brought together the different sums the man has drawn from
+the estate in the last fifteen or twenty years. The total is pretty.”
+
+Mr. Carlyle made the motion of whistling. “I had no guess of this,”
+said he. “Excuse me once more, my lord, if I appear to push you; but it
+is really desirable I should penetrate your intentions. Mr. Mackellar
+might die, when I should find myself alone upon this trust. Would it
+not be rather your lordship’s preference that Mr. Bally
+should—ahem—should leave the country?”
+
+My lord looked at Mr. Carlyle. “Why do you ask that?” said he.
+
+“I gather, my lord, that Mr. Bally is not a comfort to his family,”
+says the lawyer with a smile.
+
+My lord’s face became suddenly knotted. “I wish he was in hell!” cried
+he, and filled himself a glass of wine, but with a hand so tottering
+that he spilled the half into his bosom. This was the second time that,
+in the midst of the most regular and wise behaviour, his animosity had
+spirted out. It startled Mr. Carlyle, who observed my lord thenceforth
+with covert curiosity; and to me it restored the certainty that we were
+acting for the best in view of my lord’s health and reason.
+
+Except for this explosion the interview was very successfully
+conducted. No doubt Mr. Carlyle would talk, as lawyers do, little by
+little. We could thus feel we had laid the foundations of a better
+feeling in the country, and the man’s own misconduct would certainly
+complete what we had begun. Indeed, before his departure, the lawyer
+showed us there had already gone abroad some glimmerings of the truth.
+
+“I should perhaps explain to you, my lord,” said he, pausing, with his
+hat in his hand, “that I have not been altogether surprised with your
+lordship’s dispositions in the case of Mr. Bally. Something of this
+nature oozed out when he was last in Durrisdeer. There was some talk of
+a woman at St. Bride’s, to whom you had behaved extremely handsome, and
+Mr. Bally with no small degree of cruelty. There was the entail, again,
+which was much controverted. In short, there was no want of talk, back
+and forward; and some of our wise-acres took up a strong opinion. I
+remained in suspense, as became one of my cloth; but Mr. Mackellar’s
+docket here has finally opened my eyes. I do not think, Mr. Mackellar,
+that you and I will give him that much rope.”
+
+ The rest of that important day passed prosperously through. It was our
+ policy to keep the enemy in view, and I took my turn to be his
+ watchman with the rest. I think his spirits rose as he perceived us to
+ be so attentive, and I know that mine insensibly declined. What
+ chiefly daunted me was the man’s singular dexterity to worm himself
+ into our troubles. You may have felt (after a horse accident) the hand
+ of a bone-setter artfully divide and interrogate the muscles, and
+ settle strongly on the injured place? It was so with the Master’s
+ tongue, that was so cunning to question; and his eyes, that were so
+ quick to observe. I seemed to have said nothing, and yet to have let
+ all out. Before I knew where I was the man was condoling with me on my
+ lord’s neglect of my lady and myself, and his hurtful indulgence to
+ his son. On this last point I perceived him (with panic fear) to
+ return repeatedly. The boy had displayed a certain shrinking from his
+ uncle; it was strong in my mind his father had been fool enough to
+ indoctrinate the same, which was no wise beginning: and when I looked
+ upon the man before me, still so handsome, so apt a speaker, with so
+ great a variety of fortunes to relate, I saw he was the very personage
+ to captivate a boyish fancy. John Paul had left only that morning; it
+ was not to be supposed he had been altogether dumb upon his favourite
+ subject: so that here would be Mr. Alexander in the part of Dido, with
+ a curiosity inflamed to hear; and there would be the Master, like a
+ diabolical Æneas, full of matter the most pleasing in the world to any
+ youthful ear, such as battles, sea-disasters, flights, the forests of
+ the West, and (since his later voyage) the ancient cities of the
+ Indies. How cunningly these baits might be employed, and what an
+ empire might be so founded, little by little, in the mind of any boy,
+ stood obviously clear to me. There was no inhibition, so long as the
+ man was in the house, that would be strong enough to hold these two
+ apart; for if it be hard to charm serpents, it is no very difficult
+ thing to cast a glamour on a little chip of manhood not very long in
+ breeches. I recalled an ancient sailor-man who dwelt in a lone house
+ beyond the Figgate Whins (I believe, he called it after Portobello),
+ and how the boys would troop out of Leith on a Saturday, and sit and
+ listen to his swearing tales, as thick as crows about a carrion: a
+ thing I often remarked as I went by, a young student, on my own more
+ meditative holiday diversion. Many of these boys went, no doubt, in
+ the face of an express command; many feared and even hated the old
+ brute of whom they made their hero; and I have seen them flee from him
+ when he was tipsy, and stone him when he was drunk. And yet there they
+ came each Saturday! How much more easily would a boy like Mr.
+ Alexander fall under the influence of a high-looking, high-spoken
+ gentleman-adventurer, who should conceive the fancy to entrap him;
+ and, the influence gained, how easy to employ it for the child’s
+ perversion!
+
+I doubt if our enemy had named Mr. Alexander three times before I
+perceived which way his mind was aiming—all this train of thought and
+memory passed in one pulsation through my own—and you may say I started
+back as though an open hole had gaped across a pathway. Mr. Alexander:
+there was the weak point, there was the Eve in our perishable paradise;
+and the serpent was already hissing on the trail.
+
+I promise you, I went the more heartily about the preparations; my last
+scruple gone, the danger of delay written before me in huge characters.
+From that moment forth I seem not to have sat down or breathed. Now I
+would be at my post with the Master and his Indian; now in the garret,
+buckling a valise; now sending forth Macconochie by the side postern
+and the wood-path to bear it to the trysting-place; and, again,
+snatching some words of counsel with my lady. This was the _verso_ of
+our life in Durrisdeer that day; but on the _recto_ all appeared quite
+settled, as of a family at home in its paternal seat; and what
+perturbation may have been observable, the Master would set down to the
+blow of his unlooked-for coming, and the fear he was accustomed to
+inspire.
+
+Supper went creditably off, cold salutations passed and the company
+trooped to their respective chambers. I attended the Master to the
+last. We had put him next door to his Indian, in the north wing;
+because that was the most distant and could be severed from the body of
+the house with doors. I saw he was a kind friend or a good master
+(whichever it was) to his Secundra Dass—seeing to his comfort; mending
+the fire with his own hand, for the Indian complained of cold;
+inquiring as to the rice on which the stranger made his diet; talking
+with him pleasantly in the Hindustanee, while I stood by, my candle in
+my hand, and affected to be overcome with slumber. At length the Master
+observed my signals of distress. “I perceive,” says he, “that you have
+all your ancient habits: early to bed and early to rise. Yawn yourself
+away!”
+
+Once in my own room, I made the customary motions of undressing, so
+that I might time myself; and when the cycle was complete, set my
+tinder-box ready, and blew out my taper. The matter of an hour
+afterward I made a light again, put on my shoes of list that I had worn
+by my lord’s sick-bed, and set forth into the house to call the
+voyagers. All were dressed and waiting—my lord, my lady, Miss
+Katharine, Mr. Alexander, my lady’s woman Christie; and I observed the
+effect of secrecy even upon quite innocent persons, that one after
+another showed in the chink of the door a face as white as paper. We
+slipped out of the side postern into a night of darkness, scarce broken
+by a star or two; so that at first we groped and stumbled and fell
+among the bushes. A few hundred yards up the wood-path Macconochie was
+waiting us with a great lantern; so the rest of the way we went easy
+enough, but still in a kind of guilty silence. A little beyond the
+abbey the path debauched on the main road and some quarter of a mile
+farther, at the place called Eagles, where the moors begin, we saw the
+lights of the two carriages stand shining by the wayside. Scarce a word
+or two was uttered at our parting, and these regarded business: a
+silent grasping of hands, a turning of faces aside, and the thing was
+over; the horses broke into a trot, the lamplight sped like
+Will-o’-the-Wisp upon the broken moorland, it dipped beyond Stony Brae;
+and there were Macconochie and I alone with our lantern on the road.
+There was one thing more to wait for, and that was the reappearance of
+the coach upon Cartmore. It seems they must have pulled up upon the
+summit, looked back for a last time, and seen our lantern not yet moved
+away from the place of separation. For a lamp was taken from a
+carriage, and waved three times up and down by way of a farewell. And
+then they were gone indeed, having looked their last on the kind roof
+of Durrisdeer, their faces toward a barbarous country. I never knew
+before, the greatness of that vault of night in which we two poor
+serving-men—the one old, and the one elderly—stood for the first time
+deserted; I had never felt before my own dependency upon the
+countenance of others. The sense of isolation burned in my bowels like
+a fire. It seemed that we who remained at home were the true exiles,
+and that Durrisdeer and Solwayside, and all that made my country
+native, its air good to me, and its language welcome, had gone forth
+and was far over the sea with my old masters.
+
+The remainder of that night I paced to and fro on the smooth highway,
+reflecting on the future and the past. My thoughts, which at first
+dwelled tenderly on those who were just gone, took a more manly temper
+as I considered what remained for me to do. Day came upon the inland
+mountain-tops, and the fowls began to cry, and the smoke of homesteads
+to arise in the brown bosom of the moors, before I turned my face
+homeward, and went down the path to where the roof of Durrisdeer shone
+in the morning by the sea.
+
+ At the customary hour I had the Master called, and awaited his coming
+ in the hall with a quiet mind. He looked about him at the empty room
+ and the three covers set.
+
+“We are a small party,” said he. “How comes?”
+
+“This is the party to which we must grow accustomed,” I replied.
+
+He looked at me with a sudden sharpness. “What is all this?” said he.
+
+“You and I and your friend Mr. Dass are now all the company,” I
+replied. “My lord, my lady, and the children, are gone upon a voyage.”
+
+“Upon my word!” said he. “Can this be possible? I have indeed fluttered
+your Volscians in Corioli! But this is no reason why our breakfast
+should go cold. Sit down, Mr. Mackellar, if you please”—taking, as he
+spoke, the head of the table, which I had designed to occupy
+myself—“and as we eat, you can give me the details of this evasion.”
+
+I could see he was more affected than his language carried, and I
+determined to equal him in coolness. “I was about to ask you to take
+the head of the table,” said I; “for though I am now thrust into the
+position of your host, I could never forget that you were, after all, a
+member of the family.”
+
+For a while he played the part of entertainer, giving directions to
+Macconochie, who received them with an evil grace, and attending
+specially upon Secundra. “And where has my good family withdrawn to?”
+he asked carelessly.
+
+“Ah! Mr. Bally, that is another point,” said I. “I have no orders to
+communicate their destination.”
+
+“To me,” he corrected.
+
+“To any one,” said I.
+
+“It is the less pointed,” said the master; “_c’est de bon ton_: my
+brother improves as he continues. And I, dear Mr. Mackellar?”
+
+“You will have bed and board, Mr. Bally,” said I. “I am permitted to
+give you the run of the cellar, which is pretty reasonably stocked. You
+have only to keep well with me, which is no very difficult matter, and
+you shall want neither for wine nor a saddle-horse.”
+
+He made an excuse to send Macconochie from the room.
+
+“And for money?” he inquired. “Have I to keep well with my good friend
+Mackellar for my pocket-money also? This is a pleasing return to the
+principles of boyhood.”
+
+“There was no allowance made,” said I; “but I will take it on myself to
+see you are supplied in moderation.”
+
+“In moderation?” he repeated. “And you will take it on yourself?” He
+drew himself up, and looked about the hall at the dark rows of
+portraits. “In the name of my ancestors, I thank you,” says he; and
+then, with a return to irony, “But there must certainly be an allowance
+for Secundra Dass?” he said. “It in not possible they have omitted
+that?”
+
+“I will make a note of it, and ask instructions when I write,” said I.
+
+And he, with a sudden change of manner, and leaning forward with an
+elbow on the table—“Do you think this entirely wise?”
+
+“I execute my orders, Mr. Bally,” said I.
+
+“Profoundly modest,” said the Master; “perhaps not equally ingenuous.
+You told me yesterday my power was fallen with my father’s death. How
+comes it, then, that a peer of the realm flees under cloud of night out
+of a house in which his fathers have stood several sieges? that he
+conceals his address, which must be a matter of concern to his Gracious
+Majesty and to the whole republic? and that he should leave me in
+possession, and under the paternal charge of his invaluable Mackellar?
+This smacks to me of a very considerable and genuine apprehension.”
+
+I sought to interrupt him with some not very truthful denegation; but
+he waved me down, and pursued his speech.
+
+“I say, it smacks of it,” he said; “but I will go beyond that, for I
+think the apprehension grounded. I came to this house with some
+reluctancy. In view of the manner of my last departure, nothing but
+necessity could have induced me to return. Money, however, is that
+which I must have. You will not give with a good grace; well, I have
+the power to force it from you. Inside of a week, without leaving
+Durrisdeer, I will find out where these fools are fled to. I will
+follow; and when I have run my quarry down, I will drive a wedge into
+that family that shall once more burst it into shivers. I shall see
+then whether my Lord Durrisdeer” (said with indescribable scorn and
+rage) “will choose to buy my absence; and you will all see whether, by
+that time, I decide for profit or revenge.”
+
+I was amazed to hear the man so open. The truth is, he was consumed
+with anger at my lord’s successful flight, felt himself to figure as a
+dupe, and was in no humour to weigh language.
+
+“Do you consider _this_ entirely wise?” said I, copying his words.
+
+“These twenty years I have lived by my poor wisdom,” he answered with a
+smile that seemed almost foolish in its vanity.
+
+“And come out a beggar in the end,” said I, “if beggar be a strong
+enough word for it.”
+
+“I would have you to observe, Mr. Mackellar,” cried he, with a sudden
+imperious heat, in which I could not but admire him, “that I am
+scrupulously civil: copy me in that, and we shall be the better
+friends.”
+
+Throughout this dialogue I had been incommoded by the observation of
+Secundra Dass. Not one of us, since the first word, had made a feint of
+eating: our eyes were in each other’s faces—you might say, in each
+other’s bosoms; and those of the Indian troubled me with a certain
+changing brightness, as of comprehension. But I brushed the fancy
+aside, telling myself once more he understood no English; only, from
+the gravity of both voices, and the occasional scorn and anger in the
+Master’s, smelled out there was something of import in the wind.
+
+ For the matter of three weeks we continued to live together in the
+ house of Durrisdeer: the beginning of that most singular chapter of my
+ life—what I must call my intimacy with the Master. At first he was
+ somewhat changeable in his behaviour: now civil, now returning to his
+ old manner of flouting me to my face; and in both I met him half-way.
+ Thanks be to Providence, I had now no measure to keep with the man;
+ and I was never afraid of black brows, only of naked swords. So that I
+ found a certain entertainment in these bouts of incivility, and was
+ not always ill-inspired in my rejoinders. At last (it was at supper) I
+ had a droll expression that entirely vanquished him. He laughed again
+ and again; and “Who would have guessed,” he cried, “that this old wife
+ had any wit under his petticoats?”
+
+“It is no wit, Mr. Bally,” said I: “a dry Scot’s humour, and something
+of the driest.” And, indeed, I never had the least pretension to be
+thought a wit.
+
+From that hour he was never rude with me, but all passed between us in
+a manner of pleasantry. One of our chief times of daffing [9] was when
+he required a horse, another bottle, or some money. He would approach
+me then after the manner of a schoolboy, and I would carry it on by way
+of being his father: on both sides, with an infinity of mirth. I could
+not but perceive that he thought more of me, which tickled that poor
+part of mankind, the vanity. He dropped, besides (I must suppose
+unconsciously), into a manner that was not only familiar, but even
+friendly; and this, on the part of one who had so long detested me, I
+found the more insidious. He went little abroad; sometimes even
+refusing invitations. “No,” he would say, “what do I care for these
+thick-headed bonnet-lairds? I will stay at home, Mackellar; and we
+shall share a bottle quietly, and have one of our good talks.” And,
+indeed, meal-time at Durrisdeer must have been a delight to any one, by
+reason of the brilliancy of the discourse. He would often express
+wonder at his former indifference to my society. “But, you see,” he
+would add, “we were upon opposite sides. And so we are to-day; but let
+us never speak of that. I would think much less of you if you were not
+staunch to your employer.” You are to consider he seemed to me quite
+impotent for any evil; and how it is a most engaging form of flattery
+when (after many years) tardy justice is done to a man’s character and
+parts. But I have no thought to excuse myself. I was to blame; I let
+him cajole me, and, in short, I think the watch-dog was going sound
+asleep, when he was suddenly aroused.
+
+I should say the Indian was continually travelling to and fro in the
+house. He never spoke, save in his own dialect and with the Master;
+walked without sound; and was always turning up where you would least
+expect him, fallen into a deep abstraction, from which he would start
+(upon your coming) to mock you with one of his grovelling obeisances.
+He seemed so quiet, so frail, and so wrapped in his own fancies, that I
+came to pass him over without much regard, or even to pity him for a
+harmless exile from his country. And yet without doubt the creature was
+still eavesdropping; and without doubt it was through his stealth and
+my security that our secret reached the Master.
+
+It was one very wild night, after supper, and when we had been making
+more than usually merry, that the blow fell on me.
+
+“This is all very fine,” says the Master, “but we should do better to
+be buckling our valise.”
+
+“Why so?” I cried. “Are you leaving?”
+
+“We are all leaving to-morrow in the morning,” said he. “For the port
+of Glascow first, thence for the province of New York.”
+
+I suppose I must have groaned aloud.
+
+“Yes,” he continued, “I boasted; I said a week, and it has taken me
+near twenty days. But never mind; I shall make it up; I will go the
+faster.”
+
+“Have you the money for this voyage?” I asked.
+
+“Dear and ingenuous personage, I have,” said he. “Blame me, if you
+choose, for my duplicity; but while I have been wringing shillings from
+my daddy, I had a stock of my own put by against a rainy day. You will
+pay for your own passage, if you choose to accompany us on our flank
+march; I have enough for Secundra and myself, but not more—enough to be
+dangerous, not enough to be generous. There is, however, an outside
+seat upon the chaise which I will let you have upon a moderate
+commutation; so that the whole menagerie can go together—the house-dog,
+the monkey, and the tiger.”
+
+“I go with you,” said I.
+
+“I count upon it,” said the Master. “You have seen me foiled; I mean
+you shall see me victorious. To gain that I will risk wetting you like
+a sop in this wild weather.”
+
+“And at least,” I added, “you know very well you could not throw me
+off.”
+
+“Not easily,” said he. “You put your finger on the point with your
+usual excellent good sense. I never fight with the inevitable.”
+
+“I suppose it is useless to appeal to you?” said I.
+
+“Believe me, perfectly,” said he.
+
+“And yet, if you would give me time, I could write—” I began.
+
+“And what would be my Lord Durrisdeer’s answer?” asks he.
+
+“Aye,” said I, “that is the rub.”
+
+“And, at any rate, how much more expeditious that I should go myself!”
+says he. “But all this is quite a waste of breath. At seven to-morrow
+the chaise will be at the door. For I start from the door, Mackellar; I
+do not skulk through woods and take my chaise upon the wayside—shall we
+say, at Eagles?”
+
+My mind was now thoroughly made up. “Can you spare me quarter of an
+hour at St. Bride’s?” said I. “I have a little necessary business with
+Carlyle.”
+
+“An hour, if you prefer,” said he. “I do not seek to deny that the
+money for your seat is an object to me; and you could always get the
+first to Glascow with saddle-horses.”
+
+“Well,” said I, “I never thought to leave old Scotland.”
+
+“It will brisken you up,” says he.
+
+“This will be an ill journey for some one,” I said. “I think, sir, for
+you. Something speaks in my bosom; and so much it says plain—that this
+is an ill-omened journey.”
+
+“If you take to prophecy,” says he, “listen to that.”
+
+There came up a violent squall off the open Solway, and the rain was
+dashed on the great windows.
+
+“Do ye ken what that bodes, warlock?” said he, in a broad accent: “that
+there’ll be a man Mackellar unco’ sick at sea.”
+
+When I got to my chamber, I sat there under a painful excitation,
+hearkening to the turmoil of the gale, which struck full upon that
+gable of the house. What with the pressure on my spirits, the eldritch
+cries of the wind among the turret-tops, and the perpetual trepidation
+of the masoned house, sleep fled my eyelids utterly. I sat by my taper,
+looking on the black panes of the window, where the storm appeared
+continually on the point of bursting in its entrance; and upon that
+empty field I beheld a perspective of consequences that made the hair
+to rise upon my scalp. The child corrupted, the home broken up, my
+master dead or worse than dead, my mistress plunged in desolation—all
+these I saw before me painted brightly on the darkness; and the outcry
+of the wind appeared to mock at my inaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+MR. MACKELLAR’S JOURNEY WITH THE MASTER.
+
+
+The chaise came to the door in a strong drenching mist. We took our
+leave in silence: the house of Durrisdeer standing with dropping
+gutters and windows closed, like a place dedicate to melancholy. I
+observed the Master kept his head out, looking back on these splashed
+walls and glimmering roofs, till they were suddenly swallowed in the
+mist; and I must suppose some natural sadness fell upon the man at this
+departure; or was it some provision of the end? At least, upon our
+mounting the long brae from Durrisdeer, as we walked side by side in
+the wet, he began first to whistle and then to sing the saddest of our
+country tunes, which sets folk weeping in a tavern, _Wandering Willie_.
+The set of words he used with it I have not heard elsewhere, and could
+never come by any copy; but some of them which were the most
+appropriate to our departure linger in my memory. One verse began—
+
+Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces,
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child.
+
+
+And ended somewhat thus—
+
+Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland,
+ Lone stands the house, and the chimney-stone is cold.
+Lone let it stand, now the folks are all departed,
+ The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
+
+
+I could never be a judge of the merit of these verses; they were so
+hallowed by the melancholy of the air, and were sung (or rather
+“soothed”) to me by a master-singer at a time so fitting. He looked in
+my face when he had done, and saw that my eyes watered.
+
+“Ah! Mackellar,” said he, “do you think I have never a regret?”
+
+“I do not think you could be so bad a man,” said I, “if you had not all
+the machinery to be a good one.”
+
+“No, not all,” says he: “not all. You are there in error. The malady of
+not wanting, my evangelist.” But methought he sighed as he mounted
+again into the chaise.
+
+All day long we journeyed in the same miserable weather: the mist
+besetting us closely, the heavens incessantly weeping on my head. The
+road lay over moorish hills, where was no sound but the crying of
+moor-fowl in the wet heather and the pouring of the swollen burns.
+Sometimes I would doze off in slumber, when I would find myself plunged
+at once in some foul and ominous nightmare, from the which I would
+awake strangling. Sometimes, if the way was steep and the wheels
+turning slowly, I would overhear the voices from within, talking in
+that tropical tongue which was to me as inarticulate as the piping of
+the fowls. Sometimes, at a longer ascent, the Master would set foot to
+ground and walk by my side, mostly without speech. And all the time,
+sleeping or waking, I beheld the same black perspective of approaching
+ruin; and the same pictures rose in my view, only they were now painted
+upon hillside mist. One, I remember, stood before me with the colours
+of a true illusion. It showed me my lord seated at a table in a small
+room; his head, which was at first buried in his hands, he slowly
+raised, and turned upon me a countenance from which hope had fled. I
+saw it first on the black window-panes, my last night in Durrisdeer; it
+haunted and returned upon me half the voyage through; and yet it was no
+effect of lunacy, for I have come to a ripe old age with no decay of my
+intelligence; nor yet (as I was then tempted to suppose) a heaven-sent
+warning of the future, for all manner of calamities befell, not that
+calamity—and I saw many pitiful sights, but never that one.
+
+It was decided we should travel on all night; and it was singular, once
+the dusk had fallen, my spirits somewhat rose. The bright lamps,
+shining forth into the mist and on the smoking horses and the hodding
+post-boy, gave me perhaps an outlook intrinsically more cheerful than
+what day had shown; or perhaps my mind had become wearied of its
+melancholy. At least, I spent some waking hours, not without
+satisfaction in my thoughts, although wet and weary in my body; and
+fell at last into a natural slumber without dreams. Yet I must have
+been at work even in the deepest of my sleep; and at work with at least
+a measure of intelligence. For I started broad awake, in the very act
+of crying out to myself
+
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child,
+
+
+stricken to find in it an appropriateness, which I had not yesterday
+observed, to the Master’s detestable purpose in the present journey.
+
+We were then close upon the city of Glascow, where we were soon
+breakfasting together at an inn, and where (as the devil would have it)
+we found a ship in the very article of sailing. We took our places in
+the cabin; and, two days after, carried our effects on board. Her name
+was the _Nonesuch_, a very ancient ship and very happily named. By all
+accounts this should be her last voyage; people shook their heads upon
+the quays, and I had several warnings offered me by strangers in the
+street to the effect that she was rotten as a cheese, too deeply
+loaden, and must infallibly founder if we met a gale. From this it fell
+out we were the only passengers; the Captain, McMurtrie, was a silent,
+absorbed man, with the Glascow or Gaelic accent; the mates ignorant
+rough seafarers, come in through the hawsehole; and the Master and I
+were cast upon each other’s company.
+
+_The Nonesuch_ carried a fair wind out of the Clyde, and for near upon
+a week we enjoyed bright weather and a sense of progress. I found
+myself (to my wonder) a born seaman, in so far at least as I was never
+sick; yet I was far from tasting the usual serenity of my health.
+Whether it was the motion of the ship on the billows, the confinement,
+the salted food, or all of these together, I suffered from a blackness
+of spirit and a painful strain upon my temper. The nature of my errand
+on that ship perhaps contributed; I think it did no more; the malady
+(whatever it was) sprang from my environment; and if the ship were not
+to blame, then it was the Master. Hatred and fear are ill bedfellows;
+but (to my shame be it spoken) I have tasted those in other places,
+lain down and got up with them, and eaten and drunk with them, and yet
+never before, nor after, have I been so poisoned through and through,
+in soul and body, as I was on board the _Nonesuch_. I freely confess my
+enemy set me a fair example of forbearance; in our worst days displayed
+the most patient geniality, holding me in conversation as long as I
+would suffer, and when I had rebuffed his civility, stretching himself
+on deck to read. The book he had on board with him was Mr. Richardson’s
+famous _Clarissa_! and among other small attentions he would read me
+passages aloud; nor could any elocutionist have given with greater
+potency the pathetic portions of that work. I would retort upon him
+with passages out of the Bible, which was all my library—and very fresh
+to me, my religious duties (I grieve to say it) being always and even
+to this day extremely neglected. He tasted the merits of the word like
+the connoisseur he was; and would sometimes take it from my hand, turn
+the leaves over like a man that knew his way, and give me, with his
+fine declamation, a Roland for my Oliver. But it was singular how
+little he applied his reading to himself; it passed high above his head
+like summer thunder: Lovelace and Clarissa, the tales of David’s
+generosity, the psalms of his penitence, the solemn questions of the
+book of Job, the touching poetry of Isaiah—they were to him a source of
+entertainment only, like the scraping of a fiddle in a change-house.
+This outer sensibility and inner toughness set me against him; it
+seemed of a piece with that impudent grossness which I knew to underlie
+the veneer of his fine manners; and sometimes my gorge rose against him
+as though he were deformed—and sometimes I would draw away as though
+from something partly spectral. I had moments when I thought of him as
+of a man of pasteboard—as though, if one should strike smartly through
+the buckram of his countenance, there would be found a mere vacuity
+within. This horror (not merely fanciful, I think) vastly increased my
+detestation of his neighbourhood; I began to feel something shiver
+within me on his drawing near; I had at times a longing to cry out;
+there were days when I thought I could have struck him. This frame of
+mind was doubtless helped by shame, because I had dropped during our
+last days at Durrisdeer into a certain toleration of the man; and if
+any one had then told me I should drop into it again, I must have
+laughed in his face. It is possible he remained unconscious of this
+extreme fever of my resentment; yet I think he was too quick; and
+rather that he had fallen, in a long life of idleness, into a positive
+need of company, which obliged him to confront and tolerate my
+unconcealed aversion. Certain, at least, that he loved the note of his
+own tongue, as, indeed, he entirely loved all the parts and properties
+of himself; a sort of imbecility which almost necessarily attends on
+wickedness. I have seen him driven, when I proved recalcitrant, to long
+discourses with the skipper; and this, although the man plainly
+testified his weariness, fiddling miserably with both hand and foot,
+and replying only with a grunt.
+
+After the first week out we fell in with foul winds and heavy weather.
+The sea was high. The _Nonesuch_, being an old-fashioned ship and badly
+loaden, rolled beyond belief; so that the skipper trembled for his
+masts, and I for my life. We made no progress on our course. An
+unbearable ill-humour settled on the ship: men, mates, and master,
+girding at one another all day long. A saucy word on the one hand, and
+a blow on the other, made a daily incident. There were times when the
+whole crew refused their duty; and we of the afterguard were twice got
+under arms—being the first time that ever I bore weapons—in the fear of
+mutiny.
+
+In the midst of our evil season sprang up a hurricane of wind; so that
+all supposed she must go down. I was shut in the cabin from noon of one
+day till sundown of the next; the Master was somewhere lashed on deck.
+Secundra had eaten of some drug and lay insensible; so you may say I
+passed these hours in an unbroken solitude. At first I was terrified
+beyond motion, and almost beyond thought, my mind appearing to be
+frozen. Presently there stole in on me a ray of comfort. If the
+_Nonesuch_ foundered, she would carry down with her into the deeps of
+that unsounded sea the creature whom we all so feared and hated; there
+would be no more Master of Ballantrae, the fish would sport among his
+ribs; his schemes all brought to nothing, his harmless enemies at
+peace. At first, I have said, it was but a ray of comfort; but it had
+soon grown to be broad sunshine. The thought of the man’s death, of his
+deletion from this world, which he embittered for so many, took
+possession of my mind. I hugged it, I found it sweet in my belly. I
+conceived the ship’s last plunge, the sea bursting upon all sides into
+the cabin, the brief mortal conflict there, all by myself, in that
+closed place; I numbered the horrors, I had almost said with
+satisfaction; I felt I could bear all and more, if the _Nonesuch_
+carried down with her, overtook by the same ruin, the enemy of my poor
+master’s house. Towards noon of the second day the screaming of the
+wind abated; the ship lay not so perilously over, and it began to be
+clear to me that we were past the height of the tempest. As I hope for
+mercy, I was singly disappointed. In the selfishness of that vile,
+absorbing passion of hatred, I forgot the case of our innocent
+shipmates, and thought but of myself and my enemy. For myself, I was
+already old; I had never been young, I was not formed for the world’s
+pleasures, I had few affections; it mattered not the toss of a silver
+tester whether I was drowned there and then in the Atlantic, or
+dribbled out a few more years, to die, perhaps no less terribly, in a
+deserted sick-bed. Down I went upon my knees—holding on by the locker,
+or else I had been instantly dashed across the tossing cabin—and,
+lifting up my voice in the midst of that clamour of the abating
+hurricane, impiously prayed for my own death. “O God!” I cried, “I
+would be liker a man if I rose and struck this creature down; but Thou
+madest me a coward from my mother’s womb. O Lord, Thou madest me so,
+Thou knowest my weakness, Thou knowest that any face of death will set
+me shaking in my shoes. But, lo! here is Thy servant ready, his mortal
+weakness laid aside. Let me give my life for this creature’s; take the
+two of them, Lord! take the two, and have mercy on the innocent!” In
+some such words as these, only yet more irreverent and with more sacred
+adjurations, I continued to pour forth my spirit. God heard me not, I
+must suppose in mercy; and I was still absorbed in my agony of
+supplication when some one, removing the tarpaulin cover, let the light
+of the sunset pour into the cabin. I stumbled to my feet ashamed, and
+was seized with surprise to find myself totter and ache like one that
+had been stretched upon the rack. Secundra Dass, who had slept off the
+effects of his drug, stood in a corner not far off, gazing at me with
+wild eyes; and from the open skylight the captain thanked me for my
+supplications.
+
+“It’s you that saved the ship, Mr. Mackellar,” says he. “There is no
+craft of seamanship that could have kept her floating: well may we say,
+‘Except the Lord the city keep, the watchmen watch in vain!’”
+
+I was abashed by the captain’s error; abashed, also, by the surprise
+and fear with which the Indian regarded me at first, and the obsequious
+civilities with which he soon began to cumber me. I know now that he
+must have overheard and comprehended the peculiar nature of my prayers.
+It is certain, of course, that he at once disclosed the matter to his
+patron; and looking back with greater knowledge, I can now understand
+what so much puzzled me at the moment, those singular and (so to speak)
+approving smiles with which the Master honoured me. Similarly, I can
+understand a word that I remember to have fallen from him in
+conversation that same night; when, holding up his hand and smiling,
+“Ah! Mackellar,” said he, “not every man is so great a coward as he
+thinks he is—nor yet so good a Christian.” He did not guess how true he
+spoke! For the fact is, the thoughts which had come to me in the
+violence of the storm retained their hold upon my spirit; and the words
+that rose to my lips unbidden in the instancy of prayer continued to
+sound in my ears: with what shameful consequences, it is fitting I
+should honestly relate; for I could not support a part of such
+disloyalty as to describe the sins of others and conceal my own.
+
+The wind fell, but the sea hove ever the higher. All night the
+_Nonesuch_ rolled outrageously; the next day dawned, and the next, and
+brought no change. To cross the cabin was scarce possible; old
+experienced seamen were cast down upon the deck, and one cruelly mauled
+in the concussion; every board and block in the old ship cried out
+aloud; and the great bell by the anchor-bitts continually and dolefully
+rang. One of these days the Master and I sate alone together at the
+break of the poop. I should say the _Nonesuch_ carried a high, raised
+poop. About the top of it ran considerable bulwarks, which made the
+ship unweatherly; and these, as they approached the front on each side,
+ran down in a fine, old-fashioned, carven scroll to join the bulwarks
+of the waist. From this disposition, which seems designed rather for
+ornament than use, it followed there was a discontinuance of
+protection: and that, besides, at the very margin of the elevated part
+where (in certain movements of the ship) it might be the most needful.
+It was here we were sitting: our feet hanging down, the Master betwixt
+me and the side, and I holding on with both hands to the grating of the
+cabin skylight; for it struck me it was a dangerous position, the more
+so as I had continually before my eyes a measure of our evolutions in
+the person of the Master, which stood out in the break of the bulwarks
+against the sun. Now his head would be in the zenith and his shadow
+fall quite beyond the _Nonesuch_ on the farther side; and now he would
+swing down till he was underneath my feet, and the line of the sea
+leaped high above him like the ceiling of a room. I looked on upon this
+with a growing fascination, as birds are said to look on snakes. My
+mind, besides, was troubled with an astonishing diversity of noises;
+for now that we had all sails spread in the vain hope to bring her to
+the sea, the ship sounded like a factory with their reverberations. We
+spoke first of the mutiny with which we had been threatened; this led
+us on to the topic of assassination; and that offered a temptation to
+the Master more strong than he was able to resist. He must tell me a
+tale, and show me at the same time how clever he was and how wicked. It
+was a thing he did always with affectation and display; generally with
+a good effect. But this tale, told in a high key in the midst of so
+great a tumult, and by a narrator who was one moment looking down at me
+from the skies and the next up from under the soles of my feet—this
+particular tale, I say, took hold upon me in a degree quite singular.
+
+“My friend the count,” it was thus that he began his story, “had for an
+enemy a certain German baron, a stranger in Rome. It matters not what
+was the ground of the count’s enmity; but as he had a firm design to be
+revenged, and that with safety to himself, he kept it secret even from
+the baron. Indeed, that is the first principle of vengeance; and hatred
+betrayed is hatred impotent. The count was a man of a curious,
+searching mind; he had something of the artist; if anything fell for
+him to do, it must always be done with an exact perfection, not only as
+to the result, but in the very means and instruments, or he thought the
+thing miscarried. It chanced he was one day riding in the outer
+suburbs, when he came to a disused by-road branching off into the moor
+which lies about Rome. On the one hand was an ancient Roman tomb; on
+the other a deserted house in a garden of evergreen trees. This road
+brought him presently into a field of ruins, in the midst of which, in
+the side of a hill, he saw an open door, and, not far off, a single
+stunted pine no greater than a currant-bush. The place was desert and
+very secret; a voice spoke in the count’s bosom that there was
+something here to his advantage. He tied his horse to the pine-tree,
+took his flint and steel in his hand to make a light, and entered into
+the hill. The doorway opened on a passage of old Roman masonry, which
+shortly after branched in two. The count took the turning to the right,
+and followed it, groping forward in the dark, till he was brought up by
+a kind of fence, about elbow-high, which extended quite across the
+passage. Sounding forward with his foot, he found an edge of polished
+stone, and then vacancy. All his curiosity was now awakened, and,
+getting some rotten sticks that lay about the floor, he made a fire. In
+front of him was a profound well; doubtless some neighbouring peasant
+had once used it for his water, and it was he that had set up the
+fence. A long while the count stood leaning on the rail and looking
+down into the pit. It was of Roman foundation, and, like all that
+nation set their hands to, built as for eternity; the sides were still
+straight, and the joints smooth; to a man who should fall in, no escape
+was possible. ‘Now,’ the count was thinking, ‘a strong impulsion
+brought me to this place. What for? what have I gained? why should I be
+sent to gaze into this well?’ when the rail of the fence gave suddenly
+under his weight, and he came within an ace of falling headlong in.
+Leaping back to save himself, he trod out the last flicker of his fire,
+which gave him thenceforward no more light, only an incommoding smoke.
+‘Was I sent here to my death?’ says he, and shook from head to foot.
+And then a thought flashed in his mind. He crept forth on hands and
+knees to the brink of the pit, and felt above him in the air. The rail
+had been fast to a pair of uprights; it had only broken from the one,
+and still depended from the other. The count set it back again as he
+had found it, so that the place meant death to the first comer, and
+groped out of the catacomb like a sick man. The next day, riding in the
+Corso with the baron, he purposely betrayed a strong preoccupation. The
+other (as he had designed) inquired into the cause; and he, after some
+fencing, admitted that his spirits had been dashed by an unusual dream.
+This was calculated to draw on the baron—a superstitious man, who
+affected the scorn of superstition. Some rallying followed, and then
+the count, as if suddenly carried away, called on his friend to beware,
+for it was of him that he had dreamed. You know enough of human nature,
+my excellent Mackellar, to be certain of one thing: I mean that the
+baron did not rest till he had heard the dream. The count, sure that he
+would never desist, kept him in play till his curiosity was highly
+inflamed, and then suffered himself, with seeming reluctance, to be
+overborne. ‘I warn you,’ says he, ‘evil will come of it; something
+tells me so. But since there is to be no peace either for you or me
+except on this condition, the blame be on your own head! This was the
+dream:—I beheld you riding, I know not where, yet I think it must have
+been near Rome, for on your one hand was an ancient tomb, and on the
+other a garden of evergreen trees. Methought I cried and cried upon you
+to come back in a very agony of terror; whether you heard me I know
+not, but you went doggedly on. The road brought you to a desert place
+among ruins, where was a door in a hillside, and hard by the door a
+misbegotten pine. Here you dismounted (I still crying on you to
+beware), tied your horse to the pine-tree, and entered resolutely in by
+the door. Within, it was dark; but in my dream I could still see you,
+and still besought you to hold back. You felt your way along the
+right-hand wall, took a branching passage to the right, and came to a
+little chamber, where was a well with a railing. At this—I know not
+why—my alarm for you increased a thousandfold, so that I seemed to
+scream myself hoarse with warnings, crying it was still time, and
+bidding you begone at once from that vestibule. Such was the word I
+used in my dream, and it seemed then to have a clear significancy; but
+to-day, and awake, I profess I know not what it means. To all my outcry
+you rendered not the least attention, leaning the while upon the rail
+and looking down intently in the water. And then there was made to you
+a communication; I do not think I even gathered what it was, but the
+fear of it plucked me clean out of my slumber, and I awoke shaking and
+sobbing. And now,’ continues the count, ‘I thank you from my heart for
+your insistency. This dream lay on me like a load; and now I have told
+it in plain words and in the broad daylight, it seems no great
+matter.’—‘I do not know,’ says the baron. ‘It is in some points
+strange. A communication, did you say? Oh! it is an odd dream. It will
+make a story to amuse our friends.’—‘I am not so sure,’ says the count.
+‘I am sensible of some reluctancy. Let us rather forget it.’—‘By all
+means,’ says the baron. And (in fact) the dream was not again referred
+to. Some days after, the count proposed a ride in the fields, which the
+baron (since they were daily growing faster friends) very readily
+accepted. On the way back to Rome, the count led them insensibly by a
+particular route. Presently he reined in his horse, clapped his hand
+before his eyes, and cried out aloud. Then he showed his face again
+(which was now quite white, for he was a consummate actor), and stared
+upon the baron. ‘What ails you?’ cries the baron. ‘What is wrong with
+you?’—‘Nothing,’ cries the count. ‘It is nothing. A seizure, I know not
+what. Let us hurry back to Rome.’ But in the meanwhile the baron had
+looked about him; and there, on the left-hand side of the way as they
+went back to Rome, he saw a dusty by-road with a tomb upon the one hand
+and a garden of evergreen trees upon the other.—‘Yes,’ says he, with a
+changed voice. ‘Let us by all means hurry back to Rome. I fear you are
+not well in health.’—‘Oh, for God’s sake!’ cries the count, shuddering,
+‘back to Rome and let me get to bed.’ They made their return with
+scarce a word; and the count, who should by rights have gone into
+society, took to his bed and gave out he had a touch of country fever.
+The next day the baron’s horse was found tied to the pine, but himself
+was never heard of from that hour.—And, now, was that a murder?” says
+the Master, breaking sharply off.
+
+“Are you sure he was a count?” I asked.
+
+“I am not certain of the title,” said he, “but he was a gentleman of
+family: and the Lord deliver you, Mackellar, from an enemy so subtile!”
+
+These last words he spoke down at me, smiling, from high above; the
+next, he was under my feet. I continued to follow his evolutions with a
+childish fixity; they made me giddy and vacant, and I spoke as in a
+dream.
+
+“He hated the baron with a great hatred?” I asked.
+
+“His belly moved when the man came near him,” said the Master.
+
+“I have felt that same,” said I.
+
+“Verily!” cries the Master. “Here is news indeed! I wonder—do I flatter
+myself? or am I the cause of these ventral perturbations?”
+
+He was quite capable of choosing out a graceful posture, even with no
+one to behold him but myself, and all the more if there were any
+element of peril. He sat now with one knee flung across the other, his
+arms on his bosom, fitting the swing of the ship with an exquisite
+balance, such as a featherweight might overthrow. All at once I had the
+vision of my lord at the table, with his head upon his hands; only now,
+when he showed me his countenance, it was heavy with reproach. The
+words of my own prayer—_I were liker a man if I struck this creature
+down_—shot at the same time into my memory. I called my energies
+together, and (the ship then heeling downward toward my enemy) thrust
+at him swiftly with my foot. It was written I should have the guilt of
+this attempt without the profit. Whether from my own uncertainty or his
+incredible quickness, he escaped the thrust, leaping to his feet and
+catching hold at the same moment of a stay.
+
+I do not know how long a time passed by. I lying where I was upon the
+deck, overcome with terror and remorse and shame: he standing with the
+stay in his hand, backed against the bulwarks, and regarding me with an
+expression singularly mingled. At last he spoke.
+
+“Mackellar,” said he, “I make no reproaches, but I offer you a bargain.
+On your side, I do not suppose you desire to have this exploit made
+public; on mine, I own to you freely I do not care to draw my breath in
+a perpetual terror of assassination by the man I sit at meat with.
+Promise me—but no,” says he, breaking off, “you are not yet in the
+quiet possession of your mind; you might think I had extorted the
+promise from your weakness; and I would leave no door open for
+casuistry to come in—that dishonesty of the conscientious. Take time to
+meditate.”
+
+With that he made off up the sliding deck like a squirrel, and plunged
+into the cabin. About half an hour later he returned—I still lying as
+he had left me.
+
+“Now,” says he, “will you give me your troth as a Christian, and a
+faithful servant of my brother’s, that I shall have no more to fear
+from your attempts?”
+
+“I give it you,” said I.
+
+“I shall require your hand upon it,” says he.
+
+“You have the right to make conditions,” I replied, and we shook hands.
+
+He sat down at once in the same place and the old perilous attitude.
+
+“Hold on!” cried I, covering my eyes. “I cannot bear to see you in that
+posture. The least irregularity of the sea might plunge you overboard.”
+
+“You are highly inconsistent,” he replied, smiling, but doing as I
+asked. “For all that, Mackellar, I would have you to know you have
+risen forty feet in my esteem. You think I cannot set a price upon
+fidelity? But why do you suppose I carry that Secundra Dass about the
+world with me? Because he would die or do murder for me to-morrow; and
+I love him for it. Well, you may think it odd, but I like you the
+better for this afternoon’s performance. I thought you were magnetised
+with the Ten Commandments; but no—God damn my soul!”—he cries, “the old
+wife has blood in his body after all! Which does not change the fact,”
+he continued, smiling again, “that you have done well to give your
+promise; for I doubt if you would ever shine in your new trade.”
+
+“I suppose,” said I, “I should ask your pardon and God’s for my
+attempt. At any rate, I have passed my word, which I will keep
+faithfully. But when I think of those you persecute—” I paused.
+
+“Life is a singular thing,” said he, “and mankind a very singular
+people. You suppose yourself to love my brother. I assure you, it is
+merely custom. Interrogate your memory; and when first you came to
+Durrisdeer, you will find you considered him a dull, ordinary youth. He
+is as dull and ordinary now, though not so young. Had you instead
+fallen in with me, you would to-day be as strong upon my side.”
+
+“I would never say you were ordinary, Mr. Bally,” I returned; “but here
+you prove yourself dull. You have just shown your reliance on my word.
+In other terms, that is my conscience—the same which starts
+instinctively back from you, like the eye from a strong light.”
+
+“Ah!” says he, “but I mean otherwise. I mean, had I met you in my
+youth. You are to consider I was not always as I am to-day; nor (had I
+met in with a friend of your description) should I have ever been so.”
+
+“Hut, Mr. Bally,” says I, “you would have made a mock of me; you would
+never have spent ten civil words on such a Square-toes.”
+
+But he was now fairly started on his new course of justification, with
+which he wearied me throughout the remainder of the passage. No doubt
+in the past he had taken pleasure to paint himself unnecessarily black,
+and made a vaunt of his wickedness, bearing it for a coat-of-arms. Nor
+was he so illogical as to abate one item of his old confessions. “But
+now that I know you are a human being,” he would say, “I can take the
+trouble to explain myself. For I assure you I am human, too, and have
+my virtues, like my neighbours.” I say, he wearied me, for I had only
+the one word to say in answer: twenty times I must have said it: “Give
+up your present purpose and return with me to Durrisdeer; then I will
+believe you.”
+
+Thereupon he would shake his head at me. “Ah! Mackellar, you might live
+a thousand years and never understand my nature,” he would say. “This
+battle is now committed, the hour of reflection quite past, the hour
+for mercy not yet come. It began between us when we span a coin in the
+hall of Durrisdeer, now twenty years ago; we have had our ups and
+downs, but never either of us dreamed of giving in; and as for me, when
+my glove is cast, life and honour go with it.”
+
+“A fig for your honour!” I would say. “And by your leave, these warlike
+similitudes are something too high-sounding for the matter in hand. You
+want some dirty money; there is the bottom of your contention; and as
+for your means, what are they? to stir up sorrow in a family that never
+harmed you, to debauch (if you can) your own nephew, and to wring the
+heart of your born brother! A footpad that kills an old granny in a
+woollen mutch with a dirty bludgeon, and that for a shilling-piece and
+a paper of snuff—there is all the warrior that you are.”
+
+When I would attack him thus (or somewhat thus) he would smile, and
+sigh like a man misunderstood. Once, I remember, he defended himself
+more at large, and had some curious sophistries, worth repeating, for a
+light upon his character.
+
+“You are very like a civilian to think war consists in drums and
+banners,” said he. “War (as the ancients said very wisely) is _ultima
+ratio_. When we take our advantage unrelentingly, then we make war. Ah!
+Mackellar, you are a devil of a soldier in the steward’s room at
+Durrisdeer, or the tenants do you sad injustice!”
+
+“I think little of what war is or is not,” I replied. “But you weary me
+with claiming my respect. Your brother is a good man, and you are a bad
+one—neither more nor less.”
+
+“Had I been Alexander—” he began.
+
+“It is so we all dupe ourselves,” I cried. “Had I been St. Paul, it
+would have been all one; I would have made the same hash of that career
+that you now see me making of my own.”
+
+“I tell you,” he cried, bearing down my interruption, “had I been the
+least petty chieftain in the Highlands, had I been the least king of
+naked negroes in the African desert, my people would have adored me. A
+bad man, am I? Ah! but I was born for a good tyrant! Ask Secundra Dass;
+he will tell you I treat him like a son. Cast in your lot with me
+to-morrow, become my slave, my chattel, a thing I can command as I
+command the powers of my own limbs and spirit—you will see no more that
+dark side that I turn upon the world in anger. I must have all or none.
+But where all is given, I give it back with usury. I have a kingly
+nature: there is my loss!”
+
+“It has been hitherto rather the loss of others,” I remarked, “which
+seems a little on the hither side of royalty.”
+
+“Tilly-vally!” cried he. “Even now, I tell you, I would spare that
+family in which you take so great an interest: yes, even now—to-morrow
+I would leave them to their petty welfare, and disappear in that forest
+of cut-throats and thimble-riggers that we call the world. I would do
+it to-morrow!” says he. “Only—only—”
+
+“Only what?” I asked.
+
+“Only they must beg it on their bended knees. I think in public, too,”
+he added, smiling. “Indeed, Mackellar, I doubt if there be a hall big
+enough to serve my purpose for that act of reparation.”
+
+“Vanity, vanity!” I moralised. “To think that this great force for evil
+should be swayed by the same sentiment that sets a lassie mincing to
+her glass!”
+
+“Oh! there are double words for everything: the word that swells, the
+word that belittles; you cannot fight me with a word!” said he. “You
+said the other day that I relied on your conscience: were I in your
+humour of detraction, I might say I built upon your vanity. It is your
+pretension to be _un homme de parole_; ‘tis mine not to accept defeat.
+Call it vanity, call it virtue, call it greatness of soul—what
+signifies the expression? But recognise in each of us a common strain:
+that we both live for an idea.”
+
+It will be gathered from so much familiar talk, and so much patience on
+both sides, that we now lived together upon excellent terms. Such was
+again the fact, and this time more seriously than before. Apart from
+disputations such as that which I have tried to reproduce, not only
+consideration reigned, but, I am tempted to say, even kindness. When I
+fell sick (as I did shortly after our great storm), he sat by my berth
+to entertain me with his conversation, and treated me with excellent
+remedies, which I accepted with security. Himself commented on the
+circumstance. “You see,” says he, “you begin to know me better. A very
+little while ago, upon this lonely ship, where no one but myself has
+any smattering of science, you would have made sure I had designs upon
+your life. And, observe, it is since I found you had designs upon my
+own, that I have shown you most respect. You will tell me if this
+speaks of a small mind.” I found little to reply. In so far as regarded
+myself, I believed him to mean well; I am, perhaps, the more a dupe of
+his dissimulation, but I believed (and I still believe) that he
+regarded me with genuine kindness. Singular and sad fact! so soon as
+this change began, my animosity abated, and these haunting visions of
+my master passed utterly away. So that, perhaps, there was truth in the
+man’s last vaunting word to me, uttered on the second day of July, when
+our long voyage was at last brought almost to an end, and we lay
+becalmed at the sea end of the vast harbour of New York, in a gasping
+heat, which was presently exchanged for a surprising waterfall of rain.
+I stood on the poop, regarding the green shores near at hand, and now
+and then the light smoke of the little town, our destination. And as I
+was even then devising how to steal a march on my familiar enemy, I was
+conscious of a shade of embarrassment when he approached me with his
+hand extended.
+
+“I am now to bid you farewell,” said he, “and that for ever. For now
+you go among my enemies, where all your former prejudices will revive.
+I never yet failed to charm a person when I wanted; even you, my good
+friend—to call you so for once—even you have now a very different
+portrait of me in your memory, and one that you will never quite
+forget. The voyage has not lasted long enough, or I should have wrote
+the impression deeper. But now all is at an end, and we are again at
+war. Judge by this little interlude how dangerous I am; and tell those
+fools”—pointing with his finger to the town—“to think twice and thrice
+before they set me at defiance.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+PASSAGES AT NEW YORK.
+
+
+I have mentioned I was resolved to steal a march upon the Master; and
+this, with the complicity of Captain McMurtrie, was mighty easily
+effected: a boat being partly loaded on the one side of our ship and
+the Master placed on board of it, the while a skiff put off from the
+other, carrying me alone. I had no more trouble in finding a direction
+to my lord’s house, whither I went at top speed, and which I found to
+be on the outskirts of the place, a very suitable mansion, in a fine
+garden, with an extraordinary large barn, byre, and stable, all in one.
+It was here my lord was walking when I arrived; indeed, it had become
+his chief place of frequentation, and his mind was now filled with
+farming. I burst in upon him breathless, and gave him my news: which
+was indeed no news at all, several ships having outsailed the
+_Nonesuch_ in the interval.
+
+“We have been expecting you long,” said my lord; “and indeed, of late
+days, ceased to expect you any more. I am glad to take your hand again,
+Mackellar. I thought you had been at the bottom of the sea.”
+
+“Ah! my lord, would God I had!” cried I. “Things would have been better
+for yourself.”
+
+“Not in the least,” says he, grimly. “I could not ask better. There is
+a long score to pay, and now—at last—I can begin to pay it.”
+
+I cried out against his security.
+
+“Oh!” says he, “this is not Durrisdeer, and I have taken my
+precautions. His reputation awaits him; I have prepared a welcome for
+my brother. Indeed, fortune has served me; for I found here a merchant
+of Albany who knew him after the ’45 and had mighty convenient
+suspicions of a murder: some one of the name of Chew it was, another
+Albanian. No one here will be surprised if I deny him my door; he will
+not be suffered to address my children, nor even to salute my wife: as
+for myself, I make so much exception for a brother that he may speak to
+me. I should lose my pleasure else,” says my lord, rubbing his palms.
+
+Presently he bethought himself, and set men off running, with billets,
+to summon the magnates of the province. I cannot recall what pretext he
+employed; at least, it was successful; and when our ancient enemy
+appeared upon the scene, he found my lord pacing in front of his house
+under some trees of shade, with the Governor upon one hand and various
+notables upon the other. My lady, who was seated in the verandah, rose
+with a very pinched expression and carried her children into the house.
+
+The Master, well dressed and with an elegant walking-sword, bowed to
+the company in a handsome manner and nodded to my lord with
+familiarity. My lord did not accept the salutation, but looked upon his
+brother with bended brows.
+
+“Well, sir,” says he, at last, “what ill wind brings you hither of all
+places, where (to our common disgrace) your reputation has preceded
+you?”
+
+“Your lordship is pleased to be civil,” said the Master, with a fine
+start.
+
+“I am pleased to be very plain,” returned my lord; “because it is
+needful you should clearly understand your situation. At home, where
+you were so little known, it was still possible to keep appearances;
+that would be quite vain in this province; and I have to tell you that
+I am quite resolved to wash my hands of you. You have already ruined me
+almost to the door, as you ruined my father before me;—whose heart you
+also broke. Your crimes escape the law; but my friend the Governor has
+promised protection to my family. Have a care, sir!” cries my lord,
+shaking his cane at him: “if you are observed to utter two words to any
+of my innocent household, the law shall be stretched to make you smart
+for it.”
+
+“Ah!” says the Master, very slowly. “And so this is the advantage of a
+foreign land! These gentlemen are unacquainted with our story, I
+perceive. They do not know that I am the Lord Durrisdeer; they do not
+know you are my younger brother, sitting in my place under a sworn
+family compact; they do not know (or they would not be seen with you in
+familiar correspondence) that every acre is mine before God
+Almighty—and every doit of the money you withhold from me, you do it as
+a thief, a perjurer, and a disloyal brother!”
+
+“General Clinton,” I cried, “do not listen to his lies. I am the
+steward of the estate, and there is not one word of truth in it. The
+man is a forfeited rebel turned into a hired spy: there is his story in
+two words.”
+
+It was thus that (in the heat of the moment) I let slip his infamy.
+
+“Fellow,” said the Governor, turning his face sternly on the Master, “I
+know more of you than you think for. We have some broken ends of your
+adventures in the provinces, which you will do very well not to drive
+me to investigate. There is the disappearance of Mr. Jacob Chew with
+all his merchandise; there is the matter of where you came ashore from
+with so much money and jewels, when you were picked up by a Bermudan
+out of Albany. Believe me, if I let these matters lie, it is in
+commiseration for your family and out of respect for my valued friend,
+Lord Durrisdeer.”
+
+There was a murmur of applause from the provincials.
+
+“I should have remembered how a title would shine out in such a hole as
+this,” says the Master, white as a sheet: “no matter how unjustly come
+by. It remains for me, then, to die at my lord’s door, where my dead
+body will form a very cheerful ornament.”
+
+“Away with your affectations!” cries my lord. “You know very well I
+have no such meaning; only to protect myself from calumny, and my home
+from your intrusion. I offer you a choice. Either I shall pay your
+passage home on the first ship, when you may perhaps be able to resume
+your occupations under Government, although God knows I would rather
+see you on the highway! Or, if that likes you not, stay here and
+welcome! I have inquired the least sum on which body and soul can be
+decently kept together in New York; so much you shall have, paid
+weekly; and if you cannot labour with your hands to better it, high
+time you should betake yourself to learn. The condition is—that you
+speak with no member of my family except myself,” he added.
+
+I do not think I have ever seen any man so pale as was the Master; but
+he was erect and his mouth firm.
+
+“I have been met here with some very unmerited insults,” said he, “from
+which I have certainly no idea to take refuge by flight. Give me your
+pittance; I take it without shame, for it is mine already—like the
+shirt upon your back; and I choose to stay until these gentlemen shall
+understand me better. Already they must spy the cloven hoof, since with
+all your pretended eagerness for the family honour, you take a pleasure
+to degrade it in my person.”
+
+“This is all very fine,” says my lord; “but to us who know you of old,
+you must be sure it signifies nothing. You take that alternative out of
+which you think that you can make the most. Take it, if you can, in
+silence; it will serve you better in the long run, you may believe me,
+than this ostentation of ingratitude.”
+
+“Oh, gratitude, my lord!” cries the Master, with a mounting intonation
+and his forefinger very conspicuously lifted up. “Be at rest: it will
+not fail you. It now remains that I should salute these gentlemen whom
+we have wearied with our family affairs.”
+
+And he bowed to each in succession, settled his walking-sword, and took
+himself off, leaving every one amazed at his behaviour, and me not less
+so at my lord’s.
+
+ We were now to enter on a changed phase of this family division. The
+ Master was by no manner of means so helpless as my lord supposed,
+ having at his hand, and entirely devoted to his service, an excellent
+ artist in all sorts of goldsmith work. With my lord’s allowance, which
+ was not so scanty as he had described it, the pair could support life;
+ and all the earnings of Secundra Dass might be laid upon one side for
+ any future purpose. That this was done, I have no doubt. It was in all
+ likelihood the Master’s design to gather a sufficiency, and then
+ proceed in quest of that treasure which he had buried long before
+ among the mountains; to which, if he had confined himself, he would
+ have been more happily inspired. But unfortunately for himself and all
+ of us, he took counsel of his anger. The public disgrace of his
+ arrival—which I sometimes wonder he could manage to survive—rankled in
+ his bones; he was in that humour when a man—in the words of the old
+ adage—will cut off his nose to spite his face; and he must make
+ himself a public spectacle in the hopes that some of the disgrace
+ might spatter on my lord.
+
+He chose, in a poor quarter of the town, a lonely, small house of
+boards, overhung with some acacias. It was furnished in front with a
+sort of hutch opening, like that of a dog’s kennel, but about as high
+as a table from the ground, in which the poor man that built it had
+formerly displayed some wares; and it was this which took the Master’s
+fancy and possibly suggested his proceedings. It appears, on board the
+pirate ship he had acquired some quickness with the needle—enough, at
+least, to play the part of tailor in the public eye; which was all that
+was required by the nature of his vengeance. A placard was hung above
+the hutch, bearing these words in something of the following
+disposition:
+
+James Durie,
+formerly MASTER of BALLANTRAE.
+Clothes Neatly Clouted.
+
+SECUNDRA DASS,
+Decayed Gentleman of India.
+Fine Goldsmith Work.
+
+Underneath this, when he had a job, my gentleman sat withinside
+tailor-wise and busily stitching. I say, when he had a job; but such
+customers as came were rather for Secundra, and the Master’s sewing
+would be more in the manner of Penelope’s. He could never have designed
+to gain even butter to his bread by such a means of livelihood: enough
+for him that there was the name of Durie dragged in the dirt on the
+placard, and the sometime heir of that proud family set up cross-legged
+in public for a reproach upon his brother’s meanness. And in so far his
+device succeeded that there was murmuring in the town and a party
+formed highly inimical to my lord. My lord’s favour with the Governor
+laid him more open on the other side; my lady (who was never so well
+received in the colony) met with painful innuendoes; in a party of
+women, where it would be the topic most natural to introduce, she was
+almost debarred from the naming of needle-work; and I have seen her
+return with a flushed countenance and vow that she would go abroad no
+more.
+
+In the meanwhile my lord dwelled in his decent mansion, immersed in
+farming; a popular man with his intimates, and careless or unconscious
+of the rest. He laid on flesh; had a bright, busy face; even the heat
+seemed to prosper with him; and my lady—in despite of her own
+annoyances—daily blessed Heaven her father should have left her such a
+paradise. She had looked on from a window upon the Master’s
+humiliation; and from that hour appeared to feel at ease. I was not so
+sure myself; as time went on, there seemed to me a something not quite
+wholesome in my lord’s condition. Happy he was, beyond a doubt, but the
+grounds of this felicity were wont; even in the bosom of his family he
+brooded with manifest delight upon some private thought; and I
+conceived at last the suspicion (quite unworthy of us both) that he
+kept a mistress somewhere in the town. Yet he went little abroad, and
+his day was very fully occupied; indeed, there was but a single period,
+and that pretty early in the morning, while Mr. Alexander was at his
+lesson-book, of which I was not certain of the disposition. It should
+be borne in mind, in the defence of that which I now did, that I was
+always in some fear my lord was not quite justly in his reason; and
+with our enemy sitting so still in the same town with us, I did well to
+be upon my guard. Accordingly I made a pretext, had the hour changed at
+which I taught Mr. Alexander the foundation of cyphering and the
+mathematic, and set myself instead to dog my master’s footsteps.
+
+Every morning, fair or foul, he took his gold-headed cane, set his hat
+on the back of his head—a recent habitude, which I thought to indicate
+a burning brow—and betook himself to make a certain circuit. At the
+first his way was among pleasant trees and beside a graveyard, where he
+would sit awhile, if the day were fine, in meditation. Presently the
+path turned down to the waterside, and came back along the
+harbour-front and past the Master’s booth. As he approached this second
+part of his circuit, my Lord Durrisdeer began to pace more leisurely,
+like a man delighted with the air and scene; and before the booth,
+half-way between that and the water’s edge, would pause a little,
+leaning on his staff. It was the hour when the Master sate within upon
+his board and plied his needle. So these two brothers would gaze upon
+each other with hard faces; and then my lord move on again, smiling to
+himself.
+
+It was but twice that I must stoop to that ungrateful necessity of
+playing spy. I was then certain of my lord’s purpose in his rambles and
+of the secret source of his delight. Here was his mistress: it was
+hatred and not love that gave him healthful colours. Some moralists
+might have been relieved by the discovery; I confess that I was
+dismayed. I found this situation of two brethren not only odious in
+itself, but big with possibilities of further evil; and I made it my
+practice, in so far as many occupations would allow, to go by a shorter
+path and be secretly present at their meeting. Coming down one day a
+little late, after I had been near a week prevented, I was struck with
+surprise to find a new development. I should say there was a bench
+against the Master’s house, where customers might sit to parley with
+the shopman; and here I found my lord seated, nursing his cane and
+looking pleasantly forth upon the bay. Not three feet from him sate the
+Master, stitching. Neither spoke; nor (in this new situation) did my
+lord so much as cut a glance upon his enemy. He tasted his
+neighbourhood, I must suppose, less indirectly in the bare proximity of
+person; and, without doubt, drank deep of hateful pleasures.
+
+He had no sooner come away than I openly joined him. “My lord, my
+lord,” said I, “this is no manner of behaviour.”
+
+“I grow fat upon it,” he replied; and not merely the words, which were
+strange enough, but the whole character of his expression, shocked me.
+
+“I warn you, my lord, against this indulgency of evil feeling,” said I.
+“I know not to which it is more perilous, the soul or the reason; but
+you go the way to murder both.”
+
+“You cannot understand,” said he. “You had never such mountains of
+bitterness upon your heart.”
+
+“And if it were no more,” I added, “you will surely goad the man to
+some extremity.”
+
+“To the contrary; I am breaking his spirit,” says my lord.
+
+ Every morning for hard upon a week my lord took his same place upon
+ the bench. It was a pleasant place, under the green acacias, with a
+ sight upon the bay and shipping, and a sound (from some way off) of
+ marines singing at their employ. Here the two sate without speech or
+ any external movement, beyond that of the needle or the Master biting
+ off a thread, for he still clung to his pretence of industry; and here
+ I made a point to join them, wondering at myself and my companions. If
+ any of my lord’s friends went by, he would hail them cheerfully, and
+ cry out he was there to give some good advice to his brother, who was
+ now (to his delight) grown quite industrious. And even this the Master
+ accepted with a steady countenance; what was in his mind, God knows,
+ or perhaps Satan only.
+
+All of a sudden, on a still day of what they call the Indian Summer,
+when the woods were changed into gold and pink and scarlet, the Master
+laid down his needle and burst into a fit of merriment. I think he must
+have been preparing it a long while in silence, for the note in itself
+was pretty naturally pitched; but breaking suddenly from so extreme a
+silence, and in circumstances so averse from mirth, it sounded
+ominously on my ear.
+
+“Henry,” said he, “I have for once made a false step, and for once you
+have had the wit to profit by it. The farce of the cobbler ends to-day;
+and I confess to you (with my compliments) that you have had the best
+of it. Blood will out; and you have certainly a choice idea of how to
+make yourself unpleasant.”
+
+Never a word said my lord; it was just as though the Master had not
+broken silence.
+
+“Come,” resumed the Master, “do not be sulky; it will spoil your
+attitude. You can now afford (believe me) to be a little gracious; for
+I have not merely a defeat to accept. I had meant to continue this
+performance till I had gathered enough money for a certain purpose; I
+confess ingenuously, I have not the courage. You naturally desire my
+absence from this town; I have come round by another way to the same
+idea. And I have a proposition to make; or, if your lordship prefers, a
+favour to ask.”
+
+“Ask it,” says my lord.
+
+“You may have heard that I had once in this country a considerable
+treasure,” returned the Master; “it matters not whether or no—such is
+the fact; and I was obliged to bury it in a spot of which I have
+sufficient indications. To the recovery of this, has my ambition now
+come down; and, as it is my own, you will not grudge it me.”
+
+“Go and get it,” says my lord. “I make no opposition.”
+
+“Yes,” said the Master; “but to do so, I must find men and carriage.
+The way is long and rough, and the country infested with wild Indians.
+Advance me only so much as shall be needful: either as a lump sum, in
+lieu of my allowance; or, if you prefer it, as a loan, which I shall
+repay on my return. And then, if you so decide, you may have seen the
+last of me.”
+
+My lord stared him steadily in the eyes; there was a hard smile upon
+his face, but he uttered nothing.
+
+“Henry,” said the Master, with a formidable quietness, and drawing at
+the same time somewhat back—“Henry, I had the honour to address you.”
+
+“Let us be stepping homeward,” says my lord to me, who was plucking at
+his sleeve; and with that he rose, stretched himself, settled his hat,
+and still without a syllable of response, began to walk steadily along
+the shore.
+
+I hesitated awhile between the two brothers, so serious a climax did we
+seem to have reached. But the Master had resumed his occupation, his
+eyes lowered, his hand seemingly as deft as ever; and I decided to
+pursue my lord.
+
+“Are you mad?” I cried, so soon as I had overtook him. “Would you cast
+away so fair an opportunity?”
+
+“Is it possible you should still believe in him?” inquired my lord,
+almost with a sneer.
+
+“I wish him forth of this town!” I cried. “I wish him anywhere and
+anyhow but as he is.”
+
+“I have said my say,” returned my lord, “and you have said yours. There
+let it rest.”
+
+But I was bent on dislodging the Master. That sight of him patiently
+returning to his needlework was more than my imagination could digest.
+There was never a man made, and the Master the least of any, that could
+accept so long a series of insults. The air smelt blood to me. And I
+vowed there should be no neglect of mine if, through any chink of
+possibility, crime could be yet turned aside. That same day, therefore,
+I came to my lord in his business room, where he sat upon some trivial
+occupation.
+
+“My lord,” said I, “I have found a suitable investment for my small
+economies. But these are unhappily in Scotland; it will take some time
+to lift them, and the affair presses. Could your lordship see his way
+to advance me the amount against my note?”
+
+He read me awhile with keen eyes. “I have never inquired into the state
+of your affairs, Mackellar,” says he. “Beyond the amount of your
+caution, you may not be worth a farthing, for what I know.”
+
+“I have been a long while in your service, and never told a lie, nor
+yet asked a favour for myself,” said I, “until to-day.”
+
+“A favour for the Master,” he returned, quietly. “Do you take me for a
+fool, Mackellar? Understand it once and for all, I treat this beast in
+my own way; fear nor favour shall not move me; and before I am
+hoodwinked, it will require a trickster less transparent than yourself.
+I ask service, loyal service; not that you should make and mar behind
+my back, and steal my own money to defeat me.”
+
+“My lord,” said I, “these are very unpardonable expressions.”
+
+“Think once more, Mackellar,” he replied; “and you will see they fit
+the fact. It is your own subterfuge that is unpardonable. Deny (if you
+can) that you designed this money to evade my orders with, and I will
+ask your pardon freely. If you cannot, you must have the resolution to
+hear your conduct go by its own name.”
+
+“If you think I had any design but to save you—” I began.
+
+“Oh! my old friend,” said he, “you know very well what I think! Here is
+my hand to you with all my heart; but of money, not one rap.”
+
+Defeated upon this side, I went straight to my room, wrote a letter,
+ran with it to the harbour, for I knew a ship was on the point of
+sailing; and came to the Master’s door a little before dusk. Entering
+without the form of any knock, I found him sitting with his Indian at a
+simple meal of maize porridge with some milk. The house within was
+clean and poor; only a few books upon a shelf distinguished it, and (in
+one corner) Secundra’s little bench.
+
+“Mr. Bally,” said I, “I have near five hundred pounds laid by in
+Scotland, the economies of a hard life. A letter goes by yon ship to
+have it lifted. Have so much patience till the return ship comes in,
+and it is all yours, upon the same condition you offered to my lord
+this morning.”
+
+He rose from the table, came forward, took me by the shoulders, and
+looked me in the face, smiling.
+
+“And yet you are very fond of money!” said he. “And yet you love money
+beyond all things else, except my brother!”
+
+“I fear old age and poverty,” said I, “which is another matter.”
+
+“I will never quarrel for a name. Call it so,” he replied. “Ah!
+Mackellar, Mackellar, if this were done from any love to me, how gladly
+would I close upon your offer!”
+
+“And yet,” I eagerly answered—“I say it to my shame, but I cannot see
+you in this poor place without compunction. It is not my single
+thought, nor my first; and yet it’s there! I would gladly see you
+delivered. I do not offer it in love, and far from that; but, as God
+judges me—and I wonder at it too!—quite without enmity.”
+
+“Ah!” says he, still holding my shoulders, and now gently shaking me,
+“you think of me more than you suppose. ‘And I wonder at it too,’” he
+added, repeating my expression and, I suppose, something of my voice.
+“You are an honest man, and for that cause I spare you.”
+
+“Spare me?” I cried.
+
+“Spare you,” he repeated, letting me go and turning away. And then,
+fronting me once more. “You little know what I would do with it,
+Mackellar! Did you think I had swallowed my defeat indeed? Listen: my
+life has been a series of unmerited cast-backs. That fool, Prince
+Charlie, mismanaged a most promising affair: there fell my first
+fortune. In Paris I had my foot once more high upon the ladder: that
+time it was an accident; a letter came to the wrong hand, and I was
+bare again. A third time, I found my opportunity; I built up a place
+for myself in India with an infinite patience; and then Clive came, my
+rajah was swallowed up, and I escaped out of the convulsion, like
+another Æneas, with Secundra Dass upon my back. Three times I have had
+my hand upon the highest station: and I am not yet three-and-forty. I
+know the world as few men know it when they come to die—Court and camp,
+the East and the West; I know where to go, I see a thousand openings. I
+am now at the height of my resources, sound of health, of inordinate
+ambition. Well, all this I resign; I care not if I die, and the world
+never hear of me; I care only for one thing, and that I will have. Mind
+yourself; lest, when the roof falls, you, too, should be crushed under
+the ruins.”
+
+ As I came out of his house, all hope of intervention quite destroyed,
+ I was aware of a stir on the harbour-side, and, raising my eyes, there
+ was a great ship newly come to anchor. It seems strange I could have
+ looked upon her with so much indifference, for she brought death to
+ the brothers of Durrisdeer. After all the desperate episodes of this
+ contention, the insults, the opposing interests, the fraternal duel in
+ the shrubbery, it was reserved for some poor devil in Grub Street,
+ scribbling for his dinner, and not caring what he scribbled, to cast a
+ spell across four thousand miles of the salt sea, and send forth both
+ these brothers into savage and wintry deserts, there to die. But such
+ a thought was distant from my mind; and while all the provincials were
+ fluttered about me by the unusual animation of their port, I passed
+ throughout their midst on my return homeward, quite absorbed in the
+ recollection of my visit and the Master’s speech.
+
+The same night there was brought to us from the ship a little packet of
+pamphlets. The next day my lord was under engagement to go with the
+Governor upon some party of pleasure; the time was nearly due, and I
+left him for a moment alone in his room and skimming through the
+pamphlets. When I returned, his head had fallen upon the table, his
+arms lying abroad amongst the crumpled papers.
+
+“My lord, my lord!” I cried as I ran forward, for I supposed he was in
+some fit.
+
+He sprang up like a figure upon wires, his countenance deformed with
+fury, so that in a strange place I should scarce have known him. His
+hand at the same time flew above his head, as though to strike me down.
+“Leave me alone!” he screeched, and I fled, as fast as my shaking legs
+would bear me, for my lady. She, too, lost no time; but when we
+returned, he had the door locked within, and only cried to us from the
+other side to leave him be. We looked in each other’s faces, very
+white—each supposing the blow had come at last.
+
+“I will write to the Governor to excuse him,” says she. “We must keep
+our strong friends.” But when she took up the pen, it flew out of her
+fingers. “I cannot write,” said she. “Can you?”
+
+“I will make a shift, my lady,” said I.
+
+She looked over me as I wrote. “That will do,” she said, when I had
+done. “Thank God, Mackellar, I have you to lean upon! But what can it
+be now? What, what can it be?”
+
+In my own mind, I believed there was no explanation possible, and none
+required; it was my fear that the man’s madness had now simply burst
+forth its way, like the long-smothered flames of a volcano; but to this
+(in mere mercy to my lady) I durst not give expression.
+
+“It is more to the purpose to consider our own behaviour,” said I.
+“Must we leave him there alone?”
+
+“I do not dare disturb him,” she replied. “Nature may know best; it may
+be Nature that cries to be alone; and we grope in the dark. Oh yes, I
+would leave him as he is.”
+
+“I will, then, despatch this letter, my lady, and return here, if you
+please, to sit with you,” said I.
+
+“Pray do,” cries my lady.
+
+All afternoon we sat together, mostly in silence, watching my lord’s
+door. My own mind was busy with the scene that had just passed, and its
+singular resemblance to my vision. I must say a word upon this, for the
+story has gone abroad with great exaggeration, and I have even seen it
+printed, and my own name referred to for particulars. So much was the
+same: here was my lord in a room, with his head upon the table, and
+when he raised his face, it wore such an expression as distressed me to
+the soul. But the room was different, my lord’s attitude at the table
+not at all the same, and his face, when he disclosed it, expressed a
+painful degree of fury instead of that haunting despair which had
+always (except once, already referred to) characterised it in the
+vision. There is the whole truth at last before the public; and if the
+differences be great, the coincidence was yet enough to fill me with
+uneasiness. All afternoon, as I say, I sat and pondered upon this quite
+to myself; for my lady had trouble of her own, and it was my last
+thought to vex her with fancies. About the midst of our time of
+waiting, she conceived an ingenious scheme, had Mr. Alexander fetched,
+and bid him knock at his father’s door. My lord sent the boy about his
+business, but without the least violence, whether of manner or
+expression; so that I began to entertain a hope the fit was over.
+
+At last, as the night fell and I was lighting a lamp that stood there
+trimmed, the door opened and my lord stood within upon the threshold.
+The light was not so strong that we could read his countenance; when he
+spoke, methought his voice a little altered but yet perfectly steady.
+
+“Mackellar,” said he, “carry this note to its destination with your own
+hand. It is highly private. Find the person alone when you deliver it.”
+
+“Henry,” says my lady, “you are not ill?”
+
+“No, no,” says he, querulously, “I am occupied. Not at all; I am only
+occupied. It is a singular thing a man must be supposed to be ill when
+he has any business! Send me supper to this room, and a basket of wine:
+I expect the visit of a friend. Otherwise I am not to be disturbed.”
+
+And with that he once more shut himself in.
+
+The note was addressed to one Captain Harris, at a tavern on the
+portside. I knew Harris (by reputation) for a dangerous adventurer,
+highly suspected of piracy in the past, and now following the rude
+business of an Indian trader. What my lord should have to say to him,
+or he to my lord, it passed my imagination to conceive: or yet how my
+lord had heard of him, unless by a disgraceful trial from which the man
+was recently escaped. Altogether I went upon the errand with
+reluctance, and from the little I saw of the captain, returned from it
+with sorrow. I found him in a foul-smelling chamber, sitting by a
+guttering candle and an empty bottle; he had the remains of a military
+carriage, or rather perhaps it was an affectation, for his manners were
+low.
+
+“Tell my lord, with my service, that I will wait upon his lordship in
+the inside of half an hour,” says he, when he had read the note; and
+then had the servility, pointing to his empty bottle, to propose that I
+should buy him liquor.
+
+Although I returned with my best speed, the Captain followed close upon
+my heels, and he stayed late into the night. The cock was crowing a
+second time when I saw (from my chamber window) my lord lighting him to
+the gate, both men very much affected with their potations, and
+sometimes leaning one upon the other to confabulate. Yet the next
+morning my lord was abroad again early with a hundred pounds of money
+in his pocket. I never supposed that he returned with it; and yet I was
+quite sure it did not find its way to the Master, for I lingered all
+morning within view of the booth. That was the last time my Lord
+Durrisdeer passed his own enclosure till we left New York; he walked in
+his barn, or sat and talked with his family, all much as usual; but the
+town saw nothing of him, and his daily visits to the Master seemed
+forgotten. Nor yet did Harris reappear; or not until the end.
+
+I was now much oppressed with a sense of the mysteries in which we had
+begun to move. It was plain, if only from his change of habitude, my
+lord had something on his mind of a grave nature; but what it was,
+whence it sprang, or why he should now keep the house and garden, I
+could make no guess at. It was clear, even to probation, the pamphlets
+had some share in this revolution; I read all I could find, and they
+were all extremely insignificant, and of the usual kind of party
+scurrility; even to a high politician, I could spy out no particular
+matter of offence, and my lord was a man rather indifferent on public
+questions. The truth is, the pamphlet which was the spring of this
+affair, lay all the time on my lord’s bosom. There it was that I found
+it at last, after he was dead, in the midst of the north wilderness: in
+such a place, in such dismal circumstances, I was to read for the first
+time these idle, lying words of a Whig pamphleteer declaiming against
+indulgency to Jacobites:—“Another notorious Rebel, the M—r of B—e, is
+to have his Title restored,” the passage ran. “This Business has been
+long in hand, since he rendered some very disgraceful Services in
+Scotland and France. His Brother, _L—d D—r_, is known to be no better
+than himself in Inclination; and the supposed Heir, who is now to be
+set aside, was bred up in the most detestable Principles. In the old
+Phrase, it is _six of the one and half a dozen of the other_; but the
+Favour of such a Reposition is too extreme to be passed over.” A man in
+his right wits could not have cared two straws for a tale so manifestly
+false; that Government should ever entertain the notion, was
+inconceivable to any reasoning creature, unless possibly the fool that
+penned it; and my lord, though never brilliant, was ever remarkable for
+sense. That he should credit such a rodomontade, and carry the pamphlet
+on his bosom and the words in his heart, is the clear proof of the
+man’s lunacy. Doubtless the mere mention of Mr. Alexander, and the
+threat directly held out against the child’s succession, precipitated
+that which had so long impended. Or else my master had been truly mad
+for a long time, and we were too dull or too much used to him, and did
+not perceive the extent of his infirmity.
+
+About a week after the day of the pamphlets I was late upon the
+harbour-side, and took a turn towards the Master’s, as I often did. The
+door opened, a flood of light came forth upon the road, and I beheld a
+man taking his departure with friendly salutations. I cannot say how
+singularly I was shaken to recognise the adventurer Harris. I could not
+but conclude it was the hand of my lord that had brought him there; and
+prolonged my walk in very serious and apprehensive thought. It was late
+when I came home, and there was my lord making up his portmanteau for a
+voyage.
+
+“Why do you come so late?” he cried. “We leave to-morrow for Albany,
+you and I together; and it is high time you were about your
+preparations.”
+
+“For Albany, my lord?” I cried. “And for what earthly purpose?”
+
+“Change of scene,” said he.
+
+And my lady, who appeared to have been weeping, gave me the signal to
+obey without more parley. She told me a little later (when we found
+occasion to exchange some words) that he had suddenly announced his
+intention after a visit from Captain Harris, and her best endeavours,
+whether to dissuade him from the journey, or to elicit some explanation
+of its purpose, had alike proved unavailing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS.
+
+
+We made a prosperous voyage up that fine river of the Hudson, the
+weather grateful, the hills singularly beautified with the colours of
+the autumn. At Albany we had our residence at an inn, where I was not
+so blind and my lord not so cunning but what I could see he had some
+design to hold me prisoner. The work he found for me to do was not so
+pressing that we should transact it apart from necessary papers in the
+chamber of an inn; nor was it of such importance that I should be set
+upon as many as four or five scrolls of the same document. I submitted
+in appearance; but I took private measures on my own side, and had the
+news of the town communicated to me daily by the politeness of our
+host. In this way I received at last a piece of intelligence for which,
+I may say, I had been waiting. Captain Harris (I was told) with “Mr.
+Mountain, the trader,” had gone by up the river in a boat. I would have
+feared the landlord’s eye, so strong the sense of some complicity upon
+my master’s part oppressed me. But I made out to say I had some
+knowledge of the Captain, although none of Mr. Mountain, and to inquire
+who else was of the party. My informant knew not; Mr. Mountain had come
+ashore upon some needful purchases; had gone round the town buying,
+drinking, and prating; and it seemed the party went upon some likely
+venture, for he had spoken much of great things he would do when he
+returned. No more was known, for none of the rest had come ashore, and
+it seemed they were pressed for time to reach a certain spot before the
+snow should fall.
+
+And sure enough, the next day, there fell a sprinkle even in Albany;
+but it passed as it came, and was but a reminder of what lay before us.
+I thought of it lightly then, knowing so little as I did of that
+inclement province: the retrospect is different; and I wonder at times
+if some of the horror of these events which I must now rehearse flowed
+not from the foul skies and savage winds to which we were exposed, and
+the agony of cold that we must suffer.
+
+The boat having passed by, I thought at first we should have left the
+town. But no such matter. My lord continued his stay in Albany where he
+had no ostensible affairs, and kept me by him, far from my due
+employment, and making a pretence of occupation. It is upon this
+passage I expect, and perhaps deserve, censure. I was not so dull but
+what I had my own thoughts. I could not see the Master entrust himself
+into the hands of Harris, and not suspect some underhand contrivance.
+Harris bore a villainous reputation, and he had been tampered with in
+private by my lord; Mountain, the trader, proved, upon inquiry, to be
+another of the same kidney; the errand they were all gone upon being
+the recovery of ill-gotten treasures, offered in itself a very strong
+incentive to foul play; and the character of the country where they
+journeyed promised impunity to deeds of blood. Well: it is true I had
+all these thoughts and fears, and guesses of the Master’s fate. But you
+are to consider I was the same man that sought to dash him from the
+bulwarks of a ship in the mid-sea; the same that, a little before, very
+impiously but sincerely offered God a bargain, seeking to hire God to
+be my bravo. It is true again that I had a good deal melted towards our
+enemy. But this I always thought of as a weakness of the flesh and even
+culpable; my mind remaining steady and quite bent against him. True,
+yet again, that it was one thing to assume on my own shoulders the
+guilt and danger of a criminal attempt, and another to stand by and see
+my lord imperil and besmirch himself. But this was the very ground of
+my inaction. For (should I anyway stir in the business) I might fail
+indeed to save the Master, but I could not miss to make a byword of my
+lord.
+
+Thus it was that I did nothing; and upon the same reasons, I am still
+strong to justify my course. We lived meanwhile in Albany, but though
+alone together in a strange place, had little traffic beyond formal
+salutations. My lord had carried with him several introductions to
+chief people of the town and neighbourhood; others he had before
+encountered in New York: with this consequence, that he went much
+abroad, and I am sorry to say was altogether too convivial in his
+habits. I was often in bed, but never asleep, when he returned; and
+there was scarce a night when he did not betray the influence of
+liquor. By day he would still lay upon me endless tasks, which he
+showed considerable ingenuity to fish up and renew, in the manner of
+Penelope’s web. I never refused, as I say, for I was hired to do his
+bidding; but I took no pains to keep my penetration under a bushel, and
+would sometimes smile in his face.
+
+“I think I must be the devil and you Michael Scott,” I said to him one
+day. “I have bridged Tweed and split the Eildons; and now you set me to
+the rope of sand.”
+
+He looked at me with shining eyes, and looked away again, his jaw
+chewing, but without words.
+
+“Well, well, my lord,” said I, “your will is my pleasure. I will do
+this thing for the fourth time; but I would beg of you to invent
+another task against to-morrow, for by my troth, I am weary of this
+one.”
+
+“You do not know what you are saying,” returned my lord, putting on his
+hat and turning his back to me. “It is a strange thing you should take
+a pleasure to annoy me. A friend—but that is a different affair. It is
+a strange thing. I am a man that has had ill-fortune all my life
+through. I am still surrounded by contrivances. I am always treading in
+plots,” he burst out. “The whole world is banded against me.”
+
+“I would not talk wicked nonsense if I were you,” said I; “but I will
+tell you what I _would_ do—I would put my head in cold water, for you
+had more last night than you could carry.”
+
+“Do ye think that?” said he, with a manner of interest highly awakened.
+“Would that be good for me? It’s a thing I never tried.”
+
+“I mind the days when you had no call to try, and I wish, my lord, that
+they were back again,” said I. “But the plain truth is, if you continue
+to exceed, you will do yourself a mischief.”
+
+“I don’t appear to carry drink the way I used to,” said my lord. “I get
+overtaken, Mackellar. But I will be more upon my guard.”
+
+“That is what I would ask of you,” I replied. “You are to bear in mind
+that you are Mr. Alexander’s father: give the bairn a chance to carry
+his name with some responsibility.”
+
+“Ay, ay,” said he. “Ye’re a very sensible man, Mackellar, and have been
+long in my employ. But I think, if you have nothing more to say to me I
+will be stepping. If you have nothing more to say?” he added, with that
+burning, childish eagerness that was now so common with the man.
+
+“No, my lord, I have nothing more,” said I, dryly enough.
+
+“Then I think I will be stepping,” says my lord, and stood and looked
+at me fidgeting with his hat, which he had taken off again. “I suppose
+you will have no errands? No? I am to meet Sir William Johnson, but I
+will be more upon my guard.” He was silent for a time, and then,
+smiling: “Do you call to mind a place, Mackellar—it’s a little below
+Engles—where the burn runs very deep under a wood of rowans. I mind
+being there when I was a lad—dear, it comes over me like an old song!—I
+was after the fishing, and I made a bonny cast. Eh, but I was happy. I
+wonder, Mackellar, why I am never happy now?”
+
+“My lord,” said I, “if you would drink with more moderation you would
+have the better chance. It is an old byword that the bottle is a false
+consoler.”
+
+“No doubt,” said he, “no doubt. Well, I think I will be going.”
+
+“Good-morning, my lord,” said I.
+
+“Good-morning, good-morning,” said he, and so got himself at last from
+the apartment.
+
+I give that for a fair specimen of my lord in the morning; and I must
+have described my patron very ill if the reader does not perceive a
+notable falling off. To behold the man thus fallen: to know him
+accepted among his companions for a poor, muddled toper, welcome (if he
+were welcome at all) for the bare consideration of his title; and to
+recall the virtues he had once displayed against such odds of fortune;
+was not this a thing at once to rage and to be humbled at?
+
+In his cups, he was more excessive. I will give but the one scene,
+close upon the end, which is strongly marked upon my memory to this
+day, and at the time affected me almost with horror.
+
+I was in bed, lying there awake, when I heard him stumbling on the
+stair and singing. My lord had no gift of music, his brother had all
+the graces of the family, so that when I say singing, you are to
+understand a manner of high, carolling utterance, which was truly
+neither speech nor song. Something not unlike is to be heard upon the
+lips of children, ere they learn shame; from those of a man grown
+elderly, it had a strange effect. He opened the door with noisy
+precaution; peered in, shading his candle; conceived me to slumber;
+entered, set his light upon the table, and took off his hat. I saw him
+very plain; a high, feverish exultation appeared to boil in his veins,
+and he stood and smiled and smirked upon the candle. Presently he
+lifted up his arm, snapped his fingers, and fell to undress. As he did
+so, having once more forgot my presence, he took back to his singing;
+and now I could hear the words, which were those from the old song of
+the _Twa Corbies_ endlessly repeated:
+
+“And over his banes when they are bare
+The wind sall blaw for evermair!”
+
+
+I have said there was no music in the man. His strains had no logical
+succession except in so far as they inclined a little to the minor
+mode; but they exercised a rude potency upon the feelings, and followed
+the words, and signified the feelings of the singer with barbaric
+fitness. He took it first in the time and manner of a rant; presently
+this ill-favoured gleefulness abated, he began to dwell upon the notes
+more feelingly, and sank at last into a degree of maudlin pathos that
+was to me scarce bearable. By equal steps, the original briskness of
+his acts declined; and when he was stripped to his breeches, he sat on
+the bedside and fell to whimpering. I know nothing less respectable
+than the tears of drunkenness, and turned my back impatiently on this
+poor sight.
+
+But he had started himself (I am to suppose) on that slippery descent
+of self-pity; on the which, to a man unstrung by old sorrows and recent
+potations there is no arrest except exhaustion. His tears continued to
+flow, and the man to sit there, three parts naked, in the cold air of
+the chamber. I twitted myself alternately with inhumanity and
+sentimental weakness, now half rising in my bed to interfere, now
+reading myself lessons of indifference and courting slumber, until,
+upon a sudden, the _quantum mutatus ab illo_ shot into my mind; and
+calling to remembrance his old wisdom, constancy, and patience, I was
+overborne with a pity almost approaching the passionate, not for my
+master alone but for the sons of man.
+
+At this I leaped from my place, went over to his side and laid a hand
+on his bare shoulder, which was cold as stone. He uncovered his face
+and showed it me all swollen and begrutten [10] like a child’s; and at
+the sight my impatience partially revived.
+
+“Think shame to yourself,” said I. “This is bairnly conduct. I might
+have been snivelling myself, if I had cared to swill my belly with
+wine. But I went to my bed sober like a man. Come: get into yours, and
+have done with this pitiable exhibition.”
+
+“Oh, Mackellar,” said he, “my heart is wae!”
+
+“Wae?” cried I. “For a good cause, I think. What words were these you
+sang as you came in? Show pity to others, we then can talk of pity to
+yourself. You can be the one thing or the other, but I will be no party
+to half-way houses. If you’re a striker, strike, and if you’re a
+bleater, bleat!”
+
+“Cry!” cries he, with a burst, “that’s it—strike! that’s talking! Man,
+I’ve stood it all too long. But when they laid a hand upon the child,
+when the child’s threatened”—his momentary vigour whimpering off—“my
+child, my Alexander!”—and he was at his tears again.
+
+I took him by the shoulders and shook him. “Alexander!” said I. “Do you
+even think of him? Not you! Look yourself in the face like a brave man,
+and you’ll find you’re but a self-deceiver. The wife, the friend, the
+child, they’re all equally forgot, and you sunk in a mere log of
+selfishness.”
+
+“Mackellar,” said he, with a wonderful return to his old manner and
+appearance, “you may say what you will of me, but one thing I never
+was—I was never selfish.”
+
+“I will open your eyes in your despite,” said I. “How long have we been
+here? and how often have you written to your family? I think this is
+the first time you were ever separate: have you written at all? Do they
+know if you are dead or living?”
+
+I had caught him here too openly; it braced his better nature; there
+was no more weeping, he thanked me very penitently, got to bed and was
+soon fast asleep; and the first thing he did the next morning was to
+sit down and begin a letter to my lady: a very tender letter it was
+too, though it was never finished. Indeed all communication with New
+York was transacted by myself; and it will be judged I had a thankless
+task of it. What to tell my lady and in what words, and how far to be
+false and how far cruel, was a thing that kept me often from my
+slumber.
+
+All this while, no doubt, my lord waited with growing impatiency for
+news of his accomplices. Harris, it is to be thought, had promised a
+high degree of expedition; the time was already overpast when word was
+to be looked for; and suspense was a very evil counsellor to a man of
+an impaired intelligence. My lord’s mind throughout this interval
+dwelled almost wholly in the Wilderness, following that party with
+whose deeds he had so much concern. He continually conjured up their
+camps and progresses, the fashion of the country, the perpetration in a
+thousand different manners of the same horrid fact, and that consequent
+spectacle of the Master’s bones lying scattered in the wind. These
+private, guilty considerations I would continually observe to peep
+forth in the man’s talk, like rabbits from a hill. And it is the less
+wonder if the scene of his meditations began to draw him bodily.
+
+ It is well known what pretext he took. Sir William Johnson had a
+ diplomatic errand in these parts; and my lord and I (from curiosity,
+ as was given out) went in his company. Sir William was well attended
+ and liberally supplied. Hunters brought us venison, fish was taken for
+ us daily in the streams, and brandy ran like water. We proceeded by
+ day and encamped by night in the military style; sentinels were set
+ and changed; every man had his named duty; and Sir William was the
+ spring of all. There was much in this that might at times have
+ entertained me; but for our misfortune, the weather was extremely
+ harsh, the days were in the beginning open, but the nights frosty from
+ the first. A painful keen wind blew most of the time, so that we sat
+ in the boat with blue fingers, and at night, as we scorched our faces
+ at the fire, the clothes upon our back appeared to be of paper. A
+ dreadful solitude surrounded our steps; the land was quite dispeopled,
+ there was no smoke of fires, and save for a single boat of merchants
+ on the second day, we met no travellers. The season was indeed late,
+ but this desertion of the waterways impressed Sir William himself; and
+ I have heard him more than once express a sense of intimidation. “I
+ have come too late, I fear; they must have dug up the hatchet;” he
+ said; and the future proved how justly he had reasoned.
+
+I could never depict the blackness of my soul upon this journey. I have
+none of those minds that are in love with the unusual: to see the
+winter coming and to lie in the field so far from any house, oppressed
+me like a nightmare; it seemed, indeed, a kind of awful braving of
+God’s power; and this thought, which I daresay only writes me down a
+coward, was greatly exaggerated by my private knowledge of the errand
+we were come upon. I was besides encumbered by my duties to Sir
+William, whom it fell upon me to entertain; for my lord was quite sunk
+into a state bordering on _pervigilium_, watching the woods with a rapt
+eye, sleeping scarce at all, and speaking sometimes not twenty words in
+a whole day. That which he said was still coherent; but it turned
+almost invariably upon the party for whom he kept his crazy lookout. He
+would tell Sir William often, and always as if it were a new
+communication, that he had “a brother somewhere in the woods,” and beg
+that the sentinels should be directed “to inquire for him.” “I am
+anxious for news of my brother,” he would say. And sometimes, when we
+were under way, he would fancy he spied a canoe far off upon the water
+or a camp on the shore, and exhibit painful agitation. It was
+impossible but Sir William should be struck with these singularities;
+and at last he led me aside, and hinted his uneasiness. I touched my
+head and shook it; quite rejoiced to prepare a little testimony against
+possible disclosures.
+
+“But in that case,” cries Sir William, “is it wise to let him go at
+large?”
+
+“Those that know him best,” said I, “are persuaded that he should be
+humoured.”
+
+“Well, well,” replied Sir William, “it is none of my affairs. But if I
+had understood, you would never have been here.”
+
+Our advance into this savage country had thus uneventfully proceeded
+for about a week, when we encamped for a night at a place where the
+river ran among considerable mountains clothed in wood. The fires were
+lighted on a level space at the water’s edge; and we supped and lay
+down to sleep in the customary fashion. It chanced the night fell
+murderously cold; the stringency of the frost seized and bit me through
+my coverings so that pain kept me wakeful; and I was afoot again before
+the peep of day, crouching by the fires or trotting to and fro at the
+stream’s edge, to combat the aching of my limbs. At last dawn began to
+break upon hoar woods and mountains, the sleepers rolled in their
+robes, and the boisterous river dashing among spears of ice. I stood
+looking about me, swaddled in my stiff coat of a bull’s fur, and the
+breath smoking from my scorched nostrils, when, upon a sudden, a
+singular, eager cry rang from the borders of the wood. The sentries
+answered it, the sleepers sprang to their feet; one pointed, the rest
+followed his direction with their eyes, and there, upon the edge of the
+forest and betwixt two trees, we beheld the figure of a man reaching
+forth his hands like one in ecstasy. The next moment he ran forward,
+fell on his knees at the side of the camp, and burst in tears.
+
+This was John Mountain, the trader, escaped from the most horrid
+perils; and his first word, when he got speech, was to ask if we had
+seen Secundra Dass.
+
+“Seen what?” cries Sir William.
+
+“No,” said I, “we have seen nothing of him. Why?”
+
+“Nothing?” says Mountain. “Then I was right after all.” With that he
+struck his palm upon his brow. “But what takes him back?” he cried.
+“What takes the man back among dead bodies. There is some damned
+mystery here.”
+
+This was a word which highly aroused our curiosity, but I shall be more
+perspicacious, if I narrate these incidents in their true order. Here
+follows a narrative which I have compiled out of three sources, not
+very consistent in all points:
+
+_First_, a written statement by Mountain, in which everything criminal
+is cleverly smuggled out of view;
+
+_Second_, two conversations with Secundra Dass; and
+
+_Third_, many conversations with Mountain himself, in which he was
+pleased to be entirely plain; for the truth is he regarded me as an
+accomplice.
+
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE OF THE TRADER, MOUNTAIN.
+
+
+The crew that went up the river under the joint command of Captain
+Harris and the Master numbered in all nine persons, of whom (if I
+except Secundra Dass) there was not one that had not merited the
+gallows. From Harris downward the voyagers were notorious in that
+colony for desperate, bloody-minded miscreants; some were reputed
+pirates, the most hawkers of rum; all ranters and drinkers; all fit
+associates, embarking together without remorse, upon this treacherous
+and murderous design. I could not hear there was much discipline or any
+set captain in the gang; but Harris and four others, Mountain himself,
+two Scotchmen—Pinkerton and Hastie—and a man of the name of Hicks, a
+drunken shoemaker, put their heads together and agreed upon the course.
+In a material sense, they were well enough provided; and the Master in
+particular brought with him a tent where he might enjoy some privacy
+and shelter.
+
+Even this small indulgence told against him in the minds of his
+companions. But indeed he was in a position so entirely false (and even
+ridiculous) that all his habit of command and arts of pleasing were
+here thrown away. In the eyes of all, except Secundra Dass, he figured
+as a common gull and designated victim; going unconsciously to death;
+yet he could not but suppose himself the contriver and the leader of
+the expedition; he could scarce help but so conduct himself and at the
+least hint of authority or condescension, his deceivers would be
+laughing in their sleeves. I was so used to see and to conceive him in
+a high, authoritative attitude, that when I had conceived his position
+on this journey, I was pained and could have blushed. How soon he may
+have entertained a first surmise, we cannot know; but it was long, and
+the party had advanced into the Wilderness beyond the reach of any
+help, ere he was fully awakened to the truth.
+
+It fell thus. Harris and some others had drawn apart into the woods for
+consultation, when they were startled by a rustling in the brush. They
+were all accustomed to the arts of Indian warfare, and Mountain had not
+only lived and hunted, but fought and earned some reputation, with the
+savages. He could move in the woods without noise, and follow a trail
+like a hound; and upon the emergence of this alert, he was deputed by
+the rest to plunge into the thicket for intelligence. He was soon
+convinced there was a man in his close neighbourhood, moving with
+precaution but without art among the leaves and branches; and coming
+shortly to a place of advantage, he was able to observe Secundra Dass
+crawling briskly off with many backward glances. At this he knew not
+whether to laugh or cry; and his accomplices, when he had returned and
+reported, were in much the same dubiety. There was now no danger of an
+Indian onslaught; but on the other hand, since Secundra Dass was at the
+pains to spy upon them, it was highly probable he knew English, and if
+he knew English it was certain the whole of their design was in the
+Master’s knowledge. There was one singularity in the position. If
+Secundra Dass knew and concealed his knowledge of English, Harris was a
+proficient in several of the tongues of India, and as his career in
+that part of the world had been a great deal worse than profligate, he
+had not thought proper to remark upon the circumstance. Each side had
+thus a spy-hole on the counsels of the other. The plotters, so soon as
+this advantage was explained, returned to camp; Harris, hearing the
+Hindustani was once more closeted with his master, crept to the side of
+the tent; and the rest, sitting about the fire with their tobacco,
+awaited his report with impatience. When he came at last, his face was
+very black. He had overheard enough to confirm the worst of his
+suspicions. Secundra Dass was a good English scholar; he had been some
+days creeping and listening, the Master was now fully informed of the
+conspiracy, and the pair proposed on the morrow to fall out of line at
+a carrying place and plunge at a venture in the woods: preferring the
+full risk of famine, savage beasts, and savage men to their position in
+the midst of traitors.
+
+What, then, was to be done? Some were for killing the Master on the
+spot; but Harris assured them that would be a crime without profit,
+since the secret of the treasure must die along with him that buried
+it. Others were for desisting at once from the whole enterprise and
+making for New York; but the appetising name of treasure, and the
+thought of the long way they had already travelled dissuaded the
+majority. I imagine they were dull fellows for the most part. Harris,
+indeed, had some acquirements, Mountain was no fool, Hastie was an
+educated man; but even these had manifestly failed in life, and the
+rest were the dregs of colonial rascality. The conclusion they reached,
+at least, was more the offspring of greed and hope, than reason. It was
+to temporise, to be wary and watch the Master, to be silent and supply
+no further aliment to his suspicions, and to depend entirely (as well
+as I make out) on the chance that their victim was as greedy, hopeful,
+and irrational as themselves, and might, after all, betray his life and
+treasure.
+
+Twice in the course of the next day Secundra and the Master must have
+appeared to themselves to have escaped; and twice they were
+circumvented. The Master, save that the second time he grew a little
+pale, displayed no sign of disappointment, apologised for the stupidity
+with which he had fallen aside, thanked his recapturers as for a
+service, and rejoined the caravan with all his usual gallantry and
+cheerfulness of mien and bearing. But it is certain he had smelled a
+rat; for from thenceforth he and Secundra spoke only in each other’s
+ear, and Harris listened and shivered by the tent in vain. The same
+night it was announced they were to leave the boats and proceed by
+foot, a circumstance which (as it put an end to the confusion of the
+portages) greatly lessened the chances of escape.
+
+And now there began between the two sides a silent contest, for life on
+the one hand, for riches on the other. They were now near that quarter
+of the desert in which the Master himself must begin to play the part
+of guide; and using this for a pretext of persecution, Harris and his
+men sat with him every night about the fire, and laboured to entrap him
+into some admission. If he let slip his secret, he knew well it was the
+warrant for his death; on the other hand, he durst not refuse their
+questions, and must appear to help them to the best of his capacity, or
+he practically published his mistrust. And yet Mountain assures me the
+man’s brow was never ruffled. He sat in the midst of these jackals, his
+life depending by a thread, like some easy, witty householder at home
+by his own fire; an answer he had for everything—as often as not, a
+jesting answer; avoided threats, evaded insults; talked, laughed, and
+listened with an open countenance; and, in short, conducted himself in
+such a manner as must have disarmed suspicion, and went near to stagger
+knowledge. Indeed, Mountain confessed to me they would soon have
+disbelieved the Captain’s story, and supposed their designated victim
+still quite innocent of their designs; but for the fact that he
+continued (however ingeniously) to give the slip to questions, and the
+yet stronger confirmation of his repeated efforts to escape. The last
+of these, which brought things to a head, I am now to relate. And first
+I should say that by this time the temper of Harris’s companions was
+utterly worn out; civility was scarce pretended; and for one very
+significant circumstance, the Master and Secundra had been (on some
+pretext) deprived of weapons. On their side, however, the threatened
+pair kept up the parade of friendship handsomely; Secundra was all
+bows, the Master all smiles; and on the last night of the truce he had
+even gone so far as to sing for the diversion of the company. It was
+observed that he had also eaten with unusual heartiness, and drank
+deep, doubtless from design.
+
+At least, about three in the morning, he came out of the tent into the
+open air, audibly mourning and complaining, with all the manner of a
+sufferer from surfeit. For some while, Secundra publicly attended on
+his patron, who at last became more easy, and fell asleep on the frosty
+ground behind the tent, the Indian returning within. Some time after,
+the sentry was changed; had the Master pointed out to him, where he lay
+in what is called a robe of buffalo: and thenceforth kept an eye upon
+him (he declared) without remission. With the first of the dawn, a
+draught of wind came suddenly and blew open one side the corner of the
+robe; and with the same puff, the Master’s hat whirled in the air and
+fell some yards away. The sentry thinking it remarkable the sleeper
+should not awaken, thereupon drew near; and the next moment, with a
+great shout, informed the camp their prisoner was escaped. He had left
+behind his Indian, who (in the first vivacity of the surprise) came
+near to pay the forfeit of his life, and was, in fact, inhumanly
+mishandled; but Secundra, in the midst of threats and cruelties, stuck
+to it with extraordinary loyalty, that he was quite ignorant of his
+master’s plans, which might indeed be true, and of the manner of his
+escape, which was demonstrably false. Nothing was therefore left to the
+conspirators but to rely entirely on the skill of Mountain. The night
+had been frosty, the ground quite hard; and the sun was no sooner up
+than a strong thaw set in. It was Mountain’s boast that few men could
+have followed that trail, and still fewer (even of the native Indians)
+found it. The Master had thus a long start before his pursuers had the
+scent, and he must have travelled with surprising energy for a
+pedestrian so unused, since it was near noon before Mountain had a view
+of him. At this conjuncture the trader was alone, all his companions
+following, at his own request, several hundred yards in the rear; he
+knew the Master was unarmed; his heart was besides heated with the
+exercise and lust of hunting; and seeing the quarry so close, so
+defenceless, and seeming so fatigued, he vain-gloriously determined to
+effect the capture with his single hand. A step or two farther brought
+him to one margin of a little clearing; on the other, with his arms
+folded and his back to a huge stone, the Master sat. It is possible
+Mountain may have made a rustle, it is certain, at least, the Master
+raised his head and gazed directly at that quarter of the thicket where
+his hunter lay; “I could not be sure he saw me,” Mountain said; “he
+just looked my way like a man with his mind made up, and all the
+courage ran out of me like rum out of a bottle.” And presently, when
+the Master looked away again, and appeared to resume those meditations
+in which he had sat immersed before the trader’s coming, Mountain slunk
+stealthily back and returned to seek the help of his companions.
+
+And now began the chapter of surprises, for the scout had scarce
+informed the others of his discovery, and they were yet preparing their
+weapons for a rush upon the fugitive, when the man himself appeared in
+their midst, walking openly and quietly, with his hands behind his
+back.
+
+“Ah, men!” says he, on his beholding them. “Here is a fortunate
+encounter. Let us get back to camp.”
+
+Mountain had not mentioned his own weakness or the Master’s
+disconcerting gaze upon the thicket, so that (with all the rest) his
+return appeared spontaneous. For all that, a hubbub arose; oaths flew,
+fists were shaken, and guns pointed.
+
+“Let us get back to camp,” said the Master. “I have an explanation to
+make, but it must be laid before you all. And in the meanwhile I would
+put up these weapons, one of which might very easily go off and blow
+away your hopes of treasure. I would not kill,” says he, smiling, “the
+goose with the golden eggs.”
+
+The charm of his superiority once more triumphed; and the party, in no
+particular order, set off on their return. By the way, he found
+occasion to get a word or two apart with Mountain.
+
+“You are a clever fellow and a bold,” says he, “but I am not so sure
+that you are doing yourself justice. I would have you to consider
+whether you would not do better, ay, and safer, to serve me instead of
+serving so commonplace a rascal as Mr. Harris. Consider of it,” he
+concluded, dealing the man a gentle tap upon the shoulder, “and don’t
+be in haste. Dead or alive, you will find me an ill man to quarrel
+with.”
+
+When they were come back to the camp, where Harris and Pinkerton stood
+guard over Secundra, these two ran upon the Master like viragoes, and
+were amazed out of measure when they were bidden by their comrades to
+“stand back and hear what the gentleman had to say.” The Master had not
+flinched before their onslaught; nor, at this proof of the ground he
+had gained, did he betray the least sufficiency.
+
+“Do not let us be in haste,” says he. “Meat first and public speaking
+after.”
+
+With that they made a hasty meal: and as soon as it was done, the
+Master, leaning on one elbow, began his speech. He spoke long,
+addressing himself to each except Harris, finding for each (with the
+same exception) some particular flattery. He called them “bold, honest
+blades,” declared he had never seen a more jovial company, work better
+done, or pains more merrily supported. “Well, then,” says he, “some one
+asks me, Why the devil I ran away? But that is scarce worth answer, for
+I think you all know pretty well. But you know only pretty well: that
+is a point I shall arrive at presently, and be you ready to remark it
+when it comes. There is a traitor here: a double traitor: I will give
+you his name before I am done; and let that suffice for now. But here
+comes some other gentleman and asks me, ‘Why, in the devil, I came
+back?’ Well, before I answer that question, I have one to put to you.
+It was this cur here, this Harris, that speaks Hindustani?” cries he,
+rising on one knee and pointing fair at the man’s face, with a gesture
+indescribably menacing; and when he had been answered in the
+affirmative, “Ah!” says he, “then are all my suspicions verified, and I
+did rightly to come back. Now, men, hear the truth for the first time.”
+Thereupon he launched forth in a long story, told with extraordinary
+skill, how he had all along suspected Harris, how he had found the
+confirmation of his fears, and how Harris must have misrepresented what
+passed between Secundra and himself. At this point he made a bold
+stroke with excellent effect. “I suppose,” says he, “you think you are
+going shares with Harris; I suppose you think you will see to that
+yourselves; you would naturally not think so flat a rogue could cozen
+you. But have a care! These half idiots have a sort of cunning, as the
+skunk has its stench; and it may be news to you that Harris has taken
+care of himself already. Yes, for him the treasure is all money in the
+bargain. You must find it or go starve. But he has been paid
+beforehand; my brother paid him to destroy me; look at him, if you
+doubt—look at him, grinning and gulping, a detected thief!” Thence,
+having made this happy impression, he explained how he had escaped, and
+thought better of it, and at last concluded to come back, lay the truth
+before the company, and take his chance with them once more: persuaded
+as he was, they would instantly depose Harris and elect some other
+leader. “There is the whole truth,” said he: “and with one exception, I
+put myself entirely in your hands. What is the exception? There he
+sits,” he cried, pointing once more to Harris; “a man that has to die!
+Weapons and conditions are all one to me; put me face to face with him,
+and if you give me nothing but a stick, in five minutes I will show you
+a sop of broken carrion, fit for dogs to roll in.”
+
+It was dark night when he made an end; they had listened in almost
+perfect silence; but the firelight scarce permitted any one to judge,
+from the look of his neighbours, with what result of persuasion or
+conviction. Indeed, the Master had set himself in the brightest place,
+and kept his face there, to be the centre of men’s eyes: doubtless on a
+profound calculation. Silence followed for awhile, and presently the
+whole party became involved in disputation: the Master lying on his
+back, with his hands knit under his head and one knee flung across the
+other, like a person unconcerned in the result. And here, I daresay,
+his bravado carried him too far and prejudiced his case. At least,
+after a cast or two back and forward, opinion settled finally against
+him. It’s possible he hoped to repeat the business of the pirate ship,
+and be himself, perhaps, on hard enough conditions, elected leader; and
+things went so far that way, that Mountain actually threw out the
+proposition. But the rock he split upon was Hastie. This fellow was not
+well liked, being sour and slow, with an ugly, glowering disposition,
+but he had studied some time for the church at Edinburgh College,
+before ill conduct had destroyed his prospects, and he now remembered
+and applied what he had learned. Indeed he had not proceeded very far,
+when the Master rolled carelessly upon one side, which was done (in
+Mountain’s opinion) to conceal the beginnings of despair upon his
+countenance. Hastie dismissed the most of what they had heard as
+nothing to the matter: what they wanted was the treasure. All that was
+said of Harris might be true, and they would have to see to that in
+time. But what had that to do with the treasure? They had heard a vast
+of words; but the truth was just this, that Mr. Durie was damnably
+frightened and had several times run off. Here he was—whether caught or
+come back was all one to Hastie: the point was to make an end of the
+business. As for the talk of deposing and electing captains, he hoped
+they were all free men and could attend their own affairs. That was
+dust flung in their eyes, and so was the proposal to fight Harris. “He
+shall fight no one in this camp, I can tell him that,” said Hastie. “We
+had trouble enough to get his arms away from him, and we should look
+pretty fools to give them back again. But if it’s excitement the
+gentleman is after, I can supply him with more than perhaps he cares
+about. For I have no intention to spend the remainder of my life in
+these mountains; already I have been too long; and I propose that he
+should immediately tell us where that treasure is, or else immediately
+be shot. And there,” says he, producing his weapon, “there is the
+pistol that I mean to use.”
+
+“Come, I call you a man,” cries the Master, sitting up and looking at
+the speaker with an air of admiration.
+
+“I didn’t ask you to call me anything,” returned Hastie; “which is it
+to be?”
+
+“That’s an idle question,” said the Master. “Needs must when the devil
+drives. The truth is we are within easy walk of the place, and I will
+show it you to-morrow.”
+
+With that, as if all were quite settled, and settled exactly to his
+mind, he walked off to his tent, whither Secundra had preceded him.
+
+I cannot think of these last turns and wriggles of my old enemy except
+with admiration; scarce even pity is mingled with the sentiment, so
+strongly the man supported, so boldly resisted his misfortunes. Even at
+that hour, when he perceived himself quite lost, when he saw he had but
+effected an exchange of enemies, and overthrown Harris to set Hastie
+up, no sign of weakness appeared in his behaviour, and he withdrew to
+his tent, already determined (I must suppose) upon affronting the
+incredible hazard of his last expedient, with the same easy, assured,
+genteel expression and demeanour as he might have left a theatre withal
+to join a supper of the wits. But doubtless within, if we could see
+there, his soul trembled.
+
+Early in the night, word went about the camp that he was sick; and the
+first thing the next morning he called Hastie to his side, and inquired
+most anxiously if he had any skill in medicine. As a matter of fact,
+this was a vanity of that fallen divinity student’s, to which he had
+cunningly addressed himself. Hastie examined him; and being flattered,
+ignorant, and highly auspicious, knew not in the least whether the man
+was sick or malingering. In this state he went forth again to his
+companions; and (as the thing which would give himself most consequence
+either way) announced that the patient was in a fair way to die.
+
+“For all that,” he added with an oath, “and if he bursts by the
+wayside, he must bring us this morning to the treasure.”
+
+But there were several in the camp (Mountain among the number) whom
+this brutality revolted. They would have seen the Master pistolled, or
+pistolled him themselves, without the smallest sentiment of pity; but
+they seemed to have been touched by his gallant fight and unequivocal
+defeat the night before; perhaps, too, they were even already beginning
+to oppose themselves to their new leader: at least, they now declared
+that (if the man was sick) he should have a day’s rest in spite of
+Hastie’s teeth.
+
+The next morning he was manifestly worse, and Hastie himself began to
+display something of humane concern, so easily does even the pretence
+of doctoring awaken sympathy. The third the Master called Mountain and
+Hastie to the tent, announced himself to be dying, gave them full
+particulars as to the position of the cache, and begged them to set out
+incontinently on the quest, so that they might see if he deceived them,
+and (if they were at first unsuccessful) he should be able to correct
+their error.
+
+But here arose a difficulty on which he doubtless counted. None of
+these men would trust another, none would consent to stay behind. On
+the other hand, although the Master seemed extremely low, spoke scarce
+above a whisper, and lay much of the time insensible, it was still
+possible it was a fraudulent sickness; and if all went
+treasure-hunting, it might prove they had gone upon a wild-goose chase,
+and return to find their prisoner flown. They concluded, therefore, to
+hang idling round the camp, alleging sympathy to their reason; and
+certainly, so mingled are our dispositions, several were sincerely (if
+not very deeply) affected by the natural peril of the man whom they
+callously designed to murder. In the afternoon, Hastie was called to
+the bedside to pray: the which (incredible as it must appear) he did
+with unction; about eight at night, the wailing of Secundra announced
+that all was over; and before ten, the Indian, with a link stuck in the
+ground, was toiling at the grave. Sunrise of next day beheld the
+Master’s burial, all hands attending with great decency of demeanour;
+and the body was laid in the earth, wrapped in a fur robe, with only
+the face uncovered; which last was of a waxy whiteness, and had the
+nostrils plugged according to some Oriental habit of Secundra’s. No
+sooner was the grave filled than the lamentations of the Indian once
+more struck concern to every heart; and it appears this gang of
+murderers, so far from resenting his outcries, although both
+distressful and (in such a country) perilous to their own safety,
+roughly but kindly endeavoured to console him.
+
+But if human nature is even in the worst of men occasionally kind, it
+is still, and before all things, greedy; and they soon turned from the
+mourner to their own concerns. The cache of the treasure being hard by,
+although yet unidentified, it was concluded not to break camp; and the
+day passed, on the part of the voyagers, in unavailing exploration of
+the woods, Secundra the while lying on his master’s grave. That night
+they placed no sentinel, but lay altogether about the fire, in the
+customary woodman fashion, the heads outward, like the spokes of a
+wheel. Morning found them in the same disposition; only Pinkerton, who
+lay on Mountain’s right, between him and Hastie, had (in the hours of
+darkness) been secretly butchered, and there lay, still wrapped as to
+his body in his mantle, but offering above that ungodly and horrific
+spectacle of the scalped head. The gang were that morning as pale as a
+company of phantoms, for the pertinacity of Indian war (or to speak
+more correctly, Indian murder) was well known to all. But they laid the
+chief blame on their unsentinelled posture; and fired with the
+neighbourhood of the treasure, determined to continue where they were.
+Pinkerton was buried hard by the Master; the survivors again passed the
+day in exploration, and returned in a mingled humour of anxiety and
+hope, being partly certain they were now close on the discovery of what
+they sought, and on the other hand (with the return of darkness) were
+infected with the fear of Indians. Mountain was the first sentry; he
+declares he neither slept nor yet sat down, but kept his watch with a
+perpetual and straining vigilance, and it was even with unconcern that
+(when he saw by the stars his time was up) he drew near the fire to
+awaken his successor. This man (it was Hicks the shoemaker) slept on
+the lee side of the circle, something farther off in consequence than
+those to windward, and in a place darkened by the blowing smoke.
+Mountain stooped and took him by the shoulder; his hand was at once
+smeared by some adhesive wetness; and (the wind at the moment veering)
+the firelight shone upon the sleeper, and showed him, like Pinkerton,
+dead and scalped.
+
+It was clear they had fallen in the hands of one of those matchless
+Indian bravos, that will sometimes follow a party for days, and in
+spite of indefatigable travel, and unsleeping watch, continue to keep
+up with their advance, and steal a scalp at every resting-place. Upon
+this discovery, the treasure-seekers, already reduced to a poor half
+dozen, fell into mere dismay, seized a few necessaries, and deserting
+the remainder of their goods, fled outright into the forest. Their fire
+they left still burning, and their dead comrade unburied. All day they
+ceased not to flee, eating by the way, from hand to mouth; and since
+they feared to sleep, continued to advance at random even in the hours
+of darkness. But the limit of man’s endurance is soon reached; when
+they rested at last it was to sleep profoundly; and when they woke, it
+was to find that the enemy was still upon their heels, and death and
+mutilation had once more lessened and deformed their company.
+
+By this they had become light-headed, they had quite missed their path
+in the wilderness, their stores were already running low. With the
+further horrors, it is superfluous that I should swell this narrative,
+already too prolonged. Suffice it to say that when at length a night
+passed by innocuous, and they might breathe again in the hope that the
+murderer had at last desisted from pursuit, Mountain and Secundra were
+alone. The trader is firmly persuaded their unseen enemy was some
+warrior of his own acquaintance, and that he himself was spared by
+favour. The mercy extended to Secundra he explains on the ground that
+the East Indian was thought to be insane; partly from the fact that,
+through all the horrors of the flight and while others were casting
+away their very food and weapons, Secundra continued to stagger forward
+with a mattock on his shoulder, and partly because, in the last days
+and with a great degree of heat and fluency, he perpetually spoke with
+himself in his own language. But he was sane enough when it came to
+English.
+
+“You think he will be gone quite away?” he asked, upon their blest
+awakening in safety.
+
+“I pray God so, I believe so, I dare to believe so,” Mountain had
+replied almost with incoherence, as he described the scene to me.
+
+And indeed he was so much distempered that until he met us, the next
+morning, he could scarce be certain whether he had dreamed, or whether
+it was a fact, that Secundra had thereupon turned directly about and
+returned without a word upon their footprints, setting his face for
+these wintry and hungry solitudes, along a path whose every stage was
+mile-stoned with a mutilated corpse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS (_continued_).
+
+
+Mountain’s story, as it was laid before Sir William Johnson and my
+lord, was shorn, of course, of all the earlier particulars, and the
+expedition described to have proceeded uneventfully, until the Master
+sickened. But the latter part was very forcibly related, the speaker
+visibly thrilling to his recollections; and our then situation, on the
+fringe of the same desert, and the private interests of each, gave him
+an audience prepared to share in his emotions. For Mountain’s
+intelligence not only changed the world for my Lord Durrisdeer, but
+materially affected the designs of Sir William Johnson.
+
+These I find I must lay more at length before the reader. Word had
+reached Albany of dubious import; it had been rumoured some hostility
+was to be put in act; and the Indian diplomatist had, thereupon, sped
+into the wilderness, even at the approach of winter, to nip that
+mischief in the bud. Here, on the borders, he learned that he was come
+too late; and a difficult choice was thus presented to a man (upon the
+whole) not any more bold than prudent. His standing with the painted
+braves may be compared to that of my Lord President Culloden among the
+chiefs of our own Highlanders at the ’forty-five; that is as much as to
+say, he was, to these men, reason’s only speaking trumpet, and counsels
+of peace and moderation, if they were to prevail at all, must prevail
+singly through his influence. If, then, he should return, the province
+must lie open to all the abominable tragedies of Indian war—the houses
+blaze, the wayfarer be cut off, and the men of the woods collect their
+usual disgusting spoil of human scalps. On the other side, to go
+farther forth, to risk so small a party deeper in the desert, to carry
+words of peace among warlike savages already rejoicing to return to
+war: here was an extremity from which it was easy to perceive his mind
+revolted.
+
+“I have come too late,” he said more than once, and would fall into a
+deep consideration, his head bowed in his hands, his foot patting the
+ground.
+
+At length he raised his face and looked upon us, that is to say upon my
+lord, Mountain, and myself, sitting close round a small fire, which had
+been made for privacy in one corner of the camp.
+
+“My lord, to be quite frank with you, I find myself in two minds,” said
+he. “I think it very needful I should go on, but not at all proper I
+should any longer enjoy the pleasure of your company. We are here still
+upon the water side; and I think the risk to southward no great matter.
+Will not yourself and Mr. Mackellar take a single boat’s crew and
+return to Albany?”
+
+My lord, I should say, had listened to Mountain’s narrative, regarding
+him throughout with a painful intensity of gaze; and since the tale
+concluded, had sat as in a dream. There was something very daunting in
+his look; something to my eyes not rightly human; the face, lean, and
+dark, and aged, the mouth painful, the teeth disclosed in a perpetual
+rictus; the eyeball swimming clear of the lids upon a field of
+blood-shot white. I could not behold him myself without a jarring
+irritation, such as, I believe, is too frequently the uppermost feeling
+on the sickness of those dear to us. Others, I could not but remark.
+were scarce able to support his neighbourhood—Sir William eviting to be
+near him, Mountain dodging his eye, and, when he met it, blenching and
+halting in his story. At this appeal, however, my lord appeared to
+recover his command upon himself.
+
+“To Albany?” said he, with a good voice.
+
+“Not short of it, at least,” replied Sir William. “There is no safety
+nearer hand.”
+
+“I would be very sweir [11] to return,” says my lord. “I am not
+afraid—of Indians,” he added, with a jerk.
+
+“I wish that I could say so much,” returned Sir William, smiling;
+“although, if any man durst say it, it should be myself. But you are to
+keep in view my responsibility, and that as the voyage has now become
+highly dangerous, and your business—if you ever had any,” says he,
+“brought quite to a conclusion by the distressing family intelligence
+you have received, I should be hardly justified if I even suffered you
+to proceed, and run the risk of some obloquy if anything regrettable
+should follow.”
+
+My lord turned to Mountain. “What did he pretend he died of?” he asked.
+
+“I don’t think I understand your honour,” said the trader, pausing like
+a man very much affected, in the dressing of some cruel frost-bites.
+
+For a moment my lord seemed at a full stop; and then, with some
+irritation, “I ask you what he died of. Surely that’s a plain
+question,” said he.
+
+“Oh! I don’t know,” said Mountain. “Hastie even never knew. He seemed
+to sicken natural, and just pass away.”
+
+“There it is, you see!” concluded my lord, turning to Sir William.
+
+“Your lordship is too deep for me,” replied Sir William.
+
+“Why,” says my lord, “this in a matter of succession; my son’s title
+may be called in doubt; and the man being supposed to be dead of nobody
+can tell what, a great deal of suspicion would be naturally roused.”
+
+“But, God damn me, the man’s buried!” cried Sir William.
+
+“I will never believe that,” returned my lord, painfully trembling.
+“I’ll never believe it!” he cried again, and jumped to his feet. “Did
+he _look_ dead?” he asked of Mountain.
+
+“Look dead?” repeated the trader. “He looked white. Why, what would he
+be at? I tell you, I put the sods upon him.”
+
+My lord caught Sir William by the coat with a hooked hand. “This man
+has the name of my brother,” says he, “but it’s well understood that he
+was never canny.”
+
+“Canny?” says Sir William. “What is that?”
+
+“He’s not of this world,” whispered my lord, “neither him nor the black
+deil that serves him. I have struck my sword throughout his vitals,” he
+cried; “I have felt the hilt dirl [12] on his breastbone, and the hot
+blood spirt in my very face, time and again, time and again!” he
+repeated, with a gesture indescribable. “But he was never dead for
+that,” said he, and I sighed aloud. “Why should I think he was dead
+now? No, not till I see him rotting,” says he.
+
+Sir William looked across at me with a long face. Mountain forgot his
+wounds, staring and gaping.
+
+“My lord,” said I, “I wish you would collect your spirits.” But my
+throat was so dry, and my own wits so scattered, I could add no more.
+
+“No,” says my lord, “it’s not to be supposed that he would understand
+me. Mackellar does, for he kens all, and has seen him buried before
+now. This is a very good servant to me, Sir William, this man
+Mackellar; he buried him with his own hands—he and my father—by the
+light of two siller candlesticks. The other man is a familiar spirit;
+he brought him from Coromandel. I would have told ye this long syne,
+Sir William, only it was in the family.” These last remarks he made
+with a kind of a melancholy composure, and his time of aberration
+seemed to pass away. “You can ask yourself what it all means,” he
+proceeded. “My brother falls sick, and dies, and is buried, as so they
+say; and all seems very plain. But why did the familiar go back? I
+think ye must see for yourself it’s a point that wants some clearing.”
+
+“I will be at your service, my lord, in half a minute,” said Sir
+William, rising. “Mr. Mackellar, two words with you;” and he led me
+without the camp, the frost crunching in our steps, the trees standing
+at our elbow, hoar with frost, even as on that night in the Long
+Shrubbery. “Of course, this is midsummer madness,” said Sir William, as
+soon as we were gotten out of bearing.
+
+“Why, certainly,” said I. “The man is mad. I think that manifest.”
+
+“Shall I seize and bind him?” asked Sir William. “I will upon your
+authority. If these are all ravings, that should certainly be done.”
+
+I looked down upon the ground, back at the camp, with its bright fires
+and the folk watching us, and about me on the woods and mountains;
+there was just the one way that I could not look, and that was in Sir
+William’s face.
+
+“Sir William,” said I at last, “I think my lord not sane, and have long
+thought him so. But there are degrees in madness; and whether he should
+be brought under restraint—Sir William, I am no fit judge,” I
+concluded.
+
+“I will be the judge,” said he. “I ask for facts. Was there, in all
+that jargon, any word of truth or sanity? Do you hesitate?” he asked.
+“Am I to understand you have buried this gentleman before?”
+
+“Not buried,” said I; and then, taking up courage at last, “Sir
+William,” said I, “unless I were to tell you a long story, which much
+concerns a noble family (and myself not in the least), it would be
+impossible to make this matter clear to you. Say the word, and I will
+do it, right or wrong. And, at any rate, I will say so much, that my
+lord is not so crazy as he seems. This is a strange matter, into the
+tail of which you are unhappily drifted.”
+
+“I desire none of your secrets,” replied Sir William; “but I will be
+plain, at the risk of incivility, and confess that I take little
+pleasure in my present company.”
+
+“I would be the last to blame you,” said I, “for that.”
+
+“I have not asked either for your censure or your praise, sir,”
+returned Sir William. “I desire simply to be quit of you; and to that
+effect, I put a boat and complement of men at your disposal.”
+
+“This is fairly offered,” said I, after reflection. “But you must
+suffer me to say a word upon the other side. We have a natural
+curiosity to learn the truth of this affair; I have some of it myself;
+my lord (it is very plain) has but too much. The matter of the Indian’s
+return is enigmatical.”
+
+“I think so myself,” Sir William interrupted, “and I propose (since I
+go in that direction) to probe it to the bottom. Whether or not the man
+has gone like a dog to die upon his master’s grave, his life, at least,
+is in great danger, and I propose, if I can, to save it. There is
+nothing against his character?”
+
+“Nothing, Sir William,” I replied.
+
+“And the other?” he said. “I have heard my lord, of course; but, from
+the circumstances of his servant’s loyalty, I must suppose he had some
+noble qualities.”
+
+“You must not ask me that!” I cried. “Hell may have noble flames. I
+have known him a score of years, and always hated, and always admired,
+and always slavishly feared him.”
+
+“I appear to intrude again upon your secrets,” said Sir William,
+“believe me, inadvertently. Enough that I will see the grave, and (if
+possible) rescue the Indian. Upon these terms, can you persuade your
+master to return to Albany?”
+
+“Sir William,” said I, “I will tell you how it is. You do not see my
+lord to advantage; it will seem even strange to you that I should love
+him; but I do, and I am not alone. If he goes back to Albany, it must
+be by force, and it will be the death-warrant of his reason, and
+perhaps his life. That is my sincere belief; but I am in your hands,
+and ready to obey, if you will assume so much responsibility as to
+command.”
+
+“I will have no shred of responsibility; it is my single endeavour to
+avoid the same,” cried Sir William. “You insist upon following this
+journey up; and be it so! I wash my hands of the whole matter.”
+
+With which word, he turned upon his heel and gave the order to break
+camp; and my lord, who had been hovering near by, came instantly to my
+side.
+
+“Which is it to be?” said he.
+
+“You are to have your way,” I answered. “You shall see the grave.”
+
+ The situation of the Master’s grave was, between guides, easily
+ described; it lay, indeed, beside a chief landmark of the wilderness,
+ a certain range of peaks, conspicuous by their design and altitude,
+ and the source of many brawling tributaries to that inland sea, Lake
+ Champlain. It was therefore possible to strike for it direct, instead
+ of following back the blood-stained trail of the fugitives, and to
+ cover, in some sixteen hours of march, a distance which their
+ perturbed wanderings had extended over more than sixty. Our boats we
+ left under a guard upon the river; it was, indeed, probable we should
+ return to find them frozen fast; and the small equipment with which we
+ set forth upon the expedition, included not only an infinity of furs
+ to protect us from the cold, but an arsenal of snow-shoes to render
+ travel possible, when the inevitable snow should fall. Considerable
+ alarm was manifested at our departure; the march was conducted with
+ soldierly precaution, the camp at night sedulously chosen and
+ patrolled; and it was a consideration of this sort that arrested us,
+ the second day, within not many hundred yards of our destination—the
+ night being already imminent, the spot in which we stood well
+ qualified to be a strong camp for a party of our numbers; and Sir
+ William, therefore, on a sudden thought, arresting our advance.
+
+Before us was the high range of mountains toward which we had been all
+day deviously drawing near. From the first light of the dawn, their
+silver peaks had been the goal of our advance across a tumbled lowland
+forest, thrid with rough streams, and strewn with monstrous boulders;
+the peaks (as I say) silver, for already at the higher altitudes the
+snow fell nightly; but the woods and the low ground only breathed upon
+with frost. All day heaven had been charged with ugly vapours, in the
+which the sun swam and glimmered like a shilling piece; all day the
+wind blew on our left cheek barbarous cold, but very pure to breathe.
+With the end of the afternoon, however, the wind fell; the clouds,
+being no longer reinforced, were scattered or drunk up; the sun set
+behind us with some wintry splendour, and the white brow of the
+mountains shared its dying glow.
+
+It was dark ere we had supper; we ate in silence, and the meal was
+scarce despatched before my lord slunk from the fireside to the margin
+of the camp; whither I made haste to follow him. The camp was on high
+ground, overlooking a frozen lake, perhaps a mile in its longest
+measurement; all about us, the forest lay in heights and hollows; above
+rose the white mountains; and higher yet, the moon rode in a fair sky.
+There was no breath of air; nowhere a twig creaked; and the sounds of
+our own camp were hushed and swallowed up in the surrounding stillness.
+Now that the sun and the wind were both gone down, it appeared almost
+warm, like a night of July: a singular illusion of the sense, when
+earth, air, and water were strained to bursting with the extremity of
+frost.
+
+My lord (or what I still continued to call by his loved name) stood
+with his elbow in one hand, and his chin sunk in the other, gazing
+before him on the surface of the wood. My eyes followed his, and rested
+almost pleasantly upon the frosted contexture of the pines, rising in
+moonlit hillocks, or sinking in the shadow of small glens. Hard by, I
+told myself, was the grave of our enemy, now gone where the wicked
+cease from troubling, the earth heaped for ever on his once so active
+limbs. I could not but think of him as somehow fortunate to be thus
+done with man’s anxiety and weariness, the daily expense of spirit, and
+that daily river of circumstance to be swum through, at any hazard,
+under the penalty of shame or death. I could not but think how good was
+the end of that long travel; and with that, my mind swung at a tangent
+to my lord. For was not my lord dead also? a maimed soldier, looking
+vainly for discharge, lingering derided in the line of battle? A kind
+man, I remembered him; wise, with a decent pride, a son perhaps too
+dutiful, a husband only too loving, one that could suffer and be
+silent, one whose hand I loved to press. Of a sudden, pity caught in my
+windpipe with a sob; I could have wept aloud to remember and behold
+him; and standing thus by his elbow, under the broad moon, I prayed
+fervently either that he should be released, or I strengthened to
+persist in my affection.
+
+“Oh God,” said I, “this was the best man to me and to himself, and now
+I shrink from him. He did no wrong, or not till he was broke with
+sorrows; these are but his honourable wounds that we begin to shrink
+from. Oh, cover them up, oh, take him away, before we hate him!”
+
+I was still so engaged in my own bosom, when a sound broke suddenly
+upon the night. It was neither very loud, nor very near; yet, bursting
+as it did from so profound and so prolonged a silence, it startled the
+camp like an alarm of trumpets. Ere I had taken breath, Sir William was
+beside me, the main part of the voyagers clustered at his back,
+intently giving ear. Methought, as I glanced at them across my
+shoulder, there was a whiteness, other than moonlight, on their cheeks;
+and the rays of the moon reflected with a sparkle on the eyes of some,
+and the shadows lying black under the brows of others (according as
+they raised or bowed the head to listen) gave to the group a strange
+air of animation and anxiety. My lord was to the front, crouching a
+little forth, his hand raised as for silence: a man turned to stone.
+And still the sounds continued, breathlessly renewed with a precipitate
+rhythm.
+
+Suddenly Mountain spoke in a loud, broken whisper, as of a man
+relieved. “I have it now,” he said; and, as we all turned to hear him,
+“the Indian must have known the cache,” he added. “That is he—he is
+digging out the treasure.”
+
+“Why, to be sure!” exclaimed Sir William. “We were geese not to have
+supposed so much.”
+
+“The only thing is,” Mountain resumed, “the sound is very close to our
+old camp. And, again, I do not see how he is there before us, unless
+the man had wings!”
+
+“Greed and fear are wings,” remarked Sir William. “But this rogue has
+given us an alert, and I have a notion to return the compliment. What
+say you, gentlemen, shall we have a moonlight hunt?”
+
+It was so agreed; dispositions were made to surround Secundra at his
+task; some of Sir William’s Indians hastened in advance; and a strong
+guard being left at our headquarters, we set forth along the uneven
+bottom of the forest; frost crackling, ice sometimes loudly splitting
+under foot; and overhead the blackness of pine-woods, and the broken
+brightness of the moon. Our way led down into a hollow of the land; and
+as we descended, the sounds diminished and had almost died away. Upon
+the other slope it was more open, only dotted with a few pines, and
+several vast and scattered rocks that made inky shadows in the
+moonlight. Here the sounds began to reach us more distinctly; we could
+now perceive the ring of iron, and more exactly estimate the furious
+degree of haste with which the digger plied his instrument. As we
+neared the top of the ascent, a bird or two winged aloft and hovered
+darkly in the moonlight; and the next moment we were gazing through a
+fringe of trees upon a singular picture.
+
+A narrow plateau, overlooked by the white mountains, and encompassed
+nearer hand by woods, lay bare to the strong radiance of the moon.
+Rough goods, such as make the wealth of foresters, were sprinkled here
+and there upon the ground in meaningless disarray. About the midst, a
+tent stood, silvered with frost: the door open, gaping on the black
+interior. At the one end of this small stage lay what seemed the
+tattered remnants of a man. Without doubt we had arrived upon the scene
+of Harris’s encampment; there were the goods scattered in the panic of
+flight; it was in yon tent the Master breathed his last; and the frozen
+carrion that lay before us was the body of the drunken shoemaker. It
+was always moving to come upon the theatre of any tragic incident; to
+come upon it after so many days, and to find it (in the seclusion of a
+desert) still unchanged, must have impressed the mind of the most
+careless. And yet it was not that which struck us into pillars of
+stone; but the sight (which yet we had been half expecting) of Secundra
+ankle deep in the grave of his late master. He had cast the main part
+of his raiment by, yet his frail arms and shoulders glistered in the
+moonlight with a copious sweat; his face was contracted with anxiety
+and expectation; his blows resounded on the grave, as thick as sobs;
+and behind him, strangely deformed and ink-black upon the frosty
+ground, the creature’s shadow repeated and parodied his swift
+gesticulations. Some night birds arose from the boughs upon our coming,
+and then settled back; but Secundra, absorbed in his toil; heard or
+heeded not at all.
+
+I heard Mountain whisper to Sir William, “Good God! it’s the grave!
+He’s digging him up!” It was what we had all guessed, and yet to hear
+it put in language thrilled me. Sir William violently started.
+
+“You damned sacrilegious hound!” he cried. “What’s this?”
+
+Secundra leaped in the air, a little breathless cry escaped him, the
+tool flew from his grasp, and he stood one instant staring at the
+speaker. The next, swift as an arrow, he sped for the woods upon the
+farther side; and the next again, throwing up his hands with a violent
+gesture of resolution, he had begun already to retrace his steps.
+
+“Well, then, you come, you help—” he was saying. But by now my lord had
+stepped beside Sir William; the moon shone fair upon his face, and the
+words were still upon Secundra’s lips, when he beheld and recognised
+his master’s enemy. “Him!” he screamed, clasping his hands, and
+shrinking on himself.
+
+“Come, come!” said Sir William. “There is none here to do you harm, if
+you be innocent; and if you be guilty, your escape is quite cut off.
+Speak, what do you here among the graves of the dead and the remains of
+the unburied?”
+
+“You no murderer?” inquired Secundra. “You true man? you see me safe?”
+
+“I will see you safe, if you be innocent,” returned Sir William. “I
+have said the thing, and I see not wherefore you should doubt it.”
+
+“There all murderers,” cried Secundra, “that is why! He kill—murderer,”
+pointing to Mountain; “there two hire-murderers,” pointing to my lord
+and myself—“all gallows—murderers! Ah! I see you all swing in a rope.
+Now I go save the sahib; he see you swing in a rope. The sahib,” he
+continued, pointing to the grave, “he not dead. He bury, he not dead.”
+
+My lord uttered a little noise, moved nearer to the grave, and stood
+and stared in it.
+
+“Buried and not dead?” exclaimed Sir William. “What kind of rant is
+this?”
+
+“See, sahib,” said Secundra. “The sahib and I alone with murderers; try
+all way to escape, no way good. Then try this way: good way in warm
+climate, good way in India; here, in this dam cold place, who can tell?
+I tell you pretty good hurry: you help, you light a fire, help rub.”
+
+“What is the creature talking of?” cried Sir William. “My head goes
+round.”
+
+“I tell you I bury him alive,” said Secundra. “I teach him swallow his
+tongue. Now dig him up pretty good hurry, and he not much worse. You
+light a fire.”
+
+Sir William turned to the nearest of his men. “Light a fire,” said he.
+“My lot seems to be cast with the insane.”
+
+“You good man,” returned Secundra. “Now I go dig the sahib up.”
+
+He returned as he spoke to the grave, and resumed his former toil. My
+lord stood rooted, and I at my lord’s side, fearing I knew not what.
+
+The frost was not yet very deep, and presently the Indian threw aside
+his tool, and began to scoop the dirt by handfuls. Then he disengaged a
+corner of a buffalo robe; and then I saw hair catch among his fingers:
+yet, a moment more, and the moon shone on something white. Awhile
+Secundra crouched upon his knees, scraping with delicate fingers,
+breathing with puffed lips; and when he moved aside, I beheld the face
+of the Master wholly disengaged. It was deadly white, the eyes closed,
+the ears and nostrils plugged, the cheeks fallen, the nose sharp as if
+in death; but for all he had lain so many days under the sod,
+corruption had not approached him, and (what strangely affected all of
+us) his lips and chin were mantled with a swarthy beard.
+
+“My God!” cried Mountain, “he was as smooth as a baby when we laid him
+there!”
+
+“They say hair grows upon the dead,” observed Sir William; but his
+voice was thick and weak.
+
+Secundra paid no heed to our remarks, digging swift as a terrier in the
+loose earth. Every moment the form of the Master, swathed in his
+buffalo robe, grew more distinct in the bottom of that shallow trough;
+the moon shining strong, and the shadows of the standers-by, as they
+drew forward and back, falling and flitting over his emergent
+countenance. The sight held us with a horror not before experienced. I
+dared not look my lord in the face; but for as long as it lasted, I
+never observed him to draw breath; and a little in the background one
+of the men (I know not whom) burst into a kind of sobbing.
+
+“Now,” said Secundra, “you help me lift him out.”
+
+Of the flight of time, I have no idea; it may have been three hours,
+and it may have been five, that the Indian laboured to reanimate his
+master’s body. One thing only I know, that it was still night, and the
+moon was not yet set, although it had sunk low, and now barred the
+plateau with long shadows, when Secundra uttered a small cry of
+satisfaction; and, leaning swiftly forth, I thought I could myself
+perceive a change upon that icy countenance of the unburied. The next
+moment I beheld his eyelids flutter; the next they rose entirely, and
+the week-old corpse looked me for a moment in the face.
+
+So much display of life I can myself swear to. I have heard from others
+that he visibly strove to speak, that his teeth showed in his beard,
+and that his brow was contorted as with an agony of pain and effort.
+And this may have been; I know not, I was otherwise engaged. For at
+that first disclosure of the dead man’s eyes, my Lord Durrisdeer fell
+to the ground, and when I raised him up, he was a corpse.
+
+ Day came, and still Secundra could not be persuaded to desist from his
+ unavailing efforts. Sir William, leaving a small party under my
+ command, proceeded on his embassy with the first light; and still the
+ Indian rubbed the limbs and breathed in the mouth of the dead body.
+ You would think such labours might have vitalised a stone; but, except
+ for that one moment (which was my lord’s death), the black spirit of
+ the Master held aloof from its discarded clay; and by about the hour
+ of noon, even the faithful servant was at length convinced. He took it
+ with unshaken quietude.
+
+“Too cold,” said he, “good way in India, no good here.” And, asking for
+some food, which he ravenously devoured as soon as it was set before
+him, he drew near to the fire and took his place at my elbow. In the
+same spot, as soon as he had eaten, he stretched himself out, and fell
+into a childlike slumber, from which I must arouse him, some hours
+afterwards, to take his part as one of the mourners at the double
+funeral. It was the same throughout; he seemed to have outlived at once
+and with the same effort, his grief for his master and his terror of
+myself and Mountain.
+
+One of the men left with me was skilled in stone-cutting; and before
+Sir William returned to pick us up, I had chiselled on a boulder this
+inscription, with a copy of which I may fitly bring my narrative to a
+close:##
+
+
+J. D.,
+
+HEIR TO A SCOTTISH TITLE,
+
+A MASTER OF THE ARTS AND GRACES,
+
+ADMIRED IN EUROPE, ASIA, AMERICA,
+
+IN WAR AND PEACE,
+
+IN THE TENTS OF SAVAGE HUNTERS AND THE
+
+CITADELS OF KINGS, AFTER SO MUCH
+
+ACQUIRED, ACCOMPLISHED, AND
+
+ENDURED, LIES HERE FORGOTTEN.
+
+
+
+H. D.,
+
+HIS BROTHER,
+
+AFTER A LIFE OF UNMERITED DISTRESS,
+
+BRAVELY SUPPORTED,
+
+DIED ALMOST IN THE SAME HOUR,
+
+AND SLEEPS IN THE SAME GRAVE
+
+WITH HIS FRATERNAL ENEMY.
+
+
+
+THE PIETY OF HIS WIFE AND ONE OLD
+
+SERVANT RAISED THIS STONE
+
+TO BOTH.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes.
+
+
+[1] A kind of firework made with damp powder.
+
+[2] _Note by Mr. Mackellar_. Should not this be Alan _Breck_ Stewart,
+afterwards notorious as the Appin murderer? The Chevalier is sometimes
+very weak on names.
+
+[3] _Note by Mr. Mackellar_. This Teach of the _Sarah_ must not be
+confused with the celebrated Blackbeard. The dates and facts by no
+means tally. It is possible the second Teach may have at once borrowed
+the name and imitated the more excessive part of his manners from the
+first. Even the Master of Ballantrae could make admirers.
+
+[4] _Note by Mr. Mackellar_. And is not this the whole explanation?
+since this Dutton, exactly like the officers, enjoyed the stimulus of
+some responsibility.
+
+[5] _Note by Mr. Mackellar_: A complete blunder: there was at this date
+no word of the marriage: see above in my own narration.
+
+[6] Note by Mr. Mackellar.—Plainly Secundra Dass.—E. McK.
+
+[7] Ordered.
+
+[8] Land steward.
+
+[9] Fooling.
+
+[10] Tear-marked.
+
+[11] Unwilling.
+
+[12] Ring.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 864-0.txt or 864-0.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/8/6/864/
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
+United States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
+ you are located before using this eBook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that:
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
+widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
diff --git a/864-0.zip b/864-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3a43883
--- /dev/null
+++ b/864-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/864-h.zip b/864-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a64f899
--- /dev/null
+++ b/864-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/864-h/864-h.htm b/864-h/864-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2f76858
--- /dev/null
+++ b/864-h/864-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11483 @@
+<!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>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Master of Ballantrae, by Robert Louis Stevenson</title>
+<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
+<style type="text/css">
+
+body { margin-left: 20%;
+ margin-right: 20%;
+ text-align: justify; }
+
+h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 {text-align: center; font-style: normal; font-weight:
+normal; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: .5em; margin-bottom: .5em;}
+
+h1 {font-size: 300%;
+ margin-top: 0.6em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.6em;
+ letter-spacing: 0.12em;
+ word-spacing: 0.2em;
+ text-indent: 0em;}
+h2 {font-size: 150%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
+h3 {font-size: 130%; margin-top: 1em;}
+h4 {font-size: 120%;}
+h5 {font-size: 110%;}
+
+.no-break {page-break-before: avoid;} /* for epubs */
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em;}
+
+hr {width: 80%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
+
+p {text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.25em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.25em; }
+
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+
+p.poem {text-indent: 0%;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ font-size: 90%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+p.noindent {text-indent: 0% }
+
+p.center {text-align: center;
+ text-indent: 0em;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+p.right {text-align: right;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+p.footnote {font-size: 90%;
+ text-indent: 0%;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
+
+div.fig { display:block;
+ margin:0 auto;
+ text-align:center;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;}
+
+ .citation {vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+a:link {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:visited {color:blue; text-decoration:none}
+a:hover {color:red}
+
+</style>
+
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Master of Ballantrae, by Robert Louis Stevenson</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Master of Ballantrae<br />
+A Winter&rsquo;s Tale</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Robert Louis Stevenson</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 26, 1997 [eBook #864]<br />
+[Most recently updated: August 24, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: David Price</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE ***</div>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:55%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="[Illustration]" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>The Master of Ballantrae<br />
+A Winter&rsquo;s Tale</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Robert Louis Stevenson</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref01">PREFACE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THIS MASTER&rsquo;S WANDERINGS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. SUMMARY OF EVENTS (<i>continued</i>)</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. THE MASTER&rsquo;S WANDERINGS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. PERSECUTIONS ENDURED BY MR. HENRY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. ACCOUNT OF ALL THAT PASSED ON THE NIGHT ON FEBRUARY 27TH, 1757</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THE MASTER&rsquo;S SECOND ABSENCE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. ADVENTURE OF CHEVALIER BURKE IN INDIA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. MR. MACKELLAR&rsquo;S JOURNEY WITH THE MASTER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. PASSAGES AT NEW YORK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11b"><i>Narrative of the Trader, Mountain</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS (<i>continued</i>)</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>To Sir Percy Florence and Lady Shelley</h2>
+
+<p>
+Here is a tale which extends over many years and travels into many countries.
+By a peculiar fitness of circumstance the writer began, continued it, and
+concluded it among distant and diverse scenes. Above all, he was much upon the
+sea. The character and fortune of the fraternal enemies, the hall and shrubbery
+of Durrisdeer, the problem of Mackellar&rsquo;s homespun and how to shape it
+for superior flights; these were his company on deck in many star-reflecting
+harbours, ran often in his mind at sea to the tune of slatting canvas, and were
+dismissed (something of the suddenest) on the approach of squalls. It is my
+hope that these surroundings of its manufacture may to some degree find favour
+for my story with seafarers and sea-lovers like yourselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at least here is a dedication from a great way off: written by the loud
+shores of a subtropical island near upon ten thousand miles from Boscombe Chine
+and Manor: scenes which rise before me as I write, along with the faces and
+voices of my friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, I am for the sea once more; no doubt Sir Percy also. Let us make the
+signal B. R. D.!
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+R. L. S.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Waikiki</span>, <i>May</i> 17, 1889
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="pref01"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Although an old, consistent exile, the editor of the following pages revisits
+now and again the city of which he exults to be a native; and there are few
+things more strange, more painful, or more salutary, than such revisitations.
+Outside, in foreign spots, he comes by surprise and awakens more attention than
+he had expected; in his own city, the relation is reversed, and he stands
+amazed to be so little recollected. Elsewhere he is refreshed to see attractive
+faces, to remark possible friends; there he scouts the long streets, with a
+pang at heart, for the faces and friends that are no more. Elsewhere he is
+delighted with the presence of what is new, there tormented by the absence of
+what is old. Elsewhere he is content to be his present self; there he is
+smitten with an equal regret for what he once was and for what he once hoped to
+be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was feeling all this dimly, as he drove from the station, on his last visit;
+he was feeling it still as he alighted at the door of his friend Mr. Johnstone
+Thomson, W.S., with whom he was to stay. A hearty welcome, a face not
+altogether changed, a few words that sounded of old days, a laugh provoked and
+shared, a glimpse in passing of the snowy cloth and bright decanters and the
+Piranesis on the dining-room wall, brought him to his bed-room with a somewhat
+lightened cheer, and when he and Mr. Thomson sat down a few minutes later,
+cheek by jowl, and pledged the past in a preliminary bumper, he was already
+almost consoled, he had already almost forgiven himself his two unpardonable
+errors, that he should ever have left his native city, or ever returned to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have something quite in your way,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson. &ldquo;I
+wished to do honour to your arrival; because, my dear fellow, it is my own
+youth that comes back along with you; in a very tattered and withered state, to
+be sure, but&mdash;well!&mdash;all that&rsquo;s left of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A great deal better than nothing,&rdquo; said the editor. &ldquo;But
+what is this which is quite in my way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was coming to that,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson: &ldquo;Fate has put it in
+my power to honour your arrival with something really original by way of
+dessert. A mystery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A mystery?&rdquo; I repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said his friend, &ldquo;a mystery. It may prove to be
+nothing, and it may prove to be a great deal. But in the meanwhile it is truly
+mysterious, no eye having looked on it for near a hundred years; it is highly
+genteel, for it treats of a titled family; and it ought to be melodramatic, for
+(according to the superscription) it is concerned with death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I rarely heard a more obscure or a more promising
+annunciation,&rdquo; the other remarked. &ldquo;But what is It?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You remember my predecessor&rsquo;s, old Peter M&rsquo;Brair&rsquo;s
+business?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I remember him acutely; he could not look at me without a pang of
+reprobation, and he could not feel the pang without betraying it. He was to me
+a man of a great historical interest, but the interest was not returned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah well, we go beyond him,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson. &ldquo;I daresay old
+Peter knew as little about this as I do. You see, I succeeded to a prodigious
+accumulation of old law-papers and old tin boxes, some of them of Peter&rsquo;s
+hoarding, some of his father&rsquo;s, John, first of the dynasty, a great man
+in his day. Among other collections, were all the papers of the
+Durrisdeers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Durrisdeers!&rdquo; cried I. &ldquo;My dear fellow, these may be of
+the greatest interest. One of them was out in the &rsquo;45; one had some
+strange passages with the devil&mdash;you will find a note of it in Law&rsquo;s
+<i>Memorials</i>, I think; and there was an unexplained tragedy, I know not
+what, much later, about a hundred years ago&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More than a hundred years ago,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson. &ldquo;In
+1783.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know that? I mean some death.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, the lamentable deaths of my Lord Durrisdeer and his brother, the
+Master of Ballantrae (attainted in the troubles),&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson with
+something the tone of a man quoting. &ldquo;Is that it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To say truth,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I have only seen some dim reference
+to the things in memoirs; and heard some traditions dimmer still, through my
+uncle (whom I think you knew). My uncle lived when he was a boy in the
+neighbourhood of St. Bride&rsquo;s; he has often told me of the avenue closed
+up and grown over with grass, the great gates never opened, the last lord and
+his old maid sister who lived in the back parts of the house, a quiet, plain,
+poor, hum-drum couple it would seem&mdash;but pathetic too, as the last of that
+stirring and brave house&mdash;and, to the country folk, faintly terrible from
+some deformed traditions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson. &ldquo;Henry Graeme Durie, the last lord,
+died in 1820; his sister, the honourable Miss Katherine Durie, in &rsquo;27; so
+much I know; and by what I have been going over the last few days, they were
+what you say, decent, quiet people and not rich. To say truth, it was a letter
+of my lord&rsquo;s that put me on the search for the packet we are going to
+open this evening. Some papers could not be found; and he wrote to Jack
+M&rsquo;Brair suggesting they might be among those sealed up by a Mr.
+Mackellar. M&rsquo;Brair answered, that the papers in question were all in
+Mackellar&rsquo;s own hand, all (as the writer understood) of a purely
+narrative character; and besides, said he, &lsquo;I am bound not to open them
+before the year 1889.&rsquo; You may fancy if these words struck me: I
+instituted a hunt through all the M&rsquo;Brair repositories; and at last hit
+upon that packet which (if you have had enough wine) I propose to show you at
+once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the smoking-room, to which my host now led me, was a packet, fastened with
+many seals and enclosed in a single sheet of strong paper thus endorsed:
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>
+Papers relating to the lives and lamentable deaths of the late Lord Durisdeer,
+and his elder brother James, commonly called Master of Ballantrae, attainted in
+the troubles: entrusted into the hands of John M&rsquo;Brair in the Lawnmarket
+of Edinburgh, W.S.; this 20th day of September Anno Domini 1789; by him to be
+kept secret until the revolution of one hundred years complete, or until the
+20th day of September 1889: the same compiled and written by me, <span
+class="smcap">Ephraim Mackellar</span>,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For near forty years Land Steward on the estates of his Lordship.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+As Mr. Thomson is a married man, I will not say what hour had struck when we
+laid down the last of the following pages; but I will give a few words of what
+ensued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here,&rdquo; said Mr. Thomson, &ldquo;is a novel ready to your hand: all
+you have to do is to work up the scenery, develop the characters, and improve
+the style.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear fellow,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;they are just the three things
+that I would rather die than set my hand to. It shall be published as it
+stands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it&rsquo;s so bald,&rdquo; objected Mr. Thomson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe there is nothing so noble as baldness,&rdquo; replied I,
+&ldquo;and I am sure there is nothing so interesting. I would have all
+literature bald, and all authors (if you like) but one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; add Mr. Thomson, &ldquo;we shall see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I.<br />
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THIS MASTER&rsquo;S WANDERINGS.</h2>
+
+<p>
+The full truth of this odd matter is what the world has long been looking for,
+and public curiosity is sure to welcome. It so befell that I was intimately
+mingled with the last years and history of the house; and there does not live
+one man so able as myself to make these matters plain, or so desirous to
+narrate them faithfully. I knew the Master; on many secret steps of his career
+I have an authentic memoir in my hand; I sailed with him on his last voyage
+almost alone; I made one upon that winter&rsquo;s journey of which so many
+tales have gone abroad; and I was there at the man&rsquo;s death. As for my
+late Lord Durrisdeer, I served him and loved him near twenty years; and thought
+more of him the more I knew of him. Altogether, I think it not fit that so much
+evidence should perish; the truth is a debt I owe my lord&rsquo;s memory; and I
+think my old years will flow more smoothly, and my white hair lie quieter on
+the pillow, when the debt is paid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Duries of Durrisdeer and Ballantrae were a strong family in the south-west
+from the days of David First. A rhyme still current in the countryside&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Kittle folk are the Durrisdeers,<br />
+They ride wi&rsquo; over mony spears&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+bears the mark of its antiquity; and the name appears in another, which common
+report attributes to Thomas of Ercildoune himself&mdash;I cannot say how truly,
+and which some have applied&mdash;I dare not say with how much justice&mdash;to
+the events of this narration:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Twa Duries in Durrisdeer,<br />
+    Ane to tie and ane to ride,<br />
+An ill day for the groom<br />
+    And a waur day for the bride.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Authentic history besides is filled with their exploits which (to our modern
+eyes) seem not very commendable: and the family suffered its full share of
+those ups and downs to which the great houses of Scotland have been ever
+liable. But all these I pass over, to come to that memorable year 1745, when
+the foundations of this tragedy were laid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that time there dwelt a family of four persons in the house of Durrisdeer,
+near St. Bride&rsquo;s, on the Solway shore; a chief hold of their race since
+the Reformation. My old lord, eighth of the name, was not old in years, but he
+suffered prematurely from the disabilities of age; his place was at the chimney
+side; there he sat reading, in a lined gown, with few words for any man, and
+wry words for none: the model of an old retired housekeeper; and yet his mind
+very well nourished with study, and reputed in the country to be more cunning
+than he seemed. The master of Ballantrae, James in baptism, took from his
+father the love of serious reading; some of his tact perhaps as well, but that
+which was only policy in the father became black dissimulation in the son. The
+face of his behaviour was merely popular and wild: he sat late at wine, later
+at the cards; had the name in the country of &ldquo;an unco man for the
+lasses;&rdquo; and was ever in the front of broils. But for all he was the
+first to go in, yet it was observed he was invariably the best to come off; and
+his partners in mischief were usually alone to pay the piper. This luck or
+dexterity got him several ill-wishers, but with the rest of the country,
+enhanced his reputation; so that great things were looked for in his future,
+when he should have gained more gravity. One very black mark he had to his
+name; but the matter was hushed up at the time, and so defaced by legends
+before I came into those parts, that I scruple to set it down. If it was true,
+it was a horrid fact in one so young; and if false, it was a horrid calumny. I
+think it notable that he had always vaunted himself quite implacable, and was
+taken at his word; so that he had the addition among his neighbours of
+&ldquo;an ill man to cross.&rdquo; Here was altogether a young nobleman (not
+yet twenty-four in the year &rsquo;45) who had made a figure in the country
+beyond his time of life. The less marvel if there were little heard of the
+second son, Mr. Henry (my late Lord Durrisdeer), who was neither very bad nor
+yet very able, but an honest, solid sort of lad like many of his neighbours.
+Little heard, I say; but indeed it was a case of little spoken. He was known
+among the salmon fishers in the firth, for that was a sport that he assiduously
+followed; he was an excellent good horse-doctor besides; and took a chief hand,
+almost from a boy, in the management of the estates. How hard a part that was,
+in the situation of that family, none knows better than myself; nor yet with
+how little colour of justice a man may there acquire the reputation of a tyrant
+and a miser. The fourth person in the house was Miss Alison Graeme, a near
+kinswoman, an orphan, and the heir to a considerable fortune which her father
+had acquired in trade. This money was loudly called for by my lord&rsquo;s
+necessities; indeed the land was deeply mortgaged; and Miss Alison was designed
+accordingly to be the Master&rsquo;s wife, gladly enough on her side; with how
+much good-will on his, is another matter. She was a comely girl, and in those
+days very spirited and self-willed; for the old lord having no daughter of his
+own, and my lady being long dead, she had grown up as best she might.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To these four came the news of Prince Charlie&rsquo;s landing, and set them
+presently by the ears. My lord, like the chimney-keeper that he was, was all
+for temporising. Miss Alison held the other side, because it appeared
+romantical; and the Master (though I have heard they did not agree often) was
+for this once of her opinion. The adventure tempted him, as I conceive; he was
+tempted by the opportunity to raise the fortunes of the house, and not less by
+the hope of paying off his private liabilities, which were heavy beyond all
+opinion. As for Mr. Henry, it appears he said little enough at first; his part
+came later on. It took the three a whole day&rsquo;s disputation, before they
+agreed to steer a middle course, one son going forth to strike a blow for King
+James, my lord and the other staying at home to keep in favour with King
+George. Doubtless this was my lord&rsquo;s decision; and, as is well known, it
+was the part played by many considerable families. But the one dispute settled,
+another opened. For my lord, Miss Alison, and Mr. Henry all held the one view:
+that it was the cadet&rsquo;s part to go out; and the Master, what with
+restlessness and vanity, would at no rate consent to stay at home. My lord
+pleaded, Miss Alison wept, Mr. Henry was very plain spoken: all was of no
+avail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the direct heir of Durrisdeer that should ride by his King&rsquo;s
+bridle,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If we were playing a manly part,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, &ldquo;there
+might be sense in such talk. But what are we doing? Cheating at cards!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are saving the house of Durrisdeer, Henry,&rdquo; his father said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And see, James,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry, &ldquo;if I go, and the Prince
+has the upper hand, it will be easy to make your peace with King James. But if
+you go, and the expedition fails, we divide the right and the title. And what
+shall I be then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will be Lord Durrisdeer,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;I put all I
+have upon the table.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I play at no such game,&rdquo; cries Mr. Henry. &ldquo;I shall be left
+in such a situation as no man of sense and honour could endure. I shall be
+neither fish nor flesh!&rdquo; he cried. And a little after he had another
+expression, plainer perhaps than he intended. &ldquo;It is your duty to be here
+with my father,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You know well enough you are the
+favourite.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay?&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;And there spoke Envy! Would you trip
+up my heels&mdash;Jacob?&rdquo; said he, and dwelled upon the name maliciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry went and walked at the low end of the hall without reply; for he had
+an excellent gift of silence. Presently he came back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am the cadet and I <i>should</i> go,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;And my
+lord here is the master, and he says I <i>shall</i> go. What say ye to that, my
+brother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say this, Harry,&rdquo; returned the Master, &ldquo;that when very
+obstinate folk are met, there are only two ways out: Blows&mdash;and I think
+none of us could care to go so far; or the arbitrament of chance&mdash;and here
+is a guinea piece. Will you stand by the toss of the coin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will stand and fall by it,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;Heads, I go;
+shield, I stay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coin was spun, and it fell shield. &ldquo;So there is a lesson for
+Jacob,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall live to repent of this,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, and flung out of
+the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Miss Alison, she caught up that piece of gold which had just sent her
+lover to the wars, and flung it clean through the family shield in the great
+painted window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you loved me as well as I love you, you would have stayed,&rdquo;
+cried she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&lsquo;I could not love you, dear, so well, loved I not honour
+more,&rsquo;&rdquo; sang the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;you have no heart&mdash;I hope you may be
+killed!&rdquo; and she ran from the room, and in tears, to her own chamber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seems the Master turned to my lord with his most comical manner, and says
+he, &ldquo;This looks like a devil of a wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you are a devil of a son to me,&rdquo; cried his father,
+&ldquo;you that have always been the favourite, to my shame be it spoken. Never
+a good hour have I gotten of you, since you were born; no, never one good
+hour,&rdquo; and repeated it again the third time. Whether it was the
+Master&rsquo;s levity, or his insubordination, or Mr. Henry&rsquo;s word about
+the favourite son, that had so much disturbed my lord, I do not know; but I
+incline to think it was the last, for I have it by all accounts that Mr. Henry
+was more made up to from that hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Altogether it was in pretty ill blood with his family that the Master rode to
+the North; which was the more sorrowful for others to remember when it seemed
+too late. By fear and favour he had scraped together near upon a dozen men,
+principally tenants&rsquo; sons; they were all pretty full when they set forth,
+and rode up the hill by the old abbey, roaring and singing, the white cockade
+in every hat. It was a desperate venture for so small a company to cross the
+most of Scotland unsupported; and (what made folk think so the more) even as
+that poor dozen was clattering up the hill, a great ship of the king&rsquo;s
+navy, that could have brought them under with a single boat, lay with her broad
+ensign streaming in the bay. The next afternoon, having given the Master a fair
+start, it was Mr. Henry&rsquo;s turn; and he rode off, all by himself, to offer
+his sword and carry letters from his father to King George&rsquo;s Government.
+Miss Alison was shut in her room, and did little but weep, till both were gone;
+only she stitched the cockade upon the Master&rsquo;s hat, and (as John Paul
+told me) it was wetted with tears when he carried it down to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In all that followed, Mr. Henry and my old lord were true to their bargain.
+That ever they accomplished anything is more than I could learn; and that they
+were anyway strong on the king&rsquo;s side, more than believe. But they kept
+the letter of loyalty, corresponded with my Lord President, sat still at home,
+and had little or no commerce with the Master while that business lasted. Nor
+was he, on his side, more communicative. Miss Alison, indeed, was always
+sending him expresses, but I do not know if she had many answers. Macconochie
+rode for her once, and found the highlanders before Carlisle, and the Master
+riding by the Prince&rsquo;s side in high favour; he took the letter (so
+Macconochie tells), opened it, glanced it through with a mouth like a man
+whistling, and stuck it in his belt, whence, on his horse passageing, it fell
+unregarded to the ground. It was Macconochie who picked it up; and he still
+kept it, and indeed I have seen it in his hands. News came to Durrisdeer of
+course, by the common report, as it goes travelling through a country, a thing
+always wonderful to me. By that means the family learned more of the
+Master&rsquo;s favour with the Prince, and the ground it was said to stand on:
+for by a strange condescension in a man so proud&mdash;only that he was a man
+still more ambitious&mdash;he was said to have crept into notability by
+truckling to the Irish. Sir Thomas Sullivan, Colonel Burke and the rest, were
+his daily comrades, by which course he withdrew himself from his own
+country-folk. All the small intrigues he had a hand in fomenting; thwarted my
+Lord George upon a thousand points; was always for the advice that seemed
+palatable to the Prince, no matter if it was good or bad; and seems upon the
+whole (like the gambler he was all through life) to have had less regard to the
+chances of the campaign than to the greatness of favour he might aspire to, if,
+by any luck, it should succeed. For the rest, he did very well in the field; no
+one questioned that; for he was no coward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next was the news of Culloden, which was brought to Durrisdeer by one of
+the tenants&rsquo; sons&mdash;the only survivor, he declared, of all those that
+had gone singing up the hill. By an unfortunate chance John Paul and
+Macconochie had that very morning found the guinea piece&mdash;which was the
+root of all the evil&mdash;sticking in a holly bush; they had been &ldquo;up
+the gait,&rdquo; as the servants say at Durrisdeer, to the change-house; and if
+they had little left of the guinea, they had less of their wits. What must John
+Paul do but burst into the hall where the family sat at dinner, and cry the
+news to them that &ldquo;Tam Macmorland was but new lichtit at the door,
+and&mdash;wirra, wirra&mdash;there were nane to come behind him&rdquo;?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They took the word in silence like folk condemned; only Mr. Henry carrying his
+palm to his face, and Miss Alison laying her head outright upon her hands. As
+for my lord, he was like ashes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have still one son,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;And, Henry, I will do you
+this justice&mdash;it is the kinder that is left.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a strange thing to say in such a moment; but my lord had never forgotten
+Mr. Henry&rsquo;s speech, and he had years of injustice on his conscience.
+Still it was a strange thing, and more than Miss Alison could let pass. She
+broke out and blamed my lord for his unnatural words, and Mr. Henry because he
+was sitting there in safety when his brother lay dead, and herself because she
+had given her sweetheart ill words at his departure, calling him the flower of
+the flock, wringing her hands, protesting her love, and crying on him by his
+name&mdash;so that the servants stood astonished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry got to his feet, and stood holding his chair. It was he that was like
+ashes now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he burst out suddenly, &ldquo;I know you loved him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The world knows that, glory be to God!&rdquo; cries she; and then to Mr.
+Henry: &ldquo;There is none but me to know one thing&mdash;that you were a
+traitor to him in your heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God knows,&rdquo; groans he, &ldquo;it was lost love on both
+sides.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time went by in the house after that without much change; only they were now
+three instead of four, which was a perpetual reminder of their loss. Miss
+Alison&rsquo;s money, you are to bear in mind, was highly needful for the
+estates; and the one brother being dead, my old lord soon set his heart upon
+her marrying the other. Day in, day out, he would work upon her, sitting by the
+chimney-side with his finger in his Latin book, and his eyes set upon her face
+with a kind of pleasant intentness that became the old gentleman very well. If
+she wept, he would condole with her like an ancient man that has seen worse
+times and begins to think lightly even of sorrow; if she raged, he would fall
+to reading again in his Latin book, but always with some civil excuse; if she
+offered, as she often did, to let them have her money in a gift, he would show
+her how little it consisted with his honour, and remind her, even if he should
+consent, that Mr. Henry would certainly refuse. <i>Non vi sed sæpe cadendo</i>
+was a favourite word of his; and no doubt this quiet persecution wore away much
+of her resolve; no doubt, besides, he had a great influence on the girl, having
+stood in the place of both her parents; and, for that matter, she was herself
+filled with the spirit of the Duries, and would have gone a great way for the
+glory of Durrisdeer; but not so far, I think, as to marry my poor patron, had
+it not been&mdash;strangely enough&mdash;for the circumstance of his extreme
+unpopularity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the work of Tam Macmorland. There was not much harm in Tam; but he had
+that grievous weakness, a long tongue; and as the only man in that country who
+had been out&mdash;or, rather, who had come in again&mdash;he was sure of
+listeners. Those that have the underhand in any fighting, I have observed, are
+ever anxious to persuade themselves they were betrayed. By Tam&rsquo;s account
+of it, the rebels had been betrayed at every turn and by every officer they
+had; they had been betrayed at Derby, and betrayed at Falkirk; the night march
+was a step of treachery of my Lord George&rsquo;s; and Culloden was lost by the
+treachery of the Macdonalds. This habit of imputing treason grew upon the fool,
+till at last he must have in Mr. Henry also. Mr. Henry (by his account) had
+betrayed the lads of Durrisdeer; he had promised to follow with more men, and
+instead of that he had ridden to King George. &ldquo;Ay, and the next
+day!&rdquo; Tam would cry. &ldquo;The puir bonnie Master, and the puir, kind
+lads that rade wi&rsquo; him, were hardly ower the scaur, or he was
+aff&mdash;the Judis! Ay, weel&mdash;he has his way o&rsquo;t: he&rsquo;s to be
+my lord, nae less, and there&rsquo;s mony a cold corp amang the Hieland
+heather!&rdquo; And at this, if Tam had been drinking, he would begin to weep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let anyone speak long enough, he will get believers. This view of Mr.
+Henry&rsquo;s behaviour crept about the country by little and little; it was
+talked upon by folk that knew the contrary, but were short of topics; and it
+was heard and believed and given out for gospel by the ignorant and the
+ill-willing. Mr. Henry began to be shunned; yet awhile, and the commons began
+to murmur as he went by, and the women (who are always the most bold because
+they are the most safe) to cry out their reproaches to his face. The Master was
+cried up for a saint. It was remembered how he had never any hand in pressing
+the tenants; as, indeed, no more he had, except to spend the money. He was a
+little wild perhaps, the folk said; but how much better was a natural, wild lad
+that would soon have settled down, than a skinflint and a sneckdraw, sitting,
+with his nose in an account book, to persecute poor tenants! One trollop, who
+had had a child to the Master, and by all accounts been very badly used, yet
+made herself a kind of champion of his memory. She flung a stone one day at Mr.
+Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whaur&rsquo;s the bonnie lad that trustit ye?&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry reined in his horse and looked upon her, the blood flowing from his
+lip. &ldquo;Ay, Jess?&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;You too? And yet ye should ken me
+better.&rdquo; For it was he who had helped her with money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman had another stone ready, which she made as if she would cast; and he,
+to ward himself, threw up the hand that held his riding-rod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What, would ye beat a lassie, ye ugly&mdash;?&rdquo; cries she, and ran
+away screaming as though he had struck her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next day word went about the country like wildfire that Mr. Henry had beaten
+Jessie Broun within an inch of her life. I give it as one instance of how this
+snowball grew, and one calumny brought another; until my poor patron was so
+perished in reputation that he began to keep the house like my lord. All this
+while, you may be very sure, he uttered no complaints at home; the very ground
+of the scandal was too sore a matter to be handled; and Mr. Henry was very
+proud and strangely obstinate in silence. My old lord must have heard of it, by
+John Paul, if by no one else; and he must at least have remarked the altered
+habits of his son. Yet even he, it is probable, knew not how high the feeling
+ran; and as for Miss Alison, she was ever the last person to hear news, and the
+least interested when she heard them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the height of the ill-feeling (for it died away as it came, no man could say
+why) there was an election forward in the town of St. Bride&rsquo;s, which is
+the next to Durrisdeer, standing on the Water of Swift; some grievance was
+fermenting, I forget what, if ever I heard; and it was currently said there
+would be broken heads ere night, and that the sheriff had sent as far as
+Dumfries for soldiers. My lord moved that Mr. Henry should be present, assuring
+him it was necessary to appear, for the credit of the house. &ldquo;It will
+soon be reported,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that we do not take the lead in our
+own country.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a strange lead that I can take,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry; and when
+they had pushed him further, &ldquo;I tell you the plain truth,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;I dare not show my face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are the first of the house that ever said so,&rdquo; cries Miss
+Alison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will go all three,&rdquo; said my lord; and sure enough he got into
+his boots (the first time in four years&mdash;a sore business John Paul had to
+get them on), and Miss Alison into her riding-coat, and all three rode together
+to St. Bride&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The streets were full of the riff-raff of all the countryside, who had no
+sooner clapped eyes on Mr. Henry than the hissing began, and the hooting, and
+the cries of &ldquo;Judas!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Where was the Master?&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Where were the poor lads that rode with him?&rdquo; Even a stone was
+cast; but the more part cried shame at that, for my old lord&rsquo;s sake, and
+Miss Alison&rsquo;s. It took not ten minutes to persuade my lord that Mr. Henry
+had been right. He said never a word, but turned his horse about, and home
+again, with his chin upon his bosom. Never a word said Miss Alison; no doubt
+she thought the more; no doubt her pride was stung, for she was a bone-bred
+Durie; and no doubt her heart was touched to see her cousin so unjustly used.
+That night she was never in bed; I have often blamed my lady&mdash;when I call
+to mind that night, I readily forgive her all; and the first thing in the
+morning she came to the old lord in his usual seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If Henry still wants me,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;he can have me
+now.&rdquo; To himself she had a different speech: &ldquo;I bring you no love,
+Henry; but God knows, all the pity in the world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+June the 1st, 1748, was the day of their marriage. It was December of the same
+year that first saw me alighting at the doors of the great house; and from
+there I take up the history of events as they befell under my own observation,
+like a witness in a court.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II.<br />
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS (<i>continued</i>)</h2>
+
+<p>
+I made the last of my journey in the cold end of December, in a mighty dry day
+of frost, and who should be my guide but Patey Macmorland, brother of Tam! For
+a tow-headed, bare-legged brat of ten, he had more ill tales upon his tongue
+than ever I heard the match of; having drunken betimes in his brother&rsquo;s
+cup. I was still not so old myself; pride had not yet the upper hand of
+curiosity; and indeed it would have taken any man, that cold morning, to hear
+all the old clashes of the country, and be shown all the places by the way
+where strange things had fallen out. I had tales of Claverhouse as we came
+through the bogs, and tales of the devil, as we came over the top of the scaur.
+As we came in by the abbey I heard somewhat of the old monks, and more of the
+freetraders, who use its ruins for a magazine, landing for that cause within a
+cannon-shot of Durrisdeer; and along all the road the Duries and poor Mr. Henry
+were in the first rank of slander. My mind was thus highly prejudiced against
+the family I was about to serve, so that I was half surprised when I beheld
+Durrisdeer itself, lying in a pretty, sheltered bay, under the Abbey Hill; the
+house most commodiously built in the French fashion, or perhaps Italianate, for
+I have no skill in these arts; and the place the most beautified with gardens,
+lawns, shrubberies, and trees I had ever seen. The money sunk here
+unproductively would have quite restored the family; but as it was, it cost a
+revenue to keep it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry came himself to the door to welcome me: a tall dark young gentleman
+(the Duries are all black men) of a plain and not cheerful face, very strong in
+body, but not so strong in health: taking me by the hand without any pride, and
+putting me at home with plain kind speeches. He led me into the hall, booted as
+I was, to present me to my lord. It was still daylight; and the first thing I
+observed was a lozenge of clear glass in the midst of the shield in the painted
+window, which I remember thinking a blemish on a room otherwise so handsome,
+with its family portraits, and the pargeted ceiling with pendants, and the
+carved chimney, in one corner of which my old lord sat reading in his Livy. He
+was like Mr. Henry, with much the same plain countenance, only more subtle and
+pleasant, and his talk a thousand times more entertaining. He had many
+questions to ask me, I remember, of Edinburgh College, where I had just
+received my mastership of arts, and of the various professors, with whom and
+their proficiency he seemed well acquainted; and thus, talking of things that I
+knew, I soon got liberty of speech in my new home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the midst of this came Mrs. Henry into the room; she was very far gone, Miss
+Katharine being due in about six weeks, which made me think less of her beauty
+at the first sight; and she used me with more of condescension than the rest;
+so that, upon all accounts, I kept her in the third place of my esteem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It did not take long before all Patey Macmorland&rsquo;s tales were blotted out
+of my belief, and I was become, what I have ever since remained, a loving
+servant of the house of Durrisdeer. Mr. Henry had the chief part of my
+affection. It was with him I worked; and I found him an exacting master,
+keeping all his kindness for those hours in which we were unemployed, and in
+the steward&rsquo;s office not only loading me with work, but viewing me with a
+shrewd supervision. At length one day he looked up from his paper with a kind
+of timidness, and says he, &ldquo;Mr. Mackellar, I think I ought to tell you
+that you do very well.&rdquo; That was my first word of commendation; and from
+that day his jealousy of my performance was relaxed; soon it was &ldquo;Mr.
+Mackellar&rdquo; here, and &ldquo;Mr. Mackellar&rdquo; there, with the whole
+family; and for much of my service at Durrisdeer, I have transacted everything
+at my own time, and to my own fancy, and never a farthing challenged. Even
+while he was driving me, I had begun to find my heart go out to Mr. Henry; no
+doubt, partly in pity, he was a man so palpably unhappy. He would fall into a
+deep muse over our accounts, staring at the page or out of the window; and at
+those times the look of his face, and the sigh that would break from him, awoke
+in me strong feelings of curiosity and commiseration. One day, I remember, we
+were late upon some business in the steward&rsquo;s room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This room is in the top of the house, and has a view upon the bay, and over a
+little wooded cape, on the long sands; and there, right over against the sun,
+which was then dipping, we saw the freetraders, with a great force of men and
+horses, scouring on the beach. Mr. Henry had been staring straight west, so
+that I marvelled he was not blinded by the sun; suddenly he frowns, rubs his
+hand upon his brow, and turns to me with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would not guess what I was thinking,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;I was
+thinking I would be a happier man if I could ride and run the danger of my
+life, with these lawless companions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him I had observed he did not enjoy good spirits; and that it was a
+common fancy to envy others and think we should be the better of some change;
+quoting Horace to the point, like a young man fresh from college.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, just so,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;And with that we may get back to
+our accounts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not long before I began to get wind of the causes that so much depressed
+him. Indeed a blind man must have soon discovered there was a shadow on that
+house, the shadow of the Master of Ballantrae. Dead or alive (and he was then
+supposed to be dead) that man was his brother&rsquo;s rival: his rival abroad,
+where there was never a good word for Mr. Henry, and nothing but regret and
+praise for the Master; and his rival at home, not only with his father and his
+wife, but with the very servants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were two old serving-men that were the leaders. John Paul, a little, bald,
+solemn, stomachy man, a great professor of piety and (take him for all in all)
+a pretty faithful servant, was the chief of the Master&rsquo;s faction. None
+durst go so far as John. He took a pleasure in disregarding Mr. Henry publicly,
+often with a slighting comparison. My lord and Mrs. Henry took him up, to be
+sure, but never so resolutely as they should; and he had only to pull his
+weeping face and begin his lamentations for the Master&mdash;&ldquo;his
+laddie,&rdquo; as he called him&mdash;to have the whole condoned. As for Henry,
+he let these things pass in silence, sometimes with a sad and sometimes with a
+black look. There was no rivalling the dead, he knew that; and how to censure
+an old serving-man for a fault of loyalty, was more than he could see. His was
+not the tongue to do it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Macconochie was chief upon the other side; an old, ill-spoken, swearing,
+ranting, drunken dog; and I have often thought it an odd circumstance in human
+nature that these two serving-men should each have been the champion of his
+contrary, and blackened their own faults and made light of their own virtues
+when they beheld them in a master. Macconochie had soon smelled out my secret
+inclination, took me much into his confidence, and would rant against the
+Master by the hour, so that even my work suffered. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
+a&rsquo; daft here,&rdquo; he would cry, &ldquo;and be damned to them! The
+Master&mdash;the deil&rsquo;s in their thrapples that should call him sae!
+it&rsquo;s Mr. Henry should be master now! They were nane sae fond o&rsquo; the
+Master when they had him, I&rsquo;ll can tell ye that. Sorrow on his name!
+Never a guid word did I hear on his lips, nor naebody else, but just fleering
+and flyting and profane cursing&mdash;deil hae him! There&rsquo;s nane kent his
+wickedness: him a gentleman! Did ever ye hear tell, Mr. Mackellar, o&rsquo;
+Wully White the wabster? No? Aweel, Wully was an unco praying kind o&rsquo;
+man; a dreigh body, nane o&rsquo; my kind, I never could abide the sight
+o&rsquo; him; onyway he was a great hand by his way of it, and he up and
+rebukit the Master for some of his on-goings. It was a grand thing for the
+Master o&rsquo; Ball&rsquo;ntrae to tak up a feud wi&rsquo; a&rsquo; wabster,
+wasnae&rsquo;t?&rdquo; Macconochie would sneer; indeed, he never took the full
+name upon his lips but with a sort of a whine of hatred. &ldquo;But he did! A
+fine employ it was: chapping at the man&rsquo;s door, and crying
+&lsquo;boo&rsquo; in his lum, and puttin&rsquo; poother in his fire, and
+pee-oys <a name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1" class="citation">[1]</a>
+in his window; till the man thocht it was auld Hornie was come seekin&rsquo;
+him. Weel, to mak a lang story short, Wully gaed gyte. At the hinder end, they
+couldnae get him frae his knees, but he just roared and prayed and grat
+straucht on, till he got his release. It was fair murder, a&rsquo;body said
+that. Ask John Paul&mdash;he was brawly ashamed o&rsquo; that game, him
+that&rsquo;s sic a Christian man! Grand doin&rsquo;s for the Master o&rsquo;
+Ball&rsquo;ntrae!&rdquo; I asked him what the Master had thought of it himself.
+&ldquo;How would I ken?&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;He never said naething.&rdquo;
+And on again in his usual manner of banning and swearing, with every now and
+again a &ldquo;Master of Ballantrae&rdquo; sneered through his nose. It was in
+one of these confidences that he showed me the Carlisle letter, the print of
+the horse-shoe still stamped in the paper. Indeed, that was our last
+confidence; for he then expressed himself so ill-naturedly of Mrs. Henry that I
+had to reprimand him sharply, and must thenceforth hold him at a distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My old lord was uniformly kind to Mr. Henry; he had even pretty ways of
+gratitude, and would sometimes clap him on the shoulder and say, as if to the
+world at large: &ldquo;This is a very good son to me.&rdquo; And grateful he
+was, no doubt, being a man of sense and justice. But I think that was all, and
+I am sure Mr. Henry thought so. The love was all for the dead son. Not that
+this was often given breath to; indeed, with me but once. My lord had asked me
+one day how I got on with Mr. Henry, and I had told him the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said he, looking sideways on the burning fire, &ldquo;Henry
+is a good lad, a very good lad,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You have heard, Mr.
+Mackellar, that I had another son? I am afraid he was not so virtuous a lad as
+Mr. Henry; but dear me, he&rsquo;s dead, Mr. Mackellar! and while he lived we
+were all very proud of him, all very proud. If he was not all he should have
+been in some ways, well, perhaps we loved him better!&rdquo; This last he said
+looking musingly in the fire; and then to me, with a great deal of briskness,
+&ldquo;But I am rejoiced you do so well with Mr. Henry. You will find him a
+good master.&rdquo; And with that he opened his book, which was the customary
+signal of dismission. But it would be little that he read, and less that he
+understood; Culloden field and the Master, these would be the burthen of his
+thought; and the burthen of mine was an unnatural jealousy of the dead man for
+Mr. Henry&rsquo;s sake, that had even then begun to grow on me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am keeping Mrs. Henry for the last, so that this expression of my sentiment
+may seem unwarrantably strong: the reader shall judge for himself when I have
+done. But I must first tell of another matter, which was the means of bringing
+me more intimate. I had not yet been six months at Durrisdeer when it chanced
+that John Paul fell sick and must keep his bed; drink was the root of his
+malady, in my poor thought; but he was tended, and indeed carried himself, like
+an afflicted saint; and the very minister, who came to visit him, professed
+himself edified when he went away. The third morning of his sickness, Mr. Henry
+comes to me with something of a hang-dog look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I wish I could trouble you upon a
+little service. There is a pension we pay; it is John&rsquo;s part to carry it,
+and now that he is sick I know not to whom I should look unless it was
+yourself. The matter is very delicate; I could not carry it with my own hand
+for a sufficient reason; I dare not send Macconochie, who is a talker, and I
+am&mdash;I have&mdash;I am desirous this should not come to Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s
+ears,&rdquo; says he, and flushed to his neck as he said it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To say truth, when I found I was to carry money to one Jessie Broun, who was no
+better than she should be, I supposed it was some trip of his own that Mr.
+Henry was dissembling. I was the more impressed when the truth came out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was up a wynd off a side street in St. Bride&rsquo;s that Jessie had her
+lodging. The place was very ill inhabited, mostly by the freetrading sort.
+There was a man with a broken head at the entry; half-way up, in a tavern,
+fellows were roaring and singing, though it was not yet nine in the day.
+Altogether, I had never seen a worse neighbourhood, even in the great city of
+Edinburgh, and I was in two minds to go back. Jessie&rsquo;s room was of a
+piece with her surroundings, and herself no better. She would not give me the
+receipt (which Mr. Henry had told me to demand, for he was very methodical)
+until she had sent out for spirits, and I had pledged her in a glass; and all
+the time she carried on in a light-headed, reckless way&mdash;now aping the
+manners of a lady, now breaking into unseemly mirth, now making coquettish
+advances that oppressed me to the ground. Of the money she spoke more
+tragically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s blood money!&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;I take it for that:
+blood money for the betrayed! See what I&rsquo;m brought down to! Ah, if the
+bonnie lad were back again, it would be changed days. But he&rsquo;s
+deid&mdash;he&rsquo;s lyin&rsquo; deid amang the Hieland hills&mdash;the bonnie
+lad, the bonnie lad!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had a rapt manner of crying on the bonnie lad, clasping her hands and
+casting up her eyes, that I think she must have learned of strolling players;
+and I thought her sorrow very much of an affectation, and that she dwelled upon
+the business because her shame was now all she had to be proud of. I will not
+say I did not pity her, but it was a loathing pity at the best; and her last
+change of manner wiped it out. This was when she had had enough of me for an
+audience, and had set her name at last to the receipt. &ldquo;There!&rdquo;
+says she, and taking the most unwomanly oaths upon her tongue, bade me begone
+and carry it to the Judas who had sent me. It was the first time I had heard
+the name applied to Mr. Henry; I was staggered besides at her sudden vehemence
+of word and manner, and got forth from the room, under this shower of curses,
+like a beaten dog. But even then I was not quit, for the vixen threw up her
+window, and, leaning forth, continued to revile me as I went up the wynd; the
+freetraders, coming to the tavern door, joined in the mockery, and one had even
+the inhumanity to set upon me a very savage small dog, which bit me in the
+ankle. This was a strong lesson, had I required one, to avoid ill company; and
+I rode home in much pain from the bite and considerable indignation of mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry was in the steward&rsquo;s room, affecting employment, but I could
+see he was only impatient to hear of my errand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; says he, as soon as I came in; and when I had told him
+something of what passed, and that Jessie seemed an undeserving woman and far
+from grateful: &ldquo;She is no friend to me,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but,
+indeed, Mackellar, I have few friends to boast of, and Jessie has some cause to
+be unjust. I need not dissemble what all the country knows: she was not very
+well used by one of our family.&rdquo; This was the first time I had heard him
+refer to the Master even distantly; and I think he found his tongue rebellious
+even for that much, but presently he resumed&mdash;&ldquo;This is why I would
+have nothing said. It would give pain to Mrs. Henry . . . and to my
+father,&rdquo; he added, with another flush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Henry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you will take a freedom at my hands,
+I would tell you to let that woman be. What service is your money to the like
+of her? She has no sobriety and no economy&mdash;as for gratitude, you will as
+soon get milk from a whinstone; and if you will pretermit your bounty, it will
+make no change at all but just to save the ankles of your messengers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry smiled. &ldquo;But I am grieved about your ankle,&rdquo; said he, the
+next moment, with a proper gravity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And observe,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;I give you this advice upon
+consideration; and yet my heart was touched for the woman in the
+beginning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, there it is, you see!&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;And you are to
+remember that I knew her once a very decent lass. Besides which, although I
+speak little of my family, I think much of its repute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with that he broke up the talk, which was the first we had together in such
+confidence. But the same afternoon I had the proof that his father was
+perfectly acquainted with the business, and that it was only from his wife that
+Mr. Henry kept it secret.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear you had a painful errand to-day,&rdquo; says my lord to me,
+&ldquo;for which, as it enters in no way among your duties, I wish to thank
+you, and to remind you at the same time (in case Mr. Henry should have
+neglected) how very desirable it is that no word of it should reach my
+daughter. Reflections on the dead, Mr. Mackellar, are doubly painful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anger glowed in my heart; and I could have told my lord to his face how little
+he had to do, bolstering up the image of the dead in Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s heart,
+and how much better he were employed to shatter that false idol; for by this
+time I saw very well how the land lay between my patron and his wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My pen is clear enough to tell a plain tale; but to render the effect of an
+infinity of small things, not one great enough in itself to be narrated; and to
+translate the story of looks, and the message of voices when they are saying no
+great matter; and to put in half a page the essence of near eighteen
+months&mdash;this is what I despair to accomplish. The fault, to be very blunt,
+lay all in Mrs. Henry. She felt it a merit to have consented to the marriage,
+and she took it like a martyrdom; in which my old lord, whether he knew it or
+not, fomented her. She made a merit, besides, of her constancy to the dead,
+though its name, to a nicer conscience, should have seemed rather disloyalty to
+the living; and here also my lord gave her his countenance. I suppose he was
+glad to talk of his loss, and ashamed to dwell on it with Mr. Henry. Certainly,
+at least, he made a little coterie apart in that family of three, and it was
+the husband who was shut out. It seems it was an old custom when the family
+were alone in Durrisdeer, that my lord should take his wine to the
+chimney-side, and Miss Alison, instead of withdrawing, should bring a stool to
+his knee, and chatter to him privately; and after she had become my
+patron&rsquo;s wife the same manner of doing was continued. It should have been
+pleasant to behold this ancient gentleman so loving with his daughter, but I
+was too much a partisan of Mr. Henry&rsquo;s to be anything but wroth at his
+exclusion. Many&rsquo;s the time I have seen him make an obvious resolve, quit
+the table, and go and join himself to his wife and my Lord Durrisdeer; and on
+their part, they were never backward to make him welcome, turned to him
+smilingly as to an intruding child, and took him into their talk with an effort
+so ill-concealed that he was soon back again beside me at the table, whence (so
+great is the hall of Durrisdeer) we could but hear the murmur of voices at the
+chimney. There he would sit and watch, and I along with him; and sometimes by
+my lord&rsquo;s head sorrowfully shaken, or his hand laid on Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s
+head, or hers upon his knee as if in consolation, or sometimes by an exchange
+of tearful looks, we would draw our conclusion that the talk had gone to the
+old subject and the shadow of the dead was in the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have hours when I blame Mr. Henry for taking all too patiently; yet we are to
+remember he was married in pity, and accepted his wife upon that term. And,
+indeed, he had small encouragement to make a stand. Once, I remember, he
+announced he had found a man to replace the pane of the stained window, which,
+as it was he that managed all the business, was a thing clearly within his
+attributions. But to the Master&rsquo;s fancies, that pane was like a relic;
+and on the first word of any change, the blood flew to Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wonder at you!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wonder at myself,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, with more of bitterness than
+I had ever heard him to express.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereupon my old lord stepped in with his smooth talk, so that before the meal
+was at an end all seemed forgotten; only that, after dinner, when the pair had
+withdrawn as usual to the chimney-side, we could see her weeping with her head
+upon his knee. Mr. Henry kept up the talk with me upon some topic of the
+estates&mdash;he could speak of little else but business, and was never the
+best of company; but he kept it up that day with more continuity, his eye
+straying ever and again to the chimney, and his voice changing to another key,
+but without check of delivery. The pane, however, was not replaced; and I
+believe he counted it a great defeat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether he was stout enough or no, God knows he was kind enough. Mrs. Henry had
+a manner of condescension with him, such as (in a wife) would have pricked my
+vanity into an ulcer; he took it like a favour. She held him at the
+staff&rsquo;s end; forgot and then remembered and unbent to him, as we do to
+children; burthened him with cold kindness; reproved him with a change of
+colour and a bitten lip, like one shamed by his disgrace: ordered him with a
+look of the eye, when she was off her guard; when she was on the watch, pleaded
+with him for the most natural attentions, as though they were unheard-of
+favours. And to all this he replied with the most unwearied service, loving, as
+folk say, the very ground she trod on, and carrying that love in his eyes as
+bright as a lamp. When Miss Katharine was to be born, nothing would serve but
+he must stay in the room behind the head of the bed. There he sat, as white
+(they tell me) as a sheet, and the sweat dropping from his brow; and the
+handkerchief he had in his hand was crushed into a little ball no bigger than a
+musket-bullet. Nor could he bear the sight of Miss Katharine for many a day;
+indeed, I doubt if he was ever what he should have been to my young lady; for
+the which want of natural feeling he was loudly blamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the state of this family down to the 7th April, 1749, when there
+befell the first of that series of events which were to break so many hearts
+and lose so many lives.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> On that day I was sitting in my room a little before supper,
+when John Paul burst open the door with no civility of knocking, and told me
+there was one below that wished to speak with the steward; sneering at the name
+of my office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I asked what manner of man, and what his name was; and this disclosed the cause
+of John&rsquo;s ill-humour; for it appeared the visitor refused to name himself
+except to me, a sore affront to the major-domo&rsquo;s consequence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I, smiling a little, &ldquo;I will see what he
+wants.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found in the entrance hall a big man, very plainly habited, and wrapped in a
+sea-cloak, like one new landed, as indeed he was. Not, far off Macconochie was
+standing, with his tongue out of his mouth and his hand upon his chin, like a
+dull fellow thinking hard; and the stranger, who had brought his cloak about
+his face, appeared uneasy. He had no sooner seen me coming than he went to meet
+me with an effusive manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear man,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;a thousand apologies for disturbing
+you, but I&rsquo;m in the most awkward position. And there&rsquo;s a son of a
+ramrod there that I should know the looks of, and more betoken I believe that
+he knows mine. Being in this family, sir, and in a place of some responsibility
+(which was the cause I took the liberty to send for you), you are doubtless of
+the honest party?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may be sure at least,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;that all of that party
+are quite safe in Durrisdeer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear man, it is my very thought,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;You see, I
+have just been set on shore here by a very honest man, whose name I cannot
+remember, and who is to stand off and on for me till morning, at some danger to
+himself; and, to be clear with you, I am a little concerned lest it should be
+at some to me. I have saved my life so often, Mr. &mdash;, I forget your name,
+which is a very good one&mdash;that, faith, I would be very loath to lose it
+after all. And the son of a ramrod, whom I believe I saw before Carlisle . . .
+&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you can trust Macconochie until
+to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, and it&rsquo;s a delight to hear you say so,&rdquo; says the
+stranger. &ldquo;The truth is that my name is not a very suitable one in this
+country of Scotland. With a gentleman like you, my dear man, I would have no
+concealments of course; and by your leave I&rsquo;ll just breathe it in your
+ear. They call me Francis Burke&mdash;Colonel Francis Burke; and I am here, at
+a most damnable risk to myself, to see your masters&mdash;if you&rsquo;ll
+excuse me, my good man, for giving them the name, for I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;s
+a circumstance I would never have guessed from your appearance. And if you
+would just be so very obliging as to take my name to them, you might say that I
+come bearing letters which I am sure they will be very rejoiced to have the
+reading of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Colonel Francis Burke was one of the Prince&rsquo;s Irishmen, that did his
+cause such an infinity of hurt, and were so much distasted of the Scots at the
+time of the rebellion; and it came at once into my mind, how the Master of
+Ballantrae had astonished all men by going with that party. In the same moment
+a strong foreboding of the truth possessed my soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you will step in here,&rdquo; said I, opening a chamber door,
+&ldquo;I will let my lord know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am sure it&rsquo;s very good of you, Mr. What-is-your-name,&rdquo;
+says the Colonel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up to the hall I went, slow-footed. There they were, all three&mdash;my old
+lord in his place, Mrs. Henry at work by the window, Mr. Henry (as was much his
+custom) pacing the low end. In the midst was the table laid for supper. I told
+them briefly what I had to say. My old lord lay back in his seat. Mrs. Henry
+sprang up standing with a mechanical motion, and she and her husband stared at
+each other&rsquo;s eyes across the room; it was the strangest, challenging look
+these two exchanged, and as they looked, the colour faded in their faces. Then
+Mr. Henry turned to me; not to speak, only to sign with his finger; but that
+was enough, and I went down again for the Colonel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we returned, these three were in much the same position I same left them
+in; I believe no word had passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My Lord Durrisdeer, no doubt?&rdquo; says the Colonel, bowing, and my
+lord bowed in answer. &ldquo;And this,&rdquo; continues the Colonel,
+&ldquo;should be the Master of Ballantrae?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have never taken that name,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry; &ldquo;but I am
+Henry Durie, at your service.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the Colonel turns to Mrs. Henry, bowing with his hat upon his heart and
+the most killing airs of gallantry. &ldquo;There can be no mistake about so
+fine a figure of a lady,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;I address the seductive Miss
+Alison, of whom I have so often heard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once more husband and wife exchanged a look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Mrs. Henry Durie,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;but before my marriage my
+name was Alison Graeme.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then my lord spoke up. &ldquo;I am an old man, Colonel Burke,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;and a frail one. It will be mercy on your part to be expeditious. Do you
+bring me news of&mdash;&rdquo; he hesitated, and then the words broke from him
+with a singular change of voice&mdash;&ldquo;my son?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear lord, I will be round with you like a soldier,&rdquo; said the
+Colonel. &ldquo;I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord held out a wavering hand; he seemed to wave a signal, but whether it
+was to give him time or to speak on, was more than we could guess. At length he
+got out the one word, &ldquo;Good?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, the very best in the creation!&rdquo; cries the Colonel. &ldquo;For
+my good friend and admired comrade is at this hour in the fine city of Paris,
+and as like as not, if I know anything of his habits, he will be drawing in his
+chair to a piece of dinner.&mdash;Bedad, I believe the lady&rsquo;s
+fainting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Henry was indeed the colour of death, and drooped against the
+window-frame. But when Mr. Henry made a movement as if to run to her, she
+straightened with a sort of shiver. &ldquo;I am well,&rdquo; she said, with her
+white lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry stopped, and his face had a strong twitch of anger. The next moment
+he had turned to the Colonel. &ldquo;You must not blame yourself,&rdquo; says
+he, &ldquo;for this effect on Mrs. Durie. It is only natural; we were all
+brought up like brother and sister.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Henry looked at her husband with something like relief or even gratitude.
+In my way of thinking, that speech was the first step he made in her good
+graces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must try to forgive me, Mrs. Durie, for indeed and I am just an
+Irish savage,&rdquo; said the Colonel; &ldquo;and I deserve to be shot for not
+breaking the matter more artistically to a lady. But here are the
+Master&rsquo;s own letters; one for each of the three of you; and to be sure
+(if I know anything of my friend&rsquo;s genius) he will tell his own story
+with a better grace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He brought the three letters forth as he spoke, arranged them by their
+superscriptions, presented the first to my lord, who took it greedily, and
+advanced towards Mrs. Henry holding out the second.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the lady waved it back. &ldquo;To my husband,&rdquo; says she, with a
+choked voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Colonel was a quick man, but at this he was somewhat nonplussed. &ldquo;To
+be sure!&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;how very dull of me! To be sure!&rdquo; But he
+still held the letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Mr. Henry reached forth his hand, and there was nothing to be done but
+give it up. Mr. Henry took the letters (both hers and his own), and looked upon
+their outside, with his brows knit hard, as if he were thinking. He had
+surprised me all through by his excellent behaviour; but he was to excel
+himself now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me give you a hand to your room,&rdquo; said he to his wife.
+&ldquo;This has come something of the suddenest; and, at any rate, you will
+wish to read your letter by yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again she looked upon him with the same thought of wonder; but he gave her no
+time, coming straight to where she stood. &ldquo;It will be better so, believe
+me,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and Colonel Burke is too considerate not to excuse
+you.&rdquo; And with that he took her hand by the fingers, and led her from the
+hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Henry returned no more that night; and when Mr. Henry went to visit her
+next morning, as I heard long afterwards, she gave him the letter again, still
+unopened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, read it and be done!&rdquo; he had cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spare me that,&rdquo; said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And by these two speeches, to my way of thinking, each undid a great part of
+what they had previously done well. But the letter, sure enough, came into my
+hands, and by me was burned, unopened.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> To be very exact as to the adventures of the Master after
+Culloden, I wrote not long ago to Colonel Burke, now a Chevalier of the Order
+of St. Louis, begging him for some notes in writing, since I could scarce
+depend upon my memory at so great an interval. To confess the truth, I have
+been somewhat embarrassed by his response; for he sent me the complete memoirs
+of his life, touching only in places on the Master; running to a much greater
+length than my whole story, and not everywhere (as it seems to me) designed for
+edification. He begged in his letter, dated from Ettenheim, that I would find a
+publisher for the whole, after I had made what use of it I required; and I
+think I shall best answer my own purpose and fulfil his wishes by printing
+certain parts of it in full. In this way my readers will have a detailed, and,
+I believe, a very genuine account of some essential matters; and if any
+publisher should take a fancy to the Chevalier&rsquo;s manner of narration, he
+knows where to apply for the rest, of which there is plenty at his service. I
+put in my first extract here, so that it may stand in the place of what the
+Chevalier told us over our wine in the hall of Durrisdeer; but you are to
+suppose it was not the brutal fact, but a very varnished version that he
+offered to my lord.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III.<br />
+THE MASTER&rsquo;S WANDERINGS.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>From the Memoirs of the Chevalier de Burke</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+. . . I left Ruthven (it&rsquo;s hardly necessary to remark) with much greater
+satisfaction than I had come to it; but whether I missed my way in the deserts,
+or whether my companions failed me, I soon found myself alone. This was a
+predicament very disagreeable; for I never understood this horrid country or
+savage people, and the last stroke of the Prince&rsquo;s withdrawal had made us
+of the Irish more unpopular than ever. I was reflecting on my poor chances,
+when I saw another horseman on the hill, whom I supposed at first to have been
+a phantom, the news of his death in the very front at Culloden being current in
+the army generally. This was the Master of Ballantrae, my Lord
+Durrisdeer&rsquo;s son, a young nobleman of the rarest gallantry and parts, and
+equally designed by nature to adorn a Court and to reap laurels in the field.
+Our meeting was the more welcome to both, as he was one of the few Scots who
+had used the Irish with consideration, and as he might now be of very high
+utility in aiding my escape. Yet what founded our particular friendship was a
+circumstance, by itself as romantic as any fable of King Arthur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was on the second day of our flight, after we had slept one night in the
+rain upon the inclination of a mountain. There was an Appin man, Alan Black
+Stewart (or some such name, <a name="citation2"></a><a href="#footnote2"
+class="citation">[2]</a> but I have seen him since in France) who chanced to be
+passing the same way, and had a jealousy of my companion. Very uncivil
+expressions were exchanged; and Stewart calls upon the Master to alight and
+have it out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, Mr. Stewart,&rdquo; says the Master, &ldquo;I think at the present
+time I would prefer to run a race with you.&rdquo; And with the word claps
+spurs to his horse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stewart ran after us, a childish thing to do, for more than a mile; and I could
+not help laughing, as I looked back at last and saw him on a hill, holding his
+hand to his side, and nearly burst with running.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, all the same,&rdquo; I could not help saying to my companion,
+&ldquo;I would let no man run after me for any such proper purpose, and not
+give him his desire. It was a good jest, but it smells a trifle
+cowardly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bent his brows at me. &ldquo;I do pretty well,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;when I
+saddle myself with the most unpopular man in Scotland, and let that suffice for
+courage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O, bedad,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I could show you a more unpopular with
+the naked eye. And if you like not my company, you can &lsquo;saddle&rsquo;
+yourself on some one else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Colonel Burke,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;do not let us quarrel; and, to
+that effect, let me assure you I am the least patient man in the world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am as little patient as yourself,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I care not who
+knows that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At this rate,&rdquo; says he, reining in, &ldquo;we shall not go very
+far. And I propose we do one of two things upon the instant: either quarrel and
+be done; or make a sure bargain to bear everything at each other&rsquo;s
+hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like a pair of brothers?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I said no such foolishness,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I have a brother
+of my own, and I think no more of him than of a colewort. But if we are to have
+our noses rubbed together in this course of flight, let us each dare to be
+ourselves like savages, and each swear that he will neither resent nor
+deprecate the other. I am a pretty bad fellow at bottom, and I find the
+pretence of virtues very irksome.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O, I am as bad as yourself,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;There is no skim milk
+in Francis Burke. But which is it to be? Fight or make friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I think it will be the best manner to spin a
+coin for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This proposition was too highly chivalrous not to take my fancy; and, strange
+as it may seem of two well-born gentlemen of to-day, we span a half-crown (like
+a pair of ancient paladins) whether we were to cut each other&rsquo;s throats
+or be sworn friends. A more romantic circumstance can rarely have occurred; and
+it is one of those points in my memoirs, by which we may see the old tales of
+Homer and the poets are equally true to-day&mdash;at least, of the noble and
+genteel. The coin fell for peace, and we shook hands upon our bargain. And then
+it was that my companion explained to me his thought in running away from Mr.
+Stewart, which was certainly worthy of his political intellect. The report of
+his death, he said, was a great guard to him; Mr. Stewart having recognised
+him, had become a danger; and he had taken the briefest road to that
+gentleman&rsquo;s silence. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;Alan Black is too
+vain a man to narrate any such story of himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards afternoon we came down to the shores of that loch for which we were
+heading; and there was the ship, but newly come to anchor. She was the
+<i>Sainte-Marie-des-Anges</i>, out of the port of Havre-de-Grace. The Master,
+after we had signalled for a boat, asked me if I knew the captain. I told him
+he was a countryman of mine, of the most unblemished integrity, but, I was
+afraid, a rather timorous man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No matter,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;For all that, he should certainly hear
+the truth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I asked him if he meant about the battle? for if the captain once knew the
+standard was down, he would certainly put to sea again at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And even then!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;the arms are now of no sort of
+utility.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear man,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;who thinks of the arms? But, to be
+sure, we must remember our friends. They will be close upon our heels, perhaps
+the Prince himself, and if the ship be gone, a great number of valuable lives
+may be imperilled.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The captain and the crew have lives also, if you come to that,&rdquo;
+says Ballantrae.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This I declared was but a quibble, and that I would not hear of the captain
+being told; and then it was that Ballantrae made me a witty answer, for the
+sake of which (and also because I have been blamed myself in this business of
+the <i>Sainte-Marie-des-Anges</i>) I have related the whole conversation as it
+passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Frank,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;remember our bargain. I must not object to
+your holding your tongue, which I hereby even encourage you to do; but, by the
+same terms, you are not to resent my telling.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not help laughing at this; though I still forewarned him what would
+come of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The devil may come of it for what I care,&rdquo; says the reckless
+fellow. &ldquo;I have always done exactly as I felt inclined.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As is well known, my prediction came true. The captain had no sooner heard the
+news than he cut his cable and to sea again; and before morning broke, we were
+in the Great Minch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ship was very old; and the skipper, although the most honest of men (and
+Irish too), was one of the least capable. The wind blew very boisterous, and
+the sea raged extremely. All that day we had little heart whether to eat or
+drink; went early to rest in some concern of mind; and (as if to give us a
+lesson) in the night the wind chopped suddenly into the north-east, and blew a
+hurricane. We were awaked by the dreadful thunder of the tempest and the
+stamping of the mariners on deck; so that I supposed our last hour was
+certainly come; and the terror of my mind was increased out of all measure by
+Ballantrae, who mocked at my devotions. It is in hours like these that a man of
+any piety appears in his true light, and we find (what we are taught as babes)
+the small trust that can be set in worldly friends. I would be unworthy of my
+religion if I let this pass without particular remark. For three days we lay in
+the dark in the cabin, and had but a biscuit to nibble. On the fourth the wind
+fell, leaving the ship dismasted and heaving on vast billows. The captain had
+not a guess of whither we were blown; he was stark ignorant of his trade, and
+could do naught but bless the Holy Virgin; a very good thing, too, but scarce
+the whole of seamanship. It seemed, our one hope was to be picked up by another
+vessel; and if that should prove to be an English ship, it might be no great
+blessing to the Master and myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fifth and sixth days we tossed there helpless. The seventh some sail was
+got on her, but she was an unwieldy vessel at the best, and we made little but
+leeway. All the time, indeed, we had been drifting to the south and west, and
+during the tempest must have driven in that direction with unheard-of violence.
+The ninth dawn was cold and black, with a great sea running, and every mark of
+foul weather. In this situation we were overjoyed to sight a small ship on the
+horizon, and to perceive her go about and head for the <i>Sainte-Marie</i>. But
+our gratification did not very long endure; for when she had laid to and
+lowered a boat, it was immediately filled with disorderly fellows, who sang and
+shouted as they pulled across to us, and swarmed in on our deck with bare
+cutlasses, cursing loudly. Their leader was a horrible villain, with his face
+blacked and his whiskers curled in ringlets; Teach, his name; a most notorious
+pirate. He stamped about the deck, raving and crying out that his name was
+Satan, and his ship was called Hell. There was something about him like a
+wicked child or a half-witted person, that daunted me beyond expression. I
+whispered in the ear of Ballantrae that I would not be the last to volunteer,
+and only prayed God they might be short of hands; he approved my purpose with a
+nod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bedad,&rdquo; said I to Master Teach, &ldquo;if you are Satan, here is a
+devil for ye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word pleased him; and (not to dwell upon these shocking incidents)
+Ballantrae and I and two others were taken for recruits, while the skipper and
+all the rest were cast into the sea by the method of walking the plank. It was
+the first time I had seen this done; my heart died within me at the spectacle;
+and Master Teach or one of his acolytes (for my head was too much lost to be
+precise) remarked upon my pale face in a very alarming manner. I had the
+strength to cut a step or two of a jig, and cry out some ribaldry, which saved
+me for that time; but my legs were like water when I must get down into the
+skiff among these miscreants; and what with my horror of my company and fear of
+the monstrous billows, it was all I could do to keep an Irish tongue and break
+a jest or two as we were pulled aboard. By the blessing of God, there was a
+fiddle in the pirate ship, which I had no sooner seen than I fell upon; and in
+my quality of crowder I had the heavenly good luck to get favour in their eyes.
+<i>Crowding Pat</i> was the name they dubbed me with; and it was little I cared
+for a name so long as my skin was whole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What kind of a pandemonium that vessel was, I cannot describe, but she was
+commanded by a lunatic, and might be called a floating Bedlam. Drinking,
+roaring, singing, quarrelling, dancing, they were never all sober at one time;
+and there were days together when, if a squall had supervened, it must have
+sent us to the bottom; or if a king&rsquo;s ship had come along, it would have
+found us quite helpless for defence. Once or twice we sighted a sail, and, if
+we were sober enough, overhauled it, God forgive us! and if we were all too
+drunk, she got away, and I would bless the saints under my breath. Teach ruled,
+if you can call that rule which brought no order, by the terror he created; and
+I observed the man was very vain of his position. I have known marshals of
+France&mdash;ay, and even Highland chieftains&mdash;that were less openly
+puffed up; which throws a singular light on the pursuit of honour and glory.
+Indeed, the longer we live, the more we perceive the sagacity of Aristotle and
+the other old philosophers; and though I have all my life been eager for
+legitimate distinctions, I can lay my hand upon my heart, at the end of my
+career, and declare there is not one&mdash;no, nor yet life itself&mdash;which
+is worth acquiring or preserving at the slightest cost of dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was long before I got private speech of Ballantrae; but at length one night
+we crept out upon the boltsprit, when the rest were better employed, and
+commiserated our position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;None can deliver us but the saints,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My mind is very different,&rdquo; said Ballantrae; &ldquo;for I am going
+to deliver myself. This Teach is the poorest creature possible; we make no
+profit of him, and lie continually open to capture; and,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;I am not going to be a tarry pirate for nothing, nor yet to hang in
+chains if I can help it.&rdquo; And he told me what was in his mind to better
+the state of the ship in the way of discipline, which would give us safety for
+the present, and a sooner hope of deliverance when they should have gained
+enough and should break up their company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I confessed to him ingenuously that my nerve was quite shook amid these
+horrible surroundings, and I durst scarce tell him to count upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not very easy frightened,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;nor very easy
+beat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few days after, there befell an accident which had nearly hanged us all; and
+offers the most extraordinary picture of the folly that ruled in our concerns.
+We were all pretty drunk: and some bedlamite spying a sail, Teach put the ship
+about in chase without a glance, and we began to bustle up the arms and boast
+of the horrors that should follow. I observed Ballantrae stood quiet in the
+bows, looking under the shade of his hand; but for my part, true to my policy
+among these savages, I was at work with the busiest and passing Irish jests for
+their diversion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Run up the colours,&rdquo; cries Teach. &ldquo;Show the &mdash;s the
+Jolly Roger!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the merest drunken braggadocio at such a stage, and might have lost us a
+valuable prize; but I thought it no part of mine to reason, and I ran up the
+black flag with my own hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ballantrae steps presently aft with a smile upon his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may perhaps like to know, you drunken dog,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;that you are chasing a king&rsquo;s ship.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Teach roared him the lie; but he ran at the same time to the bulwarks, and so
+did they all. I have never seen so many drunken men struck suddenly sober. The
+cruiser had gone about, upon our impudent display of colours; she was just then
+filling on the new tack; her ensign blew out quite plain to see; and even as we
+stared, there came a puff of smoke, and then a report, and a shot plunged in
+the waves a good way short of us. Some ran to the ropes, and got the
+<i>Sarah</i> round with an incredible swiftness. One fellow fell on the rum
+barrel, which stood broached upon the deck, and rolled it promptly overboard.
+On my part, I made for the Jolly Roger, struck it, tossed it in the sea; and
+could have flung myself after, so vexed was I with our mismanagement. As for
+Teach, he grew as pale as death, and incontinently went down to his cabin. Only
+twice he came on deck that afternoon; went to the taffrail; took a long look at
+the king&rsquo;s ship, which was still on the horizon heading after us; and
+then, without speech, back to his cabin. You may say he deserted us; and if it
+had not been for one very capable sailor we had on board, and for the lightness
+of the airs that blew all day, we must certainly have gone to the yard-arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be supposed Teach was humiliated, and perhaps alarmed for his position
+with the crew; and the way in which he set about regaining what he had lost,
+was highly characteristic of the man. Early next day we smelled him burning
+sulphur in his cabin and crying out of &ldquo;Hell, hell!&rdquo; which was well
+understood among the crew, and filled their minds with apprehension. Presently
+he comes on deck, a perfect figure of fun, his face blacked, his hair and
+whiskers curled, his belt stuck full of pistols; chewing bits of glass so that
+the blood ran down his chin, and brandishing a dirk. I do not know if he had
+taken these manners from the Indians of America, where he was a native; but
+such was his way, and he would always thus announce that he was wound up to
+horrid deeds. The first that came near him was the fellow who had sent the rum
+overboard the day before; him he stabbed to the heart, damning him for a
+mutineer; and then capered about the body, raving and swearing and daring us to
+come on. It was the silliest exhibition; and yet dangerous too, for the
+cowardly fellow was plainly working himself up to another murder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All of a sudden Ballantrae stepped forth. &ldquo;Have done with this
+play-acting,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Do you think to frighten us with making
+faces? We saw nothing of you yesterday, when you were wanted; and we did well
+without you, let me tell you that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a murmur and a movement in the crew, of pleasure and alarm, I
+thought, in nearly equal parts. As for Teach, he gave a barbarous howl, and
+swung his dirk to fling it, an art in which (like many seamen) he was very
+expert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Knock that out of his hand!&rdquo; says Ballantrae, so sudden and sharp
+that my arm obeyed him before my mind had understood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Teach stood like one stupid, never thinking on his pistols.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go down to your cabin,&rdquo; cries Ballantrae, &ldquo;and come on deck
+again when you are sober. Do you think we are going to hang for you, you
+black-faced, half-witted, drunken brute and butcher? Go down!&rdquo; And he
+stamped his foot at him with such a sudden smartness that Teach fairly ran for
+it to the companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now, mates,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;a word with you. I
+don&rsquo;t know if you are gentlemen of fortune for the fun of the thing, but
+I am not. I want to make money, and get ashore again, and spend it like a man.
+And on one thing my mind is made up: I will not hang if I can help it. Come:
+give me a hint; I&rsquo;m only a beginner! Is there no way to get a little
+discipline and common sense about this business?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the men spoke up: he said by rights they should have a quartermaster;
+and no sooner was the word out of his mouth than they were all of that opinion.
+The thing went by acclamation, Ballantrae was made quartermaster, the rum was
+put in his charge, laws were passed in imitation of those of a pirate by the
+name of Roberts, and the last proposal was to make an end of Teach. But
+Ballantrae was afraid of a more efficient captain, who might be a counterweight
+to himself, and he opposed this stoutly. Teach, he said, was good enough to
+board ships and frighten fools with his blacked face and swearing; we could
+scarce get a better man than Teach for that; and besides, as the man was now
+disconsidered and as good as deposed, we might reduce his proportion of the
+plunder. This carried it; Teach&rsquo;s share was cut down to a mere derision,
+being actually less than mine; and there remained only two points: whether he
+would consent, and who was to announce to him this resolution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not let that stick you,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;I will do
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he stepped to the companion and down alone into the cabin to face that
+drunken savage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the man for us,&rdquo; cries one of the hands. &ldquo;Three
+cheers for the quartermaster!&rdquo; which were given with a will, my own voice
+among the loudest, and I dare say these plaudits had their effect on Master
+Teach in the cabin, as we have seen of late days how shouting in the streets
+may trouble even the minds of legislators.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What passed precisely was never known, though some of the heads of it came to
+the surface later on; and we were all amazed, as well as gratified, when
+Ballantrae came on deck with Teach upon his arm, and announced that all had
+been consented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I pass swiftly over those twelve or fifteen months in which we continued to
+keep the sea in the North Atlantic, getting our food and water from the ships
+we over-hauled, and doing on the whole a pretty fortunate business. Sure, no
+one could wish to read anything so ungenteel as the memoirs of a pirate, even
+an unwilling one like me! Things went extremely better with our designs, and
+Ballantrae kept his lead, to my admiration, from that day forth. I would be
+tempted to suppose that a gentleman must everywhere be first, even aboard a
+rover: but my birth is every whit as good as any Scottish lord&rsquo;s, and I
+am not ashamed to confess that I stayed Crowding Pat until the end, and was not
+much better than the crew&rsquo;s buffoon. Indeed, it was no scene to bring out
+my merits. My health suffered from a variety of reasons; I was more at home to
+the last on a horse&rsquo;s back than a ship&rsquo;s deck; and, to be
+ingenuous, the fear of the sea was constantly in my mind, battling with the
+fear of my companions. I need not cry myself up for courage; I have done well
+on many fields under the eyes of famous generals, and earned my late
+advancement by an act of the most distinguished valour before many witnesses.
+But when we must proceed on one of our abordages, the heart of Francis Burke
+was in his boots; the little eggshell skiff in which we must set forth, the
+horrible heaving of the vast billows, the height of the ship that we must
+scale, the thought of how many might be there in garrison upon their legitimate
+defence, the scowling heavens which (in that climate) so often looked darkly
+down upon our exploits, and the mere crying of the wind in my ears, were all
+considerations most unpalatable to my valour. Besides which, as I was always a
+creature of the nicest sensibility, the scenes that must follow on our success
+tempted me as little as the chances of defeat. Twice we found women on board;
+and though I have seen towns sacked, and of late days in France some very
+horrid public tumults, there was something in the smallness of the numbers
+engaged, and the bleak dangerous sea-surroundings, that made these acts of
+piracy far the most revolting. I confess ingenuously I could never proceed
+unless I was three parts drunk; it was the same even with the crew; Teach
+himself was fit for no enterprise till he was full of rum; and it was one of
+the most difficult parts of Ballantrae&rsquo;s performance, to serve us with
+liquor in the proper quantities. Even this he did to admiration; being upon the
+whole the most capable man I ever met with, and the one of the most natural
+genius. He did not even scrape favour with the crew, as I did, by continual
+buffoonery made upon a very anxious heart; but preserved on most occasions a
+great deal of gravity and distance; so that he was like a parent among a family
+of young children, or a schoolmaster with his boys. What made his part the
+harder to perform, the men were most inveterate grumblers; Ballantrae&rsquo;s
+discipline, little as it was, was yet irksome to their love of licence; and
+what was worse, being kept sober they had time to think. Some of them
+accordingly would fall to repenting their abominable crimes; one in particular,
+who was a good Catholic, and with whom I would sometimes steal apart for
+prayer; above all in bad weather, fogs, lashing rain and the like, when we
+would be the less observed; and I am sure no two criminals in the cart have
+ever performed their devotions with more anxious sincerity. But the rest,
+having no such grounds of hope, fell to another pastime, that of computation.
+All day long they would be telling up their shares or grooming over the result.
+I have said we were pretty fortunate. But an observation fails to be made: that
+in this world, in no business that I have tried, do the profits rise to a
+man&rsquo;s expectations. We found many ships and took many; yet few of them
+contained much money, their goods were usually nothing to our
+purpose&mdash;what did we want with a cargo of ploughs, or even of
+tobacco?&mdash;and it is quite a painful reflection how many whole crews we
+have made to walk the plank for no more than a stock of biscuit or an anker or
+two of spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meanwhile our ship was growing very foul, and it was high time we should
+make for our <i>port de carrénage</i>, which was in the estuary of a
+river among swamps. It was openly understood that we should then break up and
+go and squander our proportions of the spoil; and this made every man greedy of
+a little more, so that our decision was delayed from day to day. What finally
+decided matters, was a trifling accident, such as an ignorant person might
+suppose incidental to our way of life. But here I must explain: on only one of
+all the ships we boarded, the first on which we found women, did we meet with
+any genuine resistance. On that occasion we had two men killed and several
+injured, and if it had not been for the gallantry of Ballantrae we had surely
+been beat back at last. Everywhere else the defence (where there was any at
+all) was what the worst troops in Europe would have laughed at; so that the
+most dangerous part of our employment was to clamber up the side of the ship;
+and I have even known the poor souls on board to cast us a line, so eager were
+they to volunteer instead of walking the plank. This constant immunity had made
+our fellows very soft, so that I understood how Teach had made so deep a mark
+upon their minds; for indeed the company of that lunatic was the chief danger
+in our way of life. The accident to which I have referred was this:&mdash;We
+had sighted a little full-rigged ship very close under our board in a haze; she
+sailed near as well as we did&mdash;I should be nearer truth if I said, near as
+ill; and we cleared the bow-chaser to see if we could bring a spar or two about
+their ears. The swell was exceeding great; the motion of the ship beyond
+description; it was little wonder if our gunners should fire thrice and be
+still quite broad of what they aimed at. But in the meanwhile the chase had
+cleared a stern gun, the thickness of the air concealing them; and being better
+marksmen, their first shot struck us in the bows, knocked our two gunners into
+mince-meat, so that we were all sprinkled with the blood, and plunged through
+the deck into the forecastle, where we slept. Ballantrae would have held on;
+indeed, there was nothing in this <i>contretemps</i> to affect the mind of any
+soldier; but he had a quick perception of the men&rsquo;s wishes, and it was
+plain this lucky shot had given them a sickener of their trade. In a moment
+they were all of one mind: the chase was drawing away from us, it was needless
+to hold on, the <i>Sarah</i> was too foul to overhaul a bottle, it was mere
+foolery to keep the sea with her; and on these pretended grounds her head was
+incontinently put about and the course laid for the river. It was strange to
+see what merriment fell on that ship&rsquo;s company, and how they stamped
+about the deck jesting, and each computing what increase had come to his share
+by the death of the two gunners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were nine days making our port, so light were the airs we had to sail on, so
+foul the ship&rsquo;s bottom; but early on the tenth, before dawn, and in a
+light lifting haze, we passed the head. A little after, the haze lifted, and
+fell again, showing us a cruiser very close. This was a sore blow, happening so
+near our refuge. There was a great debate of whether she had seen us, and if so
+whether it was likely they had recognised the <i>Sarah</i>. We were very
+careful, by destroying every member of those crews we overhauled, to leave no
+evidence as to our own persons; but the appearance of the <i>Sarah</i> herself
+we could not keep so private; and above all of late, since she had been foul,
+and we had pursued many ships without success, it was plain that her
+description had been often published. I supposed this alert would have made us
+separate upon the instant. But here again that original genius of
+Ballantrae&rsquo;s had a surprise in store for me. He and Teach (and it was the
+most remarkable step of his success) had gone hand in hand since the first day
+of his appointment. I often questioned him upon the fact, and never got an
+answer but once, when he told me he and Teach had an understanding &ldquo;which
+would very much surprise the crew if they should hear of it, and would surprise
+himself a good deal if it was carried out.&rdquo; Well, here again he and Teach
+were of a mind; and by their joint procurement the anchor was no sooner down
+than the whole crew went off upon a scene of drunkenness indescribable. By
+afternoon we were a mere shipful of lunatical persons, throwing of things
+overboard, howling of different songs at the same time, quarrelling and falling
+together, and then forgetting our quarrels to embrace. Ballantrae had bidden me
+drink nothing, and feign drunkenness, as I valued my life; and I have never
+passed a day so wearisomely, lying the best part of the time upon the
+forecastle and watching the swamps and thickets by which our little basin was
+entirely surrounded for the eye. A little after dusk Ballantrae stumbled up to
+my side, feigned to fall, with a drunken laugh, and before he got his feet
+again, whispered me to &ldquo;reel down into the cabin and seem to fall asleep
+upon a locker, for there would be need of me soon.&rdquo; I did as I was told,
+and coming into the cabin, where it was quite dark, let myself fall on the
+first locker. There was a man there already; by the way he stirred and threw me
+off, I could not think he was much in liquor; and yet when I had found another
+place, he seemed to continue to sleep on. My heart now beat very hard, for I
+saw some desperate matter was in act. Presently down came Ballantrae, lit the
+lamp, looked about the cabin, nodded as if pleased, and on deck again without a
+word. I peered out from between my fingers, and saw there were three of us
+slumbering, or feigning to slumber, on the lockers: myself, one Dutton and one
+Grady, both resolute men. On deck the rest were got to a pitch of revelry quite
+beyond the bounds of what is human; so that no reasonable name can describe the
+sounds they were now making. I have heard many a drunken bout in my time, many
+on board that very <i>Sarah</i>, but never anything the least like this, which
+made me early suppose the liquor had been tampered with. It was a long while
+before these yells and howls died out into a sort of miserable moaning, and
+then to silence; and it seemed a long while after that before Ballantrae came
+down again, this time with Teach upon his heels. The latter cursed at the sight
+of us three upon the lockers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tut,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;you might fire a pistol at their
+ears. You know what stuff they have been swallowing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a hatch in the cabin floor, and under that the richest part of the
+booty was stored against the day of division. It fastened with a ring and three
+padlocks, the keys (for greater security) being divided; one to Teach, one to
+Ballantrae, and one to the mate, a man called Hammond. Yet I was amazed to see
+they were now all in the one hand; and yet more amazed (still looking through
+my fingers) to observe Ballantrae and Teach bring up several packets, four of
+them in all, very carefully made up and with a loop for carriage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; says Teach, &ldquo;let us be going.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One word,&rdquo; says Ballantrae. &ldquo;I have discovered there is
+another man besides yourself who knows a private path across the swamp; and it
+seems it is shorter than yours.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Teach cried out, in that case, they were undone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not know for that,&rdquo; says Ballantrae. &ldquo;For there are
+several other circumstances with which I must acquaint you. First of all, there
+is no bullet in your pistols, which (if you remember) I was kind enough to load
+for both of us this morning. Secondly, as there is someone else who knows a
+passage, you must think it highly improbable I should saddle myself with a
+lunatic like you. Thirdly, these gentlemen (who need no longer pretend to be
+asleep) are those of my party, and will now proceed to gag and bind you to the
+mast; and when your men awaken (if they ever do awake after the drugs we have
+mingled in their liquor), I am sure they will be so obliging as to deliver you,
+and you will have no difficulty, I daresay, to explain the business of the
+keys.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not a word said Teach, but looked at us like a frightened baby as we gagged and
+bound him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now you see, you moon-calf,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;why we made
+four packets. Heretofore you have been called Captain Teach, but I think you
+are now rather Captain Learn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was our last word on board the <i>Sarah</i>. We four, with our four
+packets, lowered ourselves softly into a skiff, and left that ship behind us as
+silent as the grave, only for the moaning of some of the drunkards. There was a
+fog about breast-high on the waters; so that Dutton, who knew the passage, must
+stand on his feet to direct our rowing; and this, as it forced us to row
+gently, was the means of our deliverance. We were yet but a little way from the
+ship, when it began to come grey, and the birds to fly abroad upon the water.
+All of a sudden Dutton clapped down upon his hams, and whispered us to be
+silent for our lives, and hearken. Sure enough, we heard a little faint creak
+of oars upon one hand, and then again, and further off, a creak of oars upon
+the other. It was clear we had been sighted yesterday in the morning; here were
+the cruiser&rsquo;s boats to cut us out; here were we defenceless in their very
+midst. Sure, never were poor souls more perilously placed; and as we lay there
+on our oars, praying God the mist might hold, the sweat poured from my brow.
+Presently we heard one of the boats where we might have thrown a biscuit in
+her. &ldquo;Softly, men,&rdquo; we heard an officer whisper; and I marvelled
+they could not hear the drumming of my heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind the path,&rdquo; says Ballantrae; &ldquo;we must get shelter
+anyhow; let us pull straight ahead for the sides of the basin.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This we did with the most anxious precaution, rowing, as best we could, upon
+our hands, and steering at a venture in the fog, which was (for all that) our
+only safety. But Heaven guided us; we touched ground at a thicket; scrambled
+ashore with our treasure; and having no other way of concealment, and the mist
+beginning already to lighten, hove down the skiff and let her sink. We were
+still but new under cover when the sun rose; and at the same time, from the
+midst of the basin, a great shouting of seamen sprang up, and we knew the
+<i>Sarah</i> was being boarded. I heard afterwards the officer that took her
+got great honour; and it&rsquo;s true the approach was creditably managed, but
+I think he had an easy capture when he came to board. <a
+name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3" class="citation">[3]</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was still blessing the saints for my escape, when I became aware we were in
+trouble of another kind. We were here landed at random in a vast and dangerous
+swamp; and how to come at the path was a concern of doubt, fatigue, and peril.
+Dutton, indeed, was of opinion we should wait until the ship was gone, and fish
+up the skiff; for any delay would be more wise than to go blindly ahead in that
+morass. One went back accordingly to the basin-side and (peering through the
+thicket) saw the fog already quite drunk up, and English colours flying on the
+<i>Sarah</i>, but no movement made to get her under way. Our situation was now
+very doubtful. The swamp was an unhealthful place to linger in; we had been so
+greedy to bring treasures that we had brought but little food; it was highly
+desirable, besides, that we should get clear of the neighbourhood and into the
+settlements before the news of the capture went abroad; and against all these
+considerations, there was only the peril of the passage on the other side. I
+think it not wonderful we decided on the active part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was already blistering hot when we set forth to pass the marsh, or rather to
+strike the path, by compass. Dutton took the compass, and one or other of us
+three carried his proportion of the treasure. I promise you he kept a sharp eye
+to his rear, for it was like the man&rsquo;s soul that he must trust us with.
+The thicket was as close as a bush; the ground very treacherous, so that we
+often sank in the most terrifying manner, and must go round about; the heat,
+besides, was stifling, the air singularly heavy, and the stinging insects
+abounded in such myriads that each of us walked under his own cloud. It has
+often been commented on, how much better gentlemen of birth endure fatigue than
+persons of the rabble; so that walking officers who must tramp in the dirt
+beside their men, shame them by their constancy. This was well to be observed
+in the present instance; for here were Ballantrae and I, two gentlemen of the
+highest breeding, on the one hand; and on the other, Grady, a common mariner,
+and a man nearly a giant in physical strength. The case of Dutton is not in
+point, for I confess he did as well as any of us. <a name="citation4"></a><a
+href="#footnote4" class="citation">[4]</a> But as for Grady, he began early to
+lament his case, tailed in the rear, refused to carry Dutton&rsquo;s packet
+when it came his turn, clamoured continually for rum (of which we had too
+little), and at last even threatened us from behind with a cocked pistol,
+unless we should allow him rest. Ballantrae would have fought it out, I
+believe; but I prevailed with him the other way; and we made a stop and ate a
+meal. It seemed to benefit Grady little; he was in the rear again at once,
+growling and bemoaning his lot; and at last, by some carelessness, not having
+followed properly in our tracks, stumbled into a deep part of the slough where
+it was mostly water, gave some very dreadful screams, and before we could come
+to his aid had sunk along with his booty. His fate, and above all these screams
+of his, appalled us to the soul; yet it was on the whole a fortunate
+circumstance and the means of our deliverance, for it moved Dutton to mount
+into a tree, whence he was able to perceive and to show me, who had climbed
+after him, a high piece of the wood, which was a landmark for the path. He went
+forward the more carelessly, I must suppose; for presently we saw him sink a
+little down, draw up his feet and sink again, and so twice. Then he turned his
+face to us, pretty white.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lend a hand,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I am in a bad place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, standing still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dutton broke out into the most violent oaths, sinking a little lower as he did,
+so that the mud was nearly to his waist, and plucking a pistol from his belt,
+&ldquo;Help me,&rdquo; he cries, &ldquo;or die and be damned to you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;I did but jest. I am coming.&rdquo;
+And he set down his own packet and Dutton&rsquo;s, which he was then carrying.
+&ldquo;Do not venture near till we see if you are needed,&rdquo; said he to me,
+and went forward alone to where the man was bogged. He was quiet now, though he
+still held the pistol; and the marks of terror in his countenance were very
+moving to behold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For the Lord&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;look sharp.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ballantrae was now got close up. &ldquo;Keep still,&rdquo; says he, and seemed
+to consider; and then, &ldquo;Reach out both your hands!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dutton laid down his pistol, and so watery was the top surface that it went
+clear out of sight; with an oath he stooped to snatch it; and as he did so,
+Ballantrae leaned forth and stabbed him between the shoulders. Up went his
+hands over his head&mdash;I know not whether with the pain or to ward himself;
+and the next moment he doubled forward in the mud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ballantrae was already over the ankles; but he plucked himself out, and came
+back to me, where I stood with my knees smiting one another. &ldquo;The devil
+take you, Francis!&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;I believe you are a half-hearted
+fellow, after all. I have only done justice on a pirate. And here we are quite
+clear of the <i>Sarah</i>! Who shall now say that we have dipped our hands in
+any irregularities?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I assured him he did me injustice; but my sense of humanity was so much
+affected by the horridness of the fact that I could scarce find breath to
+answer with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you must be more resolved. The need for
+this fellow ceased when he had shown you where the path ran; and you cannot
+deny I would have been daft to let slip so fair an opportunity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not deny but he was right in principle; nor yet could I refrain from
+shedding tears, of which I think no man of valour need have been ashamed; and
+it was not until I had a share of the rum that I was able to proceed. I repeat,
+I am far from ashamed of my generous emotion; mercy is honourable in the
+warrior; and yet I cannot altogether censure Ballantrae, whose step was really
+fortunate, as we struck the path without further misadventure, and the same
+night, about sundown, came to the edge of the morass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were too weary to seek far; on some dry sands, still warm with the
+day&rsquo;s sun, and close under a wood of pines, we lay down and were
+instantly plunged in sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We awaked the next morning very early, and began with a sullen spirit a
+conversation that came near to end in blows. We were now cast on shore in the
+southern provinces, thousands of miles from any French settlement; a dreadful
+journey and a thousand perils lay in front of us; and sure, if there was ever
+need for amity, it was in such an hour. I must suppose that Ballantrae had
+suffered in his sense of what is truly polite; indeed, and there is nothing
+strange in the idea, after the sea-wolves we had consorted with so long; and as
+for myself, he fubbed me off unhandsomely, and any gentleman would have
+resented his behaviour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him in what light I saw his conduct; he walked a little off, I following
+to upbraid him; and at last he stopped me with his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Frank,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you know what we swore; and yet there is
+no oath invented would induce me to swallow such expressions, if I did not
+regard you with sincere affection. It is impossible you should doubt me there:
+I have given proofs. Dutton I had to take, because he knew the pass, and Grady
+because Dutton would not move without him; but what call was there to carry you
+along? You are a perpetual danger to me with your cursed Irish tongue. By
+rights you should now be in irons in the cruiser. And you quarrel with me like
+a baby for some trinkets!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I considered this one of the most unhandsome speeches ever made; and indeed to
+this day I can scarce reconcile it to my notion of a gentleman that was my
+friend. I retorted upon him with his Scotch accent, of which he had not so much
+as some, but enough to be very barbarous and disgusting, as I told him plainly;
+and the affair would have gone to a great length, but for an alarming
+intervention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had got some way off upon the sand. The place where we had slept, with the
+packets lying undone and the money scattered openly, was now between us and the
+pines; and it was out of these the stranger must have come. There he was at
+least, a great hulking fellow of the country, with a broad axe on his shoulder,
+looking open-mouthed, now at the treasure, which was just at his feet, and now
+at our disputation, in which we had gone far enough to have weapons in our
+hands. We had no sooner observed him than he found his legs and made off again
+among the pines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was no scene to put our minds at rest: a couple of armed men in
+sea-clothes found quarrelling over a treasure, not many miles from where a
+pirate had been captured&mdash;here was enough to bring the whole country about
+our ears. The quarrel was not even made up; it was blotted from our minds; and
+we got our packets together in the twinkling of an eye, and made off, running
+with the best will in the world. But the trouble was, we did not know in what
+direction, and must continually return upon our steps. Ballantrae had indeed
+collected what he could from Dutton; but it&rsquo;s hard to travel upon
+hearsay; and the estuary, which spreads into a vast irregular harbour, turned
+us off upon every side with a new stretch of water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were near beside ourselves, and already quite spent with running, when,
+coming to the top of a dune, we saw we were again cut off by another
+ramification of the bay. This was a creek, however, very different from those
+that had arrested us before; being set in rocks, and so precipitously deep that
+a small vessel was able to lie alongside, made fast with a hawser; and her crew
+had laid a plank to the shore. Here they had lighted a fire, and were sitting
+at their meal. As for the vessel herself, she was one of those they build in
+the Bermudas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The love of gold and the great hatred that everybody has to pirates were
+motives of the most influential, and would certainly raise the country in our
+pursuit. Besides, it was now plain we were on some sort of straggling
+peninsula, like the fingers of a hand; and the wrist, or passage to the
+mainland, which we should have taken at the first, was by this time not
+improbably secured. These considerations put us on a bolder counsel. For as
+long as we dared, looking every moment to hear sounds of the chase, we lay
+among some bushes on the top of the dune; and having by this means secured a
+little breath and recomposed our appearance, we strolled down at last, with a
+great affectation of carelessness, to the party by the fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a trader and his negroes, belonging to Albany, in the province of New
+York, and now on the way home from the Indies with a cargo; his name I cannot
+recall. We were amazed to learn he had put in here from terror of the
+<i>Sarah</i>; for we had no thought our exploits had been so notorious. As soon
+as the Albanian heard she had been taken the day before, he jumped to his feet,
+gave us a cup of spirits for our good news, and sent big negroes to get sail on
+the Bermudan. On our side, we profited by the dram to become more confidential,
+and at last offered ourselves as passengers. He looked askance at our tarry
+clothes and pistols, and replied civilly enough that he had scarce
+accommodation for himself; nor could either our prayers or our offers of money,
+in which we advanced pretty far, avail to shake him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see, you think ill of us,&rdquo; says Ballantrae, &ldquo;but I will
+show you how well we think of you by telling you the truth. We are Jacobite
+fugitives, and there is a price upon our heads.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this, the Albanian was plainly moved a little. He asked us many questions as
+to the Scotch war, which Ballantrae very patiently answered. And then, with a
+wink, in a vulgar manner, &ldquo;I guess you and your Prince Charlie got more
+than you cared about,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bedad, and that we did,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;And, my dear man, I wish
+you would set a new example and give us just that much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This I said in the Irish way, about which there is allowed to be something very
+engaging. It&rsquo;s a remarkable thing, and a testimony to the love with which
+our nation is regarded, that this address scarce ever fails in a handsome
+fellow. I cannot tell how often I have seen a private soldier escape the horse,
+or a beggar wheedle out a good alms by a touch of the brogue. And, indeed, as
+soon as the Albanian had laughed at me I was pretty much at rest. Even then,
+however, he made many conditions, and&mdash;for one thing&mdash;took away our
+arms, before he suffered us aboard; which was the signal to cast off; so that
+in a moment after, we were gliding down the bay with a good breeze, and
+blessing the name of God for our deliverance. Almost in the mouth of the
+estuary, we passed the cruiser, and a little after the poor <i>Sarah</i> with
+her prize crew; and these were both sights to make us tremble. The Bermudan
+seemed a very safe place to be in, and our bold stroke to have been fortunately
+played, when we were thus reminded of the case of our companions. For all that,
+we had only exchanged traps, jumped out of the frying-pan into the fire, ran
+from the yard-arm to the block, and escaped the open hostility of the
+man-of-war to lie at the mercy of the doubtful faith of our Albanian merchant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From many circumstances, it chanced we were safer than we could have dared to
+hope. The town of Albany was at that time much concerned in contraband trade
+across the desert with the Indians and the French. This, as it was highly
+illegal, relaxed their loyalty, and as it brought them in relation with the
+politest people on the earth, divided even their sympathies. In short, they
+were like all the smugglers in the world, spies and agents ready-made for
+either party. Our Albanian, besides, was a very honest man indeed, and very
+greedy; and, to crown our luck, he conceived a great delight in our society.
+Before we had reached the town of New York we had come to a full agreement,
+that he should carry us as far as Albany upon his ship, and thence put us on a
+way to pass the boundaries and join the French. For all this we were to pay at
+a high rate; but beggars cannot be choosers, nor outlaws bargainers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We sailed, then, up the Hudson River, which, I protest, is a very fine stream,
+and put up at the &ldquo;King&rsquo;s Arms&rdquo; in Albany. The town was full
+of the militia of the province, breathing slaughter against the French.
+Governor Clinton was there himself, a very busy man, and, by what I could
+learn, very near distracted by the factiousness of his Assembly. The Indians on
+both sides were on the war-path; we saw parties of them bringing in prisoners
+and (what was much worse) scalps, both male and female, for which they were
+paid at a fixed rate; and I assure you the sight was not encouraging.
+Altogether, we could scarce have come at a period more unsuitable for our
+designs; our position in the chief inn was dreadfully conspicuous; our Albanian
+fubbed us off with a thousand delays, and seemed upon the point of a retreat
+from his engagements; nothing but peril appeared to environ the poor fugitives,
+and for some time we drowned our concern in a very irregular course of living.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, too, proved to be fortunate; and it&rsquo;s one of the remarks that fall
+to be made upon our escape, how providentially our steps were conducted to the
+very end. What a humiliation to the dignity of man! My philosophy, the
+extraordinary genius of Ballantrae, our valour, in which I grant that we were
+equal&mdash;all these might have proved insufficient without the Divine
+blessing on our efforts. And how true it is, as the Church tells us, that the
+Truths of Religion are, after all, quite applicable even to daily affairs! At
+least, it was in the course of our revelry that we made the acquaintance of a
+spirited youth by the name of Chew. He was one of the most daring of the Indian
+traders, very well acquainted with the secret paths of the wilderness, needy,
+dissolute, and, by a last good fortune, in some disgrace with his family. Him
+we persuaded to come to our relief; he privately provided what was needful for
+our flight, and one day we slipped out of Albany, without a word to our former
+friend, and embarked, a little above, in a canoe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the toils and perils of this journey, it would require a pen more elegant
+than mine to do full justice. The reader must conceive for himself the dreadful
+wilderness which we had now to thread; its thickets, swamps, precipitous rocks,
+impetuous rivers, and amazing waterfalls. Among these barbarous scenes we must
+toil all day, now paddling, now carrying our canoe upon our shoulders; and at
+night we slept about a fire, surrounded by the howling of wolves and other
+savage animals. It was our design to mount the headwaters of the Hudson, to the
+neighbourhood of Crown Point, where the French had a strong place in the woods,
+upon Lake Champlain. But to have done this directly were too perilous; and it
+was accordingly gone upon by such a labyrinth of rivers, lakes, and portages as
+makes my head giddy to remember. These paths were in ordinary times entirely
+desert; but the country was now up, the tribes on the war-path, the woods full
+of Indian scouts. Again and again we came upon these parties when we least
+expected them; and one day, in particular, I shall never forget, how, as dawn
+was coming in, we were suddenly surrounded by five or six of these painted
+devils, uttering a very dreary sort of cry, and brandishing their hatchets. It
+passed off harmlessly, indeed, as did the rest of our encounters; for Chew was
+well known and highly valued among the different tribes. Indeed, he was a very
+gallant, respectable young man; but even with the advantage of his
+companionship, you must not think these meetings were without sensible peril.
+To prove friendship on our part, it was needful to draw upon our stock of
+rum&mdash;indeed, under whatever disguise, that is the true business of the
+Indian trader, to keep a travelling public-house in the forest; and when once
+the braves had got their bottle of <i>scaura</i> (as they call this beastly
+liquor), it behoved us to set forth and paddle for our scalps. Once they were a
+little drunk, goodbye to any sense or decency; they had but the one thought, to
+get more <i>scaura</i>. They might easily take it in their heads to give us
+chase, and had we been overtaken, I had never written these memoirs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were come to the most critical portion of our course, where we might equally
+expect to fall into the hands of French or English, when a terrible calamity
+befell us. Chew was taken suddenly sick with symptoms like those of poison, and
+in the course of a few hours expired in the bottom of the canoe. We thus lost
+at once our guide, our interpreter, our boatman, and our passport, for he was
+all these in one; and found ourselves reduced, at a blow, to the most desperate
+and irremediable distress. Chew, who took a great pride in his knowledge, had
+indeed often lectured us on the geography; and Ballantrae, I believe, would
+listen. But for my part I have always found such information highly tedious;
+and beyond the fact that we were now in the country of the Adirondack Indians,
+and not so distant from our destination, could we but have found the way, I was
+entirely ignorant. The wisdom of my course was soon the more apparent; for with
+all his pains, Ballantrae was no further advanced than myself. He knew we must
+continue to go up one stream; then, by way of a portage, down another; and then
+up a third. But you are to consider, in a mountain country, how many streams
+come rolling in from every hand. And how is a gentleman, who is a perfect
+stranger in that part of the world, to tell any one of them from any other? Nor
+was this our only trouble. We were great novices, besides, in handling a canoe;
+the portages were almost beyond our strength, so that I have seen us sit down
+in despair for half an hour at a time without one word; and the appearance of a
+single Indian, since we had now no means of speaking to them, would have been
+in all probability the means of our destruction. There is altogether some
+excuse if Ballantrae showed something of a grooming disposition; his habit of
+imputing blame to others, quite as capable as himself, was less tolerable, and
+his language it was not always easy to accept. Indeed, he had contracted on
+board the pirate ship a manner of address which was in a high degree unusual
+between gentlemen; and now, when you might say he was in a fever, it increased
+upon him hugely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third day of these wanderings, as we were carrying the canoe upon a rocky
+portage, she fell, and was entirely bilged. The portage was between two lakes,
+both pretty extensive; the track, such as it was, opened at both ends upon the
+water, and on both hands was enclosed by the unbroken woods; and the sides of
+the lakes were quite impassable with bog: so that we beheld ourselves not only
+condemned to go without our boat and the greater part of our provisions, but to
+plunge at once into impenetrable thickets and to desert what little guidance we
+still had&mdash;the course of the river. Each stuck his pistols in his belt,
+shouldered an axe, made a pack of his treasure and as much food as he could
+stagger under; and deserting the rest of our possessions, even to our swords,
+which would have much embarrassed us among the woods, we set forth on this
+deplorable adventure. The labours of Hercules, so finely described by Homer,
+were a trifle to what we now underwent. Some parts of the forest were perfectly
+dense down to the ground, so that we must cut our way like mites in a cheese.
+In some the bottom was full of deep swamp, and the whole wood entirely rotten.
+I have leaped on a great fallen log and sunk to the knees in touchwood; I have
+sought to stay myself, in falling, against what looked to be a solid trunk, and
+the whole thing has whiffed away at my touch like a sheet of paper. Stumbling,
+falling, bogging to the knees, hewing our way, our eyes almost put out with
+twigs and branches, our clothes plucked from our bodies, we laboured all day,
+and it is doubtful if we made two miles. What was worse, as we could rarely get
+a view of the country, and were perpetually justled from our path by obstacles,
+it was impossible even to have a guess in what direction we were moving.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little before sundown, in an open place with a stream, and set about with
+barbarous mountains, Ballantrae threw down his pack. &ldquo;I will go no
+further,&rdquo; said he, and bade me light the fire, damning my blood in terms
+not proper for a chairman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him to try to forget he had ever been a pirate, and to remember he had
+been a gentleman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you mad?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t cross me here!&rdquo;
+And then, shaking his fist at the hills, &ldquo;To think,&rdquo; cries he,
+&ldquo;that I must leave my bones in this miserable wilderness! Would God I had
+died upon the scaffold like a gentleman!&rdquo; This he said ranting like an
+actor; and then sat biting his fingers and staring on the ground, a most
+unchristian object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took a certain horror of the man, for I thought a soldier and a gentleman
+should confront his end with more philosophy. I made him no reply, therefore,
+in words; and presently the evening fell so chill that I was glad, for my own
+sake, to kindle a fire. And yet God knows, in such an open spot, and the
+country alive with savages, the act was little short of lunacy. Ballantrae
+seemed never to observe me; but at last, as I was about parching a little corn,
+he looked up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you ever a brother?&rdquo; said be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the blessing of Heaven,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;not less than
+five.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have the one,&rdquo; said he, with a strange voice; and then
+presently, &ldquo;He shall pay me for all this,&rdquo; he added. And when I
+asked him what was his brother&rsquo;s part in our distress,
+&ldquo;What!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;he sits in my place, he bears my name, he
+courts my wife; and I am here alone with a damned Irishman in this
+tooth-chattering desert! Oh, I have been a common gull!&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The explosion was in all ways so foreign to my friend&rsquo;s nature that I was
+daunted out of all my just susceptibility. Sure, an offensive expression,
+however vivacious, appears a wonderfully small affair in circumstances so
+extreme! But here there is a strange thing to be noted. He had only once before
+referred to the lady with whom he was contracted. That was when we came in view
+of the town of New York, when he had told me, if all had their rights, he was
+now in sight of his own property, for Miss Graeme enjoyed a large estate in the
+province. And this was certainly a natural occasion; but now here she was named
+a second time; and what is surely fit to be observed, in this very month, which
+was November, &rsquo;47, and <i>I believe upon that very day as we sat among
+these barbarous mountains</i>, his brother and Miss Graeme were married. I am
+the least superstitious of men; but the hand of Providence is here displayed
+too openly not to be remarked. <a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5"
+class="citation">[5]</a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day, and the next, were passed in similar labours; Ballantrae often
+deciding on our course by the spinning of a coin; and once, when I expostulated
+on this childishness, he had an odd remark that I have never forgotten.
+&ldquo;I know no better way,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to express my scorn of
+human reason.&rdquo; I think it was the third day that we found the body of a
+Christian, scalped and most abominably mangled, and lying in a pudder of his
+blood; the birds of the desert screaming over him, as thick as flies. I cannot
+describe how dreadfully this sight affected us; but it robbed me of all
+strength and all hope for this world. The same day, and only a little after, we
+were scrambling over a part of the forest that had been burned, when
+Ballantrae, who was a little ahead, ducked suddenly behind a fallen trunk. I
+joined him in this shelter, whence we could look abroad without being seen
+ourselves; and in the bottom of the next vale, beheld a large war party of the
+savages going by across our line. There might be the value of a weak battalion
+present; all naked to the waist, blacked with grease and soot, and painted with
+white lead and vermilion, according to their beastly habits. They went one
+behind another like a string of geese, and at a quickish trot; so that they
+took but a little while to rattle by, and disappear again among the woods. Yet
+I suppose we endured a greater agony of hesitation and suspense in these few
+minutes than goes usually to a man&rsquo;s whole life. Whether they were French
+or English Indians, whether they desired scalps or prisoners, whether we should
+declare ourselves upon the chance, or lie quiet and continue the heart-breaking
+business of our journey: sure, I think these were questions to have puzzled the
+brains of Aristotle himself. Ballantrae turned to me with a face all wrinkled
+up and his teeth showing in his mouth, like what I have read of people
+starving; he said no word, but his whole appearance was a kind of dreadful
+question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They may be of the English side,&rdquo; I whispered; &ldquo;and think!
+the best we could then hope, is to begin this over again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know&mdash;I know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yet it must come to a plunge
+at last.&rdquo; And he suddenly plucked out his coin, shook it in his closed
+hands, looked at it, and then lay down with his face in the dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Addition by Mr. Mackellar</i>.&mdash;I drop the Chevalier&rsquo;s narration
+at this point because the couple quarrelled and separated the same day; and the
+Chevalier&rsquo;s account of the quarrel seems to me (I must confess) quite
+incompatible with the nature of either of the men. Henceforth they wandered
+alone, undergoing extraordinary sufferings; until first one and then the other
+was picked up by a party from Fort St. Frederick. Only two things are to be
+noted. And first (as most important for my purpose) that the Master, in the
+course of his miseries buried his treasure, at a point never since discovered,
+but of which he took a drawing in his own blood on the lining of his hat. And
+second, that on his coming thus penniless to the Fort, he was welcomed like a
+brother by the Chevalier, who thence paid his way to France. The simplicity of
+Mr. Burke&rsquo;s character leads him at this point to praise the Master
+exceedingly; to an eye more worldly wise, it would seem it was the Chevalier
+alone that was to be commended. I have the more pleasure in pointing to this
+really very noble trait of my esteemed correspondent, as I fear I may have
+wounded him immediately before. I have refrained from comments on any of his
+extraordinary and (in my eyes) immoral opinions, for I know him to be jealous
+of respect. But his version of the quarrel is really more than I can reproduce;
+for I knew the Master myself, and a man more insusceptible of fear is not
+conceivable. I regret this oversight of the Chevalier&rsquo;s, and all the more
+because the tenor of his narrative (set aside a few flourishes) strikes me as
+highly ingenuous.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+PERSECUTIONS ENDURED BY MR. HENRY.</h2>
+
+<p>
+You can guess on what part of his adventures the Colonel principally dwelled.
+Indeed, if we had heard it all, it is to be thought the current of this
+business had been wholly altered; but the pirate ship was very gently touched
+upon. Nor did I hear the Colonel to an end even of that which he was willing to
+disclose; for Mr. Henry, having for some while been plunged in a brown study,
+rose at last from his seat and (reminding the Colonel there were matters that
+he must attend to) bade me follow him immediately to the office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once there, he sought no longer to dissemble his concern, walking to and fro in
+the room with a contorted face, and passing his hand repeatedly upon his brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have some business,&rdquo; he began at last; and there broke off,
+declared we must have wine, and sent for a magnum of the best. This was
+extremely foreign to his habitudes; and what was still more so, when the wine
+had come, he gulped down one glass upon another like a man careless of
+appearances. But the drink steadied him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will scarce be surprised, Mackellar,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;when I
+tell you that my brother&mdash;whose safety we are all rejoiced to
+learn&mdash;stands in some need of money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him I had misdoubted as much; but the time was not very fortunate, as
+the stock was low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not mine,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;There is the money for the
+mortgage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I reminded him it was Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will be answerable to my wife,&rdquo; he cried violently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And then,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;there is the mortgage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;it is on that I would consult you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I showed him how unfortunate a time it was to divert this money from its
+destination; and how, by so doing, we must lose the profit of our past
+economies, and plunge back the estate into the mire. I even took the liberty to
+plead with him; and when he still opposed me with a shake of the head and a
+bitter dogged smile, my zeal quite carried me beyond my place. &ldquo;This is
+midsummer madness,&rdquo; cried I; &ldquo;and I for one will be no party to
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You speak as though I did it for my pleasure,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;But
+I have a child now; and, besides, I love order; and to say the honest truth,
+Mackellar, I had begun to take a pride in the estates.&rdquo; He gloomed for a
+moment. &ldquo;But what would you have?&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;Nothing is
+mine, nothing. This day&rsquo;s news has knocked the bottom out of my life. I
+have only the name and the shadow of things&mdash;only the shadow; there is no
+substance in my rights.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They will prove substantial enough before a court,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at me with a burning eye, and seemed to repress the word upon his
+lips; and I repented what I had said, for I saw that while he spoke of the
+estate he had still a side-thought to his marriage. And then, of a sudden, he
+twitched the letter from his pocket, where it lay all crumpled, smoothed it
+violently on the table, and read these words to me with a trembling tongue:
+&ldquo;&lsquo;My dear Jacob&rsquo;&mdash;This is how he begins!&rdquo; cries
+he&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;My dear Jacob, I once called you so, you may remember;
+and you have now done the business, and flung my heels as high as
+Criffel.&rsquo; What do you think of that, Mackellar,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;from an only brother? I declare to God I liked him very well; I was
+always staunch to him; and this is how he writes! But I will not sit down under
+the imputation&rdquo;&mdash;walking to and fro&mdash;&ldquo;I am as good as he;
+I am a better man than he, I call on God to prove it! I cannot give him all the
+monstrous sum he asks; he knows the estate to be incompetent; but I will give
+him what I have, and it is more than he expects. I have borne all this too
+long. See what he writes further on; read it for yourself: &lsquo;I know you
+are a niggardly dog.&rsquo; A niggardly dog! I niggardly? Is that true,
+Mackellar? You think it is?&rdquo; I really thought he would have struck me at
+that. &ldquo;Oh, you all think so! Well, you shall see, and he shall see, and
+God shall see. If I ruin the estate and go barefoot, I shall stuff this
+bloodsucker. Let him ask all&mdash;all, and he shall have it! It is all his by
+rights. Ah!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;and I foresaw all this, and worse, when he
+would not let me go.&rdquo; He poured out another glass of wine, and was about
+to carry it to his lips, when I made so bold as to lay a finger on his arm. He
+stopped a moment. &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; said he, and flung glass and all
+in the fireplace. &ldquo;Come, let us count the money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I durst no longer oppose him; indeed, I was very much affected by the sight of
+so much disorder in a man usually so controlled; and we sat down together,
+counted the money, and made it up in packets for the greater ease of Colonel
+Burke, who was to be the bearer. This done, Mr. Henry returned to the hall,
+where he and my old lord sat all night through with their guest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little before dawn I was called and set out with the Colonel. He would scarce
+have liked a less responsible convoy, for he was a man who valued himself; nor
+could we afford him one more dignified, for Mr. Henry must not appear with the
+freetraders. It was a very bitter morning of wind, and as we went down through
+the long shrubbery the Colonel held himself muffled in his cloak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;this is a great sum of money that your friend
+requires. I must suppose his necessities to be very great.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We must suppose so,&rdquo; says he, I thought drily; but perhaps it was
+the cloak about his mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am only a servant of the family,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;You may deal
+openly with me. I think we are likely to get little good by him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear man,&rdquo; said the Colonel, &ldquo;Ballantrae is a gentleman
+of the most eminent natural abilities, and a man that I admire, and that I
+revere, to the very ground he treads on.&rdquo; And then he seemed to me to
+pause like one in a difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But for all that,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;we are likely to get little good
+by him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure, and you can have it your own way, my dear man,&rdquo; says the
+Colonel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this time we had come to the side of the creek, where the boat awaited him.
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said be, &ldquo;I am sure I am very much your debtor for
+all your civility, Mr. Whatever-your-name-is; and just as a last word, and
+since you show so much intelligent interest, I will mention a small
+circumstance that may be of use to the family. For I believe my friend omitted
+to mention that he has the largest pension on the Scots Fund of any refugee in
+Paris; and it&rsquo;s the more disgraceful, sir,&rdquo; cries the Colonel,
+warming, &ldquo;because there&rsquo;s not one dirty penny for myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He cocked his hat at me, as if I had been to blame for this partiality; then
+changed again into his usual swaggering civility, shook me by the hand, and set
+off down to the boat, with the money under his arms, and whistling as he went
+the pathetic air of <i>Shule Aroon</i>. It was the first time I had heard that
+tune; I was to hear it again, words and all, as you shall learn, but I remember
+how that little stave of it ran in my head after the freetraders had bade him
+&ldquo;Wheesht, in the deil&rsquo;s name,&rdquo; and the grating of the oars
+had taken its place, and I stood and watched the dawn creeping on the sea, and
+the boat drawing away, and the lugger lying with her foresail backed awaiting
+it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> The gap made in our money was a sore embarrassment, and, among
+other consequences, it had this: that I must ride to Edinburgh, and there raise
+a new loan on very questionable terms to keep the old afloat; and was thus, for
+close upon three weeks, absent from the house of Durrisdeer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What passed in the interval I had none to tell me, but I found Mrs. Henry, upon
+my return, much changed in her demeanour. The old talks with my lord for the
+most part pretermitted; a certain deprecation visible towards her husband, to
+whom I thought she addressed herself more often; and, for one thing, she was
+now greatly wrapped up in Miss Katharine. You would think the change was
+agreeable to Mr. Henry; no such matter! To the contrary, every circumstance of
+alteration was a stab to him; he read in each the avowal of her truant fancies.
+That constancy to the Master of which she was proud while she supposed him
+dead, she had to blush for now she knew he was alive, and these blushes were
+the hated spring of her new conduct. I am to conceal no truth; and I will here
+say plainly, I think this was the period in which Mr. Henry showed the worst.
+He contained himself, indeed, in public; but there was a deep-seated irritation
+visible underneath. With me, from whom he had less concealment, he was often
+grossly unjust, and even for his wife he would sometimes have a sharp retort:
+perhaps when she had ruffled him with some unwonted kindness; perhaps upon no
+tangible occasion, the mere habitual tenor of the man&rsquo;s annoyance
+bursting spontaneously forth. When he would thus forget himself (a thing so
+strangely out of keeping with the terms of their relation), there went a shook
+through the whole company, and the pair would look upon each other in a kind of
+pained amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the time, too, while he was injuring himself by this defect of temper, he
+was hurting his position by a silence, of which I scarce know whether to say it
+was the child of generosity or pride. The freetraders came again and again,
+bringing messengers from the Master, and none departed empty-handed. I never
+durst reason with Mr. Henry; he gave what was asked of him in a kind of noble
+rage. Perhaps because he knew he was by nature inclining to the parsimonious,
+he took a backforemost pleasure in the recklessness with which he supplied his
+brother&rsquo;s exigence. Perhaps the falsity of the position would have
+spurred a humbler man into the same excess. But the estate (if I may say so)
+groaned under it; our daily expenses were shorn lower and lower; the stables
+were emptied, all but four roadsters; servants were discharged, which raised a
+dreadful murmuring in the country, and heated up the old disfavour upon Mr.
+Henry; and at last the yearly visit to Edinburgh must be discontinued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was in 1756. You are to suppose that for seven years this bloodsucker had
+been drawing the life&rsquo;s blood from Durrisdeer, and that all this time my
+patron had held his peace. It was an effect of devilish malice in the Master
+that he addressed Mr. Henry alone upon the matter of his demands, and there was
+never a word to my lord. The family had looked on, wondering at our economies.
+They had lamented, I have no doubt, that my patron had become so great a
+miser&mdash;a fault always despicable, but in the young abhorrent, and Mr.
+Henry was not yet thirty years of age. Still, he had managed the business of
+Durrisdeer almost from a boy; and they bore with these changes in a silence as
+proud and bitter as his own, until the coping-stone of the Edinburgh visit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this time I believe my patron and his wife were rarely together, save at
+meals. Immediately on the back of Colonel Burke&rsquo;s announcement Mrs. Henry
+made palpable advances; you might say she had laid a sort of timid court to her
+husband, different, indeed, from her former manner of unconcern and distance. I
+never had the heart to blame Mr. Henry because he recoiled from these advances;
+nor yet to censure the wife, when she was cut to the quick by their rejection.
+But the result was an entire estrangement, so that (as I say) they rarely
+spoke, except at meals. Even the matter of the Edinburgh visit was first
+broached at table, and it chanced that Mrs. Henry was that day ailing and
+querulous. She had no sooner understood her husband&rsquo;s meaning than the
+red flew in her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;At last,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;this is too much! Heaven knows what
+pleasure I have in my life, that I should be denied my only consolation. These
+shameful proclivities must be trod down; we are already a mark and an eyesore
+in the neighbourhood. I will not endure this fresh insanity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot afford it,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Afford?&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;For shame! But I have money of my
+own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is all mine, madam, by marriage,&rdquo; he snarled, and instantly
+left the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My old lord threw up his hands to Heaven, and he and his daughter, withdrawing
+to the chimney, gave me a broad hint to be gone. I found Mr. Henry in his usual
+retreat, the steward&rsquo;s room, perched on the end of the table, and
+plunging his penknife in it with a very ugly countenance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Henry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you do yourself too much injustice, and
+it is time this should cease.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cries he, &ldquo;nobody minds here. They think it only
+natural. I have shameful proclivities. I am a niggardly dog,&rdquo; and he
+drove his knife up to the hilt. &ldquo;But I will show that fellow,&rdquo; he
+cried with an oath, &ldquo;I will show him which is the more generous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is no generosity,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;this is only pride.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think I want morality?&rdquo; he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought he wanted help, and I should give it him, willy-nilly; and no sooner
+was Mrs. Henry gone to her room than I presented myself at her door and sought
+admittance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She openly showed her wonder. &ldquo;What do you want with me, Mr.
+Mackellar?&rdquo; said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Lord knows, madam,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I have never troubled you
+before with any freedoms; but this thing lies too hard upon my conscience, and
+it will out. Is it possible that two people can be so blind as you and my lord?
+and have lived all these years with a noble gentleman like Mr. Henry, and
+understand so little of his nature?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you not know where his money goes to? his&mdash;and yours&mdash;and
+the money for the very wine he does not drink at table?&rdquo; I went on.
+&ldquo;To Paris&mdash;to that man! Eight thousand pounds has he had of us in
+seven years, and my patron fool enough to keep it secret!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eight thousand pounds!&rdquo; she repeated. &ldquo;It in impossible; the
+estate is not sufficient.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God knows how we have sweated farthings to produce it,&rdquo; said I.
+&ldquo;But eight thousand and sixty is the sum, beside odd shillings. And if
+you can think my patron miserly after that, this shall be my last
+interference.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You need say no more, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;You have
+done most properly in what you too modestly call your interference. I am much
+to blame; you must think me indeed a very unobservant wife&rdquo; (looking upon
+me with a strange smile), &ldquo;but I shall put this right at once. The Master
+was always of a very thoughtless nature; but his heart is excellent; he is the
+soul of generosity. I shall write to him myself. You cannot think how you have
+pained me by this communication.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, madam, I had hoped to have pleased you,&rdquo; said I, for I
+raged to see her still thinking of the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And pleased,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;and pleased me of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That same day (I will not say but what I watched) I had the satisfaction to see
+Mr. Henry come from his wife&rsquo;s room in a state most unlike himself; for
+his face was all bloated with weeping, and yet he seemed to me to walk upon the
+air. By this, I was sure his wife had made him full amends for once.
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; thought I to myself, &ldquo;I have done a brave stroke this
+day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the morrow, as I was seated at my books, Mr. Henry came in softly behind me,
+took me by the shoulders, and shook me in a manner of playfulness. &ldquo;I
+find you are a faithless fellow after all,&rdquo; says he, which was his only
+reference to my part; but the tone he spoke in was more to me than any
+eloquence of protestation. Nor was this all I had effected; for when the next
+messenger came (as he did not long afterwards) from the Master, he got nothing
+away with him but a letter. For some while back it had been I myself who had
+conducted these affairs; Mr. Henry not setting pen to paper, and I only in the
+dryest and most formal terms. But this letter I did not even see; it would
+scarce be pleasant reading, for Mr. Henry felt he had his wife behind him for
+once, and I observed, on the day it was despatched, he had a very gratified
+expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Things went better now in the family, though it could scarce be pretended they
+went well. There was now at least no misconception; there was kindness upon all
+sides; and I believe my patron and his wife might again have drawn together if
+he could but have pocketed his pride, and she forgot (what was the ground of
+all) her brooding on another man. It is wonderful how a private thought leaks
+out; it is wonderful to me now how we should all have followed the current of
+her sentiments; and though she bore herself quietly, and had a very even
+disposition, yet we should have known whenever her fancy ran to Paris. And
+would not any one have thought that my disclosure must have rooted up that
+idol? I think there is the devil in women: all these years passed, never a
+sight of the man, little enough kindness to remember (by all accounts) even
+while she had him, the notion of his death intervening, his heartless rapacity
+laid bare to her; that all should not do, and she must still keep the best
+place in her heart for this accursed fellow, is a thing to make a plain man
+rage. I had never much natural sympathy for the passion of love; but this
+unreason in my patron&rsquo;s wife disgusted me outright with the whole matter.
+I remember checking a maid because she sang some bairnly kickshaw while my mind
+was thus engaged; and my asperity brought about my ears the enmity of all the
+petticoats about the house; of which I reeked very little, but it amused Mr.
+Henry, who rallied me much upon our joint unpopularity. It is strange enough
+(for my own mother was certainly one of the salt of the earth, and my Aunt
+Dickson, who paid my fees at the University, a very notable woman), but I have
+never had much toleration for the female sex, possibly not much understanding;
+and being far from a bold man, I have ever shunned their company. Not only do I
+see no cause to regret this diffidence in myself, but have invariably remarked
+the most unhappy consequences follow those who were less wise. So much I
+thought proper to set down, lest I show myself unjust to Mrs. Henry. And,
+besides, the remark arose naturally, on a re-perusal of the letter which was
+the next step in these affairs, and reached me, to my sincere astonishment, by
+a private hand, some week or so after the departure of the last messenger.
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="right">
+<i>Letter from Colonel</i> <span class="smcap">Burke</span> (<i>afterwards
+Chevalier</i>) <i>to</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Mackellar</span>.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Troyes in Champagne</span>,<br />
+<i>July</i> 12, 1756
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">My Dear Sir</span>,&mdash;You will doubtless be surprised
+to receive a communication from one so little known to you; but on the occasion
+I had the good fortune to rencounter you at Durrisdeer, I remarked you for a
+young man of a solid gravity of character: a qualification which I profess I
+admire and revere next to natural genius or the bold chivalrous spirit of the
+soldier. I was, besides, interested in the noble family which you have the
+honour to serve, or (to speak more by the book) to be the humble and respected
+friend of; and a conversation I had the pleasure to have with you very early in
+the morning has remained much upon my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Being the other day in Paris, on a visit from this famous city, where I am in
+garrison, I took occasion to inquire your name (which I profess I had forgot)
+at my friend, the Master of B.; and a fair opportunity occurring, I write to
+inform you of what&rsquo;s new.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master of B. (when we had last some talk of him together) was in receipt,
+as I think I then told you, of a highly advantageous pension on the Scots Fund.
+He next received a company, and was soon after advanced to a regiment of his
+own. My dear sir, I do not offer to explain this circumstance; any more than
+why I myself, who have rid at the right hand of Princes, should be fubbed off
+with a pair of colours and sent to rot in a hole at the bottom of the province.
+Accustomed as I am to Courts, I cannot but feel it is no atmosphere for a plain
+soldier; and I could never hope to advance by similar means, even could I stoop
+to the endeavour. But our friend has a particular aptitude to succeed by the
+means of ladies; and if all be true that I have heard, he enjoyed a remarkable
+protection. It is like this turned against him; for when I had the honour to
+shake him by the hand, he was but newly released from the Bastille, where he
+had been cast on a sealed letter; and, though now released, has both lost his
+regiment and his pension. My dear sir, the loyalty of a plain Irishman will
+ultimately succeed in the place of craft; as I am sure a gentleman of your
+probity will agree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, sir, the Master is a man whose genius I admire beyond expression, and,
+besides, he is my friend; but I thought a little word of this revolution in his
+fortunes would not come amiss, for, in my opinion, the man&rsquo;s desperate.
+He spoke, when I saw him, of a trip to India (whither I am myself in some hope
+of accompanying my illustrious countryman, Mr. Lally); but for this he would
+require (as I understood) more money than was readily at his command. You may
+have heard a military proverb: that it is a good thing to make a bridge of gold
+to a flying enemy? I trust you will take my meaning and I subscribe myself,
+with proper respects to my Lord Durrisdeer, to his son, and to the beauteous
+Mrs. Durie,
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+My dear Sir,<br />
+Your obedient humble servant,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Francis Burke</span>.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+This missive I carried at once to Mr. Henry; and I think there was but the one
+thought between the two of us: that it had come a week too late. I made haste
+to send an answer to Colonel Burke, in which I begged him, if he should see the
+Master, to assure him his next messenger would be attended to. But with all my
+haste I was not in time to avert what was impending; the arrow had been drawn,
+it must now fly. I could almost doubt the power of Providence (and certainly
+His will) to stay the issue of events; and it is a strange thought, how many of
+us had been storing up the elements of this catastrophe, for how long a time,
+and with how blind an ignorance of what we did.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> From the coming of the Colonel&rsquo;s letter, I had a spyglass
+in my room, began to drop questions to the tenant folk, and as there was no
+great secrecy observed, and the freetrade (in our part) went by force as much
+as stealth, I had soon got together a knowledge of the signals in use, and knew
+pretty well to an hour when any messenger might be expected. I say, I
+questioned the tenants; for with the traders themselves, desperate blades that
+went habitually armed, I could never bring myself to meddle willingly. Indeed,
+by what proved in the sequel an unhappy chance, I was an object of scorn to
+some of these braggadocios; who had not only gratified me with a nickname, but
+catching me one night upon a by-path, and being all (as they would have said)
+somewhat merry, had caused me to dance for their diversion. The method employed
+was that of cruelly chipping at my toes with naked cutlasses, shouting at the
+same time &ldquo;Square-Toes&rdquo;; and though they did me no bodily mischief,
+I was none the less deplorably affected, and was indeed for several days
+confined to my bed: a scandal on the state of Scotland on which no comment is
+required.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It happened on the afternoon of November 7th, in this same unfortunate year,
+that I espied, during my walk, the smoke of a beacon fire upon the Muckleross.
+It was drawing near time for my return; but the uneasiness upon my spirits was
+that day so great that I must burst through the thickets to the edge of what
+they call the Craig Head. The sun was already down, but there was still a broad
+light in the west, which showed me some of the smugglers treading out their
+signal fire upon the Ross, and in the bay the lugger lying with her sails
+brailed up. She was plainly but new come to anchor, and yet the skiff was
+already lowered and pulling for the landing-place at the end of the long
+shrubbery. And this I knew could signify but one thing, the coming of a
+messenger for Durrisdeer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I laid aside the remainder of my terrors, clambered down the brae&mdash;a place
+I had never ventured through before, and was hid among the shore-side thickets
+in time to see the boat touch. Captain Crail himself was steering, a thing not
+usual; by his side there sat a passenger; and the men gave way with difficulty,
+being hampered with near upon half a dozen portmanteaus, great and small. But
+the business of landing was briskly carried through; and presently the baggage
+was all tumbled on shore, the boat on its return voyage to the lugger, and the
+passenger standing alone upon the point of rock, a tall slender figure of a
+gentleman, habited in black, with a sword by his side and a walking-cane upon
+his wrist. As he so stood, he waved the cane to Captain Crail by way of
+salutation, with something both of grace and mockery that wrote the gesture
+deeply on my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner was the boat away with my sworn enemies than I took a sort of half
+courage, came forth to the margin of the thicket, and there halted again, my
+mind being greatly pulled about between natural diffidence and a dark
+foreboding of the truth. Indeed, I might have stood there swithering all night,
+had not the stranger turned, spied me through the mists, which were beginning
+to fall, and waved and cried on me to draw near. I did so with a heart like
+lead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here, my good man,&rdquo; said he, in the English accent, &ldquo;there
+are some things for Durrisdeer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was now near enough to see him, a very handsome figure and countenance,
+swarthy, lean, long, with a quick, alert, black look, as of one who was a
+fighter, and accustomed to command; upon one cheek he had a mole, not
+unbecoming; a large diamond sparkled on his hand; his clothes, although of the
+one hue, were of a French and foppish design; his ruffles, which he wore longer
+than common, of exquisite lace; and I wondered the more to see him in such a
+guise when he was but newly landed from a dirty smuggling lugger. At the same
+time he had a better look at me, toised me a second time sharply, and then
+smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wager, my friend,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;that I know both your name
+and your nickname. I divined these very clothes upon your hand of writing, Mr.
+Mackellar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At these words I fell to shaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you need not be afraid of me. I bear no
+malice for your tedious letters; and it is my purpose to employ you a good
+deal. You may call me Mr. Bally: it is the name I have assumed; or rather
+(since I am addressing so great a precision) it is so I have curtailed my own.
+Come now, pick up that and that&rdquo;&mdash;indicating two of the
+portmanteaus. &ldquo;That will be as much as you are fit to bear, and the rest
+can very well wait. Come, lose no more time, if you please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His tone was so cutting that I managed to do as he bid by a sort of instinct,
+my mind being all the time quite lost. No sooner had I picked up the
+portmanteaus than he turned his back and marched off through the long
+shrubbery, where it began already to be dusk, for the wood is thick and
+evergreen. I followed behind, loaded almost to the dust, though I profess I was
+not conscious of the burthen; being swallowed up in the monstrosity of this
+return, and my mind flying like a weaver&rsquo;s shuttle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a sudden I set the portmanteaus to the ground and halted. He turned and
+looked back at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are the Master of Ballantrae?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will do me the justice to observe,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I have
+made no secret with the astute Mackellar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in the name of God,&rdquo; cries I, &ldquo;what brings you here? Go
+back, while it is yet time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thank you,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Your master has chosen this way, and
+not I; but since he has made the choice, he (and you also) must abide by the
+result. And now pick up these things of mine, which you have set down in a very
+boggy place, and attend to that which I have made your business.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had no thought now of obedience; I came straight up to him. &ldquo;If
+nothing will move you to go back,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;though, sure, under all
+the circumstances, any Christian or even any gentleman would scruple to go
+forward . . . &rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;These are gratifying expressions,&rdquo; he threw in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If nothing will move you to go back,&rdquo; I continued, &ldquo;there
+are still some decencies to be observed. Wait here with your baggage, and I
+will go forward and prepare your family. Your father is an old man; and . . .
+&rdquo; I stumbled . . . &ldquo;there are decencies to be observed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Truly,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;this Mackellar improves upon acquaintance.
+But look you here, my man, and understand it once for all&mdash;you waste your
+breath upon me, and I go my own way with inevitable motion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;Is that so? We shall see then!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I turned and took to my heels for Durrisdeer. He clutched at me and cried
+out angrily, and then I believe I heard him laugh, and then I am certain he
+pursued me for a step or two, and (I suppose) desisted. One thing at least is
+sure, that I came but a few minutes later to the door of the great house,
+nearly strangled for the lack of breath, but quite alone. Straight up the stair
+I ran, and burst into the hall, and stopped before the family without the power
+of speech; but I must have carried my story in my looks, for they rose out of
+their places and stared on me like changelings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has come,&rdquo; I panted out at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He?&rdquo; said Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Himself,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My son?&rdquo; cried my lord. &ldquo;Imprudent, imprudent boy! Oh, could
+he not stay where he was safe!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never a word says Mrs. Henry; nor did I look at her, I scarce knew why.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry, with a very deep breath, &ldquo;and where
+is he?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I left him in the long shrubbery,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take me to him,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we went out together, he and I, without another word from any one; and in
+the midst of the gravelled plot encountered the Master strolling up, whistling
+as he came, and beating the air with his cane. There was still light enough
+overhead to recognise, though not to read, a countenance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Jacob,&rdquo; says the Master. &ldquo;So here is Esau back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;James,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, &ldquo;for God&rsquo;s sake, call me by my
+name. I will not pretend that I am glad to see you; but I would fain make you
+as welcome as I can in the house of our fathers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or in <i>my</i> house? or <i>yours</i>?&rdquo; says the Master.
+&ldquo;Which were you about to say? But this is an old sore, and we need not
+rub it. If you would not share with me in Paris, I hope you will yet scarce
+deny your elder brother a corner of the fire at Durrisdeer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is very idle speech,&rdquo; replied Mr. Henry. &ldquo;And you
+understand the power of your position excellently well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, I believe I do,&rdquo; said the other with a little laugh. And
+this, though they had never touched hands, was (as we may say) the end of the
+brothers&rsquo; meeting; for at this the Master turned to me and bade me fetch
+his baggage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, on my side, turned to Mr. Henry for a confirmation; perhaps with some
+defiance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As long as the Master is here, Mr. Mackellar, you will very much oblige
+me by regarding his wishes as you would my own,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry.
+&ldquo;We are constantly troubling you: will you be so good as send one of the
+servants?&rdquo;&mdash;with an accent on the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If this speech were anything at all, it was surely a well-deserved reproof upon
+the stranger; and yet, so devilish was his impudence, he twisted it the other
+way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And shall we be common enough to say &lsquo;Sneck up&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+inquires he softly, looking upon me sideways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had a kingdom depended on the act, I could not have trusted myself in words;
+even to call a servant was beyond me; I had rather serve the man myself than
+speak; and I turned away in silence and went into the long shrubbery, with a
+heart full of anger and despair. It was dark under the trees, and I walked
+before me and forgot what business I was come upon, till I near broke my shin
+on the portmanteaus. Then it was that I remarked a strange particular; for
+whereas I had before carried both and scarce observed it, it was now as much as
+I could do to manage one. And this, as it forced me to make two journeys, kept
+me the longer from the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I got there, the business of welcome was over long ago; the company was
+already at supper; and by an oversight that cut me to the quick, my place had
+been forgotten. I had seen one side of the Master&rsquo;s return; now I was to
+see the other. It was he who first remarked my coming in and standing back (as
+I did) in some annoyance. He jumped from his seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if I have not got the good Mackellar&rsquo;s place!&rdquo; cries he.
+&ldquo;John, lay another for Mr. Bally; I protest he will disturb no one, and
+your table is big enough for all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could scarce credit my ears, nor yet my senses, when he took me by the
+shoulders and thrust me, laughing, into my own place&mdash;such an affectionate
+playfulness was in his voice. And while John laid the fresh place for him (a
+thing on which he still insisted), he went and leaned on his father&rsquo;s
+chair and looked down upon him, and the old man turned about and looked upwards
+on his son, with such a pleasant mutual tenderness that I could have carried my
+hand to my head in mere amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet all was of a piece. Never a harsh word fell from him, never a sneer showed
+upon his lip. He had laid aside even his cutting English accent, and spoke with
+the kindly Scots&rsquo; tongue, that set a value on affectionate words; and
+though his manners had a graceful elegance mighty foreign to our ways in
+Durrisdeer, it was still a homely courtliness, that did not shame but flattered
+us. All that, he did throughout the meal, indeed, drinking wine with me with a
+notable respect, turning about for a pleasant word with John, fondling his
+father&rsquo;s hand, breaking into little merry tales of his adventures,
+calling up the past with happy reference&mdash;all he did was so becoming, and
+himself so handsome, that I could scarce wonder if my lord and Mrs. Henry sat
+about the board with radiant faces, or if John waited behind with dropping
+tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as supper was over, Mrs. Henry rose to withdraw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This was never your way, Alison,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is my way now,&rdquo; she replied: which was notoriously false,
+&ldquo;and I will give you a good-night, James, and a welcome&mdash;from the
+dead,&rdquo; said she, and her voice dropped and trembled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor Mr. Henry, who had made rather a heavy figure through the meal, was more
+concerned than ever; pleased to see his wife withdraw, and yet half displeased,
+as he thought upon the cause of it; and the next moment altogether dashed by
+the fervour of her speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On my part, I thought I was now one too many; and was stealing after Mrs.
+Henry, when the Master saw me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I take this near on an
+unfriendliness. I cannot have you go: this is to make a stranger of the
+prodigal son; and let me remind you where&mdash;in his own father&rsquo;s
+house! Come, sit ye down, and drink another glass with Mr. Bally.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; says my lord, &ldquo;we must not make a
+stranger either of him or you. I have been telling my son,&rdquo; he added, his
+voice brightening as usual on the word, &ldquo;how much we valued all your
+friendly service.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I sat there, silent, till my usual hour; and might have been almost deceived
+in the man&rsquo;s nature but for one passage, in which his perfidy appeared
+too plain. Here was the passage; of which, after what he knows of the
+brothers&rsquo; meeting, the reader shall consider for himself. Mr. Henry
+sitting somewhat dully, in spite of his best endeavours to carry things before
+my lord, up jumps the Master, passes about the board, and claps his brother on
+the shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come, <i>Hairry lad</i>,&rdquo; says he, with a broad accent such
+as they must have used together when they were boys, &ldquo;you must not be
+downcast because your brother has come home. All&rsquo;s yours, that&rsquo;s
+sure enough, and little I grudge it you. Neither must you grudge me my place
+beside my father&rsquo;s fire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that is too true, Henry,&rdquo; says my old lord with a little
+frown, a thing rare with him. &ldquo;You have been the elder brother of the
+parable in the good sense; you must be careful of the other.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am easily put in the wrong,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who puts you in the wrong?&rdquo; cried my lord, I thought very tartly
+for so mild a man. &ldquo;You have earned my gratitude and your brother&rsquo;s
+many thousand times: you may count on its endurance; and let that
+suffice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Harry, that you may,&rdquo; said the Master; and I thought Mr. Henry
+looked at him with a kind of wildness in his eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On all the miserable business that now followed, I have four questions that I
+asked myself often at the time and ask myself still:&mdash;Was the man moved by
+a particular sentiment against Mr. Henry? or by what he thought to be his
+interest? or by a mere delight in cruelty such as cats display and theologians
+tell us of the devil? or by what he would have called love? My common opinion
+halts among the three first; but perhaps there lay at the spring of his
+behaviour an element of all. As thus:&mdash;Animosity to Mr. Henry would
+explain his hateful usage of him when they were alone; the interests he came to
+serve would explain his very different attitude before my lord; that and some
+spice of a design of gallantry, his care to stand well with Mrs. Henry; and the
+pleasure of malice for itself, the pains he was continually at to mingle and
+oppose these lines of conduct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Partly because I was a very open friend to my patron, partly because in my
+letters to Paris I had often given myself some freedom of remonstrance, I was
+included in his diabolical amusement. When I was alone with him, he pursued me
+with sneers; before the family he used me with the extreme of friendly
+condescension. This was not only painful in itself; not only did it put me
+continually in the wrong; but there was in it an element of insult
+indescribable. That he should thus leave me out in his dissimulation, as though
+even my testimony were too despicable to be considered, galled me to the blood.
+But what it was to me is not worth notice. I make but memorandum of it here;
+and chiefly for this reason, that it had one good result, and gave me the
+quicker sense of Mr. Henry&rsquo;s martyrdom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was on him the burthen fell. How was he to respond to the public advances of
+one who never lost a chance of gibing him in private? How was he to smile back
+on the deceiver and the insulter? He was condemned to seem ungracious. He was
+condemned to silence. Had he been less proud, had he spoken, who would have
+credited the truth? The acted calumny had done its work; my lord and Mrs. Henry
+were the daily witnesses of what went on; they could have sworn in court that
+the Master was a model of long-suffering good-nature, and Mr. Henry a pattern
+of jealousy and thanklessness. And ugly enough as these must have appeared in
+any one, they seemed tenfold uglier in Mr. Henry; for who could forget that the
+Master lay in peril of his life, and that he had already lost his mistress, his
+title, and his fortune?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Henry, will you ride with me?&rdquo; asks the Master one day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Mr. Henry, who had been goaded by the man all morning, raps out: &ldquo;I
+will not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I sometimes wish you would be kinder, Henry,&rdquo; says the other,
+wistfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I give this for a specimen; but such scenes befell continually. Small wonder if
+Mr. Henry was blamed; small wonder if I fretted myself into something near upon
+a bilious fever; nay, and at the mere recollection feel a bitterness in my
+blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sure, never in this world was a more diabolical contrivance: so perfidious, so
+simple, so impossible to combat. And yet I think again, and I think always,
+Mrs. Henry might have read between the lines; she might have had more knowledge
+of her husband&rsquo;s nature; after all these years of marriage she might have
+commanded or captured his confidence. And my old lord, too&mdash;that very
+watchful gentleman&mdash;where was all his observation? But, for one thing, the
+deceit was practised by a master hand, and might have gulled an angel. For
+another (in the case of Mrs. Henry), I have observed there are no persons so
+far away as those who are both married and estranged, so that they seem out of
+ear-shot or to have no common tongue. For a third (in the case of both of these
+spectators), they were blinded by old ingrained predilection. And for a fourth,
+the risk the Master was supposed to stand in (supposed, I say&mdash;you will
+soon hear why) made it seem the more ungenerous to criticise; and, keeping them
+in a perpetual tender solicitude about his life, blinded them the more
+effectually to his faults.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was during this time that I perceived most clearly the effect of manner, and
+was led to lament most deeply the plainness of my own. Mr. Henry had the
+essence of a gentleman; when he was moved, when there was any call of
+circumstance, he could play his part with dignity and spirit; but in the
+day&rsquo;s commerce (it is idle to deny it) he fell short of the ornamental.
+The Master (on the other hand) had never a movement but it commanded him. So it
+befell that when the one appeared gracious and the other ungracious, every
+trick of their bodies seemed to call out confirmation. Not that alone: but the
+more deeply Mr. Henry floundered in his brother&rsquo;s toils, the more
+clownish he grew; and the more the Master enjoyed his spiteful entertainment,
+the more engagingly, the more smilingly, he went! So that the plot, by its own
+scope and progress, furthered and confirmed itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was one of the man&rsquo;s arts to use the peril in which (as I say) he was
+supposed to stand. He spoke of it to those who loved him with a gentle
+pleasantry, which made it the more touching. To Mr. Henry he used it as a cruel
+weapon of offence. I remember his laying his finger on the clean lozenge of the
+painted window one day when we three were alone together in the hall.
+&ldquo;Here went your lucky guinea, Jacob,&rdquo; said he. And when Mr. Henry
+only looked upon him darkly, &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;you need not
+look such impotent malice, my good fly. You can be rid of your spider when you
+please. How long, O Lord? When are you to be wrought to the point of a
+denunciation, scrupulous brother? It is one of my interests in this dreary
+hole. I ever loved experiment.&rdquo; Still Mr. Henry only stared upon him with
+a grooming brow, and a changed colour; and at last the Master broke out in a
+laugh and clapped him on the shoulder, calling him a sulky dog. At this my
+patron leaped back with a gesture I thought very dangerous; and I must suppose
+the Master thought so too, for he looked the least in the world discountenance,
+and I do not remember him again to have laid hands on Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though he had his peril always on his lips in the one way or the other, I
+thought his conduct strangely incautious, and began to fancy the
+Government&mdash;who had set a price upon his head&mdash;was gone sound asleep.
+I will not deny I was tempted with the wish to denounce him; but two thoughts
+withheld me: one, that if he were thus to end his life upon an honourable
+scaffold, the man would be canonised for good in the minds of his father and my
+patron&rsquo;s wife; the other, that if I was anyway mingled in the matter, Mr.
+Henry himself would scarce escape some glancings of suspicion. And in the
+meanwhile our enemy went in and out more than I could have thought possible,
+the fact that he was home again was buzzed about all the country-side, and yet
+he was never stirred. Of all these so-many and so-different persons who were
+acquainted with his presence, none had the least greed&mdash;as I used to say
+in my annoyance&mdash;or the least loyalty; and the man rode here and
+there&mdash;fully more welcome, considering the lees of old unpopularity, than
+Mr. Henry&mdash;and considering the freetraders, far safer than myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not but what he had a trouble of his own; and this, as it brought about the
+gravest consequences, I must now relate. The reader will scarce have forgotten
+Jessie Broun; her way of life was much among the smuggling party; Captain Crail
+himself was of her intimates; and she had early word of Mr. Bally&rsquo;s
+presence at the house. In my opinion, she had long ceased to care two straws
+for the Master&rsquo;s person; but it was become her habit to connect herself
+continually with the Master&rsquo;s name; that was the ground of all her
+play-acting; and so now, when he was back, she thought she owed it to herself
+to grow a haunter of the neighbourhood of Durrisdeer. The Master could scarce
+go abroad but she was there in wait for him; a scandalous figure of a woman,
+not often sober; hailing him wildly as &ldquo;her bonny laddie,&rdquo; quoting
+pedlar&rsquo;s poetry, and, as I receive the story, even seeking to weep upon
+his neck. I own I rubbed my hands over this persecution; but the Master, who
+laid so much upon others, was himself the least patient of men. There were
+strange scenes enacted in the policies. Some say he took his cane to her, and
+Jessie fell back upon her former weapons&mdash;stones. It is certain at least
+that he made a motion to Captain Crail to have the woman trepanned, and that
+the Captain refused the proposition with uncommon vehemence. And the end of the
+matter was victory for Jessie. Money was got together; an interview took place,
+in which my proud gentleman must consent to be kissed and wept upon; and the
+woman was set up in a public of her own, somewhere on Solway side (but I forget
+where), and, by the only news I ever had of it, extremely ill-frequented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is to look forward. After Jessie had been but a little while upon his
+heels, the Master comes to me one day in the steward&rsquo;s office, and with
+more civility than usual, &ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;there is a
+damned crazy wench comes about here. I cannot well move in the matter myself,
+which brings me to you. Be so good as to see to it: the men must have a strict
+injunction to drive the wench away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said I, trembling a little, &ldquo;you can do your own dirty
+errands for yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He said not a word to that, and left the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently came Mr. Henry. &ldquo;Here is news!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;It seems
+all is not enough, and you must add to my wretchedness. It seems you have
+insulted Mr. Bally.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Under your kind favour, Mr. Henry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;it was he that
+insulted me, and, as I think, grossly. But I may have been careless of your
+position when I spoke; and if you think so when you know all, my dear patron,
+you have but to say the word. For you I would obey in any point whatever, even
+to sin, God pardon me!&rdquo; And thereupon I told him what had passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry smiled to himself; a grimmer smile I never witnessed. &ldquo;You did
+exactly well,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;He shall drink his Jessie Broun to the
+dregs.&rdquo; And then, spying the Master outside, he opened the window, and
+crying to him by the name of Mr. Bally, asked him to step up and have a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;James,&rdquo; said he, when our persecutor had come in and closed the
+door behind him, looking at me with a smile, as if he thought I was to be
+humbled, &ldquo;you brought me a complaint against Mr. Mackellar, into which I
+have inquired. I need not tell you I would always take his word against yours;
+for we are alone, and I am going to use something of your own freedom. Mr.
+Mackellar is a gentleman I value; and you must contrive, so long as you are
+under this roof, to bring yourself into no more collisions with one whom I will
+support at any possible cost to me or mine. As for the errand upon which you
+came to him, you must deliver yourself from the consequences of your own
+cruelty, and, none of my servants shall be at all employed in such a
+case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father&rsquo;s servants, I believe,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go to him with this tale,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master grew very white. He pointed at me with his finger. &ldquo;I want
+that man discharged,&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He shall not be,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall pay pretty dear for this,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have paid so dear already for a wicked brother,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry,
+&ldquo;that I am bankrupt even of fears. You have no place left where you can
+strike me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will show you about that,&rdquo; says the Master, and went softly
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What will he do next, Mackellar?&rdquo; cries Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me go away,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;My dear patron, let me go away; I
+am but the beginning of fresh sorrows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you leave me quite alone?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> We were not long in suspense as to the nature of the new
+assault. Up to that hour the Master had played a very close game with Mrs.
+Henry; avoiding pointedly to be alone with her, which I took at the time for an
+effect of decency, but now think to be a most insidious art; meeting her, you
+may say, at meal-time only; and behaving, when he did so, like an affectionate
+brother. Up to that hour, you may say he had scarce directly interfered between
+Mr. Henry and his wife; except in so far as he had manoeuvred the one quite
+forth from the good graces of the other. Now all that was to be changed; but
+whether really in revenge, or because he was wearying of Durrisdeer and looked
+about for some diversion, who but the devil shall decide?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From that hour, at least, began the siege of Mrs. Henry; a thing so deftly
+carried on that I scarce know if she was aware of it herself, and that her
+husband must look on in silence. The first parallel was opened (as was made to
+appear) by accident. The talk fell, as it did often, on the exiles in France;
+so it glided to the matter of their songs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is one,&rdquo; says the Master, &ldquo;if you are curious in these
+matters, that has always seemed to me very moving. The poetry is harsh; and
+yet, perhaps because of my situation, it has always found the way to my heart.
+It is supposed to be sung, I should tell you, by an exile&rsquo;s sweetheart;
+and represents perhaps, not so much the truth of what she is thinking, as the
+truth of what he hopes of her, poor soul! in these far lands.&rdquo; And here
+the Master sighed, &ldquo;I protest it is a pathetic sight when a score of
+rough Irish, all common sentinels, get to this song; and you may see, by their
+falling tears, how it strikes home to them. It goes thus, father,&rdquo; says
+he, very adroitly taking my lord for his listener, &ldquo;and if I cannot get
+to the end of it, you must think it is a common case with us exiles.&rdquo; And
+thereupon he struck up the same air as I had heard the Colonel whistle; but now
+to words, rustic indeed, yet most pathetically setting forth a poor
+girl&rsquo;s aspirations for an exiled lover; of which one verse indeed (or
+something like it) still sticks by me:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+O, I will dye my petticoat red,<br />
+With my dear boy I&rsquo;ll beg my bread,<br />
+Though all my friends should wish me dead,<br />
+        For Willie among the rushes, O!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sang it well, even as a song; but he did better yet a performer. I have
+heard famous actors, when there was not a dry eye in the Edinburgh theatre; a
+great wonder to behold; but no more wonderful than how the Master played upon
+that little ballad, and on those who heard him, like an instrument, and seemed
+now upon the point of failing, and now to conquer his distress, so that words
+and music seemed to pour out of his own heart and his own past, and to be aimed
+directly at Mrs. Henry. And his art went further yet; for all was so delicately
+touched, it seemed impossible to suspect him of the least design; and so far
+from making a parade of emotion, you would have sworn he was striving to be
+calm. When it came to an end, we all sat silent for a time; he had chosen the
+dusk of the afternoon, so that none could see his neighbour&rsquo;s face; but
+it seemed as if we held our breathing; only my old lord cleared his throat. The
+first to move was the singer, who got to his feet suddenly and softly, and went
+and walked softly to and fro in the low end of the hall, Mr. Henry&rsquo;s
+customary place. We were to suppose that he there struggled down the last of
+his emotion; for he presently returned and launched into a disquisition on the
+nature of the Irish (always so much miscalled, and whom he defended) in his
+natural voice; so that, before the lights were brought, we were in the usual
+course of talk. But even then, methought Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s face was a shade
+pale; and, for another thing, she withdrew almost at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next sign was a friendship this insidious devil struck up with innocent
+Miss Katharine; so that they were always together, hand in hand, or she
+climbing on his knee, like a pair of children. Like all his diabolical acts,
+this cut in several ways. It was the last stroke to Mr. Henry, to see his own
+babe debauched against him; it made him harsh with the poor innocent, which
+brought him still a peg lower in his wife&rsquo;s esteem; and (to conclude) it
+was a bond of union between the lady and the Master. Under this influence,
+their old reserve melted by daily stages. Presently there came walks in the
+long shrubbery, talks in the Belvedere, and I know not what tender familiarity.
+I am sure Mrs. Henry was like many a good woman; she had a whole conscience but
+perhaps by the means of a little winking. For even to so dull an observer as
+myself, it was plain her kindness was of a more moving nature than the
+sisterly. The tones of her voice appeared more numerous; she had a light and
+softness in her eye; she was more gentle with all of us, even with Mr. Henry,
+even with myself; methought she breathed of some quiet melancholy happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To look on at this, what a torment it was for Mr. Henry! And yet it brought our
+ultimate deliverance, as I am soon to tell.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> The purport of the Master&rsquo;s stay was no more noble (gild
+it as they might) than to wring money out. He had some design of a fortune in
+the French Indies, as the Chevalier wrote me; and it was the sum required for
+this that he came seeking. For the rest of the family it spelled ruin; but my
+lord, in his incredible partiality, pushed ever for the granting. The family
+was now so narrowed down (indeed, there were no more of them than just the
+father and the two sons) that it was possible to break the entail and alienate
+a piece of land. And to this, at first by hints, and then by open pressure, Mr.
+Henry was brought to consent. He never would have done so, I am very well
+assured, but for the weight of the distress under which he laboured. But for
+his passionate eagerness to see his brother gone, he would not thus have broken
+with his own sentiment and the traditions of his house. And even so, he sold
+them his consent at a dear rate, speaking for once openly, and holding the
+business up in its own shameful colours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will observe,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;this is an injustice to my son,
+if ever I have one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that you are not likely to have,&rdquo; said my lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God knows!&rdquo; says Mr. Henry. &ldquo;And considering the cruel
+falseness of the position in which I stand to my brother, and that you, my
+lord, are my father, and have the right to command me, I set my hand to this
+paper. But one thing I will say first: I have been ungenerously pushed, and
+when next, my lord, you are tempted to compare your sons, I call on you to
+remember what I have done and what he has done. Acts are the fair test.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord was the most uneasy man I ever saw; even in his old face the blood came
+up. &ldquo;I think this is not a very wisely chosen moment, Henry, for
+complaints,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;This takes away from the merit of your
+generosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not deceive yourself, my lord,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;This
+injustice is not done from generosity to him, but in obedience to
+yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before strangers . . . &rdquo; begins my lord, still more unhappily
+affected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no one but Mackellar here,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry; &ldquo;he is
+my friend. And, my lord, as you make him no stranger to your frequent blame, it
+were hard if I must keep him one to a thing so rare as my defence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost I believe my lord would have rescinded his decision; but the Master was
+on the watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Henry, Henry,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you are the best of us still.
+Rugged and true! Ah! man, I wish I was as good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at that instance of his favourite&rsquo;s generosity my lord desisted from
+his hesitation, and the deed was signed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as it could he brought about, the land of Ochterhall was sold for much
+below its value, and the money paid over to our leech and sent by some private
+carriage into France. Or so he said; though I have suspected since it did not
+go so far. And now here was all the man&rsquo;s business brought to a
+successful head, and his pockets once more bulging with our gold; and yet the
+point for which we had consented to this sacrifice was still denied us, and the
+visitor still lingered on at Durrisdeer. Whether in malice, or because the time
+was not yet come for his adventure to the Indies, or because he had hopes of
+his design on Mrs. Henry, or from the orders of the Government, who shall say?
+but linger he did, and that for weeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You will observe I say: from the orders of Government; for about this time the
+man&rsquo;s disreputable secret trickled out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first hint I had was from a tenant, who commented on the Master&rsquo;s
+stay, and yet more on his security; for this tenant was a Jacobitish
+sympathiser, and had lost a son at Culloden, which gave him the more critical
+eye. &ldquo;There is one thing,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that I cannot but think
+strange; and that is how he got to Cockermouth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Cockermouth?&rdquo; said I, with a sudden memory of my first wonder
+on beholding the man disembark so point-de-vice after so long a voyage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, yes,&rdquo; says the tenant, &ldquo;it was there he was picked up
+by Captain Crail. You thought he had come from France by sea? And so we all
+did.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turned this news a little in my head, and then carried it to Mr. Henry.
+&ldquo;Here is an odd circumstance,&rdquo; said I, and told him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What matters how he came, Mackellar, so long as he is here?&rdquo;
+groans Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but think again! Does not this smack a
+little of some Government connivance? You know how much we have wondered
+already at the man&rsquo;s security.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;Let me think of this.&rdquo; And as
+he thought, there came that grim smile upon his face that was a little like the
+Master&rsquo;s. &ldquo;Give me paper,&rdquo; said he. And he sat without
+another word and wrote to a gentleman of his acquaintance&mdash;I will name no
+unnecessary names, but he was one in a high place. This letter I despatched by
+the only hand I could depend upon in such a case&mdash;Macconochie&rsquo;s; and
+the old man rode hard, for he was back with the reply before even my eagerness
+had ventured to expect him. Again, as he read it, Mr. Henry had the same grim
+smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the best you have done for me yet, Mackellar,&rdquo; says he.
+&ldquo;With this in my hand I will give him a shog. Watch for us at
+dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At dinner accordingly Mr. Henry proposed some very public appearance for the
+Master; and my lord, as he had hoped, objected to the danger of the course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, very easily, &ldquo;you need no longer keep
+this up with me. I am as much in the secret as yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the secret?&rdquo; says my lord. &ldquo;What do you mean, Henry? I
+give you my word, I am in no secret from which you are excluded.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master had changed countenance, and I saw he was struck in a joint of his
+harness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How?&rdquo; says Mr. Henry, turning to him with a huge appearance of
+surprise. &ldquo;I see you serve your masters very faithfully; but I had
+thought you would have been humane enough to set your father&rsquo;s mind at
+rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you talking of? I refuse to have my business publicly
+discussed. I order this to cease,&rdquo; cries the Master very foolishly and
+passionately, and indeed more like a child than a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So much discretion was not looked for at your hands, I can assure
+you,&rdquo; continued Mr. Henry. &ldquo;For see what my correspondent
+writes&rdquo;&mdash;unfolding the paper&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;It is, of course,
+in the interests both of the Government and the gentleman whom we may perhaps
+best continue to call Mr. Bally, to keep this understanding secret; but it was
+never meant his own family should continue to endure the suspense you paint so
+feelingly; and I am pleased mine should be the hand to set these fears at rest.
+Mr. Bally is as safe in Great Britain as yourself.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is this possible?&rdquo; cries my lord, looking at his son, with a great
+deal of wonder and still more of suspicion in his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear father,&rdquo; says the Master, already much recovered. &ldquo;I
+am overjoyed that this may be disclosed. My own instructions, direct from
+London, bore a very contrary sense, and I was charged to keep the indulgence
+secret from every one, yourself not excepted, and indeed yourself expressly
+named&mdash;as I can show in black and white unless I have destroyed the
+letter. They must have changed their mind very swiftly, for the whole matter is
+still quite fresh; or rather, Henry&rsquo;s correspondent must have
+misconceived that part, as he seems to have misconceived the rest. To tell you
+the truth, sir,&rdquo; he continued, getting visibly more easy, &ldquo;I had
+supposed this unexplained favour to a rebel was the effect of some application
+from yourself; and the injunction to secrecy among my family the result of a
+desire on your part to conceal your kindness. Hence I was the more careful to
+obey orders. It remains now to guess by what other channel indulgence can have
+flowed on so notorious an offender as myself; for I do not think your son need
+defend himself from what seems hinted at in Henry&rsquo;s letter. I have never
+yet heard of a Durrisdeer who was a turncoat or a spy,&rdquo; says he, proudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so it seemed he had swum out of this danger unharmed; but this was to
+reckon without a blunder he had made, and without the pertinacity of Mr. Henry,
+who was now to show he had something of his brother&rsquo;s spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You say the matter is still fresh,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is recent,&rdquo; says the Master, with a fair show of stoutness and
+yet not without a quaver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it so recent as that?&rdquo; asks Mr. Henry, like a man a little
+puzzled, and spreading his letter forth again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In all the letter there was no word as to the date; but how was the Master to
+know that?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seemed to come late enough for me,&rdquo; says he, with a laugh. And
+at the sound of that laugh, which rang false, like a cracked bell, my lord
+looked at him again across the table, and I saw his old lips draw together
+close.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry, still glancing on his letter, &ldquo;but I
+remember your expression. You said it was very fresh.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here we had a proof of our victory, and the strongest instance yet of my
+lord&rsquo;s incredible indulgence; for what must he do but interfere to save
+his favourite from exposure!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think, Henry,&rdquo; says he, with a kind of pitiful eagerness,
+&ldquo;I think we need dispute no more. We are all rejoiced at last to find
+your brother safe; we are all at one on that; and, as grateful subjects, we can
+do no less than drink to the king&rsquo;s health and bounty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus was the Master extricated; but at least he had been put to his defence, he
+had come lamely out, and the attraction of his personal danger was now publicly
+plucked away from him. My lord, in his heart of hearts, now knew his favourite
+to be a Government spy; and Mrs. Henry (however she explained the tale) was
+notably cold in her behaviour to the discredited hero of romance. Thus in the
+best fabric of duplicity, there is some weak point, if you can strike it, which
+will loosen all; and if, by this fortunate stroke, we had not shaken the idol,
+who can say how it might have gone with us at the catastrophe?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet at the time we seemed to have accomplished nothing. Before a day or two
+he had wiped off the ill-results of his discomfiture, and, to all appearance,
+stood as high as ever. As for my Lord Durrisdeer, he was sunk in parental
+partiality; it was not so much love, which should be an active quality, as an
+apathy and torpor of his other powers; and forgiveness (so to mis-apply a noble
+word) flowed from him in sheer weakness, like the tears of senility. Mrs.
+Henry&rsquo;s was a different case; and Heaven alone knows what he found to say
+to her, or how he persuaded her from her contempt. It is one of the worst
+things of sentiment, that the voice grows to be more important than the words,
+and the speaker than that which is spoken. But some excuse the Master must have
+found, or perhaps he had even struck upon some art to wrest this exposure to
+his own advantage; for after a time of coldness, it seemed as if things went
+worse than ever between him and Mrs. Henry. They were then constantly together.
+I would not be thought to cut one shadow of blame, beyond what is due to a
+half-wilful blindness, on that unfortunate lady; but I do think, in these last
+days, she was playing very near the fire; and whether I be wrong or not in
+that, one thing is sure and quite sufficient: Mr. Henry thought so. The poor
+gentleman sat for days in my room, so great a picture of distress that I could
+never venture to address him; yet it is to be thought he found some comfort
+even in my presence and the knowledge of my sympathy. There were times, too,
+when we talked, and a strange manner of talk it was; there was never a person
+named, nor an individual circumstance referred to; yet we had the same matter
+in our minds, and we were each aware of it. It is a strange art that can thus
+be practised; to talk for hours of a thing, and never name nor yet so much as
+hint at it. And I remember I wondered if it was by some such natural skill that
+the Master made love to Mrs. Henry all day long (as he manifestly did), yet
+never startled her into reserve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To show how far affairs had gone with Mr. Henry, I will give some words of his,
+uttered (as I have cause not to forget) upon the 26th of February, 1757. It was
+unseasonable weather, a cast back into Winter: windless, bitter cold, the world
+all white with rime, the sky low and gray: the sea black and silent like a
+quarry-hole. Mr. Henry sat close by the fire, and debated (as was now common
+with him) whether &ldquo;a man&rdquo; should &ldquo;do things,&rdquo; whether
+&ldquo;interference was wise,&rdquo; and the like general propositions, which
+each of us particularly applied. I was by the window, looking out, when there
+passed below me the Master, Mrs. Henry, and Miss Katharine, that now constant
+trio. The child was running to and fro, delighted with the frost; the Master
+spoke close in the lady&rsquo;s ear with what seemed (even from so far) a
+devilish grace of insinuation; and she on her part looked on the ground like a
+person lost in listening. I broke out of my reserve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I were you, Mr. Henry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I would deal openly with
+my lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar, Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you do not see the weakness
+of my ground. I can carry no such base thoughts to any one&mdash;to my father
+least of all; that would be to fall into the bottom of his scorn. The weakness
+of my ground,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;lies in myself, that I am not one who
+engages love. I have their gratitude, they all tell me that; I have a rich
+estate of it! But I am not present in their minds; they are moved neither to
+think with me nor to think for me. There is my loss!&rdquo; He got to his feet,
+and trod down the fire. &ldquo;But some method must be found, Mackellar,&rdquo;
+said he, looking at me suddenly over his shoulder; &ldquo;some way must be
+found. I am a man of a great deal of patience&mdash;far too much&mdash;far too
+much. I begin to despise myself. And yet, sure, never was a man involved in
+such a toil!&rdquo; He fell back to his brooding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cheer up,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;It will burst of itself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am far past anger now,&rdquo; says he, which had so little coherency
+with my own observation that I let both fall.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V.<br />
+ACCOUNT OF ALL THAT PASSED ON THE NIGHT ON FEBRUARY 27TH, 1757.</h2>
+
+<p>
+On the evening of the interview referred to, the Master went abroad; he was
+abroad a great deal of the next day also, that fatal 27th; but where he went,
+or what he did, we never concerned ourselves to ask until next day. If we had
+done so, and by any chance found out, it might have changed all. But as all we
+did was done in ignorance, and should be so judged, I shall so narrate these
+passages as they appeared to us in the moment of their birth, and reserve all
+that I since discovered for the time of its discovery. For I have now come to
+one of the dark parts of my narrative, and must engage the reader&rsquo;s
+indulgence for my patron.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the 27th that rigorous weather endured: a stifling cold; the folk passing
+about like smoking chimneys; the wide hearth in the hall piled high with fuel;
+some of the spring birds that had already blundered north into our
+neighbourhood, besieging the windows of the house or trotting on the frozen
+turf like things distracted. About noon there came a blink of sunshine, showing
+a very pretty, wintry, frosty landscape of white hills and woods, with
+Crail&rsquo;s lugger waiting for a wind under the Craig Head, and the smoke
+mounting straight into the air from every farm and cottage. With the coming of
+night, the haze closed in overhead; it fell dark and still and starless, and
+exceeding cold: a night the most unseasonable, fit for strange events.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Henry withdrew, as was now her custom, very early. We had set ourselves of
+late to pass the evening with a game of cards; another mark that our visitor
+was wearying mightily of the life at Durrisdeer; and we had not been long at
+this when my old lord slipped from his place beside the fire, and was off
+without a word to seek the warmth of bed. The three thus left together had
+neither love nor courtesy to share; not one of us would have sat up one instant
+to oblige another; yet from the influence of custom, and as the cards had just
+been dealt, we continued the form of playing out the round. I should say we
+were late sitters; and though my lord had departed earlier than was his custom,
+twelve was already gone some time upon the clock, and the servants long ago in
+bed. Another thing I should say, that although I never saw the Master anyway
+affected with liquor, he had been drinking freely, and was perhaps (although he
+showed it not) a trifle heated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anyway, he now practised one of his transitions; and so soon as the door closed
+behind my lord, and without the smallest change of voice, shifted from ordinary
+civil talk into a stream of insult.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Henry, it is yours to play,&rdquo; he had been saying, and now
+continued: &ldquo;It is a very strange thing how, even in so small a matter as
+a game of cards, you display your rusticity. You play, Jacob, like a bonnet
+laird, or a sailor in a tavern. The same dulness, the same petty greed,
+<i>cette lenteur d&rsquo;hebété qui me fait rager</i>; it is
+strange I should have such a brother. Even Square-toes has a certain vivacity
+when his stake is imperilled; but the dreariness of a game with you I
+positively lack language to depict.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry continued to look at his cards, as though very maturely considering
+some play; but his mind was elsewhere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear God, will this never be done?&rdquo; cries the Master.
+&ldquo;<i>Quel lourdeau</i>! But why do I trouble you with French expressions,
+which are lost on such an ignoramus? A <i>lourdeau</i>, my dear brother, is as
+we might say a bumpkin, a clown, a clodpole: a fellow without grace, lightness,
+quickness; any gift of pleasing, any natural brilliancy: such a one as you
+shall see, when you desire, by looking in the mirror. I tell you these things
+for your good, I assure you; and besides, Square-toes&rdquo; (looking at me and
+stifling a yawn), &ldquo;it is one of my diversions in this very dreary spot to
+toast you and your master at the fire like chestnuts. I have great pleasure in
+your case, for I observe the nickname (rustic as it is) has always the power to
+make you writhe. But sometimes I have more trouble with this dear fellow here,
+who seems to have gone to sleep upon his cards. Do you not see the
+applicability of the epithet I have just explained, dear Henry? Let me show
+you. For instance, with all those solid qualities which I delight to recognise
+in you, I never knew a woman who did not prefer me&mdash;nor, I think,&rdquo;
+he continued, with the most silken deliberation, &ldquo;I think&mdash;who did
+not continue to prefer me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Henry laid down his cards. He rose to his feet very softly, and seemed all
+the while like a person in deep thought. &ldquo;You coward!&rdquo; he said
+gently, as if to himself. And then, with neither hurry nor any particular
+violence, he struck the Master in the mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master sprang to his feet like one transfigured; I had never seen the man
+so beautiful. &ldquo;A blow!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I would not take a blow
+from God Almighty!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lower your voice,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;Do you wish my father to
+interfere for you again?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen, gentlemen,&rdquo; I cried, and sought to come between them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master caught me by the shoulder, held me at arm&rsquo;s length, and still
+addressing his brother: &ldquo;Do you know what this means?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the most deliberate act of my life,&rdquo; says Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must have blood, I must have blood for this,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Please God it shall be yours,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry; and he went to the
+wall and took down a pair of swords that hung there with others, naked. These
+he presented to the Master by the points. &ldquo;Mackellar shall see us play
+fair,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;I think it very needful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You need insult me no more,&rdquo; said the Master, taking one of the
+swords at random. &ldquo;I have hated you all my life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father is but newly gone to bed,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;We
+must go somewhere forth of the house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is an excellent place in the long shrubbery,&rdquo; said the
+Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;shame upon you both! Sons of the same
+mother, would you turn against the life she gave you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even so, Mackellar,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry, with the same perfect
+quietude of manner he had shown throughout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is what I will prevent,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now here is a blot upon my life. At these words of mine the Master turned
+his blade against my bosom; I saw the light run along the steel; and I threw up
+my arms and fell to my knees before him on the floor. &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; I
+cried, like a baby.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall have no more trouble with him,&rdquo; said the Master.
+&ldquo;It is a good thing to have a coward in the house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We must have light,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry, as though there had been no
+interruption.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This trembler can bring a pair of candles,&rdquo; said the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To my shame be it said, I was still so blinded with the flashing of that bare
+sword that I volunteered to bring a lantern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We do not need a l-l-lantern,&rdquo; says the Master, mocking me.
+&ldquo;There is no breath of air. Come, get to your feet, take a pair of
+lights, and go before. I am close behind with this&mdash;&rdquo; making. the
+blade glitter as he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took up the candlesticks and went before them, steps that I would give my
+hand to recall; but a coward is a slave at the best; and even as I went, my
+teeth smote each other in my mouth. It was as he had said: there was no breath
+stirring; a windless stricture of frost had bound the air; and as we went forth
+in the shine of the candles, the blackness was like a roof over our heads.
+Never a word was said; there was never a sound but the creaking of our steps
+along the frozen path. The cold of the night fell about me like a bucket of
+water; I shook as I went with more than terror; but my companions, bare-headed
+like myself, and fresh from the warm ball, appeared not even conscious of the
+change.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is the place,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;Set down the
+candles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I did as he bid me, and presently the flames went up, as steady as in a
+chamber, in the midst of the frosted trees, and I beheld these two brothers
+take their places.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The light is something in my eyes,&rdquo; said the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will give you every advantage,&rdquo; replied Mr. Henry, shifting his
+ground, &ldquo;for I think you are about to die.&rdquo; He spoke rather sadly
+than otherwise, yet there was a ring in his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Henry Durie,&rdquo; said the Master, &ldquo;two words before I begin.
+You are a fencer, you can hold a foil; you little know what a change it makes
+to hold a sword! And by that I know you are to fall. But see how strong is my
+situation! If you fall, I shift out of this country to where my money is before
+me. If I fall, where are you? My father, your wife&mdash;who is in love with
+me, as you very well know&mdash;your child even, who prefers me to
+yourself:&mdash;how will these avenge me! Had you thought of that, dear
+Henry?&rdquo; He looked at his brother with a smile; then made a fencing-room
+salute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never a word said Mr. Henry, but saluted too, and the swords rang together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I am no judge of the play; my head, besides, was gone with cold and fear and
+horror; but it seems that Mr. Henry took and kept the upper hand from the
+engagement, crowding in upon his foe with a contained and glowing fury. Nearer
+and nearer he crept upon the man, till of a sudden the Master leaped back with
+a little sobbing oath; and I believe the movement brought the light once more
+against his eyes. To it they went again, on the fresh ground; but now methought
+closer, Mr. Henry pressing more outrageously, the Master beyond doubt with
+shaken confidence. For it is beyond doubt he now recognised himself for lost,
+and had some taste of the cold agony of fear; or he had never attempted the
+foul stroke. I cannot say I followed it, my untrained eye was never quick
+enough to seize details, but it appears he caught his brother&rsquo;s blade
+with his left hand, a practice not permitted. Certainly Mr. Henry only saved
+himself by leaping on one side; as certainly the Master, lunging in the air,
+stumbled on his knee, and before he could move the sword was through his body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cried out with a stifled scream, and ran in; but the body was already fallen
+to the ground, where it writhed a moment like a trodden worm, and then lay
+motionless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look at his left hand,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is all bloody,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;On the inside?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is cut on the inside,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought so,&rdquo; said he, and turned his back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I opened the man&rsquo;s clothes; the heart was quite still, it gave not a
+flutter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God forgive us, Mr. Henry!&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;He is dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dead?&rdquo; he repeated, a little stupidly; and then with a rising
+tone, &ldquo;Dead? dead?&rdquo; says he, and suddenly cast his bloody sword
+upon the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What must we do?&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Be yourself, sir. It is too late
+now: you must be yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and stared at me. &ldquo;Oh, Mackellar!&rdquo; says he, and put his
+face in his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I plucked him by the coat. &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, for all our sakes, be
+more courageous!&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;What must we do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He showed me his face with the same stupid stare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do?&rdquo; says he. And with that his eye fell on the body, and
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he cries out, with his hand to his brow, as if he had never
+remembered; and, turning from me, made off towards the house of Durrisdeer at a
+strange stumbling run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood a moment mused; then it seemed to me my duty lay most plain on the side
+of the living; and I ran after him, leaving the candles on the frosty ground
+and the body lying in their light under the trees. But run as I pleased, he had
+the start of me, and was got into the house, and up to the hall, where I found
+him standing before the fire with his face once more in his hands, and as he so
+stood he visibly shuddered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Henry, Mr. Henry,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;this will be the ruin of us
+all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is this that I have done?&rdquo; cries he, and then looking upon me
+with a countenance that I shall never forget, &ldquo;Who is to tell the old
+man?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word knocked at my heart; but it was no time for weakness. I went and
+poured him out a glass of brandy. &ldquo;Drink that,&rdquo; said I,
+&ldquo;drink it down.&rdquo; I forced him to swallow it like a child; and,
+being still perished with the cold of the night, I followed his example.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has to be told, Mackellar,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It must be
+told.&rdquo; And he fell suddenly in a seat&mdash;my old lord&rsquo;s seat by
+the chimney-side&mdash;and was shaken with dry sobs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dismay came upon my soul; it was plain there was no help in Mr. Henry.
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;sit there, and leave all to me.&rdquo; And
+taking a candle in my hand, I set forth out of the room in the dark house.
+There was no movement; I must suppose that all had gone unobserved; and I was
+now to consider how to smuggle through the rest with the like secrecy. It was
+no hour for scruples; and I opened my lady&rsquo;s door without so much as a
+knock, and passed boldly in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is some calamity happened,&rdquo; she cried, sitting up in bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I will go forth again into the passage; and
+do you get as quickly as you can into your clothes. There is much to be
+done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She troubled me with no questions, nor did she keep me waiting. Ere I had time
+to prepare a word of that which I must say to her, she was on the threshold
+signing me to enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you cannot be very brave, I must go
+elsewhere; for if no one helps me to-night, there is an end of the house of
+Durrisdeer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am very courageous,&rdquo; said she; and she looked at me with a sort
+of smile, very painful to see, but very brave too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has come to a duel,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A duel?&rdquo; she repeated. &ldquo;A duel! Henry and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the Master,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Things have been borne so long,
+things of which you know nothing, which you would not believe if I should tell.
+But to-night it went too far, and when he insulted you&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;He? Who?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! madam,&rdquo; cried I, my bitterness breaking forth, &ldquo;do you
+ask me such a question? Indeed, then, I may go elsewhere for help; there is
+none here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not know in what I have offended you,&rdquo; said she.
+&ldquo;Forgive me; put me out of this suspense.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I dared not tell her yet; I felt not sure of her; and at the doubt, and
+under the sense of impotence it brought with it, I turned on the poor woman
+with something near to anger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;we are speaking of two men: one of them
+insulted you, and you ask me which. I will help you to the answer. With one of
+these men you have spent all your hours: has the other reproached you? To one
+you have been always kind; to the other, as God sees me and judges between us
+two, I think not always: has his love ever failed you? To-night one of these
+two men told the other, in my hearing&mdash;the hearing of a hired
+stranger,&mdash;that you were in love with him. Before I say one word, you
+shall answer your own question: Which was it? Nay, madam, you shall answer me
+another: If it has come to this dreadful end, whose fault is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stared at me like one dazzled. &ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; she said once, in a
+kind of bursting exclamation; and then a second time in a whisper to herself:
+&ldquo;Great God!&mdash;In the name of mercy, Mackellar, what is wrong?&rdquo;
+she cried. &ldquo;I am made up; I can hear all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are not fit to hear,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Whatever it was, you
+shall say first it was your fault.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she cried, with a gesture of wringing her hands, &ldquo;this
+man will drive me mad! Can you not put me out of your thoughts?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not once of you,&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;I think of none but my
+dear unhappy master.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she cried, with her hand to her heart, &ldquo;is Henry
+dead?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lower your voice,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;The other.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw her sway like something stricken by the wind; and I know not whether in
+cowardice or misery, turned aside and looked upon the floor. &ldquo;These are
+dreadful tidings,&rdquo; said I at length, when her silence began to put me in
+some fear; &ldquo;and you and I behove to be the more bold if the house is to
+be saved.&rdquo; Still she answered nothing. &ldquo;There is Miss Katharine,
+besides,&rdquo; I added: &ldquo;unless we bring this matter through, her
+inheritance is like to be of shame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know if it was the thought of her child or the naked word shame, that
+gave her deliverance; at least, I had no sooner spoken than a sound passed her
+lips, the like of it I never heard; it was as though she had lain buried under
+a hill and sought to move that burthen. And the next moment she had found a
+sort of voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was a fight,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;It was not&mdash;&rdquo;
+and she paused upon the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was a fair fight on my dear master&rsquo;s part,&rdquo; said I.
+&ldquo;As for the other, he was slain in the very act of a foul stroke.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not now!&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;hatred of that man glows in my bosom like a
+burning fire; ay, even now he is dead. God knows, I would have stopped the
+fighting, had I dared. It is my shame I did not. But when I saw him fall, if I
+could have spared one thought from pitying of my master, it had been to exult
+in that deliverance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know if she marked; but her next words were, &ldquo;My lord?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That shall be my part,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will not speak to him as you have to me?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;have you not some one else to think of?
+Leave my lord to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Some one else?&rdquo; she repeated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your husband,&rdquo; said I. She looked at me with a countenance
+illegible. &ldquo;Are you going to turn your back on him?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still she looked at me; then her hand went to her heart again.
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God bless you for that word!&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Go to him now, where
+he sits in the hall; speak to him&mdash;it matters not what you say; give him
+your hand; say, &lsquo;I know all;&rsquo;&mdash;if God gives you grace enough,
+say, &lsquo;Forgive me.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God strengthen you, and make you merciful,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;I
+will go to my husband.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me light you there,&rdquo; said I, taking up the candle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will find my way in the dark,&rdquo; she said, with a shudder, and I
+think the shudder was at me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we separated&mdash;she down stairs to where a little light glimmered in the
+hall-door, I along the passage to my lord&rsquo;s room. It seems hard to say
+why, but I could not burst in on the old man as I could on the young woman;
+with whatever reluctance, I must knock. But his old slumbers were light, or
+perhaps he slept not; and at the first summons I was bidden enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, too, sat up in bed; very aged and bloodless he looked; and whereas he had a
+certain largeness of appearance when dressed for daylight, he now seemed frail
+and little, and his face (the wig being laid aside) not bigger than a
+child&rsquo;s. This daunted me; nor less, the haggard surmise of misfortune in
+his eye. Yet his voice was even peaceful as he inquired my errand. I set my
+candle down upon a chair, leaned on the bed-foot, and looked at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Durrisdeer,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;it is very well known to you that
+I am a partisan in your family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope we are none of us partisans,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;That you love
+my son sincerely, I have always been glad to recognise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! my lord, we are past the hour of these civilities,&rdquo; I replied.
+&ldquo;If we are to save anything out of the fire, we must look the fact in its
+bare countenance. A partisan I am; partisans we have all been; it is as a
+partisan that I am here in the middle of the night to plead before you. Hear
+me; before I go, I will tell you why.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would always hear you, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and that
+at any hour, whether of the day or night, for I would be always sure you had a
+reason. You spoke once before to very proper purpose; I have not forgotten
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am here to plead the cause of my master,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I need
+not tell you how he acts. You know how he is placed. You know with what
+generosity, he has always met your other&mdash;met your wishes,&rdquo; I
+corrected myself, stumbling at that name of son. &ldquo;You know&mdash;you must
+know&mdash;what he has suffered&mdash;what he has suffered about his
+wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Mackellar!&rdquo; cried my lord, rising in bed like a bearded lion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You said you would hear me,&rdquo; I continued. &ldquo;What you do not
+know, what you should know, one of the things I am here to speak of, is the
+persecution he must bear in private. Your back is not turned before one whom I
+dare not name to you falls upon him with the most unfeeling taunts; twits
+him&mdash;pardon me, my lord&mdash;twits him with your partiality, calls him
+Jacob, calls him clown, pursues him with ungenerous raillery, not to be borne
+by man. And let but one of you appear, instantly he changes; and my master must
+smile and courtesy to the man who has been feeding him with insults; I know,
+for I have shared in some of it, and I tell you the life is insupportable. All
+these months it has endured; it began with the man&rsquo;s landing; it was by
+the name of Jacob that my master was greeted the first night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord made a movement as if to throw aside the clothes and rise. &ldquo;If
+there be any truth in this&mdash;&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I look like a man lying?&rdquo; I interrupted, checking him with my
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You should have told me at first,&rdquo; he odd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, my lord! indeed I should, and you may well hate the face of this
+unfaithful servant!&rdquo; I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will take order,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;at once.&rdquo; And again made
+the movement to rise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again I checked him. &ldquo;I have not done,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Would God I
+had! All this my dear, unfortunate patron has endured without help or
+countenance. Your own best word, my lord, was only gratitude. Oh, but he was
+your son, too! He had no other father. He was hated in the country, God knows
+how unjustly. He had a loveless marriage. He stood on all hands without
+affection or support&mdash;dear, generous, ill-fated, noble heart!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your tears do you much honour and me much shame,&rdquo; says my lord,
+with a palsied trembling. &ldquo;But you do me some injustice. Henry has been
+ever dear to me, very dear. James (I do not deny it, Mr. Mackellar), James is
+perhaps dearer; you have not seen my James in quite a favourable light; he has
+suffered under his misfortunes; and we can only remember how great and how
+unmerited these were. And even now his is the more affectionate nature. But I
+will not speak of him. All that you say of Henry is most true; I do not wonder,
+I know him to be very magnanimous; you will say I trade upon the knowledge? It
+is possible; there are dangerous virtues: virtues that tempt the encroacher.
+Mr. Mackellar, I will make it up to him; I will take order with all this. I
+have been weak; and, what is worse, I have been dull!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must not hear you blame yourself, my lord, with that which I have yet
+to tell upon my conscience,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;You have not been weak;
+you have been abused by a devilish dissembler. You saw yourself how he had
+deceived you in the matter of his danger; he has deceived you throughout in
+every step of his career. I wish to pluck him from your heart; I wish to force
+your eyes upon your other son; ah, you have a son there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;two sons&mdash;I have two sons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made some gesture of despair that struck him; he looked at me with a changed
+face. &ldquo;There is much worse behind?&rdquo; he asked, his voice dying as it
+rose upon the question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much worse,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;This night he said these words to
+Mr. Henry: &lsquo;I have never known a woman who did not prefer me to you, and
+I think who did not continue to prefer me.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will hear nothing against my daughter,&rdquo; he cried; and from his
+readiness to stop me in this direction, I conclude his eyes were not so dull as
+I had fancied, and he had looked not without anxiety upon the siege of Mrs.
+Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not of blaming her,&rdquo; cried I. &ldquo;It is not that. These
+words were said in my hearing to Mr. Henry; and if you find them not yet plain
+enough, these others but a little after: Your wife, who is in love with
+me!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They have quarrelled?&rdquo; he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must fly to them,&rdquo; he said, beginning once again to leave his
+bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; I cried, holding forth my hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not know,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;These are dangerous
+words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will nothing make you understand, my lord?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eyes besought me for the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I flung myself on my knees by the bedside. &ldquo;Oh, my lord,&rdquo; cried I,
+&ldquo;think on him you have left; think of this poor sinner whom you begot,
+whom your wife bore to you, whom we have none of us strengthened as we could;
+think of him, not of yourself; he is the other sufferer&mdash;think of him!
+That is the door for sorrow&mdash;Christ&rsquo;s door, God&rsquo;s door: oh! it
+stands open. Think of him, even as he thought of you. &lsquo;<i>Who is to tell
+the old man</i>?&rsquo;&mdash;these were his words. It was for that I came;
+that is why I am here pleading at your feet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me get up,&rdquo; he cried, thrusting me aside, and was on his feet
+before myself. His voice shook like a sail in the wind, yet he spoke with a
+good loudness; his face was like the snow, but his eyes were steady and dry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here is too much speech,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Where was it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the shrubbery,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. Henry?&rdquo; he asked. And when I had told him he knotted his
+old face in thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. James?&rdquo; says he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have left him lying,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;beside the candles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Candles?&rdquo; he cried. And with that he ran to the window, opened it,
+and looked abroad. &ldquo;It might be spied from the road.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where none goes by at such an hour,&rdquo; I objected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It makes no matter,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;One might. Hark!&rdquo; cries
+he. &ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the sound of men very guardedly rowing in the bay; and I told him so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The freetraders,&rdquo; said my lord. &ldquo;Run at once, Mackellar; put
+these candles out. I will dress in the meanwhile; and when you return we can
+debate on what is wisest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I groped my way downstairs, and out at the door. From quite a far way off a
+sheen was visible, making points of brightness in the shrubbery; in so black a
+night it might have been remarked for miles; and I blamed myself bitterly for
+my incaution. How much more sharply when I reached the place! One of the
+candlesticks was overthrown, and that taper quenched. The other burned steadily
+by itself, and made a broad space of light upon the frosted ground. All within
+that circle seemed, by the force of contrast and the overhanging blackness,
+brighter than by day. And there was the bloodstain in the midst; and a little
+farther off Mr. Henry&rsquo;s sword, the pommel of which was of silver; but of
+the body, not a trace. My heart thumped upon my ribs, the hair stirred upon my
+scalp, as I stood there staring&mdash;so strange was the sight, so dire the
+fears it wakened. I looked right and left; the ground was so hard, it told no
+story. I stood and listened till my ears ached, but the night was hollow about
+me like an empty church; not even a ripple stirred upon the shore; it seemed
+you might have heard a pin drop in the county.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I put the candle out, and the blackness fell about me groping dark; it was like
+a crowd surrounding me; and I went back to the house of Durrisdeer, with my
+chin upon my shoulder, startling, as I went, with craven suppositions. In the
+door a figure moved to meet me, and I had near screamed with terror ere I
+recognised Mrs. Henry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you told him?&rdquo; says she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was he who sent me,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;It is gone. But why are you
+here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is gone!&rdquo; she repeated. &ldquo;What is gone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The body,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;Why are you not with your
+husband?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone!&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;You cannot have looked. Come back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no light now,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I dare not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can see in the dark. I have been standing here so long&mdash;so
+long,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Come, give me your hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We returned to the shrubbery hand in hand, and to the fatal place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take care of the blood,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blood?&rdquo; she cried, and started violently back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose it will be,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I am like a blind
+man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;nothing! Have you not dreamed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, would to God we had!&rdquo; cried I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spied the sword, picked it up, and seeing the blood, let it fall again with
+her hands thrown wide. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; she cried. And then, with an instant
+courage, handled it the second time, and thrust it to the hilt into the frozen
+ground. &ldquo;I will take it back and clean it properly,&rdquo; says she, and
+again looked about her on all sides. &ldquo;It cannot be that he was
+dead?&rdquo; she added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was no flutter of his heart,&rdquo; said I, and then remembering:
+&ldquo;Why are you not with your husband?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no use,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;he will not speak to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not speak to you?&rdquo; I repeated. &ldquo;Oh! you have not
+tried.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have a right to doubt me,&rdquo; she replied, with a gentle dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this, for the first time, I was seized with sorrow for her. &ldquo;God
+knows, madam,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;God knows I am not so hard as I appear; on
+this dreadful night who can veneer his words? But I am a friend to all who are
+not Henry Durie&rsquo;s enemies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is hard, then, you should hesitate about his wife,&rdquo; said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw all at once, like the rending of a veil, how nobly she had borne this
+unnatural calamity, and how generously my reproaches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We must go back and tell this to my lord,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Him I cannot face,&rdquo; she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will find him the least moved of all of us,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet I cannot face him,&rdquo; said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you can return to Mr. Henry; I will see my
+lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we walked back, I bearing the candlesticks, she the sword&mdash;a strange
+burthen for that woman&mdash;she had another thought. &ldquo;Should we tell
+Henry?&rdquo; she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let my lord decide,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord was nearly dressed when I came to his chamber. He heard me with a
+frown. &ldquo;The freetraders,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;But whether dead or
+alive?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought him&mdash;&rdquo; said I, and paused, ashamed of the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know; but you may very well have been in error. Why should they remove
+him if not living?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Oh! here is a great door of hope. It
+must be given out that he departed&mdash;as he came&mdash;without any note of
+preparation. We must save all scandal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw he had fallen, like the rest of us, to think mainly of the house. Now
+that all the living members of the family were plunged in irremediable sorrow,
+it was strange how we turned to that conjoint abstraction of the family itself,
+and sought to bolster up the airy nothing of its reputation: not the Duries
+only, but the hired steward himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we to tell Mr. Henry?&rdquo; I asked him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will see,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I am going first to visit him; then I
+go forth with you to view the shrubbery and consider.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We went downstairs into the hall. Mr. Henry sat by the table with his head upon
+his hand, like a man of stone. His wife stood a little back from him, her hand
+at her mouth; it was plain she could not move him. My old lord walked very
+steadily to where his son was sitting; he had a steady countenance, too, but
+methought a little cold. When he was come quite up, he held out both his hands
+and said, &ldquo;My son!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a broken, strangled cry, Mr. Henry leaped up and fell on his
+father&rsquo;s neck, crying and weeping, the most pitiful sight that ever a man
+witnessed. &ldquo;Oh! father,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you know I loved him; you
+know I loved him in the beginning; I could have died for him&mdash;you know
+that! I would have given my life for him and you. Oh! say you know that. Oh!
+say you can forgive me. O father, father, what have I done&mdash;what have I
+done? And we used to be bairns together!&rdquo; and wept and sobbed, and
+fondled the old man, and clutched him about the neck, with the passion of a
+child in terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then he caught sight of his wife (you would have thought for the first
+time), where she stood weeping to hear him, and in a moment had fallen at her
+knees. &ldquo;And O my lass,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you must forgive me, too!
+Not your husband&mdash;I have only been the ruin of your life. But you knew me
+when I was a lad; there was no harm in Henry Durie then; he meant aye to be a
+friend to you. It&rsquo;s him&mdash;it&rsquo;s the old bairn that played with
+you&mdash;oh, can ye never, never forgive him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout all this my lord was like a cold, kind spectator with his wits about
+him. At the first cry, which was indeed enough to call the house about us, he
+had said to me over his shoulder, &ldquo;Close the door.&rdquo; And now he
+nodded to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We may leave him to his wife now,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Bring a light,
+Mr. Mackellar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon my going forth again with my lord, I was aware of a strange phenomenon;
+for though it was quite dark, and the night not yet old, methought I smelt the
+morning. At the same time there went a tossing through the branches of the
+evergreens, so that they sounded like a quiet sea, and the air pulled at times
+against our faces, and the flame of the candle shook. We made the more speed, I
+believe, being surrounded by this bustle; visited the scene of the duel, where
+my lord looked upon the blood with stoicism; and passing farther on toward the
+landing-place, came at last upon some evidences of the truth. For, first of
+all, where there was a pool across the path, the ice had been trodden in,
+plainly by more than one man&rsquo;s weight; next, and but a little farther, a
+young tree was broken, and down by the landing-place, where the traders&rsquo;
+boats were usually beached, another stain of blood marked where the body must
+have been infallibly set down to rest the bearers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This stain we set ourselves to wash away with the sea-water, carrying it in my
+lord&rsquo;s hat; and as we were thus engaged there came up a sudden moaning
+gust and left us instantly benighted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will come to snow,&rdquo; says my lord; &ldquo;and the best thing
+that we could hope. Let us go back now; we can do nothing in the dark.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we went houseward, the wind being again subsided, we were aware of a strong
+pattering noise about us in the night; and when we issued from the shelter of
+the trees, we found it raining smartly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout the whole of this, my lord&rsquo;s clearness of mind, no less than
+his activity of body, had not ceased to minister to my amazement. He set the
+crown upon it in the council we held on our return. The freetraders had
+certainly secured the Master, though whether dead or alive we were still left
+to our conjectures; the rain would, long before day, wipe out all marks of the
+transaction; by this we must profit. The Master had unexpectedly come after the
+fall of night; it must now be given out he had as suddenly departed before the
+break of day; and, to make all this plausible, it now only remained for me to
+mount into the man&rsquo;s chamber, and pack and conceal his baggage. True, we
+still lay at the discretion of the traders; but that was the incurable weakness
+of our guilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard him, as I said, with wonder, and hastened to obey. Mr. and Mrs. Henry
+were gone from the hall; my lord, for warmth&rsquo;s sake, hurried to his bed;
+there was still no sign of stir among the servants, and as I went up the tower
+stair, and entered the dead man&rsquo;s room, a horror of solitude weighed upon
+my mind. To my extreme surprise, it was all in the disorder of departure. Of
+his three portmanteaux, two were already locked; the third lay open and near
+full. At once there flashed upon me some suspicion of the truth. The man had
+been going, after all; he had but waited upon Crail, as Crail waited upon the
+wind; early in the night the seamen had perceived the weather changing; the
+boat had come to give notice of the change and call the passenger aboard, and
+the boat&rsquo;s crew had stumbled on him dying in his blood. Nay, and there
+was more behind. This pre-arranged departure shed some light upon his
+inconceivable insult of the night before; it was a parting shot, hatred being
+no longer checked by policy. And, for another thing, the nature of that insult,
+and the conduct of Mrs. Henry, pointed to one conclusion, which I have never
+verified, and can now never verify until the great assize&mdash;the conclusion
+that he had at last forgotten himself, had gone too far in his advances, and
+had been rebuffed. It can never be verified, as I say; but as I thought of it
+that morning among his baggage, the thought was sweet to me like honey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Into the open portmanteau I dipped a little ere I closed it. The most beautiful
+lace and linen, many suits of those fine plain clothes in which he loved to
+appear; a book or two, and those of the best, C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Commentaries,&rdquo; a volume of Mr. Hobbes, the &ldquo;Henriade&rdquo;
+of M. de Voltaire, a book upon the Indies, one on the mathematics, far beyond
+where I have studied: these were what I observed with very mingled feelings.
+But in the open portmanteau, no papers of any description. This set me musing.
+It was possible the man was dead; but, since the traders had carried him away,
+not likely. It was possible he might still die of his wound; but it was also
+possible he might not. And in this latter case I was determined to have the
+means of some defence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One after another I carried his portmanteaux to a loft in the top of the house
+which we kept locked; went to my own room for my keys, and, returning to the
+loft, had the gratification to find two that fitted pretty well. In one of the
+portmanteaux there was a shagreen letter-case, which I cut open with my knife;
+and thenceforth (so far as any credit went) the man was at my mercy. Here was a
+vast deal of gallant correspondence, chiefly of his Paris days; and, what was
+more to the purpose, here were the copies of his own reports to the English
+Secretary, and the originals of the Secretary&rsquo;s answers: a most damning
+series: such as to publish would be to wreck the Master&rsquo;s honour and to
+set a price upon his life. I chuckled to myself as I ran through the documents;
+I rubbed my hands, I sang aloud in my glee. Day found me at the pleasing task;
+nor did I then remit my diligence, except in so far as I went to the
+window&mdash;looked out for a moment, to see the frost quite gone, the world
+turned black again, and the rain and the wind driving in the bay&mdash;and to
+assure myself that the lugger was gone from its anchorage, and the Master
+(whether dead or alive) now tumbling on the Irish Sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is proper I should add in this place the very little I have subsequently
+angled out upon the doings of that night. It took me a long while to gather it;
+for we dared not openly ask, and the freetraders regarded me with enmity, if
+not with scorn. It was near six months before we even knew for certain that the
+man survived; and it was years before I learned from one of Crail&rsquo;s men,
+turned publican on his ill-gotten gain, some particulars which smack to me of
+truth. It seems the traders found the Master struggled on one elbow, and now
+staring round him, and now gazing at the candle or at his hand which was all
+bloodied, like a man stupid. Upon their coming, he would seem to have found his
+mind, bade them carry him aboard, and hold their tongues; and on the captain
+asking how he had come in such a pickle, replied with a burst of passionate
+swearing, and incontinently fainted. They held some debate, but they were
+momently looking for a wind, they were highly paid to smuggle him to France,
+and did not care to delay. Besides which, he was well enough liked by these
+abominable wretches: they supposed him under capital sentence, knew not in what
+mischief he might have got his wound, and judged it a piece of good nature to
+remove him out of the way of danger. So he was taken aboard, recovered on the
+passage over, and was set ashore a convalescent at the Havre de Grace. What is
+truly notable: he said not a word to anyone of the duel, and not a trader knows
+to this day in what quarrel, or by the hand of what adversary, he fell. With
+any other man I should have set this down to natural decency; with him, to
+pride. He could not bear to avow, perhaps even to himself, that he had been
+vanquished by one whom he had so much insulted whom he so cruelly despised.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THE MASTER&rsquo;S SECOND ABSENCE.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Of the heavy sickness which declared itself next morning I can think with
+equanimity, as of the last unmingled trouble that befell my master; and even
+that was perhaps a mercy in disguise; for what pains of the body could equal
+the miseries of his mind? Mrs. Henry and I had the watching by the bed. My old
+lord called from time to time to take the news, but would not usually pass the
+door. Once, I remember, when hope was nigh gone, he stepped to the bedside,
+looked awhile in his son&rsquo;s face, and turned away with a gesture of the
+head and hand thrown up, that remains upon my mind as something tragic; such
+grief and such a scorn of sublunary things were there expressed. But the most
+of the time Mrs. Henry and I had the room to ourselves, taking turns by night,
+and bearing each other company by day, for it was dreary watching. Mr. Henry,
+his shaven head bound in a napkin, tossed fro without remission, beating the
+bed with his hands. His tongue never lay; his voice ran continuously like a
+river, so that my heart was weary with the sound of it. It was notable, and to
+me inexpressibly mortifying, that he spoke all the while on matters of no
+import: comings and goings, horses&mdash;which he was ever calling to have
+saddled, thinking perhaps (the poor soul!) that he might ride away from his
+discomfort&mdash;matters of the garden, the salmon nets, and (what I
+particularly raged to hear) continually of his affairs, cyphering figures and
+holding disputation with the tenantry. Never a word of his father or his wife,
+nor of the Master, save only for a day or two, when his mind dwelled entirely
+in the past, and he supposed himself a boy again and upon some innocent
+child&rsquo;s play with his brother. What made this the more affecting: it
+appeared the Master had then run some peril of his life, for there was a
+cry&mdash;&ldquo;Oh! Jamie will be drowned&mdash;Oh, save Jamie!&rdquo; which
+he came over and over with a great deal of passion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This, I say, was affecting, both to Mrs. Henry and myself; but the balance of
+my master&rsquo;s wanderings did him little justice. It seemed he had set out
+to justify his brother&rsquo;s calumnies; as though he was bent to prove
+himself a man of a dry nature, immersed in money-getting. Had I been there
+alone, I would not have troubled my thumb; but all the while, as I listened, I
+was estimating the effect on the man&rsquo;s wife, and telling myself that he
+fell lower every day. I was the one person on the surface of the globe that
+comprehended him, and I was bound there should be yet another. Whether he was
+to die there and his virtues perish: or whether he should save his days and
+come back to that inheritance of sorrows, his right memory: I was bound he
+should be heartily lamented in the one case, and unaffectedly welcomed in the
+other, by the person he loved the most, his wife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finding no occasion of free speech, I bethought me at last of a kind of
+documentary disclosure; and for some nights, when I was off duty and should
+have been asleep, I gave my time to the preparation of that which I may call my
+budget. But this I found to be the easiest portion of my task, and that which
+remained&mdash;namely, the presentation to my lady&mdash;almost more than I had
+fortitude to overtake. Several days I went about with my papers under my arm,
+spying for some juncture of talk to serve as introduction. I will not deny but
+that some offered; only when they did my tongue clove to the roof of my mouth;
+and I think I might have been carrying about my packet till this day, had not a
+fortunate accident delivered me from all my hesitations. This was at night,
+when I was once more leaving the room, the thing not yet done, and myself in
+despair at my own cowardice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you carry about with you, Mr. Mackellar?&rdquo; she asked.
+&ldquo;These last days, I see you always coming in and out with the same
+armful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I returned upon my steps without a word, laid the papers before her on the
+table, and left her to her reading. Of what that was, I am now to give you some
+idea; and the best will be to reproduce a letter of my own which came first in
+the budget and of which (according to an excellent habitude) I have preserved
+the scroll. It will show, too, the moderation of my part in these affairs, a
+thing which some have called recklessly in question.
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="right">
+&ldquo;Durrisdeer.<br />
+&ldquo;1757.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Honoured Madam</span>,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I trust I would not step out of my place without occasion; but I see how
+much evil has flowed in the past to all of your noble house from that unhappy
+and secretive fault of reticency, and the papers on which I venture to call
+your attention are family papers, and all highly worthy your acquaintance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I append a schedule with some necessary observations,
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+&ldquo;And am,<br />
+&ldquo;Honoured Madam,<br />
+&ldquo;Your ladyship&rsquo;s obliged, obedient servant,<br />
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Ephraim Mackellar</span>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;Schedule of Papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A. Scroll of ten letters from Ephraim Mackellar to the Hon. James Durie,
+Esq., by courtesy Master of Ballantrae during the latter&rsquo;s residence in
+Paris: under dates . . . &rdquo; (follow the dates) . . . &ldquo;Nota: to be
+read in connection with B. and C.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;B. Seven original letters from the said Mr of Ballantrae to the said E.
+Mackellar, under dates . . . &rdquo; (follow the dates.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;C. Three original letters from the Mr of Ballantrae to the Hon. Henry
+Durie, Esq., under dates . . . &rdquo; (follow the dates) . . . &ldquo;Nota:
+given me by Mr. Henry to answer: copies of my answers A 4, A 5, and A 9 of
+these productions. The purport of Mr. Henry&rsquo;s communications, of which I
+can find no scroll, may be gathered from those of his unnatural brother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;D. A correspondence, original and scroll, extending over a period of
+three years till January of the current year, between the said Mr of Ballantrae
+and &mdash; &mdash;, Under Secretary of State; twenty-seven in all. Nota: found
+among the Master&rsquo;s papers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>
+Weary as I was with watching and distress of mind, it was impossible for me to
+sleep. All night long I walked in my chamber, revolving what should be the
+issue, and sometimes repenting the temerity of my immixture in affairs so
+private; and with the first peep of the morning I was at the sick-room door.
+Mrs. Henry had thrown open the shutters and even the window, for the
+temperature was mild. She looked steadfastly before her; where was nothing to
+see, or only the blue of the morning creeping among woods. Upon the stir of my
+entrance she did not so much as turn about her face: a circumstance from which
+I augured very ill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; I began; and then again, &ldquo;Madam;&rdquo; but could
+make no more of it. Nor yet did Mrs. Henry come to my assistance with a word.
+In this pass I began gathering up the papers where they lay scattered on the
+table; and the first thing that struck me, their bulk appeared to have
+diminished. Once I ran them through, and twice; but the correspondence with the
+Secretary of State, on which I had reckoned so much against the future, was
+nowhere to be found. I looked in the chimney; amid the smouldering embers,
+black ashes of paper fluttered in the draught; and at that my timidity
+vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good God, madam,&rdquo; cried I, in a voice not fitting for a sick-room,
+&ldquo;Good God, madam, what have you done with my papers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have burned them,&rdquo; said Mrs. Henry, turning about. &ldquo;It is
+enough, it is too much, that you and I have seen them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a fine night&rsquo;s work that you have done!&rdquo; cried I.
+&ldquo;And all to save the reputation of a man that ate bread by the shedding
+of his comrades&rsquo; blood, as I do by the shedding of ink.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To save the reputation of that family in which you are a servant, Mr.
+Mackellar,&rdquo; she returned, &ldquo;and for which you have already done so
+much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a family I will not serve much longer,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;for
+I am driven desperate. You have stricken the sword out of my hands; you have
+left us all defenceless. I had always these letters I could shake over his
+head; and now&mdash;What is to do? We are so falsely situate we dare not show
+the man the door; the country would fly on fire against us; and I had this one
+hold upon him&mdash;and now it is gone&mdash;now he may come back to-morrow,
+and we must all sit down with him to dinner, go for a stroll with him on the
+terrace, or take a hand at cards, of all things, to divert his leisure! No,
+madam! God forgive you, if He can find it in His heart; for I cannot find it in
+mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wonder to find you so simple, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; said Mrs. Henry.
+&ldquo;What does this man value reputation? But he knows how high we prize it;
+he knows we would rather die than make these letters public; and do you suppose
+he would not trade upon the knowledge? What you call your sword, Mr. Mackellar,
+and which had been one indeed against a man of any remnant of propriety, would
+have been but a sword of paper against him. He would smile in your face at such
+a threat. He stands upon his degradation, he makes that his strength; it is in
+vain to struggle with such characters.&rdquo; She cried out this last a little
+desperately, and then with more quiet: &ldquo;No, Mr. Mackellar; I have thought
+upon this matter all night, and there is no way out of it. Papers or no papers,
+the door of this house stands open for him; he is the rightful heir, forsooth!
+If we sought to exclude him, all would redound against poor Henry, and I should
+see him stoned again upon the streets. Ah! if Henry dies, it is a different
+matter! They have broke the entail for their own good purposes; the estate goes
+to my daughter; and I shall see who sets a foot upon it. But if Henry lives, my
+poor Mr. Mackellar, and that man returns, we must suffer: only this time it
+will be together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the whole I was well pleased with Mrs. Henry&rsquo;s attitude of mind; nor
+could I even deny there was some cogency in that which she advanced about the
+papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us say no more about it,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I can only be sorry I
+trusted a lady with the originals, which was an unbusinesslike proceeding at
+the best. As for what I said of leaving the service of the family, it was
+spoken with the tongue only; and you may set your mind at rest. I belong to
+Durrisdeer, Mrs. Henry, as if I had been born there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I must do her the justice to say she seemed perfectly relieved; so that we
+began this morning, as we were to continue for so many years, on a proper
+ground of mutual indulgence and respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same day, which was certainly prededicate to joy, we observed the first
+signal of recovery in Mr. Henry; and about three of the following afternoon he
+found his mind again, recognising me by name with the strongest evidences of
+affection. Mrs. Henry was also in the room, at the bedfoot; but it did not
+appear that he observed her. And indeed (the fever being gone) he was so weak
+that he made but the one effort and sank again into lethargy. The course of his
+restoration was now slow but equal; every day his appetite improved; every week
+we were able to remark an increase both of strength and flesh; and before the
+end of the month he was out of bed and had even begun to be carried in his
+chair upon the terrace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was perhaps at this time that Mrs. Henry and I were the most uneasy in mind.
+Apprehension for his days was at an end; and a worse fear succeeded. Every day
+we drew consciously nearer to a day of reckoning; and the days passed on, and
+still there was nothing. Mr. Henry bettered in strength, he held long talks
+with us on a great diversity of subjects, his father came and sat with him and
+went again; and still there was no reference to the late tragedy or to the
+former troubles which had brought it on. Did he remember, and conceal his
+dreadful knowledge? or was the whole blotted from his mind? This was the
+problem that kept us watching and trembling all day when we were in his company
+and held us awake at night when we were in our lonely beds. We knew not even
+which alternative to hope for, both appearing so unnatural and pointing so
+directly to an unsound brain. Once this fear offered, I observed his conduct
+with sedulous particularity. Something of the child he exhibited: a
+cheerfulness quite foreign to his previous character, an interest readily
+aroused, and then very tenacious, in small matters which he had heretofore
+despised. When he was stricken down, I was his only confidant, and I may say
+his only friend, and he was on terms of division with his wife; upon his
+recovery, all was changed, the past forgotten, the wife first and even single
+in his thoughts. He turned to her with all his emotions, like a child to its
+mother, and seemed secure of sympathy; called her in all his needs with
+something of that querulous familiarity that marks a certainty of indulgence;
+and I must say, in justice to the woman, he was never disappointed. To her,
+indeed, this changed behaviour was inexpressibly affecting; and I think she
+felt it secretly as a reproach; so that I have seen her, in early days, escape
+out of the room that she might indulge herself in weeping. But to me the change
+appeared not natural; and viewing it along with all the rest, I began to
+wonder, with many head-shakings, whether his reason were perfectly erect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As this doubt stretched over many years, endured indeed until my master&rsquo;s
+death, and clouded all our subsequent relations, I may well consider of it more
+at large. When he was able to resume some charge of his affairs, I had many
+opportunities to try him with precision. There was no lack of understanding,
+nor yet of authority; but the old continuous interest had quite departed; he
+grew readily fatigued, and fell to yawning; and he carried into money
+relations, where it is certainly out of place, a facility that bordered upon
+slackness. True, since we had no longer the exactions of the Master to contend
+against, there was the less occasion to raise strictness into principle or do
+battle for a farthing. True, again, there was nothing excessive in these
+relaxations, or I would have been no party to them. But the whole thing marked
+a change, very slight yet very perceptible; and though no man could say my
+master had gone at all out of his mind, no man could deny that he had drifted
+from his character. It was the same to the end, with his manner and appearance.
+Some of the heat of the fever lingered in his veins: his movements a little
+hurried, his speech notably more voluble, yet neither truly amiss. His whole
+mind stood open to happy impressions, welcoming these and making much of them;
+but the smallest suggestion of trouble or sorrow he received with visible
+impatience and dismissed again with immediate relief. It was to this temper
+that he owed the felicity of his later days; and yet here it was, if anywhere,
+that you could call the man insane. A great part of this life consists in
+contemplating what we cannot cure; but Mr. Henry, if he could not dismiss
+solicitude by an effort of the mind, must instantly and at whatever cost
+annihilate the cause of it; so that he played alternately the ostrich and the
+bull. It is to this strenuous cowardice of pain that I have to set down all the
+unfortunate and excessive steps of his subsequent career. Certainly this was
+the reason of his beating McManus, the groom, a thing so much out of all his
+former practice, and which awakened so much comment at the time. It is to this,
+again, that I must lay the total loss of near upon two hundred pounds, more
+than the half of which I could have saved if his impatience would have suffered
+me. But he preferred loss or any desperate extreme to a continuance of mental
+suffering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this has led me far from our immediate trouble: whether he remembered or
+had forgotten his late dreadful act; and if he remembered, in what light he
+viewed it. The truth burst upon us suddenly, and was indeed one of the chief
+surprises of my life. He had been several times abroad, and was now beginning
+to walk a little with an arm, when it chanced I should be left alone with him
+upon the terrace. He turned to me with a singular furtive smile, such as
+schoolboys use when in fault; and says he, in a private whisper and without the
+least preface: &ldquo;Where have you buried him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not make one sound in answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where have you buried him?&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;I want to see his
+grave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I conceived I had best take the bull by the horns. &ldquo;Mr. Henry,&rdquo;
+said I, &ldquo;I have news to give that will rejoice you exceedingly. In all
+human likelihood, your hands are clear of blood. I reason from certain indices;
+and by these it should appear your brother was not dead, but was carried in a
+swound on board the lugger. But now he may be perfectly recovered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What there was in his countenance I could not read. &ldquo;James?&rdquo; he
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your brother James,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;I would not raise a hope
+that may be found deceptive, but in my heart I think it very probable he is
+alive.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says Mr. Henry; and suddenly rising from his seat with more
+alacrity than he had yet discovered, set one finger on my breast, and cried at
+me in a kind of screaming whisper, &ldquo;Mackellar&rdquo;&mdash;these were his
+words&mdash;&ldquo;nothing can kill that man. He is not mortal. He is bound
+upon my back to all eternity&mdash;to all eternity!&rdquo; says he, and,
+sitting down again, fell upon a stubborn silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A day or two after, with the same secret smile, and first looking about as if
+to be sure we were alone, &ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;when you
+have any intelligence, be sure and let me know. We must keep an eye upon him,
+or he will take us when we least expect.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He will not show face here again,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh yes he will,&rdquo; said Mr. Henry. &ldquo;Wherever I am, there will
+he be.&rdquo; And again he looked all about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must not dwell upon this thought, Mr. Henry,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that is a very good advice. We will never
+think of it, except when you have news. And we do not know yet,&rdquo; he
+added; &ldquo;he may be dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manner of his saying this convinced me thoroughly of what I had scarce
+ventured to suspect: that, so far from suffering any penitence for the attempt,
+he did but lament his failure. This was a discovery I kept to myself, fearing
+it might do him a prejudice with his wife. But I might have saved myself the
+trouble; she had divined it for herself, and found the sentiment quite natural.
+Indeed, I could not but say that there were three of us, all of the same mind;
+nor could any news have reached Durrisdeer more generally welcome than tidings
+of the Master&rsquo;s death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This brings me to speak of the exception, my old lord. As soon as my anxiety
+for my own master began to be relaxed, I was aware of a change in the old
+gentleman, his father, that seemed to threaten mortal consequences.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His face was pale and swollen; as he sat in the chimney-side with his Latin, he
+would drop off sleeping and the book roll in the ashes; some days he would drag
+his foot, others stumble in speaking. The amenity of his behaviour appeared
+more extreme; full of excuses for the least trouble, very thoughtful for all;
+to myself, of a most flattering civility. One day, that he had sent for his
+lawyer and remained a long while private, he met me as he was crossing the hall
+with painful footsteps, and took me kindly by the hand. &ldquo;Mr.
+Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I have had many occasions to set a proper
+value on your services; and to-day, when I re-cast my will, I have taken the
+freedom to name you for one of my executors. I believe you bear love enough to
+our house to render me this service.&rdquo; At that very time he passed the
+greater portion of his days in slumber, from which it was often difficult to
+rouse him; seemed to have lost all count of years, and had several times
+(particularly on waking) called for his wife and for an old servant whose very
+gravestone was now green with moss. If I had been put to my oath, I must have
+declared he was incapable of testing; and yet there was never a will drawn more
+sensible in every trait, or showing a more excellent judgment both of persons
+and affairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His dissolution, though it took not very long, proceeded by infinitesimal
+gradations. His faculties decayed together steadily; the power of his limbs was
+almost gone, he was extremely deaf, his speech had sunk into mere mumblings;
+and yet to the end he managed to discover something of his former courtesy and
+kindness, pressing the hand of any that helped him, presenting me with one of
+his Latin books, in which he had laboriously traced my name, and in a thousand
+ways reminding us of the greatness of that loss which it might almost be said
+we had already suffered. To the end, the power of articulation returned to him
+in flashes; it seemed he had only forgotten the art of speech as a child
+forgets his lesson, and at times he would call some part of it to mind. On the
+last night of his life he suddenly broke silence with these words from Virgil:
+&ldquo;Gnatique pratisque, alma, precor, miserere,&rdquo; perfectly uttered,
+and with a fitting accent. At the sudden clear sound of it we started from our
+several occupations; but it was in vain we turned to him; he sat there silent,
+and, to all appearance, fatuous. A little later he was had to bed with more
+difficulty than ever before; and some time in the night, without any more
+violence, his spirit fled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a far later period I chanced to speak of these particulars with a doctor of
+medicine, a man of so high a reputation that I scruple to adduce his name. By
+his view of it father and son both suffered from the affection: the father from
+the strain of his unnatural sorrows&mdash;the son perhaps in the excitation of
+the fever; each had ruptured a vessel on the brain, and there was probably (my
+doctor added) some predisposition in the family to accidents of that
+description. The father sank, the son recovered all the externals of a healthy
+man; but it is like there was some destruction in those delicate tissues where
+the soul resides and does her earthly business; her heavenly, I would fain
+hope, cannot be thus obstructed by material accidents. And yet, upon a more
+mature opinion, it matters not one jot; for He who shall pass judgment on the
+records of our life is the same that formed us in frailty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of my old lord was the occasion of a fresh surprise to us who watched
+the behaviour of his successor. To any considering mind, the two sons had
+between them slain their father, and he who took the sword might be even said
+to have slain him with his hand, but no such thought appeared to trouble my new
+lord. He was becomingly grave; I could scarce say sorrowful, or only with a
+pleasant sorrow; talking of the dead with a regretful cheerfulness, relating
+old examples of his character, smiling at them with a good conscience; and when
+the day of the funeral came round, doing the honours with exact propriety. I
+could perceive, besides, that he found a solid gratification in his accession
+to the title; the which he was punctilious in exacting.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> And now there came upon the scene a new character, and one that
+played his part, too, in the story; I mean the present lord, Alexander, whose
+birth (17th July, 1757) filled the cup of my poor master&rsquo;s happiness.
+There was nothing then left him to wish for; nor yet leisure to wish for it.
+Indeed, there never was a parent so fond and doting as he showed himself. He
+was continually uneasy in his son&rsquo;s absence. Was the child abroad? the
+father would be watching the clouds in case it rained. Was it night? he would
+rise out of his bed to observe its slumbers. His conversation grew even
+wearyful to strangers, since he talked of little but his son. In matters
+relating to the estate, all was designed with a particular eye to Alexander;
+and it would be:&mdash;&ldquo;Let us put it in hand at once, that the wood may
+be grown against Alexander&rsquo;s majority;&rdquo; or, &ldquo;This will fall
+in again handsomely for Alexander&rsquo;s marriage.&rdquo; Every day this
+absorption of the man&rsquo;s nature became more observable, with many touching
+and some very blameworthy particulars. Soon the child could walk abroad with
+him, at first on the terrace, hand in hand, and afterward at large about the
+policies; and this grew to be my lord&rsquo;s chief occupation. The sound of
+their two voices (audible a great way off, for they spoke loud) became familiar
+in the neighbourhood; and for my part I found it more agreeable than the sound
+of birds. It was pretty to see the pair returning, full of briars, and the
+father as flushed and sometimes as bemuddied as the child, for they were equal
+sharers in all sorts of boyish entertainment, digging in the beach, damming of
+streams, and what not; and I have seen them gaze through a fence at cattle with
+the same childish contemplation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mention of these rambles brings me to a strange scene of which I was a
+witness. There was one walk I never followed myself without emotion, so often
+had I gone there upon miserable errands, so much had there befallen against the
+house of Durrisdeer. But the path lay handy from all points beyond the Muckle
+Ross; and I was driven, although much against my will, to take my use of it
+perhaps once in the two months. It befell when Mr. Alexander was of the age of
+seven or eight, I had some business on the far side in the morning, and entered
+the shrubbery, on my homeward way, about nine of a bright forenoon. It was that
+time of year when the woods are all in their spring colours, the thorns all in
+flower, and the birds in the high season of their singing. In contrast to this
+merriment, the shrubbery was only the more sad, and I the more oppressed by its
+associations. In this situation of spirit it struck me disagreeably to hear
+voices a little way in front, and to recognise the tones of my lord and Mr.
+Alexander. I pushed ahead, and came presently into their view. They stood
+together in the open space where the duel was, my lord with his hand on his
+son&rsquo;s shoulder, and speaking with some gravity. At least, as he raised
+his head upon my coming, I thought I could perceive his countenance to lighten.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;here comes the good Mackellar. I have just
+been telling Sandie the story of this place, and how there was a man whom the
+devil tried to kill, and how near he came to kill the devil instead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had thought it strange enough he should bring the child into that scene; that
+he should actually be discoursing of his act, passed measure. But the worst was
+yet to come; for he added, turning to his son&mdash;&ldquo;You can ask
+Mackellar; he was here and saw it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it true, Mr. Mackellar?&rdquo; asked the child. &ldquo;And did you
+really see the devil?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not heard the tale,&rdquo; I replied; &ldquo;and I am in a press
+of business.&rdquo; So far I said a little sourly, fencing with the
+embarrassment of the position; and suddenly the bitterness of the past, and the
+terror of that scene by candle-light, rushed in upon my mind. I bethought me
+that, for a difference of a second&rsquo;s quickness in parade, the child
+before me might have never seen the day; and the emotion that always fluttered
+round my heart in that dark shrubbery burst forth in words. &ldquo;But so much
+is true,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;that I have met the devil in these woods, and
+seen him foiled here. Blessed be God that we escaped with life&mdash;blessed be
+God that one stone yet stands upon another in the walls of Durrisdeer! And, oh!
+Mr. Alexander, if ever you come by this spot, though it was a hundred years
+hence, and you came with the gayest and the highest in the land, I would step
+aside and remember a bit prayer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord bowed his head gravely. &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;Mackellar is
+always in the right. Come, Alexander, take your bonnet off.&rdquo; And with
+that he uncovered, and held out his hand. &ldquo;O Lord,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;I thank Thee, and my son thanks Thee, for Thy manifold great mercies.
+Let us have peace for a little; defend us from the evil man. Smite him, O Lord,
+upon the lying mouth!&rdquo; The last broke out of him like a cry; and at that,
+whether remembered anger choked his utterance, or whether he perceived this was
+a singular sort of prayer, at least he suddenly came to a full stop; and, after
+a moment, set back his hat upon his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you have forgot a word, my lord,&rdquo; said I.
+&ldquo;&lsquo;Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass
+against us. For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever
+and ever. Amen.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! that is easy saying,&rdquo; said my lord. &ldquo;That is very easy
+saying, Mackellar. But for me to forgive!&mdash;I think I would cut a very
+silly figure if I had the affectation to pretend it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The bairn, my lord!&rdquo; said I, with some severity, for I thought his
+expressions little fitted for the care of children.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, very true,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;This is dull work for a bairn.
+Let&rsquo;s go nesting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I forget if it was the same day, but it was soon after, my lord, finding me
+alone, opened himself a little more on the same head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am now a very happy man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think so indeed, my lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and the sight of it
+gives me a light heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is an obligation in happiness&mdash;do you not think so?&rdquo;
+says he, musingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think so indeed,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;and one in sorrow, too. If we
+are not here to try to do the best, in my humble opinion the sooner we are away
+the better for all parties.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but if you were in my shoes, would you forgive him?&rdquo; asks my
+lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The suddenness of the attack a little gravelled me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a duty laid upon us strictly,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hut!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;These are expressions! Do you forgive the
+man yourself?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well&mdash;no!&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;God forgive me, I do not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shake hands upon that!&rdquo; cries my lord, with a kind of joviality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is an ill sentiment to shake hands upon,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;for
+Christian people. I think I will give you mine on some more evangelical
+occasion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This I said, smiling a little; but as for my lord, he went from the room
+laughing aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> For my lord&rsquo;s slavery to the child, I can find no
+expression adequate. He lost himself in that continual thought: business,
+friends, and wife being all alike forgotten, or only remembered with a painful
+effort, like that of one struggling with a posset. It was most notable in the
+matter of his wife. Since I had known Durrisdeer, she had been the burthen of
+his thought and the loadstone of his eyes; and now she was quite cast out. I
+have seen him come to the door of a room, look round, and pass my lady over as
+though she were a dog before the fire. It would be Alexander he was seeking,
+and my lady knew it well. I have heard him speak to her so ruggedly that I
+nearly found it in my heart to intervene: the cause would still be the same,
+that she had in some way thwarted Alexander. Without doubt this was in the
+nature of a judgment on my lady. Without doubt she had the tables turned upon
+her, as only Providence can do it; she who had been cold so many years to every
+mark of tenderness, it was her part now to be neglected: the more praise to her
+that she played it well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An odd situation resulted: that we had once more two parties in the house, and
+that now I was of my lady&rsquo;s. Not that ever I lost the love I bore my
+master. But, for one thing, he had the less use for my society. For another, I
+could not but compare the case of Mr. Alexander with that of Miss Katharine;
+for whom my lord had never found the least attention. And for a third, I was
+wounded by the change he discovered to his wife, which struck me in the nature
+of an infidelity. I could not but admire, besides, the constancy and kindness
+she displayed. Perhaps her sentiment to my lord, as it had been founded from
+the first in pity, was that rather of a mother than a wife; perhaps it pleased
+her&mdash;if I may so say&mdash;to behold her two children so happy in each
+other; the more as one had suffered so unjustly in the past. But, for all that,
+and though I could never trace in her one spark of jealousy, she must fall back
+for society on poor neglected Miss Katharine; and I, on my part, came to pass
+my spare hours more and more with the mother and daughter. It would be easy to
+make too much of this division, for it was a pleasant family, as families go;
+still the thing existed; whether my lord knew it or not, I am in doubt. I do
+not think he did; he was bound up so entirely in his son; but the rest of us
+knew it, and in a manner suffered from the knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What troubled us most, however, was the great and growing danger to the child.
+My lord was his father over again; it was to be feared the son would prove a
+second Master. Time has proved these fears to have been quite exaggerate.
+Certainly there is no more worthy gentleman to-day in Scotland than the seventh
+Lord Durrisdeer. Of my own exodus from his employment it does not become me to
+speak, above all in a memorandum written only to justify his father. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+[<i>Editor&rsquo;s Note</i>. <i>Five pages of Mr. Mackellar&rsquo;s MS. are
+here omitted</i>. <i>I have gathered from their perusal an impression that Mr.
+Mackellar</i>, <i>in his old age</i>, <i>was rather an exacting servant</i>.
+<i>Against the seventh Lord Durrisdeer</i> (<i>with whom</i>, <i>at any
+rate</i>, <i>we have no concern</i>) <i>nothing material is
+alleged</i>.&mdash;R. L. S.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+. . . But our fear at the time was lest he should turn out, in the person of
+his son, a second edition of his brother. My lady had tried to interject some
+wholesome discipline; she had been glad to give that up, and now looked on with
+secret dismay; sometimes she even spoke of it by hints; and sometimes, when
+there was brought to her knowledge some monstrous instance of my lord&rsquo;s
+indulgence, she would betray herself in a gesture or perhaps an exclamation. As
+for myself, I was haunted by the thought both day and night: not so much for
+the child&rsquo;s sake as for the father&rsquo;s. The man had gone to sleep, he
+was dreaming a dream, and any rough wakening must infallibly prove mortal. That
+he should survive its death was inconceivable; and the fear of its dishonour
+made me cover my face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was this continual preoccupation that screwed me up at last to a
+remonstrance: a matter worthy to be narrated in detail. My lord and I sat one
+day at the same table upon some tedious business of detail; I have said that he
+had lost his former interest in such occupations; he was plainly itching to be
+gone, and he looked fretful, weary, and methought older than I had ever
+previously observed. I suppose it was the haggard face that put me suddenly
+upon my enterprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said I, with my head down, and feigning to continue my
+occupation&mdash;&ldquo;or, rather, let me call you again by the name of Mr.
+Henry, for I fear your anger and want you to think upon old times&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My good Mackellar!&rdquo; said he; and that in tones so kindly that I
+had near forsook my purpose. But I called to mind that I was speaking for his
+good, and stuck to my colours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has it never come in upon your mind what you are doing?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What I am doing?&rdquo; he repeated; &ldquo;I was never good at guessing
+riddles.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What you are doing with your son?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he, with some defiance in his tone, &ldquo;and what am
+I doing with my son?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your father was a very good man,&rdquo; says I, straying from the direct
+path. &ldquo;But do you think he was a wise father?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause before he spoke, and then: &ldquo;I say nothing against
+him,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;I had the most cause perhaps; but I say
+nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, there it is,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;You had the cause at least. And
+yet your father was a good man; I never knew a better, save on the one point,
+nor yet a wiser. Where he stumbled, it is highly possible another man should
+fail. He had the two sons&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord rapped suddenly and violently on the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is this?&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;Speak out!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will, then,&rdquo; said I, my voice almost strangled with the thumping
+of my heart. &ldquo;If you continue to indulge Mr. Alexander, you are following
+in your father&rsquo;s footsteps. Beware, my lord, lest (when he grows up) your
+son should follow in the Master&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had never meant to put the thing so crudely; but in the extreme of fear,
+there comes a brutal kind of courage, the most brutal indeed of all; and I
+burnt my ships with that plain word. I never had the answer. When I lifted my
+head, my lord had risen to his feet, and the next moment he fell heavily on the
+floor. The fit or seizure endured not very long; he came to himself vacantly,
+put his hand to his head, which I was then supporting, and says he, in a broken
+voice: &ldquo;I have been ill,&rdquo; and a little after: &ldquo;Help
+me.&rdquo; I got him to his feet, and he stood pretty well, though he kept hold
+of the table. &ldquo;I have been ill, Mackellar,&rdquo; he said again.
+&ldquo;Something broke, Mackellar&mdash;or was going to break, and then all
+swam away. I think I was very angry. Never you mind, Mackellar; never you mind,
+my man. I wouldnae hurt a hair upon your head. Too much has come and gone.
+It&rsquo;s a certain thing between us two. But I think, Mackellar, I will go to
+Mrs. Henry&mdash;I think I will go to Mrs. Henry,&rdquo; said he, and got
+pretty steadily from the room, leaving me overcome with penitence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the door flew open, and my lady swept in with flashing eyes.
+&ldquo;What is all this?&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;What have you done to my
+husband? Will nothing teach you your position in this house? Will you never
+cease from making and meddling?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lady,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;since I have been in this house I have
+had plenty of hard words. For a while they were my daily diet, and I swallowed
+them all. As for to-day, you may call me what you please; you will never find
+the name hard enough for such a blunder. And yet I meant it for the
+best.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told her all with ingenuity, even as it is written here; and when she had
+heard me out, she pondered, and I could see her animosity fall.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you meant well indeed. I have had the same
+thought myself, or the same temptation rather, which makes me pardon you. But,
+dear God, can you not understand that he can bear no more? He can bear no
+more!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;The cord is stretched to snapping. What matters
+the future if he have one or two good days?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I will meddle no more. I am pleased enough
+that you should recognise the kindness of my meaning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said my lady; &ldquo;but when it came to the point, I have
+to suppose your courage failed you; for what you said was said cruelly.&rdquo;
+She paused, looking at me; then suddenly smiled a little, and said a singular
+thing: &ldquo;Do you know what you are, Mr. Mackellar? You are an old
+maid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> No more incident of any note occurred in the family until the
+return of that ill-starred man the Master. But I have to place here a second
+extract from the memoirs of Chevalier Burke, interesting in itself, and highly
+necessary for my purpose. It is our only sight of the Master on his Indian
+travels; and the first word in these pages of Secundra Dass. One fact, it is to
+observe, appears here very clearly, which if we had known some twenty years
+ago, how many calamities and sorrows had been spared!&mdash;that Secundra Dass
+spoke English.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+ADVENTURE OF CHEVALIER BURKE IN INDIA.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>Extracted from his Memoirs</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+. . . Here was I, therefore, on the streets of that city, the name of which I
+cannot call to mind, while even then I was so ill-acquainted with its situation
+that I knew not whether to go south or north. The alert being sudden, I had run
+forth without shoes or stockings; my hat had been struck from my head in the
+mellay; my kit was in the hands of the English; I had no companion but the
+cipaye, no weapon but my sword, and the devil a coin in my pocket. In short, I
+was for all the world like one of those calendars with whom Mr. Galland has
+made us acquainted in his elegant tales. These gentlemen, you will remember,
+were for ever falling in with extraordinary incidents; and I was myself upon
+the brink of one so astonishing that I protest I cannot explain it to this day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cipaye was a very honest man; he had served many years with the French
+colours, and would have let himself be cut to pieces for any of the brave
+countrymen of Mr. Lally. It is the same fellow (his name has quite escaped me)
+of whom I have narrated already a surprising instance of generosity of
+mind&mdash;when he found Mr. de Fessac and myself upon the ramparts, entirely
+overcome with liquor, and covered us with straw while the commandant was
+passing by. I consulted him, therefore, with perfect freedom. It was a fine
+question what to do; but we decided at last to escalade a garden wall, where we
+could certainly sleep in the shadow of the trees, and might perhaps find an
+occasion to get hold of a pair of slippers and a turban. In that part of the
+city we had only the difficulty of the choice, for it was a quarter consisting
+entirely of walled gardens, and the lanes which divided them were at that hour
+of the night deserted. I gave the cipaye a back, and we had soon dropped into a
+large enclosure full of trees. The place was soaking with the dew, which, in
+that country, is exceedingly unwholesome, above all to whites; yet my fatigue
+was so extreme that I was already half asleep, when the cipaye recalled me to
+my senses. In the far end of the enclosure a bright light had suddenly shone
+out, and continued to burn steadily among the leaves. It was a circumstance
+highly unusual in such a place and hour; and, in our situation, it behoved us
+to proceed with some timidity. The cipaye was sent to reconnoitre, and pretty
+soon returned with the intelligence that we had fallen extremely amiss, for the
+house belonged to a white man, who was in all likelihood English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faith,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;if there is a white man to be seen, I will
+have a look at him; for, the Lord be praised! there are more sorts than the
+one!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cipaye led me forward accordingly to a place from which I had a clear view
+upon the house. It was surrounded with a wide verandah; a lamp, very well
+trimmed, stood upon the floor of it, and on either side of the lamp there sat a
+man, cross-legged, after the Oriental manner. Both, besides, were bundled up in
+muslin like two natives; and yet one of them was not only a white man, but a
+man very well known to me and the reader, being indeed that very Master of
+Ballantrae of whose gallantry and genius I have had to speak so often. Word had
+reached me that he was come to the Indies, though we had never met at least,
+and I heard little of his occupations. But, sure, I had no sooner recognised
+him, and found myself in the arms of so old a comrade, than I supposed my
+tribulations were quite done. I stepped plainly forth into the light of the
+moon, which shone exceeding strong, and hailing Ballantrae by name, made him in
+a few words master of my grievous situation. He turned, started the least thing
+in the world, looked me fair in the face while I was speaking, and when I had
+done addressed himself to his companion in the barbarous native dialect. The
+second person, who was of an extraordinary delicate appearance, with legs like
+walking canes and fingers like the stalk of a tobacco pipe, <a
+name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6" class="citation">[6]</a> now rose to
+his feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Sahib,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;understands no English language. I
+understand it myself, and I see you make some small mistake&mdash;oh! which may
+happen very often. But the Sahib would be glad to know how you come in a
+garden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ballantrae!&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;have you the damned impudence to deny
+me to my face?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ballantrae never moved a muscle, staring at me like an image in a pagoda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Sahib understands no English language,&rdquo; says the native, as
+glib as before. &ldquo;He be glad to know how you come in a garden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! the divil fetch him,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;He would be glad to know
+how I come in a garden, would he? Well, now, my dear man, just have the
+civility to tell the Sahib, with my kind love, that we are two soldiers here
+whom he never met and never heard of, but the cipaye is a broth of a boy, and I
+am a broth of a boy myself; and if we don&rsquo;t get a full meal of meat, and
+a turban, and slippers, and the value of a gold mohur in small change as a
+matter of convenience, bedad, my friend, I could lay my finger on a garden
+where there is going to be trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They carried their comedy so far as to converse awhile in Hindustanee; and then
+says the Hindu, with the same smile, but sighing as if he were tired of the
+repetition, &ldquo;The Sahib would be glad to know how you come in a
+garden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that the way of it?&rdquo; says I, and laying my hand on my
+sword-hilt I bade the cipaye draw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ballantrae&rsquo;s Hindu, still smiling, pulled out a pistol from his bosom,
+and though Ballantrae himself never moved a muscle I knew him well enough to be
+sure he was prepared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Sahib thinks you better go away,&rdquo; says the Hindu.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, to be plain, it was what I was thinking myself; for the report of a
+pistol would have been, under Providence, the means of hanging the pair of us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell the Sahib I consider him no gentleman,&rdquo; says I, and turned
+away with a gesture of contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was not gone three steps when the voice of the Hindu called me back.
+&ldquo;The Sahib would be glad to know if you are a dam low Irishman,&rdquo;
+says he; and at the words Ballantrae smiled and bowed very low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is that?&rdquo; says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Sahib say you ask your friend Mackellar,&rdquo; says the Hindu.
+&ldquo;The Sahib he cry quits.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell the Sahib I will give him a cure for the Scots fiddle when next we
+meet,&rdquo; cried I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pair were still smiling as I left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is little doubt some flaws may be picked in my own behaviour; and when a
+man, however gallant, appeals to posterity with an account of his exploits, he
+must almost certainly expect to share the fate of C&aelig;sar and Alexander,
+and to meet with some detractors. But there is one thing that can never be laid
+at the door of Francis Burke: he never turned his back on a friend. . . .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(Here follows a passage which the Chevalier Burke has been at the pains to
+delete before sending me his manuscript. Doubtless it was some very natural
+complaint of what he supposed to be an indiscretion on my part; though, indeed,
+I can call none to mind. Perhaps Mr. Henry was less guarded; or it is just
+possible the Master found the means to examine my correspondence, and himself
+read the letter from Troyes: in revenge for which this cruel jest was
+perpetrated on Mr. Burke in his extreme necessity. The Master, for all his
+wickedness, was not without some natural affection; I believe he was sincerely
+attached to Mr. Burke in the beginning; but the thought of treachery dried up
+the springs of his very shallow friendship, and his detestable nature appeared
+naked.&mdash;E. McK.)
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE.</h2>
+
+<p>
+It is a strange thing that I should be at a stick for a date&mdash;the date,
+besides, of an incident that changed the very nature of my life, and sent us
+all into foreign lands. But the truth is, I was stricken out of all my
+habitudes, and find my journals very ill redd-up, <a name="citation7"></a><a
+href="#footnote7" class="citation">[7]</a> the day not indicated sometimes for
+a week or two together, and the whole fashion of the thing like that of a man
+near desperate. It was late in March at least, or early in April, 1764. I had
+slept heavily, and wakened with a premonition of some evil to befall. So strong
+was this upon my spirit that I hurried downstairs in my shirt and breeches, and
+my hand (I remember) shook upon the rail. It was a cold, sunny morning, with a
+thick white frost; the blackbirds sang exceeding sweet and loud about the house
+of Durrisdeer, and there was a noise of the sea in all the chambers. As I came
+by the doors of the hall, another sound arrested me&mdash;of voices talking. I
+drew nearer, and stood like a man dreaming. Here was certainly a human voice,
+and that in my own master&rsquo;s house, and yet I knew it not; certainly human
+speech, and that in my native land; and yet, listen as I pleased, I could not
+catch one syllable. An old tale started up in my mind of a fairy wife (or
+perhaps only a wandering stranger), that came to the place of my fathers some
+generations back, and stayed the matter of a week, talking often in a tongue
+that signified nothing to the hearers; and went again, as she had come, under
+cloud of night, leaving not so much as a name behind her. A little fear I had,
+but more curiosity; and I opened the hall-door, and entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The supper-things still lay upon the table; the shutters were still closed,
+although day peeped in the divisions; and the great room was lighted only with
+a single taper and some lurching reverberation of the fire. Close in the
+chimney sat two men. The one that was wrapped in a cloak and wore boots, I knew
+at once: it was the bird of ill omen back again. Of the other, who was set
+close to the red embers, and made up into a bundle like a mummy, I could but
+see that he was an alien, of a darker hue than any man of Europe, very frailly
+built, with a singular tall forehead, and a secret eye. Several bundles and a
+small valise were on the floor; and to judge by the smallness of this luggage,
+and by the condition of the Master&rsquo;s boots, grossly patched by some
+unscrupulous country cobbler, evil had not prospered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose upon my entrance; our eyes crossed; and I know not why it should have
+been, but my courage rose like a lark on a May morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;is this you?&rdquo;&mdash;and I was pleased
+with the unconcern of my own voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is even myself, worthy Mackellar,&rdquo; says the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This time you have brought the black dog visibly upon your back,&rdquo;
+I continued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Referring to Secundra Dass?&rdquo; asked the Master. &ldquo;Let me
+present you. He is a native gentleman of India.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hum!&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I am no great lover either of you or your
+friends, Mr. Bally. But I will let a little daylight in, and have a look at
+you.&rdquo; And so saying, I undid the shutters of the eastern window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the light of the morning I could perceive the man was changed. Later, when
+we were all together, I was more struck to see how lightly time had dealt with
+him; but the first glance was otherwise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are getting an old man,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shade came upon his face. &ldquo;If you could see yourself,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;you would perhaps not dwell upon the topic.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hut!&rdquo; I returned, &ldquo;old age is nothing to me. I think I have
+been always old; and I am now, I thank God, better known and more respected. It
+is not every one that can say that, Mr. Bally! The lines in your brow are
+calamities; your life begins to close in upon you like a prison; death will
+soon be rapping at the door; and I see not from what source you are to draw
+your consolations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the Master addressed himself to Secundra Dass in Hindustanee, from which I
+gathered (I freely confess, with a high degree of pleasure) that my remarks
+annoyed him. All this while, you may be sure, my mind had been busy upon other
+matters, even while I rallied my enemy; and chiefly as to how I should
+communicate secretly and quickly with my lord. To this, in the breathing-space
+now given me, I turned all the forces of my mind; when, suddenly shifting my
+eyes, I was aware of the man himself standing in the doorway, and, to all
+appearance, quite composed. He had no sooner met my looks than he stepped
+across the threshold. The Master heard him coming, and advanced upon the other
+side; about four feet apart, these brothers came to a full pause, and stood
+exchanging steady looks, and then my lord smiled, bowed a little forward, and
+turned briskly away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;we must see to breakfast for these
+travellers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was plain the Master was a trifle disconcerted; but he assumed the more
+impudence of speech and manner. &ldquo;I am as hungry as a hawk,&rdquo; says
+he. &ldquo;Let it be something good, Henry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord turned to him with the same hard smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lord Durrisdeer,&rdquo; says he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! never in the family,&rdquo; returned the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Every one in this house renders me my proper title,&rdquo; says my lord.
+&ldquo;If it please you to make an exception, I will leave you to consider what
+appearance it will bear to strangers, and whether it may not be translated as
+an effect of impotent jealousy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could have clapped my hands together with delight: the more so as my lord
+left no time for any answer, but, bidding me with a sign to follow him, went
+straight out of the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come quick,&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;we have to sweep vermin from the
+house.&rdquo; And he sped through the passages, with so swift a step that I
+could scarce keep up with him, straight to the door of John Paul, the which he
+opened without summons and walked in. John was, to all appearance, sound
+asleep, but my lord made no pretence of waking him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;John Paul,&rdquo; said he, speaking as quietly as ever I heard him,
+&ldquo;you served my father long, or I would pack you from the house like a
+dog. If in half an hour&rsquo;s time I find you gone, you shall continue to
+receive your wages in Edinburgh. If you linger here or in St.
+Bride&rsquo;s&mdash;old man, old servant, and altogether&mdash;I shall find
+some very astonishing way to make you smart for your disloyalty. Up and begone.
+The door you let them in by will serve for your departure. I do not choose my
+son shall see your face again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am rejoiced to find you bear the thing so quietly,&rdquo; said I, when
+we were forth again by ourselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quietly!&rdquo; cries he, and put my hand suddenly against his heart,
+which struck upon his bosom like a sledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this revelation I was filled with wonder and fear. There was no constitution
+could bear so violent a strain&mdash;his least of all, that was unhinged
+already; and I decided in my mind that we must bring this monstrous situation
+to an end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be well, I think, if I took word to my lady,&rdquo; said I.
+Indeed, he should have gone himself, but I counted&mdash;not in vain&mdash;on
+his indifference.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;do. I will hurry breakfast: we must all
+appear at the table, even Alexander; it must appear we are untroubled.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I ran to my lady&rsquo;s room, and with no preparatory cruelty, disclosed my
+news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My mind was long ago made up,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;We must make our
+packets secretly to-day, and leave secretly to-night. Thank Heaven, we have
+another house! The first ship that sails shall bear us to New York.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what of him?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We leave him Durrisdeer,&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Let him work his
+pleasure upon that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not so, by your leave,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;There shall be a dog at his
+heels that can hold fast. Bed he shall have, and board, and a horse to ride
+upon, if he behave himself; but the keys&mdash;if you think well of it, my
+lady&mdash;shall be left in the hands of one Mackellar. There will be good care
+taken; trust him for that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;I thank you for that thought.
+All shall be left in your hands. If we must go into a savage country, I
+bequeath it to you to take our vengeance. Send Macconochie to St.
+Bride&rsquo;s, to arrange privately for horses and to call the lawyer. My lord
+must leave procuration.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment my lord came to the door, and we opened our plan to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never hear of it,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;he would think I feared
+him. I will stay in my own house, please God, until I die. There lives not the
+man can beard me out of it. Once and for all, here I am, and here I stay in
+spite of all the devils in hell.&rdquo; I can give no idea of the vehemency of
+his words and utterance; but we both stood aghast, and I in particular, who had
+been a witness of his former self-restraint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lady looked at me with an appeal that went to my heart and recalled me to my
+wits. I made her a private sign to go, and when my lord and I were alone, went
+up to him where he was racing to and fro in one end of the room like a
+half-lunatic, and set my hand firmly on his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I am going to be the plain-dealer once
+more; if for the last time, so much the better, for I am grown weary of the
+part.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing will change me,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;God forbid I should
+refuse to hear you; but nothing will change me.&rdquo; This he said firmly,
+with no signal of the former violence, which already raised my hopes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said I &ldquo;I can afford to waste my breath.&rdquo;
+I pointed to a chair, and he sat down and looked at me. &ldquo;I can remember a
+time when my lady very much neglected you,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never spoke of it while it lasted,&rdquo; returned my lord, with a
+high flush of colour; &ldquo;and it is all changed now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know how much?&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;Do you know how much it is
+all changed? The tables are turned, my lord! It is my lady that now courts you
+for a word, a look&mdash;ay, and courts you in vain. Do you know with whom she
+passes her days while you are out gallivanting in the policies? My lord, she is
+glad to pass them with a certain dry old grieve <a name="citation8"></a><a
+href="#footnote8" class="citation">[8]</a> of the name of Ephraim Mackellar;
+and I think you may be able to remember what that means, for I am the more in a
+mistake or you were once driven to the same company yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar!&rdquo; cries my lord, getting to his feet. &ldquo;O my God,
+Mackellar!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is neither the name of Mackellar nor the name of God that can change
+the truth,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;and I am telling you the fact. Now for you,
+that suffered so much, to deal out the same suffering to another, is that the
+part of any Christian? But you are so swallowed up in your new friend that the
+old are all forgotten. They are all clean vanished from your memory. And yet
+they stood by you at the darkest; my lady not the least. And does my lady ever
+cross your mind? Does it ever cross your mind what she went through that
+night?&mdash;or what manner of a wife she has been to you
+thenceforward?&mdash;or in what kind of a position she finds herself to-day?
+Never. It is your pride to stay and face him out, and she must stay along with
+you. Oh! my lord&rsquo;s pride&mdash;that&rsquo;s the great affair! And yet she
+is the woman, and you are a great hulking man! She is the woman that you swore
+to protect; and, more betoken, the own mother of that son of yours!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are speaking very bitterly, Mackellar,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but,
+the Lord knows, I fear you are speaking very true. I have not proved worthy of
+my happiness. Bring my lady back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lady was waiting near at hand to learn the issue. When I brought her in, my
+lord took a hand of each of us, and laid them both upon his bosom. &ldquo;I
+have had two friends in my life,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;All the comfort ever I
+had, it came from one or other. When you two are in a mind, I think I would be
+an ungrateful dog&mdash;&rdquo; He shut his mouth very hard, and looked on us
+with swimming eyes. &ldquo;Do what ye like with me,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;only
+don&rsquo;t think&mdash;&rdquo; He stopped again. &ldquo;Do what ye please with
+me: God knows I love and honour you.&rdquo; And dropping our two hands, he
+turned his back and went and gazed out of the window. But my lady ran after,
+calling his name, and threw herself upon his neck in a passion of weeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went out and shut the door behind me, and stood and thanked God from the
+bottom of my heart.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> At the breakfast board, according to my lord&rsquo;s design, we
+were all met. The Master had by that time plucked off his patched boots and
+made a toilet suitable to the hour; Secundra Dass was no longer bundled up in
+wrappers, but wore a decent plain black suit, which misbecame him strangely;
+and the pair were at the great window, looking forth, when the family entered.
+They turned; and the black man (as they had already named him in the house)
+bowed almost to his knees, but the Master was for running forward like one of
+the family. My lady stopped him, curtseying low from the far end of the hall,
+and keeping her children at her back. My lord was a little in front: so there
+were the three cousins of Durrisdeer face to face. The hand of time was very
+legible on all; I seemed to read in their changed faces a <i>memento mori</i>;
+and what affected me still more, it was the wicked man that bore his years the
+handsomest. My lady was quite transfigured into the matron, a becoming woman
+for the head of a great tableful of children and dependents. My lord was grown
+slack in his limbs; he stooped; he walked with a running motion, as though he
+had learned again from Mr. Alexander; his face was drawn; it seemed a trifle
+longer than of old; and it wore at times a smile very singularly mingled, and
+which (in my eyes) appeared both bitter and pathetic. But the Master still bore
+himself erect, although perhaps with effort; his brow barred about the centre
+with imperious lines, his mouth set as for command. He had all the gravity and
+something of the splendour of Satan in the &ldquo;Paradise Lost.&rdquo; I could
+not help but see the man with admiration, and was only surprised that I saw him
+with so little fear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But indeed (as long as we were at the table) it seemed as if his authority were
+quite vanished and his teeth all drawn. We had known him a magician that
+controlled the elements; and here he was, transformed into an ordinary
+gentleman, chatting like his neighbours at the breakfast-board. For now the
+father was dead, and my lord and lady reconciled, in what ear was he to pour
+his calumnies? It came upon me in a kind of vision how hugely I had overrated
+the man&rsquo;s subtlety. He had his malice still; he was false as ever; and,
+the occasion being gone that made his strength, he sat there impotent; he was
+still the viper, but now spent his venom on a file. Two more thoughts occurred
+to me while yet we sat at breakfast: the first, that he was abashed&mdash;I had
+almost said, distressed&mdash;to find his wickedness quite unavailing; the
+second, that perhaps my lord was in the right, and we did amiss to fly from our
+dismasted enemy. But my poor man&rsquo;s leaping heart came in my mind, and I
+remembered it was for his life we played the coward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the meal was over, the Master followed me to my room, and, taking a chair
+(which I had never offered him), asked me what was to be done with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;the house will still be open to
+you for a time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For a time?&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;I do not know if I quite take your
+meaning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is plain enough,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;We keep you for our
+reputation; as soon as you shall have publicly disgraced yourself by some of
+your misconduct, we shall pack you forth again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are become an impudent rogue,&rdquo; said the Master, bending his
+brows at me dangerously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I learned in a good school,&rdquo; I returned. &ldquo;And you must have
+perceived yourself that with my old lord&rsquo;s death your power is quite
+departed. I do not fear you now, Mr. Bally; I think even&mdash;God forgive
+me&mdash;that I take a certain pleasure in your company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He broke out in a burst of laughter, which I clearly saw to be assumed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have come with empty pockets,&rdquo; says he, after a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not think there will be any money going,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;I
+would advise you not to build on that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall have something to say on the point,&rdquo; he returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed?&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I have not a guess what it will be,
+then.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! you affect confidence,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;I have still
+one strong position&mdash;that you people fear a scandal, and I enjoy
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pardon me, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;We do not in the least fear
+a scandal against you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed again. &ldquo;You have been studying repartee,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;But speech is very easy, and sometimes very deceptive. I warn you
+fairly: you will find me vitriol in the house. You would do wiser to pay money
+down and see my back.&rdquo; And with that he waved his hand to me and left the
+room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little after, my lord came with the lawyer, Mr. Carlyle; a bottle of old wine
+was brought, and we all had a glass before we fell to business. The necessary
+deeds were then prepared and executed, and the Scotch estates made over in
+trust to Mr. Carlyle and myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is one point, Mr. Carlyle,&rdquo; said my lord, when these affairs
+had been adjusted, &ldquo;on which I wish that you would do us justice. This
+sudden departure coinciding with my brother&rsquo;s return will be certainly
+commented on. I wish you would discourage any conjunction of the two.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will make a point of it, my lord,&rdquo; said Mr. Carlyle. &ldquo;The
+Mas&mdash; Bally does not, then, accompany you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a point I must approach,&rdquo; said my lord. &ldquo;Mr. Bally
+remains at Durrisdeer, under the care of Mr. Mackellar; and I do not mean that
+he shall even know our destination.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Common report, however&mdash;&rdquo; began the lawyer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! but, Mr. Carlyle, this is to be a secret quite among
+ourselves,&rdquo; interrupted my lord. &ldquo;None but you and Mackellar are to
+be made acquainted with my movements.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. Bally stays here? Quite so,&rdquo; said Mr. Carlyle. &ldquo;The
+powers you leave&mdash;&rdquo; Then he broke off again. &ldquo;Mr. Mackellar,
+we have a rather heavy weight upon us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Mr. Bally will have no voice?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He will have no voice,&rdquo; said my lord; &ldquo;and, I hope, no
+influence. Mr. Bally is not a good adviser.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the lawyer. &ldquo;By the way, has Mr. Bally
+means?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understand him to have nothing,&rdquo; replied my lord. &ldquo;I give
+him table, fire, and candle in this house.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in the matter of an allowance? If I am to share the responsibility,
+you will see how highly desirable it is that I should understand your
+views,&rdquo; said the lawyer. &ldquo;On the question of an allowance?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There will be no allowance,&rdquo; said my lord. &ldquo;I wish Mr. Bally
+to live very private. We have not always been gratified with his
+behaviour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in the matter of money,&rdquo; I added, &ldquo;he has shown himself
+an infamous bad husband. Glance your eye upon that docket, Mr. Carlyle, where I
+have brought together the different sums the man has drawn from the estate in
+the last fifteen or twenty years. The total is pretty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Carlyle made the motion of whistling. &ldquo;I had no guess of this,&rdquo;
+said he. &ldquo;Excuse me once more, my lord, if I appear to push you; but it
+is really desirable I should penetrate your intentions. Mr. Mackellar might
+die, when I should find myself alone upon this trust. Would it not be rather
+your lordship&rsquo;s preference that Mr. Bally should&mdash;ahem&mdash;should
+leave the country?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord looked at Mr. Carlyle. &ldquo;Why do you ask that?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I gather, my lord, that Mr. Bally is not a comfort to his family,&rdquo;
+says the lawyer with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord&rsquo;s face became suddenly knotted. &ldquo;I wish he was in
+hell!&rdquo; cried he, and filled himself a glass of wine, but with a hand so
+tottering that he spilled the half into his bosom. This was the second time
+that, in the midst of the most regular and wise behaviour, his animosity had
+spirted out. It startled Mr. Carlyle, who observed my lord thenceforth with
+covert curiosity; and to me it restored the certainty that we were acting for
+the best in view of my lord&rsquo;s health and reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Except for this explosion the interview was very successfully conducted. No
+doubt Mr. Carlyle would talk, as lawyers do, little by little. We could thus
+feel we had laid the foundations of a better feeling in the country, and the
+man&rsquo;s own misconduct would certainly complete what we had begun. Indeed,
+before his departure, the lawyer showed us there had already gone abroad some
+glimmerings of the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should perhaps explain to you, my lord,&rdquo; said he, pausing, with
+his hat in his hand, &ldquo;that I have not been altogether surprised with your
+lordship&rsquo;s dispositions in the case of Mr. Bally. Something of this
+nature oozed out when he was last in Durrisdeer. There was some talk of a woman
+at St. Bride&rsquo;s, to whom you had behaved extremely handsome, and Mr. Bally
+with no small degree of cruelty. There was the entail, again, which was much
+controverted. In short, there was no want of talk, back and forward; and some
+of our wise-acres took up a strong opinion. I remained in suspense, as became
+one of my cloth; but Mr. Mackellar&rsquo;s docket here has finally opened my
+eyes. I do not think, Mr. Mackellar, that you and I will give him that much
+rope.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> The rest of that important day passed prosperously through. It
+was our policy to keep the enemy in view, and I took my turn to be his watchman
+with the rest. I think his spirits rose as he perceived us to be so attentive,
+and I know that mine insensibly declined. What chiefly daunted me was the
+man&rsquo;s singular dexterity to worm himself into our troubles. You may have
+felt (after a horse accident) the hand of a bone-setter artfully divide and
+interrogate the muscles, and settle strongly on the injured place? It was so
+with the Master&rsquo;s tongue, that was so cunning to question; and his eyes,
+that were so quick to observe. I seemed to have said nothing, and yet to have
+let all out. Before I knew where I was the man was condoling with me on my
+lord&rsquo;s neglect of my lady and myself, and his hurtful indulgence to his
+son. On this last point I perceived him (with panic fear) to return repeatedly.
+The boy had displayed a certain shrinking from his uncle; it was strong in my
+mind his father had been fool enough to indoctrinate the same, which was no
+wise beginning: and when I looked upon the man before me, still so handsome, so
+apt a speaker, with so great a variety of fortunes to relate, I saw he was the
+very personage to captivate a boyish fancy. John Paul had left only that
+morning; it was not to be supposed he had been altogether dumb upon his
+favourite subject: so that here would be Mr. Alexander in the part of Dido,
+with a curiosity inflamed to hear; and there would be the Master, like a
+diabolical &AElig;neas, full of matter the most pleasing in the world to any
+youthful ear, such as battles, sea-disasters, flights, the forests of the West,
+and (since his later voyage) the ancient cities of the Indies. How cunningly
+these baits might be employed, and what an empire might be so founded, little
+by little, in the mind of any boy, stood obviously clear to me. There was no
+inhibition, so long as the man was in the house, that would be strong enough to
+hold these two apart; for if it be hard to charm serpents, it is no very
+difficult thing to cast a glamour on a little chip of manhood not very long in
+breeches. I recalled an ancient sailor-man who dwelt in a lone house beyond the
+Figgate Whins (I believe, he called it after Portobello), and how the boys
+would troop out of Leith on a Saturday, and sit and listen to his swearing
+tales, as thick as crows about a carrion: a thing I often remarked as I went
+by, a young student, on my own more meditative holiday diversion. Many of these
+boys went, no doubt, in the face of an express command; many feared and even
+hated the old brute of whom they made their hero; and I have seen them flee
+from him when he was tipsy, and stone him when he was drunk. And yet there they
+came each Saturday! How much more easily would a boy like Mr. Alexander fall
+under the influence of a high-looking, high-spoken gentleman-adventurer, who
+should conceive the fancy to entrap him; and, the influence gained, how easy to
+employ it for the child&rsquo;s perversion!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I doubt if our enemy had named Mr. Alexander three times before I perceived
+which way his mind was aiming&mdash;all this train of thought and memory passed
+in one pulsation through my own&mdash;and you may say I started back as though
+an open hole had gaped across a pathway. Mr. Alexander: there was the weak
+point, there was the Eve in our perishable paradise; and the serpent was
+already hissing on the trail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I promise you, I went the more heartily about the preparations; my last scruple
+gone, the danger of delay written before me in huge characters. From that
+moment forth I seem not to have sat down or breathed. Now I would be at my post
+with the Master and his Indian; now in the garret, buckling a valise; now
+sending forth Macconochie by the side postern and the wood-path to bear it to
+the trysting-place; and, again, snatching some words of counsel with my lady.
+This was the <i>verso</i> of our life in Durrisdeer that day; but on the
+<i>recto</i> all appeared quite settled, as of a family at home in its paternal
+seat; and what perturbation may have been observable, the Master would set down
+to the blow of his unlooked-for coming, and the fear he was accustomed to
+inspire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Supper went creditably off, cold salutations passed and the company trooped to
+their respective chambers. I attended the Master to the last. We had put him
+next door to his Indian, in the north wing; because that was the most distant
+and could be severed from the body of the house with doors. I saw he was a kind
+friend or a good master (whichever it was) to his Secundra Dass&mdash;seeing to
+his comfort; mending the fire with his own hand, for the Indian complained of
+cold; inquiring as to the rice on which the stranger made his diet; talking
+with him pleasantly in the Hindustanee, while I stood by, my candle in my hand,
+and affected to be overcome with slumber. At length the Master observed my
+signals of distress. &ldquo;I perceive,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;that you have
+all your ancient habits: early to bed and early to rise. Yawn yourself
+away!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once in my own room, I made the customary motions of undressing, so that I
+might time myself; and when the cycle was complete, set my tinder-box ready,
+and blew out my taper. The matter of an hour afterward I made a light again,
+put on my shoes of list that I had worn by my lord&rsquo;s sick-bed, and set
+forth into the house to call the voyagers. All were dressed and
+waiting&mdash;my lord, my lady, Miss Katharine, Mr. Alexander, my lady&rsquo;s
+woman Christie; and I observed the effect of secrecy even upon quite innocent
+persons, that one after another showed in the chink of the door a face as white
+as paper. We slipped out of the side postern into a night of darkness, scarce
+broken by a star or two; so that at first we groped and stumbled and fell among
+the bushes. A few hundred yards up the wood-path Macconochie was waiting us
+with a great lantern; so the rest of the way we went easy enough, but still in
+a kind of guilty silence. A little beyond the abbey the path debauched on the
+main road and some quarter of a mile farther, at the place called Eagles, where
+the moors begin, we saw the lights of the two carriages stand shining by the
+wayside. Scarce a word or two was uttered at our parting, and these regarded
+business: a silent grasping of hands, a turning of faces aside, and the thing
+was over; the horses broke into a trot, the lamplight sped like
+Will-o&rsquo;-the-Wisp upon the broken moorland, it dipped beyond Stony Brae;
+and there were Macconochie and I alone with our lantern on the road. There was
+one thing more to wait for, and that was the reappearance of the coach upon
+Cartmore. It seems they must have pulled up upon the summit, looked back for a
+last time, and seen our lantern not yet moved away from the place of
+separation. For a lamp was taken from a carriage, and waved three times up and
+down by way of a farewell. And then they were gone indeed, having looked their
+last on the kind roof of Durrisdeer, their faces toward a barbarous country. I
+never knew before, the greatness of that vault of night in which we two poor
+serving-men&mdash;the one old, and the one elderly&mdash;stood for the first
+time deserted; I had never felt before my own dependency upon the countenance
+of others. The sense of isolation burned in my bowels like a fire. It seemed
+that we who remained at home were the true exiles, and that Durrisdeer and
+Solwayside, and all that made my country native, its air good to me, and its
+language welcome, had gone forth and was far over the sea with my old masters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remainder of that night I paced to and fro on the smooth highway,
+reflecting on the future and the past. My thoughts, which at first dwelled
+tenderly on those who were just gone, took a more manly temper as I considered
+what remained for me to do. Day came upon the inland mountain-tops, and the
+fowls began to cry, and the smoke of homesteads to arise in the brown bosom of
+the moors, before I turned my face homeward, and went down the path to where
+the roof of Durrisdeer shone in the morning by the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> At the customary hour I had the Master called, and awaited his
+coming in the hall with a quiet mind. He looked about him at the empty room and
+the three covers set.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are a small party,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;How comes?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the party to which we must grow accustomed,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at me with a sudden sharpness. &ldquo;What is all this?&rdquo; said
+he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You and I and your friend Mr. Dass are now all the company,&rdquo; I
+replied. &ldquo;My lord, my lady, and the children, are gone upon a
+voyage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my word!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Can this be possible? I have indeed
+fluttered your Volscians in Corioli! But this is no reason why our breakfast
+should go cold. Sit down, Mr. Mackellar, if you please&rdquo;&mdash;taking, as
+he spoke, the head of the table, which I had designed to occupy
+myself&mdash;&ldquo;and as we eat, you can give me the details of this
+evasion.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could see he was more affected than his language carried, and I determined to
+equal him in coolness. &ldquo;I was about to ask you to take the head of the
+table,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;for though I am now thrust into the position of
+your host, I could never forget that you were, after all, a member of the
+family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a while he played the part of entertainer, giving directions to
+Macconochie, who received them with an evil grace, and attending specially upon
+Secundra. &ldquo;And where has my good family withdrawn to?&rdquo; he asked
+carelessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Mr. Bally, that is another point,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I have no
+orders to communicate their destination.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me,&rdquo; he corrected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To any one,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the less pointed,&rdquo; said the master; &ldquo;<i>c&rsquo;est de
+bon ton</i>: my brother improves as he continues. And I, dear Mr.
+Mackellar?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will have bed and board, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I am
+permitted to give you the run of the cellar, which is pretty reasonably
+stocked. You have only to keep well with me, which is no very difficult matter,
+and you shall want neither for wine nor a saddle-horse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made an excuse to send Macconochie from the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for money?&rdquo; he inquired. &ldquo;Have I to keep well with my
+good friend Mackellar for my pocket-money also? This is a pleasing return to
+the principles of boyhood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was no allowance made,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;but I will take it on
+myself to see you are supplied in moderation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In moderation?&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;And you will take it on
+yourself?&rdquo; He drew himself up, and looked about the hall at the dark rows
+of portraits. &ldquo;In the name of my ancestors, I thank you,&rdquo; says he;
+and then, with a return to irony, &ldquo;But there must certainly be an
+allowance for Secundra Dass?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It in not possible they
+have omitted that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will make a note of it, and ask instructions when I write,&rdquo; said
+I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he, with a sudden change of manner, and leaning forward with an elbow on
+the table&mdash;&ldquo;Do you think this entirely wise?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I execute my orders, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Profoundly modest,&rdquo; said the Master; &ldquo;perhaps not equally
+ingenuous. You told me yesterday my power was fallen with my father&rsquo;s
+death. How comes it, then, that a peer of the realm flees under cloud of night
+out of a house in which his fathers have stood several sieges? that he conceals
+his address, which must be a matter of concern to his Gracious Majesty and to
+the whole republic? and that he should leave me in possession, and under the
+paternal charge of his invaluable Mackellar? This smacks to me of a very
+considerable and genuine apprehension.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sought to interrupt him with some not very truthful denegation; but he waved
+me down, and pursued his speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I say, it smacks of it,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but I will go beyond
+that, for I think the apprehension grounded. I came to this house with some
+reluctancy. In view of the manner of my last departure, nothing but necessity
+could have induced me to return. Money, however, is that which I must have. You
+will not give with a good grace; well, I have the power to force it from you.
+Inside of a week, without leaving Durrisdeer, I will find out where these fools
+are fled to. I will follow; and when I have run my quarry down, I will drive a
+wedge into that family that shall once more burst it into shivers. I shall see
+then whether my Lord Durrisdeer&rdquo; (said with indescribable scorn and rage)
+&ldquo;will choose to buy my absence; and you will all see whether, by that
+time, I decide for profit or revenge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was amazed to hear the man so open. The truth is, he was consumed with anger
+at my lord&rsquo;s successful flight, felt himself to figure as a dupe, and was
+in no humour to weigh language.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you consider <i>this</i> entirely wise?&rdquo; said I, copying his
+words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;These twenty years I have lived by my poor wisdom,&rdquo; he answered
+with a smile that seemed almost foolish in its vanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And come out a beggar in the end,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if beggar be a
+strong enough word for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would have you to observe, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; cried he, with a
+sudden imperious heat, in which I could not but admire him, &ldquo;that I am
+scrupulously civil: copy me in that, and we shall be the better friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout this dialogue I had been incommoded by the observation of Secundra
+Dass. Not one of us, since the first word, had made a feint of eating: our eyes
+were in each other&rsquo;s faces&mdash;you might say, in each other&rsquo;s
+bosoms; and those of the Indian troubled me with a certain changing brightness,
+as of comprehension. But I brushed the fancy aside, telling myself once more he
+understood no English; only, from the gravity of both voices, and the
+occasional scorn and anger in the Master&rsquo;s, smelled out there was
+something of import in the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> For the matter of three weeks we continued to live together in
+the house of Durrisdeer: the beginning of that most singular chapter of my
+life&mdash;what I must call my intimacy with the Master. At first he was
+somewhat changeable in his behaviour: now civil, now returning to his old
+manner of flouting me to my face; and in both I met him half-way. Thanks be to
+Providence, I had now no measure to keep with the man; and I was never afraid
+of black brows, only of naked swords. So that I found a certain entertainment
+in these bouts of incivility, and was not always ill-inspired in my rejoinders.
+At last (it was at supper) I had a droll expression that entirely vanquished
+him. He laughed again and again; and &ldquo;Who would have guessed,&rdquo; he
+cried, &ldquo;that this old wife had any wit under his petticoats?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no wit, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; said I: &ldquo;a dry Scot&rsquo;s
+humour, and something of the driest.&rdquo; And, indeed, I never had the least
+pretension to be thought a wit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From that hour he was never rude with me, but all passed between us in a manner
+of pleasantry. One of our chief times of daffing <a name="citation9"></a><a
+href="#footnote9" class="citation">[9]</a> was when he required a horse,
+another bottle, or some money. He would approach me then after the manner of a
+schoolboy, and I would carry it on by way of being his father: on both sides,
+with an infinity of mirth. I could not but perceive that he thought more of me,
+which tickled that poor part of mankind, the vanity. He dropped, besides (I
+must suppose unconsciously), into a manner that was not only familiar, but even
+friendly; and this, on the part of one who had so long detested me, I found the
+more insidious. He went little abroad; sometimes even refusing invitations.
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;what do I care for these thick-headed
+bonnet-lairds? I will stay at home, Mackellar; and we shall share a bottle
+quietly, and have one of our good talks.&rdquo; And, indeed, meal-time at
+Durrisdeer must have been a delight to any one, by reason of the brilliancy of
+the discourse. He would often express wonder at his former indifference to my
+society. &ldquo;But, you see,&rdquo; he would add, &ldquo;we were upon opposite
+sides. And so we are to-day; but let us never speak of that. I would think much
+less of you if you were not staunch to your employer.&rdquo; You are to
+consider he seemed to me quite impotent for any evil; and how it is a most
+engaging form of flattery when (after many years) tardy justice is done to a
+man&rsquo;s character and parts. But I have no thought to excuse myself. I was
+to blame; I let him cajole me, and, in short, I think the watch-dog was going
+sound asleep, when he was suddenly aroused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I should say the Indian was continually travelling to and fro in the house. He
+never spoke, save in his own dialect and with the Master; walked without sound;
+and was always turning up where you would least expect him, fallen into a deep
+abstraction, from which he would start (upon your coming) to mock you with one
+of his grovelling obeisances. He seemed so quiet, so frail, and so wrapped in
+his own fancies, that I came to pass him over without much regard, or even to
+pity him for a harmless exile from his country. And yet without doubt the
+creature was still eavesdropping; and without doubt it was through his stealth
+and my security that our secret reached the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was one very wild night, after supper, and when we had been making more than
+usually merry, that the blow fell on me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is all very fine,&rdquo; says the Master, &ldquo;but we should do
+better to be buckling our valise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why so?&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Are you leaving?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are all leaving to-morrow in the morning,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;For
+the port of Glascow first, thence for the province of New York.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I suppose I must have groaned aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I boasted; I said a week, and it has
+taken me near twenty days. But never mind; I shall make it up; I will go the
+faster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you the money for this voyage?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear and ingenuous personage, I have,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Blame me,
+if you choose, for my duplicity; but while I have been wringing shillings from
+my daddy, I had a stock of my own put by against a rainy day. You will pay for
+your own passage, if you choose to accompany us on our flank march; I have
+enough for Secundra and myself, but not more&mdash;enough to be dangerous, not
+enough to be generous. There is, however, an outside seat upon the chaise which
+I will let you have upon a moderate commutation; so that the whole menagerie
+can go together&mdash;the house-dog, the monkey, and the tiger.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I go with you,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I count upon it,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;You have seen me foiled;
+I mean you shall see me victorious. To gain that I will risk wetting you like a
+sop in this wild weather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And at least,&rdquo; I added, &ldquo;you know very well you could not
+throw me off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not easily,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You put your finger on the point with
+your usual excellent good sense. I never fight with the inevitable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose it is useless to appeal to you?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Believe me, perfectly,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet, if you would give me time, I could write&mdash;&rdquo; I began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what would be my Lord Durrisdeer&rsquo;s answer?&rdquo; asks he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that is the rub.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, at any rate, how much more expeditious that I should go
+myself!&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;But all this is quite a waste of breath. At
+seven to-morrow the chaise will be at the door. For I start from the door,
+Mackellar; I do not skulk through woods and take my chaise upon the
+wayside&mdash;shall we say, at Eagles?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My mind was now thoroughly made up. &ldquo;Can you spare me quarter of an hour
+at St. Bride&rsquo;s?&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;I have a little necessary business
+with Carlyle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An hour, if you prefer,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I do not seek to deny
+that the money for your seat is an object to me; and you could always get the
+first to Glascow with saddle-horses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I never thought to leave old
+Scotland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will brisken you up,&rdquo; says he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This will be an ill journey for some one,&rdquo; I said. &ldquo;I think,
+sir, for you. Something speaks in my bosom; and so much it says
+plain&mdash;that this is an ill-omened journey.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you take to prophecy,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;listen to that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came up a violent squall off the open Solway, and the rain was dashed on
+the great windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do ye ken what that bodes, warlock?&rdquo; said he, in a broad accent:
+&ldquo;that there&rsquo;ll be a man Mackellar unco&rsquo; sick at sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I got to my chamber, I sat there under a painful excitation, hearkening to
+the turmoil of the gale, which struck full upon that gable of the house. What
+with the pressure on my spirits, the eldritch cries of the wind among the
+turret-tops, and the perpetual trepidation of the masoned house, sleep fled my
+eyelids utterly. I sat by my taper, looking on the black panes of the window,
+where the storm appeared continually on the point of bursting in its entrance;
+and upon that empty field I beheld a perspective of consequences that made the
+hair to rise upon my scalp. The child corrupted, the home broken up, my master
+dead or worse than dead, my mistress plunged in desolation&mdash;all these I
+saw before me painted brightly on the darkness; and the outcry of the wind
+appeared to mock at my inaction.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+MR. MACKELLAR&rsquo;S JOURNEY WITH THE MASTER.</h2>
+
+<p>
+The chaise came to the door in a strong drenching mist. We took our leave in
+silence: the house of Durrisdeer standing with dropping gutters and windows
+closed, like a place dedicate to melancholy. I observed the Master kept his
+head out, looking back on these splashed walls and glimmering roofs, till they
+were suddenly swallowed in the mist; and I must suppose some natural sadness
+fell upon the man at this departure; or was it some provision of the end? At
+least, upon our mounting the long brae from Durrisdeer, as we walked side by
+side in the wet, he began first to whistle and then to sing the saddest of our
+country tunes, which sets folk weeping in a tavern, <i>Wandering Willie</i>.
+The set of words he used with it I have not heard elsewhere, and could never
+come by any copy; but some of them which were the most appropriate to our
+departure linger in my memory. One verse began&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces,<br />
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+And ended somewhat thus&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland,<br />
+    Lone stands the house, and the chimney-stone is cold.<br />
+Lone let it stand, now the folks are all departed,<br />
+    The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I could never be a judge of the merit of these verses; they were so hallowed by
+the melancholy of the air, and were sung (or rather &ldquo;soothed&rdquo;) to
+me by a master-singer at a time so fitting. He looked in my face when he had
+done, and saw that my eyes watered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;do you think I have never a
+regret?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not think you could be so bad a man,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you
+had not all the machinery to be a good one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, not all,&rdquo; says he: &ldquo;not all. You are there in error. The
+malady of not wanting, my evangelist.&rdquo; But methought he sighed as he
+mounted again into the chaise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day long we journeyed in the same miserable weather: the mist besetting us
+closely, the heavens incessantly weeping on my head. The road lay over moorish
+hills, where was no sound but the crying of moor-fowl in the wet heather and
+the pouring of the swollen burns. Sometimes I would doze off in slumber, when I
+would find myself plunged at once in some foul and ominous nightmare, from the
+which I would awake strangling. Sometimes, if the way was steep and the wheels
+turning slowly, I would overhear the voices from within, talking in that
+tropical tongue which was to me as inarticulate as the piping of the fowls.
+Sometimes, at a longer ascent, the Master would set foot to ground and walk by
+my side, mostly without speech. And all the time, sleeping or waking, I beheld
+the same black perspective of approaching ruin; and the same pictures rose in
+my view, only they were now painted upon hillside mist. One, I remember, stood
+before me with the colours of a true illusion. It showed me my lord seated at a
+table in a small room; his head, which was at first buried in his hands, he
+slowly raised, and turned upon me a countenance from which hope had fled. I saw
+it first on the black window-panes, my last night in Durrisdeer; it haunted and
+returned upon me half the voyage through; and yet it was no effect of lunacy,
+for I have come to a ripe old age with no decay of my intelligence; nor yet (as
+I was then tempted to suppose) a heaven-sent warning of the future, for all
+manner of calamities befell, not that calamity&mdash;and I saw many pitiful
+sights, but never that one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was decided we should travel on all night; and it was singular, once the
+dusk had fallen, my spirits somewhat rose. The bright lamps, shining forth into
+the mist and on the smoking horses and the hodding post-boy, gave me perhaps an
+outlook intrinsically more cheerful than what day had shown; or perhaps my mind
+had become wearied of its melancholy. At least, I spent some waking hours, not
+without satisfaction in my thoughts, although wet and weary in my body; and
+fell at last into a natural slumber without dreams. Yet I must have been at
+work even in the deepest of my sleep; and at work with at least a measure of
+intelligence. For I started broad awake, in the very act of crying out to
+myself
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child,
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+stricken to find in it an appropriateness, which I had not yesterday observed,
+to the Master&rsquo;s detestable purpose in the present journey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were then close upon the city of Glascow, where we were soon breakfasting
+together at an inn, and where (as the devil would have it) we found a ship in
+the very article of sailing. We took our places in the cabin; and, two days
+after, carried our effects on board. Her name was the <i>Nonesuch</i>, a very
+ancient ship and very happily named. By all accounts this should be her last
+voyage; people shook their heads upon the quays, and I had several warnings
+offered me by strangers in the street to the effect that she was rotten as a
+cheese, too deeply loaden, and must infallibly founder if we met a gale. From
+this it fell out we were the only passengers; the Captain, McMurtrie, was a
+silent, absorbed man, with the Glascow or Gaelic accent; the mates ignorant
+rough seafarers, come in through the hawsehole; and the Master and I were cast
+upon each other&rsquo;s company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>The Nonesuch</i> carried a fair wind out of the Clyde, and for near upon a
+week we enjoyed bright weather and a sense of progress. I found myself (to my
+wonder) a born seaman, in so far at least as I was never sick; yet I was far
+from tasting the usual serenity of my health. Whether it was the motion of the
+ship on the billows, the confinement, the salted food, or all of these
+together, I suffered from a blackness of spirit and a painful strain upon my
+temper. The nature of my errand on that ship perhaps contributed; I think it
+did no more; the malady (whatever it was) sprang from my environment; and if
+the ship were not to blame, then it was the Master. Hatred and fear are ill
+bedfellows; but (to my shame be it spoken) I have tasted those in other places,
+lain down and got up with them, and eaten and drunk with them, and yet never
+before, nor after, have I been so poisoned through and through, in soul and
+body, as I was on board the <i>Nonesuch</i>. I freely confess my enemy set me a
+fair example of forbearance; in our worst days displayed the most patient
+geniality, holding me in conversation as long as I would suffer, and when I had
+rebuffed his civility, stretching himself on deck to read. The book he had on
+board with him was Mr. Richardson&rsquo;s famous <i>Clarissa</i>! and among
+other small attentions he would read me passages aloud; nor could any
+elocutionist have given with greater potency the pathetic portions of that
+work. I would retort upon him with passages out of the Bible, which was all my
+library&mdash;and very fresh to me, my religious duties (I grieve to say it)
+being always and even to this day extremely neglected. He tasted the merits of
+the word like the connoisseur he was; and would sometimes take it from my hand,
+turn the leaves over like a man that knew his way, and give me, with his fine
+declamation, a Roland for my Oliver. But it was singular how little he applied
+his reading to himself; it passed high above his head like summer thunder:
+Lovelace and Clarissa, the tales of David&rsquo;s generosity, the psalms of his
+penitence, the solemn questions of the book of Job, the touching poetry of
+Isaiah&mdash;they were to him a source of entertainment only, like the scraping
+of a fiddle in a change-house. This outer sensibility and inner toughness set
+me against him; it seemed of a piece with that impudent grossness which I knew
+to underlie the veneer of his fine manners; and sometimes my gorge rose against
+him as though he were deformed&mdash;and sometimes I would draw away as though
+from something partly spectral. I had moments when I thought of him as of a man
+of pasteboard&mdash;as though, if one should strike smartly through the buckram
+of his countenance, there would be found a mere vacuity within. This horror
+(not merely fanciful, I think) vastly increased my detestation of his
+neighbourhood; I began to feel something shiver within me on his drawing near;
+I had at times a longing to cry out; there were days when I thought I could
+have struck him. This frame of mind was doubtless helped by shame, because I
+had dropped during our last days at Durrisdeer into a certain toleration of the
+man; and if any one had then told me I should drop into it again, I must have
+laughed in his face. It is possible he remained unconscious of this extreme
+fever of my resentment; yet I think he was too quick; and rather that he had
+fallen, in a long life of idleness, into a positive need of company, which
+obliged him to confront and tolerate my unconcealed aversion. Certain, at
+least, that he loved the note of his own tongue, as, indeed, he entirely loved
+all the parts and properties of himself; a sort of imbecility which almost
+necessarily attends on wickedness. I have seen him driven, when I proved
+recalcitrant, to long discourses with the skipper; and this, although the man
+plainly testified his weariness, fiddling miserably with both hand and foot,
+and replying only with a grunt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the first week out we fell in with foul winds and heavy weather. The sea
+was high. The <i>Nonesuch</i>, being an old-fashioned ship and badly loaden,
+rolled beyond belief; so that the skipper trembled for his masts, and I for my
+life. We made no progress on our course. An unbearable ill-humour settled on
+the ship: men, mates, and master, girding at one another all day long. A saucy
+word on the one hand, and a blow on the other, made a daily incident. There
+were times when the whole crew refused their duty; and we of the afterguard
+were twice got under arms&mdash;being the first time that ever I bore
+weapons&mdash;in the fear of mutiny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the midst of our evil season sprang up a hurricane of wind; so that all
+supposed she must go down. I was shut in the cabin from noon of one day till
+sundown of the next; the Master was somewhere lashed on deck. Secundra had
+eaten of some drug and lay insensible; so you may say I passed these hours in
+an unbroken solitude. At first I was terrified beyond motion, and almost beyond
+thought, my mind appearing to be frozen. Presently there stole in on me a ray
+of comfort. If the <i>Nonesuch</i> foundered, she would carry down with her
+into the deeps of that unsounded sea the creature whom we all so feared and
+hated; there would be no more Master of Ballantrae, the fish would sport among
+his ribs; his schemes all brought to nothing, his harmless enemies at peace. At
+first, I have said, it was but a ray of comfort; but it had soon grown to be
+broad sunshine. The thought of the man&rsquo;s death, of his deletion from this
+world, which he embittered for so many, took possession of my mind. I hugged
+it, I found it sweet in my belly. I conceived the ship&rsquo;s last plunge, the
+sea bursting upon all sides into the cabin, the brief mortal conflict there,
+all by myself, in that closed place; I numbered the horrors, I had almost said
+with satisfaction; I felt I could bear all and more, if the <i>Nonesuch</i>
+carried down with her, overtook by the same ruin, the enemy of my poor
+master&rsquo;s house. Towards noon of the second day the screaming of the wind
+abated; the ship lay not so perilously over, and it began to be clear to me
+that we were past the height of the tempest. As I hope for mercy, I was singly
+disappointed. In the selfishness of that vile, absorbing passion of hatred, I
+forgot the case of our innocent shipmates, and thought but of myself and my
+enemy. For myself, I was already old; I had never been young, I was not formed
+for the world&rsquo;s pleasures, I had few affections; it mattered not the toss
+of a silver tester whether I was drowned there and then in the Atlantic, or
+dribbled out a few more years, to die, perhaps no less terribly, in a deserted
+sick-bed. Down I went upon my knees&mdash;holding on by the locker, or else I
+had been instantly dashed across the tossing cabin&mdash;and, lifting up my
+voice in the midst of that clamour of the abating hurricane, impiously prayed
+for my own death. &ldquo;O God!&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;I would be liker a man
+if I rose and struck this creature down; but Thou madest me a coward from my
+mother&rsquo;s womb. O Lord, Thou madest me so, Thou knowest my weakness, Thou
+knowest that any face of death will set me shaking in my shoes. But, lo! here
+is Thy servant ready, his mortal weakness laid aside. Let me give my life for
+this creature&rsquo;s; take the two of them, Lord! take the two, and have mercy
+on the innocent!&rdquo; In some such words as these, only yet more irreverent
+and with more sacred adjurations, I continued to pour forth my spirit. God
+heard me not, I must suppose in mercy; and I was still absorbed in my agony of
+supplication when some one, removing the tarpaulin cover, let the light of the
+sunset pour into the cabin. I stumbled to my feet ashamed, and was seized with
+surprise to find myself totter and ache like one that had been stretched upon
+the rack. Secundra Dass, who had slept off the effects of his drug, stood in a
+corner not far off, gazing at me with wild eyes; and from the open skylight the
+captain thanked me for my supplications.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s you that saved the ship, Mr. Mackellar,&rdquo; says he.
+&ldquo;There is no craft of seamanship that could have kept her floating: well
+may we say, &lsquo;Except the Lord the city keep, the watchmen watch in
+vain!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was abashed by the captain&rsquo;s error; abashed, also, by the surprise and
+fear with which the Indian regarded me at first, and the obsequious civilities
+with which he soon began to cumber me. I know now that he must have overheard
+and comprehended the peculiar nature of my prayers. It is certain, of course,
+that he at once disclosed the matter to his patron; and looking back with
+greater knowledge, I can now understand what so much puzzled me at the moment,
+those singular and (so to speak) approving smiles with which the Master
+honoured me. Similarly, I can understand a word that I remember to have fallen
+from him in conversation that same night; when, holding up his hand and
+smiling, &ldquo;Ah! Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;not every man is so great
+a coward as he thinks he is&mdash;nor yet so good a Christian.&rdquo; He did
+not guess how true he spoke! For the fact is, the thoughts which had come to me
+in the violence of the storm retained their hold upon my spirit; and the words
+that rose to my lips unbidden in the instancy of prayer continued to sound in
+my ears: with what shameful consequences, it is fitting I should honestly
+relate; for I could not support a part of such disloyalty as to describe the
+sins of others and conceal my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wind fell, but the sea hove ever the higher. All night the <i>Nonesuch</i>
+rolled outrageously; the next day dawned, and the next, and brought no change.
+To cross the cabin was scarce possible; old experienced seamen were cast down
+upon the deck, and one cruelly mauled in the concussion; every board and block
+in the old ship cried out aloud; and the great bell by the anchor-bitts
+continually and dolefully rang. One of these days the Master and I sate alone
+together at the break of the poop. I should say the <i>Nonesuch</i> carried a
+high, raised poop. About the top of it ran considerable bulwarks, which made
+the ship unweatherly; and these, as they approached the front on each side, ran
+down in a fine, old-fashioned, carven scroll to join the bulwarks of the waist.
+From this disposition, which seems designed rather for ornament than use, it
+followed there was a discontinuance of protection: and that, besides, at the
+very margin of the elevated part where (in certain movements of the ship) it
+might be the most needful. It was here we were sitting: our feet hanging down,
+the Master betwixt me and the side, and I holding on with both hands to the
+grating of the cabin skylight; for it struck me it was a dangerous position,
+the more so as I had continually before my eyes a measure of our evolutions in
+the person of the Master, which stood out in the break of the bulwarks against
+the sun. Now his head would be in the zenith and his shadow fall quite beyond
+the <i>Nonesuch</i> on the farther side; and now he would swing down till he
+was underneath my feet, and the line of the sea leaped high above him like the
+ceiling of a room. I looked on upon this with a growing fascination, as birds
+are said to look on snakes. My mind, besides, was troubled with an astonishing
+diversity of noises; for now that we had all sails spread in the vain hope to
+bring her to the sea, the ship sounded like a factory with their
+reverberations. We spoke first of the mutiny with which we had been threatened;
+this led us on to the topic of assassination; and that offered a temptation to
+the Master more strong than he was able to resist. He must tell me a tale, and
+show me at the same time how clever he was and how wicked. It was a thing he
+did always with affectation and display; generally with a good effect. But this
+tale, told in a high key in the midst of so great a tumult, and by a narrator
+who was one moment looking down at me from the skies and the next up from under
+the soles of my feet&mdash;this particular tale, I say, took hold upon me in a
+degree quite singular.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My friend the count,&rdquo; it was thus that he began his story,
+&ldquo;had for an enemy a certain German baron, a stranger in Rome. It matters
+not what was the ground of the count&rsquo;s enmity; but as he had a firm
+design to be revenged, and that with safety to himself, he kept it secret even
+from the baron. Indeed, that is the first principle of vengeance; and hatred
+betrayed is hatred impotent. The count was a man of a curious, searching mind;
+he had something of the artist; if anything fell for him to do, it must always
+be done with an exact perfection, not only as to the result, but in the very
+means and instruments, or he thought the thing miscarried. It chanced he was
+one day riding in the outer suburbs, when he came to a disused by-road
+branching off into the moor which lies about Rome. On the one hand was an
+ancient Roman tomb; on the other a deserted house in a garden of evergreen
+trees. This road brought him presently into a field of ruins, in the midst of
+which, in the side of a hill, he saw an open door, and, not far off, a single
+stunted pine no greater than a currant-bush. The place was desert and very
+secret; a voice spoke in the count&rsquo;s bosom that there was something here
+to his advantage. He tied his horse to the pine-tree, took his flint and steel
+in his hand to make a light, and entered into the hill. The doorway opened on a
+passage of old Roman masonry, which shortly after branched in two. The count
+took the turning to the right, and followed it, groping forward in the dark,
+till he was brought up by a kind of fence, about elbow-high, which extended
+quite across the passage. Sounding forward with his foot, he found an edge of
+polished stone, and then vacancy. All his curiosity was now awakened, and,
+getting some rotten sticks that lay about the floor, he made a fire. In front
+of him was a profound well; doubtless some neighbouring peasant had once used
+it for his water, and it was he that had set up the fence. A long while the
+count stood leaning on the rail and looking down into the pit. It was of Roman
+foundation, and, like all that nation set their hands to, built as for
+eternity; the sides were still straight, and the joints smooth; to a man who
+should fall in, no escape was possible. &lsquo;Now,&rsquo; the count was
+thinking, &lsquo;a strong impulsion brought me to this place. What for? what
+have I gained? why should I be sent to gaze into this well?&rsquo; when the
+rail of the fence gave suddenly under his weight, and he came within an ace of
+falling headlong in. Leaping back to save himself, he trod out the last flicker
+of his fire, which gave him thenceforward no more light, only an incommoding
+smoke. &lsquo;Was I sent here to my death?&rsquo; says he, and shook from head
+to foot. And then a thought flashed in his mind. He crept forth on hands and
+knees to the brink of the pit, and felt above him in the air. The rail had been
+fast to a pair of uprights; it had only broken from the one, and still depended
+from the other. The count set it back again as he had found it, so that the
+place meant death to the first comer, and groped out of the catacomb like a
+sick man. The next day, riding in the Corso with the baron, he purposely
+betrayed a strong preoccupation. The other (as he had designed) inquired into
+the cause; and he, after some fencing, admitted that his spirits had been
+dashed by an unusual dream. This was calculated to draw on the baron&mdash;a
+superstitious man, who affected the scorn of superstition. Some rallying
+followed, and then the count, as if suddenly carried away, called on his friend
+to beware, for it was of him that he had dreamed. You know enough of human
+nature, my excellent Mackellar, to be certain of one thing: I mean that the
+baron did not rest till he had heard the dream. The count, sure that he would
+never desist, kept him in play till his curiosity was highly inflamed, and then
+suffered himself, with seeming reluctance, to be overborne. &lsquo;I warn
+you,&rsquo; says he, &lsquo;evil will come of it; something tells me so. But
+since there is to be no peace either for you or me except on this condition,
+the blame be on your own head! This was the dream:&mdash;I beheld you riding, I
+know not where, yet I think it must have been near Rome, for on your one hand
+was an ancient tomb, and on the other a garden of evergreen trees. Methought I
+cried and cried upon you to come back in a very agony of terror; whether you
+heard me I know not, but you went doggedly on. The road brought you to a desert
+place among ruins, where was a door in a hillside, and hard by the door a
+misbegotten pine. Here you dismounted (I still crying on you to beware), tied
+your horse to the pine-tree, and entered resolutely in by the door. Within, it
+was dark; but in my dream I could still see you, and still besought you to hold
+back. You felt your way along the right-hand wall, took a branching passage to
+the right, and came to a little chamber, where was a well with a railing. At
+this&mdash;I know not why&mdash;my alarm for you increased a thousandfold, so
+that I seemed to scream myself hoarse with warnings, crying it was still time,
+and bidding you begone at once from that vestibule. Such was the word I used in
+my dream, and it seemed then to have a clear significancy; but to-day, and
+awake, I profess I know not what it means. To all my outcry you rendered not
+the least attention, leaning the while upon the rail and looking down intently
+in the water. And then there was made to you a communication; I do not think I
+even gathered what it was, but the fear of it plucked me clean out of my
+slumber, and I awoke shaking and sobbing. And now,&rsquo; continues the count,
+&lsquo;I thank you from my heart for your insistency. This dream lay on me like
+a load; and now I have told it in plain words and in the broad daylight, it
+seems no great matter.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;I do not know,&rsquo; says the
+baron. &lsquo;It is in some points strange. A communication, did you say? Oh!
+it is an odd dream. It will make a story to amuse our
+friends.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;I am not so sure,&rsquo; says the count. &lsquo;I
+am sensible of some reluctancy. Let us rather forget it.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;By
+all means,&rsquo; says the baron. And (in fact) the dream was not again
+referred to. Some days after, the count proposed a ride in the fields, which
+the baron (since they were daily growing faster friends) very readily accepted.
+On the way back to Rome, the count led them insensibly by a particular route.
+Presently he reined in his horse, clapped his hand before his eyes, and cried
+out aloud. Then he showed his face again (which was now quite white, for he was
+a consummate actor), and stared upon the baron. &lsquo;What ails you?&rsquo;
+cries the baron. &lsquo;What is wrong with
+you?&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Nothing,&rsquo; cries the count. &lsquo;It is nothing.
+A seizure, I know not what. Let us hurry back to Rome.&rsquo; But in the
+meanwhile the baron had looked about him; and there, on the left-hand side of
+the way as they went back to Rome, he saw a dusty by-road with a tomb upon the
+one hand and a garden of evergreen trees upon the
+other.&mdash;&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; says he, with a changed voice. &lsquo;Let us by
+all means hurry back to Rome. I fear you are not well in
+health.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Oh, for God&rsquo;s sake!&rsquo; cries the count,
+shuddering, &lsquo;back to Rome and let me get to bed.&rsquo; They made their
+return with scarce a word; and the count, who should by rights have gone into
+society, took to his bed and gave out he had a touch of country fever. The next
+day the baron&rsquo;s horse was found tied to the pine, but himself was never
+heard of from that hour.&mdash;And, now, was that a murder?&rdquo; says the
+Master, breaking sharply off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you sure he was a count?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am not certain of the title,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;but he was a
+gentleman of family: and the Lord deliver you, Mackellar, from an enemy so
+subtile!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These last words he spoke down at me, smiling, from high above; the next, he
+was under my feet. I continued to follow his evolutions with a childish fixity;
+they made me giddy and vacant, and I spoke as in a dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He hated the baron with a great hatred?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;His belly moved when the man came near him,&rdquo; said the Master.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have felt that same,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Verily!&rdquo; cries the Master. &ldquo;Here is news indeed! I
+wonder&mdash;do I flatter myself? or am I the cause of these ventral
+perturbations?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was quite capable of choosing out a graceful posture, even with no one to
+behold him but myself, and all the more if there were any element of peril. He
+sat now with one knee flung across the other, his arms on his bosom, fitting
+the swing of the ship with an exquisite balance, such as a featherweight might
+overthrow. All at once I had the vision of my lord at the table, with his head
+upon his hands; only now, when he showed me his countenance, it was heavy with
+reproach. The words of my own prayer&mdash;<i>I were liker a man if I struck
+this creature down</i>&mdash;shot at the same time into my memory. I called my
+energies together, and (the ship then heeling downward toward my enemy) thrust
+at him swiftly with my foot. It was written I should have the guilt of this
+attempt without the profit. Whether from my own uncertainty or his incredible
+quickness, he escaped the thrust, leaping to his feet and catching hold at the
+same moment of a stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know how long a time passed by. I lying where I was upon the deck,
+overcome with terror and remorse and shame: he standing with the stay in his
+hand, backed against the bulwarks, and regarding me with an expression
+singularly mingled. At last he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I make no reproaches, but I offer you
+a bargain. On your side, I do not suppose you desire to have this exploit made
+public; on mine, I own to you freely I do not care to draw my breath in a
+perpetual terror of assassination by the man I sit at meat with. Promise
+me&mdash;but no,&rdquo; says he, breaking off, &ldquo;you are not yet in the
+quiet possession of your mind; you might think I had extorted the promise from
+your weakness; and I would leave no door open for casuistry to come
+in&mdash;that dishonesty of the conscientious. Take time to meditate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that he made off up the sliding deck like a squirrel, and plunged into the
+cabin. About half an hour later he returned&mdash;I still lying as he had left
+me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;will you give me your troth as a Christian,
+and a faithful servant of my brother&rsquo;s, that I shall have no more to fear
+from your attempts?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I give it you,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall require your hand upon it,&rdquo; says he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have the right to make conditions,&rdquo; I replied, and we shook
+hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat down at once in the same place and the old perilous attitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hold on!&rdquo; cried I, covering my eyes. &ldquo;I cannot bear to see
+you in that posture. The least irregularity of the sea might plunge you
+overboard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are highly inconsistent,&rdquo; he replied, smiling, but doing as I
+asked. &ldquo;For all that, Mackellar, I would have you to know you have risen
+forty feet in my esteem. You think I cannot set a price upon fidelity? But why
+do you suppose I carry that Secundra Dass about the world with me? Because he
+would die or do murder for me to-morrow; and I love him for it. Well, you may
+think it odd, but I like you the better for this afternoon&rsquo;s performance.
+I thought you were magnetised with the Ten Commandments; but no&mdash;God damn
+my soul!&rdquo;&mdash;he cries, &ldquo;the old wife has blood in his body after
+all! Which does not change the fact,&rdquo; he continued, smiling again,
+&ldquo;that you have done well to give your promise; for I doubt if you would
+ever shine in your new trade.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I should ask your pardon and
+God&rsquo;s for my attempt. At any rate, I have passed my word, which I will
+keep faithfully. But when I think of those you persecute&mdash;&rdquo; I
+paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Life is a singular thing,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and mankind a very
+singular people. You suppose yourself to love my brother. I assure you, it is
+merely custom. Interrogate your memory; and when first you came to Durrisdeer,
+you will find you considered him a dull, ordinary youth. He is as dull and
+ordinary now, though not so young. Had you instead fallen in with me, you would
+to-day be as strong upon my side.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would never say you were ordinary, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; I returned;
+&ldquo;but here you prove yourself dull. You have just shown your reliance on
+my word. In other terms, that is my conscience&mdash;the same which starts
+instinctively back from you, like the eye from a strong light.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;but I mean otherwise. I mean, had I met you
+in my youth. You are to consider I was not always as I am to-day; nor (had I
+met in with a friend of your description) should I have ever been so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hut, Mr. Bally,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;you would have made a mock of me;
+you would never have spent ten civil words on such a Square-toes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was now fairly started on his new course of justification, with which he
+wearied me throughout the remainder of the passage. No doubt in the past he had
+taken pleasure to paint himself unnecessarily black, and made a vaunt of his
+wickedness, bearing it for a coat-of-arms. Nor was he so illogical as to abate
+one item of his old confessions. &ldquo;But now that I know you are a human
+being,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;I can take the trouble to explain myself.
+For I assure you I am human, too, and have my virtues, like my
+neighbours.&rdquo; I say, he wearied me, for I had only the one word to say in
+answer: twenty times I must have said it: &ldquo;Give up your present purpose
+and return with me to Durrisdeer; then I will believe you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereupon he would shake his head at me. &ldquo;Ah! Mackellar, you might live a
+thousand years and never understand my nature,&rdquo; he would say. &ldquo;This
+battle is now committed, the hour of reflection quite past, the hour for mercy
+not yet come. It began between us when we span a coin in the hall of
+Durrisdeer, now twenty years ago; we have had our ups and downs, but never
+either of us dreamed of giving in; and as for me, when my glove is cast, life
+and honour go with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A fig for your honour!&rdquo; I would say. &ldquo;And by your leave,
+these warlike similitudes are something too high-sounding for the matter in
+hand. You want some dirty money; there is the bottom of your contention; and as
+for your means, what are they? to stir up sorrow in a family that never harmed
+you, to debauch (if you can) your own nephew, and to wring the heart of your
+born brother! A footpad that kills an old granny in a woollen mutch with a
+dirty bludgeon, and that for a shilling-piece and a paper of snuff&mdash;there
+is all the warrior that you are.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I would attack him thus (or somewhat thus) he would smile, and sigh like a
+man misunderstood. Once, I remember, he defended himself more at large, and had
+some curious sophistries, worth repeating, for a light upon his character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are very like a civilian to think war consists in drums and
+banners,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;War (as the ancients said very wisely) is
+<i>ultima ratio</i>. When we take our advantage unrelentingly, then we make
+war. Ah! Mackellar, you are a devil of a soldier in the steward&rsquo;s room at
+Durrisdeer, or the tenants do you sad injustice!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think little of what war is or is not,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;But
+you weary me with claiming my respect. Your brother is a good man, and you are
+a bad one&mdash;neither more nor less.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Had I been Alexander&mdash;&rdquo; he began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so we all dupe ourselves,&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Had I been St.
+Paul, it would have been all one; I would have made the same hash of that
+career that you now see me making of my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; he cried, bearing down my interruption, &ldquo;had I
+been the least petty chieftain in the Highlands, had I been the least king of
+naked negroes in the African desert, my people would have adored me. A bad man,
+am I? Ah! but I was born for a good tyrant! Ask Secundra Dass; he will tell you
+I treat him like a son. Cast in your lot with me to-morrow, become my slave, my
+chattel, a thing I can command as I command the powers of my own limbs and
+spirit&mdash;you will see no more that dark side that I turn upon the world in
+anger. I must have all or none. But where all is given, I give it back with
+usury. I have a kingly nature: there is my loss!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has been hitherto rather the loss of others,&rdquo; I remarked,
+&ldquo;which seems a little on the hither side of royalty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tilly-vally!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;Even now, I tell you, I would spare
+that family in which you take so great an interest: yes, even
+now&mdash;to-morrow I would leave them to their petty welfare, and disappear in
+that forest of cut-throats and thimble-riggers that we call the world. I would
+do it to-morrow!&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Only&mdash;only&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only what?&rdquo; I asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only they must beg it on their bended knees. I think in public,
+too,&rdquo; he added, smiling. &ldquo;Indeed, Mackellar, I doubt if there be a
+hall big enough to serve my purpose for that act of reparation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Vanity, vanity!&rdquo; I moralised. &ldquo;To think that this great
+force for evil should be swayed by the same sentiment that sets a lassie
+mincing to her glass!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! there are double words for everything: the word that swells, the
+word that belittles; you cannot fight me with a word!&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;You said the other day that I relied on your conscience: were I in your
+humour of detraction, I might say I built upon your vanity. It is your
+pretension to be <i>un homme de parole</i>; &lsquo;tis mine not to accept
+defeat. Call it vanity, call it virtue, call it greatness of soul&mdash;what
+signifies the expression? But recognise in each of us a common strain: that we
+both live for an idea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It will be gathered from so much familiar talk, and so much patience on both
+sides, that we now lived together upon excellent terms. Such was again the
+fact, and this time more seriously than before. Apart from disputations such as
+that which I have tried to reproduce, not only consideration reigned, but, I am
+tempted to say, even kindness. When I fell sick (as I did shortly after our
+great storm), he sat by my berth to entertain me with his conversation, and
+treated me with excellent remedies, which I accepted with security. Himself
+commented on the circumstance. &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you begin
+to know me better. A very little while ago, upon this lonely ship, where no one
+but myself has any smattering of science, you would have made sure I had
+designs upon your life. And, observe, it is since I found you had designs upon
+my own, that I have shown you most respect. You will tell me if this speaks of
+a small mind.&rdquo; I found little to reply. In so far as regarded myself, I
+believed him to mean well; I am, perhaps, the more a dupe of his dissimulation,
+but I believed (and I still believe) that he regarded me with genuine kindness.
+Singular and sad fact! so soon as this change began, my animosity abated, and
+these haunting visions of my master passed utterly away. So that, perhaps,
+there was truth in the man&rsquo;s last vaunting word to me, uttered on the
+second day of July, when our long voyage was at last brought almost to an end,
+and we lay becalmed at the sea end of the vast harbour of New York, in a
+gasping heat, which was presently exchanged for a surprising waterfall of rain.
+I stood on the poop, regarding the green shores near at hand, and now and then
+the light smoke of the little town, our destination. And as I was even then
+devising how to steal a march on my familiar enemy, I was conscious of a shade
+of embarrassment when he approached me with his hand extended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am now to bid you farewell,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and that for ever.
+For now you go among my enemies, where all your former prejudices will revive.
+I never yet failed to charm a person when I wanted; even you, my good
+friend&mdash;to call you so for once&mdash;even you have now a very different
+portrait of me in your memory, and one that you will never quite forget. The
+voyage has not lasted long enough, or I should have wrote the impression
+deeper. But now all is at an end, and we are again at war. Judge by this little
+interlude how dangerous I am; and tell those fools&rdquo;&mdash;pointing with
+his finger to the town&mdash;&ldquo;to think twice and thrice before they set
+me at defiance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X.<br />
+PASSAGES AT NEW YORK.</h2>
+
+<p>
+I have mentioned I was resolved to steal a march upon the Master; and this,
+with the complicity of Captain McMurtrie, was mighty easily effected: a boat
+being partly loaded on the one side of our ship and the Master placed on board
+of it, the while a skiff put off from the other, carrying me alone. I had no
+more trouble in finding a direction to my lord&rsquo;s house, whither I went at
+top speed, and which I found to be on the outskirts of the place, a very
+suitable mansion, in a fine garden, with an extraordinary large barn, byre, and
+stable, all in one. It was here my lord was walking when I arrived; indeed, it
+had become his chief place of frequentation, and his mind was now filled with
+farming. I burst in upon him breathless, and gave him my news: which was indeed
+no news at all, several ships having outsailed the <i>Nonesuch</i> in the
+interval.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have been expecting you long,&rdquo; said my lord; &ldquo;and indeed,
+of late days, ceased to expect you any more. I am glad to take your hand again,
+Mackellar. I thought you had been at the bottom of the sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! my lord, would God I had!&rdquo; cried I. &ldquo;Things would have
+been better for yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not in the least,&rdquo; says he, grimly. &ldquo;I could not ask better.
+There is a long score to pay, and now&mdash;at last&mdash;I can begin to pay
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cried out against his security.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;this is not Durrisdeer, and I have taken my
+precautions. His reputation awaits him; I have prepared a welcome for my
+brother. Indeed, fortune has served me; for I found here a merchant of Albany
+who knew him after the &rsquo;45 and had mighty convenient suspicions of a
+murder: some one of the name of Chew it was, another Albanian. No one here will
+be surprised if I deny him my door; he will not be suffered to address my
+children, nor even to salute my wife: as for myself, I make so much exception
+for a brother that he may speak to me. I should lose my pleasure else,&rdquo;
+says my lord, rubbing his palms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he bethought himself, and set men off running, with billets, to
+summon the magnates of the province. I cannot recall what pretext he employed;
+at least, it was successful; and when our ancient enemy appeared upon the
+scene, he found my lord pacing in front of his house under some trees of shade,
+with the Governor upon one hand and various notables upon the other. My lady,
+who was seated in the verandah, rose with a very pinched expression and carried
+her children into the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Master, well dressed and with an elegant walking-sword, bowed to the
+company in a handsome manner and nodded to my lord with familiarity. My lord
+did not accept the salutation, but looked upon his brother with bended brows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; says he, at last, &ldquo;what ill wind brings you
+hither of all places, where (to our common disgrace) your reputation has
+preceded you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your lordship is pleased to be civil,&rdquo; said the Master, with a
+fine start.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am pleased to be very plain,&rdquo; returned my lord; &ldquo;because
+it is needful you should clearly understand your situation. At home, where you
+were so little known, it was still possible to keep appearances; that would be
+quite vain in this province; and I have to tell you that I am quite resolved to
+wash my hands of you. You have already ruined me almost to the door, as you
+ruined my father before me;&mdash;whose heart you also broke. Your crimes
+escape the law; but my friend the Governor has promised protection to my
+family. Have a care, sir!&rdquo; cries my lord, shaking his cane at him:
+&ldquo;if you are observed to utter two words to any of my innocent household,
+the law shall be stretched to make you smart for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says the Master, very slowly. &ldquo;And so this is the
+advantage of a foreign land! These gentlemen are unacquainted with our story, I
+perceive. They do not know that I am the Lord Durrisdeer; they do not know you
+are my younger brother, sitting in my place under a sworn family compact; they
+do not know (or they would not be seen with you in familiar correspondence)
+that every acre is mine before God Almighty&mdash;and every doit of the money
+you withhold from me, you do it as a thief, a perjurer, and a disloyal
+brother!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;General Clinton,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;do not listen to his lies. I am
+the steward of the estate, and there is not one word of truth in it. The man is
+a forfeited rebel turned into a hired spy: there is his story in two
+words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was thus that (in the heat of the moment) I let slip his infamy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; said the Governor, turning his face sternly on the
+Master, &ldquo;I know more of you than you think for. We have some broken ends
+of your adventures in the provinces, which you will do very well not to drive
+me to investigate. There is the disappearance of Mr. Jacob Chew with all his
+merchandise; there is the matter of where you came ashore from with so much
+money and jewels, when you were picked up by a Bermudan out of Albany. Believe
+me, if I let these matters lie, it is in commiseration for your family and out
+of respect for my valued friend, Lord Durrisdeer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a murmur of applause from the provincials.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should have remembered how a title would shine out in such a hole as
+this,&rdquo; says the Master, white as a sheet: &ldquo;no matter how unjustly
+come by. It remains for me, then, to die at my lord&rsquo;s door, where my dead
+body will form a very cheerful ornament.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Away with your affectations!&rdquo; cries my lord. &ldquo;You know very
+well I have no such meaning; only to protect myself from calumny, and my home
+from your intrusion. I offer you a choice. Either I shall pay your passage home
+on the first ship, when you may perhaps be able to resume your occupations
+under Government, although God knows I would rather see you on the highway! Or,
+if that likes you not, stay here and welcome! I have inquired the least sum on
+which body and soul can be decently kept together in New York; so much you
+shall have, paid weekly; and if you cannot labour with your hands to better it,
+high time you should betake yourself to learn. The condition is&mdash;that you
+speak with no member of my family except myself,&rdquo; he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not think I have ever seen any man so pale as was the Master; but he was
+erect and his mouth firm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been met here with some very unmerited insults,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;from which I have certainly no idea to take refuge by flight. Give me
+your pittance; I take it without shame, for it is mine already&mdash;like the
+shirt upon your back; and I choose to stay until these gentlemen shall
+understand me better. Already they must spy the cloven hoof, since with all
+your pretended eagerness for the family honour, you take a pleasure to degrade
+it in my person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is all very fine,&rdquo; says my lord; &ldquo;but to us who know
+you of old, you must be sure it signifies nothing. You take that alternative
+out of which you think that you can make the most. Take it, if you can, in
+silence; it will serve you better in the long run, you may believe me, than
+this ostentation of ingratitude.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, gratitude, my lord!&rdquo; cries the Master, with a mounting
+intonation and his forefinger very conspicuously lifted up. &ldquo;Be at rest:
+it will not fail you. It now remains that I should salute these gentlemen whom
+we have wearied with our family affairs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he bowed to each in succession, settled his walking-sword, and took himself
+off, leaving every one amazed at his behaviour, and me not less so at my
+lord&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> We were now to enter on a changed phase of this family division.
+The Master was by no manner of means so helpless as my lord supposed, having at
+his hand, and entirely devoted to his service, an excellent artist in all sorts
+of goldsmith work. With my lord&rsquo;s allowance, which was not so scanty as
+he had described it, the pair could support life; and all the earnings of
+Secundra Dass might be laid upon one side for any future purpose. That this was
+done, I have no doubt. It was in all likelihood the Master&rsquo;s design to
+gather a sufficiency, and then proceed in quest of that treasure which he had
+buried long before among the mountains; to which, if he had confined himself,
+he would have been more happily inspired. But unfortunately for himself and all
+of us, he took counsel of his anger. The public disgrace of his
+arrival&mdash;which I sometimes wonder he could manage to survive&mdash;rankled
+in his bones; he was in that humour when a man&mdash;in the words of the old
+adage&mdash;will cut off his nose to spite his face; and he must make himself a
+public spectacle in the hopes that some of the disgrace might spatter on my
+lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He chose, in a poor quarter of the town, a lonely, small house of boards,
+overhung with some acacias. It was furnished in front with a sort of hutch
+opening, like that of a dog&rsquo;s kennel, but about as high as a table from
+the ground, in which the poor man that built it had formerly displayed some
+wares; and it was this which took the Master&rsquo;s fancy and possibly
+suggested his proceedings. It appears, on board the pirate ship he had acquired
+some quickness with the needle&mdash;enough, at least, to play the part of
+tailor in the public eye; which was all that was required by the nature of his
+vengeance. A placard was hung above the hutch, bearing these words in something
+of the following disposition:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">James Durie</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">formerly</span> MASTER <span class="smcap">of</span>
+BALLANTRAE.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Clothes Neatly Clouted</span>.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">
+SECUNDRA DASS,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Decayed Gentleman of India</span>.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Fine Goldsmith Work</span>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Underneath this, when he had a job, my gentleman sat withinside tailor-wise and
+busily stitching. I say, when he had a job; but such customers as came were
+rather for Secundra, and the Master&rsquo;s sewing would be more in the manner
+of Penelope&rsquo;s. He could never have designed to gain even butter to his
+bread by such a means of livelihood: enough for him that there was the name of
+Durie dragged in the dirt on the placard, and the sometime heir of that proud
+family set up cross-legged in public for a reproach upon his brother&rsquo;s
+meanness. And in so far his device succeeded that there was murmuring in the
+town and a party formed highly inimical to my lord. My lord&rsquo;s favour with
+the Governor laid him more open on the other side; my lady (who was never so
+well received in the colony) met with painful innuendoes; in a party of women,
+where it would be the topic most natural to introduce, she was almost debarred
+from the naming of needle-work; and I have seen her return with a flushed
+countenance and vow that she would go abroad no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meanwhile my lord dwelled in his decent mansion, immersed in farming; a
+popular man with his intimates, and careless or unconscious of the rest. He
+laid on flesh; had a bright, busy face; even the heat seemed to prosper with
+him; and my lady&mdash;in despite of her own annoyances&mdash;daily blessed
+Heaven her father should have left her such a paradise. She had looked on from
+a window upon the Master&rsquo;s humiliation; and from that hour appeared to
+feel at ease. I was not so sure myself; as time went on, there seemed to me a
+something not quite wholesome in my lord&rsquo;s condition. Happy he was,
+beyond a doubt, but the grounds of this felicity were wont; even in the bosom
+of his family he brooded with manifest delight upon some private thought; and I
+conceived at last the suspicion (quite unworthy of us both) that he kept a
+mistress somewhere in the town. Yet he went little abroad, and his day was very
+fully occupied; indeed, there was but a single period, and that pretty early in
+the morning, while Mr. Alexander was at his lesson-book, of which I was not
+certain of the disposition. It should be borne in mind, in the defence of that
+which I now did, that I was always in some fear my lord was not quite justly in
+his reason; and with our enemy sitting so still in the same town with us, I did
+well to be upon my guard. Accordingly I made a pretext, had the hour changed at
+which I taught Mr. Alexander the foundation of cyphering and the mathematic,
+and set myself instead to dog my master&rsquo;s footsteps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every morning, fair or foul, he took his gold-headed cane, set his hat on the
+back of his head&mdash;a recent habitude, which I thought to indicate a burning
+brow&mdash;and betook himself to make a certain circuit. At the first his way
+was among pleasant trees and beside a graveyard, where he would sit awhile, if
+the day were fine, in meditation. Presently the path turned down to the
+waterside, and came back along the harbour-front and past the Master&rsquo;s
+booth. As he approached this second part of his circuit, my Lord Durrisdeer
+began to pace more leisurely, like a man delighted with the air and scene; and
+before the booth, half-way between that and the water&rsquo;s edge, would pause
+a little, leaning on his staff. It was the hour when the Master sate within
+upon his board and plied his needle. So these two brothers would gaze upon each
+other with hard faces; and then my lord move on again, smiling to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was but twice that I must stoop to that ungrateful necessity of playing spy.
+I was then certain of my lord&rsquo;s purpose in his rambles and of the secret
+source of his delight. Here was his mistress: it was hatred and not love that
+gave him healthful colours. Some moralists might have been relieved by the
+discovery; I confess that I was dismayed. I found this situation of two
+brethren not only odious in itself, but big with possibilities of further evil;
+and I made it my practice, in so far as many occupations would allow, to go by
+a shorter path and be secretly present at their meeting. Coming down one day a
+little late, after I had been near a week prevented, I was struck with surprise
+to find a new development. I should say there was a bench against the
+Master&rsquo;s house, where customers might sit to parley with the shopman; and
+here I found my lord seated, nursing his cane and looking pleasantly forth upon
+the bay. Not three feet from him sate the Master, stitching. Neither spoke; nor
+(in this new situation) did my lord so much as cut a glance upon his enemy. He
+tasted his neighbourhood, I must suppose, less indirectly in the bare proximity
+of person; and, without doubt, drank deep of hateful pleasures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had no sooner come away than I openly joined him. &ldquo;My lord, my
+lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;this is no manner of behaviour.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I grow fat upon it,&rdquo; he replied; and not merely the words, which
+were strange enough, but the whole character of his expression, shocked me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I warn you, my lord, against this indulgency of evil feeling,&rdquo;
+said I. &ldquo;I know not to which it is more perilous, the soul or the reason;
+but you go the way to murder both.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You cannot understand,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You had never such
+mountains of bitterness upon your heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if it were no more,&rdquo; I added, &ldquo;you will surely goad the
+man to some extremity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To the contrary; I am breaking his spirit,&rdquo; says my lord.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> Every morning for hard upon a week my lord took his same place
+upon the bench. It was a pleasant place, under the green acacias, with a sight
+upon the bay and shipping, and a sound (from some way off) of marines singing
+at their employ. Here the two sate without speech or any external movement,
+beyond that of the needle or the Master biting off a thread, for he still clung
+to his pretence of industry; and here I made a point to join them, wondering at
+myself and my companions. If any of my lord&rsquo;s friends went by, he would
+hail them cheerfully, and cry out he was there to give some good advice to his
+brother, who was now (to his delight) grown quite industrious. And even this
+the Master accepted with a steady countenance; what was in his mind, God knows,
+or perhaps Satan only.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All of a sudden, on a still day of what they call the Indian Summer, when the
+woods were changed into gold and pink and scarlet, the Master laid down his
+needle and burst into a fit of merriment. I think he must have been preparing
+it a long while in silence, for the note in itself was pretty naturally
+pitched; but breaking suddenly from so extreme a silence, and in circumstances
+so averse from mirth, it sounded ominously on my ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I have for once made a false step, and for
+once you have had the wit to profit by it. The farce of the cobbler ends
+to-day; and I confess to you (with my compliments) that you have had the best
+of it. Blood will out; and you have certainly a choice idea of how to make
+yourself unpleasant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never a word said my lord; it was just as though the Master had not broken
+silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; resumed the Master, &ldquo;do not be sulky; it will spoil
+your attitude. You can now afford (believe me) to be a little gracious; for I
+have not merely a defeat to accept. I had meant to continue this performance
+till I had gathered enough money for a certain purpose; I confess ingenuously,
+I have not the courage. You naturally desire my absence from this town; I have
+come round by another way to the same idea. And I have a proposition to make;
+or, if your lordship prefers, a favour to ask.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask it,&rdquo; says my lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may have heard that I had once in this country a considerable
+treasure,&rdquo; returned the Master; &ldquo;it matters not whether or
+no&mdash;such is the fact; and I was obliged to bury it in a spot of which I
+have sufficient indications. To the recovery of this, has my ambition now come
+down; and, as it is my own, you will not grudge it me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go and get it,&rdquo; says my lord. &ldquo;I make no opposition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Master; &ldquo;but to do so, I must find men and
+carriage. The way is long and rough, and the country infested with wild
+Indians. Advance me only so much as shall be needful: either as a lump sum, in
+lieu of my allowance; or, if you prefer it, as a loan, which I shall repay on
+my return. And then, if you so decide, you may have seen the last of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord stared him steadily in the eyes; there was a hard smile upon his face,
+but he uttered nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; said the Master, with a formidable quietness, and drawing
+at the same time somewhat back&mdash;&ldquo;Henry, I had the honour to address
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us be stepping homeward,&rdquo; says my lord to me, who was plucking
+at his sleeve; and with that he rose, stretched himself, settled his hat, and
+still without a syllable of response, began to walk steadily along the shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hesitated awhile between the two brothers, so serious a climax did we seem to
+have reached. But the Master had resumed his occupation, his eyes lowered, his
+hand seemingly as deft as ever; and I decided to pursue my lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you mad?&rdquo; I cried, so soon as I had overtook him. &ldquo;Would
+you cast away so fair an opportunity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible you should still believe in him?&rdquo; inquired my lord,
+almost with a sneer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish him forth of this town!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;I wish him
+anywhere and anyhow but as he is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have said my say,&rdquo; returned my lord, &ldquo;and you have said
+yours. There let it rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I was bent on dislodging the Master. That sight of him patiently returning
+to his needlework was more than my imagination could digest. There was never a
+man made, and the Master the least of any, that could accept so long a series
+of insults. The air smelt blood to me. And I vowed there should be no neglect
+of mine if, through any chink of possibility, crime could be yet turned aside.
+That same day, therefore, I came to my lord in his business room, where he sat
+upon some trivial occupation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I have found a suitable investment for my
+small economies. But these are unhappily in Scotland; it will take some time to
+lift them, and the affair presses. Could your lordship see his way to advance
+me the amount against my note?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He read me awhile with keen eyes. &ldquo;I have never inquired into the state
+of your affairs, Mackellar,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Beyond the amount of your
+caution, you may not be worth a farthing, for what I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been a long while in your service, and never told a lie, nor yet
+asked a favour for myself,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;until to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A favour for the Master,&rdquo; he returned, quietly. &ldquo;Do you take
+me for a fool, Mackellar? Understand it once and for all, I treat this beast in
+my own way; fear nor favour shall not move me; and before I am hoodwinked, it
+will require a trickster less transparent than yourself. I ask service, loyal
+service; not that you should make and mar behind my back, and steal my own
+money to defeat me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;these are very unpardonable
+expressions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think once more, Mackellar,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;and you will see
+they fit the fact. It is your own subterfuge that is unpardonable. Deny (if you
+can) that you designed this money to evade my orders with, and I will ask your
+pardon freely. If you cannot, you must have the resolution to hear your conduct
+go by its own name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you think I had any design but to save you&mdash;&rdquo; I began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! my old friend,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you know very well what I
+think! Here is my hand to you with all my heart; but of money, not one
+rap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Defeated upon this side, I went straight to my room, wrote a letter, ran with
+it to the harbour, for I knew a ship was on the point of sailing; and came to
+the Master&rsquo;s door a little before dusk. Entering without the form of any
+knock, I found him sitting with his Indian at a simple meal of maize porridge
+with some milk. The house within was clean and poor; only a few books upon a
+shelf distinguished it, and (in one corner) Secundra&rsquo;s little bench.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Bally,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I have near five hundred pounds laid by
+in Scotland, the economies of a hard life. A letter goes by yon ship to have it
+lifted. Have so much patience till the return ship comes in, and it is all
+yours, upon the same condition you offered to my lord this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose from the table, came forward, took me by the shoulders, and looked me
+in the face, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet you are very fond of money!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;And yet you
+love money beyond all things else, except my brother!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear old age and poverty,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;which is another
+matter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never quarrel for a name. Call it so,&rdquo; he replied.
+&ldquo;Ah! Mackellar, Mackellar, if this were done from any love to me, how
+gladly would I close upon your offer!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; I eagerly answered&mdash;&ldquo;I say it to my shame,
+but I cannot see you in this poor place without compunction. It is not my
+single thought, nor my first; and yet it&rsquo;s there! I would gladly see you
+delivered. I do not offer it in love, and far from that; but, as God judges
+me&mdash;and I wonder at it too!&mdash;quite without enmity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says he, still holding my shoulders, and now gently shaking
+me, &ldquo;you think of me more than you suppose. &lsquo;And I wonder at it
+too,&rsquo;&rdquo; he added, repeating my expression and, I suppose, something
+of my voice. &ldquo;You are an honest man, and for that cause I spare
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spare me?&rdquo; I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spare you,&rdquo; he repeated, letting me go and turning away. And then,
+fronting me once more. &ldquo;You little know what I would do with it,
+Mackellar! Did you think I had swallowed my defeat indeed? Listen: my life has
+been a series of unmerited cast-backs. That fool, Prince Charlie, mismanaged a
+most promising affair: there fell my first fortune. In Paris I had my foot once
+more high upon the ladder: that time it was an accident; a letter came to the
+wrong hand, and I was bare again. A third time, I found my opportunity; I built
+up a place for myself in India with an infinite patience; and then Clive came,
+my rajah was swallowed up, and I escaped out of the convulsion, like another
+&AElig;neas, with Secundra Dass upon my back. Three times I have had my hand
+upon the highest station: and I am not yet three-and-forty. I know the world as
+few men know it when they come to die&mdash;Court and camp, the East and the
+West; I know where to go, I see a thousand openings. I am now at the height of
+my resources, sound of health, of inordinate ambition. Well, all this I resign;
+I care not if I die, and the world never hear of me; I care only for one thing,
+and that I will have. Mind yourself; lest, when the roof falls, you, too,
+should be crushed under the ruins.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> As I came out of his house, all hope of intervention quite
+destroyed, I was aware of a stir on the harbour-side, and, raising my eyes,
+there was a great ship newly come to anchor. It seems strange I could have
+looked upon her with so much indifference, for she brought death to the
+brothers of Durrisdeer. After all the desperate episodes of this contention,
+the insults, the opposing interests, the fraternal duel in the shrubbery, it
+was reserved for some poor devil in Grub Street, scribbling for his dinner, and
+not caring what he scribbled, to cast a spell across four thousand miles of the
+salt sea, and send forth both these brothers into savage and wintry deserts,
+there to die. But such a thought was distant from my mind; and while all the
+provincials were fluttered about me by the unusual animation of their port, I
+passed throughout their midst on my return homeward, quite absorbed in the
+recollection of my visit and the Master&rsquo;s speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same night there was brought to us from the ship a little packet of
+pamphlets. The next day my lord was under engagement to go with the Governor
+upon some party of pleasure; the time was nearly due, and I left him for a
+moment alone in his room and skimming through the pamphlets. When I returned,
+his head had fallen upon the table, his arms lying abroad amongst the crumpled
+papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord, my lord!&rdquo; I cried as I ran forward, for I supposed he was
+in some fit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sprang up like a figure upon wires, his countenance deformed with fury, so
+that in a strange place I should scarce have known him. His hand at the same
+time flew above his head, as though to strike me down. &ldquo;Leave me
+alone!&rdquo; he screeched, and I fled, as fast as my shaking legs would bear
+me, for my lady. She, too, lost no time; but when we returned, he had the door
+locked within, and only cried to us from the other side to leave him be. We
+looked in each other&rsquo;s faces, very white&mdash;each supposing the blow
+had come at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will write to the Governor to excuse him,&rdquo; says she. &ldquo;We
+must keep our strong friends.&rdquo; But when she took up the pen, it flew out
+of her fingers. &ldquo;I cannot write,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Can you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will make a shift, my lady,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked over me as I wrote. &ldquo;That will do,&rdquo; she said, when I had
+done. &ldquo;Thank God, Mackellar, I have you to lean upon! But what can it be
+now? What, what can it be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In my own mind, I believed there was no explanation possible, and none
+required; it was my fear that the man&rsquo;s madness had now simply burst
+forth its way, like the long-smothered flames of a volcano; but to this (in
+mere mercy to my lady) I durst not give expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is more to the purpose to consider our own behaviour,&rdquo; said I.
+&ldquo;Must we leave him there alone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not dare disturb him,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Nature may know
+best; it may be Nature that cries to be alone; and we grope in the dark. Oh
+yes, I would leave him as he is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will, then, despatch this letter, my lady, and return here, if you
+please, to sit with you,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray do,&rdquo; cries my lady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All afternoon we sat together, mostly in silence, watching my lord&rsquo;s
+door. My own mind was busy with the scene that had just passed, and its
+singular resemblance to my vision. I must say a word upon this, for the story
+has gone abroad with great exaggeration, and I have even seen it printed, and
+my own name referred to for particulars. So much was the same: here was my lord
+in a room, with his head upon the table, and when he raised his face, it wore
+such an expression as distressed me to the soul. But the room was different, my
+lord&rsquo;s attitude at the table not at all the same, and his face, when he
+disclosed it, expressed a painful degree of fury instead of that haunting
+despair which had always (except once, already referred to) characterised it in
+the vision. There is the whole truth at last before the public; and if the
+differences be great, the coincidence was yet enough to fill me with
+uneasiness. All afternoon, as I say, I sat and pondered upon this quite to
+myself; for my lady had trouble of her own, and it was my last thought to vex
+her with fancies. About the midst of our time of waiting, she conceived an
+ingenious scheme, had Mr. Alexander fetched, and bid him knock at his
+father&rsquo;s door. My lord sent the boy about his business, but without the
+least violence, whether of manner or expression; so that I began to entertain a
+hope the fit was over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, as the night fell and I was lighting a lamp that stood there trimmed,
+the door opened and my lord stood within upon the threshold. The light was not
+so strong that we could read his countenance; when he spoke, methought his
+voice a little altered but yet perfectly steady.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;carry this note to its destination
+with your own hand. It is highly private. Find the person alone when you
+deliver it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Henry,&rdquo; says my lady, &ldquo;you are not ill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; says he, querulously, &ldquo;I am occupied. Not at all; I
+am only occupied. It is a singular thing a man must be supposed to be ill when
+he has any business! Send me supper to this room, and a basket of wine: I
+expect the visit of a friend. Otherwise I am not to be disturbed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with that he once more shut himself in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The note was addressed to one Captain Harris, at a tavern on the portside. I
+knew Harris (by reputation) for a dangerous adventurer, highly suspected of
+piracy in the past, and now following the rude business of an Indian trader.
+What my lord should have to say to him, or he to my lord, it passed my
+imagination to conceive: or yet how my lord had heard of him, unless by a
+disgraceful trial from which the man was recently escaped. Altogether I went
+upon the errand with reluctance, and from the little I saw of the captain,
+returned from it with sorrow. I found him in a foul-smelling chamber, sitting
+by a guttering candle and an empty bottle; he had the remains of a military
+carriage, or rather perhaps it was an affectation, for his manners were low.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell my lord, with my service, that I will wait upon his lordship in the
+inside of half an hour,&rdquo; says he, when he had read the note; and then had
+the servility, pointing to his empty bottle, to propose that I should buy him
+liquor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although I returned with my best speed, the Captain followed close upon my
+heels, and he stayed late into the night. The cock was crowing a second time
+when I saw (from my chamber window) my lord lighting him to the gate, both men
+very much affected with their potations, and sometimes leaning one upon the
+other to confabulate. Yet the next morning my lord was abroad again early with
+a hundred pounds of money in his pocket. I never supposed that he returned with
+it; and yet I was quite sure it did not find its way to the Master, for I
+lingered all morning within view of the booth. That was the last time my Lord
+Durrisdeer passed his own enclosure till we left New York; he walked in his
+barn, or sat and talked with his family, all much as usual; but the town saw
+nothing of him, and his daily visits to the Master seemed forgotten. Nor yet
+did Harris reappear; or not until the end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was now much oppressed with a sense of the mysteries in which we had begun to
+move. It was plain, if only from his change of habitude, my lord had something
+on his mind of a grave nature; but what it was, whence it sprang, or why he
+should now keep the house and garden, I could make no guess at. It was clear,
+even to probation, the pamphlets had some share in this revolution; I read all
+I could find, and they were all extremely insignificant, and of the usual kind
+of party scurrility; even to a high politician, I could spy out no particular
+matter of offence, and my lord was a man rather indifferent on public
+questions. The truth is, the pamphlet which was the spring of this affair, lay
+all the time on my lord&rsquo;s bosom. There it was that I found it at last,
+after he was dead, in the midst of the north wilderness: in such a place, in
+such dismal circumstances, I was to read for the first time these idle, lying
+words of a Whig pamphleteer declaiming against indulgency to
+Jacobites:&mdash;&ldquo;Another notorious Rebel, the M&mdash;r of B&mdash;e, is
+to have his Title restored,&rdquo; the passage ran. &ldquo;This Business has
+been long in hand, since he rendered some very disgraceful Services in Scotland
+and France. His Brother, <i>L&mdash;d D&mdash;r</i>, is known to be no better
+than himself in Inclination; and the supposed Heir, who is now to be set aside,
+was bred up in the most detestable Principles. In the old Phrase, it is <i>six
+of the one and half a dozen of the other</i>; but the Favour of such a
+Reposition is too extreme to be passed over.&rdquo; A man in his right wits
+could not have cared two straws for a tale so manifestly false; that Government
+should ever entertain the notion, was inconceivable to any reasoning creature,
+unless possibly the fool that penned it; and my lord, though never brilliant,
+was ever remarkable for sense. That he should credit such a rodomontade, and
+carry the pamphlet on his bosom and the words in his heart, is the clear proof
+of the man&rsquo;s lunacy. Doubtless the mere mention of Mr. Alexander, and the
+threat directly held out against the child&rsquo;s succession, precipitated
+that which had so long impended. Or else my master had been truly mad for a
+long time, and we were too dull or too much used to him, and did not perceive
+the extent of his infirmity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About a week after the day of the pamphlets I was late upon the harbour-side,
+and took a turn towards the Master&rsquo;s, as I often did. The door opened, a
+flood of light came forth upon the road, and I beheld a man taking his
+departure with friendly salutations. I cannot say how singularly I was shaken
+to recognise the adventurer Harris. I could not but conclude it was the hand of
+my lord that had brought him there; and prolonged my walk in very serious and
+apprehensive thought. It was late when I came home, and there was my lord
+making up his portmanteau for a voyage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do you come so late?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;We leave to-morrow for
+Albany, you and I together; and it is high time you were about your
+preparations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For Albany, my lord?&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;And for what earthly
+purpose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Change of scene,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And my lady, who appeared to have been weeping, gave me the signal to obey
+without more parley. She told me a little later (when we found occasion to
+exchange some words) that he had suddenly announced his intention after a visit
+from Captain Harris, and her best endeavours, whether to dissuade him from the
+journey, or to elicit some explanation of its purpose, had alike proved
+unavailing.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS.</h2>
+
+<p>
+We made a prosperous voyage up that fine river of the Hudson, the weather
+grateful, the hills singularly beautified with the colours of the autumn. At
+Albany we had our residence at an inn, where I was not so blind and my lord not
+so cunning but what I could see he had some design to hold me prisoner. The
+work he found for me to do was not so pressing that we should transact it apart
+from necessary papers in the chamber of an inn; nor was it of such importance
+that I should be set upon as many as four or five scrolls of the same document.
+I submitted in appearance; but I took private measures on my own side, and had
+the news of the town communicated to me daily by the politeness of our host. In
+this way I received at last a piece of intelligence for which, I may say, I had
+been waiting. Captain Harris (I was told) with &ldquo;Mr. Mountain, the
+trader,&rdquo; had gone by up the river in a boat. I would have feared the
+landlord&rsquo;s eye, so strong the sense of some complicity upon my
+master&rsquo;s part oppressed me. But I made out to say I had some knowledge of
+the Captain, although none of Mr. Mountain, and to inquire who else was of the
+party. My informant knew not; Mr. Mountain had come ashore upon some needful
+purchases; had gone round the town buying, drinking, and prating; and it seemed
+the party went upon some likely venture, for he had spoken much of great things
+he would do when he returned. No more was known, for none of the rest had come
+ashore, and it seemed they were pressed for time to reach a certain spot before
+the snow should fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And sure enough, the next day, there fell a sprinkle even in Albany; but it
+passed as it came, and was but a reminder of what lay before us. I thought of
+it lightly then, knowing so little as I did of that inclement province: the
+retrospect is different; and I wonder at times if some of the horror of these
+events which I must now rehearse flowed not from the foul skies and savage
+winds to which we were exposed, and the agony of cold that we must suffer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boat having passed by, I thought at first we should have left the town. But
+no such matter. My lord continued his stay in Albany where he had no ostensible
+affairs, and kept me by him, far from my due employment, and making a pretence
+of occupation. It is upon this passage I expect, and perhaps deserve, censure.
+I was not so dull but what I had my own thoughts. I could not see the Master
+entrust himself into the hands of Harris, and not suspect some underhand
+contrivance. Harris bore a villainous reputation, and he had been tampered with
+in private by my lord; Mountain, the trader, proved, upon inquiry, to be
+another of the same kidney; the errand they were all gone upon being the
+recovery of ill-gotten treasures, offered in itself a very strong incentive to
+foul play; and the character of the country where they journeyed promised
+impunity to deeds of blood. Well: it is true I had all these thoughts and
+fears, and guesses of the Master&rsquo;s fate. But you are to consider I was
+the same man that sought to dash him from the bulwarks of a ship in the
+mid-sea; the same that, a little before, very impiously but sincerely offered
+God a bargain, seeking to hire God to be my bravo. It is true again that I had
+a good deal melted towards our enemy. But this I always thought of as a
+weakness of the flesh and even culpable; my mind remaining steady and quite
+bent against him. True, yet again, that it was one thing to assume on my own
+shoulders the guilt and danger of a criminal attempt, and another to stand by
+and see my lord imperil and besmirch himself. But this was the very ground of
+my inaction. For (should I anyway stir in the business) I might fail indeed to
+save the Master, but I could not miss to make a byword of my lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus it was that I did nothing; and upon the same reasons, I am still strong to
+justify my course. We lived meanwhile in Albany, but though alone together in a
+strange place, had little traffic beyond formal salutations. My lord had
+carried with him several introductions to chief people of the town and
+neighbourhood; others he had before encountered in New York: with this
+consequence, that he went much abroad, and I am sorry to say was altogether too
+convivial in his habits. I was often in bed, but never asleep, when he
+returned; and there was scarce a night when he did not betray the influence of
+liquor. By day he would still lay upon me endless tasks, which he showed
+considerable ingenuity to fish up and renew, in the manner of Penelope&rsquo;s
+web. I never refused, as I say, for I was hired to do his bidding; but I took
+no pains to keep my penetration under a bushel, and would sometimes smile in
+his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I must be the devil and you Michael Scott,&rdquo; I said to him
+one day. &ldquo;I have bridged Tweed and split the Eildons; and now you set me
+to the rope of sand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at me with shining eyes, and looked away again, his jaw chewing, but
+without words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well, my lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;your will is my pleasure. I
+will do this thing for the fourth time; but I would beg of you to invent
+another task against to-morrow, for by my troth, I am weary of this one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not know what you are saying,&rdquo; returned my lord, putting on
+his hat and turning his back to me. &ldquo;It is a strange thing you should
+take a pleasure to annoy me. A friend&mdash;but that is a different affair. It
+is a strange thing. I am a man that has had ill-fortune all my life through. I
+am still surrounded by contrivances. I am always treading in plots,&rdquo; he
+burst out. &ldquo;The whole world is banded against me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would not talk wicked nonsense if I were you,&rdquo; said I;
+&ldquo;but I will tell you what I <i>would</i> do&mdash;I would put my head in
+cold water, for you had more last night than you could carry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do ye think that?&rdquo; said he, with a manner of interest highly
+awakened. &ldquo;Would that be good for me? It&rsquo;s a thing I never
+tried.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mind the days when you had no call to try, and I wish, my lord, that
+they were back again,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;But the plain truth is, if you
+continue to exceed, you will do yourself a mischief.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t appear to carry drink the way I used to,&rdquo; said my
+lord. &ldquo;I get overtaken, Mackellar. But I will be more upon my
+guard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is what I would ask of you,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;You are to
+bear in mind that you are Mr. Alexander&rsquo;s father: give the bairn a chance
+to carry his name with some responsibility.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re a very sensible man,
+Mackellar, and have been long in my employ. But I think, if you have nothing
+more to say to me I will be stepping. If you have nothing more to say?&rdquo;
+he added, with that burning, childish eagerness that was now so common with the
+man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, my lord, I have nothing more,&rdquo; said I, dryly enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I think I will be stepping,&rdquo; says my lord, and stood and
+looked at me fidgeting with his hat, which he had taken off again. &ldquo;I
+suppose you will have no errands? No? I am to meet Sir William Johnson, but I
+will be more upon my guard.&rdquo; He was silent for a time, and then, smiling:
+&ldquo;Do you call to mind a place, Mackellar&mdash;it&rsquo;s a little below
+Engles&mdash;where the burn runs very deep under a wood of rowans. I mind being
+there when I was a lad&mdash;dear, it comes over me like an old song!&mdash;I
+was after the fishing, and I made a bonny cast. Eh, but I was happy. I wonder,
+Mackellar, why I am never happy now?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;if you would drink with more moderation
+you would have the better chance. It is an old byword that the bottle is a
+false consoler.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;no doubt. Well, I think I will be
+going.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-morning, my lord,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good-morning, good-morning,&rdquo; said he, and so got himself at last
+from the apartment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I give that for a fair specimen of my lord in the morning; and I must have
+described my patron very ill if the reader does not perceive a notable falling
+off. To behold the man thus fallen: to know him accepted among his companions
+for a poor, muddled toper, welcome (if he were welcome at all) for the bare
+consideration of his title; and to recall the virtues he had once displayed
+against such odds of fortune; was not this a thing at once to rage and to be
+humbled at?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his cups, he was more excessive. I will give but the one scene, close upon
+the end, which is strongly marked upon my memory to this day, and at the time
+affected me almost with horror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was in bed, lying there awake, when I heard him stumbling on the stair and
+singing. My lord had no gift of music, his brother had all the graces of the
+family, so that when I say singing, you are to understand a manner of high,
+carolling utterance, which was truly neither speech nor song. Something not
+unlike is to be heard upon the lips of children, ere they learn shame; from
+those of a man grown elderly, it had a strange effect. He opened the door with
+noisy precaution; peered in, shading his candle; conceived me to slumber;
+entered, set his light upon the table, and took off his hat. I saw him very
+plain; a high, feverish exultation appeared to boil in his veins, and he stood
+and smiled and smirked upon the candle. Presently he lifted up his arm, snapped
+his fingers, and fell to undress. As he did so, having once more forgot my
+presence, he took back to his singing; and now I could hear the words, which
+were those from the old song of the <i>Twa Corbies</i> endlessly repeated:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;And over his banes when they are bare<br />
+The wind sall blaw for evermair!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have said there was no music in the man. His strains had no logical
+succession except in so far as they inclined a little to the minor mode; but
+they exercised a rude potency upon the feelings, and followed the words, and
+signified the feelings of the singer with barbaric fitness. He took it first in
+the time and manner of a rant; presently this ill-favoured gleefulness abated,
+he began to dwell upon the notes more feelingly, and sank at last into a degree
+of maudlin pathos that was to me scarce bearable. By equal steps, the original
+briskness of his acts declined; and when he was stripped to his breeches, he
+sat on the bedside and fell to whimpering. I know nothing less respectable than
+the tears of drunkenness, and turned my back impatiently on this poor sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he had started himself (I am to suppose) on that slippery descent of
+self-pity; on the which, to a man unstrung by old sorrows and recent potations
+there is no arrest except exhaustion. His tears continued to flow, and the man
+to sit there, three parts naked, in the cold air of the chamber. I twitted
+myself alternately with inhumanity and sentimental weakness, now half rising in
+my bed to interfere, now reading myself lessons of indifference and courting
+slumber, until, upon a sudden, the <i>quantum mutatus ab illo</i> shot into my
+mind; and calling to remembrance his old wisdom, constancy, and patience, I was
+overborne with a pity almost approaching the passionate, not for my master
+alone but for the sons of man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this I leaped from my place, went over to his side and laid a hand on his
+bare shoulder, which was cold as stone. He uncovered his face and showed it me
+all swollen and begrutten <a name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10"
+class="citation">[10]</a> like a child&rsquo;s; and at the sight my impatience
+partially revived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think shame to yourself,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;This is bairnly conduct.
+I might have been snivelling myself, if I had cared to swill my belly with
+wine. But I went to my bed sober like a man. Come: get into yours, and have
+done with this pitiable exhibition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;my heart is wae!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wae?&rdquo; cried I. &ldquo;For a good cause, I think. What words were
+these you sang as you came in? Show pity to others, we then can talk of pity to
+yourself. You can be the one thing or the other, but I will be no party to
+half-way houses. If you&rsquo;re a striker, strike, and if you&rsquo;re a
+bleater, bleat!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cry!&rdquo; cries he, with a burst, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s it&mdash;strike!
+that&rsquo;s talking! Man, I&rsquo;ve stood it all too long. But when they laid
+a hand upon the child, when the child&rsquo;s threatened&rdquo;&mdash;his
+momentary vigour whimpering off&mdash;&ldquo;my child, my
+Alexander!&rdquo;&mdash;and he was at his tears again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took him by the shoulders and shook him. &ldquo;Alexander!&rdquo; said I.
+&ldquo;Do you even think of him? Not you! Look yourself in the face like a
+brave man, and you&rsquo;ll find you&rsquo;re but a self-deceiver. The wife,
+the friend, the child, they&rsquo;re all equally forgot, and you sunk in a mere
+log of selfishness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mackellar,&rdquo; said he, with a wonderful return to his old manner and
+appearance, &ldquo;you may say what you will of me, but one thing I never
+was&mdash;I was never selfish.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will open your eyes in your despite,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;How long
+have we been here? and how often have you written to your family? I think this
+is the first time you were ever separate: have you written at all? Do they know
+if you are dead or living?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had caught him here too openly; it braced his better nature; there was no
+more weeping, he thanked me very penitently, got to bed and was soon fast
+asleep; and the first thing he did the next morning was to sit down and begin a
+letter to my lady: a very tender letter it was too, though it was never
+finished. Indeed all communication with New York was transacted by myself; and
+it will be judged I had a thankless task of it. What to tell my lady and in
+what words, and how far to be false and how far cruel, was a thing that kept me
+often from my slumber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this while, no doubt, my lord waited with growing impatiency for news of
+his accomplices. Harris, it is to be thought, had promised a high degree of
+expedition; the time was already overpast when word was to be looked for; and
+suspense was a very evil counsellor to a man of an impaired intelligence. My
+lord&rsquo;s mind throughout this interval dwelled almost wholly in the
+Wilderness, following that party with whose deeds he had so much concern. He
+continually conjured up their camps and progresses, the fashion of the country,
+the perpetration in a thousand different manners of the same horrid fact, and
+that consequent spectacle of the Master&rsquo;s bones lying scattered in the
+wind. These private, guilty considerations I would continually observe to peep
+forth in the man&rsquo;s talk, like rabbits from a hill. And it is the less
+wonder if the scene of his meditations began to draw him bodily.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> It is well known what pretext he took. Sir William Johnson had a
+diplomatic errand in these parts; and my lord and I (from curiosity, as was
+given out) went in his company. Sir William was well attended and liberally
+supplied. Hunters brought us venison, fish was taken for us daily in the
+streams, and brandy ran like water. We proceeded by day and encamped by night
+in the military style; sentinels were set and changed; every man had his named
+duty; and Sir William was the spring of all. There was much in this that might
+at times have entertained me; but for our misfortune, the weather was extremely
+harsh, the days were in the beginning open, but the nights frosty from the
+first. A painful keen wind blew most of the time, so that we sat in the boat
+with blue fingers, and at night, as we scorched our faces at the fire, the
+clothes upon our back appeared to be of paper. A dreadful solitude surrounded
+our steps; the land was quite dispeopled, there was no smoke of fires, and save
+for a single boat of merchants on the second day, we met no travellers. The
+season was indeed late, but this desertion of the waterways impressed Sir
+William himself; and I have heard him more than once express a sense of
+intimidation. &ldquo;I have come too late, I fear; they must have dug up the
+hatchet;&rdquo; he said; and the future proved how justly he had reasoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could never depict the blackness of my soul upon this journey. I have none of
+those minds that are in love with the unusual: to see the winter coming and to
+lie in the field so far from any house, oppressed me like a nightmare; it
+seemed, indeed, a kind of awful braving of God&rsquo;s power; and this thought,
+which I daresay only writes me down a coward, was greatly exaggerated by my
+private knowledge of the errand we were come upon. I was besides encumbered by
+my duties to Sir William, whom it fell upon me to entertain; for my lord was
+quite sunk into a state bordering on <i>pervigilium</i>, watching the woods
+with a rapt eye, sleeping scarce at all, and speaking sometimes not twenty
+words in a whole day. That which he said was still coherent; but it turned
+almost invariably upon the party for whom he kept his crazy lookout. He would
+tell Sir William often, and always as if it were a new communication, that he
+had &ldquo;a brother somewhere in the woods,&rdquo; and beg that the sentinels
+should be directed &ldquo;to inquire for him.&rdquo; &ldquo;I am anxious for
+news of my brother,&rdquo; he would say. And sometimes, when we were under way,
+he would fancy he spied a canoe far off upon the water or a camp on the shore,
+and exhibit painful agitation. It was impossible but Sir William should be
+struck with these singularities; and at last he led me aside, and hinted his
+uneasiness. I touched my head and shook it; quite rejoiced to prepare a little
+testimony against possible disclosures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But in that case,&rdquo; cries Sir William, &ldquo;is it wise to let him
+go at large?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those that know him best,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;are persuaded that he
+should be humoured.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; replied Sir William, &ldquo;it is none of my affairs.
+But if I had understood, you would never have been here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our advance into this savage country had thus uneventfully proceeded for about
+a week, when we encamped for a night at a place where the river ran among
+considerable mountains clothed in wood. The fires were lighted on a level space
+at the water&rsquo;s edge; and we supped and lay down to sleep in the customary
+fashion. It chanced the night fell murderously cold; the stringency of the
+frost seized and bit me through my coverings so that pain kept me wakeful; and
+I was afoot again before the peep of day, crouching by the fires or trotting to
+and fro at the stream&rsquo;s edge, to combat the aching of my limbs. At last
+dawn began to break upon hoar woods and mountains, the sleepers rolled in their
+robes, and the boisterous river dashing among spears of ice. I stood looking
+about me, swaddled in my stiff coat of a bull&rsquo;s fur, and the breath
+smoking from my scorched nostrils, when, upon a sudden, a singular, eager cry
+rang from the borders of the wood. The sentries answered it, the sleepers
+sprang to their feet; one pointed, the rest followed his direction with their
+eyes, and there, upon the edge of the forest and betwixt two trees, we beheld
+the figure of a man reaching forth his hands like one in ecstasy. The next
+moment he ran forward, fell on his knees at the side of the camp, and burst in
+tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was John Mountain, the trader, escaped from the most horrid perils; and
+his first word, when he got speech, was to ask if we had seen Secundra Dass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Seen what?&rdquo; cries Sir William.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;we have seen nothing of him. Why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing?&rdquo; says Mountain. &ldquo;Then I was right after all.&rdquo;
+With that he struck his palm upon his brow. &ldquo;But what takes him
+back?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;What takes the man back among dead bodies. There
+is some damned mystery here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a word which highly aroused our curiosity, but I shall be more
+perspicacious, if I narrate these incidents in their true order. Here follows a
+narrative which I have compiled out of three sources, not very consistent in
+all points:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>First</i>, a written statement by Mountain, in which everything criminal is
+cleverly smuggled out of view;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Second</i>, two conversations with Secundra Dass; and
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Third</i>, many conversations with Mountain himself, in which he was pleased
+to be entirely plain; for the truth is he regarded me as an accomplice.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3><a name="chap11b"></a>NARRATIVE OF THE TRADER, MOUNTAIN.</h3>
+
+<p>
+The crew that went up the river under the joint command of Captain Harris and
+the Master numbered in all nine persons, of whom (if I except Secundra Dass)
+there was not one that had not merited the gallows. From Harris downward the
+voyagers were notorious in that colony for desperate, bloody-minded miscreants;
+some were reputed pirates, the most hawkers of rum; all ranters and drinkers;
+all fit associates, embarking together without remorse, upon this treacherous
+and murderous design. I could not hear there was much discipline or any set
+captain in the gang; but Harris and four others, Mountain himself, two
+Scotchmen&mdash;Pinkerton and Hastie&mdash;and a man of the name of Hicks, a
+drunken shoemaker, put their heads together and agreed upon the course. In a
+material sense, they were well enough provided; and the Master in particular
+brought with him a tent where he might enjoy some privacy and shelter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even this small indulgence told against him in the minds of his companions. But
+indeed he was in a position so entirely false (and even ridiculous) that all
+his habit of command and arts of pleasing were here thrown away. In the eyes of
+all, except Secundra Dass, he figured as a common gull and designated victim;
+going unconsciously to death; yet he could not but suppose himself the
+contriver and the leader of the expedition; he could scarce help but so conduct
+himself and at the least hint of authority or condescension, his deceivers
+would be laughing in their sleeves. I was so used to see and to conceive him in
+a high, authoritative attitude, that when I had conceived his position on this
+journey, I was pained and could have blushed. How soon he may have entertained
+a first surmise, we cannot know; but it was long, and the party had advanced
+into the Wilderness beyond the reach of any help, ere he was fully awakened to
+the truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It fell thus. Harris and some others had drawn apart into the woods for
+consultation, when they were startled by a rustling in the brush. They were all
+accustomed to the arts of Indian warfare, and Mountain had not only lived and
+hunted, but fought and earned some reputation, with the savages. He could move
+in the woods without noise, and follow a trail like a hound; and upon the
+emergence of this alert, he was deputed by the rest to plunge into the thicket
+for intelligence. He was soon convinced there was a man in his close
+neighbourhood, moving with precaution but without art among the leaves and
+branches; and coming shortly to a place of advantage, he was able to observe
+Secundra Dass crawling briskly off with many backward glances. At this he knew
+not whether to laugh or cry; and his accomplices, when he had returned and
+reported, were in much the same dubiety. There was now no danger of an Indian
+onslaught; but on the other hand, since Secundra Dass was at the pains to spy
+upon them, it was highly probable he knew English, and if he knew English it
+was certain the whole of their design was in the Master&rsquo;s knowledge.
+There was one singularity in the position. If Secundra Dass knew and concealed
+his knowledge of English, Harris was a proficient in several of the tongues of
+India, and as his career in that part of the world had been a great deal worse
+than profligate, he had not thought proper to remark upon the circumstance.
+Each side had thus a spy-hole on the counsels of the other. The plotters, so
+soon as this advantage was explained, returned to camp; Harris, hearing the
+Hindustani was once more closeted with his master, crept to the side of the
+tent; and the rest, sitting about the fire with their tobacco, awaited his
+report with impatience. When he came at last, his face was very black. He had
+overheard enough to confirm the worst of his suspicions. Secundra Dass was a
+good English scholar; he had been some days creeping and listening, the Master
+was now fully informed of the conspiracy, and the pair proposed on the morrow
+to fall out of line at a carrying place and plunge at a venture in the woods:
+preferring the full risk of famine, savage beasts, and savage men to their
+position in the midst of traitors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What, then, was to be done? Some were for killing the Master on the spot; but
+Harris assured them that would be a crime without profit, since the secret of
+the treasure must die along with him that buried it. Others were for desisting
+at once from the whole enterprise and making for New York; but the appetising
+name of treasure, and the thought of the long way they had already travelled
+dissuaded the majority. I imagine they were dull fellows for the most part.
+Harris, indeed, had some acquirements, Mountain was no fool, Hastie was an
+educated man; but even these had manifestly failed in life, and the rest were
+the dregs of colonial rascality. The conclusion they reached, at least, was
+more the offspring of greed and hope, than reason. It was to temporise, to be
+wary and watch the Master, to be silent and supply no further aliment to his
+suspicions, and to depend entirely (as well as I make out) on the chance that
+their victim was as greedy, hopeful, and irrational as themselves, and might,
+after all, betray his life and treasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twice in the course of the next day Secundra and the Master must have appeared
+to themselves to have escaped; and twice they were circumvented. The Master,
+save that the second time he grew a little pale, displayed no sign of
+disappointment, apologised for the stupidity with which he had fallen aside,
+thanked his recapturers as for a service, and rejoined the caravan with all his
+usual gallantry and cheerfulness of mien and bearing. But it is certain he had
+smelled a rat; for from thenceforth he and Secundra spoke only in each
+other&rsquo;s ear, and Harris listened and shivered by the tent in vain. The
+same night it was announced they were to leave the boats and proceed by foot, a
+circumstance which (as it put an end to the confusion of the portages) greatly
+lessened the chances of escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now there began between the two sides a silent contest, for life on the one
+hand, for riches on the other. They were now near that quarter of the desert in
+which the Master himself must begin to play the part of guide; and using this
+for a pretext of persecution, Harris and his men sat with him every night about
+the fire, and laboured to entrap him into some admission. If he let slip his
+secret, he knew well it was the warrant for his death; on the other hand, he
+durst not refuse their questions, and must appear to help them to the best of
+his capacity, or he practically published his mistrust. And yet Mountain
+assures me the man&rsquo;s brow was never ruffled. He sat in the midst of these
+jackals, his life depending by a thread, like some easy, witty householder at
+home by his own fire; an answer he had for everything&mdash;as often as not, a
+jesting answer; avoided threats, evaded insults; talked, laughed, and listened
+with an open countenance; and, in short, conducted himself in such a manner as
+must have disarmed suspicion, and went near to stagger knowledge. Indeed,
+Mountain confessed to me they would soon have disbelieved the Captain&rsquo;s
+story, and supposed their designated victim still quite innocent of their
+designs; but for the fact that he continued (however ingeniously) to give the
+slip to questions, and the yet stronger confirmation of his repeated efforts to
+escape. The last of these, which brought things to a head, I am now to relate.
+And first I should say that by this time the temper of Harris&rsquo;s
+companions was utterly worn out; civility was scarce pretended; and for one
+very significant circumstance, the Master and Secundra had been (on some
+pretext) deprived of weapons. On their side, however, the threatened pair kept
+up the parade of friendship handsomely; Secundra was all bows, the Master all
+smiles; and on the last night of the truce he had even gone so far as to sing
+for the diversion of the company. It was observed that he had also eaten with
+unusual heartiness, and drank deep, doubtless from design.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At least, about three in the morning, he came out of the tent into the open
+air, audibly mourning and complaining, with all the manner of a sufferer from
+surfeit. For some while, Secundra publicly attended on his patron, who at last
+became more easy, and fell asleep on the frosty ground behind the tent, the
+Indian returning within. Some time after, the sentry was changed; had the
+Master pointed out to him, where he lay in what is called a robe of buffalo:
+and thenceforth kept an eye upon him (he declared) without remission. With the
+first of the dawn, a draught of wind came suddenly and blew open one side the
+corner of the robe; and with the same puff, the Master&rsquo;s hat whirled in
+the air and fell some yards away. The sentry thinking it remarkable the sleeper
+should not awaken, thereupon drew near; and the next moment, with a great
+shout, informed the camp their prisoner was escaped. He had left behind his
+Indian, who (in the first vivacity of the surprise) came near to pay the
+forfeit of his life, and was, in fact, inhumanly mishandled; but Secundra, in
+the midst of threats and cruelties, stuck to it with extraordinary loyalty,
+that he was quite ignorant of his master&rsquo;s plans, which might indeed be
+true, and of the manner of his escape, which was demonstrably false. Nothing
+was therefore left to the conspirators but to rely entirely on the skill of
+Mountain. The night had been frosty, the ground quite hard; and the sun was no
+sooner up than a strong thaw set in. It was Mountain&rsquo;s boast that few men
+could have followed that trail, and still fewer (even of the native Indians)
+found it. The Master had thus a long start before his pursuers had the scent,
+and he must have travelled with surprising energy for a pedestrian so unused,
+since it was near noon before Mountain had a view of him. At this conjuncture
+the trader was alone, all his companions following, at his own request, several
+hundred yards in the rear; he knew the Master was unarmed; his heart was
+besides heated with the exercise and lust of hunting; and seeing the quarry so
+close, so defenceless, and seeming so fatigued, he vain-gloriously determined
+to effect the capture with his single hand. A step or two farther brought him
+to one margin of a little clearing; on the other, with his arms folded and his
+back to a huge stone, the Master sat. It is possible Mountain may have made a
+rustle, it is certain, at least, the Master raised his head and gazed directly
+at that quarter of the thicket where his hunter lay; &ldquo;I could not be sure
+he saw me,&rdquo; Mountain said; &ldquo;he just looked my way like a man with
+his mind made up, and all the courage ran out of me like rum out of a
+bottle.&rdquo; And presently, when the Master looked away again, and appeared
+to resume those meditations in which he had sat immersed before the
+trader&rsquo;s coming, Mountain slunk stealthily back and returned to seek the
+help of his companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now began the chapter of surprises, for the scout had scarce informed the
+others of his discovery, and they were yet preparing their weapons for a rush
+upon the fugitive, when the man himself appeared in their midst, walking openly
+and quietly, with his hands behind his back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, men!&rdquo; says he, on his beholding them. &ldquo;Here is a
+fortunate encounter. Let us get back to camp.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mountain had not mentioned his own weakness or the Master&rsquo;s disconcerting
+gaze upon the thicket, so that (with all the rest) his return appeared
+spontaneous. For all that, a hubbub arose; oaths flew, fists were shaken, and
+guns pointed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us get back to camp,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;I have an
+explanation to make, but it must be laid before you all. And in the meanwhile I
+would put up these weapons, one of which might very easily go off and blow away
+your hopes of treasure. I would not kill,&rdquo; says he, smiling, &ldquo;the
+goose with the golden eggs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The charm of his superiority once more triumphed; and the party, in no
+particular order, set off on their return. By the way, he found occasion to get
+a word or two apart with Mountain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are a clever fellow and a bold,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;but I am not
+so sure that you are doing yourself justice. I would have you to consider
+whether you would not do better, ay, and safer, to serve me instead of serving
+so commonplace a rascal as Mr. Harris. Consider of it,&rdquo; he concluded,
+dealing the man a gentle tap upon the shoulder, &ldquo;and don&rsquo;t be in
+haste. Dead or alive, you will find me an ill man to quarrel with.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were come back to the camp, where Harris and Pinkerton stood guard
+over Secundra, these two ran upon the Master like viragoes, and were amazed out
+of measure when they were bidden by their comrades to &ldquo;stand back and
+hear what the gentleman had to say.&rdquo; The Master had not flinched before
+their onslaught; nor, at this proof of the ground he had gained, did he betray
+the least sufficiency.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not let us be in haste,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;Meat first and public
+speaking after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that they made a hasty meal: and as soon as it was done, the Master,
+leaning on one elbow, began his speech. He spoke long, addressing himself to
+each except Harris, finding for each (with the same exception) some particular
+flattery. He called them &ldquo;bold, honest blades,&rdquo; declared he had
+never seen a more jovial company, work better done, or pains more merrily
+supported. &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;some one asks me, Why the
+devil I ran away? But that is scarce worth answer, for I think you all know
+pretty well. But you know only pretty well: that is a point I shall arrive at
+presently, and be you ready to remark it when it comes. There is a traitor
+here: a double traitor: I will give you his name before I am done; and let that
+suffice for now. But here comes some other gentleman and asks me, &lsquo;Why,
+in the devil, I came back?&rsquo; Well, before I answer that question, I have
+one to put to you. It was this cur here, this Harris, that speaks
+Hindustani?&rdquo; cries he, rising on one knee and pointing fair at the
+man&rsquo;s face, with a gesture indescribably menacing; and when he had been
+answered in the affirmative, &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;then are all my
+suspicions verified, and I did rightly to come back. Now, men, hear the truth
+for the first time.&rdquo; Thereupon he launched forth in a long story, told
+with extraordinary skill, how he had all along suspected Harris, how he had
+found the confirmation of his fears, and how Harris must have misrepresented
+what passed between Secundra and himself. At this point he made a bold stroke
+with excellent effect. &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;you think you
+are going shares with Harris; I suppose you think you will see to that
+yourselves; you would naturally not think so flat a rogue could cozen you. But
+have a care! These half idiots have a sort of cunning, as the skunk has its
+stench; and it may be news to you that Harris has taken care of himself
+already. Yes, for him the treasure is all money in the bargain. You must find
+it or go starve. But he has been paid beforehand; my brother paid him to
+destroy me; look at him, if you doubt&mdash;look at him, grinning and gulping,
+a detected thief!&rdquo; Thence, having made this happy impression, he
+explained how he had escaped, and thought better of it, and at last concluded
+to come back, lay the truth before the company, and take his chance with them
+once more: persuaded as he was, they would instantly depose Harris and elect
+some other leader. &ldquo;There is the whole truth,&rdquo; said he: &ldquo;and
+with one exception, I put myself entirely in your hands. What is the exception?
+There he sits,&rdquo; he cried, pointing once more to Harris; &ldquo;a man that
+has to die! Weapons and conditions are all one to me; put me face to face with
+him, and if you give me nothing but a stick, in five minutes I will show you a
+sop of broken carrion, fit for dogs to roll in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was dark night when he made an end; they had listened in almost perfect
+silence; but the firelight scarce permitted any one to judge, from the look of
+his neighbours, with what result of persuasion or conviction. Indeed, the
+Master had set himself in the brightest place, and kept his face there, to be
+the centre of men&rsquo;s eyes: doubtless on a profound calculation. Silence
+followed for awhile, and presently the whole party became involved in
+disputation: the Master lying on his back, with his hands knit under his head
+and one knee flung across the other, like a person unconcerned in the result.
+And here, I daresay, his bravado carried him too far and prejudiced his case.
+At least, after a cast or two back and forward, opinion settled finally against
+him. It&rsquo;s possible he hoped to repeat the business of the pirate ship,
+and be himself, perhaps, on hard enough conditions, elected leader; and things
+went so far that way, that Mountain actually threw out the proposition. But the
+rock he split upon was Hastie. This fellow was not well liked, being sour and
+slow, with an ugly, glowering disposition, but he had studied some time for the
+church at Edinburgh College, before ill conduct had destroyed his prospects,
+and he now remembered and applied what he had learned. Indeed he had not
+proceeded very far, when the Master rolled carelessly upon one side, which was
+done (in Mountain&rsquo;s opinion) to conceal the beginnings of despair upon
+his countenance. Hastie dismissed the most of what they had heard as nothing to
+the matter: what they wanted was the treasure. All that was said of Harris
+might be true, and they would have to see to that in time. But what had that to
+do with the treasure? They had heard a vast of words; but the truth was just
+this, that Mr. Durie was damnably frightened and had several times run off.
+Here he was&mdash;whether caught or come back was all one to Hastie: the point
+was to make an end of the business. As for the talk of deposing and electing
+captains, he hoped they were all free men and could attend their own affairs.
+That was dust flung in their eyes, and so was the proposal to fight Harris.
+&ldquo;He shall fight no one in this camp, I can tell him that,&rdquo; said
+Hastie. &ldquo;We had trouble enough to get his arms away from him, and we
+should look pretty fools to give them back again. But if it&rsquo;s excitement
+the gentleman is after, I can supply him with more than perhaps he cares about.
+For I have no intention to spend the remainder of my life in these mountains;
+already I have been too long; and I propose that he should immediately tell us
+where that treasure is, or else immediately be shot. And there,&rdquo; says he,
+producing his weapon, &ldquo;there is the pistol that I mean to use.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, I call you a man,&rdquo; cries the Master, sitting up and looking
+at the speaker with an air of admiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t ask you to call me anything,&rdquo; returned Hastie;
+&ldquo;which is it to be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s an idle question,&rdquo; said the Master. &ldquo;Needs must
+when the devil drives. The truth is we are within easy walk of the place, and I
+will show it you to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that, as if all were quite settled, and settled exactly to his mind, he
+walked off to his tent, whither Secundra had preceded him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I cannot think of these last turns and wriggles of my old enemy except with
+admiration; scarce even pity is mingled with the sentiment, so strongly the man
+supported, so boldly resisted his misfortunes. Even at that hour, when he
+perceived himself quite lost, when he saw he had but effected an exchange of
+enemies, and overthrown Harris to set Hastie up, no sign of weakness appeared
+in his behaviour, and he withdrew to his tent, already determined (I must
+suppose) upon affronting the incredible hazard of his last expedient, with the
+same easy, assured, genteel expression and demeanour as he might have left a
+theatre withal to join a supper of the wits. But doubtless within, if we could
+see there, his soul trembled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Early in the night, word went about the camp that he was sick; and the first
+thing the next morning he called Hastie to his side, and inquired most
+anxiously if he had any skill in medicine. As a matter of fact, this was a
+vanity of that fallen divinity student&rsquo;s, to which he had cunningly
+addressed himself. Hastie examined him; and being flattered, ignorant, and
+highly auspicious, knew not in the least whether the man was sick or
+malingering. In this state he went forth again to his companions; and (as the
+thing which would give himself most consequence either way) announced that the
+patient was in a fair way to die.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For all that,&rdquo; he added with an oath, &ldquo;and if he bursts by
+the wayside, he must bring us this morning to the treasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there were several in the camp (Mountain among the number) whom this
+brutality revolted. They would have seen the Master pistolled, or pistolled him
+themselves, without the smallest sentiment of pity; but they seemed to have
+been touched by his gallant fight and unequivocal defeat the night before;
+perhaps, too, they were even already beginning to oppose themselves to their
+new leader: at least, they now declared that (if the man was sick) he should
+have a day&rsquo;s rest in spite of Hastie&rsquo;s teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning he was manifestly worse, and Hastie himself began to display
+something of humane concern, so easily does even the pretence of doctoring
+awaken sympathy. The third the Master called Mountain and Hastie to the tent,
+announced himself to be dying, gave them full particulars as to the position of
+the cache, and begged them to set out incontinently on the quest, so that they
+might see if he deceived them, and (if they were at first unsuccessful) he
+should be able to correct their error.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But here arose a difficulty on which he doubtless counted. None of these men
+would trust another, none would consent to stay behind. On the other hand,
+although the Master seemed extremely low, spoke scarce above a whisper, and lay
+much of the time insensible, it was still possible it was a fraudulent
+sickness; and if all went treasure-hunting, it might prove they had gone upon a
+wild-goose chase, and return to find their prisoner flown. They concluded,
+therefore, to hang idling round the camp, alleging sympathy to their reason;
+and certainly, so mingled are our dispositions, several were sincerely (if not
+very deeply) affected by the natural peril of the man whom they callously
+designed to murder. In the afternoon, Hastie was called to the bedside to pray:
+the which (incredible as it must appear) he did with unction; about eight at
+night, the wailing of Secundra announced that all was over; and before ten, the
+Indian, with a link stuck in the ground, was toiling at the grave. Sunrise of
+next day beheld the Master&rsquo;s burial, all hands attending with great
+decency of demeanour; and the body was laid in the earth, wrapped in a fur
+robe, with only the face uncovered; which last was of a waxy whiteness, and had
+the nostrils plugged according to some Oriental habit of Secundra&rsquo;s. No
+sooner was the grave filled than the lamentations of the Indian once more
+struck concern to every heart; and it appears this gang of murderers, so far
+from resenting his outcries, although both distressful and (in such a country)
+perilous to their own safety, roughly but kindly endeavoured to console him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if human nature is even in the worst of men occasionally kind, it is still,
+and before all things, greedy; and they soon turned from the mourner to their
+own concerns. The cache of the treasure being hard by, although yet
+unidentified, it was concluded not to break camp; and the day passed, on the
+part of the voyagers, in unavailing exploration of the woods, Secundra the
+while lying on his master&rsquo;s grave. That night they placed no sentinel,
+but lay altogether about the fire, in the customary woodman fashion, the heads
+outward, like the spokes of a wheel. Morning found them in the same
+disposition; only Pinkerton, who lay on Mountain&rsquo;s right, between him and
+Hastie, had (in the hours of darkness) been secretly butchered, and there lay,
+still wrapped as to his body in his mantle, but offering above that ungodly and
+horrific spectacle of the scalped head. The gang were that morning as pale as a
+company of phantoms, for the pertinacity of Indian war (or to speak more
+correctly, Indian murder) was well known to all. But they laid the chief blame
+on their unsentinelled posture; and fired with the neighbourhood of the
+treasure, determined to continue where they were. Pinkerton was buried hard by
+the Master; the survivors again passed the day in exploration, and returned in
+a mingled humour of anxiety and hope, being partly certain they were now close
+on the discovery of what they sought, and on the other hand (with the return of
+darkness) were infected with the fear of Indians. Mountain was the first
+sentry; he declares he neither slept nor yet sat down, but kept his watch with
+a perpetual and straining vigilance, and it was even with unconcern that (when
+he saw by the stars his time was up) he drew near the fire to awaken his
+successor. This man (it was Hicks the shoemaker) slept on the lee side of the
+circle, something farther off in consequence than those to windward, and in a
+place darkened by the blowing smoke. Mountain stooped and took him by the
+shoulder; his hand was at once smeared by some adhesive wetness; and (the wind
+at the moment veering) the firelight shone upon the sleeper, and showed him,
+like Pinkerton, dead and scalped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was clear they had fallen in the hands of one of those matchless Indian
+bravos, that will sometimes follow a party for days, and in spite of
+indefatigable travel, and unsleeping watch, continue to keep up with their
+advance, and steal a scalp at every resting-place. Upon this discovery, the
+treasure-seekers, already reduced to a poor half dozen, fell into mere dismay,
+seized a few necessaries, and deserting the remainder of their goods, fled
+outright into the forest. Their fire they left still burning, and their dead
+comrade unburied. All day they ceased not to flee, eating by the way, from hand
+to mouth; and since they feared to sleep, continued to advance at random even
+in the hours of darkness. But the limit of man&rsquo;s endurance is soon
+reached; when they rested at last it was to sleep profoundly; and when they
+woke, it was to find that the enemy was still upon their heels, and death and
+mutilation had once more lessened and deformed their company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this they had become light-headed, they had quite missed their path in the
+wilderness, their stores were already running low. With the further horrors, it
+is superfluous that I should swell this narrative, already too prolonged.
+Suffice it to say that when at length a night passed by innocuous, and they
+might breathe again in the hope that the murderer had at last desisted from
+pursuit, Mountain and Secundra were alone. The trader is firmly persuaded their
+unseen enemy was some warrior of his own acquaintance, and that he himself was
+spared by favour. The mercy extended to Secundra he explains on the ground that
+the East Indian was thought to be insane; partly from the fact that, through
+all the horrors of the flight and while others were casting away their very
+food and weapons, Secundra continued to stagger forward with a mattock on his
+shoulder, and partly because, in the last days and with a great degree of heat
+and fluency, he perpetually spoke with himself in his own language. But he was
+sane enough when it came to English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You think he will be gone quite away?&rdquo; he asked, upon their blest
+awakening in safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I pray God so, I believe so, I dare to believe so,&rdquo; Mountain had
+replied almost with incoherence, as he described the scene to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And indeed he was so much distempered that until he met us, the next morning,
+he could scarce be certain whether he had dreamed, or whether it was a fact,
+that Secundra had thereupon turned directly about and returned without a word
+upon their footprints, setting his face for these wintry and hungry solitudes,
+along a path whose every stage was mile-stoned with a mutilated corpse.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS (<i>continued</i>).</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mountain&rsquo;s story, as it was laid before Sir William Johnson and my lord,
+was shorn, of course, of all the earlier particulars, and the expedition
+described to have proceeded uneventfully, until the Master sickened. But the
+latter part was very forcibly related, the speaker visibly thrilling to his
+recollections; and our then situation, on the fringe of the same desert, and
+the private interests of each, gave him an audience prepared to share in his
+emotions. For Mountain&rsquo;s intelligence not only changed the world for my
+Lord Durrisdeer, but materially affected the designs of Sir William Johnson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These I find I must lay more at length before the reader. Word had reached
+Albany of dubious import; it had been rumoured some hostility was to be put in
+act; and the Indian diplomatist had, thereupon, sped into the wilderness, even
+at the approach of winter, to nip that mischief in the bud. Here, on the
+borders, he learned that he was come too late; and a difficult choice was thus
+presented to a man (upon the whole) not any more bold than prudent. His
+standing with the painted braves may be compared to that of my Lord President
+Culloden among the chiefs of our own Highlanders at the &rsquo;forty-five; that
+is as much as to say, he was, to these men, reason&rsquo;s only speaking
+trumpet, and counsels of peace and moderation, if they were to prevail at all,
+must prevail singly through his influence. If, then, he should return, the
+province must lie open to all the abominable tragedies of Indian war&mdash;the
+houses blaze, the wayfarer be cut off, and the men of the woods collect their
+usual disgusting spoil of human scalps. On the other side, to go farther forth,
+to risk so small a party deeper in the desert, to carry words of peace among
+warlike savages already rejoicing to return to war: here was an extremity from
+which it was easy to perceive his mind revolted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have come too late,&rdquo; he said more than once, and would fall into
+a deep consideration, his head bowed in his hands, his foot patting the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length he raised his face and looked upon us, that is to say upon my lord,
+Mountain, and myself, sitting close round a small fire, which had been made for
+privacy in one corner of the camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord, to be quite frank with you, I find myself in two minds,&rdquo;
+said he. &ldquo;I think it very needful I should go on, but not at all proper I
+should any longer enjoy the pleasure of your company. We are here still upon
+the water side; and I think the risk to southward no great matter. Will not
+yourself and Mr. Mackellar take a single boat&rsquo;s crew and return to
+Albany?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord, I should say, had listened to Mountain&rsquo;s narrative, regarding
+him throughout with a painful intensity of gaze; and since the tale concluded,
+had sat as in a dream. There was something very daunting in his look; something
+to my eyes not rightly human; the face, lean, and dark, and aged, the mouth
+painful, the teeth disclosed in a perpetual rictus; the eyeball swimming clear
+of the lids upon a field of blood-shot white. I could not behold him myself
+without a jarring irritation, such as, I believe, is too frequently the
+uppermost feeling on the sickness of those dear to us. Others, I could not but
+remark. were scarce able to support his neighbourhood&mdash;Sir William eviting
+to be near him, Mountain dodging his eye, and, when he met it, blenching and
+halting in his story. At this appeal, however, my lord appeared to recover his
+command upon himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To Albany?&rdquo; said he, with a good voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not short of it, at least,&rdquo; replied Sir William. &ldquo;There is
+no safety nearer hand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would be very sweir <a name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11"
+class="citation">[11]</a> to return,&rdquo; says my lord. &ldquo;I am not
+afraid&mdash;of Indians,&rdquo; he added, with a jerk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish that I could say so much,&rdquo; returned Sir William, smiling;
+&ldquo;although, if any man durst say it, it should be myself. But you are to
+keep in view my responsibility, and that as the voyage has now become highly
+dangerous, and your business&mdash;if you ever had any,&rdquo; says he,
+&ldquo;brought quite to a conclusion by the distressing family intelligence you
+have received, I should be hardly justified if I even suffered you to proceed,
+and run the risk of some obloquy if anything regrettable should follow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord turned to Mountain. &ldquo;What did he pretend he died of?&rdquo; he
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think I understand your honour,&rdquo; said the trader,
+pausing like a man very much affected, in the dressing of some cruel
+frost-bites.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment my lord seemed at a full stop; and then, with some irritation,
+&ldquo;I ask you what he died of. Surely that&rsquo;s a plain question,&rdquo;
+said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Mountain. &ldquo;Hastie even never
+knew. He seemed to sicken natural, and just pass away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There it is, you see!&rdquo; concluded my lord, turning to Sir William.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your lordship is too deep for me,&rdquo; replied Sir William.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; says my lord, &ldquo;this in a matter of succession; my
+son&rsquo;s title may be called in doubt; and the man being supposed to be dead
+of nobody can tell what, a great deal of suspicion would be naturally
+roused.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, God damn me, the man&rsquo;s buried!&rdquo; cried Sir William.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never believe that,&rdquo; returned my lord, painfully trembling.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never believe it!&rdquo; he cried again, and jumped to his
+feet. &ldquo;Did he <i>look</i> dead?&rdquo; he asked of Mountain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look dead?&rdquo; repeated the trader. &ldquo;He looked white. Why, what
+would he be at? I tell you, I put the sods upon him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord caught Sir William by the coat with a hooked hand. &ldquo;This man has
+the name of my brother,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s well understood
+that he was never canny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Canny?&rdquo; says Sir William. &ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not of this world,&rdquo; whispered my lord, &ldquo;neither
+him nor the black deil that serves him. I have struck my sword throughout his
+vitals,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;I have felt the hilt dirl <a
+name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12" class="citation">[12]</a> on his
+breastbone, and the hot blood spirt in my very face, time and again, time and
+again!&rdquo; he repeated, with a gesture indescribable. &ldquo;But he was
+never dead for that,&rdquo; said he, and I sighed aloud. &ldquo;Why should I
+think he was dead now? No, not till I see him rotting,&rdquo; says he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sir William looked across at me with a long face. Mountain forgot his wounds,
+staring and gaping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I wish you would collect your
+spirits.&rdquo; But my throat was so dry, and my own wits so scattered, I could
+add no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; says my lord, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s not to be supposed that he
+would understand me. Mackellar does, for he kens all, and has seen him buried
+before now. This is a very good servant to me, Sir William, this man Mackellar;
+he buried him with his own hands&mdash;he and my father&mdash;by the light of
+two siller candlesticks. The other man is a familiar spirit; he brought him
+from Coromandel. I would have told ye this long syne, Sir William, only it was
+in the family.&rdquo; These last remarks he made with a kind of a melancholy
+composure, and his time of aberration seemed to pass away. &ldquo;You can ask
+yourself what it all means,&rdquo; he proceeded. &ldquo;My brother falls sick,
+and dies, and is buried, as so they say; and all seems very plain. But why did
+the familiar go back? I think ye must see for yourself it&rsquo;s a point that
+wants some clearing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will be at your service, my lord, in half a minute,&rdquo; said Sir
+William, rising. &ldquo;Mr. Mackellar, two words with you;&rdquo; and he led me
+without the camp, the frost crunching in our steps, the trees standing at our
+elbow, hoar with frost, even as on that night in the Long Shrubbery. &ldquo;Of
+course, this is midsummer madness,&rdquo; said Sir William, as soon as we were
+gotten out of bearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, certainly,&rdquo; said I. &ldquo;The man is mad. I think that
+manifest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I seize and bind him?&rdquo; asked Sir William. &ldquo;I will upon
+your authority. If these are all ravings, that should certainly be done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked down upon the ground, back at the camp, with its bright fires and the
+folk watching us, and about me on the woods and mountains; there was just the
+one way that I could not look, and that was in Sir William&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir William,&rdquo; said I at last, &ldquo;I think my lord not sane, and
+have long thought him so. But there are degrees in madness; and whether he
+should be brought under restraint&mdash;Sir William, I am no fit judge,&rdquo;
+I concluded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will be the judge,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I ask for facts. Was there,
+in all that jargon, any word of truth or sanity? Do you hesitate?&rdquo; he
+asked. &ldquo;Am I to understand you have buried this gentleman before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not buried,&rdquo; said I; and then, taking up courage at last,
+&ldquo;Sir William,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;unless I were to tell you a long
+story, which much concerns a noble family (and myself not in the least), it
+would be impossible to make this matter clear to you. Say the word, and I will
+do it, right or wrong. And, at any rate, I will say so much, that my lord is
+not so crazy as he seems. This is a strange matter, into the tail of which you
+are unhappily drifted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I desire none of your secrets,&rdquo; replied Sir William; &ldquo;but I
+will be plain, at the risk of incivility, and confess that I take little
+pleasure in my present company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would be the last to blame you,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;for that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not asked either for your censure or your praise, sir,&rdquo;
+returned Sir William. &ldquo;I desire simply to be quit of you; and to that
+effect, I put a boat and complement of men at your disposal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is fairly offered,&rdquo; said I, after reflection. &ldquo;But you
+must suffer me to say a word upon the other side. We have a natural curiosity
+to learn the truth of this affair; I have some of it myself; my lord (it is
+very plain) has but too much. The matter of the Indian&rsquo;s return is
+enigmatical.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think so myself,&rdquo; Sir William interrupted, &ldquo;and I propose
+(since I go in that direction) to probe it to the bottom. Whether or not the
+man has gone like a dog to die upon his master&rsquo;s grave, his life, at
+least, is in great danger, and I propose, if I can, to save it. There is
+nothing against his character?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, Sir William,&rdquo; I replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the other?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have heard my lord, of course;
+but, from the circumstances of his servant&rsquo;s loyalty, I must suppose he
+had some noble qualities.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must not ask me that!&rdquo; I cried. &ldquo;Hell may have noble
+flames. I have known him a score of years, and always hated, and always
+admired, and always slavishly feared him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I appear to intrude again upon your secrets,&rdquo; said Sir William,
+&ldquo;believe me, inadvertently. Enough that I will see the grave, and (if
+possible) rescue the Indian. Upon these terms, can you persuade your master to
+return to Albany?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir William,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I will tell you how it is. You do not
+see my lord to advantage; it will seem even strange to you that I should love
+him; but I do, and I am not alone. If he goes back to Albany, it must be by
+force, and it will be the death-warrant of his reason, and perhaps his life.
+That is my sincere belief; but I am in your hands, and ready to obey, if you
+will assume so much responsibility as to command.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will have no shred of responsibility; it is my single endeavour to
+avoid the same,&rdquo; cried Sir William. &ldquo;You insist upon following this
+journey up; and be it so! I wash my hands of the whole matter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With which word, he turned upon his heel and gave the order to break camp; and
+my lord, who had been hovering near by, came instantly to my side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which is it to be?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are to have your way,&rdquo; I answered. &ldquo;You shall see the
+grave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> The situation of the Master&rsquo;s grave was, between guides,
+easily described; it lay, indeed, beside a chief landmark of the wilderness, a
+certain range of peaks, conspicuous by their design and altitude, and the
+source of many brawling tributaries to that inland sea, Lake Champlain. It was
+therefore possible to strike for it direct, instead of following back the
+blood-stained trail of the fugitives, and to cover, in some sixteen hours of
+march, a distance which their perturbed wanderings had extended over more than
+sixty. Our boats we left under a guard upon the river; it was, indeed, probable
+we should return to find them frozen fast; and the small equipment with which
+we set forth upon the expedition, included not only an infinity of furs to
+protect us from the cold, but an arsenal of snow-shoes to render travel
+possible, when the inevitable snow should fall. Considerable alarm was
+manifested at our departure; the march was conducted with soldierly precaution,
+the camp at night sedulously chosen and patrolled; and it was a consideration
+of this sort that arrested us, the second day, within not many hundred yards of
+our destination&mdash;the night being already imminent, the spot in which we
+stood well qualified to be a strong camp for a party of our numbers; and Sir
+William, therefore, on a sudden thought, arresting our advance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before us was the high range of mountains toward which we had been all day
+deviously drawing near. From the first light of the dawn, their silver peaks
+had been the goal of our advance across a tumbled lowland forest, thrid with
+rough streams, and strewn with monstrous boulders; the peaks (as I say) silver,
+for already at the higher altitudes the snow fell nightly; but the woods and
+the low ground only breathed upon with frost. All day heaven had been charged
+with ugly vapours, in the which the sun swam and glimmered like a shilling
+piece; all day the wind blew on our left cheek barbarous cold, but very pure to
+breathe. With the end of the afternoon, however, the wind fell; the clouds,
+being no longer reinforced, were scattered or drunk up; the sun set behind us
+with some wintry splendour, and the white brow of the mountains shared its
+dying glow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was dark ere we had supper; we ate in silence, and the meal was scarce
+despatched before my lord slunk from the fireside to the margin of the camp;
+whither I made haste to follow him. The camp was on high ground, overlooking a
+frozen lake, perhaps a mile in its longest measurement; all about us, the
+forest lay in heights and hollows; above rose the white mountains; and higher
+yet, the moon rode in a fair sky. There was no breath of air; nowhere a twig
+creaked; and the sounds of our own camp were hushed and swallowed up in the
+surrounding stillness. Now that the sun and the wind were both gone down, it
+appeared almost warm, like a night of July: a singular illusion of the sense,
+when earth, air, and water were strained to bursting with the extremity of
+frost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord (or what I still continued to call by his loved name) stood with his
+elbow in one hand, and his chin sunk in the other, gazing before him on the
+surface of the wood. My eyes followed his, and rested almost pleasantly upon
+the frosted contexture of the pines, rising in moonlit hillocks, or sinking in
+the shadow of small glens. Hard by, I told myself, was the grave of our enemy,
+now gone where the wicked cease from troubling, the earth heaped for ever on
+his once so active limbs. I could not but think of him as somehow fortunate to
+be thus done with man&rsquo;s anxiety and weariness, the daily expense of
+spirit, and that daily river of circumstance to be swum through, at any hazard,
+under the penalty of shame or death. I could not but think how good was the end
+of that long travel; and with that, my mind swung at a tangent to my lord. For
+was not my lord dead also? a maimed soldier, looking vainly for discharge,
+lingering derided in the line of battle? A kind man, I remembered him; wise,
+with a decent pride, a son perhaps too dutiful, a husband only too loving, one
+that could suffer and be silent, one whose hand I loved to press. Of a sudden,
+pity caught in my windpipe with a sob; I could have wept aloud to remember and
+behold him; and standing thus by his elbow, under the broad moon, I prayed
+fervently either that he should be released, or I strengthened to persist in my
+affection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh God,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;this was the best man to me and to
+himself, and now I shrink from him. He did no wrong, or not till he was broke
+with sorrows; these are but his honourable wounds that we begin to shrink from.
+Oh, cover them up, oh, take him away, before we hate him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was still so engaged in my own bosom, when a sound broke suddenly upon the
+night. It was neither very loud, nor very near; yet, bursting as it did from so
+profound and so prolonged a silence, it startled the camp like an alarm of
+trumpets. Ere I had taken breath, Sir William was beside me, the main part of
+the voyagers clustered at his back, intently giving ear. Methought, as I
+glanced at them across my shoulder, there was a whiteness, other than
+moonlight, on their cheeks; and the rays of the moon reflected with a sparkle
+on the eyes of some, and the shadows lying black under the brows of others
+(according as they raised or bowed the head to listen) gave to the group a
+strange air of animation and anxiety. My lord was to the front, crouching a
+little forth, his hand raised as for silence: a man turned to stone. And still
+the sounds continued, breathlessly renewed with a precipitate rhythm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly Mountain spoke in a loud, broken whisper, as of a man relieved.
+&ldquo;I have it now,&rdquo; he said; and, as we all turned to hear him,
+&ldquo;the Indian must have known the cache,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;That is
+he&mdash;he is digging out the treasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, to be sure!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir William. &ldquo;We were geese not
+to have supposed so much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The only thing is,&rdquo; Mountain resumed, &ldquo;the sound is very
+close to our old camp. And, again, I do not see how he is there before us,
+unless the man had wings!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Greed and fear are wings,&rdquo; remarked Sir William. &ldquo;But this
+rogue has given us an alert, and I have a notion to return the compliment. What
+say you, gentlemen, shall we have a moonlight hunt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was so agreed; dispositions were made to surround Secundra at his task; some
+of Sir William&rsquo;s Indians hastened in advance; and a strong guard being
+left at our headquarters, we set forth along the uneven bottom of the forest;
+frost crackling, ice sometimes loudly splitting under foot; and overhead the
+blackness of pine-woods, and the broken brightness of the moon. Our way led
+down into a hollow of the land; and as we descended, the sounds diminished and
+had almost died away. Upon the other slope it was more open, only dotted with a
+few pines, and several vast and scattered rocks that made inky shadows in the
+moonlight. Here the sounds began to reach us more distinctly; we could now
+perceive the ring of iron, and more exactly estimate the furious degree of
+haste with which the digger plied his instrument. As we neared the top of the
+ascent, a bird or two winged aloft and hovered darkly in the moonlight; and the
+next moment we were gazing through a fringe of trees upon a singular picture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A narrow plateau, overlooked by the white mountains, and encompassed nearer
+hand by woods, lay bare to the strong radiance of the moon. Rough goods, such
+as make the wealth of foresters, were sprinkled here and there upon the ground
+in meaningless disarray. About the midst, a tent stood, silvered with frost:
+the door open, gaping on the black interior. At the one end of this small stage
+lay what seemed the tattered remnants of a man. Without doubt we had arrived
+upon the scene of Harris&rsquo;s encampment; there were the goods scattered in
+the panic of flight; it was in yon tent the Master breathed his last; and the
+frozen carrion that lay before us was the body of the drunken shoemaker. It was
+always moving to come upon the theatre of any tragic incident; to come upon it
+after so many days, and to find it (in the seclusion of a desert) still
+unchanged, must have impressed the mind of the most careless. And yet it was
+not that which struck us into pillars of stone; but the sight (which yet we had
+been half expecting) of Secundra ankle deep in the grave of his late master. He
+had cast the main part of his raiment by, yet his frail arms and shoulders
+glistered in the moonlight with a copious sweat; his face was contracted with
+anxiety and expectation; his blows resounded on the grave, as thick as sobs;
+and behind him, strangely deformed and ink-black upon the frosty ground, the
+creature&rsquo;s shadow repeated and parodied his swift gesticulations. Some
+night birds arose from the boughs upon our coming, and then settled back; but
+Secundra, absorbed in his toil; heard or heeded not at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I heard Mountain whisper to Sir William, &ldquo;Good God! it&rsquo;s the grave!
+He&rsquo;s digging him up!&rdquo; It was what we had all guessed, and yet to
+hear it put in language thrilled me. Sir William violently started.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You damned sacrilegious hound!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s
+this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Secundra leaped in the air, a little breathless cry escaped him, the tool flew
+from his grasp, and he stood one instant staring at the speaker. The next,
+swift as an arrow, he sped for the woods upon the farther side; and the next
+again, throwing up his hands with a violent gesture of resolution, he had begun
+already to retrace his steps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then, you come, you help&mdash;&rdquo; he was saying. But by now
+my lord had stepped beside Sir William; the moon shone fair upon his face, and
+the words were still upon Secundra&rsquo;s lips, when he beheld and recognised
+his master&rsquo;s enemy. &ldquo;Him!&rdquo; he screamed, clasping his hands,
+and shrinking on himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come!&rdquo; said Sir William. &ldquo;There is none here to do you
+harm, if you be innocent; and if you be guilty, your escape is quite cut off.
+Speak, what do you here among the graves of the dead and the remains of the
+unburied?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You no murderer?&rdquo; inquired Secundra. &ldquo;You true man? you see
+me safe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will see you safe, if you be innocent,&rdquo; returned Sir William.
+&ldquo;I have said the thing, and I see not wherefore you should doubt
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There all murderers,&rdquo; cried Secundra, &ldquo;that is why! He
+kill&mdash;murderer,&rdquo; pointing to Mountain; &ldquo;there two
+hire-murderers,&rdquo; pointing to my lord and myself&mdash;&ldquo;all
+gallows&mdash;murderers! Ah! I see you all swing in a rope. Now I go save the
+sahib; he see you swing in a rope. The sahib,&rdquo; he continued, pointing to
+the grave, &ldquo;he not dead. He bury, he not dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My lord uttered a little noise, moved nearer to the grave, and stood and stared
+in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Buried and not dead?&rdquo; exclaimed Sir William. &ldquo;What kind of
+rant is this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See, sahib,&rdquo; said Secundra. &ldquo;The sahib and I alone with
+murderers; try all way to escape, no way good. Then try this way: good way in
+warm climate, good way in India; here, in this dam cold place, who can tell? I
+tell you pretty good hurry: you help, you light a fire, help rub.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the creature talking of?&rdquo; cried Sir William. &ldquo;My
+head goes round.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you I bury him alive,&rdquo; said Secundra. &ldquo;I teach him
+swallow his tongue. Now dig him up pretty good hurry, and he not much worse.
+You light a fire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sir William turned to the nearest of his men. &ldquo;Light a fire,&rdquo; said
+he. &ldquo;My lot seems to be cast with the insane.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You good man,&rdquo; returned Secundra. &ldquo;Now I go dig the sahib
+up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He returned as he spoke to the grave, and resumed his former toil. My lord
+stood rooted, and I at my lord&rsquo;s side, fearing I knew not what.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The frost was not yet very deep, and presently the Indian threw aside his tool,
+and began to scoop the dirt by handfuls. Then he disengaged a corner of a
+buffalo robe; and then I saw hair catch among his fingers: yet, a moment more,
+and the moon shone on something white. Awhile Secundra crouched upon his knees,
+scraping with delicate fingers, breathing with puffed lips; and when he moved
+aside, I beheld the face of the Master wholly disengaged. It was deadly white,
+the eyes closed, the ears and nostrils plugged, the cheeks fallen, the nose
+sharp as if in death; but for all he had lain so many days under the sod,
+corruption had not approached him, and (what strangely affected all of us) his
+lips and chin were mantled with a swarthy beard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My God!&rdquo; cried Mountain, &ldquo;he was as smooth as a baby when we
+laid him there!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They say hair grows upon the dead,&rdquo; observed Sir William; but his
+voice was thick and weak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Secundra paid no heed to our remarks, digging swift as a terrier in the loose
+earth. Every moment the form of the Master, swathed in his buffalo robe, grew
+more distinct in the bottom of that shallow trough; the moon shining strong,
+and the shadows of the standers-by, as they drew forward and back, falling and
+flitting over his emergent countenance. The sight held us with a horror not
+before experienced. I dared not look my lord in the face; but for as long as it
+lasted, I never observed him to draw breath; and a little in the background one
+of the men (I know not whom) burst into a kind of sobbing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Secundra, &ldquo;you help me lift him out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the flight of time, I have no idea; it may have been three hours, and it may
+have been five, that the Indian laboured to reanimate his master&rsquo;s body.
+One thing only I know, that it was still night, and the moon was not yet set,
+although it had sunk low, and now barred the plateau with long shadows, when
+Secundra uttered a small cry of satisfaction; and, leaning swiftly forth, I
+thought I could myself perceive a change upon that icy countenance of the
+unburied. The next moment I beheld his eyelids flutter; the next they rose
+entirely, and the week-old corpse looked me for a moment in the face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much display of life I can myself swear to. I have heard from others that he
+visibly strove to speak, that his teeth showed in his beard, and that his brow
+was contorted as with an agony of pain and effort. And this may have been; I
+know not, I was otherwise engaged. For at that first disclosure of the dead
+man&rsquo;s eyes, my Lord Durrisdeer fell to the ground, and when I raised him
+up, he was a corpse.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2"> Day came, and still Secundra could not be persuaded to desist
+from his unavailing efforts. Sir William, leaving a small party under my
+command, proceeded on his embassy with the first light; and still the Indian
+rubbed the limbs and breathed in the mouth of the dead body. You would think
+such labours might have vitalised a stone; but, except for that one moment
+(which was my lord&rsquo;s death), the black spirit of the Master held aloof
+from its discarded clay; and by about the hour of noon, even the faithful
+servant was at length convinced. He took it with unshaken quietude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too cold,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;good way in India, no good here.&rdquo;
+And, asking for some food, which he ravenously devoured as soon as it was set
+before him, he drew near to the fire and took his place at my elbow. In the
+same spot, as soon as he had eaten, he stretched himself out, and fell into a
+childlike slumber, from which I must arouse him, some hours afterwards, to take
+his part as one of the mourners at the double funeral. It was the same
+throughout; he seemed to have outlived at once and with the same effort, his
+grief for his master and his terror of myself and Mountain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the men left with me was skilled in stone-cutting; and before Sir
+William returned to pick us up, I had chiselled on a boulder this inscription,
+with a copy of which I may fitly bring my narrative to a close:##
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="center">
+J. D.,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+HEIR TO A SCOTTISH TITLE,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+A MASTER OF THE ARTS AND GRACES,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+ADMIRED IN EUROPE, ASIA, AMERICA,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+IN WAR AND PEACE,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+IN THE TENTS OF SAVAGE HUNTERS AND THE
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+CITADELS OF KINGS, AFTER SO MUCH
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+ACQUIRED, ACCOMPLISHED, AND
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+ENDURED, LIES HERE FORGOTTEN.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">
+H. D.,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+HIS BROTHER,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+AFTER A LIFE OF UNMERITED DISTRESS,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+BRAVELY SUPPORTED,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+DIED ALMOST IN THE SAME HOUR,
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+AND SLEEPS IN THE SAME GRAVE
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+WITH HIS FRATERNAL ENEMY.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="center">
+THE PIETY OF HIS WIFE AND ONE OLD
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+SERVANT RAISED THIS STONE
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+TO BOTH.
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>Footnotes.</h2>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1" class="footnote">[1]</a> A kind of
+firework made with damp powder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote2"></a><a href="#citation2" class="footnote">[2]</a> <i>Note
+by Mr. Mackellar</i>. Should not this be Alan <i>Breck</i> Stewart, afterwards
+notorious as the Appin murderer? The Chevalier is sometimes very weak on names.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3" class="footnote">[3]</a> <i>Note
+by Mr. Mackellar</i>. This Teach of the <i>Sarah</i> must not be confused with
+the celebrated Blackbeard. The dates and facts by no means tally. It is
+possible the second Teach may have at once borrowed the name and imitated the
+more excessive part of his manners from the first. Even the Master of
+Ballantrae could make admirers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4" class="footnote">[4]</a> <i>Note
+by Mr. Mackellar</i>. And is not this the whole explanation? since this Dutton,
+exactly like the officers, enjoyed the stimulus of some responsibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5" class="footnote">[5]</a> <i>Note
+by Mr. Mackellar</i>: A complete blunder: there was at this date no word of the
+marriage: see above in my own narration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6" class="footnote">[6]</a> Note by
+Mr. Mackellar.&mdash;Plainly Secundra Dass.&mdash;E. McK.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7" class="footnote">[7]</a> Ordered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8" class="footnote">[8]</a> Land
+steward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9" class="footnote">[9]</a> Fooling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10" class="footnote">[10]</a>
+Tear-marked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11" class="footnote">[11]</a>
+Unwilling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12" class="footnote">[12]</a> Ring.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE ***</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This file should be named 864-h.htm or 864-h.zip</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0;'>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in https://www.gutenberg.org/8/6/864/</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
+be renamed.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
+the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
+of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
+copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
+easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
+of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
+Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
+do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
+by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
+license, especially commercial redistribution.
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin:0.83em 0; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</span>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
+or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
+Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country other than the United States.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
+on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
+phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+</div>
+
+<blockquote>
+ <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+ other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+ whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+ of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+ at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+ are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
+ of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
+ </div>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
+Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; License.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
+other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
+Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+provided that:
+</div>
+
+<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+ works.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+ </div>
+
+ <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
+ &bull; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
+the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
+forth in Section 3 below.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
+Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
+to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
+and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
+public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
+visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
+facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
+</div>
+
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</div>
+
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/864-h/images/cover.jpg b/864-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aa466c5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/864-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..196ffa5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #864 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/864)
diff --git a/old/blntr10.txt b/old/blntr10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..64b0b0f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/blntr10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9389 @@
+Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Master of Ballantrae by R.L.S.
+#38 in our series by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
+the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
+
+Please take a look at the important information in this header.
+We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
+electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
+
+Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
+further information is included below. We need your donations.
+
+
+The Master of Ballantrae
+
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+March, 1997 [Etext #864]
+
+
+Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Master of Ballantrae by R.L.S.
+*****This file should be named blntr10.txt or blntr10.zip******
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, blntr11.txt.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, blntr10a.txt.
+
+
+Scanned and proofed by David Price
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
+of the official release dates, for time for better editing.
+
+Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
+up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
+in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
+a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
+look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
+new copy has at least one byte more or less.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+fifty hours is one conservative estimate for how long it we take
+to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-two text
+files per month: or 400 more Etexts in 1996 for a total of 800.
+If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
+total should reach 80 billion Etexts.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
+Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only 10% of the present number of computer users. 2001
+should have at least twice as many computer users as that, so it
+will require us reaching less than 5% of the users in 2001.
+
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+
+All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
+tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
+Mellon University).
+
+For these and other matters, please mail to:
+
+Project Gutenberg
+P. O. Box 2782
+Champaign, IL 61825
+
+When all other email fails try our Executive Director:
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+We would prefer to send you this information by email
+(Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
+
+******
+If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please
+FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
+[Mac users, do NOT point and click. . .type]
+
+ftp uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu
+login: anonymous
+password: your@login
+cd etext/etext90 through /etext96
+or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
+dir [to see files]
+get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
+GET INDEX?00.GUT
+for a list of books
+and
+GET NEW GUT for general information
+and
+MGET GUT* for newsletters.
+
+**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
+(Three Pages)
+
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
+tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
+Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
+Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
+things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
+under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
+etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
+officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
+and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
+indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
+[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
+or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
+ cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the etext (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
+ net profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
+ University" within the 60 days following each
+ date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
+ your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
+scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
+free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
+you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
+Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
+
+*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+The Master of Ballantrae by Robert Louis Stevenson
+Scanned and proofed by David Price
+ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+
+The Master of Ballantrae
+A Winter's Tale
+
+
+
+
+To Sir Percy Florence and Lady Shelley
+
+
+Here is a tale which extends over many years and travels into many
+countries. By a peculiar fitness of circumstance the writer began,
+continued it, and concluded it among distant and diverse scenes.
+Above all, he was much upon the sea. The character and fortune of
+the fraternal enemies, the hall and shrubbery of Durrisdeer, the
+problem of Mackellar's homespun and how to shape it for superior
+flights; these were his company on deck in many star-reflecting
+harbours, ran often in his mind at sea to the tune of slatting
+canvas, and were dismissed (something of the suddenest) on the
+approach of squalls. It is my hope that these surroundings of its
+manufacture may to some degree find favour for my story with
+seafarers and sea-lovers like yourselves.
+
+And at least here is a dedication from a great way off: written by
+the loud shores of a subtropical island near upon ten thousand
+miles from Boscombe Chine and Manor: scenes which rise before me
+as I write, along with the faces and voices of my friends.
+
+Well, I am for the sea once more; no doubt Sir Percy also. Let us
+make the signal B. R. D.!
+
+R. L. S.
+
+WAIKIKI, May 17, 1889
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+Although an old, consistent exile, the editor of the following
+pages revisits now and again the city of which he exults to be a
+native; and there are few things more strange, more painful, or
+more salutary, than such revisitations. Outside, in foreign spots,
+he comes by surprise and awakens more attention than he had
+expected; in his own city, the relation is reversed, and he stands
+amazed to be so little recollected. Elsewhere he is refreshed to
+see attractive faces, to remark possible friends; there he scouts
+the long streets, with a pang at heart, for the faces and friends
+that are no more. Elsewhere he is delighted with the presence of
+what is new, there tormented by the absence of what is old.
+Elsewhere he is content to be his present self; there he is smitten
+with an equal regret for what he once was and for what he once
+hoped to be.
+
+He was feeling all this dimly, as he drove from the station, on his
+last visit; he was feeling it still as he alighted at the door of
+his friend Mr. Johnstone Thomson, W.S., with whom he was to stay.
+A hearty welcome, a face not altogether changed, a few words that
+sounded of old days, a laugh provoked and shared, a glimpse in
+passing of the snowy cloth and bright decanters and the Piranesis
+on the dining-room wall, brought him to his bed-room with a
+somewhat lightened cheer, and when he and Mr. Thomson sat down a
+few minutes later, cheek by jowl, and pledged the past in a
+preliminary bumper, he was already almost consoled, he had already
+almost forgiven himself his two unpardonable errors, that he should
+ever have left his native city, or ever returned to it.
+
+"I have something quite in your way," said Mr. Thomson. "I wished
+to do honour to your arrival; because, my dear fellow, it is my own
+youth that comes back along with you; in a very tattered and
+withered state, to be sure, but - well! - all that's left of it."
+
+"A great deal better than nothing," said the editor. "But what is
+this which is quite in my way?"
+
+"I was coming to that," said Mr. Thomson: "Fate has put it in my
+power to honour your arrival with something really original by way
+of dessert. A mystery."
+
+"A mystery?" I repeated.
+
+"Yes," said his friend, "a mystery. It may prove to be nothing,
+and it may prove to be a great deal. But in the meanwhile it is
+truly mysterious, no eye having looked on it for near a hundred
+years; it is highly genteel, for it treats of a titled family; and
+it ought to be melodramatic, for (according to the superscription)
+it is concerned with death."
+
+"I think I rarely heard a more obscure or a more promising
+annunciation," the other remarked. "But what is It?"
+
+"You remember my predecessor's, old Peter M'Brair's business?"
+
+"I remember him acutely; he could not look at me without a pang of
+reprobation, and he could not feel the pang without betraying it.
+He was to me a man of a great historical interest, but the interest
+was not returned."
+
+"Ah well, we go beyond him," said Mr. Thomson. "I daresay old
+Peter knew as little about this as I do. You see, I succeeded to a
+prodigious accumulation of old law-papers and old tin boxes, some
+of them of Peter's hoarding, some of his father's, John, first of
+the dynasty, a great man in his day. Among other collections, were
+all the papers of the Durrisdeers."
+
+"The Durrisdeers!" cried I. "My dear fellow, these may be of the
+greatest interest. One of them was out in the '45; one had some
+strange passages with the devil - you will find a note of it in
+Law's MEMORIALS, I think; and there was an unexplained tragedy, I
+know not what, much later, about a hundred years ago - "
+
+"More than a hundred years ago," said Mr. Thomson. "In 1783."
+
+"How do you know that? I mean some death."
+
+"Yes, the lamentable deaths of my Lord Durrisdeer and his brother,
+the Master of Ballantrae (attainted in the troubles)," said Mr.
+Thomson with something the tone of a man quoting. "Is that it?"
+
+"To say truth," said I, "I have only seen some dim reference to the
+things in memoirs; and heard some traditions dimmer still, through
+my uncle (whom I think you knew). My uncle lived when he was a boy
+in the neighbourhood of St. Bride's; he has often told me of the
+avenue closed up and grown over with grass, the great gates never
+opened, the last lord and his old maid sister who lived in the back
+parts of the house, a quiet, plain, poor, hum-drum couple it would
+seem - but pathetic too, as the last of that stirring and brave
+house - and, to the country folk, faintly terrible from some
+deformed traditions."
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Thomson. "Henry Graeme Durie, the last lord, died
+in 1820; his sister, the honourable Miss Katherine Durie, in '27;
+so much I know; and by what I have been going over the last few
+days, they were what you say, decent, quiet people and not rich.
+To say truth, it was a letter of my lord's that put me on the
+search for the packet we are going to open this evening. Some
+papers could not be found; and he wrote to Jack M'Brair suggesting
+they might be among those sealed up by a Mr. Mackellar. M'Brair
+answered, that the papers in question were all in Mackellar's own
+hand, all (as the writer understood) of a purely narrative
+character; and besides, said he, 'I am bound not to open them
+before the year 1889.' You may fancy if these words struck me: I
+instituted a hunt through all the M'Brair repositories; and at last
+hit upon that packet which (if you have had enough wine) I propose
+to show you at once."
+
+In the smoking-room, to which my host now led me, was a packet,
+fastened with many seals and enclosed in a single sheet of strong
+paper thus endorsed:
+
+
+Papers relating to the lives and lamentable deaths of the late Lord
+Durisdeer, and his elder brother James, commonly called Master of
+Ballantrae, attainted in the troubles: entrusted into the hands of
+John M'Brair in the Lawnmarket of Edinburgh, W.S.; this 20th day of
+September Anno Domini 1789; by him to be kept secret until the
+revolution of one hundred years complete, or until the 20th day of
+September 1889: the same compiled and written by me, EPHRAIM
+MACKELLAR,
+
+For near forty years Land Steward on the estates of his Lordship.
+
+
+As Mr. Thomson is a married man, I will not say what hour had
+struck when we laid down the last of the following pages; but I
+will give a few words of what ensued.
+
+"Here," said Mr. Thomson, "is a novel ready to your hand: all you
+have to do is to work up the scenery, develop the characters, and
+improve the style."
+
+"My dear fellow," said I, "they are just the three things that I
+would rather die than set my hand to. It shall be published as it
+stands."
+
+"But it's so bald," objected Mr. Thomson.
+
+"I believe there is nothing so noble as baldness," replied I, "and
+I am sure there in nothing so interesting. I would have all
+literature bald, and all authors (if you like) but one."
+
+"Well, well," add Mr. Thomson, "we shall see."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. - SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THIS MASTER'S WANDERINGS.
+
+
+
+The full truth of this odd matter is what the world has long been
+looking for, and public curiosity is sure to welcome. It so befell
+that I was intimately mingled with the last years and history of
+the house; and there does not live one man so able as myself to
+make these matters plain, or so desirous to narrate them
+faithfully. I knew the Master; on many secret steps of his career
+I have an authentic memoir in my hand; I sailed with him on his
+last voyage almost alone; I made one upon that winter's journey of
+which so many tales have gone abroad; and I was there at the man's
+death. As for my late Lord Durrisdeer, I served him and loved him
+near twenty years; and thought more of him the more I knew of him.
+Altogether, I think it not fit that so much evidence should perish;
+the truth is a debt I owe my lord's memory; and I think my old
+years will flow more smoothly, and my white hair lie quieter on the
+pillow, when the debt is paid.
+
+The Duries of Durrisdeer and Ballantrae were a strong family in the
+south-west from the days of David First. A rhyme still current in
+the countryside -
+
+
+Kittle folk are the Durrisdeers,
+They ride wi' over mony spears -
+
+
+bears the mark of its antiquity; and the name appears in another,
+which common report attributes to Thomas of Ercildoune himself - I
+cannot say how truly, and which some have applied - I dare not say
+with how much justice - to the events of this narration:
+
+
+Twa Duries in Durrisdeer,
+Ane to tie and ane to ride,
+An ill day for the groom
+And a waur day for the bride.
+
+
+Authentic history besides is filled with their exploits which (to
+our modern eyes) seem not very commendable: and the family
+suffered its full share of those ups and downs to which the great
+houses of Scotland have been ever liable. But all these I pass
+over, to come to that memorable year 1745, when the foundations of
+this tragedy were laid.
+
+At that time there dwelt a family of four persons in the house of
+Durrisdeer, near St. Bride's, on the Solway shore; a chief hold of
+their race since the Reformation. My old lord, eighth of the name,
+was not old in years, but he suffered prematurely from the
+disabilities of age; his place was at the chimney side; there he
+sat reading, in a lined gown, with few words for any man, and wry
+words for none: the model of an old retired housekeeper; and yet
+his mind very well nourished with study, and reputed in the country
+to be more cunning than he seemed. The master of Ballantrae, James
+in baptism, took from his father the love of serious reading; some
+of his tact perhaps as well, but that which was only policy in the
+father became black dissimulation in the son. The face of his
+behaviour was merely popular and wild: he sat late at wine, later
+at the cards; had the name in the country of "an unco man for the
+lasses;" and was ever in the front of broils. But for all he was
+the first to go in, yet it was observed he was invariably the best
+to come off; and his partners in mischief were usually alone to pay
+the piper. This luck or dexterity got him several ill-wishers, but
+with the rest of the country, enhanced his reputation; so that
+great things were looked for in his future, when he should have
+gained more gravity. One very black mark he had to his name; but
+the matter was hushed up at the time, and so defaced by legends
+before I came into those parts, that I scruple to set it down. If
+it was true, it was a horrid fact in one so young; and if false, it
+was a horrid calumny. I think it notable that he had always
+vaunted himself quite implacable, and was taken at his word; so
+that he had the addition among his neighbours of "an ill man to
+cross." Here was altogether a young nobleman (not yet twenty-four
+in the year '45) who had made a figure in the country beyond his
+time of life. The less marvel if there were little heard of the
+second son, Mr. Henry (my late Lord Durrisdeer), who was neither
+very bad nor yet very able, but an honest, solid sort of lad like
+many of his neighbours. Little heard, I say; but indeed it was a
+case of little spoken. He was known among the salmon fishers in
+the firth, for that was a sport that he assiduously followed; he
+was an excellent good horse-doctor besides; and took a chief hand,
+almost from a boy, in the management of the estates. How hard a
+part that was, in the situation of that family, none knows better
+than myself; nor yet with how little colour of justice a man may
+there acquire the reputation of a tyrant and a miser. The fourth
+person in the house was Miss Alison Graeme, a near kinswoman, an
+orphan, and the heir to a considerable fortune which her father had
+acquired in trade. This money was loudly called for by my lord's
+necessities; indeed the land was deeply mortgaged; and Miss Alison
+was designed accordingly to be the Master's wife, gladly enough on
+her side; with how much good-will on his, is another matter. She
+was a comely girl, and in those days very spirited and self-willed;
+for the old lord having no daughter of his own, and my lady being
+long dead, she had grown up as best she might.
+
+To these four came the news of Prince Charlie's landing, and set
+them presently by the ears. My lord, like the chimney-keeper that
+he was, was all for temporising. Miss Alison held the other side,
+because it appeared romantical; and the Master (though I have heard
+they did not agree often) was for this once of her opinion. The
+adventure tempted him, as I conceive; he was tempted by the
+opportunity to raise the fortunes of the house, and not less by the
+hope of paying off his private liabilities, which were heavy beyond
+all opinion. As for Mr. Henry, it appears he said little enough at
+first; his part came later on. It took the three a whole day's
+disputation, before they agreed to steer a middle course, one son
+going forth to strike a blow for King James, my lord and the other
+staying at home to keep in favour with King George. Doubtless this
+was my lord's decision; and, as is well known, it was the part
+played by many considerable families. But the one dispute settled,
+another opened. For my lord, Miss Alison, and Mr. Henry all held
+the one view: that it was the cadet's part to go out; and the
+Master, what with restlessness and vanity, would at no rate consent
+to stay at home. My lord pleaded, Miss Alison wept, Mr. Henry was
+very plain spoken: all was of no avail.
+
+"It is the direct heir of Durrisdeer that should ride by his King's
+bridle," says the Master.
+
+"If we were playing a manly part," says Mr. Henry, "there might be
+sense in such talk. But what are we doing? Cheating at cards!"
+
+"We are saving the house of Durrisdeer, Henry," his father said.
+
+"And see, James," said Mr. Henry, "if I go, and the Prince has the
+upper hand, it will be easy to make your peace with King James.
+But if you go, and the expedition fails, we divide the right and
+the title. And what shall I be then?"
+
+"You will be Lord Durrisdeer," said the Master. "I put all I have
+upon the table."
+
+"I play at no such game," cries Mr. Henry. "I shall be left in
+such a situation as no man of sense and honour could endure. I
+shall be neither fish nor flesh!" he cried. And a little after he
+had another expression, plainer perhaps than he intended. "It is
+your duty to be here with my father," said he. "You know well
+enough you are the favourite."
+
+"Ay?" said the Master. "And there spoke Envy! Would you trip up
+my heels - Jacob?" said he, and dwelled upon the name maliciously.
+
+Mr. Henry went and walked at the low end of the hall without reply;
+for he had an excellent gift of silence. Presently he came back.
+
+"I am the cadet and I SHOULD go," said he. "And my lord here in
+the master, and he says I SHALL go. What say ye to that, my
+brother?"
+
+"I say this, Harry," returned the Master, "that when very obstinate
+folk are met, there are only two ways out: Blows - and I think
+none of us could care to go so far; or the arbitrament of chance -
+and here is a guinea piece. Will you stand by the toss of the
+coin?"
+
+"I will stand and fall by it," said Mr. Henry. "Heads, I go;
+shield, I stay."
+
+The coin was spun, and it fell shield. "So there is a lesson for
+Jacob," says the Master.
+
+"We shall live to repent of this," says Mr. Henry, and flung out of
+the hall.
+
+As for Miss Alison, she caught up that piece of gold which had just
+sent her lover to the wars, and flung it clean through the family
+shield in the great painted window.
+
+"If you loved me as well as I love you, you would have stayed,"
+cried she.
+
+"'I could not love you, dear, so well, loved I not honour more,'"
+sang the Master.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, "you have no heart - I hope you may be killed!"
+and she ran from the room, and in tears, to her own chamber.
+
+It seems the Master turned to my lord with his most comical manner,
+and says he, "This looks like a devil of a wife."
+
+"I think you are a devil of a son to me," cried his father, "you
+that have always been the favourite, to my shame be it spoken.
+Never a good hour have I gotten of you, since you were born; no,
+never one good hour," and repeated it again the third time.
+Whether it was the Master's levity, or his insubordination, or Mr.
+Henry's word about the favourite son, that had so much disturbed my
+lord, I do not know; but I incline to think it was the last, for I
+have it by all accounts that Mr. Henry was more made up to from
+that hour.
+
+Altogether it was in pretty ill blood with his family that the
+Master rode to the North; which was the more sorrowful for others
+to remember when it seemed too late. By fear and favour he had
+scraped together near upon a dozen men, principally tenants' sons;
+they were all pretty full when they set forth, and rode up the hill
+by the old abbey, roaring and singing, the white cockade in every
+hat. It was a desperate venture for so small a company to cross
+the most of Scotland unsupported; and (what made folk think so the
+more) even as that poor dozen was clattering up the hill, a great
+ship of the king's navy, that could have brought them under with a
+single boat, lay with her broad ensign streaming in the bay. The
+next afternoon, having given the Master a fair start, it was Mr.
+Henry's turn; and he rode off, all by himself, to offer his sword
+and carry letters from his father to King George's Government.
+Miss Alison was shut in her room, and did little but weep, till
+both were gone; only she stitched the cockade upon the Master's
+hat, and (as John Paul told me) it was wetted with tears when he
+carried it down to him.
+
+In all that followed, Mr. Henry and my old lord were true to their
+bargain. That ever they accomplished anything is more than I could
+learn; and that they were anyway strong on the king's side, more
+than believe. But they kept the letter of loyalty, corresponded
+with my Lord President, sat still at home, and had little or no
+commerce with the Master while that business lasted. Nor was he,
+on his side, more communicative. Miss Alison, indeed, was always
+sending him expresses, but I do not know if she had many answers.
+Macconochie rode for her once, and found the highlanders before
+Carlisle, and the Master riding by the Prince's side in high
+favour; he took the letter (so Macconochie tells), opened it,
+glanced it through with a mouth like a man whistling, and stuck it
+in his belt, whence, on his horse passageing, it fell unregarded to
+the ground. It was Macconochie who picked it up; and he still kept
+it, and indeed I have seen it in his hands. News came to
+Durrisdeer of course, by the common report, as it goes travelling
+through a country, a thing always wonderful to me. By that means
+the family learned more of the Master's favour with the Prince, and
+the ground it was said to stand on: for by a strange condescension
+in a man so proud - only that he was a man still more ambitious -
+he was said to have crept into notability by truckling to the
+Irish. Sir Thomas Sullivan, Colonel Burke and the rest, were his
+daily comrades, by which course he withdrew himself from his own
+country-folk. All the small intrigues he had a hand in fomenting;
+thwarted my Lord George upon a thousand points; was always for the
+advice that seemed palatable to the Prince, no matter if it was
+good or bad; and seems upon the whole (like the gambler he was all
+through life) to have had less regard to the chances of the
+campaign than to the greatness of favour he might aspire to, if, by
+any luck, it should succeed. For the rest, he did very well in the
+field; no one questioned that; for he was no coward.
+
+The next was the news of Culloden, which was brought to Durrisdeer
+by one of the tenants' sons - the only survivor, he declared, of
+all those that had gone singing up the hill. By an unfortunate
+chance John Paul and Macconochie had that very morning found the
+guinea piece - which was the root of all the evil - sticking in a
+holly bush; they had been "up the gait," as the servants say at
+Durrisdeer, to the change-house; and if they had little left of the
+guinea, they had less of their wits. What must John Paul do but
+burst into the hall where the family sat at dinner, and cry the
+news to them that "Tam Macmorland was but new lichtit at the door,
+and - wirra, wirra - there were nane to come behind him"?
+
+They took the word in silence like folk condemned; only Mr. Henry
+carrying his palm to his face, and Miss Alison laying her head
+outright upon her hands. As for my lord, he was like ashes.
+
+"I have still one son," says he. "And, Henry, I will do you this
+justice - it is the kinder that is left."
+
+It was a strange thing to say in such a moment; but my lord had
+never forgotten Mr. Henry's speech, and he had years of injustice
+on his conscience. Still it was a strange thing, and more than
+Miss Alison could let pass. She broke out and blamed my lord for
+his unnatural words, and Mr. Henry because he was sitting there in
+safety when his brother lay dead, and herself because she had given
+her sweetheart ill words at his departure, calling him the flower
+of the flock, wringing her hands, protesting her love, and crying
+on him by his name - so that the servants stood astonished.
+
+Mr. Henry got to his feet, and stood holding his chair. It was he
+that was like ashes now.
+
+"Oh!" he burst out suddenly, "I know you loved him."
+
+"The world knows that, glory be to God!" cries she; and then to Mr.
+Henry: "There is none but me to know one thing - that you were a
+traitor to him in your heart."
+
+"God knows," groans he, "it was lost love on both sides."
+
+Time went by in the house after that without much change; only they
+were now three instead of four, which was a perpetual reminder of
+their loss. Miss Alison's money, you are to bear in mind, wag
+highly needful for the estates; and the one brother being dead, my
+old lord soon set his heart upon her marrying the other. Day in,
+day out, he would work upon her, sitting by the chimney-side with
+his finger in his Latin book, and his eyes set upon her face with a
+kind of pleasant intentness that became the old gentleman very
+well. If she wept, he would condole with her like an ancient man
+that has seen worse times and begins to think lightly even of
+sorrow; if she raged, he would fall to reading again in his Latin
+book, but always with some civil excuse; if she offered, as she
+often did, to let them have her money in a gift, he would show her
+how little it consisted with his honour, and remind her, even if he
+should consent, that Mr. Henry would certainly refuse. NON VI SED
+SAEPE CADENDO was a favourite word of his; and no doubt this quiet
+persecution wore away much of her resolve; no doubt, besides, he
+had a great influence on the girl, having stood in the place of
+both her parents; and, for that matter, she was herself filled with
+the spirit of the Duries, and would have gone a great way for the
+glory of Durrisdeer; but not so far, I think, as to marry my poor
+patron, had it not been - strangely enough - for the circumstance
+of his extreme unpopularity.
+
+This was the work of Tam Macmorland. There was not much harm in
+Tam; but he had that grievous weakness, a long tongue; and as the
+only man in that country who had been out - or, rather, who had
+come in again - he was sure of listeners. Those that have the
+underhand in any fighting, I have observed, are ever anxious to
+persuade themselves they were betrayed. By Tam's account of it,
+the rebels had been betrayed at every turn and by every officer
+they had; they had been betrayed at Derby, and betrayed at Falkirk;
+the night march was a step of treachery of my Lord George's; and
+Culloden was lost by the treachery of the Macdonalds. This habit
+of imputing treason grew upon the fool, till at last he must have
+in Mr. Henry also. Mr. Henry (by his account) had betrayed the
+lads of Durrisdeer; he had promised to follow with more men, and
+instead of that he had ridden to King George. "Ay, and the next
+day!" Tam would cry. "The puir bonnie Master, and the puir, kind
+lads that rade wi' him, were hardly ower the scaur, or he was aff -
+the Judis! Ay, weel - he has his way o't: he's to be my lord, nae
+less, and there's mony a cold corp amang the Hieland heather!" And
+at this, if Tam had been drinking, he would begin to weep.
+
+Let anyone speak long enough, he will get believers. This view of
+Mr. Henry's behaviour crept about the country by little and little;
+it was talked upon by folk that knew the contrary, but were short
+of topics; and it was heard and believed and given out for gospel
+by the ignorant and the ill-willing. Mr. Henry began to be
+shunned; yet awhile, and the commons began to murmur as he went by,
+and the women (who are always the most bold because they are the
+most safe) to cry out their reproaches to his face. The Master was
+cried up for a saint. It was remembered how he had never any hand
+in pressing the tenants; as, indeed, no more he had, except to
+spend the money. He was a little wild perhaps, the folk said; but
+how much better was a natural, wild lad that would soon have
+settled down, than a skinflint and a sneckdraw, sitting, with his
+nose in an account book, to persecute poor tenants! One trollop,
+who had had a child to the Master, and by all accounts been very
+badly used, yet made herself a kind of champion of his memory. She
+flung a stone one day at Mr. Henry.
+
+"Whaur's the bonnie lad that trustit ye?" she cried.
+
+Mr. Henry reined in his horse and looked upon her, the blood
+flowing from his lip. "Ay, Jess?" says he. "You too? And yet ye
+should ken me better." For it was he who had helped her with
+money.
+
+The woman had another stone ready, which she made as if she would
+cast; and he, to ward himself, threw up the hand that held his
+riding-rod.
+
+"What, would ye beat a lassie, ye ugly - ?" cries she, and ran away
+screaming as though he had struck her.
+
+Next day word went about the country like wildfire that Mr. Henry
+had beaten Jessie Broun within an inch of her life. I give it as
+one instance of how this snowball grew, and one calumny brought
+another; until my poor patron was so perished in reputation that he
+began to keep the house like my lord. All this while, you may be
+very sure, he uttered no complaints at home; the very ground of the
+scandal was too sore a matter to be handled; and Mr. Henry was very
+proud and strangely obstinate in silence. My old lord must have
+heard of it, by John Paul, if by no one else; and he must at least
+have remarked the altered habits of his son. Yet even he, it is
+probable, knew not how high the feeling ran; and as for Miss
+Alison, she was ever the last person to hear news, and the least
+interested when she heard them.
+
+In the height of the ill-feeling (for it died away as it came, no
+man could say why) there was an election forward in the town of St.
+Bride's, which is the next to Durrisdeer, standing on the Water of
+Swift; some grievance was fermenting, I forget what, if ever I
+heard; and it was currently said there would be broken heads ere
+night, and that the sheriff had sent as far as Dumfries for
+soldiers. My lord moved that Mr. Henry should be present, assuring
+him it was necessary to appear, for the credit of the house. "It
+will soon be reported," said he, "that we do not take the lead in
+our own country."
+
+"It is a strange lead that I can take," said Mr. Henry; and when
+they had pushed him further, "I tell you the plain truth," he said,
+"I dare not show my face."
+
+"You are the first of the house that ever said so," cries Miss
+Alison.
+
+"We will go all three," said my lord; and sure enough he got into
+his boots (the first time in four years - a sore business John Paul
+had to get them on), and Miss Alison into her riding-coat, and all
+three rode together to St. Bride's.
+
+The streets were full of the rift-raff of all the countryside, who
+had no sooner clapped eyes on Mr. Henry than the hissing began, and
+the hooting, and the cries of "Judas!" and "Where was the Master?"
+and "Where were the poor lads that rode with him?" Even a stone
+was cast; but the more part cried shame at that, for my old lord's
+sake, and Miss Alison's. It took not ten minutes to persuade my
+lord that Mr. Henry had been right. He said never a word, but
+turned his horse about, and home again, with his chin upon his
+bosom. Never a word said Miss Alison; no doubt she thought the
+more; no doubt her pride was stung, for she was a bone-bred Durie;
+and no doubt her heart was touched to see her cousin so unjustly
+used. That night she was never in bed; I have often blamed my lady
+- when I call to mind that night, I readily forgive her all; and
+the first thing in the morning she came to the old lord in his
+usual seat.
+
+"If Henry still wants me," said she, "he can have me now." To
+himself she had a different speech: "I bring you no love, Henry;
+but God knows, all the pity in the world."
+
+June the 1st, 1748, was the day of their marriage. It was December
+of the same year that first saw me alighting at the doors of the
+great house; and from there I take up the history of events as they
+befell under my own observation, like a witness in a court.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. SUMMARY OF EVENTS (continued)
+
+
+
+I made the last of my journey in the cold end of December, in a
+mighty dry day of frost, and who should be my guide but Patey
+Macmorland, brother of Tam! For a tow-headed, bare-legged brat of
+ten, he had more ill tales upon his tongue than ever I heard the
+match of; having drunken betimes in his brother's cup. I was still
+not so old myself; pride had not yet the upper hand of curiosity;
+and indeed it would have taken any man, that cold morning, to hear
+all the old clashes of the country, and be shown all the places by
+the way where strange things had fallen out. I had tales of
+Claverhouse as we came through the bogs, and tales of the devil, as
+we came over the top of the scaur. As we came in by the abbey I
+heard somewhat of the old monks, and more of the freetraders, who
+use its ruins for a magazine, landing for that cause within a
+cannon-shot of Durrisdeer; and along all the road the Duries and
+poor Mr. Henry were in the first rank of slander. My mind was thus
+highly prejudiced against the family I was about to serve, so that
+I was half surprised when I beheld Durrisdeer itself, lying in a
+pretty, sheltered bay, under the Abbey Hill; the house most
+commodiously built in the French fashion, or perhaps Italianate,
+for I have no skill in these arts; and the place the most
+beautified with gardens, lawns, shrubberies, and trees I had ever
+seen. The money sunk here unproductively would have quite restored
+the family; but as it was, it cost a revenue to keep it up.
+
+Mr. Henry came himself to the door to welcome me: a tall dark
+young gentleman (the Duries are all black men) of a plain and not
+cheerful face, very strong in body, but not so strong in health:
+taking me by the hand without any pride, and putting me at home
+with plain kind speeches. He led me into the hall, booted as I
+was, to present me to my lord. It was still daylight; and the
+first thing I observed was a lozenge of clear glass in the midst of
+the shield in the painted window, which I remember thinking a
+blemish on a room otherwise so handsome, with its family portraits,
+and the pargeted ceiling with pendants, and the carved chimney, in
+one corner of which my old lord sat reading in his Livy. He was
+like Mr. Henry, with much the same plain countenance, only more
+subtle and pleasant, and his talk a thousand times more
+entertaining. He had many questions to ask me, I remember, of
+Edinburgh College, where I had just received my mastership of arts,
+and of the various professors, with whom and their proficiency he
+seemed well acquainted; and thus, talking of things that I knew, I
+soon got liberty of speech in my new home.
+
+In the midst of this came Mrs. Henry into the room; she was very
+far gone, Miss Katharine being due in about six weeks, which made
+me think less of her beauty at the first sight; and she used me
+with more of condescension than the rest; so that, upon all
+accounts, I kept her in the third place of my esteem.
+
+It did not take long before all Patey Macmorland's tales were
+blotted out of my belief, and I was become, what I have ever since
+remained, a loving servant of the house of Durrisdeer. Mr. Henry
+had the chief part of my affection. It was with him I worked; and
+I found him an exacting master, keeping all his kindness for those
+hours in which we were unemployed, and in the steward's office not
+only loading me with work, but viewing me with a shrewd
+supervision. At length one day he looked up from his paper with a
+kind of timidness, and says he, "Mr. Mackellar, I think I ought to
+tell you that you do very well." That was my first word of
+commendation; and from that day his jealousy of my performance was
+relaxed; soon it was "Mr. Mackellar" here, and "Mr. Mackellar"
+there, with the whole family; and for much of my service at
+Durrisdeer, I have transacted everything at my own time, and to my
+own fancy, and never a farthing challenged. Even while he was
+driving me, I had begun to find my heart go out to Mr. Henry; no
+doubt, partly in pity, he was a man so palpably unhappy. He would
+fall into a deep muse over our accounts, staring at the page or out
+of the window; and at those times the look of his face, and the
+sigh that would break from him, awoke in me strong feelings of
+curiosity and commiseration. One day, I remember, we were late
+upon some business in the steward's room.
+
+This room is in the top of the house, and has a view upon the bay,
+and over a little wooded cape, on the long sands; and there, right
+over against the sun, which was then dipping, we saw the
+freetraders, with a great force of men and horses, scouring on the
+beach. Mr. Henry had been staring straight west, so that I
+marvelled he was not blinded by the sun; suddenly he frowns, rubs
+his hand upon his brow, and turns to me with a smile.
+
+"You would not guess what I was thinking," says he. "I was
+thinking I would be a happier man if I could ride and run the
+danger of my life, with these lawless companions."
+
+I told him I had observed he did not enjoy good spirits; and that
+it was a common fancy to envy others and think we should be the
+better of some change; quoting Horace to the point, like a young
+man fresh from college.
+
+"Why, just so," said he. "And with that we may get back to our
+accounts."
+
+It was not long before I began to get wind of the causes that so
+much depressed him. Indeed a blind man must have soon discovered
+there was a shadow on that house, the shadow of the Master of
+Ballantrae. Dead or alive (and he was then supposed to be dead)
+that man was his brother's rival: his rival abroad, where there
+was never a good word for Mr. Henry, and nothing but regret and
+praise for the Master; and his rival at home, not only with his
+father and his wife, but with the very servants.
+
+They were two old serving-men that were the leaders. John Paul, a
+little, bald, solemn, stomachy man, a great professor of piety and
+(take him for all in all) a pretty faithful servant, was the chief
+of the Master's faction. None durst go so far as John. He took a
+pleasure in disregarding Mr. Henry publicly, often with a slighting
+comparison. My lord and Mrs. Henry took him up, to be sure, but
+never so resolutely as they should; and he had only to pull his
+weeping face and begin his lamentations for the Master - "his
+laddie," as he called him - to have the whole condoned. As for
+Henry, he let these things pass in silence, sometimes with a sad
+and sometimes with a black look. There was no rivalling the dead,
+he knew that; and how to censure an old serving-man for a fault of
+loyalty, was more than he could see. His was not the tongue to do
+it.
+
+Macconochie was chief upon the other side; an old, ill-spoken,
+swearing, ranting, drunken dog; and I have often thought it an odd
+circumstance in human nature that these two serving-men should each
+have been the champion of his contrary, and blackened their own
+faults and made light of their own virtues when they beheld them in
+a master. Macconochie had soon smelled out my secret inclination,
+took me much into his confidence, and would rant against the Master
+by the hour, so that even my work suffered. "They're a' daft
+here," he would cry, "and be damned to them! The Master - the
+deil's in their thrapples that should call him sae! it's Mr. Henry
+should be master now! They were nane sae fond o' the Master when
+they had him, I'll can tell ye that. Sorrow on his name! Never a
+guid word did I hear on his lips, nor naebody else, but just
+fleering and flyting and profane cursing - deil hae him! There's
+nane kent his wickedness: him a gentleman! Did ever ye hear tell,
+Mr. Mackellar, o' Wully White the wabster? No? Aweel, Wully was
+an unco praying kind o' man; a dreigh body, nane o' my kind, I
+never could abide the sight o' him; onyway he was a great hand by
+his way of it, and he up and rebukit the Master for some of his on-
+goings. It was a grand thing for the Master o' Ball'ntrae to tak
+up a feud wi' a' wabster, wasnae't?" Macconochie would sneer;
+indeed, he never took the full name upon his lips but with a sort
+of a whine of hatred. "But he did! A fine employ it was:
+chapping at the man's door, and crying 'boo' in his lum, and
+puttin' poother in his fire, and pee-oys (1) in his window; till
+the man thocht it was auld Hornie was come seekin' him. Weel, to
+mak a lang story short, Wully gaed gyte. At the hinder end, they
+couldnae get him frae his knees, but he just roared and prayed and
+grat straucht on, till he got his release. It was fair murder,
+a'body said that. Ask John Paul - he was brawly ashamed o' that
+game, him that's sic a Christian man! Grand doin's for the Master
+o' Ball'ntrae!" I asked him what the Master had thought of it
+himself. "How would I ken?" says he. "He never said naething."
+And on again in his usual manner of banning and swearing, with
+every now and again a "Master of Ballantrae" sneered through his
+nose. It was in one of these confidences that he showed me the
+Carlisle letter, the print of the horse-shoe still stamped in the
+paper. Indeed, that was our last confidence; for he then expressed
+himself so ill-naturedly of Mrs. Henry that I had to reprimand him
+sharply, and must thenceforth hold him at a distance.
+
+My old lord was uniformly kind to Mr. Henry; he had even pretty
+ways of gratitude, and would sometimes clap him on the shoulder and
+say, as if to the world at large: "This is a very good son to me."
+And grateful he was, no doubt, being a man of sense and justice.
+But I think that was all, and I am sure Mr. Henry thought so. The
+love was all for the dead son. Not that this was often given
+breath to; indeed, with me but once. My lord had asked me one day
+how I got on with Mr. Henry, and I had told him the truth.
+
+"Ay," said he, looking sideways on the burning fire, "Henry is a
+good lad, a very good lad," said he. "You have heard, Mr.
+Mackellar, that I had another son? I am afraid he was not so
+virtuous a lad as Mr. Henry; but dear me, he's dead, Mr. Mackellar!
+and while he lived we were all very proud of him, all very proud.
+If he was not all he should have been in some ways, well, perhaps
+we loved him better!" This last he said looking musingly in the
+fire; and then to me, with a great deal of briskness, "But I am
+rejoiced you do so well with Mr. Henry. You will find him a good
+master." And with that he opened his book, which was the customary
+signal of dismission. But it would be little that he read, and
+less that he understood; Culloden field and the Master, these would
+be the burthen of his thought; and the burthen of mine was an
+unnatural jealousy of the dead man for Mr. Henry's sake, that had
+even then begun to grow on me.
+
+I am keeping Mrs. Henry for the last, so that this expression of my
+sentiment may seem unwarrantably strong: the reader shall judge
+for himself when I have done. But I must first tell of another
+matter, which was the means of bringing me more intimate. I had
+not yet been six months at Durrisdeer when it chanced that John
+Paul fell sick and must keep his bed; drink was the root of his
+malady, in my poor thought; but he was tended, and indeed carried
+himself, like an afflicted saint; and the very minister, who came
+to visit him, professed himself edified when he went away. The
+third morning of his sickness, Mr. Henry comes to me with something
+of a hang-dog look.
+
+"Mackellar," says he, "I wish I could trouble you upon a little
+service. There is a pension we pay; it is John's part to carry it,
+and now that he is sick I know not to whom I should look unless it
+was yourself. The matter is very delicate; I could not carry it
+with my own hand for a sufficient reason; I dare not send
+Macconochie, who is a talker, and I am - I have - I am desirous
+this should not come to Mrs. Henry's ears," says he, and flushed to
+his neck as he said it.
+
+To say truth, when I found I was to carry money to one Jessie
+Broun, who was no better than she should be, I supposed it was some
+trip of his own that Mr. Henry was dissembling. I was the more
+impressed when the truth came out.
+
+It was up a wynd off a side street in St. Bride's that Jessie had
+her lodging. The place was very ill inhabited, mostly by the
+freetrading sort. There was a man with a broken head at the entry;
+half-way up, in a tavern, fellows were roaring and singing, though
+it was not yet nine in the day. Altogether, I had never seen a
+worse neighbourhood, even in the great city of Edinburgh, and I was
+in two minds to go back. Jessie's room was of a piece with her
+surroundings, and herself no better. She would not give me the
+receipt (which Mr. Henry had told me to demand, for he was very
+methodical) until she had sent out for spirits, and I had pledged
+her in a glass; and all the time she carried on in a light-headed,
+reckless way - now aping the manners of a lady, now breaking into
+unseemly mirth, now making coquettish advances that oppressed me to
+the ground. Of the money she spoke more tragically.
+
+"It's blood money!" said she; "I take it for that: blood money for
+the betrayed! See what I'm brought down to! Ah, if the bonnie lad
+were back again, it would be changed days. But he's deid - he's
+lyin' deid amang the Hieland hills - the bonnie lad, the bonnie
+lad!"
+
+She had a rapt manner of crying on the bonnie lad, clasping her
+hands and casting up her eyes, that I think she must have learned
+of strolling players; and I thought her sorrow very much of an
+affectation, and that she dwelled upon the business because her
+shame was now all she had to be proud of. I will not say I did not
+pity her, but it was a loathing pity at the best; and her last
+change of manner wiped it out. This was when she had had enough of
+me for an audience, and had set her name at last to the receipt.
+"There!" says she, and taking the most unwomanly oaths upon her
+tongue, bade me begone and carry it to the Judas who had sent me.
+It was the first time I had heard the name applied to Mr. Henry; I
+was staggered besides at her sudden vehemence of word and manner,
+and got forth from the room, under this shower of curses, like a
+beaten dog. But even then I was not quit, for the vixen threw up
+her window, and, leaning forth, continued to revile me as I went up
+the wynd; the freetraders, coming to the tavern door, joined in the
+mockery, and one had even the inhumanity to set upon me a very
+savage small dog, which bit me in the ankle. This was a strong
+lesson, had I required one, to avoid ill company; and I rode home
+in much pain from the bite and considerable indignation of mind.
+
+Mr. Henry was in the steward's room, affecting employment, but I
+could see he was only impatient to hear of my errand.
+
+"Well?" says he, as soon as I came in; and when I had told him
+something of what passed, and that Jessie seemed an undeserving
+woman and far from grateful: "She is no friend to me," said he;
+"but, indeed, Mackellar, I have few friends to boast of, and Jessie
+has some cause to be unjust. I need not dissemble what all the
+country knows: she was not very well used by one of our family."
+This was the first time I had heard him refer to the Master even
+distantly; and I think he found his tongue rebellious even for that
+much, but presently he resumed - "This is why I would have nothing
+said. It would give pain to Mrs. Henry . . . and to my father," he
+added, with another flush.
+
+"Mr. Henry," said I, "if you will take a freedom at my hands, I
+would tell you to let that woman be. What service is your money to
+the like of her? She has no sobriety and no economy - as for
+gratitude, you will as soon get milk from a whinstone; and if you
+will pretermit your bounty, it will make no change at all but just
+to save the ankles of your messengers."
+
+Mr. Henry smiled. "But I am grieved about your ankle," said he,
+the next moment, with a proper gravity.
+
+"And observe," I continued, "I give you this advice upon
+consideration; and yet my heart was touched for the woman in the
+beginning."
+
+"Why, there it is, you see!" said Mr. Henry. "And you are to
+remember that I knew her once a very decent lass. Besides which,
+although I speak little of my family, I think much of its repute."
+
+And with that he broke up the talk, which was the first we had
+together in such confidence. But the same afternoon I had the
+proof that his father was perfectly acquainted with the business,
+and that it was only from his wife that Mr. Henry kept it secret.
+
+"I fear you had a painful errand to-day," says my lord to me, "for
+which, as it enters in no way among your duties, I wish to thank
+you, and to remind you at the same time (in case Mr. Henry should
+have neglected) how very desirable it is that no word of it should
+reach my daughter. Reflections on the dead, Mr. Mackellar, are
+doubly painful."
+
+Anger glowed in my heart; and I could have told my lord to his face
+how little he had to do, bolstering up the image of the dead in
+Mrs. Henry's heart, and how much better he were employed to shatter
+that false idol; for by this time I saw very well how the land lay
+between my patron and his wife.
+
+My pen is clear enough to tell a plain tale; but to render the
+effect of an infinity of small things, not one great enough in
+itself to be narrated; and to translate the story of looks, and the
+message of voices when they are saying no great matter; and to put
+in half a page the essence of near eighteen months - this is what I
+despair to accomplish. The fault, to be very blunt, lay all in
+Mrs. Henry. She felt it a merit to have consented to the marriage,
+and she took it like a martyrdom; in which my old lord, whether he
+knew it or not, fomented her. She made a merit, besides, of her
+constancy to the dead, though its name, to a nicer conscience,
+should have seemed rather disloyalty to the living; and here also
+my lord gave her his countenance. I suppose he was glad to talk of
+his loss, and ashamed to dwell on it with Mr. Henry. Certainly, at
+least, he made a little coterie apart in that family of three, and
+it was the husband who was shut out. It seems it was an old custom
+when the family were alone in Durrisdeer, that my lord should take
+his wine to the chimney-side, and Miss Alison, instead of
+withdrawing, should bring a stool to his knee, and chatter to him
+privately; and after she had become my patron's wife the same
+manner of doing was continued. It should have been pleasant to
+behold this ancient gentleman so loving with his daughter, but I
+was too much a partisan of Mr. Henry's to be anything but wroth at
+his exclusion. Many's the time I have seen him make an obvious
+resolve, quit the table, and go and join himself to his wife and my
+Lord Durrisdeer; and on their part, they were never backward to
+make him welcome, turned to him smilingly as to an intruding child,
+and took him into their talk with an effort so ill-concealed that
+he was soon back again beside me at the table, whence (so great is
+the hall of Durrisdeer) we could but hear the murmur of voices at
+the chimney. There he would sit and watch, and I along with him;
+and sometimes by my lord's head sorrowfully shaken, or his hand
+laid on Mrs. Henry's head, or hers upon his knee as if in
+consolation, or sometimes by an exchange of tearful looks, we would
+draw our conclusion that the talk had gone to the old subject and
+the shadow of the dead was in the hall.
+
+I have hours when I blame Mr. Henry for taking all too patiently;
+yet we are to remember he was married in pity, and accepted his
+wife upon that term. And, indeed, he had small encouragement to
+make a stand. Once, I remember, he announced he had found a man to
+replace the pane of the stained window, which, as it was he that
+managed all the business, was a thing clearly within his
+attributions. But to the Master's fancies, that pane was like a
+relic; and on the first word of any change, the blood flew to Mrs.
+Henry's face.
+
+"I wonder at you!" she cried.
+
+"I wonder at myself," says Mr. Henry, with more of bitterness than
+I had ever heard him to express.
+
+Thereupon my old lord stepped in with his smooth talk, so that
+before the meal was at an end all seemed forgotten; only that,
+after dinner, when the pair had withdrawn as usual to the chimney-
+side, we could see her weeping with her head upon his knee. Mr.
+Henry kept up the talk with me upon some topic of the estates - he
+could speak of little else but business, and was never the best of
+company; but he kept it up that day with more continuity, his eye
+straying ever and again to the chimney, and his voice changing to
+another key, but without check of delivery. The pane, however, was
+not replaced; and I believe he counted it a great defeat.
+
+Whether he was stout enough or no, God knows he was kind enough.
+Mrs. Henry had a manner of condescension with him, such as (in a
+wife) would have pricked my vanity into an ulcer; he took it like a
+favour. She held him at the staff's end; forgot and then
+remembered and unbent to him, as we do to children; burthened him
+with cold kindness; reproved him with a change of colour and a
+bitten lip, like one shamed by his disgrace: ordered him with a
+look of the eye, when she was off her guard; when she was on the
+watch, pleaded with him for the most natural attentions, as though
+they were unheard-of favours. And to all this he replied with the
+most unwearied service, loving, as folk say, the very ground she
+trod on, and carrying that love in his eyes as bright as a lamp.
+When Miss Katharine was to be born, nothing would serve but he must
+stay in the room behind the head of the bed. There he sat, as
+white (they tell me) as a sheet, and the sweat dropping from his
+brow; and the handkerchief he had in his hand was crushed into a
+little ball no bigger than a musket-bullet. Nor could he bear the
+sight of Miss Katharine for many a day; indeed, I doubt if he was
+ever what he should have been to my young lady; for the which want
+of natural feeling he was loudly blamed.
+
+Such was the state of this family down to the 7th April, 1749, when
+there befell the first of that series of events which were to break
+so many hearts and lose so many lives.
+
+
+On that day I was sitting in my room a little before supper, when
+John Paul burst open the door with no civility of knocking, and
+told me there was one below that wished to speak with the steward;
+sneering at the name of my office.
+
+I asked what manner of man, and what his name was; and this
+disclosed the cause of John's ill-humour; for it appeared the
+visitor refused to name himself except to me, a sore affront to the
+major-domo's consequence.
+
+"Well," said I, smiling a little, "I will see what he wants."
+
+I found in the entrance hall a big man, very plainly habited, and
+wrapped in a sea-cloak, like one new landed, as indeed he was.
+Not, far off Macconochie was standing, with his tongue out of his
+mouth and his hand upon his chin, like a dull fellow thinking hard;
+and the stranger, who had brought his cloak about his face,
+appeared uneasy. He had no sooner seen me coming than he went to
+meet me with an effusive manner.
+
+"My dear man," said he, "a thousand apologies for disturbing you,
+but I'm in the most awkward position. And there's a son of a
+ramrod there that I should know the looks of, and more betoken I
+believe that he knows mine. Being in this family, sir, and in a
+place of some responsibility (which was the cause I took the
+liberty to send for you), you are doubtless of the honest party?"
+
+"You may be sure at least," says I, "that all of that party are
+quite safe in Durrisdeer."
+
+"My dear man, it is my very thought," says he. "You see, I have
+just been set on shore here by a very honest man, whose name I
+cannot remember, and who is to stand off and on for me till
+morning, at some danger to himself; and, to be clear with you, I am
+a little concerned lest it should be at some to me. I have saved
+my life so often, Mr. -, I forget your name, which is a very good
+one - that, faith, I would be very loath to lose it after all. And
+the son of a ramrod, whom I believe I saw before Carlisle . . . "
+
+"Oh, sir," said I, "you can trust Macconochie until to-morrow."
+
+"Well, and it's a delight to hear you say so," says the stranger.
+"The truth is that my name is not a very suitable one in this
+country of Scotland. With a gentleman like you, my dear man, I
+would have no concealments of course; and by your leave I'll just
+breathe it in your ear. They call me Francis Burke - Colonel
+Francis Burke; and I am here, at a most damnable risk to myself, to
+see your masters - if you'll excuse me, my good man, for giving
+them the name, for I'm sure it's a circumstance I would never have
+guessed from your appearance. And if you would just be so very
+obliging as to take my name to them, you might say that I come
+bearing letters which I am sure they will be very rejoiced to have
+the reading of."
+
+Colonel Francis Burke was one of the Prince's Irishmen, that did
+his cause such an infinity of hurt, and were so much distasted of
+the Scots at the time of the rebellion; and it came at once into my
+mind, how the Master of Ballantrae had astonished all men by going
+with that party. In the same moment a strong foreboding of the
+truth possessed my soul.
+
+"If you will step in here," said I, opening a chamber door, "I will
+let my lord know."
+
+"And I am sure it's very good of you, Mr. What-is-your-name," says
+the Colonel.
+
+Up to the hall I went, slow-footed. There they were, all three -
+my old lord in his place, Mrs. Henry at work by the window, Mr.
+Henry (as was much his custom) pacing the low end. In the midst
+was the table laid for supper. I told them briefly what I had to
+say. My old lord lay back in his seat. Mrs. Henry sprang up
+standing with a mechanical motion, and she and her husband stared
+at each other's eyes across the room; it was the strangest,
+challenging look these two exchanged, and as they looked, the
+colour faded in their faces. Then Mr. Henry turned to me; not to
+speak, only to sign with his finger; but that was enough, and I
+went down again for the Colonel.
+
+When we returned, these three were in much the same position I same
+left them in; I believe no word had passed.
+
+"My Lord Durrisdeer, no doubt?" says the Colonel, bowing, and my
+lord bowed in answer. "And this," continues the Colonel, "should
+be the Master of Ballantrae?"
+
+"I have never taken that name," said Mr. Henry; "but I am Henry
+Durie, at your service."
+
+Then the Colonel turns to Mrs. Henry, bowing with his hat upon his
+heart and the most killing airs of gallantry. "There can be no
+mistake about so fine a figure of a lady," says he. "I address the
+seductive Miss Alison, of whom I have so often heard?"
+
+Once more husband and wife exchanged a look.
+
+"I am Mrs. Henry Durie," said she; "but before my marriage my name
+was Alison Graeme."
+
+Then my lord spoke up. "I am an old man, Colonel Burke," said he,
+"and a frail one. It will be mercy on your part to be expeditious.
+Do you bring me news of - " he hesitated, and then the words broke
+from him with a singular change of voice - "my son?"
+
+"My dear lord, I will be round with you like a soldier," said the
+Colonel. "I do."
+
+My lord held out a wavering hand; he seemed to wave a signal, but
+whether it was to give him time or to speak on, was more than we
+could guess. At length he got out the one word, "Good?"
+
+"Why, the very best in the creation!" cries the Colonel. "For my
+good friend and admired comrade is at this hour in the fine city of
+Paris, and as like as not, if I know anything of his habits, he
+will be drawing in his chair to a piece of dinner. - Bedad, I
+believe the lady's fainting."
+
+Mrs. Henry was indeed the colour of death, and drooped against the
+window-frame. But when Mr. Henry made a movement as if to run to
+her, she straightened with a sort of shiver. "I am well," she
+said, with her white lips.
+
+Mr. Henry stopped, and his face had a strong twitch of anger. The
+next moment he had turned to the Colonel. "You must not blame
+yourself," says he, "for this effect on Mrs. Durie. It is only
+natural; we were all brought up like brother and sister."
+
+Mrs. Henry looked at her husband with something like relief or even
+gratitude. In my way of thinking, that speech was the first step
+he made in her good graces.
+
+"You must try to forgive me, Mrs. Durie, for indeed and I am just
+an Irish savage," said the Colonel; "and I deserve to be shot for
+not breaking the matter more artistically to a lady. But here are
+the Master's own letters; one for each of the three of you; and to
+be sure (if I know anything of my friend's genius) he will tell his
+own story with a better grace."
+
+He brought the three letters forth as he spoke, arranged them by
+their superscriptions, presented the first to my lord, who took it
+greedily, and advanced towards Mrs. Henry holding out the second.
+
+But the lady waved it back. "To my husband," says she, with a
+choked voice.
+
+The Colonel was a quick man, but at this he was somewhat
+nonplussed. "To be sure!" says he; "how very dull of me! To be
+sure!" But he still held the letter.
+
+At last Mr. Henry reached forth his hand, and there was nothing to
+be done but give it up. Mr. Henry took the letters (both hers and
+his own), and looked upon their outside, with his brows knit hard,
+as if he were thinking. He had surprised me all through by his
+excellent behaviour; but he was to excel himself now.
+
+"Let me give you a hand to your room," said he to his wife. "This
+has come something of the suddenest; and, at any rate, you will
+wish to read your letter by yourself."
+
+Again she looked upon him with the same thought of wonder; but he
+gave her no time, coming straight to where she stood. "It will be
+better so, believe me," said he; "and Colonel Burke is too
+considerate not to excuse you." And with that he took her hand by
+the fingers, and led her from the hall.
+
+Mrs. Henry returned no more that night; and when Mr. Henry went to
+visit her next morning, as I heard long afterwards, she gave him
+the letter again, still unopened.
+
+"Oh, read it and be done!" he had cried.
+
+"Spare me that," said she.
+
+And by these two speeches, to my way of thinking, each undid a
+great part of what they had previously done well. But the letter,
+sure enough, came into my hands, and by me was burned, unopened.
+
+
+To be very exact as to the adventures of the Master after Culloden,
+I wrote not long ago to Colonel Burke, now a Chevalier of the Order
+of St. Louis, begging him for some notes in writing, since I could
+scarce depend upon my memory at so great an interval. To confess
+the truth, I have been somewhat embarrassed by his response; for he
+sent me the complete memoirs of his life, touching only in places
+on the Master; running to a much greater length than my whole
+story, and not everywhere (as it seems to me) designed for
+edification. He begged in his letter, dated from Ettenheim, that I
+would find a publisher for the whole, after I had made what use of
+it I required; and I think I shall best answer my own purpose and
+fulfil his wishes by printing certain parts of it in full. In this
+way my readers will have a detailed, and, I believe, a very genuine
+account of some essential matters; and if any publisher should take
+a fancy to the Chevalier's manner of narration, he knows where to
+apply for the rest, of which there is plenty at his service. I put
+in my first extract here, so that it may stand in the place of what
+the Chevalier told us over our wine in the hall of Durrisdeer; but
+you are to suppose it was not the brutal fact, but a very varnished
+version that he offered to my lord.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. - THE MASTER'S WANDERINGS.
+
+
+
+FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE CHEVALIER DE BURKE.
+
+
+. . . I left Ruthven (it's hardly necessary to remark) with much
+greater satisfaction than I had come to it; but whether I missed my
+way in the deserts, or whether my companions failed me, I soon
+found myself alone. This was a predicament very disagreeable; for
+I never understood this horrid country or savage people, and the
+last stroke of the Prince's withdrawal had made us of the Irish
+more unpopular than ever. I was reflecting on my poor chances,
+when I saw another horseman on the hill, whom I supposed at first
+to have been a phantom, the news of his death in the very front at
+Culloden being current in the army generally. This was the Master
+of Ballantrae, my Lord Durrisdeer's son, a young nobleman of the
+rarest gallantry and parts, and equally designed by nature to adorn
+a Court and to reap laurels in the field. Our meeting was the more
+welcome to both, as he was one of the few Scots who had used the
+Irish with consideration, and as he might now be of very high
+utility in aiding my escape. Yet what founded our particular
+friendship was a circumstance, by itself as romantic as any fable
+of King Arthur.
+
+This was on the second day of our flight, after we had slept one
+night in the rain upon the inclination of a mountain. There was an
+Appin man, Alan Black Stewart (or some such name, (2) but I have
+seen him since in France) who chanced to be passing the same way,
+and had a jealousy of my companion. Very uncivil expressions were
+exchanged; and Stewart calls upon the Master to alight and have it
+out.
+
+"Why, Mr. Stewart," says the Master, "I think at the present time I
+would prefer to run a race with you." And with the word claps
+spurs to his horse.
+
+Stewart ran after us, a childish thing to do, for more than a mile;
+and I could not help laughing, as I looked back at last and saw him
+on a hill, holding his hand to his side, and nearly burst with
+running.
+
+"But, all the same," I could not help saying to my companion, "I
+would let no man run after me for any such proper purpose, and not
+give him his desire. It was a good jest, but it smells a trifle
+cowardly."
+
+He bent his brows at me. "I do pretty well," says he, "when I
+saddle myself with the most unpopular man in Scotland, and let that
+suffice for courage."
+
+"O, bedad," says I, "I could show you a more unpopular with the
+naked eye. And if you like not my company, you can 'saddle'
+yourself on some one else."
+
+"Colonel Burke," says he, "do not let us quarrel; and, to that
+effect, let me assure you I am the least patient man in the world."
+
+"I am as little patient as yourself," said I. "I care not who
+knows that."
+
+"At this rate," says he, reining in, "we shall not go very far.
+And I propose we do one of two things upon the instant: either
+quarrel and be done; or make a sure bargain to bear everything at
+each other's hands."
+
+"Like a pair of brothers?" said I.
+
+"I said no such foolishness," he replied. "I have a brother of my
+own, and I think no more of him than of a colewort. But if we are
+to have our noses rubbed together in this course of flight, let us
+each dare to be ourselves like savages, and each swear that he will
+neither resent nor deprecate the other. I am a pretty bad fellow
+at bottom, and I find the pretence of virtues very irksome."
+
+"O, I am as bad as yourself," said I. "There is no skim milk in
+Francis Burke. But which is it to be? Fight or make friends?"
+
+"Why," says be, "I think it will be the best manner to spin a coin
+for it."
+
+This proposition was too highly chivalrous not to take my fancy;
+and, strange as it may seem of two well-born gentlemen of to-day,
+we span a half-crown (like a pair of ancient paladins) whether we
+were to cut each other's throats or be sworn friends. A more
+romantic circumstance can rarely have occurred; and it is one of
+those points in my memoirs, by which we may see the old tales of
+Homer and the poets are equally true to-day - at least, of the
+noble and genteel. The coin fell for peace, and we shook hands
+upon our bargain. And then it was that my companion explained to
+me his thought in running away from Mr. Stewart, which was
+certainly worthy of his political intellect. The report of his
+death, he said, was a great guard to him; Mr. Stewart having
+recognised him, had become a danger; and he had taken the briefest
+road to that gentleman's silence. "For," says he, "Alan Black is
+too vain a man to narrate any such story of himself."
+
+Towards afternoon we came down to the shores of that loch for which
+we were heading; and there was the ship, but newly come to anchor.
+She was the SAINTE-MARIE-DES-ANGES, out of the port of Havre-de-
+Grace. The Master, after we had signalled for a boat, asked me if
+I knew the captain. I told him he was a countryman of mine, of the
+most unblemished integrity, but, I was afraid, a rather timorous
+man.
+
+"No matter," says he. "For all that, he should certainly hear the
+truth."
+
+I asked him if he meant about the battle? for if the captain once
+knew the standard was down, he would certainly put to sea again at
+once.
+
+"And even then!" said he; "the arms are now of no sort of utility."
+
+"My dear man," said I, "who thinks of the arms? But, to be sure,
+we must remember our friends. They will be close upon our heels,
+perhaps the Prince himself, and if the ship be gone, a great number
+of valuable lives may be imperilled."
+
+"The captain and the crew have lives also, if you come to that,"
+says Ballantrae.
+
+This I declared was but a quibble, and that I would not hear of the
+captain being told; and then it was that Ballantrae made me a witty
+answer, for the sake of which (and also because I have been blamed
+myself in this business of the SAINTE-MARIE-DES-ANGES) I have
+related the whole conversation as it passed.
+
+"Frank," says he, "remember our bargain. I must not object to your
+holding your tongue, which I hereby even encourage you to do; but,
+by the same terms, you are not to resent my telling."
+
+I could not help laughing at this; though I still forewarned him
+what would come of it.
+
+"The devil may come of it for what I care," says the reckless
+fellow. "I have always done exactly as I felt inclined."
+
+As is well known, my prediction came true. The captain had no
+sooner heard the news than he cut his cable and to sea again; and
+before morning broke, we were in the Great Minch.
+
+The ship was very old; and the skipper, although the most honest of
+men (and Irish too), was one of the least capable. The wind blew
+very boisterous, and the sea raged extremely. All that day we had
+little heart whether to eat or drink; went early to rest in some
+concern of mind; and (as if to give us a lesson) in the night the
+wind chopped suddenly into the north-east, and blew a hurricane.
+We were awaked by the dreadful thunder of the tempest and the
+stamping of the mariners on deck; so that I supposed our last hour
+was certainly come; and the terror of my mind was increased out of
+all measure by Ballantrae, who mocked at my devotions. It is in
+hours like these that a man of any piety appears in his true light,
+and we find (what we are taught as babes) the small trust that can
+be set in worldly friends. I would be unworthy of my religion if I
+let this pass without particular remark. For three days we lay in
+the dark in the cabin, and had but a biscuit to nibble. On the
+fourth the wind fell, leaving the ship dismasted and heaving on
+vast billows. The captain had not a guess of whither we were
+blown; he was stark ignorant of his trade, and could do naught but
+bless the Holy Virgin; a very good thing, too, but scarce the whole
+of seamanship. It seemed, our one hope was to be picked up by
+another vessel; and if that should prove to be an English ship, it
+might be no great blessing to the Master and myself.
+
+The fifth and sixth days we tossed there helpless. The seventh
+some sail was got on her, but she was an unwieldy vessel at the
+best, and we made little but leeway. All the time, indeed, we had
+been drifting to the south and west, and during the tempest must
+have driven in that direction with unheard-of violence. The ninth
+dawn was cold and black, with a great sea running, and every mark
+of foul weather. In this situation we were overjoyed to sight a
+small ship on the horizon, and to perceive her go about and head
+for the SAINTE-MARIE. But our gratification did not very long
+endure; for when she had laid to and lowered a boat, it was
+immediately filled with disorderly fellows, who sang and shouted as
+they pulled across to us, and swarmed in on our deck with bare
+cutlasses, cursing loudly. Their leader was a horrible villain,
+with his face blacked and his whiskers curled in ringlets; Teach,
+his name; a most notorious pirate. He stamped about the deck,
+raving and crying out that his name was Satan, and his ship was
+called Hell. There was something about him like a wicked child or
+a half-witted person, that daunted me beyond expression. I
+whispered in the ear of Ballantrae that I would not be the last to
+volunteer, and only prayed God they might be short of hands; he
+approved my purpose with a nod.
+
+"Bedad," said I to Master Teach, "if you are Satan, here is a devil
+for ye."
+
+The word pleased him; and (not to dwell upon these shocking
+incidents) Ballantrae and I and two others were taken for recruits,
+while the skipper and all the rest were cast into the sea by the
+method of walking the plank. It was the first time I had seen this
+done; my heart died within me at the spectacle; and Master Teach or
+one of his acolytes (for my head was too much lost to be precise)
+remarked upon my pale face in a very alarming manner. I had the
+strength to cut a step or two of a jig, and cry out some ribaldry,
+which saved me for that time; but my legs were like water when I
+must get down into the skiff among these miscreants; and what with
+my horror of my company and fear of the monstrous billows, it was
+all I could do to keep an Irish tongue and break a jest or two as
+we were pulled aboard. By the blessing of God, there was a fiddle
+in the pirate ship, which I had no sooner seen than I fell upon;
+and in my quality of crowder I had the heavenly good luck to get
+favour in their eyes. CROWDING PAT was the name they dubbed me
+with; and it was little I cared for a name so long as my skin was
+whole.
+
+What kind of a pandemonium that vessel was, I cannot describe, but
+she was commanded by a lunatic, and might be called a floating
+Bedlam. Drinking, roaring, singing, quarrelling, dancing, they
+were never all sober at one time; and there were days together
+when, if a squall had supervened, it must have sent us to the
+bottom; or if a king's ship had come along, it would have found us
+quite helpless for defence. Once or twice we sighted a sail, and,
+if we were sober enough, overhauled it, God forgive us! and if we
+were all too drunk, she got away, and I would bless the saints
+under my breath. Teach ruled, if you can call that rule which
+brought no order, by the terror he created; and I observed the man
+was very vain of his position. I have known marshals of France -
+ay, and even Highland chieftains - that were less openly puffed up;
+which throws a singular light on the pursuit of honour and glory.
+Indeed, the longer we live, the more we perceive the sagacity of
+Aristotle and the other old philosophers; and though I have all my
+life been eager for legitimate distinctions, I can lay my hand upon
+my heart, at the end of my career, and declare there is not one -
+no, nor yet life itself - which is worth acquiring or preserving at
+the slightest cost of dignity.
+
+It was long before I got private speech of Ballantrae; but at
+length one night we crept out upon the boltsprit, when the rest
+were better employed, and commiserated our position.
+
+"None can deliver us but the saints," said I.
+
+"My mind is very different," said Ballantrae; "for I am going to
+deliver myself. This Teach is the poorest creature possible; we
+make no profit of him, and lie continually open to capture; and,"
+says he, "I am not going to be a tarry pirate for nothing, nor yet
+to hang in chains if I can help it." And he told me what was in
+his mind to better the state of the ship in the way of discipline,
+which would give us safety for the present, and a sooner hope of
+deliverance when they should have gained enough and should break up
+their company.
+
+I confessed to him ingenuously that my nerve was quite shook amid
+these horrible surroundings, and I durst scarce tell him to count
+upon me.
+
+"I am not very easy frightened," said he, "nor very easy beat."
+
+A few days after, there befell an accident which had nearly hanged
+us all; and offers the most extraordinary picture of the folly that
+ruled in our concerns. We were all pretty drunk: and some
+bedlamite spying a sail, Teach put the ship about in chase without
+a glance, and we began to bustle up the arms and boast of the
+horrors that should follow. I observed Ballantrae stood quiet in
+the bows, looking under the shade of his hand; but for my part,
+true to my policy among these savages, I was at work with the
+busiest and passing Irish jests for their diversion.
+
+"Run up the colours," cries Teach. "Show the -s the Jolly Roger!"
+
+It was the merest drunken braggadocio at such a stage, and might
+have lost us a valuable prize; but I thought it no part of mine to
+reason, and I ran up the black flag with my own hand.
+
+Ballantrae steps presently aft with a smile upon his face.
+
+"You may perhaps like to know, you drunken dog," says he, "that you
+are chasing a king's ship."
+
+Teach roared him the lie; but he ran at the same time to the
+bulwarks, and so did they all. I have never seen so many drunken
+men struck suddenly sober. The cruiser had gone about, upon our
+impudent display of colours; she was just then filling on the new
+tack; her ensign blew out quite plain to see; and even as we
+stared, there came a puff of smoke, and then a report, and a shot
+plunged in the waves a good way short of us. Some ran to the
+ropes, and got the SARAH round with an incredible swiftness. One
+fellow fell on the rum barrel, which stood broached upon the deck,
+and rolled it promptly overboard. On my part, I made for the Jolly
+Roger, struck it, tossed it in the sea; and could have flung myself
+after, so vexed was I with our mismanagement. As for Teach, he
+grew as pale as death, and incontinently went down to his cabin.
+Only twice he came on deck that afternoon; went to the taffrail;
+took a long look at the king's ship, which was still on the horizon
+heading after us; and then, without speech, back to his cabin. You
+may say he deserted us; and if it had not been for one very capable
+sailor we had on board, and for the lightness of the airs that blew
+all day, we must certainly have gone to the yard-arm.
+
+It is to be supposed Teach was humiliated, and perhaps alarmed for
+his position with the crew; and the way in which he set about
+regaining what he had lost, was highly characteristic of the man.
+Early next day we smelled him burning sulphur in his cabin and
+crying out of "Hell, hell!" which was well understood among the
+crew, and filled their minds with apprehension. Presently he comes
+on deck, a perfect figure of fun, his face blacked, his hair and
+whiskers curled, his belt stuck full of pistols; chewing bits of
+glass so that the blood ran down his chin, and brandishing a dirk.
+I do not know if he had taken these manners from the Indians of
+America, where he was a native; but such was his way, and he would
+always thus announce that he was wound up to horrid deeds. The
+first that came near him was the fellow who had sent the rum
+overboard the day before; him he stabbed to the heart, damning him
+for a mutineer; and then capered about the body, raving and
+swearing and daring us to come on. It was the silliest exhibition;
+and yet dangerous too, for the cowardly fellow was plainly working
+himself up to another murder.
+
+All of a sudden Ballantrae stepped forth. "Have done with this
+play-acting," says he. "Do you think to frighten us with making
+faces? We saw nothing of you yesterday, when you were wanted; and
+we did well without you, let me tell you that."
+
+There was a murmur and a movement in the crew, of pleasure and
+alarm, I thought, in nearly equal parts. As for Teach, he gave a
+barbarous howl, and swung his dirk to fling it, an art in which
+(like many seamen) he was very expert.
+
+"Knock that out of his hand!" says Ballantrae, so sudden and sharp
+that my arm obeyed him before my mind had understood.
+
+Teach stood like one stupid, never thinking on his pistols.
+
+"Go down to your cabin," cries Ballantrae, "and come on deck again
+when you are sober. Do you think we are going to hang for you, you
+black-faced, half-witted, drunken brute and butcher? Go down!"
+And he stamped his foot at him with such a sudden smartness that
+Teach fairly ran for it to the companion.
+
+"And now, mates," says Ballantrae, "a word with you. I don't know
+if you are gentlemen of fortune for the fun of the thing, but I am
+not. I want to make money, and get ashore again, and spend it like
+a man. And on one thing my mind is made up: I will not hang if I
+can help it. Come: give me a hint; I'm only a beginner! Is there
+no way to get a little discipline and common sense about this
+business?"
+
+One of the men spoke up: he said by rights they should have a
+quartermaster; and no sooner was the word out of his mouth than
+they were all of that opinion. The thing went by acclamation,
+Ballantrae was made quartermaster, the rum was put in his charge,
+laws were passed in imitation of those of a pirate by the name of
+Roberts, and the last proposal was to make an end of Teach. But
+Ballantrae was afraid of a more efficient captain, who might be a
+counterweight to himself, and he opposed this stoutly. Teach, he
+said, was good enough to board ships and frighten fools with his
+blacked face and swearing; we could scarce get a better man than
+Teach for that; and besides, as the man was now disconsidered and
+as good as deposed, we might reduce his proportion of the plunder.
+This carried it; Teach's share was cut down to a mere derision,
+being actually less than mine; and there remained only two points:
+whether he would consent, and who was to announce to him this
+resolution.
+
+"Do not let that stick you," says Ballantrae, "I will do that."
+
+And he stepped to the companion and down alone into the cabin to
+face that drunken savage.
+
+"This is the man for us," cries one of the hands. "Three cheers
+for the quartermaster!" which were given with a will, my own voice
+among the loudest, and I dare say these plaudits had their effect
+on Master Teach in the cabin, as we have seen of late days how
+shouting in the streets may trouble even the minds of legislators.
+
+What passed precisely was never known, though some of the heads of
+it came to the surface later on; and we were all amazed, as well as
+gratified, when Ballantrae came on deck with Teach upon his arm,
+and announced that all had been consented.
+
+I pass swiftly over those twelve or fifteen months in which we
+continued to keep the sea in the North Atlantic, getting our food
+and water from the ships we over-hauled, and doing on the whole a
+pretty fortunate business. Sure, no one could wish to read
+anything so ungenteel as the memoirs of a pirate, even an unwilling
+one like me! Things went extremely better with our designs, and
+Ballantrae kept his lead, to my admiration, from that day forth. I
+would be tempted to suppose that a gentleman must everywhere be
+first, even aboard a rover: but my birth is every whit as good as
+any Scottish lord's, and I am not ashamed to confess that I stayed
+Crowding Pat until the end, and was not much better than the crew's
+buffoon. Indeed, it was no scene to bring out my merits. My
+health suffered from a variety of reasons; I was more at home to
+the last on a horse's back than a ship's deck; and, to be
+ingenuous, the fear of the sea was constantly in my mind, battling
+with the fear of my companions. I need not cry myself up for
+courage; I have done well on many fields under the eyes of famous
+generals, and earned my late advancement by an act of the most
+distinguished valour before many witnesses. But when we must
+proceed on one of our abordages, the heart of Francis Burke was in
+his boots; the little eggshell skiff in which we must set forth,
+the horrible heaving of the vast billows, the height of the ship
+that we must scale, the thought of how many might be there in
+garrison upon their legitimate defence, the scowling heavens which
+(in that climate) so often looked darkly down upon our exploits,
+and the mere crying of the wind in my ears, were all considerations
+most unpalatable to my valour. Besides which, as I was always a
+creature of the nicest sensibility, the scenes that must follow on
+our success tempted me as little as the chances of defeat. Twice
+we found women on board; and though I have seen towns sacked, and
+of late days in France some very horrid public tumults, there was
+something in the smallness of the numbers engaged, and the bleak
+dangerous sea-surroundings, that made these acts of piracy far the
+most revolting. I confess ingenuously I could never proceed unless
+I was three parts drunk; it was the same even with the crew; Teach
+himself was fit for no enterprise till he was full of rum; and it
+was one of the most difficult parts of Ballantrae's performance, to
+serve us with liquor in the proper quantities. Even this he did to
+admiration; being upon the whole the most capable man I ever met
+with, and the one of the most natural genius. He did not even
+scrape favour with the crew, as I did, by continual buffoonery made
+upon a very anxious heart; but preserved on most occasions a great
+deal of gravity and distance; so that he was like a parent among a
+family of young children, or a schoolmaster with his boys. What
+made his part the harder to perform, the men were most inveterate
+grumblers; Ballantrae's discipline, little as it was, was yet
+irksome to their love of licence; and what was worse, being kept
+sober they had time to think. Some of them accordingly would fall
+to repenting their abominable crimes; one in particular, who was a
+good Catholic, and with whom I would sometimes steal apart for
+prayer; above all in bad weather, fogs, lashing rain and the like,
+when we would be the less observed; and I am sure no two criminals
+in the cart have ever performed their devotions with more anxious
+sincerity. But the rest, having no such grounds of hope, fell to
+another pastime, that of computation. All day long they would he
+telling up their shares or grooming over the result. I have said
+we were pretty fortunate. But an observation fails to be made:
+that in this world, in no business that I have tried, do the
+profits rise to a man's expectations. We found many ships and took
+many; yet few of them contained much money, their goods were
+usually nothing to our purpose - what did we want with a cargo of
+ploughs, or even of tobacco? - and it is quite a painful reflection
+how many whole crews we have made to walk the plank for no more
+than a stock of biscuit or an anker or two of spirit.
+
+In the meanwhile our ship was growing very foul, and it was high
+time we should make for our PORT DE CARRENAGE, which was in the
+estuary of a river among swamps. It was openly understood that we
+should then break up and go and squander our proportions of the
+spoil; and this made every man greedy of a little more, so that our
+decision was delayed from day to day. What finally decided
+matters, was a trifling accident, such as an ignorant person might
+suppose incidental to our way of life. But here I must explain:
+on only one of all the ships we boarded, the first on which we
+found women, did we meet with any genuine resistance. On that
+occasion we had two men killed and several injured, and if it had
+not been for the gallantry of Ballantrae we had surely been beat
+back at last. Everywhere else the defence (where there was any at
+all) was what the worst troops in Europe would have laughed at; so
+that the most dangerous part of our employment was to clamber up
+the side of the ship; and I have even known the poor souls on board
+to cast us a line, so eager were they to volunteer instead of
+walking the plank. This constant immunity had made our fellows
+very soft, so that I understood how Teach had made so deep a mark
+upon their minds; for indeed the company of that lunatic was the
+chief danger in our way of life. The accident to which I have
+referred was this:- We had sighted a little full-rigged ship very
+close under our board in a haze; she sailed near as well as we did
+- I should be nearer truth if I said, near as ill; and we cleared
+the bow-chaser to see if we could bring a spar or two about their
+ears. The swell was exceeding great; the motion of the ship beyond
+description; it was little wonder if our gunners should fire thrice
+and be still quite broad of what they aimed at. But in the
+meanwhile the chase had cleared a stern gun, the thickness of the
+air concealing them; and being better marksmen, their first shot
+struck us in the bows, knocked our two gunners into mince-meat, so
+that we were all sprinkled with the blood, and plunged through the
+deck into the forecastle, where we slept. Ballantrae would have
+held on; indeed, there was nothing in this CONTRETEMPS to affect
+the mind of any soldier; but he had a quick perception of the men's
+wishes, and it was plain this lucky shot had given them a sickener
+of their trade. In a moment they were all of one mind: the chase
+was drawing away from us, it was needless to hold on, the SARAH was
+too foul to overhaul a bottle, it was mere foolery to keep the sea
+with her; and on these pretended grounds her head was incontinently
+put about and the course laid for the river. It was strange to see
+what merriment fell on that ship's company, and how they stamped
+about the deck jesting, and each computing what increase had come
+to his share by the death of the two gunners.
+
+We were nine days making our port, so light were the airs we had to
+sail on, so foul the ship's bottom; but early on the tenth, before
+dawn, and in a light lifting haze, we passed the head. A little
+after, the haze lifted, and fell again, showing us a cruiser very
+close. This was a sore blow, happening so near our refuge. There
+was a great debate of whether she had seen us, and if so whether it
+was likely they had recognised the SARAH. We were very careful, by
+destroying every member of those crews we overhauled, to leave no
+evidence as to our own persons; but the appearance of the SARAH
+herself we could not keep so private; and above all of late, since
+she had been foul, and we had pursued many ships without success,
+it was plain that her description had been often published. I
+supposed this alert would have made us separate upon the instant.
+But here again that original genius of Ballantrae's had a surprise
+in store for me. He and Teach (and it was the most remarkable step
+of his success) had gone hand in hand since the first day of his
+appointment. I often questioned him upon the fact, and never got
+an answer but once, when he told me he and Teach had an
+understanding "which would very much surprise the crew if they
+should hear of it, and would surprise himself a good deal if it was
+carried out." Well, here again he and Teach were of a mind; and by
+their joint procurement the anchor was no sooner down than the
+whole crew went off upon a scene of drunkenness indescribable. By
+afternoon we were a mere shipful of lunatical persons, throwing of
+things overboard, howling of different songs at the same time,
+quarrelling and falling together, and then forgetting our quarrels
+to embrace. Ballantrae had bidden me drink nothing, and feign
+drunkenness, as I valued my life; and I have never passed a day so
+wearisomely, lying the best part of the time upon the forecastle
+and watching the swamps and thickets by which our little basin was
+entirely surrounded for the eye. A little after dusk Ballantrae
+stumbled up to my side, feigned to fall, with a drunken laugh, and
+before he got his feet again, whispered me to "reel down into the
+cabin and seem to fall asleep upon a locker, for there would be
+need of me soon." I did as I was told, and coming into the cabin,
+where it was quite dark, let myself fall on the first locker.
+There was a man there already; by the way he stirred and threw me
+off, I could not think he was much in liquor; and yet when I had
+found another place, he seemed to continue to sleep on. My heart
+now beat very hard, for I saw some desperate matter was in act.
+Presently down came Ballantrae, lit the lamp, looked about the
+cabin, nodded as if pleased, and on deck again without a word. I
+peered out from between my fingers, and saw there were three of us
+slumbering, or feigning to slumber, on the lockers: myself, one
+Dutton and one Grady, both resolute men. On deck the rest were got
+to a pitch of revelry quite beyond the bounds of what is human; so
+that no reasonable name can describe the sounds they were now
+making. I have heard many a drunken bout in my time, many on board
+that very SARAH, but never anything the least like this, which made
+me early suppose the liquor had been tampered with. It was a long
+while before these yells and howls died out into a sort of
+miserable moaning, and then to silence; and it seemed a long while
+after that before Ballantrae came down again, this time with Teach
+upon his heels. The latter cursed at the sight of us three upon
+the lockers.
+
+"Tut," says Ballantrae, "you might fire a pistol at their ears.
+You know what stuff they have been swallowing."
+
+There was a hatch in the cabin floor, and under that the richest
+part of the booty was stored against the day of division. It
+fastened with a ring and three padlocks, the keys (for greater
+security) being divided; one to Teach, one to Ballantrae, and one
+to the mate, a man called Hammond. Yet I was amazed to see they
+were now all in the one hand; and yet more amazed (still looking
+through my fingers) to observe Ballantrae and Teach bring up
+several packets, four of them in all, very carefully made up and
+with a loop for carriage.
+
+"And now," says Teach, "let us be going."
+
+"One word," says Ballantrae. "I have discovered there is another
+man besides yourself who knows a private path across the swamp; and
+it seems it is shorter than yours."
+
+Teach cried out, in that case, they were undone.
+
+"I do not know for that," says Ballantrae. "For there are several
+other circumstances with which I must acquaint you. First of all,
+there is no bullet in your pistols, which (if you remember) I was
+kind enough to load for both of us this morning. Secondly, as
+there is someone else who knows a passage, you must think it highly
+improbable I should saddle myself with a lunatic like you.
+Thirdly, these gentlemen (who need no longer pretend to be asleep)
+are those of my party, and will now proceed to gag and bind you to
+the mast; and when your men awaken (if they ever do awake after the
+drugs we have mingled in their liquor), I am sure they will be so
+obliging as to deliver you, and you will have no difficulty, I
+daresay, to explain the business of the keys."
+
+Not a word said Teach, but looked at us like a frightened baby as
+we gagged and bound him.
+
+"Now you see, you moon-calf," says Ballantrae, "why we made four
+packets. Heretofore you have been called Captain Teach, but I
+think you are now rather Captain Learn."
+
+That was our last word on board the SARAH. We four, with our four
+packets, lowered ourselves softly into a skiff, and left that ship
+behind us as silent as the grave, only for the moaning of some of
+the drunkards. There was a fog about breast-high on the waters; so
+that Dutton, who knew the passage, must stand on his feet to direct
+our rowing; and this, as it forced us to row gently, was the means
+of our deliverance. We were yet but a little way from the ship,
+when it began to come grey, and the birds to fly abroad upon the
+water. All of a sudden Dutton clapped down upon his hams, and
+whispered us to be silent for our lives, and hearken. Sure enough,
+we heard a little faint creak of oars upon one hand, and then
+again, and further off, a creak of oars upon the other. It was
+clear we had been sighted yesterday in the morning; here were the
+cruiser's boats to cut us out; here were we defenceless in their
+very midst. Sure, never were poor souls more perilously placed;
+and as we lay there on our oars, praying God the mist might hold,
+the sweat poured from my brow. Presently we heard one of the boats
+where we might have thrown a biscuit in her. "Softly, men," we
+heard an officer whisper; and I marvelled they could not hear the
+drumming of my heart.
+
+"Never mind the path," says Ballantrae; "we must get shelter
+anyhow; let us pull straight ahead for the sides of the basin."
+
+This we did with the most anxious precaution, rowing, as best we
+could, upon our hands, and steering at a venture in the fog, which
+was (for all that) our only safety. But Heaven guided us; we
+touched ground at a thicket; scrambled ashore with our treasure;
+and having no other way of concealment, and the mist beginning
+already to lighten, hove down the skiff and let her sink. We were
+still but new under cover when the sun rose; and at the same time,
+from the midst of the basin, a great shouting of seamen sprang up,
+and we knew the SARAH was being boarded. I heard afterwards the
+officer that took her got great honour; and it's true the approach
+was creditably managed, but I think he had an easy capture when he
+came to board. (3)
+
+I was still blessing the saints for my escape, when I became aware
+we were in trouble of another kind. We were here landed at random
+in a vast and dangerous swamp; and how to come at the path was a
+concern of doubt, fatigue, and peril. Dutton, indeed, was of
+opinion we should wait until the ship was gone, and fish up the
+skiff; for any delay would be more wise than to go blindly ahead in
+that morass. One went back accordingly to the basin-side and
+(peering through the thicket) saw the fog already quite drunk up,
+and English colours flying on the SARAH, but no movement made to
+get her under way. Our situation was now very doubtful. The swamp
+was an unhealthful place to linger in; we had been so greedy to
+bring treasures that we had brought but little food; it was highly
+desirable, besides, that we should get clear of the neighbourhood
+and into the settlements before the news of the capture went
+abroad; and against all these considerations, there was only the
+peril of the passage on the other side. I think it not wonderful
+we decided on the active part.
+
+It was already blistering hot when we set forth to pass the marsh,
+or rather to strike the path, by compass. Dutton took the compass,
+and one or other of us three carried his proportion of the
+treasure. I promise you he kept a sharp eye to his rear, for it
+was like the man's soul that he must trust us with. The thicket
+was as close as a bush; the ground very treacherous, so that we
+often sank in the most terrifying manner, and must go round about;
+the heat, besides, was stifling, the air singularly heavy, and the
+stinging insects abounded in such myriads that each of us walked
+under his own cloud. It has often been commented on, how much
+better gentlemen of birth endure fatigue than persons of the
+rabble; so that walking officers who must tramp in the dirt beside
+their men, shame them by their constancy. This was well to be
+observed in the present instance; for here were Ballantrae and I,
+two gentlemen of the highest breeding, on the one hand; and on the
+other, Grady, a common mariner, and a man nearly a giant in
+physical strength. The case of Dutton is not in point, for I
+confess he did as well as any of us. (4) But as for Grady, he
+began early to lament his case, tailed in the rear, refused to
+carry Dutton's packet when it came his turn, clamoured continually
+for rum (of which we had too little), and at last even threatened
+us from behind with a cooked pistol, unless we should allow him
+rest. Ballantrae would have fought it out, I believe; but I
+prevailed with him the other way; and we made a stop and ate a
+meal. It seemed to benefit Grady little; he was in the rear again
+at once, growling and bemoaning his lot; and at last, by some
+carelessness, not having followed properly in our tracks, stumbled
+into a deep part of the slough where it was mostly water, gave some
+very dreadful screams, and before we could come to his aid had sunk
+along with his booty. His fate, and above all these screams of
+his, appalled us to the soul; yet it was on the whole a fortunate
+circumstance and the means of our deliverance, for it moved Dutton
+to mount into a tree, whence he was able to perceive and to show
+me, who had climbed after him, a high piece of the wood, which was
+a landmark for the path. He went forward the more carelessly, I
+must suppose; for presently we saw him sink a little down, draw up
+his feet and sink again, and so twice. Then he turned his face to
+us, pretty white.
+
+"Lend a hand," said he, "I am in a bad place."
+
+"I don't know about that," says Ballantrae, standing still.
+
+Dutton broke out into the most violent oaths, sinking a little
+lower as he did, so that the mud was nearly to his waist, and
+plucking a pistol from his belt, "Help me," he cries, "or die and
+be damned to you!"
+
+"Nay," says Ballantrae, "I did but jest. I am coming." And he set
+down his own packet and Dutton's, which he was then carrying. "Do
+not venture near till we see if you are needed," said he to me, and
+went forward alone to where the man was bogged. He was quiet now,
+though he still held the pistol; and the marks of terror in his
+countenance were very moving to behold.
+
+"For the Lord's sake," says he, "look sharp."
+
+Ballantrae was now got close up. "Keep still," says he, and seemed
+to consider; and then, "Reach out both your hands!"
+
+Dutton laid down his pistol, and so watery was the top surface that
+it went clear out of sight; with an oath he stooped to snatch it;
+and as he did so, Ballantrae leaned forth and stabbed him between
+the shoulders. Up went his hands over his head - I know not
+whether with the pain or to ward himself; and the next moment he
+doubled forward in the mud.
+
+Ballantrae was already over the ankles; but he plucked himself out,
+and came back to me, where I stood with my knees smiting one
+another. "The devil take you, Francis!" says he. "I believe you
+are a half-hearted fellow, after all. I have only done justice on
+a pirate. And here we are quite clear of the SARAH! Who shall now
+say that we have dipped our hands in any irregularities?"
+
+I assured him he did me injustice; but my sense of humanity was so
+much affected by the horridness of the fact that I could scarce
+find breath to answer with.
+
+"Come," said he, "you must be more resolved. The need for this
+fellow ceased when he had shown you where the path ran; and you
+cannot deny I would have been daft to let slip so fair an
+opportunity."
+
+I could not deny but he was right in principle; nor yet could I
+refrain from shedding tears, of which I think no man of valour need
+have been ashamed; and it was not until I had a share of the rum
+that I was able to proceed. I repeat, I am far from ashamed of my
+generous emotion; mercy is honourable in the warrior; and yet I
+cannot altogether censure Ballantrae, whose step was really
+fortunate, as we struck the path without further misadventure, and
+the same night, about sundown, came to the edge of the morass.
+
+We were too weary to seek far; on some dry sands, still warm with
+the day's sun, and close under a wood of pines, we lay down and
+were instantly plunged in sleep.
+
+We awaked the next morning very early, and began with a sullen
+spirit a conversation that came near to end in blows. We were now
+cast on shore in the southern provinces, thousands of miles from
+any French settlement; a dreadful journey and a thousand perils lay
+in front of us; and sure, if there was ever need for amity, it was
+in such an hour. I must suppose that Ballantrae had suffered in
+his sense of what is truly polite; indeed, and there is nothing
+strange in the idea, after the sea-wolves we had consorted with so
+long; and as for myself, he fubbed me off unhandsomely, and any
+gentleman would have resented his behaviour.
+
+I told him in what light I saw his conduct; he walked a little off,
+I following to upbraid him; and at last he stopped me with his
+hand.
+
+"Frank," says he, "you know what we swore; and yet there is no oath
+invented would induce me to swallow such expressions, if I did not
+regard you with sincere affection. It is impossible you should
+doubt me there: I have given proofs. Dutton I had to take,
+because he knew the pass, and Grady because Dutton would not move
+without him; but what call was there to carry you along? You are a
+perpetual danger to me with your cursed Irish tongue. By rights
+you should now be in irons in the cruiser. And you quarrel with me
+like a baby for some trinkets!"
+
+I considered this one of the most unhandsome speeches ever made;
+and indeed to this day I can scarce reconcile it to my notion of a
+gentleman that was my friend. I retorted upon him with his Scotch
+accent, of which he had not so much as some, but enough to be very
+barbarous and disgusting, as I told him plainly; and the affair
+would have gone to a great length, but for an alarming
+intervention.
+
+We had got some way off upon the sand. The place where we had
+slept, with the packets lying undone and the money scattered
+openly, was now between us and the pines; and it was out of these
+the stranger must have come. There he was at least, a great
+hulking fellow of the country, with a broad axe on his shoulder,
+looking open-mouthed, now at the treasure, which was just at his
+feet, and now at our disputation, in which we had gone far enough
+to have weapons in our hands. We had no sooner observed him than
+he found his legs and made off again among the pines.
+
+This was no scene to put our minds at rest: a couple of armed men
+in sea-clothes found quarrelling over a treasure, not many miles
+from where a pirate had been captured - here was enough to bring
+the whole country about our ears. The quarrel was not even made
+up; it was blotted from our minds; and we got our packets together
+in the twinkling of an eye, and made off, running with the best
+will in the world. But the trouble was, we did not know in what
+direction, and must continually return upon our steps. Ballantrae
+had indeed collected what he could from Dutton; but it's hard to
+travel upon hearsay; and the estuary, which spreads into a vast
+irregular harbour, turned us off upon every side with a new stretch
+of water.
+
+We were near beside ourselves, and already quite spent with
+running, when, coming to the top of a dune, we saw we were again
+cut off by another ramification of the bay. This was a creek,
+however, very different from those that had arrested us before;
+being set in rocks, and so precipitously deep that a small vessel
+was able to lie alongside, made fast with a hawser; and her crew
+had laid a plank to the shore. Here they had lighted a fire, and
+were sitting at their meal. As for the vessel herself, she was one
+of those they build in the Bermudas.
+
+The love of gold and the great hatred that everybody has to pirates
+were motives of the most influential, and would certainly raise the
+country in our pursuit. Besides, it was now plain we were on some
+sort of straggling peninsula, like the fingers of a hand; and the
+wrist, or passage to the mainland, which we should have taken at
+the first, was by this time not improbably secured. These
+considerations put us on a bolder counsel. For as long as we
+dared, looking every moment to hear sounds of the chase, we lay
+among some bushes on the top of the dune; and having by this means
+secured a little breath and recomposed our appearance, we strolled
+down at last, with a great affectation of carelessness, to the
+party by the fire.
+
+It was a trader and his negroes, belonging to Albany, in the
+province of New York, and now on the way home from the Indies with
+a cargo; his name I cannot recall. We were amazed to learn he had
+put in here from terror of the SARAH; for we had no thought our
+exploits had been so notorious. As soon as the Albanian heard she
+had been taken the day before, he jumped to his feet, gave us a cup
+of spirits for our good news, and sent big negroes to get sail on
+the Bermudan. On our side, we profited by the dram to become more
+confidential, and at last offered ourselves as passengers. He
+looked askance at our tarry clothes and pistols, and replied
+civilly enough that he had scarce accommodation for himself; nor
+could either our prayers or our offers of money, in which we
+advanced pretty far, avail to shake him.
+
+"I see, you think ill of us," says Ballantrae, "but I will show you
+how well we think of you by telling you the truth. We are Jacobite
+fugitives, and there is a price upon our heads."
+
+At this, the Albanian was plainly moved a little. He asked us many
+questions as to the Scotch war, which Ballantrae very patiently
+answered. And then, with a wink, in a vulgar manner, "I guess you
+and your Prince Charlie got more than you cared about," said he.
+
+"Bedad, and that we did," said I. "And, my dear man, I wish you
+would set a new example and give us just that much."
+
+This I said in the Irish way, about which there is allowed to be
+something very engaging. It's a remarkable thing, and a testimony
+to the love with which our nation is regarded, that this address
+scarce ever fails in a handsome fellow. I cannot tell how often I
+have seen a private soldier escape the horse, or a beggar wheedle
+out a good alms by a touch of the brogue. And, indeed, as soon as
+the Albanian had laughed at me I was pretty much at rest. Even
+then, however, he made many conditions, and - for one thing - took
+away our arms, before he suffered us aboard; which was the signal
+to cast off; so that in a moment after, we were gliding down the
+bay with a good breeze, and blessing the name of God for our
+deliverance. Almost in the mouth of the estuary, we passed the
+cruiser, and a little after the poor SARAH with her prize crew; and
+these were both sights to make us tremble. The Bermudan seemed a
+very safe place to be in, and our bold stroke to have been
+fortunately played, when we were thus reminded of the case of our
+companions. For all that, we had only exchanged traps, jumped out
+of the frying-pan into the fire, ran from the yard-arm to the
+block, and escaped the open hostility of the man-of-war to lie at
+the mercy of the doubtful faith of our Albanian merchant.
+
+From many circumstances, it chanced we were safer than we could
+have dared to hope. The town of Albany was at that time much
+concerned in contraband trade across the desert with the Indians
+and the French. This, as it was highly illegal, relaxed their
+loyalty, and as it brought them in relation with the politest
+people on the earth, divided even their sympathies. In short, they
+were like all the smugglers in the world, spies and agents ready-
+made for either party. Our Albanian, besides, was a very honest
+man indeed, and very greedy; and, to crown our luck, he conceived a
+great delight in our society. Before we had reached the town of
+New York we had come to a full agreement, that he should carry us
+as far as Albany upon his ship, and thence put us on a way to pass
+the boundaries and join the French. For all this we were to pay at
+a high rate; but beggars cannot be choosers, nor outlaws
+bargainers.
+
+We sailed, then, up the Hudson River, which, I protest, is a very
+fine stream, and put up at the "King's Arms" in Albany. The town
+was full of the militia of the province, breathing slaughter
+against the French. Governor Clinton was there himself, a very
+busy man, and, by what I could learn, very near distracted by the
+factiousness of his Assembly. The Indians on both sides were on
+the war-path; we saw parties of them bringing in prisoners and
+(what was much worse) scalps, both male and female, for which they
+were paid at a fixed rate; and I assure you the sight was not
+encouraging. Altogether, we could scarce have come at a period
+more unsuitable for our designs; our position in the chief inn was
+dreadfully conspicuous; our Albanian fubbed us off with a thousand
+delays, and seemed upon the point of a retreat from his
+engagements; nothing but peril appeared to environ the poor
+fugitives, and for some time we drowned our concern in a very
+irregular course of living.
+
+This, too, proved to be fortunate; and it's one of the remarks that
+fall to be made upon our escape, how providentially our steps were
+conducted to the very end. What a humiliation to the dignity of
+man! My philosophy, the extraordinary genius of Ballantrae, our
+valour, in which I grant that we were equal - all these might have
+proved insufficient without the Divine blessing on our efforts.
+And how true it is, as the Church tells us, that the Truths of
+Religion are, after all, quite applicable even to daily affairs!
+At least, it was in the course of our revelry that we made the
+acquaintance of a spirited youth by the name of Chew. He was one
+of the most daring of the Indian traders, very well acquainted with
+the secret paths of the wilderness, needy, dissolute, and, by a
+last good fortune, in some disgrace with his family. Him we
+persuaded to come to our relief; he privately provided what was
+needful for our flight, and one day we slipped out of Albany,
+without a word to our former friend, and embarked, a little above,
+in a canoe.
+
+To the toils and perils of this journey, it would require a pen
+more elegant than mine to do full justice. The reader must
+conceive for himself the dreadful wilderness which we had now to
+thread; its thickets, swamps, precipitous rocks, impetuous rivers,
+and amazing waterfalls. Among these barbarous scenes we must toil
+all day, now paddling, now carrying our canoe upon our shoulders;
+and at night we slept about a fire, surrounded by the howling of
+wolves and other savage animals. It was our design to mount the
+headwaters of the Hudson, to the neighbourhood of Crown Point,
+where the French had a strong place in the woods, upon Lake
+Champlain. But to have done this directly were too perilous; and
+it was accordingly gone upon by such a labyrinth of rivers, lakes,
+and portages as makes my head giddy to remember. These paths were
+in ordinary times entirely desert; but the country was now up, the
+tribes on the war-path, the woods full of Indian scouts. Again and
+again we came upon these parties when we least expected, them; and
+one day, in particular, I shall never forget, how, as dawn was
+coming in, we were suddenly surrounded by five or six of these
+painted devils, uttering a very dreary sort of cry, and brandishing
+their hatchets. It passed off harmlessly, indeed, as did the rest
+of our encounters; for Chew was well known and highly valued among
+the different tribes. Indeed, he was a very gallant, respectable
+young man; but even with the advantage of his companionship, you
+must not think these meetings were without sensible peril. To
+prove friendship on our part, it was needful to draw upon our stock
+of rum - indeed, under whatever disguise, that is the true business
+of the Indian trader, to keep a travelling public-house in the
+forest; and when once the braves had got their bottle of SCAURA (as
+they call this beastly liquor), it behoved us to set forth and
+paddle for our scalps. Once they were a little drunk, goodbye to
+any sense or decency; they had but the one thought, to get more
+SCAURA. They might easily take it in their heads to give us chase,
+and had we been overtaken, I had never written these memoirs.
+
+We were come to the most critical portion of our course, where we
+might equally expect to fall into the hands of French or English,
+when a terrible calamity befell us. Chew was taken suddenly sick
+with symptoms like those of poison, and in the course of a few
+hours expired in the bottom of the canoe. We thus lost at once our
+guide, our interpreter, our boatman, and our passport, for he was
+all these in one; and found ourselves reduced, at a blow, to the
+most desperate and irremediable distress. Chew, who took a great
+pride in his knowledge, had indeed often lectured us on the
+geography; and Ballantrae, I believe, would listen. But for my
+part I have always found such information highly tedious; and
+beyond the fact that we were now in the country of the Adirondack
+Indians, and not so distant from our destination, could we but have
+found the way, I was entirely ignorant. The wisdom of my course
+was soon the more apparent; for with all his pains, Ballantrae was
+no further advanced than myself. He knew we must continue to go up
+one stream; then, by way of a portage, down another; and then up a
+third. But you are to consider, in a mountain country, how many
+streams come rolling in from every hand. And how is a gentleman,
+who is a perfect stranger in that part of the world, to tell any
+one of them from any other? Nor was this our only trouble. We
+were great novices, besides, in handling a canoe; the portages were
+almost beyond our strength, so that I have seen us sit down in
+despair for half an hour at a time without one word; and the
+appearance of a single Indian, since we had now no means of
+speaking to them, would have been in all probability the means of
+our destruction. There is altogether some excuse if Ballantrae
+showed something of a grooming disposition; his habit of imputing
+blame to others, quite as capable as himself, was less tolerable,
+and his language it was not always easy to accept. Indeed, he had
+contracted on board the pirate ship a manner of address which was
+in a high degree unusual between gentlemen; and now, when you might
+say he was in a fever, it increased upon him hugely.
+
+The third day of these wanderings, as we were carrying the canoe
+upon a rocky portage, she fell, and was entirely bilged. The
+portage was between two lakes, both pretty extensive; the track,
+such as it was, opened at both ends upon the water, and on both
+hands was enclosed by the unbroken woods; and the sides of the
+lakes were quite impassable with bog: so that we beheld ourselves
+not only condemned to go without our boat and the greater part of
+our provisions, but to plunge at once into impenetrable thickets
+and to desert what little guidance we still had - the course of the
+river. Each stuck his pistols in his belt, shouldered an axe, made
+a pack of his treasure and as much food as he could stagger under;
+and deserting the rest of our possessions, even to our swords,
+which would have much embarrassed us among the woods, we set forth
+on this deplorable adventure. The labours of Hercules, so finely
+described by Homer, were a trifle to what we now underwent. Some
+parts of the forest were perfectly dense down to the ground, so
+that we must cut our way like mites in a cheese. In some the
+bottom was full of deep swamp, and the whole wood entirely rotten.
+I have leaped on a great fallen log and sunk to the knees in
+touchwood; I have sought to stay myself, in falling, against what
+looked to be a solid trunk, and the whole thing has whiffed away at
+my touch like a sheet of paper. Stumbling, falling, bogging to the
+knees, hewing our way, our eyes almost put out with twigs and
+branches, our clothes plucked from our bodies, we laboured all day,
+and it is doubtful if we made two miles. What was worse, as we
+could rarely get a view of the country, and were perpetually
+justled from our path by obstacles, it was impossible even to have
+a guess in what direction we were moving.
+
+A little before sundown, in an open place with a stream, and set
+about with barbarous mountains, Ballantrae threw down his pack. "I
+will go no further," said he, and bade me light the fire, damning
+my blood in terms not proper for a chairman.
+
+I told him to try to forget he had ever been a pirate, and to
+remember he had been a gentleman.
+
+"Are you mad?" he cried. "Don't cross me here! And then, shaking
+his fist at the hills, "To think," cries he, "that I must leave my
+bones in this miserable wilderness! Would God I had died upon the
+scaffold like a gentleman!" This he said ranting like an actor;
+and then sat biting his fingers and staring on the ground, a most
+unchristian object.
+
+I took a certain horror of the man, for I thought a soldier and a
+gentleman should confront his end with more philosophy. I made him
+no reply, therefore, in words; and presently the evening fell so
+chill that I was glad, for my own sake, to kindle a fire. And yet
+God knows, in such an open spot, and the country alive with
+savages, the act was little short of lunacy. Ballantrae seemed
+never to observe me; but at last, as I was about parching a little
+corn, he looked up.
+
+"Have you ever a brother?" said be.
+
+"By the blessing of Heaven," said I, "not less than five."
+
+"I have the one," said he, with a strange voice; and then
+presently, "He shall pay me for all this," he added. And when I
+asked him what was his brother's part in our distress, "What!" he
+cried, "he sits in my place, he bears my name, he courts my wife;
+and I am here alone with a damned Irishman in this tooth-chattering
+desert! Oh, I have been a common gull!" he cried.
+
+The explosion was in all ways so foreign to my friend's nature that
+I was daunted out of all my just susceptibility. Sure, an
+offensive expression, however vivacious, appears a wonderfully
+small affair in circumstances so extreme! But here there is a
+strange thing to be noted. He had only once before referred to the
+lady with whom he was contracted. That was when we came in view of
+the town of New York, when he had told me, if all had their rights,
+he was now in sight of his own property, for Miss Graeme enjoyed a
+large estate in the province. And this was certainly a natural
+occasion; but now here she was named a second time; and what is
+surely fit to be observed, in this very month, which was November,
+'47, and I BELIEVE UPON THAT VERY DAY AS WE SAT AMONG THESE
+BARBAROUS MOUNTAINS, his brother and Miss Graeme were married. I
+am the least superstitious of men; but the hand of Providence is
+here displayed too openly not to be remarked. (5)
+
+The next day, and the next, were passed in similar labours;
+Ballantrae often deciding on our course by the spinning of a coin;
+and once, when I expostulated on this childishness, he had an odd
+remark that I have never forgotten. "I know no better way," said
+he, "to express my scorn of human reason." I think it was the
+third day that we found the body of a Christian, scalped and most
+abominably mangled, and lying in a pudder of his blood; the birds
+of the desert screaming over him, as thick as flies. I cannot
+describe how dreadfully this sight affected us; but it robbed me of
+all strength and all hope for this world. The same day, and only a
+little after, we were scrambling over a part of the forest that had
+been burned, when Ballantrae, who was a little ahead, ducked
+suddenly behind a fallen trunk. I joined him in this shelter,
+whence we could look abroad without being seen ourselves; and in
+the bottom of the next vale, beheld a large war party of the
+savages going by across our line. There might be the value of a
+weak battalion present; all naked to the waist, blacked with grease
+and soot, and painted with white lead and vermilion, according to
+their beastly habits. They went one behind another like a string
+of geese, and at a quickish trot; so that they took but a little
+while to rattle by, and disappear again among the woods. Yet I
+suppose we endured a greater agony of hesitation and suspense in
+these few minutes than goes usually to a man's whole life. Whether
+they were French or English Indians, whether they desired scalps or
+prisoners, whether we should declare ourselves upon the chance, or
+lie quiet and continue the heart-breaking business of our journey:
+sure, I think these were questions to have puzzled the brains of
+Aristotle himself. Ballantrae turned to me with a face all
+wrinkled up and his teeth showing in his mouth, like what I have
+read of people starving; he said no word, but his whole appearance
+was a kind of dreadful question.
+
+"They may be of the English side," I whispered; "and think! the
+best we could then hope, is to begin this over again."
+
+"I know - I know," he said. "Yet it must come to a plunge at
+last." And he suddenly plucked out his coin, shook it in his
+closed hands, looked at it, and then lay down with his face in the
+dust.
+
+ADDITION BY MR. MACKELLAR. - I drop the Chevalier's narration at
+this point because the couple quarrelled and separated the same
+day; and the Chevalier's account of the quarrel seems to me (I must
+confess) quite incompatible with the nature of either of the men.
+Henceforth they wandered alone, undergoing extraordinary
+sufferings; until first one and then the other was picked up by a
+party from Fort St. Frederick. Only two things are to be noted.
+And first (as most important for my purpose) that the Master, in
+the course of his miseries buried his treasure, at a point never
+since discovered, but of which he took a drawing in his own blood
+on the lining of his hat. And second, that on his coming thus
+penniless to the Fort, he was welcomed like a brother by the
+Chevalier, who thence paid his way to France. The simplicity of
+Mr. Burke's character leads him at this point to praise the Master
+exceedingly; to an eye more worldly wise, it would seem it was the
+Chevalier alone that was to be commended. I have the more pleasure
+in pointing to this really very noble trait of my esteemed
+correspondent, as I fear I may have wounded him immediately before.
+I have refrained from comments on any of his extraordinary and (in
+my eyes) immoral opinions, for I know him to be jealous of respect.
+But his version of the quarrel is really more than I can reproduce;
+for I knew the Master myself, and a man more insusceptible of fear
+is not conceivable. I regret this oversight of the Chevalier's,
+and all the more because the tenor of his narrative (set aside a
+few flourishes) strikes me as highly ingenuous.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. - PERSECUTIONS ENDURED BY MR. HENRY.
+
+
+
+You can guess on what part of his adventures the Colonel
+principally dwelled. Indeed, if we had heard it all, it is to be
+thought the current of this business had been wholly altered; but
+the pirate ship was very gently touched upon. Nor did I hear the
+Colonel to an end even of that which he was willing to disclose;
+for Mr. Henry, having for some while been plunged in a brown study,
+rose at last from his seat and (reminding the Colonel there were
+matters that he must attend to) bade me follow him immediately to
+the office.
+
+Once there, he sought no longer to dissemble his concern, walking
+to and fro in the room with a contorted face, and passing his hand
+repeatedly upon his brow.
+
+"We have some business," he began at last; and there broke off,
+declared we must have wine, and sent for a magnum of the best.
+This was extremely foreign to his habitudes; and what was still
+more so, when the wine had come, he gulped down one glass upon
+another like a man careless of appearances. But the drink steadied
+him.
+
+"You will scarce be surprised, Mackellar," says he, "when I tell
+you that my brother - whose safety we are all rejoiced to learn -
+stands in some need of money."
+
+I told him I had misdoubted as much; but the time was not very
+fortunate, as the stock was low.
+
+"Not mine," said he. "There is the money for the mortgage."
+
+I reminded him it was Mrs. Henry's.
+
+"I will be answerable to my wife," he cried violently.
+
+"And then," said I, "there is the mortgage."
+
+"I know," said he; "it is on that I would consult you."
+
+I showed him how unfortunate a time it was to divert this money
+from its destination; and how, by so doing, we must lose the profit
+of our past economies, and plunge back the estate into the mire. I
+even took the liberty to plead with him; and when he still opposed
+me with a shake of the head and a bitter dogged smile, my zeal
+quite carried me beyond my place. "This is midsummer madness,"
+cried I; "and I for one will be no party to it."
+
+"You speak as though I did it for my pleasure," says he. "But I
+have a child now; and, besides, I love order; and to say the honest
+truth, Mackellar, I had begun to take a pride in the estates." He
+gloomed for a moment. "But what would you have?" he went on.
+"Nothing is mine, nothing. This day's news has knocked the bottom
+out of my life. I have only the name and the shadow of things -
+only the shadow; there is no substance in my rights."
+
+"They will prove substantial enough before a court," said I.
+
+He looked at me with a burning eye, and seemed to repress the word
+upon his lips; and I repented what I had said, for I saw that while
+he spoke of the estate he had still a side-thought to his marriage.
+And then, of a sudden, he twitched the letter from his pocket,
+where it lay all crumpled, smoothed it violently on the table, and
+read these words to me with a trembling tongue: "'My dear Jacob' -
+This is how he begins!" cries he - "'My dear Jacob, I once called
+you so, you may remember; and you have now done the business, and
+flung my heels as high as Criffel.' What do you think of that,
+Mackellar," says he, "from an only brother? I declare to God I
+liked him very well; I was always staunch to him; and this is how
+he writes! But I will not sit down under the imputation" - walking
+to and fro - "I am as good as he; I am a better man than he, I call
+on God to prove it! I cannot give him all the monstrous sum he
+asks; he knows the estate to be incompetent; but I will give him
+what I have, and it in more than he expects. I have borne all this
+too long. See what he writes further on; read it for yourself: 'I
+know you are a niggardly dog.' A niggardly dog! I niggardly? Is
+that true, Mackellar? You think it is?" I really thought he would
+have struck me at that. "Oh, you all think so! Well, you shall
+see, and he shall see, and God shall see. If I ruin the estate and
+go barefoot, I shall stuff this bloodsucker. Let him ask all -
+all, and he shall have it! It is all his by rights. Ah!" he
+cried, "and I foresaw all this, and worse, when he would not let me
+go." He poured out another glass of wine, and was about to carry
+it to his lips, when I made so bold as to lay a finger on his arm.
+He stopped a moment. "You are right," said he, and flung glass and
+all in the fireplace. "Come, let us count the money."
+
+I durst no longer oppose him; indeed, I was very much affected by
+the sight of so much disorder in a man usually so controlled; and
+we sat down together, counted the money, and made it up in packets
+for the greater ease of Colonel Burke, who was to be the bearer.
+This done, Mr. Henry returned to the hall, where he and my old lord
+sat all night through with their guest.
+
+A little before dawn I was called and set out with the Colonel. He
+would scarce have liked a less responsible convoy, for he was a man
+who valued himself; nor could we afford him one more dignified, for
+Mr. Henry must not appear with the freetraders. It was a very
+bitter morning of wind, and as we went down through the long
+shrubbery the Colonel held himself muffled in his cloak.
+
+"Sir," said I, "this is a great sum of money that your friend
+requires. I must suppose his necessities to be very great."
+
+"We must suppose so," says he, I thought drily; but perhaps it was
+the cloak about his mouth.
+
+"I am only a servant of the family," said I. "You may deal openly
+with me. I think we are likely to get little good by him?"
+
+"My dear man," said the Colonel, "Ballantrae is a gentleman of the
+most eminent natural abilities, and a man that I admire, and that I
+revere, to the very ground he treads on." And then he seemed to me
+to pause like one in a difficulty.
+
+"But for all that," said I, "we are likely to get little good by
+him?"
+
+"Sure, and you can have it your own way, my dear man," says the
+Colonel.
+
+By this time we had come to the side of the creek, where the boat
+awaited him. "Well," said be, "I am sure I am very much your
+debtor for all your civility, Mr. Whatever-your-name-is; and just
+as a last word, and since you show so much intelligent interest, I
+will mention a small circumstance that may be of use to the family.
+For I believe my friend omitted to mention that he has the largest
+pension on the Scots Fund of any refugee in Paris; and it's the
+more disgraceful, sir," cries the Colonel, warming, "because
+there's not one dirty penny for myself."
+
+He cocked his hat at me, as if I had been to blame for this
+partiality; then changed again into his usual swaggering civility,
+shook me by the hand, and set off down to the boat, with the money
+under his arms, and whistling as he went the pathetic air of SHULE
+AROON. It was the first time I had heard that tune; I was to hear
+it again, words and all, as you shall learn, but I remember how
+that little stave of it ran in my head after the freetraders had
+bade him "Wheesht, in the deil's name," and the grating of the oars
+had taken its place, and I stood and watched the dawn creeping on
+the sea, and the boat drawing away, and the lugger lying with her
+foresail backed awaiting it.
+
+
+The gap made in our money was a sore embarrassment, and, among
+other consequences, it had this: that I must ride to Edinburgh,
+and there raise a new loan on very questionable terms to keep the
+old afloat; and was thus, for close upon three weeks, absent from
+the house of Durrisdeer.
+
+What passed in the interval I had none to tell me, but I found Mrs.
+Henry, upon my return, much changed in her demeanour. The old
+talks with my lord for the most part pretermitted; a certain
+deprecation visible towards her husband, to whom I thought she
+addressed herself more often; and, for one thing, she was now
+greatly wrapped up in Miss Katharine. You would think the change
+was agreeable to Mr. Henry; no such matter! To the contrary, every
+circumstance of alteration was a stab to him; he read in each the
+avowal of her truant fancies. That constancy to the Master of
+which she was proud while she supposed him dead, she had to blush
+for now she knew he was alive, and these blushes were the hated
+spring of her new conduct. I am to conceal no truth; and I will
+here say plainly, I think this was the period in which Mr. Henry
+showed the worst. He contained himself, indeed, in public; but
+there was a deep-seated irritation visible underneath. With me,
+from whom he had less concealment, he was often grossly unjust, and
+even for his wife he would sometimes have a sharp retort: perhaps
+when she had ruffled him with some unwonted kindness; perhaps upon
+no tangible occasion, the mere habitual tenor of the man's
+annoyance bursting spontaneously forth. When he would thus forget
+himself (a thing so strangely out of keeping with the terms of
+their relation), there went a shook through the whole company, and
+the pair would look upon each other in a kind of pained amazement.
+
+All the time, too, while he was injuring himself by this defect of
+temper, he was hurting his position by a silence, of which I scarce
+know whether to say it was the child of generosity or pride. The
+freetraders came again and again, bringing messengers from the
+Master, and none departed empty-handed. I never durst reason with
+Mr. Henry; he gave what was asked of him in a kind of noble rage.
+Perhaps because he knew he was by nature inclining to the
+parsimonious, he took a backforemost pleasure in the recklessness
+with which he supplied his brother's exigence. Perhaps the falsity
+of the position would have spurred a humbler man into the same
+excess. But the estate (if I may say so) groaned under it; our
+daily expenses were shorn lower and lower; the stables were
+emptied, all but four roadsters; servants were discharged, which
+raised a dreadful murmuring in the country, and heated up the old
+disfavour upon Mr. Henry; and at last the yearly visit to Edinburgh
+must be discontinued.
+
+This was in 1756. You are to suppose that for seven years this
+bloodsucker had been drawing the life's blood from Durrisdeer, and
+that all this time my patron had held his peace. It was an effect
+of devilish malice in the Master that he addressed Mr. Henry alone
+upon the matter of his demands, and there was never a word to my
+lord. The family had looked on, wondering at our economies. They
+had lamented, I have no doubt, that my patron had become so great a
+miser - a fault always despicable, but in the young abhorrent, and
+Mr. Henry was not yet thirty years of age. Still, he had managed
+the business of Durrisdeer almost from a boy; and they bore with
+these changes in a silence as proud and bitter as his own, until
+the coping-stone of the Edinburgh visit.
+
+At this time I believe my patron and his wife were rarely together,
+save at meals. Immediately on the back of Colonel Burke's
+announcement Mrs. Henry made palpable advances; you might say she
+had laid a sort of timid court to her husband, different, indeed,
+from her former manner of unconcern and distance. I never had the
+heart to blame Mr. Henry because he recoiled from these advances;
+nor yet to censure the wife, when she was cut to the quick by their
+rejection. But the result was an entire estrangement, so that (as
+I say) they rarely spoke, except at meals. Even the matter of the
+Edinburgh visit was first broached at table, and it chanced that
+Mrs. Henry was that day ailing and querulous. She had no sooner
+understood her husband's meaning than the red flew in her face.
+
+"At last," she cried, "this is too much! Heaven knows what
+pleasure I have in my life, that I should be denied my only
+consolation. These shameful proclivities must be trod down; we are
+already a mark and an eyesore in the neighbourhood. I will not
+endure this fresh insanity."
+
+"I cannot afford it," says Mr. Henry.
+
+"Afford?" she cried. "For shame! But I have money of my own."
+
+"That is all mine, madam, by marriage," he snarled, and instantly
+left the room.
+
+My old lord threw up his hands to Heaven, and he and his daughter,
+withdrawing to the chimney, gave me a broad hint to be gone. I
+found Mr. Henry in his usual retreat, the steward's room, perched
+on the end of the table, and plunging his penknife in it with a
+very ugly countenance.
+
+"Mr. Henry," said I, "you do yourself too much injustice, and it is
+time this should cease."
+
+"Oh!" cries he, "nobody minds here. They think it only natural. I
+have shameful proclivities. I am a niggardly dog," and he drove
+his knife up to the hilt. "But I will show that fellow," he cried
+with an oath, "I will show him which is the more generous."
+
+"This is no generosity," said I; "this is only pride."
+
+"Do you think I want morality?" he asked.
+
+I thought he wanted help, and I should give it him, willy-nilly;
+and no sooner was Mrs. Henry gone to her room than I presented
+myself at her door and sought admittance.
+
+She openly showed her wonder. "What do you want with me, Mr.
+Mackellar?" said she.
+
+"The Lord knows, madam," says I, "I have never troubled you before
+with any freedoms; but this thing lies too hard upon my conscience,
+and it will out. Is it possible that two people can be so blind as
+you and my lord? and have lived all these years with a noble
+gentleman like Mr. Henry, and understand so little of his nature?"
+
+"What does this mean?" she cried.
+
+"Do you not know where his money goes to? his - and yours - and the
+money for the very wine he does not drink at table?" I went on.
+"To Paris - to that man! Eight thousand pounds has he had of us in
+seven years, and my patron fool enough to keep it secret!"
+
+"Eight thousand pounds!" she repeated. "It in impossible; the
+estate is not sufficient."
+
+"God knows how we have sweated farthings to produce it," said I.
+"But eight thousand and sixty is the sum, beside odd shillings.
+And if you can think my patron miserly after that, this shall be my
+last interference."
+
+"You need say no more, Mr. Mackellar," said she. "You have done
+most properly in what you too modestly call your interference. I
+am much to blame; you must think me indeed a very unobservant wife"
+(looking upon me with a strange smile), "but I shall put this right
+at once. The Master was always of a very thoughtless nature; but
+his heart is excellent; he is the soul of generosity. I shall
+write to him myself. You cannot think how you have pained me by
+this communication."
+
+"Indeed, madam, I had hoped to have pleased you," said I, for I
+raged to see her still thinking of the Master.
+
+"And pleased," said she, "and pleased me of course."
+
+That same day (I will not say but what I watched) I had the
+satisfaction to see Mr. Henry come from his wife's room in a state
+most unlike himself; for his face was all bloated with weeping, and
+yet he seemed to me to walk upon the air. By this, I was sure his
+wife had made him full amends for once. "Ah," thought I to myself,
+"I have done a brave stroke this day."
+
+On the morrow, as I was seated at my books, Mr. Henry came in
+softly behind me, took me by the shoulders, and shook me in a
+manner of playfulness. "I find you are a faithless fellow after
+all," says he, which was his only reference to my part; but the
+tone he spoke in was more to me than any eloquence of protestation.
+Nor was this all I had effected; for when the next messenger came
+(as he did not long afterwards) from the Master, he got nothing
+away with him but a letter. For some while back it had been I
+myself who had conducted these affairs; Mr. Henry not setting pen
+to paper, and I only in the dryest and most formal terms. But this
+letter I did not even see; it would scarce be pleasant reading, for
+Mr. Henry felt he had his wife behind him for once, and I observed,
+on the day it was despatched, he had a very gratified expression.
+
+Things went better now in the family, though it could scarce be
+pretended they went well. There was now at least no misconception;
+there was kindness upon all sides; and I believe my patron and his
+wife might again have drawn together if he could but have pocketed
+his pride, and she forgot (what was the ground of all) her brooding
+on another man. It is wonderful how a private thought leaks out;
+it is wonderful to me now how we should all have followed the
+current of her sentiments; and though she bore herself quietly, and
+had a very even disposition, yet we should have known whenever her
+fancy ran to Paris. And would not any one have thought that my
+disclosure must have rooted up that idol? I think there is the
+devil in women: all these years passed, never a sight of the man,
+little enough kindness to remember (by all accounts) even while she
+had him, the notion of his death intervening, his heartless
+rapacity laid bare to her; that all should not do, and she must
+still keep the best place in her heart for this accursed fellow, is
+a thing to make a plain man rage. I had never much natural
+sympathy for the passion of love; but this unreason in my patron's
+wife disgusted me outright with the whole matter. I remember
+checking a maid because she sang some bairnly kickshaw while my
+mind was thus engaged; and my asperity brought about my ears the
+enmity of all the petticoats about the house; of which I reeked
+very little, but it amused Mr. Henry, who rallied me much upon our
+joint unpopularity. It is strange enough (for my own mother was
+certainly one of the salt of the earth, and my Aunt Dickson, who
+paid my fees at the University, a very notable woman), but I have
+never had much toleration for the female sex, possibly not much
+understanding; and being far from a bold man, I have ever shunned
+their company. Not only do I see no cause to regret this
+diffidence in myself, but have invariably remarked the most unhappy
+consequences follow those who were less wise. So much I thought
+proper to set down, lest I show myself unjust to Mrs. Henry. And,
+besides, the remark arose naturally, on a re-perusal of the letter
+which was the next step in these affairs, and reached me, to my
+sincere astonishment, by a private hand, some week or so after the
+departure of the last messenger.
+
+
+Letter from Colonel BURKE (afterwards Chevalier) to MR. MACKELLAR.
+TROYES IN CHAMPAGNE,
+July 12, 1756
+
+My Dear Sir, - You will doubtless be surprised to receive a
+communication from one so little known to you; but on the occasion
+I had the good fortune to rencounter you at Durrisdeer, I remarked
+you for a young man of a solid gravity of character: a
+qualification which I profess I admire and revere next to natural
+genius or the bold chivalrous spirit of the soldier. I was,
+besides, interested in the noble family which you have the honour
+to serve, or (to speak more by the book) to be the humble and
+respected friend of; and a conversation I had the pleasure to have
+with you very early in the morning has remained much upon my mind.
+
+Being the other day in Paris, on a visit from this famous city,
+where I am in garrison, I took occasion to inquire your name (which
+I profess I had forgot) at my friend, the Master of B.; and a fair
+opportunity occurring, I write to inform you of what's new.
+
+The Master of B. (when we had last some talk of him together) was
+in receipt, as I think I then told you, of a highly advantageous
+pension on the Scots Fund. He next received a company, and was
+soon after advanced to a regiment of his own. My dear sir, I do
+not offer to explain this circumstance; any more than why I myself,
+who have rid at the right hand of Princes, should be fubbed off
+with a pair of colours and sent to rot in a hole at the bottom of
+the province. Accustomed as I am to Courts, I cannot but feel it
+is no atmosphere for a plain soldier; and I could never hope to
+advance by similar means, even could I stoop to the endeavour. But
+our friend has a particular aptitude to succeed by the means of
+ladies; and if all be true that I have heard, he enjoyed a
+remarkable protection. It is like this turned against him; for
+when I had the honour to shake him by the hand, he was but newly
+released from the Bastille, where he had been cast on a sealed
+letter; and, though now released, has both lost his regiment and
+his pension. My dear sir, the loyalty of a plain Irishman will
+ultimately succeed in the place of craft; as I am sure a gentleman
+of your probity will agree.
+
+Now, sir, the Master is a man whose genius I admire beyond
+expression, and, besides, he is my friend; but I thought a little
+word of this revolution in his fortunes would not come amiss, for,
+in my opinion, the man's desperate. He spoke, when I saw him, of a
+trip to India (whither I am myself in some hope of accompanying my
+illustrious countryman, Mr. Lally); but for this he would require
+(as I understood) more money than was readily at his command. You
+may have heard a military proverb: that it is a good thing to make
+a bridge of gold to a flying enemy? I trust you will take my
+meaning and I subscribe myself, with proper respects to my Lord
+Durrisdeer, to his son, and to the beauteous Mrs. Durie,
+
+My dear Sir,
+
+Your obedient humble servant,
+
+FRANCIS BURKE.
+
+
+This missive I carried at once to Mr. Henry; and I think there was
+but the one thought between the two of us: that it had come a week
+too late. I made haste to send an answer to Colonel Burke, in
+which I begged him, if he should see the Master, to assure him his
+next messenger would be attended to. But with all my haste I was
+not in time to avert what was impending; the arrow had been drawn,
+it must now fly. I could almost doubt the power of Providence (and
+certainly His will) to stay the issue of events; and it is a
+strange thought, how many of us had been storing up the elements of
+this catastrophe, for how long a time, and with how blind an
+ignorance of what we did.
+
+
+From the coming of the Colonel's letter, I had a spyglass in my
+room, began to drop questions to the tenant folk, and as there was
+no great secrecy observed, and the freetrade (in our part) went by
+force as much as stealth, I had soon got together a knowledge of
+the signals in use, and knew pretty well to an hour when any
+messenger might be expected. I say, I questioned the tenants; for
+with the traders themselves, desperate blades that went habitually
+armed, I could never bring myself to meddle willingly. Indeed, by
+what proved in the sequel an unhappy chance, I was an object of
+scorn to some of these braggadocios; who had not only gratified me
+with a nickname, but catching me one night upon a by-path, and
+being all (as they would have said) somewhat merry, had caused me
+to dance for their diversion. The method employed was that of
+cruelly chipping at my toes with naked cutlasses, shouting at the
+same time "Square-Toes"; and though they did me no bodily mischief,
+I was none the less deplorably affected, and was indeed for several
+days confined to my bed: a scandal on the state of Scotland on
+which no comment is required.
+
+It happened on the afternoon of November 7th, in this same
+unfortunate year, that I espied, during my walk, the smoke of a
+beacon fire upon the Muckleross. It was drawing near time for my
+return; but the uneasiness upon my spirits was that day so great
+that I must burst through the thickets to the edge of what they
+call the Craig Head. The sun was already down, but there was still
+a broad light in the west, which showed me some of the smugglers
+treading out their signal fire upon the Ross, and in the bay the
+lugger lying with her sails brailed up. She was plainly but new
+come to anchor, and yet the skiff was already lowered and pulling
+for the landing-place at the end of the long shrubbery. And this I
+knew could signify but one thing, the coming of a messenger for
+Durrisdeer.
+
+I laid aside the remainder of my terrors, clambered down the brae -
+a place I had never ventured through before, and was hid among the
+shore-side thickets in time to see the boat touch. Captain Crail
+himself was steering, a thing not usual; by his side there sat a
+passenger; and the men gave way with difficulty, being hampered
+with near upon half a dozen portmanteaus, great and small. But the
+business of landing was briskly carried through; and presently the
+baggage was all tumbled on shore, the boat on its return voyage to
+the lugger, and the passenger standing alone upon the point of
+rock, a tall slender figure of a gentleman, habited in black, with
+a sword by his side and a walking-cane upon his wrist. As he so
+stood, he waved the cane to Captain Crail by way of salutation,
+with something both of grace and mockery that wrote the gesture
+deeply on my mind.
+
+No sooner was the boat away with my sworn enemies than I took a
+sort of half courage, came forth to the margin of the thicket, and
+there halted again, my mind being greatly pulled about between
+natural diffidence and a dark foreboding of the truth. Indeed, I
+might have stood there swithering all night, had not the stranger
+turned, spied me through the mists, which were beginning to fall,
+and waved and cried on me to draw near. I did so with a heart like
+lead.
+
+"Here, my good man," said he, in the English accent, "there are
+some things for Durrisdeer."
+
+I was now near enough to see him, a very handsome figure and
+countenance, swarthy, lean, long, with a quick, alert, black look,
+as of one who was a fighter, and accustomed to command; upon one
+cheek he had a mole, not unbecoming; a large diamond sparkled on
+his hand; his clothes, although of the one hue, were of a French
+and foppish design; his ruffles, which he wore longer than common,
+of exquisite lace; and I wondered the more to see him in such a
+guise when he was but newly landed from a dirty smuggling lugger.
+At the same time he had a better look at me, toised me a second
+time sharply, and then smiled.
+
+"I wager, my friend," says he, "that I know both your name and your
+nickname. I divined these very clothes upon your hand of writing,
+Mr. Mackellar."
+
+At these words I fell to shaking.
+
+"Oh,"' says he, "you need not be afraid of me. I bear no malice
+for your tedious letters; and it is my purpose to employ you a good
+deal. You may call me Mr. Bally: it is the name I have assumed;
+or rather (since I am addressing so great a precision) it is so I
+have curtailed my own. Come now, pick up that and that" -
+indicating two of the portmanteaus. "That will be as much as you
+are fit to bear, and the rest can very well wait. Come, lose no
+more time, if you please."
+
+His tone was so cutting that I managed to do as he bid by a sort of
+instinct, my mind being all the time quite lost. No sooner had I
+picked up the portmanteaus than he turned his back and marched off
+through the long shrubbery, where it began already to be dusk, for
+the wood is thick and evergreen. I followed behind, loaded almost
+to the dust, though I profess I was not conscious of the burthen;
+being swallowed up in the monstrosity of this return, and my mind
+flying like a weaver's shuttle.
+
+On a sudden I set the portmanteaus to the ground and halted. He
+turned and looked back at me.
+
+"Well?" said he.
+
+"You are the Master of Ballantrae?"
+
+"You will do me the justice to observe," says he, "I have made no
+secret with the astute Mackellar."
+
+"And in the name of God," cries I, "what brings you here? Go back,
+while it is yet time."
+
+"I thank you," said he. "Your master has chosen this way, and not
+I; but since he has made the choice, he (and you also) must abide
+by the result. And now pick up these things of mine, which you
+have set down in a very boggy place, and attend to that which I
+have made your business."
+
+But I had no thought now of obedience; I came straight up to him.
+"If nothing will move you to go back," said I; "though, sure, under
+all the circumstances, any Christian or even any gentleman would
+scruple to go forward . . . "
+
+"These are gratifying expressions," he threw in.
+
+"If nothing will move you to go back," I continued, "there are
+still some decencies to be observed. Wait here with your baggage,
+and I will go forward and prepare your family. Your father is an
+old man; and . . . " I stumbled . . . "there are decencies to be
+observed."
+
+"Truly," said he, "this Mackellar improves upon acquaintance. But
+look you here, my man, and understand it once for all - you waste
+your breath upon me, and I go my own way with inevitable motion."
+
+"Ah!" says I. "Is that so? We shall see then!"
+
+And I turned and took to my heels for Durrisdeer. He clutched at
+me and cried out angrily, and then I believe I heard him laugh, and
+then I am certain he pursued me for a step or two, and (I suppose)
+desisted. One thing at least is sure, that I came but a few
+minutes later to the door of the great house, nearly strangled for
+the lack of breath, but quite alone. Straight up the stair I ran,
+and burst into the hall, and stopped before the family without the
+power of speech; but I must have carried my story in my looks, for
+they rose out of their places and stared on me like changelings.
+
+"He has come," I panted out at last.
+
+"He?" said Mr. Henry.
+
+"Himself," said I.
+
+"My son?" cried my lord. "Imprudent, imprudent boy! Oh, could he
+not stay where he was safe!"
+
+Never a word says Mrs. Henry; nor did I look at her, I scarce knew
+why.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Henry, with a very deep breath, "and where is he?"
+
+"I left him in the long shrubbery," said I.
+
+"Take me to him," said he.
+
+So we went out together, he and I, without another word from any
+one; and in the midst of the gravelled plot encountered the Master
+strolling up, whistling as he came, and beating the air with his
+cane. There was still light enough overhead to recognise, though
+not to read, a countenance.
+
+"Ah! Jacob," says the Master. "So here is Esau back."
+
+"James," says Mr. Henry, "for God's sake, call me by my name. I
+will not pretend that I am glad to see you; but I would fain make
+you as welcome as I can in the house of our fathers."
+
+"Or in MY house? or YOURS?" says the Master. "Which were you about
+to say? But this is an old sore, and we need not rub it. If you
+would not share with me in Paris, I hope you will yet scarce deny
+your elder brother a corner of the fire at Durrisdeer?"
+
+"That is very idle speech," replied Mr. Henry. "And you understand
+the power of your position excellently well."
+
+"Why, I believe I do," said the other with a little laugh. And
+this, though they had never touched hands, was (as we may say) the
+end of the brothers' meeting; for at this the Master turned to me
+and bade me fetch his baggage.
+
+I, on my side, turned to Mr. Henry for a confirmation; perhaps with
+some defiance.
+
+"As long as the Master is here, Mr. Mackellar, you will very much
+oblige me by regarding his wishes as you would my own," says Mr.
+Henry. "We are constantly troubling you: will you be so good as
+send one of the servants?" - with an accent on the word.
+
+If this speech were anything at all, it was surely a well-deserved
+reproof upon the stranger; and yet, so devilish was his impudence,
+he twisted it the other way.
+
+"And shall we be common enough to say 'Sneck up'?" inquires he
+softly, looking upon me sideways.
+
+Had a kingdom depended on the act, I could not have trusted myself
+in words; even to call a servant was beyond me; I had rather serve
+the man myself than speak; and I turned away in silence and went
+into the long shrubbery, with a heart full of anger and despair.
+It was dark under the trees, and I walked before me and forgot what
+business I was come upon, till I near broke my shin on the
+portmanteaus. Then it was that I remarked a strange particular;
+for whereas I had before carried both and scarce observed it, it
+was now as much as I could do to manage one. And this, as it
+forced me to make two journeys, kept me the longer from the hall.
+
+When I got there, the business of welcome was over long ago; the
+company was already at supper; and by an oversight that cut me to
+the quick, my place had been forgotten. I had seen one side of the
+Master's return; now I was to see the other. It was he who first
+remarked my coming in and standing back (as I did) in some
+annoyance. He jumped from his seat.
+
+"And if I have not got the good Mackellar's place!" cries he.
+"John, lay another for Mr. Bally; I protest he will disturb no one,
+and your table is big enough for all."
+
+I could scarce credit my ears, nor yet my senses, when he took me
+by the shoulders and thrust me, laughing, into my own place - such
+an affectionate playfulness was in his voice. And while John laid
+the fresh place for him (a thing on which he still insisted), he
+went and leaned on his father's chair and looked down upon him, and
+the old man turned about and looked upwards on his son, with such a
+pleasant mutual tenderness that I could have carried my hand to my
+head in mere amazement.
+
+Yet all was of a piece. Never a harsh word fell from him, never a
+sneer showed upon his lip. He had laid aside even his cutting
+English accent, and spoke with the kindly Scots' tongue, that set a
+value on affectionate words; and though his manners had a graceful
+elegance mighty foreign to our ways in Durrisdeer, it was still a
+homely courtliness, that did not shame but flattered us. All that,
+he did throughout the meal, indeed, drinking wine with me with a
+notable respect, turning about for a pleasant word with John,
+fondling his father's hand, breaking into little merry tales of his
+adventures, calling up the past with happy reference - all he did
+was so becoming, and himself so handsome, that I could scarce
+wonder if my lord and Mrs. Henry sat about the board with radiant
+faces, or if John waited behind with dropping tears.
+
+As soon as supper was over, Mrs. Henry rose to withdraw.
+
+"This was never your way, Alison," said he.
+
+"It is my way now," she replied: which was notoriously false, "and
+I will give you a good-night, James, and a welcome - from the
+dead," said she, and her voice dropped and trembled.
+
+Poor Mr. Henry, who had made rather a heavy figure through the
+meal, was more concerned than ever; pleased to see his wife
+withdraw, and yet half displeased, as he thought upon the cause of
+it; and the next moment altogether dashed by the fervour of her
+speech.
+
+On my part, I thought I was now one too many; and was stealing
+after Mrs. Henry, when the Master saw me.
+
+"Now, Mr. Mackellar," says he, "I take this near on an
+unfriendliness. I cannot have you go: this is to make a stranger
+of the prodigal son; and let me remind you where - in his own
+father's house! Come, sit ye down, and drink another glass with
+Mr. Bally."
+
+"Ay, ay, Mr. Mackellar," says my lord, "we must not make a stranger
+either of him or you. I have been telling my son," he added, his
+voice brightening as usual on the word, "how much we valued all
+your friendly service."
+
+So I sat there, silent, till my usual hour; and might have been
+almost deceived in the man's nature but for one passage, in which
+his perfidy appeared too plain. Here was the passage; of which,
+after what he knows of the brothers' meeting, the reader shall
+consider for himself. Mr. Henry sitting somewhat dully, in spite
+of his best endeavours to carry things before my lord, up jumps the
+Master, passes about the board, and claps his brother on the
+shoulder.
+
+"Come, come, HAIRRY LAD," says he, with a broad accent such as they
+must have used together when they were boys, "you must not be
+downcast because your brother has come home. All's yours, that's
+sure enough, and little I grudge it you. Neither must you grudge
+me my place beside my father's fire."
+
+"And that is too true, Henry," says my old lord with a little
+frown, a thing rare with him. "You have been the elder brother of
+the parable in the good sense; you must be careful of the other."
+
+"I am easily put in the wrong," said Mr. Henry.
+
+"Who puts you in the wrong?" cried my lord, I thought very tartly
+for so mild a man. "You have earned my gratitude and your
+brother's many thousand times: you may count on its endurance; and
+let that suffice."
+
+"Ay, Harry, that you may," said the Master; and I thought Mr. Henry
+looked at him with a kind of wildness in his eye.
+
+On all the miserable business that now followed, I have four
+questions that I asked myself often at the time and ask myself
+still:- Was the man moved by a particular sentiment against Mr.
+Henry? or by what he thought to be his interest? or by a mere
+delight in cruelty such as cats display and theologians tell us of
+the devil? or by what he would have called love? My common opinion
+halts among the three first; but perhaps there lay at the spring of
+his behaviour an element of all. As thus:- Animosity to Mr. Henry
+would explain his hateful usage of him when they were alone; the
+interests he came to serve would explain his very different
+attitude before my lord; that and some spice of a design of
+gallantry, his care to stand well with Mrs. Henry; and the pleasure
+of malice for itself, the pains he was continually at to mingle and
+oppose these lines of conduct.
+
+Partly because I was a very open friend to my patron, partly
+because in my letters to Paris I had often given myself some
+freedom of remonstrance, I was included in his diabolical
+amusement. When I was alone with him, he pursued me with sneers;
+before the family he used me with the extreme of friendly
+condescension. This was not only painful in itself; not only did
+it put me continually in the wrong; but there was in it an element
+of insult indescribable. That he should thus leave me out in his
+dissimulation, as though even my testimony were too despicable to
+be considered, galled me to the blood. But what it was to me is
+not worth notice. I make but memorandum of it here; and chiefly
+for this reason, that it had one good result, and gave me the
+quicker sense of Mr. Henry's martyrdom.
+
+It was on him the burthen fell. How was he to respond to the
+public advances of one who never lost a chance of gibing him in
+private? How was he to smile back on the deceiver and the
+insulter? He was condemned to seem ungracious. He was condemned
+to silence. Had he been less proud, had he spoken, who would have
+credited the truth? The acted calumny had done its work; my lord
+and Mrs. Henry were the daily witnesses of what went on; they could
+have sworn in court that the Master was a model of long-suffering
+good-nature, and Mr. Henry a pattern of jealousy and thanklessness.
+And ugly enough as these must have appeared in any one, they seemed
+tenfold uglier in Mr. Henry; for who could forget that the Master
+lay in peril of his life, and that he had already lost his
+mistress, his title, and his fortune?
+
+"Henry, will you ride with me?" asks the Master one day.
+
+And Mr. Henry, who had been goaded by the man all morning, raps
+out: "I will not."
+
+"I sometimes wish you would be kinder, Henry," says the other,
+wistfully.
+
+I give this for a specimen; but such scenes befell continually.
+Small wonder if Mr. Henry was blamed; small wonder if I fretted
+myself into something near upon a bilious fever; nay, and at the
+mere recollection feel a bitterness in my blood.
+
+Sure, never in this world was a more diabolical contrivance: so
+perfidious, so simple, so impossible to combat. And yet I think
+again, and I think always, Mrs. Henry might have road between the
+lines; she might have had more knowledge of her husband's nature;
+after all these years of marriage she might have commanded or
+captured his confidence. And my old lord, too - that very watchful
+gentleman - where was all his observation? But, for one thing, the
+deceit was practised by a master hand, and might have gulled an
+angel. For another (in the case of Mrs. Henry), I have observed
+there are no persons so far away as those who are both married and
+estranged, so that they seem out of ear-shot or to have no common
+tongue. For a third (in the case of both of these spectators),
+they were blinded by old ingrained predilection. And for a fourth,
+the risk the Master was supposed to stand in (supposed, I say - you
+will soon hear why) made it seem the more ungenerous to criticise;
+and, keeping them in a perpetual tender solicitude about his life,
+blinded them the more effectually to his faults.
+
+It was during this time that I perceived most clearly the effect of
+manner, and was led to lament most deeply the plainness of my own.
+Mr. Henry had the essence of a gentleman; when he was moved, when
+there was any call of circumstance, he could play his part with
+dignity and spirit; but in the day's commerce (it is idle to deny
+it) he fell short of the ornamental. The Master (on the other
+hand) had never a movement but it commanded him. So it befell that
+when the one appeared gracious and the other ungracious, every
+trick of their bodies seemed to call out confirmation. Not that
+alone: but the more deeply Mr. Henry floundered in his brother's
+toils, the more clownish he grew; and the more the Master enjoyed
+his spiteful entertainment, the more engagingly, the more
+smilingly, he went! So that the plot, by its own scope and
+progress, furthered and confirmed itself.
+
+It was one of the man's arts to use the peril in which (as I say)
+he was supposed to stand. He spoke of it to those who loved him
+with a gentle pleasantry, which made it the more touching. To Mr.
+Henry he used it as a cruel weapon of offence. I remember his
+laying his finger on the clean lozenge of the painted window one
+day when we three were alone together in the hall. "Here went your
+lucky guinea, Jacob," said he. And when Mr. Henry only looked upon
+him darkly, "Oh!" he added, "you need not look such impotent
+malice, my good fly. You can be rid of your spider when you
+please. How long, O Lord? When are you to be wrought to the point
+of a denunciation, scrupulous brother? It is one of my interests
+in this dreary hole. I ever loved experiment." Still Mr. Henry
+only stared upon him with a grooming brow, and a changed colour;
+and at last the Master broke out in a laugh and clapped him on the
+shoulder, calling him a sulky dog. At this my patron leaped back
+with a gesture I thought very dangerous; and I must suppose the
+Master thought so too, for he looked the least in the world
+discountenance, and I do not remember him again to have laid hands
+on Mr. Henry.
+
+But though he had his peril always on his lips in the one way or
+the other, I thought his conduct strangely incautious, and began to
+fancy the Government - who had set a price upon his head - was gone
+sound asleep. I will not deny I was tempted with the wish to
+denounce him; but two thoughts withheld me: one, that if he were
+thus to end his life upon an honourable scaffold, the man would be
+canonised for good in the minds of his father and my patron's wife;
+the other, that if I was anyway mingled in the matter, Mr. Henry
+himself would scarce escape some glancings of suspicion. And in
+the meanwhile our enemy went in and out more than I could have
+thought possible, the fact that he was home again was buzzed about
+all the country-side, and yet he was never stirred. Of all these
+so-many and so-different persons who were acquainted with his
+presence, none had the least greed - as I used to say in my
+annoyance - or the least loyalty; and the man rode here and there -
+fully more welcome, considering the lees of old unpopularity, than
+Mr. Henry - and considering the freetraders, far safer than myself.
+
+Not but what he had a trouble of his own; and this, as it brought
+about the gravest consequences, I must now relate. The reader will
+scarce have forgotten Jessie Broun; her way of life was much among
+the smuggling party; Captain Crail himself was of her intimates;
+and she had early word of Mr. Bally's presence at the house. In my
+opinion, she had long ceased to care two straws for the Master's
+person; but it was become her habit to connect herself continually
+with the Master's name; that was the ground of all her play-acting;
+and so now, when he was back, she thought she owed it to herself to
+grow a haunter of the neighbourhood of Durrisdeer. The Master
+could scarce go abroad but she was there in wait for him; a
+scandalous figure of a woman, not often sober; hailing him wildly
+as "her bonny laddie," quoting pedlar's poetry, and, as I receive
+the story, even seeking to weep upon his neck. I own I rubbed my
+hands over this persecution; but the Master, who laid so much upon
+others, was himself the least patient of men. There were strange
+scenes enacted in the policies. Some say he took his cane to her,
+and Jessie fell back upon her former weapons - stones. It is
+certain at least that he made a motion to Captain Crail to have the
+woman trepanned, and that the Captain refused the proposition with
+uncommon vehemence. And the end of the matter was victory for
+Jessie. Money was got together; an interview took place, in which
+my proud gentleman must consent to be kissed and wept upon; and the
+woman was set up in a public of her own, somewhere on Solway side
+(but I forget where), and, by the only news I ever had of it,
+extremely ill-frequented.
+
+This is to look forward. After Jessie had been but a little while
+upon his heels, the Master comes to me one day in the steward's
+office, and with more civility than usual, "Mackellar," says he,
+"there is a damned crazy wench comes about here. I cannot well
+move in the matter myself, which brings me to you. Be so good as
+to see to it: the men must have a strict injunction to drive the
+wench away."
+
+"Sir," said I, trembling a little, "you can do your own dirty
+errands for yourself."
+
+He said not a word to that, and left the room.
+
+Presently came Mr. Henry. "Here is news!" cried he. "It seems all
+is not enough, and you must add to my wretchedness. It seems you
+have insulted Mr. Bally."
+
+"Under your kind favour, Mr. Henry," said I, "it was he that
+insulted me, and, as I think, grossly. But I may have been
+careless of your position when I spoke; and if you think so when
+you know all, my dear patron, you have but to say the word. For
+you I would obey in any point whatever, even to sin, God pardon
+me!" And thereupon I told him what had passed.
+
+Mr. Henry smiled to himself; a grimmer smile I never witnessed.
+"You did exactly well," said he. "He shall drink his Jessie Broun
+to the dregs." And then, spying the Master outside, he opened the
+window, and crying to him by the name of Mr. Bally, asked him to
+step up and have a word.
+
+"James," said he, when our persecutor had come in and closed the
+door behind him, looking at me with a smile, as if he thought I was
+to be humbled, "you brought me a complaint against Mr. Mackellar,
+into which I have inquired. I need not tell you I would always
+take his word against yours; for we are alone, and I am going to
+use something of your own freedom. Mr. Mackellar is a gentleman I
+value; and you must contrive, so long as you are under this roof,
+to bring yourself into no more collisions with one whom I will
+support at any possible cost to me or mine. As for the errand upon
+which you came to him, you must deliver yourself from the
+consequences of your own cruelty, and, none of my servants shall be
+at all employed in such a case."
+
+"My father's servants, I believe," says the Master.
+
+"Go to him with this tale," said Mr. Henry.
+
+The Master grew very white. He pointed at me with his finger. "I
+want that man discharged," he said.
+
+"He shall not be," said Mr. Henry.
+
+"You shall pay pretty dear for this," says the Master.
+
+"I have paid so dear already for a wicked brother," said Mr. Henry,
+"that I am bankrupt even of fears. You have no place left where
+you can strike me."
+
+"I will show you about that," says the Master, and went softly
+away.
+
+"What will he do next, Mackellar?" cries Mr. Henry.
+
+"Let me go away," said I. "My dear patron, let me go away; I am
+but the beginning of fresh sorrows."
+
+"Would you leave me quite alone?" said he.
+
+
+We were not long in suspense as to the nature of the new assault.
+Up to that hour the Master had played a very close game with Mrs.
+Henry; avoiding pointedly to be alone with her, which I took at the
+time for an effect of decency, but now think to be a most insidious
+art; meeting her, you may say, at meal-time only; and behaving,
+when he did so, like an affectionate brother. Up to that hour, you
+may say he had scarce directly interfered between Mr. Henry and his
+wife; except in so far as he had manoeuvred the one quite forth
+from the good graces of the other. Now all that was to be changed;
+but whether really in revenge, or because he was wearying of
+Durrisdeer and looked about for some diversion, who but the devil
+shall decide?
+
+From that hour, at least, began the siege of Mrs. Henry; a thing so
+deftly carried on that I scarce know if she was aware of it
+herself, and that her husband must look on in silence. The first
+parallel was opened (as was made to appear) by accident. The talk
+fell, as it did often, on the exiles in France; so it glided to the
+matter of their songs.
+
+"There is one," says the Master, "if you are curious in these
+matters, that has always seemed to me very moving. The poetry is
+harsh; and yet, perhaps because of my situation, it has always
+found the way to my heart. It is supposed to be sung, I should
+tell you, by an exile's sweetheart; and represents perhaps, not so
+much the truth of what she is thinking, as the truth of what he
+hopes of her, poor soul! in these far lands." And here the Master
+sighed, "I protest it is a pathetic sight when a score of rough
+Irish, all common sentinels, get to this song; and you may see, by
+their falling tears, how it strikes home to them. It goes thus,
+father," says he, very adroitly taking my lord for his listener,
+"and if I cannot get to the end of it, you must think it is a
+common case with us exiles." And thereupon he struck up the same
+air as I had heard the Colonel whistle; but now to words, rustic
+indeed, yet most pathetically setting forth a poor girl's
+aspirations for an exiled lover; of which one verse indeed (or
+something like it) still sticks by me:-
+
+
+O, I will dye my petticoat red,
+With my dear boy I'll beg my bread,
+Though all my friends should wish me dead,
+For Willie among the rushes, O!
+
+
+He sang it well, even as a song; but he did better yet a performer.
+I have heard famous actors, when there was not a dry eye in the
+Edinburgh theatre; a great wonder to behold; but no more wonderful
+than how the Master played upon that little ballad, and on those
+who heard him, like an instrument, and seemed now upon the point of
+failing, and now to conquer his distress, so that words and music
+seemed to pour out of his own heart and his own past, and to be
+aimed directly at Mrs. Henry. And his art went further yet; for
+all was so delicately touched, it seemed impossible to suspect him
+of the least design; and so far from making a parade of emotion,
+you would have sworn he was striving to be calm. When it came to
+an end, we all sat silent for a time; he had chosen the dusk of the
+afternoon, so that none could see his neighbour's face; but it
+seemed as if we held our breathing; only my old lord cleared his
+throat. The first to move was the singer, who got to his feet
+suddenly and softly, and went and walked softly to and fro in the
+low end of the hall, Mr. Henry's customary place. We were to
+suppose that he there struggled down the last of his emotion; for
+he presently returned and launched into a disquisition on the
+nature of the Irish (always so much miscalled, and whom he
+defended) in his natural voice; so that, before the lights were
+brought, we were in the usual course of talk. But even then,
+methought Mrs. Henry's face was a shade pale; and, for another
+thing, she withdrew almost at once.
+
+The next sign was a friendship this insidious devil struck up with
+innocent Miss Katharine; so that they were always together, hand in
+hand, or she climbing on his knee, like a pair of children. Like
+all his diabolical acts, this cut in several ways. It was the last
+stroke to Mr. Henry, to see his own babe debauched against him; it
+made him harsh with the poor innocent, which brought him still a
+peg lower in his wife's esteem; and (to conclude) it was a bond of
+union between the lady and the Master. Under this influence, their
+old reserve melted by daily stages. Presently there came walks in
+the long shrubbery, talks in the Belvedere, and I know not what
+tender familiarity. I am sure Mrs. Henry was like many a good
+woman; she had a whole conscience but perhaps by the means of a
+little winking. For even to so dull an observer as myself, it was
+plain her kindness was of a more moving nature than the sisterly.
+The tones of her voice appeared more numerous; she had a light and
+softness in her eye; she was more gentle with all of us, even with
+Mr. Henry, even with myself; methought she breathed of some quiet
+melancholy happiness.
+
+To look on at this, what a torment it was for Mr. Henry! And yet
+it brought our ultimate deliverance, as I am soon to tell.
+
+
+The purport of the Master's stay was no more noble (gild it as they
+might) than to wring money out. He had some design of a fortune in
+the French Indies, as the Chevalier wrote me; and it was the sum
+required for this that he came seeking. For the rest of the family
+it spelled ruin; but my lord, in his incredible partiality, pushed
+ever for the granting. The family was now so narrowed down
+(indeed, there were no more of them than just the father and the
+two sons) that it was possible to break the entail and alienate a
+piece of land. And to this, at first by hints, and then by open
+pressure, Mr. Henry was brought to consent. He never would have
+done so, I am very well assured, but for the weight of the distress
+under which he laboured. But for his passionate eagerness to see
+his brother gone, he would not thus have broken with his own
+sentiment and the traditions of his house. And even so, he sold
+them his consent at a dear rate, speaking for once openly, and
+holding the business up in its own shameful colours.
+
+"You will observe," he said, "this is an injustice to my son, if
+ever I have one."
+
+"But that you are not likely to have," said my lord.
+
+"God knows!" says Mr. Henry. "And considering the cruel falseness
+of the position in which I stand to my brother, and that you, my
+lord, are my father, and have the right to command me, I set my
+hand to this paper. But one thing I will say first: I have been
+ungenerously pushed, and when next, my lord, you are tempted to
+compare your sons, I call on you to remember what I have done and
+what he has done. Acts are the fair test."
+
+My lord was the most uneasy man I ever saw; even in his old face
+the blood came up. "I think this is not a very wisely chosen
+moment, Henry, for complaints," said he. "This takes away from the
+merit of your generosity."
+
+"Do not deceive yourself, my lord," said Mr. Henry. "This
+injustice is not done from generosity to him, but in obedience to
+yourself."
+
+"Before strangers . . . " begins my lord, still more unhappily
+affected.
+
+"There is no one but Mackellar here," said Mr. Henry; "he is my
+friend. And, my lord, as you make him no stranger to your frequent
+blame, it were hard if I must keep him one to a thing so rare as my
+defence."
+
+Almost I believe my lord would have rescinded his decision; but the
+Master was on the watch.
+
+"Ah! Henry, Henry," says he, "you are the best of us still.
+Rugged and true! Ah! man, I wish I was as good."
+
+And at that instance of his favourite's generosity my lord desisted
+from his hesitation, and the deed was signed.
+
+As soon as it could he brought about, the land of Ochterhall was
+sold for much below its value, and the money paid over to our leech
+and sent by some private carriage into France. Or so he said;
+though I have suspected since it did not go so far. And now here
+was all the man's business brought to a successful head, and his
+pockets once more bulging with our gold; and yet the point for
+which we had consented to this sacrifice was still denied us, and
+the visitor still lingered on at Durrisdeer. Whether in malice, or
+because the time was not yet come for his adventure to the Indies,
+or because he had hopes of his design on Mrs. Henry, or from the
+orders of the Government, who shall say? but linger he did, and
+that for weeks.
+
+You will observe I say: from the orders of Government; for about
+this time the man's disreputable secret trickled out.
+
+The first hint I had was from a tenant, who commented on the
+Master's stay, and yet more on his security; for this tenant was a
+Jacobitish sympathiser, and had lost a son at Culloden, which gave
+him the more critical eye. "There is one thing," said he, "that I
+cannot but think strange; and that is how he got to Cockermouth."
+
+"To Cockermouth?" said I, with a sudden memory of my first wonder
+on beholding the man disembark so point-de-vice after so long a
+voyage.
+
+"Why, yes," says the tenant, "it was there he was picked up by
+Captain Crail. You thought he had come from France by sea? And so
+we all did."
+
+I turned this news a little in my head, and then carried it to Mr.
+Henry. "Here is an odd circumstance," said I, and told him.
+
+"What matters how he came, Mackellar, so long as he is here?"
+groans Mr. Henry.
+
+"No, sir," said I, "but think again! Does not this smack a little
+of some Government connivance? You know how much we have wondered
+already at the man's security."
+
+"Stop," said Mr. Henry. "Let me think of this." And as he
+thought, there came that grim smile upon his face that was a little
+like the Master's. "Give me paper," said he. And he sat without
+another word and wrote to a gentleman of his acquaintance - I will
+name no unnecessary names, but he was one in a high place. This
+letter I despatched by the only hand I could depend upon in such a
+case - Macconochie's; and the old man rode hard, for he was back
+with the reply before even my eagerness had ventured to expect him.
+Again, as he read it, Mr. Henry had the same grim smile.
+
+"This is the best you have done for me yet, Mackellar," says he.
+"With this in my hand I will give him a shog. Watch for us at
+dinner."
+
+At dinner accordingly Mr. Henry proposed some very public
+appearance for the Master; and my lord, as he had hoped, objected
+to the danger of the course.
+
+"Oh!" says Mr. Henry, very easily, "you need no longer keep this up
+with me. I am as much in the secret as yourself."
+
+"In the secret?" says my lord. "What do you mean, Henry? I give
+you my word, I am in no secret from which you are excluded."
+
+The Master had changed countenance, and I saw he was struck in a
+joint of his harness.
+
+"How?" says Mr. Henry, turning to him with a huge appearance of
+surprise. "I see you serve your masters very faithfully; but I had
+thought you would have been humane enough to set your father's mind
+at rest."
+
+"What are you talking of? I refuse to have my business publicly
+discussed. I order this to cease," cries the Master very foolishly
+and passionately, and indeed more like a child than a man.
+
+"So much discretion was not looked for at your hands, I can assure
+you," continued Mr. Henry. "For see what my correspondent writes"
+- unfolding the paper - "'It is, of course, in the interests both
+of the Government and the gentleman whom we may perhaps best
+continue to call Mr. Bally, to keep this understanding secret; but
+it was never meant his own family should continue to endure the
+suspense you paint so feelingly; and I am pleased mine should be
+the hand to set these fears at rest. Mr. Bally is as safe in Great
+Britain as yourself.'"
+
+"Is this possible?" cries my lord, looking at his son, with a great
+deal of wonder and still more of suspicion in his face.
+
+"My dear father," says the Master, already much recovered. "I am
+overjoyed that this may be disclosed. My own instructions, direct
+from London, bore a very contrary sense, and I was charged to keep
+the indulgence secret from every one, yourself not excepted, and
+indeed yourself expressly named - as I can show in black and white
+unless I have destroyed the letter. They must have changed their
+mind very swiftly, for the whole matter is still quite fresh; or
+rather, Henry's correspondent must have misconceived that part, as
+he seems to have misconceived the rest. To tell you the truth,
+sir," he continued, getting visibly more easy, "I had supposed this
+unexplained favour to a rebel was the effect of some application
+from yourself; and the injunction to secrecy among my family the
+result of a desire on your part to conceal your kindness. Hence I
+was the more careful to obey orders. It remains now to guess by
+what other channel indulgence can have flowed on so notorious an
+offender as myself; for I do not think your son need defend himself
+from what seems hinted at in Henry's letter. I have never yet
+heard of a Durrisdeer who was a turncoat or a spy," says he,
+proudly.
+
+And so it seemed he had swum out of this danger unharmed; but this
+was to reckon without a blunder he had made, and without the
+pertinacity of Mr. Henry, who was now to show he had something of
+his brother's spirit.
+
+"You say the matter is still fresh," says Mr. Henry.
+
+"It is recent," says the Master, with a fair show of stoutness and
+yet not without a quaver.
+
+"Is it so recent as that?" asks Mr. Henry, like a man a little
+puzzled, and spreading his letter forth again.
+
+In all the letter there was no word as to the date; but how was the
+Master to know that?
+
+"It seemed to come late enough for me," says he, with a laugh. And
+at the sound of that laugh, which rang false, like a cracked bell,
+my lord looked at him again across the table, and I saw his old
+lips draw together close.
+
+"No," said Mr. Henry, still glancing on his letter, "but I remember
+your expression. You said it was very fresh."
+
+And here we had a proof of our victory, and the strongest instance
+yet of my lord's incredible indulgence; for what must he do but
+interfere to save his favourite from exposure!
+
+"I think, Henry," says he, with a kind of pitiful eagerness, "I
+think we need dispute no more. We are all rejoiced at last to find
+your brother safe; we are all at one on that; and, as grateful
+subjects, we can do no less than drink to the king's health and
+bounty."
+
+Thus was the Master extricated; but at least he had been put to his
+defence, he had come lamely out, and the attraction of his personal
+danger was now publicly plucked away from him. My lord, in his
+heart of hearts, now knew his favourite to be a Government spy; and
+Mrs. Henry (however she explained the tale) was notably cold in her
+behaviour to the discredited hero of romance. Thus in the best
+fabric of duplicity, there is some weak point, if you can strike
+it, which will loosen all; and if, by this fortunate stroke, we had
+not shaken the idol, who can say how it might have gone with us at
+the catastrophe?
+
+And yet at the time we seemed to have accomplished nothing. Before
+a day or two he had wiped off the ill-results of his discomfiture,
+and, to all appearance, stood as high as ever. As for my Lord
+Durrisdeer, he was sunk in parental partiality; it was not so much
+love, which should be an active quality, as an apathy and torpor of
+his other powers; and forgiveness (so to mis-apply a noble word)
+flowed from him in sheer weakness, like the tears of senility.
+Mrs. Henry's was a different case; and Heaven alone knows what he
+found to say to her, or how he persuaded her from her contempt. It
+is one of the worst things of sentiment, that the voice grows to be
+more important than the words, and the speaker than that which is
+spoken. But some excuse the Master must have found, or perhaps he
+had even struck upon some art to wrest this exposure to his own
+advantage; for after a time of coldness, it seemed as if things
+went worse than ever between him and Mrs. Henry. They were then
+constantly together. I would not be thought to cut one shadow of
+blame, beyond what is due to a half-wilful blindness, on that
+unfortunate lady; but I do think, in these last days, she was
+playing very near the fire; and whether I be wrong or not in that,
+one thing is sure and quite sufficient: Mr. Henry thought so. The
+poor gentleman sat for days in my room, so great a picture of
+distress that I could never venture to address him; yet it is to be
+thought he found some comfort even in my presence and the knowledge
+of my sympathy. There were times, too, when we talked, and a
+strange manner of talk it was; there was never a person named, nor
+an individual circumstance referred to; yet we had the same matter
+in our minds, and we were each aware of it. It is a strange art
+that can thus be practised; to talk for hours of a thing, and never
+name nor yet so much as hint at it. And I remember I wondered if
+it was by some such natural skill that the Master made love to Mrs.
+Henry all day long (as he manifestly did), yet never startled her
+into reserve.
+
+To show how far affairs had gone with Mr. Henry, I will give some
+words of his, uttered (as I have cause not to forget) upon the 26th
+of February, 1757. It was unseasonable weather, a cast back into
+Winter: windless, bitter cold, the world all white with rime, the
+sky low and gray . the sea black and silent like a quarry-hole.
+Mr. Henry sat close by the fire, and debated (as was now common
+with him) whether "a man" should "do things," whether "interference
+was wise," and the like general propositions, which each of us
+particularly applied. I was by the window, looking out, when there
+passed below me the Master, Mrs. Henry, and Miss Katharine, that
+now constant trio. The child was running to and fro, delighted
+with the frost; the Master spoke close in the lady's ear with what
+seemed (even from so far) a devilish grace of insinuation; and she
+on her part looked on the ground like a person lost in listening.
+I broke out of my reserve.
+
+"If I were you, Mr. Henry," said I, "I would deal openly with my
+lord."
+
+"Mackellar, Mackellar," said he, "you do not see the weakness of my
+ground. I can carry no such base thoughts to any one - to my
+father least of all; that would be to fall into the bottom of his
+scorn. The weakness of my ground," he continued, "lies in myself,
+that I am not one who engages love. I have their gratitude, they
+all tell me that; I have a rich estate of it! But I am not present
+in their minds; they are moved neither to think with me nor to
+think for me. There is my loss!" He got to his feet, and trod
+down the fire. "But some method must be found, Mackellar," said
+he, looking at me suddenly over his shoulder; "some way must be
+found. I am a man of a great deal of patience - far too much - far
+too much. I begin to despise myself. And yet, sure, never was a
+man involved in such a toil!" He fell back to his brooding.
+
+"Cheer up," said I. "It will burst of itself."
+
+"I am far past anger now," says he, which had so little coherency
+with my own observation that I let both fall.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. - ACCOUNT OF ALL THAT PASSED ON THE NIGHT ON FEBRUARY
+27TH, 1757.
+
+
+
+On the evening of the interview referred to, the Master went
+abroad; he was abroad a great deal of the next day also, that fatal
+27th; but where he went, or what he did, we never concerned
+ourselves to ask until next day. If we had done so, and by any
+chance found out, it might have changed all. But as all we did was
+done in ignorance, and should be so judged, I shall so narrate
+these passages as they appeared to us in the moment of their birth,
+and reserve all that I since discovered for the time of its
+discovery. For I have now come to one of the dark parts of my
+narrative, and must engage the reader's indulgence for my patron.
+
+All the 27th that rigorous weather endured: a stifling cold; the
+folk passing about like smoking chimneys; the wide hearth in the
+hall piled high with fuel; some of the spring birds that had
+already blundered north into our neighbourhood, besieging the
+windows of the house or trotting on the frozen turf like things
+distracted. About noon there came a blink of sunshine, showing a
+very pretty, wintry, frosty landscape of white hills and woods,
+with Crail's lugger waiting for a wind under the Craig Head, and
+the smoke mounting straight into the air from every farm and
+cottage. With the coming of night, the haze closed in overhead; it
+fell dark and still and starless, and exceeding cold: a night the
+most unseasonable, fit for strange events.
+
+Mrs. Henry withdrew, as was now her custom, very early. We had set
+ourselves of late to pass the evening with a game of cards; another
+mark that our visitor was wearying mightily of the life at
+Durrisdeer; and we had not been long at this when my old lord
+slipped from his place beside the fire, and was off without a word
+to seek the warmth of bed. The three thus left together had
+neither love nor courtesy to share; not one of us would have sat up
+one instant to oblige another; yet from the influence of custom,
+and as the cards had just been dealt, we continued the form of
+playing out the round. I should say we were late sitters; and
+though my lord had departed earlier than was his custom, twelve was
+already gone some time upon the clock, and the servants long ago in
+bed. Another thing I should say, that although I never saw the
+Master anyway affected with liquor, he had been drinking freely,
+and was perhaps (although he showed it not) a trifle heated.
+
+Anyway, he now practised one of his transitions; and so soon as the
+door closed behind my lord, and without the smallest change of
+voice, shifted from ordinary civil talk into a stream of insult.
+
+"My dear Henry, it is yours to play," he had been saying, and now
+continued: "It is a very strange thing how, even in so small a
+matter as a game of cards, you display your rusticity. You play,
+Jacob, like a bonnet laird, or a sailor in a tavern. The same
+dulness, the same petty greed, CETTE LENTEUR D'HEBETE QUI ME FAIT
+RAGER; it is strange I should have such a brother. Even Square-
+toes has a certain vivacity when his stake is imperilled; but the
+dreariness of a game with you I positively lack language to
+depict."
+
+Mr. Henry continued to look at his cards, as though very maturely
+considering some play; but his mind was elsewhere.
+
+"Dear God, will this never be done?" cries the Master. "QUEL
+LOURDEAU! But why do I trouble you with French expressions, which
+are lost on such an ignoramus? A LOURDEAU, my dear brother, is as
+we might say a bumpkin, a clown, a clodpole: a fellow without
+grace, lightness, quickness; any gift of pleasing, any natural
+brilliancy: such a one as you shall see, when you desire, by
+looking in the mirror. I tell you these things for your good, I
+assure you; and besides, Square-toes" (looking at me and stifling a
+yawn), "it is one of my diversions in this very dreary spot to
+toast you and your master at the fire like chestnuts. I have great
+pleasure in your case, for I observe the nickname (rustic as it is)
+has always the power to make you writhe. But sometimes I have more
+trouble with this dear fellow here, who seems to have gone to sleep
+upon his cards. Do you not see the applicability of the epithet I
+have just explained, dear Henry? Let me show you. For instance,
+with all those solid qualities which I delight to recognise in you,
+I never knew a woman who did not prefer me - nor, I think," he
+continued, with the most silken deliberation, "I think - who did
+not continue to prefer me."
+
+Mr. Henry laid down his cards. He rose to his feet very softly,
+and seemed all the while like a person in deep thought. "You
+coward!" he said gently, as if to himself. And then, with neither
+hurry nor any particular violence, he struck the Master in the
+mouth.
+
+The Master sprang to his feet like one transfigured; I had never
+seen the man so beautiful. "A blow!" he cried. "I would not take
+a blow from God Almighty!"
+
+"Lower your voice," said Mr. Henry. "Do you wish my father to
+interfere for you again?"
+
+"Gentlemen, gentlemen," I cried, and sought to come between them.
+
+The Master caught me by the shoulder, held me at arm's length, and
+still addressing his brother: "Do you know what this means?" said
+he.
+
+"It was the most deliberate act of my life," says Mr. Henry.
+
+"I must have blood, I must have blood for this," says the Master.
+
+"Please God it shall be yours," said Mr. Henry; and he went to the
+wall and took down a pair of swords that hung there with others,
+naked. These he presented to the Master by the points. "Mackellar
+shall see us play fair," said Mr. Henry. "I think it very
+needful."
+
+"You need insult me no more," said the Master, taking one of the
+swords at random. "I have hated you all my life."
+
+"My father is but newly gone to bed," said Mr. Henry. "We must go
+somewhere forth of the house."
+
+"There is an excellent place in the long shrubbery," said the
+Master.
+
+"Gentlemen," said I, "shame upon you both! Sons of the same
+mother, would you turn against the life she gave you?"
+
+"Even so, Mackellar," said Mr. Henry, with the same perfect
+quietude of manner he had shown throughout.
+
+"It is what I will prevent," said I.
+
+And now here is a blot upon my life. At these words of mine the
+Master turned his blade against my bosom; I saw the light run along
+the steel; and I threw up my arms and fell to my knees before him
+on the floor. "No, no," I cried, like a baby.
+
+"We shall have no more trouble with him," said the Master. "It is
+a good thing to have a coward in the house."
+
+"We must have light," said Mr. Henry, as though there had been no
+interruption.
+
+"This trembler can bring a pair of candles," said the Master.
+
+To my shame be it said, I was still so blinded with the flashing of
+that bare sword that I volunteered to bring a lantern.
+
+"We do not need a l-l-lantern," says the Master, mocking me.
+"There is no breath of air. Come, get to your feet, take a pair of
+lights, and go before. I am close behind with this - " making. the
+blade glitter as he spoke.
+
+I took up the candlesticks and went before them, steps that I would
+give my hand to recall; but a coward is a slave at the best; and
+even as I went, my teeth smote each other in my mouth. It was as
+he had said: there was no breath stirring; a windless stricture of
+frost had bound the air; and as we went forth in the shine of the
+candles, the blackness was like a roof over our heads. Never a
+word was said; there was never a sound but the creaking of our
+steps along the frozen path. The cold of the night fell about me
+like a bucket of water; I shook as I went with more than terror;
+but my companions, bare-headed like myself, and fresh from the warm
+ball, appeared not even conscious of the change.
+
+"Here is the place," said the Master. "Set down the candles."
+
+I did as he bid me, and presently the flames went up, as steady as
+in a chamber, in the midst of the frosted trees, and I beheld these
+two brothers take their places.
+
+"The light is something in my eyes," said the Master.
+
+"I will give you every advantage," replied Mr. Henry, shifting his
+ground, "for I think you are about to die." He spoke rather sadly
+than otherwise, yet there was a ring in his voice.
+
+"Henry Durie," said the Master, "two words before I begin. You are
+a fencer, you can hold a foil; you little know what a change it
+makes to hold a sword! And by that I know you are to fall. But
+see how strong is my situation! If you fall, I shift out of this
+country to where my money is before me. If I fall, where are you?
+My father, your wife - who is in love with me, as you very well
+know - your child even, who prefers me to yourself:- how will these
+avenge me! Had you thought of that, dear Henry?" He looked at his
+brother with a smile; then made a fencing-room salute.
+
+Never a word said Mr. Henry, but saluted too, and the swords rang
+together.
+
+I am no judge of the play; my head, besides, was gone with cold and
+fear and horror; but it seems that Mr. Henry took and kept the
+upper hand from the engagement, crowding in upon his foe with a
+contained and glowing fury. Nearer and nearer he crept upon the
+man, till of a sudden the Master leaped back with a little sobbing
+oath; and I believe the movement brought the light once more
+against his eyes. To it they went again, on the fresh ground; but
+now methought closer, Mr. Henry pressing more outrageously, the
+Master beyond doubt with shaken confidence. For it is beyond doubt
+he now recognised himself for lost, and had some taste of the cold
+agony of fear; or he had never attempted the foul stroke. I cannot
+say I followed it, my untrained eye was never quick enough to seize
+details, but it appears he caught his brother's blade with his left
+hand, a practice not permitted. Certainly Mr. Henry only saved
+himself by leaping on one side; as certainly the Master, lunging in
+the air, stumbled on his knee, and before he could move the sword
+was through his body.
+
+I cried out with a stifled scream, and ran in; but the body was
+already fallen to the ground, where it writhed a moment like a
+trodden worm, and then lay motionless.
+
+"Look at his left hand." said Mr. Henry.
+
+"It is all bloody," said I.
+
+"On the inside?" said he.
+
+"It is cut on the inside," said I.
+
+"I thought so," said he, and turned his back.
+
+I opened the man's clothes; the heart was quite still, it gave not
+a flutter.
+
+"God forgive us, Mr. Henry!" said I. "He is dead."
+
+"Dead?" he repeated, a little stupidly; and then with a rising
+tone, "Dead? dead?" says he, and suddenly cast his bloody sword
+upon the ground.
+
+"What must we do?" said I. "Be yourself, sir. It is too late now:
+you must be yourself."
+
+He turned and stared at me. "Oh, Mackellar!" says he, and put his
+face in his hands.
+
+I plucked him by the coat. "For God's sake, for all our sakes, be
+more courageous!" said I. "What must we do?"
+
+He showed me his face with the same stupid stare.
+
+"Do?" says he. And with that his eye fell on the body, and "Oh!"
+he cries out, with his hand to his brow, as if he had never
+remembered; and, turning from me, made off towards the house of
+Durrisdeer at a strange stumbling run.
+
+I stood a moment mused; then it seemed to me my duty lay most plain
+on the side of the living; and I ran after him, leaving the candles
+on the frosty ground and the body lying in their light under the
+trees. But run as I pleased, he had the start of me, and was got
+into the house, and up to the hall, where I found him standing
+before the fire with his face once more in his hands, and as he so
+stood he visibly shuddered.
+
+"Mr. Henry, Mr. Henry," I said, "this will be the ruin of us all."
+
+"What is this that I have done?" cries he, and then looking upon me
+with a countenance that I shall never forget, "Who is to tell the
+old man?" he said.
+
+The word knocked at my heart; but it was no time for weakness. I
+went and poured him out a glass of brandy. "Drink that," said I,
+"drink it down." I forced him to swallow it like a child; and,
+being still perished with the cold of the night, I followed his
+example.
+
+"It has to be told, Mackellar," said he. "It must be told." And
+he fell suddenly in a seat - my old lord's seat by the chimney-side
+- and was shaken with dry sobs.
+
+Dismay came upon my soul; it was plain there was no help in Mr.
+Henry. "Well," said I, "sit there, and leave all to me." And
+taking a candle in my hand, I set forth out of the room in the dark
+house. There was no movement; I must suppose that all had gone
+unobserved; and I was now to consider how to smuggle through the
+rest with the like secrecy. It was no hour for scruples; and I
+opened my lady's door without so much as a knock, and passed boldly
+in.
+
+"There is some calamity happened," she cried, sitting up in bed.
+
+"Madam," said I, "I will go forth again into the passage; and do
+you get as quickly as you can into your clothes. There is much to
+be done."
+
+She troubled me with no questions, nor did she keep me waiting.
+Ere I had time to prepare a word of that which I must say to her,
+she was on the threshold signing me to enter.
+
+"Madam," said I, "if you cannot be very brave, I must go elsewhere;
+for if no one helps me to-night, there is an end of the house of
+Durrisdeer."
+
+"I am very courageous," said she; and she looked at me with a sort
+of smile, very painful to see, but very brave too.
+
+"It has come to a duel," said I.
+
+"A duel?" she repeated. "A duel! Henry and - "
+
+"And the Master," said I. "Things have been borne so long, things
+of which you know nothing, which you would not believe if I should
+tell. But to-night it went too far, and when he insulted you - "
+
+"Stop," said she. "He? Who?"
+
+"Oh! madam," cried I, my bitterness breaking forth, "do you ask me
+such a question? Indeed, then, I may go elsewhere for help; there
+is none here!"
+
+"I do not know in what I have offended you," said she. "Forgive
+me; put me out of this suspense."
+
+But I dared not tell her yet; I felt not sure of her; and at the
+doubt, and under the sense of impotence it brought with it, I
+turned on the poor woman with something near to anger.
+
+"Madam," said I, "we are speaking of two men: one of them insulted
+you, and you ask me which. I will help you to the answer. With
+one of these men you have spent all your hours: has the other
+reproached you? To one you have been always kind; to the other, as
+God sees me and judges between us two, I think not always: has his
+love ever failed you? To-night one of these two men told the
+other, in my hearing - the hearing of a hired stranger, - that you
+were in love with him. Before I say one word, you shall answer
+your own question: Which was it? Nay, madam, you shall answer me
+another: If it has come to this dreadful end, whose fault is it?"
+
+She stared at me like one dazzled. "Good God!" she said once, in a
+kind of bursting exclamation; and then a second time in a whisper
+to herself: "Great God! - In the name of mercy, Mackellar, what is
+wrong?" she cried. "I am made up; I can hear all."
+
+"You are not fit to hear," said I. "Whatever it was, you shall say
+first it was your fault."
+
+"Oh!" she cried, with a gesture of wringing her hands, "this man
+will drive me mad! Can you not put me out of your thoughts?"
+
+"I think not once of you," I cried. "I think of none but my dear
+unhappy master."
+
+"Ah!" she cried, with her hand to her heart, "is Henry dead?"
+
+"Lower your voice," said I. "The other."
+
+I saw her sway like something stricken by the wind; and I know not
+whether in cowardice or misery, turned aside and looked upon the
+floor. "These are dreadful tidings," said I at length, when her
+silence began to put me in some fear; "and you and I behove to be
+the more bold if the house is to be saved." Still she answered
+nothing. "There is Miss Katharine, besides," I added: "unless we
+bring this matter through, her inheritance is like to be of shame."
+
+I do not know if it was the thought of her child or the naked word
+shame, that gave her deliverance; at least, I had no sooner spoken
+than a sound passed her lips, the like of it I never heard; it was
+as though she had lain buried under a hill and sought to move that
+burthen. And the next moment she had found a sort of voice.
+
+"It was a fight," she whispered. "It was not - " and she paused
+upon the word.
+
+"It was a fair fight on my dear master's part," said I. "As for
+the other, he was slain in the very act of a foul stroke."
+
+"Not now!" she cried.
+
+"Madam," said I, "hatred of that man glows in my bosom like a
+burning fire; ay, even now he is dead. God knows, I would have
+stopped the fighting, had I dared. It is my shame I did not. But
+when I saw him fall, if I could have spared one thought from
+pitying of my master, it had been to exult in that deliverance."
+
+I do not know if she marked; but her next words were, "My lord?"
+
+"That shall be my part," said I.
+
+"You will not speak to him as you have to me?" she asked.
+
+"Madam," said I, "have you not some one else to think of? Leave my
+lord to me."
+
+"Some one else?" she repeated.
+
+"Your husband," said I. She looked at me with a countenance
+illegible. "Are you going to turn your back on him?" I asked.
+
+Still she looked at me; then her hand went to her heart again.
+"No," said she.
+
+"God bless you for that word!" I said. "Go to him now, where he
+sits in the hall; speak to him - it matters not what you say; give
+him your hand; say, 'I know all;' - if God gives you grace enough,
+say, 'Forgive me.'"
+
+"God strengthen you, and make you merciful," said she. "I will go
+to my husband."
+
+"Let me light you there," said I, taking up the candle.
+
+"I will find my way in the dark," she said, with a shudder, and I
+think the shudder was at me.
+
+So we separated - she down stairs to where a little light glimmered
+in the hall-door, I along the passage to my lord's room. It seems
+hard to say why, but I could not burst in on the old man as I could
+on the young woman; with whatever reluctance, I must knock. But
+his old slumbers were light, or perhaps he slept not; and at the
+first summons I was bidden enter.
+
+He, too, sat up in bed; very aged and bloodless he looked; and
+whereas he had a certain largeness of appearance when dressed for
+daylight, he now seemed frail and little, and his face (the wig
+being laid aside) not bigger than a child's. This daunted me; nor
+less, the haggard surmise of misfortune in his eye. Yet his voice
+was even peaceful as he inquired my errand. I set my candle down
+upon a chair, leaned on the bed-foot, and looked at him.
+
+"Lord Durrisdeer," said I, "it is very well known to you that I am
+a partisan in your family."
+
+"I hope we are none of us partisans," said he. "That you love my
+son sincerely, I have always been glad to recognise."
+
+"Oh! my lord, we are past the hour of these civilities," I replied.
+"If we are to save anything out of the fire, we must look the fact
+in its bare countenance. A partisan I am; partisans we have all
+been; it is as a partisan that I am here in the middle of the night
+to plead before you. Hear me; before I go, I will tell you why."
+
+"I would always hear you, Mr. Mackellar," said he, "and that at any
+hour, whether of the day or night, for I would be always sure you
+had a reason. You spoke once before to very proper purpose; I have
+not forgotten that."
+
+"I am here to plead the cause of my master," I said. "I need not
+tell you how he acts. You know how he is placed. You know with
+what generosity, he has always met your other - met your wishes," I
+corrected myself, stumbling at that name of son. "You know - you
+must know - what he has suffered - what he has suffered about his
+wife."
+
+"Mr. Mackellar!" cried my lord, rising in bed like a bearded lion.
+
+"You said you would hear me," I continued. "What you do not know,
+what you should know, one of the things I am here to speak of, is
+the persecution he must bear in private. Your back is not turned
+before one whom I dare not name to you falls upon him with the most
+unfeeling taunts; twits him - pardon me, my lord - twits him with
+your partiality, calls him Jacob, calls him clown, pursues him with
+ungenerous raillery, not to be borne by man. And let but one of
+you appear, instantly he changes; and my master must smile and
+courtesy to the man who has been feeding him with insults; I know,
+for I have shared in some of it, and I tell you the life is
+insupportable. All these months it has endured; it began with the
+man's landing; it was by the name of Jacob that my master was
+greeted the first night."
+
+My lord made a movement as if to throw aside the clothes and rise.
+"If there be any truth in this - " said he.
+
+"Do I look like a man lying?" I interrupted, checking him with my
+hand.
+
+"You should have told me at first," he odd.
+
+"Ah, my lord! indeed I should, and you may well hate the face of
+this unfaithful servant!" I cried.
+
+"I will take order," said he, "at once." And again made the
+movement to rise.
+
+Again I checked him. "I have not done," said I. "Would God I had!
+All this my dear, unfortunate patron has endured without help or
+countenance. Your own best word, my lord, was only gratitude. Oh,
+but he was your son, too! He had no other father. He was hated in
+the country, God knows how unjustly. He had a loveless marriage.
+He stood on all hands without affection or support - dear,
+generous, ill-fated, noble heart!"
+
+"Your tears do you much honour and me much shame," says my lord,
+with a palsied trembling. "But you do me some injustice. Henry
+has been ever dear to me, very dear. James (I do not deny it, Mr.
+Mackellar), James is perhaps dearer; you have not seen my James in
+quite a favourable light; he has suffered under his misfortunes;
+and we can only remember how great and how unmerited these were.
+And even now his is the more affectionate nature. But I will not
+speak of him. All that you say of Henry is most true; I do not
+wonder, I know him to be very magnanimous; you will say I trade
+upon the knowledge? It is possible; there are dangerous virtues:
+virtues that tempt the encroacher. Mr. Mackellar, I will make it
+up to him; I will take order with all this. I have been weak; and,
+what is worse, I have been dull!"
+
+"I must not hear you blame yourself, my lord, with that which I
+have yet to tell upon my conscience," I replied. "You have not
+been weak; you have been abused by a devilish dissembler. You saw
+yourself how he had deceived you in the matter of his danger; he
+has deceived you throughout in every step of his career. I wish to
+pluck him from your heart; I wish to force your eyes upon your
+other son; ah, you have a son there!"
+
+"No, no" said he, "two sons - I have two sons."
+
+I made some gesture of despair that struck him; he looked at me
+with a changed face. "There is much worse behind?" he asked, his
+voice dying as it rose upon the question.
+
+"Much worse," I answered. "This night he said these words to Mr.
+Henry: 'I have never known a woman who did not prefer me to you,
+and I think who did not continue to prefer me.'"
+
+"I will hear nothing against my daughter," he cried; and from his
+readiness to stop me in this direction, I conclude his eyes were
+not so dull as I had fancied, and he had looked not without anxiety
+upon the siege of Mrs. Henry.
+
+"I think not of blaming her," cried I. "It is not that. These
+words were said in my hearing to Mr. Henry; and if you find them
+not yet plain enough, these others but a little after: Your wife,
+who is in love with me!'"
+
+"They have quarrelled?" he said.
+
+I nodded.
+
+"I must fly to them," he said, beginning once again to leave his
+bed.
+
+"No, no!" I cried, holding forth my hands.
+
+"You do not know," said he. "These are dangerous words."
+
+"Will nothing make you understand, my lord?' said I.
+
+His eyes besought me for the truth.
+
+I flung myself on my knees by the bedside. "Oh, my lord," cried I,
+"think on him you have left; think of this poor sinner whom you
+begot, whom your wife bore to you, whom we have none of us
+strengthened as we could; think of him, not of yourself; he is the
+other sufferer - think of him! That is the door for sorrow -
+Christ's door, God's door: oh! it stands open. Think of him, even
+as he thought of you. 'WHO IS TO TELL THE OLD MAN?' - these were
+his words. It was for that I came; that is why I am here pleading
+at your feet."
+
+"Let me get up," he cried, thrusting me aside, and was on his feet
+before myself. His voice shook like a sail in the wind, yet he
+spoke with a good loudness; his face was like the snow, but his
+eyes were steady and dry.
+
+"Here is too much speech," said he. "Where was it?"
+
+"In the shrubbery," said I.
+
+"And Mr. Henry?" he asked. And when I had told him he knotted his
+old face in thought.
+
+"And Mr. James?" says he.
+
+"I have left him lying," said I, "beside the candles."
+
+"Candles?" he cried. And with that he ran to the window, opened
+it, and looked abroad. "It might be spied from the road."
+
+"Where none goes by at such an hour," I objected.
+
+"It makes no matter," he said. "One might. Hark!" cries he.
+"What is that?"
+
+It was the sound of men very guardedly rowing in the bay; and I
+told him so.
+
+"The freetraders," said my lord. "Run at once, Mackellar; put
+these candles out. I will dress in the meanwhile; and when you
+return we can debate on what is wisest."
+
+I groped my way downstairs, and out at the door. From quite a far
+way off a sheen was visible, making points of brightness in the
+shrubbery; in so black a night it might have been remarked for
+miles; and I blamed myself bitterly for my incaution. How much
+more sharply when I reached the place! One of the candlesticks was
+overthrown, and that taper quenched. The other burned steadily by
+itself, and made a broad space of light upon the frosted ground.
+All within that circle seemed, by the force of contrast and the
+overhanging blackness, brighter than by day. And there was the
+bloodstain in the midst; and a little farther off Mr. Henry's
+sword, the pommel of which was of silver; but of the body, not a
+trace. My heart thumped upon my ribs, the hair stirred upon my
+scalp, as I stood there staring - so strange was the sight, so dire
+the fears it wakened. I looked right and left; the ground was so
+hard, it told no story. I stood and listened till my ears ached,
+but the night was hollow about me like an empty church; not even a
+ripple stirred upon the shore; it seemed you might have heard a pin
+drop in the county.
+
+I put the candle out, and the blackness fell about me groping dark;
+it was like a crowd surrounding me; and I went back to the house of
+Durrisdeer, with my chin upon my shoulder, startling, as I went,
+with craven suppositions. In the door a figure moved to meet me,
+and I had near screamed with terror ere I recognised Mrs. Henry.
+
+"Have you told him?" says she.
+
+"It was he who sent me," said I. "It is gone. But why are you
+here?"
+
+"It is gone!" she repeated. "What is gone?"
+
+"The body," said I. "Why are you not with your husband?"
+
+"Gone!" said she. "You cannot have looked. Come back."
+
+"There is no light now," said I. "I dare not."
+
+"I can see in the dark. I have been standing here so long - so
+long," said she. "Come, give me your hand."
+
+We returned to the shrubbery hand in hand, and to the fatal place.
+
+"Take care of the blood," said I.
+
+"Blood?" she cried, and started violently back.
+
+"I suppose it will be," said I. "I am like a blind man."
+
+"No!" said she, "nothing! Have you not dreamed?"
+
+"Ah, would to God we had!" cried I.
+
+She spied the sword, picked it up, and seeing the blood, let it
+fall again with her hands thrown wide. "Ah!" she cried. And then,
+with an instant courage, handled it the second time, and thrust it
+to the hilt into the frozen ground. "I will take it back and clean
+it properly," says she, and again looked about her on all sides.
+"It cannot be that he was dead?" she added.
+
+"There was no flutter of his heart," said I, and then remembering:
+"Why are you not with your husband?"
+
+"It is no use," said she; "he will not speak to me."
+
+"Not speak to you?" I repeated. "Oh! you have not tried."
+
+"You have a right to doubt me," she replied, with a gentle dignity.
+
+At this, for the first time, I was seized with sorrow for her.
+"God knows, madam," I cried, "God knows I am not so hard as I
+appear; on this dreadful night who can veneer his words? But I am
+a friend to all who are not Henry Durie's enemies."
+
+"It is hard, then, you should hesitate about his wife," said she.
+
+I saw all at once, like the rending of a veil, how nobly she had
+borne this unnatural calamity, and how generously my reproaches.
+
+"We must go back and tell this to my lord," said I.
+
+"Him I cannot face," she cried.
+
+"You will find him the least moved of all of us," said I.
+
+"And yet I cannot face him," said she.
+
+"Well," said I, "you can return to Mr. Henry; I will see my lord."
+
+As we walked back, I bearing the candlesticks, she the sword - a
+strange burthen for that woman - she had another thought. "Should
+we tell Henry?" she asked.
+
+"Let my lord decide," said I.
+
+My lord was nearly dressed when I came to his chamber. He heard me
+with a frown. "The freetraders," said he. "But whether dead or
+alive?"
+
+"I thought him - " said I, and paused, ashamed of the word.
+
+"I know; but you may very well have been in error. Why should they
+remove him if not living?" he asked. "Oh! here is a great door of
+hope. It must be given out that he departed - as he came - without
+any note of preparation. We must save all scandal."
+
+I saw he had fallen, like the rest of us, to think mainly of the
+house. Now that all the living members of the family were plunged
+in irremediable sorrow, it was strange how we turned to that
+conjoint abstraction of the family itself, and sought to bolster up
+the airy nothing of its reputation: not the Duries only, but the
+hired steward himself.
+
+"Are we to tell Mr. Henry?" I asked him.
+
+"I will see," said he. "I am going first to visit him; then I go
+forth with you to view the shrubbery and consider."
+
+We went downstairs into the hall. Mr. Henry sat by the table with
+his head upon his hand, like a man of stone. His wife stood a
+little back from him, her hand at her mouth; it was plain she could
+not move him. My old lord walked very steadily to where his son
+was sitting; he had a steady countenance, too, but methought a
+little cold. When he was come quite up, he held out both his hands
+and said, "My son!"
+
+With a broken, strangled cry, Mr. Henry leaped up and fell on his
+father's neck, crying and weeping, the most pitiful sight that ever
+a man witnessed. "Oh! father," he cried, "you know I loved him;
+you know I loved him in the beginning; I could have died for him -
+you know that! I would have given my life for him and you. Oh!
+say you know that. Oh! say you can forgive me. O father, father,
+what have I done - what have I done? And we used to be bairns
+together!" and wept and sobbed, and fondled the old man, and
+clutched him about the neck, with the passion of a child in terror.
+
+And then he caught sight of his wife (you would have thought for
+the first time), where she stood weeping to hear him, and in a
+moment had fallen at her knees. "And O my lass," he cried, "you
+must forgive me, too! Not your husband - I have only been the ruin
+of your life. But you knew me when I was a lad; there was no harm
+in Henry Durie then; he meant aye to be a friend to you. It's him
+- it's the old bairn that played with you - oh, can ye never, never
+forgive him?"
+
+Throughout all this my lord was like a cold, kind spectator with
+his wits about him. At the first cry, which was indeed enough to
+call the house about us, he had said to me over his shoulder,
+"Close the door." And now he nodded to himself.
+
+"We may leave him to his wife now,"' says he. "Bring a light, Mr.
+Mackellar."
+
+Upon my going forth again with my lord, I was aware of a strange
+phenomenon; for though it was quite dark, and the night not yet
+old, methought I smelt the morning. At the same time there went a
+tossing through the branches of the evergreens, so that they
+sounded like a quiet sea, and the air pulled at times against our
+faces, and the flame of the candle shook. We made the more speed,
+I believe, being surrounded by this bustle; visited the scene of
+the duel, where my lord looked upon the blood with stoicism; and
+passing farther on toward the landing-place, came at last upon some
+evidences of the truth. For, first of all, where there was a pool
+across the path, the ice had been trodden in, plainly by more than
+one man's weight; next, and but a little farther, a young tree was
+broken, and down by the landing-place, where the traders' boats
+were usually beached, another stain of blood marked where the body
+must have been infallibly set down to rest the bearers.
+
+This stain we set ourselves to wash away with the sea-water,
+carrying it in my lord's hat; and as we were thus engaged there
+came up a sudden moaning gust and left us instantly benighted.
+
+"It will come to snow," says my lord; "and the best thing that we
+could hope. Let us go back now; we can do nothing in the dark."
+
+As we went houseward, the wind being again subsided, we were aware
+of a strong pattering noise about us in the night; and when we
+issued from the shelter of the trees, we found it raining smartly.
+
+Throughout the whole of this, my lord's clearness of mind, no less
+than his activity of body, had not ceased to minister to my
+amazement. He set the crown upon it in the council we held on our
+return. The freetraders had certainly secured the Master, though
+whether dead or alive we were still left to our conjectures; the
+rain would, long before day, wipe out all marks of the transaction;
+by this we must profit. The Master had unexpectedly come after the
+fall of night; it must now he given out he had as suddenly departed
+before the break of day; and, to make all this plausible, it now
+only remained for me to mount into the man's chamber, and pack and
+conceal his baggage. True, we still lay at the discretion of the
+traders; but that was the incurable weakness of our guilt.
+
+I heard him, as I said, with wonder, and hastened to obey. Mr. and
+Mrs. Henry were gone from the hall; my lord, for warmth's sake,
+hurried to his bed; there was still no sign of stir among the
+servants, and as I went up the tower stair, and entered the dead
+man's room, a horror of solitude weighed upon my mind. To my
+extreme surprise, it was all in the disorder of departure. Of his
+three portmanteaux, two were already locked; the third lay open and
+near full. At once there flashed upon me some suspicion of the
+truth. The man had been going, after all; he had but waited upon
+Crail, as Crail waited upon the wind; early in the night the seamen
+had perceived the weather changing; the boat had come to give
+notice of the change and call the passenger aboard, and the boat's
+crew had stumbled on him dying in his blood. Nay, and there was
+more behind. This pre-arranged departure shed some light upon his
+inconceivable insult of the night before; it was a parting shot,
+hatred being no longer checked by policy. And, for another thing,
+the nature of that insult, and the conduct of Mrs. Henry, pointed
+to one conclusion, which I have never verified, and can now never
+verify until the great assize - the conclusion that he had at last
+forgotten himself, had gone too far in his advances, and had been
+rebuffed. It can never be verified, as I say; but as I thought of
+it that morning among his baggage, the thought was sweet to me like
+honey.
+
+Into the open portmanteau I dipped a little ere I closed it. The
+most beautiful lace and linen, many suits of those fine plain
+clothes in which he loved to appear; a book or two, and those of
+the best, Caesar's "Commentaries," a volume of Mr. Hobbes, the
+"Henriade" of M. de Voltaire, a book upon the Indies, one on the
+mathematics, far beyond where I have studied: these were what I
+observed with very mingled feelings. But in the open portmanteau,
+no papers of any description. This set me musing. It was possible
+the man was dead; but, since the traders had carried him away, not
+likely. It was possible he might still die of his wound; but it
+was also possible he might not. And in this latter case I was
+determined to have the means of some defence.
+
+One after another I carried his portmanteaux to a loft in the top
+of the house which we kept locked; went to my own room for my keys,
+and, returning to the loft, had the gratification to find two that
+fitted pretty well. In one of the portmanteaux there was a
+shagreen letter-case, which I cut open with my knife; and
+thenceforth (so far as any credit went) the man was at my mercy.
+Here was a vast deal of gallant correspondence, chiefly of his
+Paris days; and, what was more to the purpose, here were the copies
+of his own reports to the English Secretary, and the originals of
+the Secretary's answers: a most damning series: such as to
+publish would be to wreck the Master's honour and to set a price
+upon his life. I chuckled to myself as I ran through the
+documents; I rubbed my hands, I sang aloud in my glee. Day found
+me at the pleasing task; nor did I then remit my diligence, except
+in so far as I went to the window - looked out for a moment, to see
+the frost quite gone, the world turned black again, and the rain
+and the wind driving in the bay - and to assure myself that the
+lugger was gone from its anchorage, and the Master (whether dead or
+alive) now tumbling on the Irish Sea.
+
+It is proper I should add in this place the very little I have
+subsequently angled out upon the doings of that night. It took me
+a long while to gather it; for we dared not openly ask, and the
+freetraders regarded me with enmity, if not with scorn. It was
+near six months before we even knew for certain that the man
+survived; and it was years before I learned from one of Crail's
+men, turned publican on his ill-gotten gain, some particulars which
+smack to me of truth. It seems the traders found the Master
+struggled on one elbow, and now staring round him, and now gazing
+at the candle or at his hand which was all bloodied, like a man
+stupid. Upon their coming, he would seem to have found his mind,
+bade them carry him aboard, and hold their tongues; and on the
+captain asking how he had come in such a pickle, replied with a
+burst of passionate swearing, and incontinently fainted. They held
+some debate, but they were momently looking for a wind, they were
+highly paid to smuggle him to France, and did not care to delay.
+Besides which, he was well enough liked by these abominable
+wretches: they supposed him under capital sentence, knew not in
+what mischief he might have got his wound, and judged it a piece of
+good nature to remove him out of the way of danger. So he was
+taken aboard, recovered on the passage over, and was set ashore a
+convalescent at the Havre de Grace. What is truly notable: he
+said not a word to anyone of the duel, and not a trader knows to
+this day in what quarrel, or by the hand of what adversary, he
+fell. With any other man I should have set this down to natural
+decency; with him, to pride. He could not bear to avow, perhaps
+even to himself, that he had been vanquished by one whom he had so
+much insulted whom he so cruelly despised.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. - SUMMARY OF EVENTS DURING THE MASTER'S SECOND ABSENCE.
+
+
+
+Of the heavy sickness which declared itself next morning I can
+think with equanimity, as of the last unmingled trouble that befell
+my master; and even that was perhaps a mercy in disguise; for what
+pains of the body could equal the miseries of his mind? Mrs. Henry
+and I had the watching by the bed. My old lord called from time to
+time to take the news, but would not usually pass the door. Once,
+I remember, when hope was nigh gone, he stepped to the bedside,
+looked awhile in his son's face, and turned away with a gesture of
+the head and hand thrown up, that remains upon my mind as something
+tragic; such grief and such a scorn of sublunary things were there
+expressed. But the most of the time Mrs. Henry and I had the room
+to ourselves, taking turns by night, and bearing each other company
+by day, for it was dreary watching. Mr. Henry, his shaven head
+bound in a napkin, tossed fro without remission, beating the bed
+with his hands. His tongue never lay; his voice ran continuously
+like a river, so that my heart was weary with the sound of it. It
+was notable, and to me inexpressibly mortifying, that he spoke all
+the while on matters of no import: comings and goings, horses -
+which he was ever calling to have saddled, thinking perhaps (the
+poor soul!) that he might ride away from his discomfort - matters
+of the garden, the salmon nets, and (what I particularly raged to
+hear) continually of his affairs, cyphering figures and holding
+disputation with the tenantry. Never a word of his father or his
+wife, nor of the Master, save only for a day or two, when his mind
+dwelled entirely in the past, and he supposed himself a boy again
+and upon some innocent child's play with his brother. What made
+this the more affecting: it appeared the Master had then run some
+peril of his life, for there was a cry - "Oh! Jamie will be
+drowned - Oh, save Jamie!" which he came over and over with a great
+deal of passion.
+
+This, I say, was affecting, both to Mrs. Henry and myself; but the
+balance of my master's wanderings did him little justice. It
+seemed he had set out to justify his brother's calumnies; as though
+he was bent to prove himself a man of a dry nature, immersed in
+money-getting. Had I been there alone, I would not have troubled
+my thumb; but all the while, as I listened, I was estimating the
+effect on the man's wife, and telling myself that he fell lower
+every day. I was the one person on the surface of the globe that
+comprehended him, and I was bound there should be yet another.
+Whether he was to die there and his virtues perish: or whether he
+should save his days and come back to that inheritance of sorrows,
+his right memory: I was bound he should be heartily lamented in
+the one case, and unaffectedly welcomed in the other, by the person
+he loved the most, his wife.
+
+Finding no occasion of free speech, I bethought me at last of a
+kind of documentary disclosure; and for some nights, when I was off
+duty and should have been asleep, I gave my time to the preparation
+of that which I may call my budget. But this I found to be the
+easiest portion of my task, and that which remained - namely, the
+presentation to my lady - almost more than I had fortitude to
+overtake. Several days I went about with my papers under my arm,
+spying for some juncture of talk to serve as introduction. I will
+not deny but that some offered; only when they did my tongue clove
+to the roof of my mouth; and I think I might have been carrying
+about my packet till this day, had not a fortunate accident
+delivered me from all my hesitations. This was at night, when I
+was once more leaving the room, the thing not yet done, and myself
+in despair at my own cowardice.
+
+"What do you carry about with you, Mr. Mackellar?" she asked.
+"These last days, I see you always coming in and out with the same
+armful."
+
+I returned upon my steps without a word, laid the papers before her
+on the table, and left her to her reading. Of what that was, I am
+now to give you some idea; and the best will be to reproduce a
+letter of my own which came first in the budget and of which
+(according to an excellent habitude) I have preserved the scroll.
+It will show, too, the moderation of my part in these affairs, a
+thing which some have called recklessly in question.
+
+
+"Durrisdeer.
+"1757.
+
+"HONOURED MADAM,
+
+"I trust I would not step out of my place without occasion; but I
+see how much evil has flowed in the past to all of your noble house
+from that unhappy and secretive fault of reticency, and the papers
+on which I venture to call your attention are family papers, and
+all highly worthy your acquaintance.
+
+"I append a schedule with some necessary observations,
+"And am,
+"Honoured Madam,
+"Your ladyship's obliged, obedient servant,
+"EPHRAIM MACKELLAR.
+
+
+"Schedule of Papers.
+
+"A. Scroll of ten letters from Ephraim Mackellar to the Hon. James
+Durie, Esq., by courtesy Master of Ballantrae during the latter's
+residence in Paris: under dates . . . " (follow the dates) . . .
+"Nota: to be read in connection with B. and C.
+
+"B. Seven original letters from the said Mr of Ballantrae to the
+said E. Mackellar, under dates . . . " (follow the dates.)
+
+"C. Three original letters from the Mr of Ballantrae to the Hon.
+Henry Durie, Esq., under dates . . . " (follow the dates) . . .
+"Nota: given me by Mr. Henry to answer: copies of my answers A 4,
+A 5, and A 9 of these productions. The purport of Mr. Henry's
+communications, of which I can find no scroll, may be gathered from
+those of his unnatural brother.
+
+"D. A correspondence, original and scroll, extending over a period
+of three years till January of the current year, between the said
+Mr of Ballantrae and - -, Under Secretary of State; twenty-seven in
+all. Nota: found among the Master's papers."
+
+
+Weary as I was with watching and distress of mind, it was
+impossible for me to sleep. All night long I walked in my chamber,
+revolving what should be the issue, and sometimes repenting the
+temerity of my immixture in affairs so private; and with the first
+peep of the morning I was at the sick-room door. Mrs. Henry had
+thrown open the shutters and even the window, for the temperature
+was mild. She looked steadfastly before her; where was nothing to
+see, or only the blue of the morning creeping among woods. Upon
+the stir of my entrance she did not so much as turn about her face:
+a circumstance from which I augured very ill.
+
+"Madam," I began; and then again, "Madam;" but could make no more
+of it. Nor yet did Mrs. Henry come to my assistance with a word.
+In this pass I began gathering up the papers where they lay
+scattered on the table; and the first thing that struck me, their
+bulk appeared to have diminished. Once I ran them through, and
+twice; but the correspondence with the Secretary of State, on which
+I had reckoned so much against the future, was nowhere to be found.
+I looked in the chimney; amid the smouldering embers, black ashes
+of paper fluttered in the draught; and at that my timidity
+vanished.
+
+"Good God, madam," cried I, in a voice not fitting for a sick-room,
+"Good God, madam, what have you done with my papers?"
+
+"I have burned them," said Mrs. Henry, turning about. "It is
+enough, it is too much, that you and I have seen them."
+
+"This is a fine night's work that you have done!" cried I. "And
+all to save the reputation of a man that ate bread by the shedding
+of his comrades' blood, as I do by the shedding of ink."
+
+"To save the reputation of that family in which you are a servant,
+Mr. Mackellar," she returned, "and for which you have already done
+so much."
+
+"It is a family I will not serve much longer," I cried, "for I am
+driven desperate. You have stricken the sword out of my hands; you
+have left us all defenceless. I had always these letters I could
+shake over his head; and now - What is to do? We are so falsely
+situate we dare not show the man the door; the country would fly on
+fire against us; and I had this one hold upon him - and now it is
+gone - now he may come back to-morrow, and we must all sit down
+with him to dinner, go for a stroll with him on the terrace, or
+take a hand at cards, of all things, to divert his leisure! No,
+madam! God forgive you, if He can find it in His heart; for I
+cannot find it in mine."
+
+"I wonder to find you so simple, Mr. Mackellar," said Mrs. Henry.
+"What does this man value reputation? But he knows how high we
+prize it; he knows we would rather die than make these letters
+public; and do you suppose he would not trade upon the knowledge?
+What you call your sword, Mr. Mackellar, and which had been one
+indeed against a man of any remnant of propriety, would have been
+but a sword of paper against him. He would smile in your face at
+such a threat. He stands upon his degradation, he makes that his
+strength; it is in vain to struggle with such characters." She
+cried out this last a little desperately, and then with more quiet:
+"No, Mr. Mackellar; I have thought upon this matter all night, and
+there is no way out of it. Papers or no papers, the door of this
+house stands open for him; he is the rightful heir, forsooth! If
+we sought to exclude him, all would redound against poor Henry, and
+I should see him stoned again upon the streets. Ah! if Henry dies,
+it is a different matter! They have broke the entail for their own
+good purposes; the estate goes to my daughter; and I shall see who
+sets a foot upon it. But if Henry lives, my poor Mr. Mackellar,
+and that man returns, we must suffer: only this time it will be
+together."
+
+On the whole I was well pleased with Mrs. Henry's attitude of mind;
+nor could I even deny there was some cogency in that which she
+advanced about the papers.
+
+"Let us say no more about it," said I. "I can only be sorry I
+trusted a lady with the originals, which was an unbusinesslike
+proceeding at the best. As for what I said of leaving the service
+of the family, it was spoken with the tongue only; and you may set
+your mind at rest. I belong to Durrisdeer, Mrs. Henry, as if I had
+been born there."
+
+I must do her the justice to say she seemed perfectly relieved; so
+that we began this morning, as we were to continue for so many
+years, on a proper ground of mutual indulgence and respect.
+
+The same day, which was certainly prededicate to joy, we observed
+the first signal of recovery in Mr. Henry; and about three of the
+following afternoon he found his mind again, recognising me by name
+with the strongest evidences of affection. Mrs. Henry was also in
+the room, at the bedfoot; but it did not appear that he observed
+her. And indeed (the fever being gone) he was so weak that he made
+but the one effort and sank again into lethargy. The course of his
+restoration was now slow but equal; every day his appetite
+improved; every week we were able to remark an increase both of
+strength and flesh; and before the end of the month he was out of
+bed and had even begun to be carried in his chair upon the terrace.
+
+It was perhaps at this time that Mrs. Henry and I were the most
+uneasy in mind. Apprehension for his days was at an end; and a
+worse fear succeeded. Every day we drew consciously nearer to a
+day of reckoning; and the days passed on, and still there was
+nothing. Mr. Henry bettered in strength, he held long talks with
+us on a great diversity of subjects, his father came and sat with
+him and went again; and still there was no reference to the late
+tragedy or to the former troubles which had brought it on. Did he
+remember, and conceal his dreadful knowledge? or was the whole
+blotted from his mind? This was the problem that kept us watching
+and trembling all day when we were in his company and held us awake
+at night when we were in our lonely beds. We knew not even which
+alternative to hope for, both appearing so unnatural and pointing
+so directly to an unsound brain. Once this fear offered, I
+observed his conduct with sedulous particularity. Something of the
+child he exhibited: a cheerfulness quite foreign to his previous
+character, an interest readily aroused, and then very tenacious, in
+small matters which he had heretofore despised. When he was
+stricken down, I was his only confidant, and I may say his only
+friend, and he was on terms of division with his wife; upon his
+recovery, all was changed, the past forgotten, the wife first and
+even single in his thoughts. He turned to her with all his
+emotions, like a child to its mother, and seemed secure of
+sympathy; called her in all his needs with something of that
+querulous familiarity that marks a certainty of indulgence; and I
+must say, in justice to the woman, he was never disappointed. To
+her, indeed, this changed behaviour was inexpressibly affecting;
+and I think she felt it secretly as a reproach; so that I have seen
+her, in early days, escape out of the room that she might indulge
+herself in weeping. But to me the change appeared not natural; and
+viewing it along with all the rest, I began to wonder, with many
+head-shakings, whether his reason were perfectly erect.
+
+As this doubt stretched over many years, endured indeed until my
+master's death, and clouded all our subsequent relations, I may
+well consider of it more at large. When he was able to resume some
+charge of his affairs, I had many opportunities to try him with
+precision. There was no lack of understanding, nor yet of
+authority; but the old continuous interest had quite departed; he
+grew readily fatigued, and fell to yawning; and he carried into
+money relations, where it is certainly out of place, a facility
+that bordered upon slackness. True, since we had no longer the
+exactions of the Master to contend against, there was the less
+occasion to raise strictness into principle or do battle for a
+farthing. True, again, there was nothing excessive in these
+relaxations, or I would have been no party to them. But the whole
+thing marked a change, very slight yet very perceptible; and though
+no man could say my master had gone at all out of his mind, no man
+could deny that he had drifted from his character. It was the same
+to the end, with his manner and appearance. Some of the heat of
+the fever lingered in his veins: his movements a little hurried,
+his speech notably more voluble, yet neither truly amiss. His
+whole mind stood open to happy impressions, welcoming these and
+making much of them; but the smallest suggestion of trouble or
+sorrow he received with visible impatience and dismissed again with
+immediate relief. It was to this temper that he owed the felicity
+of his later days; and yet here it was, if anywhere, that you could
+call the man insane. A great part of this life consists in
+contemplating what we cannot cure; but Mr. Henry, if he could not
+dismiss solicitude by an effort of the mind, must instantly and at
+whatever cost annihilate the cause of it; so that he played
+alternately the ostrich and the bull. It is to this strenuous
+cowardice of pain that I have to set down all the unfortunate and
+excessive steps of his subsequent career. Certainly this was the
+reason of his beating McManus, the groom, a thing so much out of
+all his former practice, and which awakened so much comment at the
+time. It is to this, again, that I must lay the total lose of near
+upon two hundred pounds, more than the half of which I could have
+saved if his impatience would have suffered me. But he preferred
+loss or any desperate extreme to a continuance of mental suffering.
+
+All this has led me far from our immediate trouble: whether he
+remembered or had forgotten his late dreadful act; and if he
+remembered, in what light he viewed it. The truth burst upon us
+suddenly, and was indeed one of the chief surprises of my life. He
+had been several times abroad, and was now beginning to walk a
+little with an arm, when it chanced I should be left alone with him
+upon the terrace. He turned to me with a singular furtive smile,
+such as schoolboys use when in fault; and says he, in a private
+whisper and without the least preface: "Where have you buried
+him?"
+
+I could not make one sound in answer.
+
+"Where have you buried him?" he repeated. "I want to see his
+grave."
+
+I conceived I had best take the bull by the horns. "Mr. Henry,"
+said I, "I have news to give that will rejoice you exceedingly. In
+all human likelihood, your hands are clear of blood. I reason from
+certain indices; and by these it should appear your brother was not
+dead, but was carried in a swound on board the lugger. But now he
+may be perfectly recovered."
+
+What there was in his countenance I could not read. "James?" he
+asked.
+
+"Your brother James," I answered. "I would not raise a hope that
+may be found deceptive, but in my heart I think it very probable he
+is alive."
+
+"Ah!" says Mr. Henry; and suddenly rising from his seat with more
+alacrity than he had yet discovered, set one finger on my breast,
+and cried at me in a kind of screaming whisper, "Mackellar" - these
+were his words - "nothing can kill that man. He is not mortal. He
+is bound upon my back to all eternity - to all eternity!" says he,
+and, sitting down again, fell upon a stubborn silence.
+
+A day or two after, with the same secret smile, and first looking
+about as if to be sure we were alone, "Mackellar," said he, "when
+you have any intelligence, be sure and let me know. We must keep
+an eye upon him, or he will take us when we least expect."
+
+"He will not show face here again," said I.
+
+"Oh yes he will," said Mr. Henry. "Wherever I am, there will he
+be." And again he looked all about him.
+
+"You must not dwell upon this thought, Mr. Henry," said I.
+
+"No," said he, "that is a very good advice. We will never think of
+it, except when you have news. And we do not know yet," he added;
+"he may be dead."
+
+The manner of his saying this convinced me thoroughly of what I had
+scarce ventured to suspect: that, so far from suffering any
+penitence for the attempt, he did but lament his failure. This was
+a discovery I kept to myself, fearing it might do him a prejudice
+with his wife. But I might have saved myself the trouble; she had
+divined it for herself, and found the sentiment quite natural.
+Indeed, I could not but say that there were three of us, all of the
+same mind; nor could any news have reached Durrisdeer more
+generally welcome than tidings of the Master's death.
+
+This brings me to speak of the exception, my old lord. As soon as
+my anxiety for my own master began to be relaxed, I was aware of a
+change in the old gentleman, his father, that seemed to threaten
+mortal consequences.
+
+His face was pale and swollen; as he sat in the chimney-side with
+his Latin, he would drop off sleeping and the book roll in the
+ashes; some days he would drag his foot, others stumble in
+speaking. The amenity of his behaviour appeared more extreme; full
+of excuses for the least trouble, very thoughtful for all; to
+myself, of a most flattering civility. One day, that he had sent
+for his lawyer and remained a long while private, he met me as he
+was crossing the hall with painful footsteps, and took me kindly by
+the hand. "Mr. Mackellar," said he, "I have had many occasions to
+set a proper value on your services; and to-day, when I re-cast my
+will, I have taken the freedom to name you for one of my executors.
+I believe you bear love enough to our house to render me this
+service." At that very time he passed the greater portion of his
+days in clamber, from which it was often difficult to rouse him;
+seemed to have losst all count of years, and had several times
+(particularly on waking) called for his wife and for an old servant
+whose very gravestone was now green with moss. If I had been put
+to my oath, I must have declared he was incapable of testing; and
+yet there was never a will drawn more sensible in every trait, or
+showing a more excellent judgment both of persons and affairs.
+
+His dissolution, though it took not very long, proceeded by
+infinitesimal gradations. His faculties decayed together steadily;
+the power of his limbs was almost gone, he was extremely deaf, his
+speech had sunk into mere mumblings; and yet to the end he managed
+to discover something of his former courtesy and kindness, pressing
+the hand of any that helped him, presenting me with one of his
+Latin books, in which he had laboriously traced my name, and in a
+thousand ways reminding us of the greatness of that loss which it
+might almost be said we had already suffered. To the end, the
+power of articulation returned to him in flashes; it seemed he had
+only forgotten the art of speech as a child forgets his lesson, and
+at times he would call some part of it to mind. On the last night
+of his life he suddenly broke silence with these words from Virgil:
+"Gnatique pratisque, alma, precor, miserere," perfectly uttered,
+and with a fitting accent. At the sudden clear sound of it we
+started from our several occupations; but it was in vain we turned
+to him; he sat there silent, and, to all appearance, fatuous. A
+little later he was had to bed with more difficulty than ever
+before; and some time in the night, without any more violence, his
+spirit fled.
+
+At a far later period I chanced to speak of these particulars with
+a doctor of medicine, a man of so high a reputation that I scruple
+to adduce his name. By his view of it father and son both suffered
+from the affection: the father from the strain of his unnatural
+sorrows - the son perhaps in the excitation of the fever; each had
+ruptured a vessel on the brain, and there was probably (my doctor
+added) some predisposition in the family to accidents of that
+description. The father sank, the son recovered all the externals
+of a healthy man; but it is like there was some destruction in
+those delicate tissues where the soul resides and does her earthly
+business; her heavenly, I would fain hope, cannot be thus
+obstructed by material accidents. And yet, upon a more mature
+opinion, it matters not one jot; for He who shall pass judgment on
+the records of our life is the same that formed us in frailty.
+
+The death of my old lord was the occasion of a fresh surprise to us
+who watched the behaviour of his successor. To any considering
+mind, the two sons had between them slain their father, and he who
+took the sword might be even said to have slain him with his hand,
+but no such thought appeared to trouble my new lord. He was
+becomingly grave; I could scarce say sorrowful, or only with a
+pleasant sorrow; talking of the dead with a regretful cheerfulness,
+relating old examples of his character, smiling at them with a good
+conscience; and when the day of the funeral came round, doing the
+honours with exact propriety. I could perceive, besides, that he
+found a solid gratification in his accession to the title; the
+which he was punctilious in exacting.
+
+
+And now there came upon the scene a new character, and one that
+played his part, too, in the story; I mean the present lord,
+Alexander, whose birth (17th July, 1757) filled the cup of my poor
+master's happiness. There was nothing then left him to wish for;
+nor yet leisure to wish for it. Indeed, there never was a parent
+so fond and doting as he showed himself. He was continually uneasy
+in his son's absence. Was the child abroad? the father would be
+watching the clouds in case it rained. Was it night? he would rise
+out of his bed to observe its slumbers. His conversation grew even
+wearyful to strangers, since he talked of little but his son. In
+matters relating to the estate, all was designed with a particular
+eye to Alexander; and it would be:- "Let us put it in hand at once,
+that the wood may be grown against Alexander's majority;" or, "This
+will fall in again handsomely for Alexander's marriage." Every day
+this absorption of the man's nature became more observable, with
+many touching and some very blameworthy particulars. Soon the
+child could walk abroad with him, at first on the terrace, hand in
+hand, and afterward at large about the policies; and this grew to
+be my lord's chief occupation. The sound of their two voices
+(audible a great way off, for they spoke loud) became familiar in
+the neighbourhood; and for my part I found it more agreeable than
+the sound of birds. It was pretty to see the pair returning, full
+of briars, and the father as flushed and sometimes as bemuddied as
+the child, for they were equal sharers in all sorts of boyish
+entertainment, digging in the beach, damming of streams, and what
+not; and I have seen them gaze through a fence at cattle with the
+same childish contemplation.
+
+The mention of these rambles brings me to a strange scene of which
+I was a witness. There was one walk I never followed myself
+without emotion, so often had I gone there upon miserable errands,
+so much had there befallen against the house of Durrisdeer. But
+the path lay handy from all points beyond the Muckle Ross; and I
+was driven, although much against my will, to take my use of it
+perhaps once in the two months. It befell when Mr. Alexander was
+of the age of seven or eight, I had some business on the far side
+in the morning, and entered the shrubbery, on my homeward way,
+about nine of a bright forenoon. It was that time of year when the
+woods are all in their spring colours, the thorns all in flower,
+and the birds in the high season of their singing. In contrast to
+this merriment, the shrubbery was only the more sad, and I the more
+oppressed by its associations. In this situation of spirit it
+struck me disagreeably to hear voices a little way in front, and to
+recognise the tones of my lord and Mr. Alexander. I pushed ahead,
+and came presently into their view. They stood together in the
+open space where the duel was, my lord with his hand on his son's
+shoulder, and speaking with some gravity. At least, as he raised
+his head upon my coming, I thought I could perceive his countenance
+to lighten.
+
+"Ah!" says he, "here comes the good Mackellar. I have just been
+telling Sandie the story of this place, and how there was a man
+whom the devil tried to kill, and how near he came to kill the
+devil instead."
+
+I had thought it strange enough he should bring the child into that
+scene; that he should actually be discoursing of his act, passed
+measure. But the worst was yet to come; for he added, turning to
+his son - "You can ask Mackellar; he was here and saw it."
+
+"Is it true, Mr. Mackellar?" asked the child. "And did you really
+see the devil?"
+
+"I have not heard the tale," I replied; "and I am in a press of
+business." So far I said a little sourly, fencing with the
+embarrassment of the position; and suddenly the bitterness of the
+past, and the terror of that scene by candle-light, rushed in upon
+my mind. I bethought me that, for a difference of a second's
+quickness in parade, the child before me might have never seen the
+day; and the emotion that always fluttered round my heart in that
+dark shrubbery burst forth in words. "But so much is true," I
+cried, "that I have met the devil in these woods, and seen him
+foiled here. Blessed be God that we escaped with life - blessed be
+God that one stone yet stands upon another in the walls of
+Durrisdeer! And, oh! Mr. Alexander, if ever you come by this spot,
+though it was a hundred years hence, and you came with the gayest
+and the highest in the land, I would step aside and remember a bit
+prayer."
+
+My lord bowed his head gravely. "Ah!" says he, "Mackellar is
+always in the right. Come, Alexander, take your bonnet off." And
+with that he uncovered, and held out his hand. "O Lord," said he,
+"I thank Thee, and my son thanks Thee, for Thy manifold great
+mercies. Let us have peace for a little; defend us from the evil
+man. Smite him, O Lord, upon the lying mouth!" The last broke out
+of him like a cry; and at that, whether remembered anger choked his
+utterance, or whether he perceived this was a singular sort of
+prayer, at least he suddenly came to a full stop; and, after a
+moment, set back his hat upon his head.
+
+"I think you have forgot a word, my lord," said I. "'Forgive us
+our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us. For
+Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever and
+ever. Amen.'"
+
+"Ah! that is easy saying," said my lord. "That is very easy
+saying, Mackellar. But for me to forgive! - I think I would cut a
+very silly figure if I had the affectation to pretend it."
+
+"The bairn, my lord!" said I, with some severity, for I thought his
+expressions little fitted for the care of children.
+
+"Why, very true," said he. "This is dull work for a bairn. Let's
+go nesting."
+
+I forget if it was the same day, but it was soon after, my lord,
+finding me alone, opened himself a little more on the same head.
+
+"Mackellar," he said, "I am now a very happy man."
+
+"I think so indeed, my lord," said I, "and the sight of it gives me
+a light heart."
+
+"There is an obligation in happiness - do you not think so?" says
+he, musingly.
+
+"I think so indeed," says I, "and one in sorrow, too. If we are
+not here to try to do the best, in my humble opinion the sooner we
+are away the better for all parties."
+
+"Ay, but if you were in my shoes, would you forgive him?" asks my
+lord.
+
+The suddenness of the attack a little gravelled me.
+
+"It is a duty laid upon us strictly," said I.
+
+"Hut!" said he. "These are expressions! Do you forgive the man
+yourself?"
+
+"Well - no!" said I. "God forgive me, I do not."
+
+"Shake hands upon that!" cries my lord, with a kind of joviality.
+
+"It is an ill sentiment to shake hands upon," said I, "for
+Christian people. I think I will give you mine on some more
+evangelical occasion."
+
+This I said, smiling a little; but as for my lord, he went from the
+room laughing aloud.
+
+
+For my lord's slavery to the child, I can find no expression
+adequate. He lost himself in that continual thought: business,
+friends, and wife being all alike forgotten, or only remembered
+with a painful effort, like that of one struggling with a posset.
+It was most notable in the matter of his wife. Since I had known
+Durrisdeer, she had been the burthen of his thought and the
+loadstone of his eyes; and now she was quite cast out. I have seen
+him come to the door of a room, look round, and pass my lady over
+as though she were a dog before the fire. It would be Alexander he
+was seeking, and my lady knew it well. I have heard him speak to
+her so ruggedly that I nearly found it in my heart to intervene:
+the cause would still be the same, that she had in some way
+thwarted Alexander. Without doubt this was in the nature of a
+judgment on my lady. Without doubt she had the tables turned upon
+her, as only Providence can do it; she who had been cold so many
+years to every mark of tenderness, it was her part now to be
+neglected: the more praise to her that she played it well.
+
+An odd situation resulted: that we had once more two parties in
+the house, and that now I was of my lady's. Not that ever I lost
+the love I bore my master. But, for one thing, he had the less use
+for my society. For another, I could not but compare the case of
+Mr. Alexander with that of Miss Katharine; for whom my lord had
+never found the least attention. And for a third, I was wounded by
+the change he discovered to his wife, which struck me in the nature
+of an infidelity. I could not but admire, besides, the constancy
+and kindness she displayed. Perhaps her sentiment to my lord, as
+it had been founded from the first in pity, was that rather of a
+mother than a wife; perhaps it pleased her - if I may so say - to
+behold her two children so happy in each other; the more as one had
+suffered so unjustly in the past. But, for all that, and though I
+could never trace in her one spark of jealousy, she must fall back
+for society on poor neglected Miss Katharine; and I, on my part,
+came to pass my spare hours more and more with the mother and
+daughter. It would be easy to make too much of this division, for
+it was a pleasant family, as families go; still the thing existed;
+whether my lord knew it or not, I am in doubt. I do not think he
+did; he was bound up so entirely in his son; but the rest of us
+knew it, and in a manner suffered from the knowledge.
+
+What troubled us most, however, was the great and growing danger to
+the child. My lord was his father over again; it was to be feared
+the son would prove a second Master. Time has proved these fears
+to have been quite exaggerate. Certainly there is no more worthy
+gentleman to-day in Scotland than the seventh Lord Durrisdeer. Of
+my own exodus from his employment it does not become me to speak,
+above all in a memorandum written only to justify his father. . . .
+
+[Editor's Note. Five pages of Mr. Mackellar's MS. are here
+omitted. I have gathered from their perusal an impression that Mr.
+Mackellar, in his old age, was rather an exacting servant. Against
+the seventh Lord Durrisdeer (with whom, at any rate, we have no
+concern) nothing material is alleged. - R. L. S.]
+
+. . . But our fear at the time was lest he should turn out, in the
+person of his son, a second edition of his brother. My lady had
+tried to interject some wholesome discipline; she had been glad to
+give that up, and now looked on with secret dismay; sometimes she
+even spoke of it by hints; and sometimes, when there was brought to
+her knowledge some monstrous instance of my lord's indulgence, she
+would betray herself in a gesture or perhaps an exclamation. As
+for myself, I was haunted by the thought both day and night: not
+so much for the child's sake as for the father's. The man had gone
+to sleep, he was dreaming a dream, and any rough wakening must
+infallibly prove mortal. That he should survive its death was
+inconceivable; and the fear of its dishonour made me cover my face.
+
+It was this continual preoccupation that screwed me up at last to a
+remonstrance: a matter worthy to be narrated in detail. My lord
+and I sat one day at the same table upon some tedious business of
+detail; I have said that he had lost his former interest in such
+occupations; he was plainly itching to be gone, and he looked
+fretful, weary, and methought older than I had ever previously
+observed. I suppose it was the haggard face that put me suddenly
+upon my enterprise.
+
+"My lord," said I, with my head down, and feigning to continue my
+occupation - "or, rather, let me call you again by the name of Mr.
+Henry, for I fear your anger and want you to think upon old times -
+"
+
+"My good Mackellar!" said he; and that in tones so kindly that I
+had near forsook my purpose. But I called to mind that I was
+speaking for his good, and stuck to my colours.
+
+"Has it never come in upon your mind what you are doing?" I asked.
+
+"What I am doing?" he repeated; "I was never good at guessing
+riddles."
+
+"What you are doing with your son?" said I.
+
+"Well," said he, with some defiance in his tone, "and what am I
+doing with my son?"
+
+"Your father was a very good man," says I, straying from the direct
+path. "But do you think he was a wise father?"
+
+There was a pause before he spoke, and then: "I say nothing
+against him," he replied. "I had the most cause perhaps; but I say
+nothing."
+
+"Why, there it is," said I. "You had the cause at least. And yet
+your father was a good man; I never knew a better, save on the one
+point, nor yet a wiser. Where he stumbled, it is highly possible
+another man should fail. He had the two sons - "
+
+My lord rapped suddenly and violently on the table.
+
+"What is this?" cried he. "Speak out!"
+
+"I will, then," said I, my voice almost strangled with the thumping
+of my heart. "If you continue to indulge Mr. Alexander, you are
+following in your father's footsteps. Beware, my lord, lest (when
+he grows up) your son should follow in the Master's."
+
+I had never meant to put the thing so crudely; but in the extreme
+of fear, there comes a brutal kind of courage, the most brutal
+indeed of all; and I burnt my ships with that plain word. I never
+had the answer. When I lifted my head, my lord had risen to his
+feet, and the next moment he fell heavily on the floor. The fit or
+seizure endured not very long; he came to himself vacantly, put his
+hand to his head, which I was then supporting, and says he, in a
+broken voice: "I have been ill," and a little after: "Help me."
+I got him to his feet, and he stood pretty well, though he kept
+hold of the table. "I have been ill, Mackellar," he said again.
+"Something broke, Mackellar - or was going to break, and then all
+swam away. I think I was very angry. Never you mind, Mackellar;
+never you mind, my man. I wouldnae hurt a hair upon your head.
+Too much has come and gone. It's a certain thing between us two.
+But I think, Mackellar, I will go to Mrs. Henry - I think I will go
+to Mrs. Henry," said he, and got pretty steadily from the room,
+leaving me overcome with penitence.
+
+Presently the door flew open, and my lady swept in with flashing
+eyes. "What is all this?" she cried. "What have you done to my
+husband? Will nothing teach you your position in this house? Will
+you never cease from making and meddling?"
+
+"My lady," said I, "since I have been in this house I have had
+plenty of hard words. For a while they were my daily diet, and I
+swallowed them all. As for to-day, you may call me what you
+please; you will never find the name hard enough for such a
+blunder. And yet I meant it for the best."
+
+I told her all with ingenuity, even as it is written here; and when
+she had heard me out, she pondered, and I could see her animosity
+fall. "Yes," she said, "you meant well indeed. I have had the
+same thought myself, or the same temptation rather, which makes me
+pardon you. But, dear God, can you not understand that he can bear
+no more? He can bear no more!" she cried. "The cord is stretched
+to snapping. What matters the future if he have one or two good
+days?"
+
+"Amen," said I. "I will meddle no more. I am pleased enough that
+you should recognise the kindness of my meaning."
+
+"Yes," said my lady; "but when it came to the point, I have to
+suppose your courage failed you; for what you said was said
+cruelly." She paused, looking at me; then suddenly smiled a
+little, and said a singular thing: "Do you know what you are, Mr.
+Mackellar? You are an old maid."
+
+
+No more incident of any note occurred in the family until the
+return of that ill-starred man the Master. But I have to place
+here a second extract from the memoirs of Chevalier Burke,
+interesting in itself, and highly necessary for my purpose. It is
+our only sight of the Master on his Indian travels; and the first
+word in these pages of Secundra Dass. One fact, it is to observe,
+appears here very clearly, which if we had known some twenty years
+ago, how many calamities and sorrows had been spared! - that
+Secundra Dass spoke English.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. - ADVENTURE OF CHEVALIER BURKE IN INDIA.
+
+
+
+Extracted from his Memoirs.
+
+. . . Here was I, therefore, on the streets of that city, the name
+of which I cannot call to mind, while even then I was so ill-
+acquainted with its situation that I knew not whether to go south
+or north. The alert being sudden, I had run forth without shoes or
+stockings; my hat had been struck from my head in the mellay; my
+kit was in the hands of the English; I had no companion but the
+cipaye, no weapon but my sword, and the devil a coin in my pocket.
+In short, I was for all the world like one of those calendars with
+whom Mr. Galland has made us acquainted in his elegant tales.
+These gentlemen, you will remember, were for ever falling in with
+extraordinary incidents; and I was myself upon the brink of one so
+astonishing that I protest I cannot explain it to this day.
+
+The cipaye was a very honest man; he had served many years with the
+French colours, and would have let himself be cut to pieces for any
+of the brave countrymen of Mr. Lally. It is the same fellow (his
+name has quite escaped me) of whom I have narrated already a
+surprising instance of generosity of mind - when he found Mr. de
+Fessac and myself upon the ramparts, entirely overcome with liquor,
+and covered us with straw while the commandant was passing by. I
+consulted him, therefore, with perfect freedom. It was a fine
+question what to do; but we decided at last to escalade a garden
+wall, where we could certainly sleep in the shadow of the trees,
+and might perhaps find an occasion to get hold of a pair of
+slippers and a turban. In that part of the city we had only the
+difficulty of the choice, for it was a quarter consisting entirely
+of walled gardens, and the lanes which divided them were at that
+hour of the night deserted. I gave the cipaye a back, and we had
+soon dropped into a large enclosure full of trees. The place was
+soaking with the dew, which, in that country, is exceedingly
+unwholesome, above all to whites; yet my fatigue was so extreme
+that I was already half asleep, when the cipaye recalled me to my
+senses. In the far end of the enclosure a bright light had
+suddenly shone out, and continued to burn steadily among the
+leaves. It was a circumstance highly unusual in such a place and
+hour; and, in our situation, it behoved us to proceed with some
+timidity. The cipaye was sent to reconnoitre, and pretty soon
+returned with the intelligence that we had fallen extremely amiss,
+for the house belonged to a white man, who was in all likelihood
+English.
+
+"Faith," says I, "if there is a white man to be seen, I will have a
+look at him; for, the Lord be praised! there are more sorts than
+the one!"
+
+The cipaye led me forward accordingly to a place from which I had a
+clear view upon the house. It was surrounded with a wide verandah;
+a lamp, very well trimmed, stood upon the floor of it, and on
+either side of the lamp there sat a man, cross-legged, after the
+Oriental manner. Both, besides, were bundled up in muslin like two
+natives; and yet one of them was not only a white man, but a man
+very well known to me and the reader, being indeed that very Master
+of Ballantrae of whose gallantry and genius I have had to speak so
+often. Word had reached me that he was come to the Indies, though
+we had never met at least, and I heard little of his occupations.
+But, sure, I had no sooner recognised him, and found myself in the
+arms of so old a comrade, than I supposed my tribulations were
+quite done. I stepped plainly forth into the light of the moon,
+which shone exceeding strong, and hailing Ballantrae by name, made
+him in a few words master of my grievous situation. He turned,
+started the least thing in the world, looked me fair in the face
+while I was speaking, and when I had done addressed himself to his
+companion in the barbarous native dialect. The second person, who
+was of an extraordinary delicate appearance, with legs like walking
+canes and fingers like the stalk of a tobacco pipe, (6) now rose to
+his feet.
+
+"The Sahib," says he, "understands no English language. I
+understand it myself, and I see you make some small mistake - oh!
+which may happen very often. But the Sahib would be glad to know
+how you come in a garden."
+
+"Ballantrae!" I cried, "have you the damned impudence to deny me to
+my face?"
+
+Ballantrae never moved a muscle, staring at me like an image in a
+pagoda.
+
+"The Sahib understands no English language," says the native, as
+glib as before. "He be glad to know how you come in a garden."
+
+"Oh! the divil fetch him," says I. "He would be glad to know how I
+come in a garden, would he? Well, now, my dear man, just have the
+civility to tell the Sahib, with my kind love, that we are two
+soldiers here whom he never met and never heard of, but the cipaye
+is a broth of a boy, and I am a broth of a boy myself; and if we
+don't get a full meal of meat, and a turban, and slippers, and the
+value of a gold mohur in small change as a matter of convenience,
+bedad, my friend, I could lay my finger on a garden where there is
+going to be trouble."
+
+They carried their comedy so far as to converse awhile in
+Hindustanee; and then says the Hindu, with the same smile, but
+sighing as if he were tired of the repetition, "The Sahib would be
+glad to know how you come in a garden."
+
+"Is that the way of it?" says I, and laying my hand on my sword-
+hilt I bade the cipaye draw.
+
+Ballantrae's Hindu, still smiling, pulled out a pistol from his
+bosom, and though Ballantrae himself never moved a muscle I knew
+him well enough to be sure he was prepared.
+
+"The Sahib thinks you better go away," says the Hindu.
+
+Well, to be plain, it was what I was thinking myself; for the
+report of a pistol would have been, under Providence, the means of
+hanging the pair of us.
+
+"Tell the Sahib I consider him no gentleman," says I, and turned
+away with a gesture of contempt.
+
+I was not gone three steps when the voice of the Hindu called me
+back. "The Sahib would be glad to know if you are a dam low
+Irishman," says he; and at the words Ballantrae smiled and bowed
+very low.
+
+"What is that?" says I.
+
+"The Sahib say you ask your friend Mackellar," says the Hindu.
+"The Sahib he cry quits."
+
+"Tell the Sahib I will give him a cure for the Scots fiddle when
+next we meet," cried I.
+
+The pair were still smiling as I left.
+
+There is little doubt some flaws may be picked in my own behaviour;
+and when a man, however gallant, appeals to posterity with an
+account of his exploits, he must almost certainly expect to share
+the fate of Caesar and Alexander, and to meet with some detractors.
+But there is one thing that can never be laid at the door of
+Francis Burke: he never turned his back on a friend. . . .
+
+(Here follows a passage which the Chevalier Burke has been at the
+pains to delete before sending me his manuscript. Doubtless it was
+some very natural complaint of what he supposed to be an
+indiscretion on my part; though, indeed, I can call none to mind.
+Perhaps Mr. Henry was less guarded; or it is just possible the
+Master found the means to examine my correspondence, and himself
+read the letter from Troyes: in revenge for which this cruel jest
+was perpetrated on Mr. Burke in his extreme necessity. The Master,
+for all his wickedness, was not without some natural affection; I
+believe he was sincerely attached to Mr. Burke in the beginning;
+but the thought of treachery dried up the springs of his very
+shallow friendship, and his detestable nature appeared naked. - E.
+McK.)
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. - THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE.
+
+
+
+It is a strange thing that I should be at a stick for a date - the
+date, besides, of an incident that changed the very nature of my
+life, and sent us all into foreign lands. But the truth is, I was
+stricken out of all my habitudes, and find my journals very ill
+redd-up, (7) the day not indicated sometimes for a week or two
+together, and the whole fashion of the thing like that of a man
+near desperate. It was late in March at least, or early in April,
+1764. I had slept heavily, and wakened with a premonition of some
+evil to befall. So strong was this upon my spirit that I hurried
+downstairs in my shirt and breeches, and my hand (I remember) shook
+upon the rail. It was a cold, sunny morning, with a thick white
+frost; the blackbirds sang exceeding sweet and loud about the house
+of Durrisdeer, and there was a noise of the sea in all the
+chambers. As I came by the doors of the hall, another sound
+arrested me - of voices talking. I drew nearer, and stood like a
+man dreaming. Here was certainly a human voice, and that in my own
+master's house, and yet I knew it not; certainly human speech, and
+that in my native land; and yet, listen as I pleased, I could not
+catch one syllable. An old tale started up in my mind of a fairy
+wife (or perhaps only a wandering stranger), that came to the place
+of my fathers some generations back, and stayed the matter of a
+week, talking often in a tongue that signified nothing to the
+hearers; and went again, as she had come, under cloud of night,
+leaving not so much as a name behind her. A little fear I had, but
+more curiosity; and I opened the hall-door, and entered.
+
+The supper-things still lay upon the table; the shutters were still
+closed, although day peeped in the divisions; and the great room
+was lighted only with a single taper and some lurching
+reverberation of the fire. Close in the chimney sat two men. The
+one that was wrapped in a cloak and wore boots, I knew at once: it
+was the bird of ill omen back again. Of the other, who was set
+close to the red embers, and made up into a bundle like a mummy, I
+could but see that he was an alien, of a darker hue than any man of
+Europe, very frailly built, with a singular tall forehead, and a
+secret eye. Several bundles and a small valise were on the floor;
+and to judge by the smallness of this luggage, and by the condition
+of the Master's boots, grossly patched by some unscrupulous country
+cobbler, evil had not prospered.
+
+He rose upon my entrance; our eyes crossed; and I know not why it
+should have been, but my courage rose like a lark on a May morning.
+
+"Ha!" said I, "is this you?" - and I was pleased with the unconcern
+of my own voice.
+
+"It is even myself, worthy Mackellar," says the Master.
+
+"This time you have brought the black dog visibly upon your back,"
+I continued.
+
+"Referring to Secundra Dass?" asked the Master. "Let me present
+you. He is a native gentleman of India."
+
+"Hum!" said I. "I am no great lover either of you or your friends,
+Mr. Bally. But I will let a little daylight in, and have a look at
+you." And so saying, I undid the shutters of the eastern window.
+
+By the light of the morning I could perceive the man was changed.
+Later, when we were all together, I was more struck to see how
+lightly time had dealt with him; but the first glance was
+otherwise.
+
+"You are getting an old man," said I.
+
+A shade came upon his face. "If you could see yourself," said he,
+"you would perhaps not dwell upon the topic."
+
+"Hut!" I returned, "old age is nothing to me. I think I have been
+always old; and I am now, I thank God, better known and more
+respected. It is not every one that can say that, Mr. Bally! The
+lines in your brow are calamities; your life begins to close in
+upon you like a prison; death will soon be rapping at the door; and
+I see not from what source you are to draw your consolations."
+
+Here the Master addressed himself to Secundra Dass in Hindustanee,
+from which I gathered (I freely confess, with a high degree of
+pleasure) that my remarks annoyed him. All this while, you may be
+sure, my mind had been busy upon other matters, even while I
+rallied my enemy; and chiefly as to how I should communicate
+secretly and quickly with my lord. To this, in the breathing-space
+now given me, I turned all the forces of my mind; when, suddenly
+shifting my eyes, I was aware of the man himself standing in the
+doorway, and, to all appearance, quite composed. He had no sooner
+met my looks than he stepped across the threshold. The Master
+heard him coming, and advanced upon the other side; about four feet
+apart, these brothers came to a full pause, and stood exchanging
+steady looks, and then my lord smiled, bowed a little forward, and
+turned briskly away.
+
+"Mackellar," says he, "we must see to breakfast for these
+travellers."
+
+It was plain the Master was a trifle disconcerted; but he assumed
+the more impudence of speech and manner. "I am as hungry as a
+hawk," says he. "Let it be something good, Henry."
+
+My lord turned to him with the same hard smile.
+
+"Lord Durrisdeer," says he.
+
+"Oh! never in the family," returned the Master.
+
+"Every one in this house renders me my proper title," says my lord.
+"If it please you to make an exception, I will leave you to
+consider what appearance it will bear to strangers, and whether it
+may not be translated as an effect of impotent jealousy."
+
+I could have clapped my hands together with delight: the more so
+as my lord left no time for any answer, but, bidding me with a sign
+to follow him, went straight out of the hall.
+
+"Come quick," says he; "we have to sweep vermin from the house."
+And he sped through the passages, with so swift a step that I could
+scarce keep up with him, straight to the door of John Paul, the
+which he opened without summons and walked in. John was, to all
+appearance, sound asleep, but my lord made no pretence of waking
+him.
+
+"John Paul," said he, speaking as quietly as ever I heard him, "you
+served my father long, or I would pack you from the house like a
+dog. If in half an hour's time I find you gone, you shall continue
+to receive your wages in Edinburgh. If you linger here or in St.
+Bride's - old man, old servant, and altogether - I shall find some
+very astonishing way to make you smart for your disloyalty. Up and
+begone. The door you let them in by will serve for your departure.
+I do not choose my son shall see your face again."
+
+"I am rejoiced to find you bear the thing so quietly," said I, when
+we were forth again by ourselves.
+
+"Quietly!" cries he, and put my hand suddenly against his heart,
+which struck upon his bosom like a sledge.
+
+At this revelation I was filled with wonder and fear. There was no
+constitution could bear so violent a strain - his least of all,
+that was unhinged already; and I decided in my mind that we must
+bring this monstrous situation to an end.
+
+"It would be well, I think, if I took word to my lady," said I.
+Indeed, he should have gone himself, but I counted - not in vain -
+on his indifference.
+
+"Aye," says he, "do. I will hurry breakfast: we must all appear
+at the table, even Alexander; it must appear we are untroubled."
+
+I ran to my lady's room, and with no preparatory cruelty disclosed
+my news.
+
+"My mind was long ago made up," said she. "We must make our
+packets secretly to-day, and leave secretly to-night. Thank
+Heaven, we have another house! The first ship that sails shall
+bear us to New York."
+
+"And what of him?" I asked.
+
+"We leave him Durrisdeer," she cried. "Let him work his pleasure
+upon that."
+
+"Not so, by your leave," said I. "There shall be a dog at his
+heels that can hold fast. Bed he shall have, and board, and a
+horse to ride upon, if he behave himself; but the keys - if you
+think well of it, my lady - shall be left in the hands of one
+Mackellar. There will be good care taken; trust him for that."
+
+"Mr. Mackellar," she cried, "I thank you for that thought. All
+shall be left in your hands. If we must go into a savage country,
+I bequeath it to you to take our vengeance. Send Macconochie to
+St. Bride's, to arrange privately for horses and to call the
+lawyer. My lord must leave procuration."
+
+At that moment my lord came to the door, and we opened our plan to
+him.
+
+"I will never hear of it," he cried; "he would think I feared him.
+I will stay in my own house, please God, until I die. There lives
+not the man can beard me out of it. Once and for all, here I am,
+and here I stay in spite of all the devils in hell." I can give no
+idea of the vehemency of his words and utterance; but we both stood
+aghast, and I in particular, who had been a witness of his former
+self-restraint.
+
+My lady looked at me with an appeal that went to my heart and
+recalled me to my wits. I made her a private sign to go, and when
+my lord and I were alone, went up to him where he was racing to and
+fro in one end of the room like a half-lunatic, and set my hand
+firmly on his shoulder.
+
+"My lord," says I, "I am going to be the plain-dealer once more; if
+for the last time, so much the better, for I am grown weary of the
+part."
+
+"Nothing will change me," he answered. "God forbid I should refuse
+to hear you; but nothing will change me." This he said firmly,
+with no signal of the former violence, which already raised my
+hopes.
+
+"Very well," said I "I can afford to waste my breath." I pointed
+to a chair, and he sat down and looked at me. "I can remember a
+time when my lady very much neglected you," said I.
+
+"I never spoke of it while it lasted," returned my lord, with a
+high flush of colour; "and it is all changed now."'
+
+"Do you know how much?" I said. "Do you know how much it is all
+changed? The tables are turned, my lord! It is my lady that now
+courts you for a word, a look - ay, and courts you in vain. Do you
+know with whom she passes her days while you are out gallivanting
+in the policies? My lord, she is glad to pass them with a certain
+dry old grieve (8) of the name of Ephraim Mackellar; and I think
+you may be able to remember what that means, for I am the more in a
+mistake or you were once driven to the same company yourself."
+
+"Mackellar!" cries my lord, getting to his feet. "O my God,
+Mackellar!"
+
+"It is neither the name of Mackellar nor the name of God that can
+change the truth," said I; "and I am telling you the fact. Now for
+you, that suffered so much, to deal out the same suffering to
+another, is that the part of any Christian? But you are so
+swallowed up in your new friend that the old are all forgotten.
+They are all clean vanished from your memory. And yet they stood
+by you at the darkest; my lady not the least. And does my lady
+ever cross your mind? Does it ever cross your mind what she went
+through that night? - or what manner of a wife she has been to you
+thenceforward? - or in what kind of a position she finds herself
+to-day? Never. It is your pride to stay and face him out, and she
+must stay along with you. Oh! my lord's pride - that's the great
+affair! And yet she is the woman, and you are a great hulking man!
+She is the woman that you swore to protect; and, more betoken, the
+own mother of that son of yours!"
+
+"You are speaking very bitterly, Mackellar," said he; "but, the
+Lord knows, I fear you are speaking very true. I have not proved
+worthy of my happiness. Bring my lady back."
+
+My lady was waiting near at hand to learn the issue. When I
+brought her in, my lord took a hand of each of us, and laid them
+both upon his bosom. "I have had two friends in my life," said he.
+"All the comfort ever I had, it came from one or other. When you
+two are in a mind, I think I would be an ungrateful dog - " He
+shut his mouth very hard, and looked on us with swimming eyes. "Do
+what ye like with me," says he, "only don't think - " He stopped
+again. "Do what ye please with me: God knows I love and honour
+you." And dropping our two hands, he turned his back and went and
+gazed out of the window. But my lady ran after, calling his name,
+and threw herself upon his neck in a passion of weeping.
+
+I went out and shut the door behind me, and stood and thanked God
+from the bottom of my heart.
+
+
+At the breakfast board, according to my lord's design, we were all
+met. The Master had by that time plucked off his patched boots and
+made a toilet suitable to the hour; Secundra Dass was no longer
+bundled up in wrappers, but wore a decent plain black suit, which
+misbecame him strangely; and the pair were at the great window,
+looking forth, when the family entered. They turned; and the black
+man (as they had already named him in the house) bowed almost to
+his knees, but the Master was for running forward like one of the
+family. My lady stopped him, curtseying low from the far end of
+the hall, and keeping her children at her back. My lord was a
+little in front: so there were the three cousins of Durrisdeer
+face to face. The hand of time was very legible on all; I seemed
+to read in their changed faces a MEMENTO MORI; and what affected me
+still more, it was the wicked man that bore his years the
+handsomest. My lady was quite transfigured into the matron, a
+becoming woman for the head of a great tableful of children and
+dependents. My lord was grown slack in his limbs; he stooped; he
+walked with a running motion, as though he had learned again from
+Mr. Alexander; his face was drawn; it seemed a trifle longer than
+of old; and it wore at times a smile very singularly mingled, and
+which (in my eyes) appeared both bitter and pathetic. But the
+Master still bore himself erect, although perhaps with effort; his
+brow barred about the centre with imperious lines, his mouth set as
+for command. He had all the gravity and something of the splendour
+of Satan in the "Paradise Lost." I could not help but see the man
+with admiration, and was only surprised that I saw him with so
+little fear.
+
+But indeed (as long as we were at the table) it seemed as if his
+authority were quite vanished and his teeth all drawn. We had
+known him a magician that controlled the elements; and here he was,
+transformed into an ordinary gentleman, chatting like his
+neighbours at the breakfast-board. For now the father was dead,
+and my lord and lady reconciled, in what ear was he to pour his
+calumnies? It came upon me in a kind of vision how hugely I had
+overrated the man's subtlety. He had his malice still; he was
+false as ever; and, the occasion being gone that made his strength,
+he sat there impotent; he was still the viper, but now spent his
+venom on a file. Two more thoughts occurred to me while yet we sat
+at breakfast: the first, that he was abashed - I had almost said,
+distressed - to find his wickedness quite unavailing; the second,
+that perhaps my lord was in the right, and we did amiss to fly from
+our dismasted enemy. But my poor man's leaping heart came in my
+mind, and I remembered it was for his life we played the coward.
+
+When the meal was over, the Master followed me to my room, and,
+taking a chair (which I had never offered him), asked me what was
+to be done with him.
+
+"Why, Mr. Bally," said I, "the house will still be open to you for
+a time."
+
+"For a time?" says he. "I do not know if I quite take your
+meaning."
+
+"It is plain enough," said I. "We keep you for our reputation; as
+soon as you shall have publicly disgraced yourself by some of your
+misconduct, we shall pack you forth again."
+
+"You are become an impudent rogue," said the Master, bending his
+brows at me dangerously.
+
+"I learned in a good school," I returned. "And you must have
+perceived yourself that with my old lord's death your power is
+quite departed. I do not fear you now, Mr. Bally; I think even -
+God forgive me - that I take a certain pleasure in your company."
+
+He broke out in a burst of laughter, which I clearly saw to be
+assumed.
+
+"I have come with empty pockets," says he, after a pause.
+
+"I do not think there will be any money going," I replied. "I
+would advise you not to build on that."
+
+"I shall have something to say on the point," he returned.
+
+"Indeed?" said I. "I have not a guess what it will be, then."
+
+"Oh! you affect confidence," said the Master. "I have still one
+strong position - that you people fear a scandal, and I enjoy it."
+
+"Pardon me, Mr. Bally," says I. "We do not in the least fear a
+scandal against you."
+
+He laughed again. "You have been studying repartee," he said.
+"But speech is very easy, and sometimes very deceptive. I warn you
+fairly: you will find me vitriol in the house. You would do wiser
+to pay money down and see my back." And with that he waved his
+hand to me and left the room.
+
+A little after, my lord came with the lawyer, Mr. Carlyle; a bottle
+of old wine was brought, and we all had a glass before we fell to
+business. The necessary deeds were then prepared and executed, and
+the Scotch estates made over in trust to Mr. Carlyle and myself.
+
+"There is one point, Mr. Carlyle," said my lord, when these affairs
+had been adjusted, "on which I wish that you would do us justice.
+This sudden departure coinciding with my brother's return will be
+certainly commented on. I wish you would discourage any
+conjunction of the two."
+
+"I will make a point of it, my lord," said Mr. Carlyle. "The Mas-
+Bally does not, then, accompany you?"
+
+"It is a point I must approach," said my lord. "Mr. Bally remains
+at Durrisdeer, under the care of Mr. Mackellar; and I do not mean
+that he shall even know our destination."
+
+"Common report, however - " began the lawyer.
+
+"Ah! but, Mr. Carlyle, this is to be a secret quite among
+ourselves," interrupted my lord. "None but you and Mackellar are
+to be made acquainted with my movements."
+
+"And Mr. Bally stays here? Quite so," said Mr. Carlyle. "The
+powers you leave - " Then he broke off again. "Mr. Mackellar, we
+have a rather heavy weight upon us."
+
+"No doubt," said I.
+
+"No doubt," said he. "Mr. Bally will have no voice?"
+
+"He will have no voice," said my lord; "and, I hope, no influence.
+Mr. Bally is not a good adviser."
+
+"I see," said the lawyer. "By the way, has Mr. Bally means?"
+
+"I understand him to have nothing," replied my lord. "I give him
+table, fire, and candle in this house."
+
+"And in the matter of an allowance? If I am to share the
+responsibility, you will see how highly desirable it is that I
+should understand your views," said the lawyer. "On the question
+of an allowance?"
+
+"There will be no allowance," said my lord. "I wish Mr. Bally to
+live very private. We have not always been gratified with his
+behaviour."
+
+"And in the matter of money," I added, "he has shown himself an
+infamous bad husband. Glance your eye upon that docket, Mr.
+Carlyle, where I have brought together the different sums the man
+has drawn from the estate in the last fifteen or twenty years. The
+total is pretty."
+
+Mr. Carlyle made the motion of whistling. "I had no guess of
+this," said he. "Excuse me once more, my lord, if I appear to push
+you; but it is really desirable I should penetrate your intentions.
+Mr. Mackellar might die, when I should find myself alone upon this
+trust. Would it not be rather your lordship's preference that Mr.
+Bally should - ahem - should leave the country?"
+
+My lord looked at Mr. Carlyle. "Why do you ask that?" said he.
+
+"I gather, my lord, that Mr. Bally is not a comfort to his family,"
+says the lawyer with a smile.
+
+My lord's face became suddenly knotted. "I wish he was in hell!"
+cried he, and filled himself a glass of wine, but with a hand so
+tottering that he spilled the half into his bosom. This was the
+second time that, in the midst of the most regular and wise
+behaviour, his animosity had spirted out. It startled Mr. Carlyle,
+who observed my lord thenceforth with covert curiosity; and to me
+it restored the certainty that we were acting for the best in view
+of my lord's health and reason.
+
+Except for this explosion the interview was very successfully
+conducted. No doubt Mr. Carlyle would talk, as lawyers do, little
+by little. We could thus feel we had laid the foundations of a
+better feeling in the country, and the man's own misconduct would
+certainly complete what we had begun. Indeed, before his
+departure, the lawyer showed us there had already gone abroad some
+glimmerings of the truth.
+
+"I should perhaps explain to you, my lord," said he, pausing, with
+his hat in his hand, "that I have not been altogether surprised
+with your lordship's dispositions in the case of Mr. Bally.
+Something of this nature oozed out when he was last in Durrisdeer.
+There was some talk of a woman at St. Bride's, to whom you had
+behaved extremely handsome, and Mr. Bally with no small degree of
+cruelty. There was the entail, again, which was much controverted.
+In short, there was no want of talk, back and forward; and some of
+our wise-acres took up a strong opinion. I remained in suspense,
+as became one of my cloth; but Mr. Mackellar's docket here has
+finally opened my eyes. I do not think, Mr. Mackellar, that you
+and I will give him that much rope."
+
+
+The rest of that important day passed prosperously through. It was
+our policy to keep the enemy in view, and I took my turn to be his
+watchman with the rest. I think his spirits rose as he perceived
+us to be so attentive, and I know that mine insensibly declined.
+What chiefly daunted me was the man's singular dexterity to worm
+himself into our troubles. You may have felt (after a horse
+accident) the hand of a bone-setter artfully divide and interrogate
+the muscles, and settle strongly on the injured place? It was so
+with the Master's tongue, that was so cunning to question; and his
+eyes, that were so quick to observe. I seemed to have said
+nothing, and yet to have let all out. Before I knew where I was
+the man was condoling with me on my lord's neglect of my lady and
+myself, and his hurtful indulgence to his son. On this last point
+I perceived him (with panic fear) to return repeatedly. The boy
+had displayed a certain shrinking from his uncle; it was strong in
+my mind his father had been fool enough to indoctrinate the same,
+which was no wise beginning: and when I looked upon the man before
+me, still so handsome, so apt a speaker, with so great a variety of
+fortunes to relate, I saw he was the very personage to captivate a
+boyish fancy. John Paul had left only that morning; it was not to
+be supposed he had been altogether dumb upon his favourite subject:
+so that here would be Mr. Alexander in the part of Dido, with a
+curiosity inflamed to hear; and there would be the Master, like a
+diabolical AEneas, full of matter the most pleasing in the world to
+any youthful ear, such as battles, sea-disasters, flights, the
+forests of the West, and (since his later voyage) the ancient
+cities of the Indies. How cunningly these baits might be employed,
+and what an empire might be so founded, little by little, in the
+mind of any boy, stood obviously clear to me. There was no
+inhibition, so long as the man was in the house, that would be
+strong enough to hold these two apart; for if it be hard to charm
+serpents, it is no very difficult thing to cast a glamour on a
+little chip of manhood not very long in breeches. I recalled an
+ancient sailor-man who dwelt in a lone house beyond the Figgate
+Whins (I believe, he called it after Portobello), and how the boys
+would troop out of Leith on a Saturday, and sit and listen to his
+swearing tales, as thick as crows about a carrion: a thing I often
+remarked as I went by, a young student, on my own more meditative
+holiday diversion. Many of these boys went, no doubt, in the face
+of an express command; many feared and even hated the old brute of
+whom they made their hero; and I have seen them flee from him when
+he was tipsy, and stone him when he was drunk. And yet there they
+came each Saturday! How much more easily would a boy like Mr.
+Alexander fall under the influence of a high-looking, high-spoken
+gentleman-adventurer, who should conceive the fancy to entrap him;
+and, the influence gained, how easy to employ it for the child's
+perversion!
+
+I doubt if our enemy had named Mr. Alexander three times before I
+perceived which way his mind was aiming - all this train of thought
+and memory passed in one pulsation through my own - and you may say
+I started back as though an open hole had gaped across a pathway.
+Mr. Alexander: there was the weak point, there was the Eve in our
+perishable paradise; and the serpent was already hissing on the
+trail.
+
+I promise you, I went the more heartily about the preparations; my
+last scruple gone, the danger of delay written before me in huge
+characters. From that moment forth I seem not to have sat down or
+breathed. Now I would be at my post with the Master and his
+Indian; now in the garret, buckling a valise; now sending forth
+Macconochie by the side postern and the wood-path to bear it to the
+trysting-place; and, again, snatching some words of counsel with my
+lady. This was the VERSO of our life in Durrisdeer that day; but
+on the RECTO all appeared quite settled, as of a family at home in
+its paternal seat; and what perturbation may have been observable,
+the Master would set down to the blow of his unlooked-for coming,
+and the fear he was accustomed to inspire.
+
+Supper went creditably off, cold salutations passed and the company
+trooped to their respective chambers. I attended the Master to the
+last. We had put him next door to his Indian, in the north wing;
+because that was the most distant and could be severed from the
+body of the house with doors. I saw he was a kind friend or a good
+master (whichever it was) to his Secundra Dass - seeing to his
+comfort; mending the fire with his own hand, for the Indian
+complained of cold; inquiring as to the rice on which the stranger
+made his diet; talking with him pleasantly in the Hindustanee,
+while I stood by, my candle in my hand, and affected to be overcome
+with slumber. At length the Master observed my signals of
+distress. "I perceive," says he, "that you have all your ancient
+habits: early to bed and early to rise. Yawn yourself away!"
+
+Once in my own room, I made the customary motions of undressing, so
+that I might time myself; and when the cycle was complete, set my
+tinder-box ready, and blew out my taper. The matter of an hour
+afterward I made a light again, put on my shoes of list that I had
+worn by my lord's sick-bed, and set forth into the house to call
+the voyagers. All were dressed and waiting - my lord, my lady,
+Miss Katharine, Mr. Alexander, my lady's woman Christie; and I
+observed the effect of secrecy even upon quite innocent persons,
+that one after another showed in the chink of the door a face as
+white as paper. We slipped out of the side postern into a night of
+darkness, scarce broken by a star or two; so that at first we
+groped and stumbled and fell among the bushes. A few hundred yards
+up the wood-path Macconochie was waiting us with a great lantern;
+so the rest of the way we went easy enough, but still in a kind of
+guilty silence. A little beyond the abbey the path debauched on
+the main road and some quarter of a mile farther, at the place
+called Eagles, where the moors begin, we saw the lights of the two
+carriages stand shining by the wayside. Scarce a word or two was
+uttered at our parting, and these regarded business: a silent
+grasping of hands, a turning of faces aside, and the thing was
+over; the horses broke into a trot, the lamplight sped like Will-
+o'-the-Wisp upon the broken moorland, it dipped beyond Stony Brae;
+and there were Macconochie and I alone with our lantern on the
+road. There was one thing more to wait for, and that was the
+reappearance of the coach upon Cartmore. It seems they must have
+pulled up upon the summit, looked back for a last time, and seen
+our lantern not yet moved away from the place of separation. For a
+lamp was taken from a carriage, and waved three times up and down
+by way of a farewell. And then they were gone indeed, having
+looked their last on the kind roof of Durrisdeer, their faces
+toward a barbarous country. I never knew before, the greatness of
+that vault of night in which we two poor serving-men - the one old,
+and the one elderly - stood for the first time deserted; I had
+never felt before my own dependency upon the countenance of others.
+The sense of isolation burned in my bowels like a fire. It seemed
+that we who remained at home were the true exiles, and that
+Durrisdeer and Solwayside, and all that made my country native, its
+air good to me, and its language welcome, had gone forth and was
+far over the sea with my old masters.
+
+The remainder of that night I paced to and fro on the smooth
+highway, reflecting on the future and the past. My thoughts, which
+at first dwelled tenderly on those who were just gone, took a more
+manly temper as I considered what remained for me to do. Day came
+upon the inland mountain-tops, and the fowls began to cry, and the
+smoke of homesteads to arise in the brown bosom of the moors,
+before I turned my face homeward, and went down the path to where
+the roof of Durrisdeer shone in the morning by the sea.
+
+
+At the customary hour I had the Master called, and awaited his
+coming in the hall with a quiet mind. He looked about him at the
+empty room and the three covers set.
+
+"We are a small party," said he. "How comes?"
+
+"This is the party to which we must grow accustomed," I replied.
+
+He looked at me with a sudden sharpness. "What is all this?" said
+he.
+
+"You and I and your friend Mr. Dass are now all the company," I
+replied. "My lord, my lady, and the children, are gone upon a
+voyage."
+
+"Upon my word!" said he. "Can this be possible? I have indeed
+fluttered your Volscians in Corioli! But this is no reason why our
+breakfast should go cold. Sit down, Mr. Mackellar, if you please"
+- taking, as he spoke, the head of the table, which I had designed
+to occupy myself - "and as we eat, you can give me the details of
+this evasion."
+
+I could see he was more affected than his language carried, and I
+determined to equal him in coolness. "I was about to ask you to
+take the head of the table," said I; "for though I am now thrust
+into the position of your host, I could never forget that you were,
+after all, a member of the family."
+
+For a while he played the part of entertainer, giving directions to
+Macconochie, who received them with an evil grace, and attending
+specially upon Secundra. "And where has my good family withdrawn
+to?" he asked carelessly.
+
+"Ah! Mr. Bally, that is another point," said I. "I have no orders
+to communicate their destination."
+
+"To me," he corrected.
+
+"To any one," said I.
+
+"It is the less pointed," said the master; "C'EST DE BON TON: my
+brother improves as he continues. And I, dear Mr. Mackellar?"
+
+"You will have bed and board, Mr. Bally," said I. "I am permitted
+to give you the run of the cellar, which is pretty reasonably
+stocked. You have only to keep well with me, which is no very
+difficult matter, and you shall want neither for wine nor a saddle-
+horse."
+
+He made an excuse to send Macconochie from the room.
+
+"And for money?" he inquired. "Have I to keep well with my good
+friend Mackellar for my pocket-money also? This is a pleasing
+return to the principles of boyhood."
+
+"There was no allowance made," said I; "but I will take it on
+myself to see you are supplied in moderation."
+
+"In moderation?" he repeated. "And you will take it on yourself?"
+He drew himself up, and looked about the hall at the dark rows of
+portraits. "In the name of my ancestors, I thank you," says he;
+and then, with a return to irony, "But there must certainly be an
+allowance for Secundra Dass?" he said. "It in not possible they
+have omitted that?"
+
+"I will make a note of it, and ask instructions when I write," said
+I.
+
+And he, with a sudden change of manner, and leaning forward with an
+elbow on the table - "Do you think this entirely wise?"
+
+"I execute my orders, Mr. Bally," said I.
+
+"Profoundly modest," said the Master; "perhaps not equally
+ingenuous. You told me yesterday my power was fallen with my
+father's death. How comes it, then, that a peer of the realm flees
+under cloud of night out of a house in which his fathers have stood
+several sieges? that he conceals his address, which must be a
+matter of concern to his Gracious Majesty and to the whole
+republic? and that he should leave me in possession, and under the
+paternal charge of his invaluable Mackellar? This smacks to me of
+a very considerable and genuine apprehension."
+
+I sought to interrupt him with some not very truthful denegation;
+but he waved me down, and pursued his speech.
+
+"I say, it smacks of it," he said; "but I will go beyond that, for
+I think the apprehension grounded. I came to this house with some
+reluctancy. In view of the manner of my last departure, nothing
+but necessity could have induced me to return. Money, however, is
+that which I must have. You will not give with a good grace; well,
+I have the power to force it from you. Inside of a week, without
+leaving Durrisdeer, I will find out where these fools are fled to.
+I will follow; and when I have run my quarry down, I will drive a
+wedge into that family that shall once more burst it into shivers.
+I shall see then whether my Lord Durrisdeer" (said with
+indescribable scorn and rage) "will choose to buy my absence; and
+you will all see whether, by that time, I decide for profit or
+revenge."
+
+I was amazed to hear the man so open. The truth is, he was
+consumed with anger at my lord's successful flight, felt himself to
+figure as a dupe, and was in no humour to weigh language.
+
+"Do you consider THIS entirely wise?" said I, copying his words.
+
+"These twenty years I have lived by my poor wisdom," he answered
+with a smile that seemed almost foolish in its vanity.
+
+"And come out a beggar in the end," said I, "if beggar be a strong
+enough word for it."
+
+"I would have you to observe, Mr. Mackellar," cried he, with a
+sudden imperious heat, in which I could not but admire him, "that I
+am scrupulously civil: copy me in that, and we shall be the better
+friends."
+
+Throughout this dialogue I had been incommoded by the observation
+of Secundra Dass. Not one of us, since the first word, had made a
+feint of eating: our eyes were in each other's faces - you might
+say, in each other's bosoms; and those of the Indian troubled me
+with a certain changing brightness, as of comprehension. But I
+brushed the fancy aside, telling myself once more he understood no
+English; only, from the gravity of both voices, and the occasional
+scorn and anger in the Master's, smelled out there was something of
+import in the wind.
+
+
+For the matter of three weeks we continued to live together in the
+house of Durrisdeer: the beginning of that most singular chapter
+of my life - what I must call my intimacy with the Master. At
+first he was somewhat changeable in his behaviour: now civil, now
+returning to his old manner of flouting me to my face; and in both
+I met him half-way. Thanks be to Providence, I had now no measure
+to keep with the man; and I was never afraid of black brows, only
+of naked swords. So that I found a certain entertainment in these
+bouts of incivility, and was not always ill-inspired in my
+rejoinders. At last (it was at supper) I had a droll expression
+that entirely vanquished him. He laughed again and again; and "Who
+would have guessed," he cried, "that this old wife had any wit
+under his petticoats?"
+
+"It is no wit, Mr. Bally," said I: "a dry Scot's humour, and
+something of the driest." And, indeed, I never had the least
+pretension to be thought a wit.
+
+From that hour he was never rude with me, but all passed between us
+in a manner of pleasantry. One of our chief times of daffing (9)
+was when he required a horse, another bottle, or some money. He
+would approach me then after the manner of a schoolboy, and I would
+carry it on by way of being his father: on both sides, with an
+infinity of mirth. I could not but perceive that he thought more
+of me, which tickled that poor part of mankind, the vanity. He
+dropped, besides (I must suppose unconsciously), into a manner that
+was not only familiar, but even friendly; and this, on the part of
+one who had so long detested me, I found the more insidious. He
+went little abroad; sometimes even refusing invitations. "No," he
+would say, "what do I care for these thick-headed bonnet-lairds? I
+will stay at home, Mackellar; and we shall share a bottle quietly,
+and have one of our good talks." And, indeed, meal-time at
+Durrisdeer must have been a delight to any one, by reason of the
+brilliancy of the discourse. He would often express wonder at his
+former indifference to my society. "But, you see," he would add,
+"we were upon opposite sides. And so we are to-day; but let us
+never speak of that. I would think much less of you if you were
+not staunch to your employer." You are to consider he seemed to me
+quite impotent for any evil; and how it is a most engaging form of
+flattery when (after many years) tardy justice is done to a man's
+character and parts. But I have no thought to excuse myself. I
+was to blame; I let him cajole me, and, in short, I think the
+watch-dog was going sound asleep, when he was suddenly aroused.
+
+I should say the Indian was continually travelling to and fro in
+the house. He never spoke, save in his own dialect and with the
+Master; walked without sound; and was always turning up where you
+would least expect him, fallen into a deep abstraction, from which
+he would start (upon your coming) to mock you with one of his
+grovelling obeisances. He seemed so quiet, so frail, and so
+wrapped in his own fancies, that I came to pass him over without
+much regard, or even to pity him for a harmless exile from his
+country. And yet without doubt the creature was still
+eavesdropping; and without doubt it was through his stealth and my
+security that our secret reached the Master.
+
+It was one very wild night, after supper, and when we had been
+making more than usually merry, that the blow fell on me.
+
+"This is all very fine," says the Master, "but we should do better
+to be buckling our valise."
+
+"Why so?" I cried. "Are you leaving?"
+
+"We are all leaving to-morrow in the morning," said he. "For the
+port of Glascow first, thence for the province of New York."
+
+I suppose I must have groaned aloud.
+
+"Yes," he continued, "I boasted; I said a week, and it has taken me
+near twenty days. But never mind; I shall make it up; I will go
+the faster."
+
+"Have you the money for this voyage?" I asked.
+
+"Dear and ingenuous personage, I have," said he. "Blame me, if you
+choose, for my duplicity; but while I have been wringing shillings
+from my daddy, I had a stock of my own put by against a rainy day.
+You will pay for your own passage, if you choose to accompany us on
+our flank march; I have enough for Secundra and myself, but not
+more - enough to be dangerous, not enough to be generous. There
+is, however, an outside seat upon the chaise which I will let you
+have upon a moderate commutation; so that the whole menagerie can
+go together - the house-dog, the monkey, and the tiger."
+
+"I go with you," said I.
+
+"I count upon it," said the Master. "You have seen me foiled; I
+mean you shall see me victorious. To gain that I will risk wetting
+you like a sop in this wild weather."
+
+"And at least," I added, "you know very well you could not throw me
+off."
+
+"Not easily," said he. "You put your finger on the point with your
+usual excellent good sense. I never fight with the inevitable."
+
+"I suppose it is useless to appeal to you?" said I.
+
+"Believe me, perfectly," said he.
+
+"And yet, if you would give me time, I could write - " I began.
+
+"And what would be my Lord Durrisdeer's answer?" asks he.
+
+"Aye," said I, "that is the rub."
+
+"And, at any rate, how much more expeditions that I should go
+myself!" says he. "But all this is quite a waste of breath. At
+seven to-morrow the chaise will be at the door. For I start from
+the door, Mackellar; I do not skulk through woods and take my
+chaise upon the wayside - shall we say, at Eagles?"
+
+My mind was now thoroughly made up. "Can you spare me quarter of
+an hour at St. Bride's?" said I. "I have a little necessary
+business with Carlyle."
+
+"An hour, if you prefer," said he. "I do not seek to deny that the
+money for your seat is an object to me; and you could always get
+the first to Glascow with saddle-horses."
+
+"Well," said I, "I never thought to leave old Scotland."
+
+"It will brisken you up," says he.
+
+"This will be an ill journey for some one," I said. "I think, sir,
+for you. Something speaks in my bosom; and so much it says plain -
+that this is an ill-omened journey."
+
+"If you take to prophecy," says he, "listen to that."
+
+There came up a violent squall off the open Solway, and the rain
+was dashed on the great windows.
+
+"Do ye ken what that bodes, warlock?" said he, in a broad accent:
+"that there'll be a man Mackellar unco' sick at sea."
+
+When I got to my chamber, I sat there under a painful excitation,
+hearkening to the turmoil of the gale, which struck full upon that
+gable of the house. What with the pressure on my spirits, the
+eldritch cries of the wind among the turret-tops, and the perpetual
+trepidation of the masoned house, sleep fled my eyelids utterly. I
+sat by my taper, looking on the black panes of the window, where
+the storm appeared continually on the point of bursting in its
+entrance; and upon that empty field I beheld a perspective of
+consequences that made the hair to rise upon my scalp. The child
+corrupted, the home broken up, my master dead or worse than dead,
+my mistress plunged in desolation - all these I saw before me
+painted brightly on the darkness; and the outcry of the wind
+appeared to mock at my inaction.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. - MR. MACKELLAR'S JOURNEY WITH THE MASTER.
+
+
+
+The chaise came to the door in a strong drenching mist. We took
+our leave in silence: the house of Durrisdeer standing with
+dropping gutters and windows closed, like a place dedicate to
+melancholy. I observed the Master kept his head out, looking back
+on these splashed walls and glimmering roofs, till they were
+suddenly swallowed in the mist; and I must suppose some natural
+sadness fell upon the man at this departure; or was it some
+provision of the end? At least, upon our mounting the long brae
+from Durrisdeer, as we walked side by side in the wet, he began
+first to whistle and then to sing the saddest of our country tunes,
+which sets folk weeping in a tavern, WANDERING WILLIE. The set of
+words he used with it I have not heard elsewhere, and could never
+come by any copy; but some of them which were the most appropriate
+to our departure linger in my memory. One verse began -
+
+
+Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces,
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child.
+
+
+And ended somewhat thus -
+
+
+Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland,
+Lone stands the house, and the chimney-stone is cold.
+Lone let it stand, now the folks are all departed,
+The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
+
+
+I could never be a judge of the merit of these verses; they were so
+hallowed by the melancholy of the air, and were sung (or rather
+"soothed") to me by a master-singer at a time so fitting. He
+looked in my face when he had done, and saw that my eyes watered.
+
+"Ah! Mackellar," said he, "do you think I have never a regret?"
+
+"I do not think you could be so bad a man," said I, "if you had not
+all the machinery to be a good one."
+
+"No, not all," says he: "not all. You are there in error. The
+malady of not wanting, my evangelist." But methought he sighed as
+he mounted again into the chaise.
+
+All day long we journeyed in the same miserable weather: the mist
+besetting us closely, the heavens incessantly weeping on my head.
+The road lay over moorish hills, where was no sound but the crying
+of moor-fowl in the wet heather and the pouring of the swollen
+burns. Sometimes I would doze off in slumber, when I would find
+myself plunged at once in some foul and ominous nightmare, from the
+which I would awake strangling. Sometimes, if the way was steep
+and the wheels turning slowly, I would overhear the voices from
+within, talking in that tropical tongue which was to me as
+inarticulate as the piping of the fowls. Sometimes, at a longer
+ascent, the Master would set foot to ground and walk by my side,
+mostly without speech. And all the time, sleeping or waking, I
+beheld the same black perspective of approaching ruin; and the same
+pictures rose in my view, only they were now painted upon hillside
+mist. One, I remember, stood before me with the colours of a true
+illusion. It showed me my lord seated at a table in a small room;
+his head, which was at first buried in his hands, he slowly raised,
+and turned upon me a countenance from which hope had fled. I saw
+it first on the black window-panes, my last night in Durrisdeer; it
+haunted and returned upon me half the voyage through; and yet it
+was no effect of lunacy, for I have come to a ripe old age with no
+decay of my intelligence; nor yet (as I was then tempted to
+suppose) a heaven-sent warning of the future, for all manner of
+calamities befell, not that calamity - and I saw many pitiful
+sights, but never that one.
+
+It was decided we should travel on all night; and it was singular,
+once the dusk had fallen, my spirits somewhat rose. The bright
+lamps, shining forth into the mist and on the smoking horses and
+the hodding post-boy, gave me perhaps an outlook intrinsically more
+cheerful than what day had shown; or perhaps my mind had become
+wearied of its melancholy. At least, I spent some waking hours,
+not without satisfaction in my thoughts, although wet and weary in
+my body; and fell at last into a natural slumber without dreams.
+Yet I must have been at work even in the deepest of my sleep; and
+at work with at least a measure of intelligence. For I started
+broad awake, in the very act of crying out to myself
+
+
+Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child,
+
+
+stricken to find in it an appropriateness, which I had not
+yesterday observed, to the Master's detestable purpose in the
+present journey.
+
+We were then close upon the city of Glascow, where we were soon
+breakfasting together at an inn, and where (as the devil would have
+it) we found a ship in the very article of sailing. We took our
+places in the cabin; and, two days after, carried our effects on
+board. Her name was the NONESUCH, a very ancient ship and very
+happily named. By all accounts this should be her last voyage;
+people shook their heads upon the quays, and I had several warnings
+offered me by strangers in the street to the effect that she was
+rotten as a cheese, too deeply loaden, and must infallibly founder
+if we met a gale. From this it fell out we were the only
+passengers; the Captain, McMurtrie, was a silent, absorbed man,
+with the Glascow or Gaelic accent; the mates ignorant rough
+seafarers, come in through the hawsehole; and the Master and I were
+cast upon each other's company.
+
+THE NONESUCH carried a fair wind out of the Clyde, and for near
+upon a week we enjoyed bright weather and a sense of progress. I
+found myself (to my wonder) a born seaman, in so far at least as I
+was never sick; yet I was far from tasting the usual serenity of my
+health. Whether it was the motion of the ship on the billows, the
+confinement, the salted food, or all of these together, I suffered
+from a blackness of spirit and a painful strain upon my temper.
+The nature of my errand on that ship perhaps contributed; I think
+it did no more; the malady (whatever it was) sprang from my
+environment; and if the ship were not to blame, then it was the
+Master. Hatred and fear are ill bedfellows; but (to my shame be it
+spoken) I have tasted those in other places, lain down and got up
+with them, and eaten and drunk with them, and yet never before, nor
+after, have I been so poisoned through and through, in soul and
+body, as I was on board the NONESUCH. I freely confess my enemy
+set me a fair example of forbearance; in our worst days displayed
+the most patient geniality, holding me in conversation as long as I
+would suffer, and when I had rebuffed his civility, stretching
+himself on deck to read. The book he had on board with him was Mr.
+Richardson's famous CLARISSA! and among other small attentions he
+would read me passages aloud; nor could any elocutionist have given
+with greater potency the pathetic portions of that work. I would
+retort upon him with passages out of the Bible, which was all my
+library - and very fresh to me, my religious duties (I grieve to
+say it) being always and even to this day extremely neglected. He
+tasted the merits of the word like the connoisseur he was; and
+would sometimes take it from my hand, turn the leaves over like a
+man that knew his way, and give me, with his fine declamation, a
+Roland for my Oliver. But it was singular how little he applied
+his reading to himself; it passed high above his head like summer
+thunder: Lovelace and Clarissa, the tales of David's generosity,
+the psalms of his penitence, the solemn questions of the book of
+Job, the touching poetry of Isaiah - they were to him a source of
+entertainment only, like the scraping of a fiddle in a change-
+house. This outer sensibility and inner toughness set me against
+him; it seemed of a piece with that impudent grossness which I knew
+to underlie the veneer of his fine manners; and sometimes my gorge
+rose against him as though he were deformed - and sometimes I would
+draw away as though from something partly spectral. I had moments
+when I thought of him as of a man of pasteboard - as though, if one
+should strike smartly through the buckram of his countenance, there
+would be found a mere vacuity within. This horror (not merely
+fanciful, I think) vastly increased my detestation of his
+neighbourhood; I began to feel something shiver within me on his
+drawing near; I had at times a longing to cry out; there were days
+when I thought I could have struck him. This frame of mind was
+doubtless helped by shame, because I had dropped during our last
+days at Durrisdeer into a certain toleration of the man; and if any
+one had then told me I should drop into it again, I must have
+laughed in his face. It is possible he remained unconscious of
+this extreme fever of my resentment; yet I think he was too quick;
+and rather that he had fallen, in a long life of idleness, into a
+positive need of company, which obliged him to confront and
+tolerate my unconcealed aversion. Certain, at least, that he loved
+the note of his own tongue, as, indeed, he entirely loved all the
+parts and properties of himself; a sort of imbecility which almost
+necessarily attends on wickedness. I have seen him driven, when I
+proved recalcitrant, to long discourses with the skipper; and this,
+although the man plainly testified his weariness, fiddling
+miserably with both hand and foot, and replying only with a grunt.
+
+After the first week out we fell in with foul winds and heavy
+weather. The sea was high. The NONESUCH, being an old-fashioned
+ship and badly loaden, rolled beyond belief; so that the skipper
+trembled for his masts, and I for my life. We made no progress on
+our course. An unbearable ill-humour settled on the ship: men,
+mates, and master, girding at one another all day long. A saucy
+word on the one hand, and a blow on the other, made a daily
+incident. There were times when the whole crew refused their duty;
+and we of the afterguard were twice got under arms - being the
+first time that ever I bore weapons - in the fear of mutiny.
+
+In the midst of our evil season sprang up a hurricane of wind; so
+that all supposed she must go down. I was shut in the cabin from
+noon of one day till sundown of the next; the Master was somewhere
+lashed on deck. Secundra had eaten of some drug and lay
+insensible; so you may say I passed these hours in an unbroken
+solitude. At first I was terrified beyond motion, and almost
+beyond thought, my mind appearing to be frozen. Presently there
+stole in on me a ray of comfort. If the NONESUCH foundered, she
+would carry down with her into the deeps of that unsounded sea the
+creature whom we all so feared and hated; there would be no more
+Master of Ballantrae, the fish would sport among his ribs; his
+schemes all brought to nothing, his harmless enemies at peace. At
+first, I have said, it was but a ray of comfort; but it had soon
+grown to be broad sunshine. The thought of the man's death, of his
+deletion from this world, which he embittered for so many, took
+possession of my mind. I hugged it, I found it sweet in my belly.
+I conceived the ship's last plunge, the sea bursting upon all sides
+into the cabin, the brief mortal conflict there, all by myself, in
+that closed place; I numbered the horrors, I had almost said with
+satisfaction; I felt I could bear all and more, if the NONESUCH
+carried down with her, overtook by the same ruin, the enemy of my
+poor master's house. Towards noon of the second day the screaming
+of the wind abated; the ship lay not so perilously over, and it
+began to be clear to me that we were past the height of the
+tempest. As I hope for mercy, I was singly disappointed. In the
+selfishness of that vile, absorbing passion of hatred, I forgot the
+case of our innocent shipmates, and thought but of myself and my
+enemy. For myself, I was already old; I had never been young, I
+was not formed for the world's pleasures, I had few affections; it
+mattered not the toss of a silver tester whether I was drowned
+there and then in the Atlantic, or dribbled out a few more years,
+to die, perhaps no less terribly, in a deserted sick-bed. Down I
+went upon my knees - holding on by the locker, or else I had been
+instantly dashed across the tossing cabin - and, lifting up my
+voice in the midst of that clamour of the abating hurricane,
+impiously prayed for my own death. "O God!" I cried, "I would be
+liker a man if I rose and struck this creature down; but Thou
+madest me a coward from my mother's womb. O Lord, Thou madest me
+so, Thou knowest my weakness, Thou knowest that any face of death
+will set me shaking in my shoes. But, lo! here is Thy servant
+ready, his mortal weakness laid aside. Let me give my life for
+this creature's; take the two of them, Lord! take the two, and have
+mercy on the innocent!" In some such words as these, only yet more
+irreverent and with more sacred adjurations, I continued to pour
+forth my spirit. God heard me not, I must suppose in mercy; and I
+was still absorbed in my agony of supplication when some one,
+removing the tarpaulin cover, let the light of the sunset pour into
+the cabin. I stumbled to my feet ashamed, and was seized with
+surprise to find myself totter and ache like one that had been
+stretched upon the rack. Secundra Dass, who had slept off the
+effects of his drug, stood in a corner not far off, gazing at me
+with wild eyes; and from the open skylight the captain thanked me
+for my supplications.
+
+"It's you that saved the ship, Mr. Mackellar," says he. "There is
+no craft of seamanship that could have kept her floating: well may
+we say, 'Except the Lord the city keep, the watchmen watch in
+vain!'"
+
+I was abashed by the captain's error; abashed, also, by the
+surprise and fear with which the Indian regarded me at first, and
+the obsequious civilities with which he soon began to cumber me. I
+know now that he must have overheard and comprehended the peculiar
+nature of my prayers. It is certain, of course, that he at once
+disclosed the matter to his patron; and looking back with greater
+knowledge, I can now understand what so much puzzled me at the
+moment, those singular and (so to speak) approving smiles with
+which the Master honoured me. Similarly, I can understand a word
+that I remember to have fallen from him in conversation that same
+night; when, holding up his hand and smiling, "Ah! Mackellar," said
+he, "not every man is so great a coward as he thinks he is - nor
+yet so good a Christian." He did not guess how true he spoke! For
+the fact is, the thoughts which had come to me in the violence of
+the storm retained their hold upon my spirit; and the words that
+rose to my lips unbidden in the instancy of prayer continued to
+sound in my ears: with what shameful consequences, it is fitting I
+should honestly relate; for I could not support a part of such
+disloyalty as to describe the sins of others and conceal my own.
+
+The wind fell, but the sea hove ever the higher. All night the
+NONESUCH rolled outrageously; the next day dawned, and the next,
+and brought no change. To cross the cabin was scarce possible; old
+experienced seamen were cast down upon the deck, and one cruelly
+mauled in the concussion; every board and block in the old ship
+cried out aloud; and the great bell by the anchor-bitts continually
+and dolefully rang. One of these days the Master and I sate alone
+together at the break of the poop. I should say the NONESUCH
+carried a high, raised poop. About the top of it ran considerable
+bulwarks, which made the ship unweatherly; and these, as they
+approached the front on each side, ran down in a fine, old-
+fashioned, carven scroll to join the bulwarks of the waist. From
+this disposition, which seems designed rather for ornament than
+use, it followed there was a discontinuance of protection: and
+that, besides, at the very margin of the elevated part where (in
+certain movements of the ship) it might be the most needful. It
+was here we were sitting: our feet hanging down, the Master
+betwixt me and the side, and I holding on with both hands to the
+grating of the cabin skylight; for it struck me it was a dangerous
+position, the more so as I had continually before my eyes a measure
+of our evolutions in the person of the Master, which stood out in
+the break of the bulwarks against the sun. Now his head would be
+in the zenith and his shadow fall quite beyond the NONESUCH on the
+farther side; and now he would swing down till he was underneath my
+feet, and the line of the sea leaped high above him like the
+ceiling of a room. I looked on upon this with a growing
+fascination, as birds are said to look on snakes. My mind,
+besides, was troubled with an astonishing diversity of noises; for
+now that we had all sails spread in the vain hope to bring her to
+the sea, the ship sounded like a factory with their reverberations.
+We spoke first of the mutiny with which we had been threatened;
+this led us on to the topic of assassination; and that offered a
+temptation to the Master more strong than he was able to resist.
+He must tell me a tale, and show me at the same time how clever he
+was and how wicked. It was a thing he did always with affectation
+and display; generally with a good effect. But this tale, told in
+a high key in the midst of so great a tumult, and by a narrator who
+was one moment looking down at me from the skies and the next up
+from under the soles of my feet - this particular tale, I say, took
+hold upon me in a degree quite singular.
+
+"My friend the count," it was thus that he began his story, "had
+for an enemy a certain German baron, a stranger in Rome. It
+matters not what was the ground of the count's enmity; but as he
+had a firm design to be revenged, and that with safety to himself,
+he kept it secret even from the baron. Indeed, that is the first
+principle of vengeance; and hatred betrayed is hatred impotent.
+The count was a man of a curious, searching mind; he had something
+of the artist; if anything fell for him to do, it must always be
+done with an exact perfection, not only as to the result, but in
+the very means and instruments, or he thought the thing miscarried.
+It chanced he was one day riding in the outer suburbs, when he came
+to a disused by-road branching off into the moor which lies about
+Rome. On the one hand was an ancient Roman tomb; on the other a
+deserted house in a garden of evergreen trees. This road brought
+him presently into a field of ruins, in the midst of which, in the
+side of a hill, he saw an open door, and, not far off, a single
+stunted pine no greater than a currant-bush. The place was desert
+and very secret; a voice spoke in the count's bosom that there was
+something here to his advantage. He tied his horse to the pine-
+tree, took his flint and steel in his hand to make a light, and
+entered into the hill. The doorway opened on a passage of old
+Roman masonry, which shortly after branched in two. The count took
+the turning to the right, and followed it, groping forward in the
+dark, till he was brought up by a kind of fence, about elbow-high,
+which extended quite across the passage. Sounding forward with his
+foot, he found an edge of polished stone, and then vacancy. All
+his curiosity was now awakened, and, getting some rotten sticks
+that lay about the floor, he made a fire. In front of him was a
+profound well; doubtless some neighbouring peasant had once used it
+for his water, and it was he that had set up the fence. A long
+while the count stood leaning on the rail and looking down into the
+pit. It was of Roman foundation, and, like all that nation set
+their hands to, built as for eternity; the sides were still
+straight, and the joints smooth; to a man who should fall in, no
+escape was possible. 'Now,' the count was thinking, 'a strong
+impulsion brought me to this place. What for? what have I gained?
+why should I be sent to gaze into this well?' when the rail of the
+fence gave suddenly under his weight, and he came within an ace of
+falling headlong in. Leaping back to save himself, he trod out the
+last flicker of his fire, which gave him thenceforward no more
+light, only an incommoding smoke. 'Was I sent here to my death?'
+says he, and shook from head to foot. And then a thought flashed
+in his mind. He crept forth on hands and knees to the brink of the
+pit, and felt above him in the air. The rail had been fast to a
+pair of uprights; it had only broken from the one, and still
+depended from the other. The count set it back again as he had
+found it, so that the place meant death to the first comer, and
+groped out of the catacomb like a sick man. The next day, riding
+in the Corso with the baron, he purposely betrayed a strong
+preoccupation. The other (as he had designed) inquired into the
+cause; and he, after some fencing, admitted that his spirits had
+been dashed by an unusual dream. This was calculated to draw on
+the baron - a superstitious man, who affected the scorn of
+superstition. Some rallying followed, and then the count, as if
+suddenly carried away, called on his friend to beware, for it was
+of him that he had dreamed. You know enough of human nature, my
+excellent Mackellar, to be certain of one thing: I mean that the
+baron did not rest till he had heard the dream. The count, sure
+that he would never desist, kept him in play till his curiosity was
+highly inflamed, and then suffered himself, with seeming
+reluctance, to be overborne. 'I warn you,' says he, 'evil will
+come of it; something tells me so. But since there is to be no
+peace either for you or me except on this condition, the blame be
+on your own head! This was the dream:- I beheld you riding, I know
+not where, yet I think it must have been near Rome, for on your one
+hand was an ancient tomb, and on the other a garden of evergreen
+trees. Methought I cried and cried upon you to come back in a very
+agony of terror; whether you heard me I know not, but you went
+doggedly on. The road brought you to a desert place among ruins,
+where was a door in a hillside, and hard by the door a misbegotten
+pine. Here you dismounted (I still crying on you to beware), tied
+your horse to the pine-tree, and entered resolutely in by the door.
+Within, it was dark; but in my dream I could still see you, and
+still besought you to hold back. You felt your way along the
+right-hand wall, took a branching passage to the right, and came to
+a little chamber, where was a well with a railing. At this - I
+know not why - my alarm for you increased a thousandfold, so that I
+seemed to scream myself hoarse with warnings, crying it was still
+time, and bidding you begone at once from that vestibule. Such was
+the word I used in my dream, and it seemed then to have a clear
+significancy; but to-day, and awake, I profess I know not what it
+means. To all my outcry you rendered not the least attention,
+leaning the while upon the rail and looking down intently in the
+water. And then there was made to you a communication; I do not
+think I even gathered what it was, but the fear of it plucked me
+clean out of my slumber, and I awoke shaking and sobbing. And
+now,' continues the count, 'I thank you from my heart for your
+insistency. This dream lay on me like a load; and now I have told
+it in plain words and in the broad daylight, it seems no great
+matter.' - 'I do not know,' says the baron. 'It is in some points
+strange. A communication, did you say? Oh! it is an odd dream.
+It will make a story to amuse our friends.' - 'I am not so sure,'
+says the count. 'I am sensible of some reluctancy. Let us rather
+forget it.' - 'By all means,' says the baron. And (in fact) the
+dream was not again referred to. Some days after, the count
+proposed a ride in the fields, which the baron (since they were
+daily growing faster friends) very readily accepted. On the way
+back to Rome, the count led them insensibly by a particular route.
+Presently he reined in his horse, clapped his hand before his eyes,
+and cried out aloud. Then he showed his face again (which was now
+quite white, for he was a consummate actor), and stared upon the
+baron. 'What ails you?' cries the baron. 'What is wrong with
+you?' - 'Nothing,' cries the count. 'It is nothing. A seizure, I
+know not what. Let us hurry back to Rome.' But in the meanwhile
+the baron had looked about him; and there, on the left-hand side of
+the way as they went back to Rome, he saw a dusty by-road with a
+tomb upon the one hand and a garden of evergreen trees upon the
+other. - 'Yes,' says he, with a changed voice. 'Let us by all
+means hurry back to Rome. I fear you are not well in health.' -
+'Oh, for God's sake!' cries the count, shuddering, 'back to Rome
+and let me get to bed.' They made their return with scarce a word;
+and the count, who should by rights have gone into society, took to
+his bed and gave out he had a touch of country fever. The next day
+the baron's horse was found tied to the pine, but himself was never
+heard of from that hour. - And, now, was that a murder?" says the
+Master, breaking sharply off.
+
+"Are you sure he was a count?" I asked.
+
+"I am not certain of the title," said he, "but he was a gentleman
+of family: and the Lord deliver you, Mackellar, from an enemy so
+subtile!"
+
+These last words he spoke down at me, smiling, from high above; the
+next, he was under my feet. I continued to follow his evolutions
+with a childish fixity; they made me giddy and vacant, and I spoke
+as in a dream.
+
+"He hated the baron with a great hatred?" I asked.
+
+His belly moved when the man came near him," said the Master.
+
+"I have felt that same," said I.
+
+"Verily!" cries the Master. "Here is news indeed! I wonder - do I
+flatter myself? or am I the cause of these ventral perturbations?"
+
+He was quite capable of choosing out a graceful posture, even with
+no one to behold him but myself, and all the more if there were any
+element of peril. He sat now with one knee flung across the other,
+his arms on his bosom, fitting the swing of the ship with an
+exquisite balance, such as a featherweight might overthrow. All at
+once I had the vision of my lord at the table, with his head upon
+his hands; only now, when he showed me his countenance, it was
+heavy with reproach. The words of my own prayer - I WERE LIKER A
+MAN IF I STRUCK THIS CREATURE DOWN - shot at the same time into my
+memory. I called my energies together, and (the ship then heeling
+downward toward my enemy) thrust at him swiftly with my foot. It
+was written I should have the guilt of this attempt without the
+profit. Whether from my own uncertainty or his incredible
+quickness, he escaped the thrust, leaping to his feet and catching
+hold at the same moment of a stay.
+
+I do not know how long a time passed by. I lying where I was upon
+the deck, overcome with terror and remorse and shame: he standing
+with the stay in his hand, backed against the bulwarks, and
+regarding me with an expression singularly mingled. At last he
+spoke.
+
+"Mackellar," said he, "I make no reproaches, but I offer you a
+bargain. On your side, I do not suppose you desire to have this
+exploit made public; on mine, I own to you freely I do not care to
+draw my breath in a perpetual terror of assassination by the man I
+sit at meat with. Promise me - but no," says he, breaking off,
+"you are not yet in the quiet possession of your mind; you might
+think I had extorted the promise from your weakness; and I would
+leave no door open for casuistry to come in - that dishonesty of
+the conscientious. Take time to meditate."
+
+With that he made off up the sliding deck like a squirrel, and
+plunged into the cabin. About half an hour later he returned - I
+still lying as he had left me.
+
+"Now,' says be, "will you give me your troth as a Christian, and a
+faithful servant of my brother's, that I shall have no more to fear
+from your attempts?"
+
+"I give it you," said I.
+
+"I shall require your hand upon it," says he.
+
+"You have the right to make conditions," I replied, and we shook
+hands.
+
+He sat down at once in the same place and the old perilous
+attitude.
+
+"Hold on!" cried I, covering my eyes. "I cannot bear to see you in
+that posture. The least irregularity of the sea might plunge you
+overboard."
+
+"You are highly inconsistent," he replied, smiling, but doing as I
+asked. "For all that, Mackellar, I would have you to know you have
+risen forty feet in my esteem. You think I cannot set a price upon
+fidelity? But why do you suppose I carry that Secundra Dass about
+the world with me? Because he would die or do murder for me to-
+morrow; and I love him for it. Well, you may think it odd, but I
+like you the better for this afternoon's performance. I thought
+you were magnetised with the Ten Commandments; but no - God damn my
+soul!" - he cries, "the old wife has blood in his body after all!
+Which does not change the fact," he continued, smiling again, "that
+you have done well to give your promise; for I doubt if you would
+ever shine in your new trade."
+
+"I suppose," said I, "I should ask your pardon and God's for my
+attempt. At any rate, I have passed my word, which I will keep
+faithfully. But when I think of those you persecute - " I paused.
+
+"Life is a singular thing," said he, "and mankind a very singular
+people. You suppose yourself to love my brother. I assure you, it
+is merely custom. Interrogate your memory; and when first you came
+to Durrisdeer, you will find you considered him a dull, ordinary
+youth. He is as dull and ordinary now, though not so young. Had
+you instead fallen in with me, you would to-day be as strong upon
+my side."
+
+"I would never say you were ordinary, Mr. Bally," I returned; "but
+here you prove yourself dull. You have just shown your reliance on
+my word. In other terms, that is my conscience - the same which
+starts instinctively back from you, like the eye from a strong
+light."
+
+"Ah!" says he, "but I mean otherwise. I mean, had I met you in my
+youth. You are to consider I was not always as I am to-day; nor
+(had I met in with a friend of your description) should I have ever
+been so."
+
+"Hut, Mr. Bally," says I, "you would have made a mock of me; you
+would never have spent ten civil words on such a Square-toes."
+
+But he was now fairly started on his new course of justification,
+with which he wearied me throughout the remainder of the passage.
+No doubt in the past he had taken pleasure to paint himself
+unnecessarily black, and made a vaunt of his wickedness, bearing it
+for a coat-of-arms. Nor was he so illogical as to abate one item
+of his old confessions. "But now that I know you are a human
+being," he would say, "I can take the trouble to explain myself.
+For I assure you I am human, too, and have my virtues, like my
+neighbours." I say, he wearied me, for I had only the one word to
+say in answer: twenty times I must have said it: "Give up your
+present purpose and return with me to Durrisdeer; then I will
+believe you."
+
+Thereupon he would shake his head at me. "Ah! Mackellar, you might
+live a thousand years and never understand my nature," he would
+say. "This battle is now committed, the hour of reflection quite
+past, the hour for mercy not yet come. It began between us when we
+span a coin in the hall of Durrisdeer, now twenty years ago; we
+have had our ups and downs, but never either of us dreamed of
+giving in; and as for me, when my glove is cast, life and honour go
+with it."
+
+"A fig for your honour!" I would say. "And by your leave, these
+warlike similitudes are something too high-sounding for the matter
+in hand. You want some dirty money; there is the bottom of your
+contention; and as for your means, what are they? to stir up sorrow
+in a family that never harmed you, to debauch (if you can) your own
+nephew, and to wring the heart of your born brother! A footpad
+that kills an old granny in a woollen mutch with a dirty bludgeon,
+and that for a shilling-piece and a paper of snuff - there is all
+the warrior that you are."
+
+When I would attack him thus (or somewhat thus) he would smile, and
+sigh like a man misunderstood. Once, I remember, he defended
+himself more at large, and had some curious sophistries, worth
+repeating, for a light upon his character.
+
+"You are very like a civilian to think war consists in drums and
+banners," said he. "War (as the ancients said very wisely) is
+ULTIMA RATIO. When we take our advantage unrelentingly, then we
+make war. Ah! Mackellar, you are a devil of a soldier in the
+steward's room at Durrisdeer, or the tenants do you sad injustice!"
+
+"I think little of what war is or is not," I replied. "But you
+weary me with claiming my respect. Your brother is a good man, and
+you are a bad one - neither more nor less."
+
+"Had I been Alexander - " he began.
+
+"It is so we all dupe ourselves," I cried. "Had I been St. Paul,
+it would have been all one; I would have made the same hash of that
+career that you now see me making of my own."
+
+"I tell you," he cried, bearing down my interruption, "had I been
+the least petty chieftain in the Highlands, had I been the least
+king of naked negroes in the African desert, my people would have
+adored me. A bad man, am I? Ah! but I was born for a good tyrant!
+Ask Secundra Dass; he will tell you I treat him like a son. Cast
+in your lot with me to-morrow, become my slave, my chattel, a thing
+I can command as I command the powers of my own limbs and spirit -
+you will see no more that dark side that I turn upon the world in
+anger. I must have all or none. But where all is given, I give it
+back with usury. I have a kingly nature: there is my loss!"
+
+"It has been hitherto rather the loss of others," I remarked,
+"which seems a little on the hither side of royalty."
+
+"Tilly-vally!" cried he. "Even now, I tell you, I would spare that
+family in which you take so great an interest: yes, even now - to-
+morrow I would leave them to their petty welfare, and disappear in
+that forest of cut-throats and thimble-riggers that we call the
+world. I would do it to-morrow!" says he. "Only - only - "
+
+"Only what?" I asked.
+
+"Only they must beg it on their bended knees. I think in public,
+too," he added, smiling. "Indeed, Mackellar, I doubt if there be a
+hall big enough to serve my purpose for that act of reparation."
+
+"Vanity, vanity!" I moralised. "To think that this great force for
+evil should be swayed by the same sentiment that sets a lassie
+mincing to her glass!"
+
+"Oh! there are double words for everything: the word that swells,
+the word that belittles; you cannot fight me with a word!" said he.
+"You said the other day that I relied on your conscience: were I
+in your humour of detraction, I might say I built upon your vanity.
+It is your pretension to be UN HOMME DE PAROLE; 'tis mine not to
+accept defeat. Call it vanity, call it virtue, call it greatness
+of soul - what signifies the expression? But recognise in each of
+us a common strain: that we both live for an idea."
+
+It will be gathered from so much familiar talk, and so much
+patience on both sides, that we now lived together upon excellent
+terms. Such was again the fact, and this time more seriously than
+before. Apart from disputations such as that which I have tried to
+reproduce, not only consideration reigned, but, I am tempted to
+say, even kindness. When I fell sick (as I did shortly after our
+great storm), he sat by my berth to entertain me with his
+conversation, and treated me with excellent remedies, which I
+accepted with security. Himself commented on the circumstance.
+"You see," says he, "you begin to know me better. A very little
+while ago, upon this lonely ship, where no one but myself has any
+smattering of science, you would have made sure I had designs upon
+your life. And, observe, it is since I found you had designs upon
+my own, that I have shown you most respect. You will tell me if
+this speaks of a small mind." I found little to reply. In so far
+as regarded myself, I believed him to mean well; I am, perhaps, the
+more a dupe of his dissimulation, but I believed (and I still
+believe) that he regarded me with genuine kindness. Singular and
+sad fact! so soon as this change began, my animosity abated, and
+these haunting visions of my master passed utterly away. So that,
+perhaps, there was truth in the man's last vaunting word to me,
+uttered on the second day of July, when our long voyage was at last
+brought almost to an end, and we lay becalmed at the sea end of the
+vast harbour of New York, in a gasping heat, which was presently
+exchanged for a surprising waterfall of rain. I stood on the poop,
+regarding the green shores near at hand, and now and then the light
+smoke of the little town, our destination. And as I was even then
+devising how to steal a march on my familiar enemy, I was conscious
+of a shade of embarrassment when he approached me with his hand
+extended.
+
+"I am now to bid you farewell," said he, "and that for ever. For
+now you go among my enemies, where all your former prejudices will
+revive. I never yet failed to charm a person when I wanted; even
+you, my good friend - to call you so for once - even you have now a
+very different portrait of me in your memory, and one that you will
+never quite forget. The voyage has not lasted long enough, or I
+should have wrote the impression deeper. But now all is at an end,
+and we are again at war. Judge by this little interlude how
+dangerous I am; and tell those fools" - pointing with his finger to
+the town - "to think twice and thrice before they set me at
+defiance."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. - PASSAGES AT NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+I have mentioned I was resolved to steal a march upon the Master;
+and this, with the complicity of Captain McMurtrie, was mighty
+easily effected: a boat being partly loaded on the one side of our
+ship and the Master placed on board of it, the while a skiff put
+off from the other, carrying me alone. I had no more trouble in
+finding a direction to my lord's house, whither I went at top
+speed, and which I found to be on the outskirts of the place, a
+very suitable mansion, in a fine garden, with an extraordinary
+large barn, byre, and stable, all in one. It was here my lord was
+walking when I arrived; indeed, it had become his chief place of
+frequentation, and his mind was now filled with farming. I burst
+in upon him breathless, and gave him my news: which was indeed no
+news at all, several ships having outsailed the NONESUCH in the
+interval.
+
+"We have been expecting you long," said my lord; "and indeed, of
+late days, ceased to expect you any more. I am glad to take your
+hand again, Mackellar. I thought you had been at the bottom of the
+sea."
+
+"Ah! my lord, would God I had!" cried I. "Things would have been
+better for yourself."
+
+"Not in the least," says he, grimly. "I could not ask better.
+There is a long score to pay, and now - at last - I can begin to
+pay it."
+
+I cried out against his security.
+
+"Oh!" says he, "this is not Durrisdeer, and I have taken my
+precautions. His reputation awaits him; I have prepared a welcome
+for my brother. Indeed, fortune has served me; for I found here a
+merchant of Albany who knew him after the '45 and had mighty
+convenient suspicions of a murder: some one of the name of Chew it
+was, another Albanian. No one here will be surprised if I deny him
+my door; he will not be suffered to address my children, nor even
+to salute my wife: as for myself, I make so much exception for a
+brother that he may speak to me. I should lose my pleasure else,"
+says my lord, rubbing his palms.
+
+Presently he bethought himself, and set men off running, with
+billets, to summon the magnates of the province. I cannot recall
+what pretext he employed; at least, it was successful; and when our
+ancient enemy appeared upon the scene, he found my lord pacing in
+front of his house under some trees of shade, with the Governor
+upon one hand and various notables upon the other. My lady, who
+was seated in the verandah, rose with a very pinched expression and
+carried her children into the house.
+
+The Master, well dressed and with an elegant walking-sword, bowed
+to the company in a handsome manner and nodded to my lord with
+familiarity. My lord did not accept the salutation, but looked
+upon his brother with bended brows.
+
+"Well, sir," says he, at last, "what ill wind brings you hither of
+all places, where (to our common disgrace) your reputation has
+preceded you?"
+
+"Your lordship is pleased to be civil," said the Master, with a
+fine start.
+
+"I am pleased to be very plain," returned my lord; "because it is
+needful you should clearly understand your situation. At home,
+where you were so little known, it was still possible to keep
+appearances; that would be quite vain in this province; and I have
+to tell you that I am quite resolved to wash my hands of you. You
+have already ruined me almost to the door, as you ruined my father
+before me; - whose heart you also broke. Your crimes escape the
+law; but my friend the Governor has promised protection to my
+family. Have a care, sir!" cries my lord, shaking his cane at him:
+"if you are observed to utter two words to any of my innocent
+household, the law shall be stretched to make you smart for it."
+
+"Ah!" says the Master, very slowly. "And so this is the advantage
+of a foreign land! These gentlemen are unacquainted with our
+story, I perceive. They do not know that I am the Lord Durrisdeer;
+they do not know you are my younger brother, sitting in my place
+under a sworn family compact; they do not know (or they would not
+be seen with you in familiar correspondence) that every acre is
+mine before God Almighty - and every doit of the money you withhold
+from me, you do it as a thief, a perjurer, and a disloyal brother!"
+
+"General Clinton," I cried, "do not listen to his lies. I am the
+steward of the estate, and there is not one word of truth in it.
+The man is a forfeited rebel turned into a hired spy: there is his
+story in two words."
+
+It was thus that (in the heat of the moment) I let slip his infamy.
+
+"Fellow," said the Governor, turning his face sternly on the
+Master, "I know more of you than you think for. We have some
+broken ends of your adventures in the provinces, which you will do
+very well not to drive me to investigate. There is the
+disappearance of Mr. Jacob Chew with all his merchandise; there is
+the matter of where you came ashore from with so much money and
+jewels, when you were picked up by a Bermudan out of Albany.
+Believe me, if I let these matters lie, it is in commiseration for
+your family and out of respect for my valued friend, Lord
+Durrisdeer."
+
+There was a murmur of applause from the provincials.
+
+"I should have remembered how a title would shine out in such a
+hole as this," says the Master, white as a sheet: "no matter how
+unjustly come by. It remains for me, then, to die at my lord's
+door, where my dead body will form a very cheerful ornament."
+
+"Away with your affectations!" cries my lord. "You know very well
+I have no such meaning; only to protect myself from calumny, and my
+home from your intrusion. I offer you a choice. Either I shall
+pay your passage home on the first ship, when you may perhaps be
+able to resume your occupations under Government, although God
+knows I would rather see you on the highway! Or, if that likes you
+not, stay here and welcome! I have inquired the least sum on which
+body and soul can be decently kept together in New York; so much
+you shall have, paid weekly; and if you cannot labour with your
+hands to better it, high time you should betake yourself to learn.
+The condition is - that you speak with no member of my family
+except myself," he added.
+
+I do not think I have ever seen any man so pale as was the Master;
+but he was erect and his mouth firm.
+
+"I have been met here with some very unmerited insults," said he,
+"from which I have certainly no idea to take refuge by flight.
+Give me your pittance; I take it without shame, for it is mine
+already - like the shirt upon your back; and I choose to stay until
+these gentlemen shall understand me better. Already they must spy
+the cloven hoof, since with all your pretended eagerness for the
+family honour, you take a pleasure to degrade it in my person."
+
+"This is all very fine," says my lord; "but to us who know you of
+old, you must be sure it signifies nothing. You take that
+alternative out of which you think that you can make the most.
+Take it, if you can, in silence; it will serve you better in the
+long run, you may believe me, than this ostentation of
+ingratitude."
+
+"Oh, gratitude, my lord!" cries the Master, with a mounting
+intonation and his forefinger very conspicuously lifted up. "Be at
+rest: it will not fail you. It now remains that I should salute
+these gentlemen whom we have wearied with our family affairs."
+
+And he bowed to each in succession, settled his walking-sword, and
+took himself off, leaving every one amazed at his behaviour, and me
+not less so at my lord's.
+
+
+We were now to enter on a changed phase of this family division.
+The Master was by no manner of means so helpless as my lord
+supposed, having at his hand, and entirely devoted to his service,
+an excellent artist in all sorts of goldsmith work. With my lord's
+allowance, which was not so scanty as he had described it, the pair
+could support life; and all the earnings of Secundra Dass might be
+laid upon one side for any future purpose. That this was done, I
+have no doubt. It was in all likelihood the Master's design to
+gather a sufficiency, and then proceed in quest of that treasure
+which he had buried long before among the mountains; to which, if
+he had confined himself, he would have been more happily inspired.
+But unfortunately for himself and all of us, he took counsel of his
+anger. The public disgrace of his arrival - which I sometimes
+wonder he could manage to survive - rankled in his bones; he was in
+that humour when a man - in the words of the old adage - will cut
+off his nose to spite his face; and he must make himself a public
+spectacle in the hopes that some of the disgrace might spatter on
+my lord.
+
+He chose, in a poor quarter of the town, a lonely, small house of
+boards, overhung with some acacias. It was furnished in front with
+a sort of hutch opening, like that of a dog's kennel, but about as
+high as a table from the ground, in which the poor man that built
+it had formerly displayed some wares; and it was this which took
+the Master's fancy and possibly suggested his proceedings. It
+appears, on board the pirate ship he had acquired some quickness
+with the needle - enough, at least, to play the part of tailor in
+the public eye; which was all that was required by the nature of
+his vengeance. A placard was hung above the hutch, bearing these
+words in something of the following disposition:
+
+
+JAMES DURIE,
+FORMERLY MASTER OF BALLANTRAE.
+CLOTHES NEATLY CLOUTED.
+* * * * *
+SECUNDRA DASS,
+DECAYED GENTLEMAN OF INDIA.
+FINE GOLDSMITH WORK.
+
+
+Underneath this, when he had a job, my gentleman sat withinside
+tailor-wise and busily stitching. I say, when he had a job; but
+such customers as came were rather for Secundra, and the Master's
+sewing would be more in the manner of Penelope's. He could never
+have designed to gain even butter to his bread by such a means of
+livelihood: enough for him that there was the name of Durie
+dragged in the dirt on the placard, and the sometime heir of that
+proud family set up cross-legged in public for a reproach upon his
+brother's meanness. And in so far his device succeeded that there
+was murmuring in the town and a party formed highly inimical to my
+lord. My lord's favour with the Governor laid him more open on the
+other side; my lady (who was never so well received in the colony)
+met with painful innuendoes; in a party of women, where it would be
+the topic most natural to introduce, she was almost debarred from
+the naming of needle-work; and I have seen her return with a
+flushed countenance and vow that she would go abroad no more.
+
+In the meanwhile my lord dwelled in his decent mansion, immersed in
+farming; a popular man with his intimates, and careless or
+unconscious of the rest. He laid on flesh; had a bright, busy
+face; even the heat seemed to prosper with him; and my lady - in
+despite of her own annoyances - daily blessed Heaven her father
+should have left her such a paradise. She had looked on from a
+window upon the Master's humiliation; and from that hour appeared
+to feel at ease. I was not so sure myself; as time went on, there
+seemed to me a something not quite wholesome in my lord's
+condition. Happy he was, beyond a doubt, but the grounds of this
+felicity were wont; even in the bosom of his family he brooded with
+manifest delight upon some private thought; and I conceived at last
+the suspicion (quite unworthy of us both) that he kept a mistress
+somewhere in the town. Yet he went little abroad, and his day was
+very fully occupied; indeed, there was but a single period, and
+that pretty early in the morning, while Mr. Alexander was at his
+lesson-book, of which I was not certain of the disposition. It
+should be borne in mind, in the defence of that which I now did,
+that I was always in some fear my lord was not quite justly in his
+reason; and with our enemy sitting so still in the same town with
+us, I did well to be upon my guard. Accordingly I made a pretext,
+had the hour changed at which I taught Mr. Alexander the foundation
+of cyphering and the mathematic, and set myself instead to dog my
+master's footsteps.
+
+Every morning, fair or foul, he took his gold-headed cane, set his
+hat on the back of his head - a recent habitude, which I thought to
+indicate a burning brow - and betook himself to make a certain
+circuit. At the first his way was among pleasant trees and beside
+a graveyard, where he would sit awhile, if the day were fine, in
+meditation. Presently the path turned down to the waterside, and
+came back along the harbour-front and past the Master's booth. As
+he approached this second part of his circuit, my Lord Durrisdeer
+began to pace more leisurely, like a man delighted with the air and
+scene; and before the booth, half-way between that and the water's
+edge, would pause a little, leaning on his staff. It was the hour
+when the Master sate within upon his board and plied his needle.
+So these two brothers would gaze upon each other with hard faces;
+and then my lord move on again, smiling to himself.
+
+It was but twice that I must stoop to that ungrateful necessity of
+playing spy. I was then certain of my lord's purpose in his
+rambles and of the secret source of his delight. Here was his
+mistress: it was hatred and not love that gave him healthful
+colours. Some moralists might have been relieved by the discovery;
+I confess that I was dismayed. I found this situation of two
+brethren not only odious in itself, but big with possibilities of
+further evil; and I made it my practice, in so far as many
+occupations would allow, to go by a shorter path and be secretly
+present at their meeting. Coming down one day a little late, after
+I had been near a week prevented, I was struck with surprise to
+find a new development. I should say there was a bench against the
+Master's house, where customers might sit to parley with the
+shopman; and here I found my lord seated, nursing his cane and
+looking pleasantly forth upon the bay. Not three feet from him
+sate the Master, stitching. Neither spoke; nor (in this new
+situation) did my lord so much as cut a glance upon his enemy. He
+tasted his neighbourhood, I must suppose, less indirectly in the
+bare proximity of person; and, without doubt, drank deep of hateful
+pleasures.
+
+He had no sooner come away than I openly joined him. "My lord, my
+lord," said I, "this is no manner of behaviour."
+
+"I grow fat upon it," he replied; and not merely the words, which
+were strange enough, but the whole character of his expression,
+shocked me.
+
+"I warn you, my lord, against this indulgency of evil feeling,"
+said I. "I know not to which it is more perilous, the soul or the
+reason; but you go the way to murder both."
+
+"You cannot understand," said he. "You had never such mountains of
+bitterness upon your heart."
+
+"And if it were no more," I added, "you will surely goad the man to
+some extremity."
+
+"To the contrary; I am breaking his spirit," says my lord.
+
+
+Every morning for hard upon a week my lord took his same place upon
+the bench. It was a pleasant place, under the green acacias, with
+a sight upon the bay and shipping, and a sound (from some way off)
+of marines singing at their employ. Here the two sate without
+speech or any external movement, beyond that of the needle or the
+Master biting off a thread, for he still clung to his pretence of
+industry; and here I made a point to join them, wondering at myself
+and my companions. If any of my lord's friends went by, he would
+hail them cheerfully, and cry out he was there to give some good
+advice to his brother, who was now (to his delight) grown quite
+industrious. And even this the Master accepted with a steady
+countenance; what was in his mind, God knows, or perhaps Satan
+only.
+
+All of a sudden, on a still day of what they call the Indian
+Summer, when the woods were changed into gold and pink and scarlet,
+the Master laid down his needle and burst into a fit of merriment.
+I think he must have been preparing it a long while in silence, for
+the note in itself was pretty naturally pitched; but breaking
+suddenly from so extreme a silence, and in circumstances so averse
+from mirth, it sounded ominously on my ear.
+
+"Henry," said he, "I have for once made a false step, and for once
+you have had the wit to profit by it. The farce of the cobbler
+ends to-day; and I confess to you (with my compliments) that you
+have had the best of it. Blood will out; and you have certainly a
+choice idea of how to make yourself unpleasant."
+
+Never a word said my lord; it was just as though the Master had not
+broken silence.
+
+"Come," resumed the Master, "do not be sulky; it will spoil your
+attitude. You can now afford (believe me) to be a little gracious;
+for I have not merely a defeat to accept. I had meant to continue
+this performance till I had gathered enough money for a certain
+purpose; I confess ingenuously, I have not the courage. You
+naturally desire my absence from this town; I have come round by
+another way to the same idea. And I have a proposition to make;
+or, if your lordship prefers, a favour to ask."
+
+"Ask it," says my lord.
+
+"You may have heard that I had once in this country a considerable
+treasure," returned the Master; "it matters not whether or no -
+such is the fact; and I was obliged to bury it in a spot of which I
+have sufficient indications. To the recovery of this, has my
+ambition now come down; and, as it is my own, you will not grudge
+it me."
+
+"Go and get it," says my lord. "I make no opposition."
+
+"Yes," said the Master; "but to do so, I must find men and
+carriage. The way is long and rough, and the country infested with
+wild Indians. Advance me only so much as shall be needful: either
+as a lump sum, in lieu of my allowance; or, if you prefer it, as a
+loan, which I shall repay on my return. And then, if you so
+decide, you may have seen the last of me."
+
+My lord stared him steadily in the eyes; there was a hard smile
+upon his face, but he uttered nothing.
+
+"Henry," said the Master, with a formidable quietness, and drawing
+at the same time somewhat back - "Henry, I had the honour to
+address you."
+
+"Let us be stepping homeward," says my lord to me, who was plucking
+at his sleeve; and with that he rose, stretched himself, settled
+his hat, and still without a syllable of response, began to walk
+steadily along the shore.
+
+I hesitated awhile between the two brothers, so serious a climax
+did we seem to have reached. But the Master had resumed his
+occupation, his eyes lowered, his hand seemingly as deft as ever;
+and I decided to pursue my lord.
+
+"Are you mad?" I cried, so soon as I had overtook him. "Would you
+cast away so fair an opportunity?"
+
+"Is it possible you should still believe in him?" inquired my lord,
+almost with a sneer.
+
+"I wish him forth of this town!" I cried. "I wish him anywhere and
+anyhow but as he is."
+
+"I have said my say," returned my lord, "and you have said yours.
+There let it rest."
+
+But I was bent on dislodging the Master. That sight of him
+patiently returning to his needlework was more than my imagination
+could digest. There was never a man made, and the Master the least
+of any, that could accept so long a series of insults. The air
+smelt blood to me. And I vowed there should be no neglect of mine
+if, through any chink of possibility, crime could be yet turned
+aside. That same day, therefore, I came to my lord in his business
+room, where he sat upon some trivial occupation.
+
+"My lord," said I, "I have found a suitable investment for my small
+economies. But these are unhappily in Scotland; it will take some
+time to lift them, and the affair presses. Could your lordship see
+his way to advance me the amount against my note?"
+
+He read me awhile with keen eyes. "I have never inquired into the
+state of your affairs, Mackellar," says he. "Beyond the amount of
+your caution, you may not be worth a farthing, for what I know."
+
+"I have been a long while in your service, and never told a lie,
+nor yet asked a favour for myself," said I, "until to-day."
+
+"A favour for the Master," he returned, quietly. "Do you take me
+for a fool, Mackellar? Understand it once and for all, I treat
+this beast in my own way; fear nor favour shall not move me; and
+before I am hoodwinked, it will require a trickster less
+transparent than yourself. I ask service, loyal service; not that
+you should make and mar behind my back, and steal my own money to
+defeat me."
+
+"My lord," said I, "these are very unpardonable expressions."
+
+"Think once more, Mackellar," he replied; "and you will see they
+fit the fact. It is your own subterfuge that is unpardonable.
+Deny (if you can) that you designed this money to evade my orders
+with, and I will ask your pardon freely. If you cannot, you must
+have the resolution to hear your conduct go by its own name."
+
+"If you think I had any design but to save you - " I began.
+
+"Oh! my old friend," said he, "you know very well what I think!
+Here is my hand to you with all my heart; but of money, not one
+rap."
+
+Defeated upon this side, I went straight to my room, wrote a
+letter, ran with it to the harbour, for I knew a ship was on the
+point of sailing; and came to the Master's door a little before
+dusk. Entering without the form of any knock, I found him sitting
+with his Indian at a simple meal of maize porridge with some milk.
+The house within was clean and poor; only a few books upon a shelf
+distinguished it, and (in one corner) Secundra's little bench.
+
+"Mr. Bally," said I, "I have near five hundred pounds laid by in
+Scotland, the economies of a hard life. A letter goes by yon ship
+to have it lifted. Have so much patience till the return ship
+comes in, and it is all yours, upon the same condition you offered
+to my lord this morning."
+
+He rose from the table, came forward, took me by the shoulders, and
+looked me in the face, smiling.
+
+"And yet you are very fond of money!" said he. "And yet you love
+money beyond all things else, except my brother!"
+
+"I fear old age and poverty," said I, "which is another matter."
+
+"I will never quarrel for a name. Call it so," he replied. "Ah!
+Mackellar, Mackellar, if this were done from any love to me, how
+gladly would I close upon your offer!"
+
+"And yet," I eagerly answered - "I say it to my shame, but I cannot
+see you in this poor place without compunction. It is not my
+single thought, nor my first; and yet it's there! I would gladly
+see you delivered. I do not offer it in love, and far from that;
+but, as God judges me - and I wonder at it too! - quite without
+enmity."
+
+"Ah!" says he, still holding my shoulders, and now gently shaking
+me, "you think of me more than you suppose. 'And I wonder at it
+too,'" he added, repeating my expression and, I suppose, something
+of my voice. "You are an honest man, and for that cause I spare
+you."
+
+"Spare me?" I cried.
+
+"Spare you," he repeated, letting me go and turning away. And
+then, fronting me once more. "You little know what I would do with
+it, Mackellar! Did you think I had swallowed my defeat indeed?
+Listen: my life has been a series of unmerited cast-backs. That
+fool, Prince Charlie, mismanaged a most promising affair: there
+fell my first fortune. In Paris I had my foot once more high upon
+the ladder: that time it was an accident; a letter came to the
+wrong hand, and I was bare again. A third time, I found my
+opportunity; I built up a place for myself in India with an
+infinite patience; and then Clive came, my rajah was swallowed up,
+and I escaped out of the convulsion, like another AEneas, with
+Secundra Dass upon my back. Three times I have had my hand upon
+the highest station: and I am not yet three-and-forty. I know the
+world as few men know it when they come to die - Court and camp,
+the East and the West; I know where to go, I see a thousand
+openings. I am now at the height of my resources, sound of health,
+of inordinate ambition. Well, all this I resign; I care not if I
+die, and the world never hear of me; I care only for one thing, and
+that I will have. Mind yourself; lest, when the roof falls, you,
+too, should be crushed under the ruins."
+
+
+As I came out of his house, all hope of intervention quite
+destroyed, I was aware of a stir on the harbour-side, and, raising
+my eyes, there was a great ship newly come to anchor. It seems
+strange I could have looked upon her with so much indifference, for
+she brought death to the brothers of Durrisdeer. After all the
+desperate episodes of this contention, the insults, the opposing
+interests, the fraternal duel in the shrubbery, it was reserved for
+some poor devil in Grub Street, scribbling for his dinner, and not
+caring what he scribbled, to cast a spell across four thousand
+miles of the salt sea, and send forth both these brothers into
+savage and wintry deserts, there to die. But such a thought was
+distant from my mind; and while all the provincials were fluttered
+about me by the unusual animation of their port, I passed
+throughout their midst on my return homeward, quite absorbed in the
+recollection of my visit and the Master's speech.
+
+The same night there was brought to us from the ship a little
+packet of pamphlets. The next day my lord was under engagement to
+go with the Governor upon some party of pleasure; the time was
+nearly due, and I left him for a moment alone in his room and
+skimming through the pamphlets. When I returned, his head had
+fallen upon the table, his arms lying abroad amongst the crumpled
+papers.
+
+"My lord, my lord!" I cried as I ran forward, for I supposed he was
+in some fit.
+
+He sprang up like a figure upon wires, his countenance deformed
+with fury, so that in a strange place I should scarce have known
+him. His hand at the same time flew above his head, as though to
+strike me down. "Leave me alone!" he screeched, and I fled, as
+fast as my shaking legs would bear me, for my lady. She, too, lost
+no time; but when we returned, he had the door locked within, and
+only cried to us from the other side to leave him be. We looked in
+each other's faces, very white - each supposing the blow had come
+at last.
+
+"I will write to the Governor to excuse him," says she. "We must
+keep our strong friends." But when she took up the pen, it flew
+out of her fingers. "I cannot write," said she. "Can you?"
+
+"I will make a shift, my lady," said I.
+
+She looked over me as I wrote. "That will do," she said, when I
+had done. "Thank God, Mackellar, I have you to lean upon! But
+what can it be now? What, what can it be?"
+
+In my own mind, I believed there was no explanation possible, and
+none required; it was my fear that the man's madness had now simply
+burst forth its way, like the long-smothered flames of a volcano;
+but to this (in mere mercy to my lady) I durst not give expression.
+
+"It is more to the purpose to consider our own behaviour," said I.
+"Must we leave him there alone?"
+
+"I do not dare disturb him," she replied. "Nature may know best;
+it may be Nature that cries to be alone; and we grope in the dark.
+Oh yes, I would leave him as he is."
+
+"I will, then, despatch this letter, my lady, and return here, if
+you please, to sit with you," said I.
+
+"Pray do," cries my lady.
+
+All afternoon we sat together, mostly in silence, watching my
+lord's door. My own mind was busy with the scene that had just
+passed, and its singular resemblance to my vision. I must say a
+word upon this, for the story has gone abroad with great
+exaggeration, and I have even seen it printed, and my own name
+referred to for particulars. So much was the same: here was my
+lord in a room, with his head upon the table, and when he raised
+his face, it wore such an expression as distressed me to the soul.
+But the room was different, my lord's attitude at the table not at
+all the same, and his face, when he disclosed it, expressed a
+painful degree of fury instead of that haunting despair which had
+always (except once, already referred to) characterised it in the
+vision. There is the whole truth at last before the public; and if
+the differences be great, the coincidence was yet enough to fill me
+with uneasiness. All afternoon, as I say, I sat and pondered upon
+this quite to myself; for my lady had trouble of her own, and it
+was my last thought to vex her with fancies. About the midst of
+our time of waiting, she conceived an ingenious scheme, had Mr.
+Alexander fetched, and bid him knock at his father's door. My lord
+sent the boy about his business, but without the least violence,
+whether of manner or expression; so that I began to entertain a
+hope the fit was over.
+
+At last, as the night fell and I was lighting a lamp that stood
+there trimmed, the door opened and my lord stood within upon the
+threshold. The light was not so strong that we could read his
+countenance; when he spoke, methought his voice a little altered
+but yet perfectly steady.
+
+"Mackellar," said he, "carry this note to its destination with your
+own hand. It is highly private. Find the person alone when you
+deliver it."
+
+"Henry," says my lady, "you are not ill?"
+
+"No, no," says be, querulously, "I am occupied. Not at all; I am
+only occupied. It is a singular thing a man must be supposed to be
+ill when he has any business! Send me supper to this room, and a
+basket of wine: I expect the visit of a friend. Otherwise I am
+not to be disturbed."
+
+And with that he once more shut himself in.
+
+The note was addressed to one Captain Harris, at a tavern on the
+portside. I knew Harris (by reputation) for a dangerous
+adventurer, highly suspected of piracy in the past, and now
+following the rude business of an Indian trader. What my lord
+should have to say to him, or he to my lord, it passed my
+imagination to conceive: or yet how my lord had heard of him,
+unless by a disgraceful trial from which the man was recently
+escaped. Altogether I went upon the errand with reluctance, and
+from the little I saw of the captain, returned from it with sorrow.
+I found him in a foul-smelling chamber, sitting by a guttering
+candle and an empty bottle; he had the remains of a military
+carriage, or rather perhaps it was an affectation, for his manners
+were low.
+
+"Tell my lord, with my service, that I will wait upon his lordship
+in the inside of half an hour," says he, when he had read the note;
+and then had the servility, pointing to his empty bottle, to
+propose that I should buy him liquor.
+
+Although I returned with my best speed, the Captain followed close
+upon my heels, and he stayed late into the night. The cock was
+crowing a second time when I saw (from my chamber window) my lord
+lighting him to the gate, both men very much affected with their
+potations, and sometimes leaning one upon the other to confabulate.
+Yet the next morning my lord was abroad again early with a hundred
+pounds of money in his pocket. I never supposed that he returned
+with it; and yet I was quite sure it did not find its way to the
+Master, for I lingered all morning within view of the booth. That
+was the last time my Lord Durrisdeer passed his own enclosure till
+we left New York; he walked in his barn, or sat and talked with his
+family, all much as usual; but the town saw nothing of him, and his
+daily visits to the Master seemed forgotten. Nor yet did Harris
+reappear; or not until the end.
+
+I was now much oppressed with a sense of the mysteries in which we
+had begun to move. It was plain, if only from his change of
+habitude, my lord had something on his mind of a grave nature; but
+what it was, whence it sprang, or why he should now keep the house
+and garden, I could make no guess at. It was clear, even to
+probation, the pamphlets had some share in this revolution; I read
+all I could find, and they were all extremely insignificant, and of
+the usual kind of party scurrility; even to a high politician, I
+could spy out no particular matter of offence, and my lord was a
+man rather indifferent on public questions. The truth is, the
+pamphlet which was the spring of this affair, lay all the time on
+my lord's bosom. There it was that I found it at last, after he
+was dead, in the midst of the north wilderness: in such a place,
+in such dismal circumstances, I was to read for the first time
+these idle, lying words of a Whig pamphleteer declaiming against
+indulgency to Jacobites:- "Another notorious Rebel, the M-r of B-e,
+is to have his Title restored," the passage ran. "This Business
+has been long in hand, since he rendered some very disgraceful
+Services in Scotland and France. His Brother, L-D D-R, is known to
+be no better than himself in Inclination; and the supposed Heir,
+who is now to be set aside, was bred up in the most detestable
+Principles. In the old Phrase, it is SIX OF THE ONE AND HALF A
+DOZEN OF THE OTHER; but the Favour of such a Reposition is too
+extreme to be passed over." A man in his right wits could not have
+cared two straws for a tale so manifestly false; that Government
+should ever entertain the notion, was inconceivable to any
+reasoning creature, unless possibly the fool that penned it; and my
+lord, though never brilliant, was ever remarkable for sense. That
+he should credit such a rodomontade, and carry the pamphlet on his
+bosom and the words in his heart, is the clear proof of the man's
+lunacy. Doubtless the mere mention of Mr. Alexander, and the
+threat directly held out against the child's succession,
+precipitated that which had so long impended. Or else my master
+had been truly mad for a long time, and we were too dull or too
+much used to him, and did not perceive the extent of his infirmity.
+
+About a week after the day of the pamphlets I was late upon the
+harbour-side, and took a turn towards the Master's, as I often did.
+The door opened, a flood of light came forth upon the road, and I
+beheld a man taking his departure with friendly salutations. I
+cannot say how singularly I was shaken to recognise the adventurer
+Harris. I could not but conclude it was the hand of my lord that
+had brought him there; and prolonged my walk in very serious and
+apprehensive thought. It was late when I came home, and there was
+my lord making up his portmanteau for a voyage.
+
+"Why do you come so late?" he cried. "We leave to-morrow for
+Albany, you and I together; and it is high time you were about your
+preparations."
+
+"For Albany, my lord?" I cried. "And for what earthly purpose?"
+
+"Change of scene," said he.
+
+And my lady, who appeared to have been weeping, gave me the signal
+to obey without more parley. She told me a little later (when we
+found occasion to exchange some words) that he had suddenly
+announced his intention after a visit from Captain Harris, and her
+best endeavours, whether to dissuade him from the journey, or to
+elicit some explanation of its purpose, had alike proved
+unavailing.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. - THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS.
+
+
+
+We made a prosperous voyage up that fine river of the Hudson, the
+weather grateful, the hills singularly beautified with the colours
+of the autumn. At Albany we had our residence at an inn, where I
+was not so blind and my lord not so cunning but what I could see he
+had some design to hold me prisoner. The work he found for me to
+do was not so pressing that we should transact it apart from
+necessary papers in the chamber of an inn; nor was it of such
+importance that I should be set upon as many as four or five
+scrolls of the same document. I submitted in appearance; but I
+took private measures on my own side, and had the news of the town
+communicated to me daily by the politeness of our host. In this
+way I received at last a piece of intelligence for which, I may
+say, I had been waiting. Captain Harris (I was told) with "Mr.
+Mountain, the trader," had gone by up the river in a boat. I would
+have feared the landlord's eye, so strong the sense of some
+complicity upon my master's part oppressed me. But I made out to
+say I had some knowledge of the Captain, although none of Mr.
+Mountain, and to inquire who else was of the party. My informant
+knew not; Mr. Mountain had come ashore upon some needful purchases;
+had gone round the town buying, drinking, and prating; and it
+seemed the party went upon some likely venture, for he had spoken
+much of great things he would do when he returned. No more was
+known, for none of the rest had come ashore, and it seemed they
+were pressed for time to reach a certain spot before the snow
+should fall.
+
+And sure enough, the next day, there fell a sprinkle even in
+Albany; but it passed as it came, and was but a reminder of what
+lay before us. I thought of it lightly then, knowing so little as
+I did of that inclement province: the retrospect is different; and
+I wonder at times if some of the horror of there events which I
+must now rehearse flowed not from the foul skies and savage winds
+to which we were exposed, and the agony of cold that we must
+suffer.
+
+The boat having passed by, I thought at first we should have left
+the town. But no such matter. My lord continued his stay in
+Albany where he had no ostensible affairs, and kept me by him, far
+from my due employment, and making a pretence of occupation. It is
+upon this passage I expect, and perhaps deserve, censure. I was
+not so dull but what I had my own thoughts. I could not see the
+Master entrust himself into the hands of Harris, and not suspect
+some underhand contrivance. Harris bore a villainous reputation,
+and he had been tampered with in private by my lord; Mountain, the
+trader, proved, upon inquiry, to be another of the same kidney; the
+errand they were all gone upon being the recovery of ill-gotten
+treasures, offered in itself a very strong incentive to foul play;
+and the character of the country where they journeyed promised
+impunity to deeds of blood. Well: it is true I had all these
+thoughts and fears, and guesses of the Master's fate. But you are
+to consider I was the same man that sought to dash him from the
+bulwarks of a ship in the mid-sea; the same that, a little before,
+very impiously but sincerely offered God a bargain, seeking to hire
+God to be my bravo. It is true again that I had a good deal melted
+towards our enemy. But this I always thought of as a weakness of
+the flesh and even culpable; my mind remaining steady and quite
+bent against him. True, yet again, that it was one thing to assume
+on my own shoulders the guilt and danger of a criminal attempt, and
+another to stand by and see my lord imperil and besmirch himself.
+But this was the very ground of my inaction. For (should I anyway
+stir in the business) I might fail indeed to save the Master, but I
+could not miss to make a byword of my lord.
+
+Thus it was that I did nothing; and upon the same reasons, I am
+still strong to justify my course. We lived meanwhile in Albany,
+but though alone together in a strange place, had little traffic
+beyond formal salutations. My lord had carried with him several
+introductions to chief people of the town and neighbourhood; others
+he had before encountered in New York: with this consequence, that
+he went much abroad, and I am sorry to say was altogether too
+convivial in his habits. I was often in bed, but never asleep,
+when he returned; and there was scarce a night when he did not
+betray the influence of liquor. By day he would still lay upon me
+endless tasks, which he showed considerable ingenuity to fish up
+and renew, in the manner of Penelope's web. I never refused, as I
+say, for I was hired to do his bidding; but I took no pains to keep
+my penetration under a bushel, and would sometimes smile in his
+face.
+
+"I think I must be the devil and you Michael Scott," I said to him
+one day. "I have bridged Tweed and split the Eildons; and now you
+set me to the rope of sand."
+
+He looked at me with shining eyes, and looked away again, his jaw
+chewing, but without words.
+
+"Well, well, my lord," said I, "your will is my pleasure. I will
+do this thing for the fourth time; but I would beg of you to invent
+another task against to-morrow, for by my troth, I am weary of this
+one."
+
+"You do not know what you are saying," returned my lord, putting on
+his hat and turning his back to me. "It is a strange thing you
+should take a pleasure to annoy me. A friend - but that is a
+different affair. It is a strange thing. I am a man that has had
+ill-fortune all my life through. I am still surrounded by
+contrivances. I am always treading in plots," he burst out. "The
+whole world is banded against me."
+
+"I would not talk wicked nonsense if I were you," said I; "but I
+will tell you what I WOULD do - I would put my head in cold water,
+for you had more last night than you could carry."
+
+"Do ye think that?" said he, with a manner of interest highly
+awakened. "Would that be good for me? It's a thing I never
+tried."
+
+"I mind the days when you had no call to try, and I wish, my lord,
+that they were back again," said I. "But the plain truth is, if
+you continue to exceed, you will do yourself a mischief."
+
+"I don't appear to carry drink the way I used to," said my lord.
+"I get overtaken, Mackellar. But I will be more upon my guard."
+
+"That is what I would ask of you," I replied. "You are to bear in
+mind that you are Mr. Alexander's father: give the bairn a chance
+to carry his name with some responsibility."
+
+"Ay, ay," said he. "Ye're a very sensible man, Mackellar, and have
+been long in my employ. But I think, if you have nothing more to
+say to me I will be stepping. If you have nothing more to say?" he
+added, with that burning, childish eagerness that was now so common
+with the man.
+
+"No, my lord, I have nothing more," said I, dryly enough.
+
+"Then I think I will be stepping," says my lord, and stood and
+looked at me fidgeting with his hat, which he had taken off again.
+"I suppose you will have no errands? No? I am to meet Sir William
+Johnson, but I will be more upon my guard." He was silent for a
+time, and then, smiling: "Do you call to mind a place, Mackellar -
+it's a little below Engles - where the burn runs very deep under a
+wood of rowans. I mind being there when I was a lad - dear, it
+comes over me like an old song! - I was after the fishing, and I
+made a bonny cast. Eh, but I was happy. I wonder, Mackellar, why
+I am never happy now?"
+
+"My lord," said I, "if you would drink with more moderation you
+would have the better chance. It is an old byword that the bottle
+is a false consoler."
+
+"No doubt," said he, "no doubt. Well, I think I will be going."
+
+"Good-morning, my lord," said I.
+
+"Good-morning, good-morning," said he, and so got himself at last
+from the apartment.
+
+I give that for a fair specimen of my lord in the morning; and I
+must have described my patron very ill if the reader does not
+perceive a notable falling off. To behold the man thus fallen: to
+know him accepted among his companions for a poor, muddled toper,
+welcome (if he were welcome at all) for the bare consideration of
+his title; and to recall the virtues he had once displayed against
+such odds of fortune; was not this a thing at once to rage and to
+be humbled at?
+
+In his cups, he was more expensive. I will give but the one scene,
+close upon the end, which is strongly marked upon my memory to this
+day, and at the time affected me almost with horror
+
+I was in bed, lying there awake, when I heard him stumbling on the
+stair and singing. My lord had no gift of music, his brother had
+all the graces of the family, so that when I say singing, you are
+to understand a manner of high, carolling utterance, which was
+truly neither speech nor song. Something not unlike is to be heard
+upon the lips of children, ere they learn shame; from those of a
+man grown elderly, it had a strange effect. He opened the door
+with noisy precaution; peered in, shading his candle; conceived me
+to slumber; entered, set his light upon the table, and took off his
+hat. I saw him very plain; a high, feverish exultation appeared to
+boil in his veins, and he stood and smiled and smirked upon the
+candle. Presently he lifted up his arm, snapped his fingers, and
+fell to undress. As he did so, having once more forgot my
+presence, he took back to his singing; and now I could hear the
+words, which were those from the old song of the TWA CORBIES
+endlessly repeated:
+
+
+"And over his banes when they are bare
+The wind sall blaw for evermair!"
+
+
+I have said there was no music in the man. His strains had no
+logical succession except in so far as they inclined a little to
+the minor mode; but they exercised a rude potency upon the
+feelings, and followed the words, and signified the feelings of the
+singer with barbaric fitness. He took it first in the time and
+manner of a rant; presently this ill-favoured gleefulness abated,
+he began to dwell upon the notes more feelingly, and sank at last
+into a degree of maudlin pathos that was to me scarce bearable. By
+equal steps, the original briskness of his acts declined; and when
+he was stripped to his breeches, he sat on the bedside and fell to
+whimpering. I know nothing less respectable than the tears of
+drunkenness, and turned my back impatiently on this poor sight.
+
+But he had started himself (I am to suppose) on that slippery
+descent of self-pity; on the which, to a man unstrung by old
+sorrows and recent potations there is no arrest except exhaustion.
+His tears continued to flow, and the man to sit there, three parts
+naked, in the cold air of the chamber. I twitted myself
+alternately with inhumanity and sentimental weakness, now half
+rising in my bed to interfere, now reading myself lessons of
+indifference and courting slumber, until, upon a sudden, the
+QUANTUM MUTATUS AB ILLO shot into my mind; and calling to
+remembrance his old wisdom, constancy, and patience, I was
+overborne with a pity almost approaching the passionate, not for my
+master alone but for the sons of man.
+
+At this I leaped from my place, went over to his side and laid a
+hand on his bare shoulder, which was cold as stone. He uncovered
+his face and showed it me all swollen and begrutten (10) like a
+child's; and at the sight my impatience partially revived.
+
+"Think shame to yourself," said I. "This is bairnly conduct. I
+might have been snivelling myself, if I had cared to swill my belly
+with wine. But I went to my bed sober like a man. Come: get into
+yours, and have done with this pitiable exhibition."
+
+"Oh, Mackellar," said he, "my heart is wae!"
+
+"Wae?" cried I. "For a good cause, I think. What words were these
+you sang as you came in? Show pity to others, we then can talk of
+pity to yourself. You can be the one thing or the other, but I
+will be no party to half-way houses. If you're a striker, strike,
+and if you're a bleater, bleat!"
+
+"Cry!" cries he, with a burst, "that's it - strike! that's talking!
+Man, I've stood it all too long. But when they laid a hand upon
+the child, when the child's threatened" - his momentary vigour
+whimpering off - "my child, my Alexander!" - and he was at his
+tears again.
+
+I took him by the shoulders and shook him. "Alexander!" said I.
+"Do you even think of him? Not you! Look yourself in the face
+like a brave man, and you'll find you're but a self-deceiver. The
+wife, the friend, the child, they're all equally forgot, and you
+sunk in a mere log of selfishness."
+
+"Mackellar," said he, with a wonderful return to his old manner and
+appearance, "you may say what you will of me, but one thing I never
+was - I was never selfish."
+
+"I will open your eyes in your despite," said I. "How long have we
+been here? and how often have you written to your family? I think
+this is the first time you were ever separate: have you written at
+all? Do they know if you are dead or living?"
+
+I had caught him here too openly; it braced his better nature;
+there was no more weeping, he thanked me very penitently, got to
+bed and was soon fast asleep; and the first thing he did the next
+morning was to sit down and begin a letter to my lady: a very
+tender letter it was too, though it was never finished. Indeed all
+communication with New York was transacted by myself; and it will
+be judged I had a thankless task of it. What to tell my lady and
+in what words, and how far to be false and how far cruel, was a
+thing that kept me often from my slumber.
+
+All this while, no doubt, my lord waited with growing impatiency
+for news of his accomplices. Harris, it is to be thought, had
+promised a high degree of expedition; the time was already overpast
+when word was to be looked for; and suspense was a very evil
+counsellor to a man of an impaired intelligence. My lord's mind
+throughout this interval dwelled almost wholly in the Wilderness,
+following that party with whose deeds he had so much concern. He
+continually conjured up their camps and progresses, the fashion of
+the country, the perpetration in a thousand different manners of
+the same horrid fact, and that consequent spectacle of the Master's
+bones lying scattered in the wind. These private, guilty
+considerations I would continually observe to peep forth in the
+man's talk, like rabbits from a hill. And it is the less wonder if
+the scene of his meditations began to draw him bodily.
+
+
+It is well known what pretext he took. Sir William Johnson had a
+diplomatic errand in these parts; and my lord and I (from
+curiosity, as was given out) went in his company. Sir William was
+well attended and liberally supplied. Hunters brought us venison,
+fish was taken for us daily in the streams, and brandy ran like
+water. We proceeded by day and encamped by night in the military
+style; sentinels were set and changed; every man had his named
+duty; and Sir William was the spring of all. There was much in
+this that might at times have entertained me; but for our
+misfortune, the weather was extremely harsh, the days were in the
+beginning open, but the nights frosty from the first. A painful
+keen wind blew most of the time, so that we sat in the boat with
+blue fingers, and at night, as we scorched our faces at the fire,
+the clothes upon our back appeared to be of paper. A dreadful
+solitude surrounded our steps; the land was quite dispeopled, there
+was no smoke of fires, and save for a single boat of merchants on
+the second day, we met no travellers. The season was indeed late,
+but this desertion of the waterways impressed Sir William himself;
+and I have heard him more than once express a sense of
+intimidation. "I have come too late, I fear; they must have dug up
+the hatchet;" he said; and the future proved how justly he had
+reasoned.
+
+I could never depict the blackness of my soul upon this journey. I
+have none of those minds that are in love with the unusual: to see
+the winter coming and to lie in the field so far from any house,
+oppressed me like a nightmare; it seemed, indeed, a kind of awful
+braving of God's power; and this thought, which I daresay only
+writes me down a coward, was greatly exaggerated by my private
+knowledge of the errand we were come upon. I was besides
+encumbered by my duties to Sir William, whom it fell upon me to
+entertain; for my lord was quite sunk into a state bordering on
+PERVIGILIUM, watching the woods with a rapt eye, sleeping scarce at
+all, and speaking sometimes not twenty words in a whole day. That
+which he said was still coherent; but it turned almost invariably
+upon the party for whom he kept his crazy lookout. He would tell
+Sir William often, and always as if it were a new communication,
+that he had "a brother somewhere in the woods," and beg that the
+sentinels should be directed "to inquire for him." "I am anxious
+for news of my brother," he would say. And sometimes, when we were
+under way, he would fancy he spied a canoe far off upon the water
+or a camp on the shore, and exhibit painful agitation. It was
+impossible but Sir William should be struck with these
+singularities; and at last he led me aside, and hinted his
+uneasiness. I touched my head and shook it; quite rejoiced to
+prepare a little testimony against possible disclosures.
+
+"But in that case," cries Sir William, "is it wise to let him go at
+large?"
+
+"Those that know him best," said I, "are persuaded that he should
+be humoured."
+
+"Well, well," replied Sir William, "it is none of my affairs. But
+if I had understood, you would never have been here."
+
+Our advance into this savage country had thus uneventfully
+proceeded for about a week, when we encamped for a night at a place
+where the river ran among considerable mountains clothed in wood.
+The fires were lighted on a level space at the water's edge; and we
+supped and lay down to sleep in the customary fashion. It chanced
+the night fell murderously cold; the stringency of the frost seized
+and bit me through my coverings so that pain kept me wakeful; and I
+was afoot again before the peep of day, crouching by the fires or
+trotting to and for at the stream's edge, to combat the aching of
+my limbs. At last dawn began to break upon hoar woods and
+mountains, the sleepers rolled in their robes, and the boisterous
+river dashing among spears of ice. I stood looking about me,
+swaddled in my stiff coat of a bull's fur, and the breath smoking
+from my scorched nostrils, when, upon a sudden, a singular, eager
+cry rang from the borders of the wood. The sentries answered it,
+the sleepers sprang to their feet; one pointed, the rest followed
+his direction with their eyes, and there, upon the edge of the
+forest and betwixt two trees, we beheld the figure of a man
+reaching forth his hands like one in ecstasy. The next moment he
+ran forward, fell on his knees at the side of the camp, and burst
+in tears.
+
+This was John Mountain, the trader, escaped from the most horrid
+perils; and his fist word, when he got speech, was to ask if we had
+seen Secundra Dass.
+
+"Seen what?" cries Sir William.
+
+"No," said I, "we have seen nothing of him. Why?"
+
+"Nothing?" says Mountain. "Then I was right after all." With that
+he struck his palm upon his brow. "But what takes him back?" he
+cried. "What takes the man back among dead bodies. There is some
+damned mystery here."
+
+This was a word which highly aroused our curiosity, but I shall be
+more perspicacious, if I narrate these incidents in their true
+order. Here follows a narrative which I have compiled out of three
+sources, not very consistent in all points:
+
+FIRST, a written statement by Mountain, in which everything
+criminal is cleverly smuggled out of view;
+
+SECOND, two conversations with Secundra Dass; and
+
+THIRD, many conversations with Mountain himself, in which he was
+pleased to be entirely plain; for the truth is he regarded me as an
+accomplice.
+
+
+NARRATIVE OF THE TRADER, MOUNTAIN.
+
+
+The crew that went up the river under the joint command of Captain
+Harris and the Master numbered in all nine persons, of whom (if I
+except Secundra Dass) there was not one that had not merited the
+gallows. From Harris downward the voyagers were notorious in that
+colony for desperate, bloody-minded miscreants; some were reputed
+pirates, the most hawkers of rum; all ranters and drinkers; all fit
+associates, embarking together without remorse, upon this
+treacherous and murderous design. I could not hear there was much
+discipline or any set captain in the gang; but Harris and four
+others, Mountain himself, two Scotchmen - Pinkerton and Hastie -
+and a man of the name of Hicks, a drunken shoemaker, put their
+heads together and agreed upon the course. In a material sense,
+they were well enough provided; and the Master in particular
+brought with him a tent where he might enjoy some privacy and
+shelter.
+
+Even this small indulgence told against him in the minds of his
+companions. But indeed he was in a position so entirely false (and
+even ridiculous) that all his habit of command and arts of pleasing
+were here thrown away. In the eyes of all, except Secundra Dass,
+he figured as a common gull and designated victim; going
+unconsciously to death; yet he could not but suppose himself the
+contriver and the leader of the expedition; he could scarce help
+but so conduct himself and at the least hint of authority or
+condescension, his deceivers would be laughing in their sleeves. I
+was so used to see and to conceive him in a high, authoritative
+attitude, that when I had conceived his position on this journey, I
+was pained and could have blushed. How soon he may have
+entertained a first surmise, we cannot know; but it was long, and
+the party had advanced into the Wilderness beyond the reach of any
+help, ere he was fully awakened to the truth.
+
+It fell thus. Harris and some others had drawn apart into the
+woods for consultation, when they were startled by a rustling in
+the brush. They were all accustomed to the arts of Indian warfare,
+and Mountain had not only lived and hunted, but fought and earned
+some reputation, with the savages. He could move in the woods
+without noise, and follow a trail like a hound; and upon the
+emergence of this alert, he was deputed by the rest to plunge into
+the thicket for intelligence. He was soon convinced there was a
+man in his close neighbourhood, moving with precaution but without
+art among the leaves and branches; and coming shortly to a place of
+advantage, he was able to observe Secundra Dass crawling briskly
+off with many backward glances. At this he knew not whether to
+laugh or cry; and his accomplices, when he had returned and
+reported, were in much the same dubiety. There was now no danger
+of an Indian onslaught; but on the other hand, since Secundra Dass
+was at the pains to spy upon them, it was highly probable he knew
+English, and if he knew English it was certain the whole of their
+design was in the Master's knowledge. There was one singularity in
+the position. If Secundra Dass knew and concealed his knowledge of
+English, Harris was a proficient in several of the tongues of
+India, and as his career in that part of the world had been a great
+deal worse than profligate, he had not thought proper to remark
+upon the circumstance. Each side had thus a spy-hole on the
+counsels of the other. The plotters, so soon as this advantage was
+explained, returned to camp; Harris, hearing the Hindustani was
+once more closeted with his master, crept to the side of the tent;
+and the rest, sitting about the fire with their tobacco, awaited
+his report with impatience. When he came at last, his face was
+very black. He had overheard enough to confirm the worst of his
+suspicions. Secundra Dass was a good English scholar; he had been
+some days creeping and listening, the Master was now fully informed
+of the conspiracy, and the pair proposed on the morrow to fall out
+of line at a carrying place and plunge at a venture in the woods:
+preferring the full risk of famine, savage beasts, and savage men
+to their position in the midst of traitors.
+
+What, then, was to be done? Some were for killing the Master on
+the spot; but Harris assured them that would be a crime without
+profit, since the secret of the treasure must die along with him
+that buried it. Others were for desisting at once from the whole
+enterprise and making for New York; but the appetising name of
+treasure, and the thought of the long way they had already
+travelled dissuaded the majority. I imagine they were dull fellows
+for the most part. Harris, indeed, had some acquirements, Mountain
+was no fool, Hastie was an educated man; but even these had
+manifestly failed in life, and the rest were the dregs of colonial
+rascality. The conclusion they reached, at least, was more the
+offspring of greed and hope, than reason. It was to temporise, to
+be wary and watch the Master, to be silent and supply no further
+aliment to his suspicions, and to depend entirely (as well as I
+make out) on the chance that their victim was as greedy, hopeful,
+and irrational as themselves, and might, after all, betray his life
+and treasure.
+
+Twice in the course of the next day Secundra and the Master must
+have appeared to themselves to have escaped; and twice they were
+circumvented. The Master, save that the second time he grew a
+little pale, displayed no sign of disappointment, apologised for
+the stupidity with which he had fallen aside, thanked his
+recapturers as for a service, and rejoined the caravan with all his
+usual gallantry and cheerfulness of mien and bearing. But it is
+certain he had smelled a rat; for from thenceforth he and Secundra
+spoke only in each other's ear, and Harris listened and shivered by
+the tent in vain. The same night it was announced they were to
+leave the boats and proceed by foot, a circumstance which (as it
+put an end to the confusion of the portages) greatly lessened the
+chances of escape.
+
+And now there began between the two sides a silent contest, for
+life on the one hand, for riches on the other. They were now near
+that quarter of the desert in which the Master himself must begin
+to play the part of guide; and using this for a pretext of
+persecution, Harris and his men sat with him every night about the
+fire, and laboured to entrap him into some admission. If he let
+slip his secret, he knew well it was the warrant for his death; on
+the other hand, he durst not refuse their questions, and must
+appear to help them to the best of his capacity, or he practically
+published his mistrust. And yet Mountain assures me the man's brow
+was never ruffled. He sat in the midst of these jackals, his life
+depending by a thread, like some easy, witty householder at home by
+his own fire; an answer he had for everything - as often as not, a
+jesting answer; avoided threats, evaded insults; talked, laughed,
+and listened with an open countenance; and, in short, conducted
+himself in such a manner as must have disarmed suspicion, and went
+near to stagger knowledge. Indeed, Mountain confessed to me they
+would soon have disbelieved the Captain's story, and supposed their
+designated victim still quite innocent of their designs; but for
+the fact that he continued (however ingeniously) to give the slip
+to questions, and the yet stronger confirmation of his repeated
+efforts to escape. The last of these, which brought things to a
+head, I am now to relate. And first I should say that by this time
+the temper of Harris's companions was utterly worn out; civility
+was scarce pretended; and for one very significant circumstance,
+the Master and Secundra had been (on some pretext) deprived of
+weapons. On their side, however, the threatened pair kept up the
+parade of friendship handsomely; Secundra was all bows, the Master
+all smiles; and on the last night of the truce he had even gone so
+far as to sing for the diversion of the company. It was observed
+that he had also eaten with unusual heartiness, and drank deep,
+doubtless from design.
+
+At least, about three in the morning, he came out of the tent into
+the open air, audibly mourning and complaining, with all the manner
+of a sufferer from surfeit. For some while, Secundra publicly
+attended on his patron, who at last became more easy, and fell
+asleep on the frosty ground behind the tent, the Indian returning
+within. Some time after, the sentry was changed; had the Master
+pointed out to him, where he lay in what is called a robe of
+buffalo: and thenceforth kept an eye upon him (he declared)
+without remission. With the first of the dawn, a draught of wind
+came suddenly and blew open one side the corner of the robe; and
+with the same puff, the Master's hat whirled in the air and fell
+some yards away. The sentry thinking it remarkable the sleeper
+should not awaken, thereupon drew near; and the next moment, with a
+great shout, informed the camp their prisoner was escaped. He had
+left behind his Indian, who (in the first vivacity of the surprise)
+came near to pay the forfeit of his life, and was, in fact,
+inhumanly mishandled; but Secundra, in the midst of threats and
+cruelties, stuck to it with extraordinary loyalty, that he was
+quite ignorant of his master's plans, which might indeed be true,
+and of the manner of his escape, which was demonstrably false.
+Nothing was therefore left to the conspirators but to rely entirely
+on the skill of Mountain. The night had been frosty, the ground
+quite hard; and the sun was no sooner up than a strong thaw set in.
+It was Mountain's boast that few men could have followed that
+trail, and still fewer (even of the native Indians) found it. The
+Master had thus a long start before his pursuers had the scent, and
+he must have travelled with surprising energy for a pedestrian so
+unused, since it was near noon before Mountain had a view of him.
+At this conjuncture the trader was alone, all his companions
+following, at his own request, several hundred yards in the rear;
+he knew the Master was unarmed; his heart was besides heated with
+the exercise and lust of hunting; and seeing the quarry so close,
+so defenceless, and seeming so fatigued, he vain-gloriously
+determined to effect the capture with his single hand. A step or
+two farther brought him to one margin of a little clearing; on the
+other, with his arms folded and his back to a huge stone, the
+Master sat. It is possible Mountain may have made a rustle, it is
+certain, at least, the Master raised his head and gazed directly at
+that quarter of the thicket where his hunter lay; "I could not be
+sure he saw me," Mountain said; "he just looked my way like a man
+with his mind made up, and all the courage ran out of me like rum
+out of a bottle." And presently, when the Master looked away
+again, and appeared to resume those meditations in which he had sat
+immersed before the trader's coming, Mountain slunk stealthily back
+and returned to seek the help of his companions.
+
+And now began the chapter of surprises, for the scout had scarce
+informed the others of his discovery, and they were yet preparing
+their weapons for a rush upon the fugitive, when the man himself
+appeared in their midst, walking openly and quietly, with his hands
+behind his back.
+
+"Ah, men!" says he, on his beholding them. "Here is a fortunate
+encounter. Let us get back to camp."
+
+Mountain had not mentioned his own weakness or the Master's
+disconcerting gaze upon the thicket, so that (with all the rest)
+his return appeared spontaneous. For all that, a hubbub arose;
+oaths flew, fists were shaken, and guns pointed.
+
+"Let us get back to camp," said the Master. "I have an explanation
+to make, but it must be laid before you all. And in the meanwhile
+I would put up these weapons, one of which might very easily go off
+and blow away your hopes of treasure. I would not kill," says he,
+smiling, "the goose with the golden eggs."
+
+The charm of his superiority once more triumphed; and the party, in
+no particular order, set off on their return. By the way, he found
+occasion to get a word or two apart with Mountain.
+
+"You are a clever fellow and a bold," says he, "but I am not so
+sure that you are doing yourself justice. I would have you to
+consider whether you would not do better, ay, and safer, to serve
+me instead of serving so commonplace a rascal as Mr. Harris.
+Consider of it," he concluded, dealing the man a gentle tap upon
+the shoulder, "and don't be in haste. Dead or alive, you will find
+me an ill man to quarrel with."
+
+When they were come back to the camp, where Harris and Pinkerton
+stood guard over Secundra, these two ran upon the Master like
+viragoes, and were amazed out of measure when they were bidden by
+their comrades to "stand back and hear what the gentleman had to
+say." The Master had not flinched before their onslaught; nor, at
+this proof of the ground he had gained, did he betray the least
+sufficiency.
+
+"Do not let us be in haste," says he. "Meat first and public
+speaking after."
+
+With that they made a hasty meal: and as soon as it was done, the
+Master, leaning on one elbow, began his speech. He spoke long,
+addressing himself to each except Harris, finding for each (with
+the same exception) some particular flattery. He called them
+"bold, honest blades," declared he had never seen a more jovial
+company, work better done, or pains more merrily supported. "Well,
+then," says he, "some one asks me, Why the devil I ran away? But
+that is scarce worth answer, for I think you all know pretty well.
+But you know only pretty well: that is a point I shall arrive at
+presently, and be you ready to remark it when it comes. There is a
+traitor here: a double traitor: I will give you his name before I
+am done; and let that suffice for now. But here comes some other
+gentleman and asks me, 'Why, in the devil, I came back?' Well,
+before I answer that question, I have one to put to you. It was
+this cur here, this Harris, that speaks Hindustani?" cries he,
+rising on one knee and pointing fair at the man's face, with a
+gesture indescribably menacing; and when he had been answered in
+the affirmative, "Ah!" says he, "then are all my suspicions
+verified, and I did rightly to come back. Now, men, hear the truth
+for the first time." Thereupon he launched forth in a long story,
+told with extraordinary skill, how he had all along suspected
+Harris, how he had found the confirmation of his fears, and how
+Harris must have misrepresented what passed between Secundra and
+himself. At this point he made a bold stroke with excellent
+effect. "I suppose," says he, "you think you are going shares with
+Harris; I suppose you think you will see to that yourselves; you
+would naturally not think so flat a rogue could cozen you. But
+have a care! These half idiots have a sort of cunning, as the
+skunk has its stench; and it may be news to you that Harris has
+taken care of himself already. Yes, for him the treasure is all
+money in the bargain. You must find it or go starve. But he has
+been paid beforehand; my brother paid him to destroy me; look at
+him, if you doubt - look at him, grinning and gulping, a detected
+thief!" Thence, having made this happy impression, he explained
+how he had escaped, and thought better of it, and at last concluded
+to come back, lay the truth before the company, and take his chance
+with them once more: persuaded as he was, they would instantly
+depose Harris and elect some other leader. "There is the whole
+truth," said he: "and with one exception, I put myself entirely in
+your hands. What is the exception? There he sits," he cried,
+pointing once more to Harris; "a man that has to die! Weapons and
+conditions are all one to me; put me face to face with him, and if
+you give me nothing but a stick, in five minutes I will show you a
+sop of broken carrion, fit for dogs to roll in."
+
+It was dark night when he made an end; they had listened in almost
+perfect silence; but the firelight scarce permitted any one to
+judge, from the look of his neighbours, with what result of
+persuasion or conviction. Indeed, the Master had set himself in
+the brightest place, and kept his face there, to be the centre of
+men's eyes: doubtless on a profound calculation. Silence followed
+for awhile, and presently the whole party became involved in
+disputation: the Master lying on his back, with his hands knit
+under his head and one knee flung across the other, like a person
+unconcerned in the result. And here, I daresay, his bravado
+carried him too far and prejudiced his case. At least, after a
+cast or two back and forward, opinion settled finally against him.
+It's possible he hoped to repeat the business of the pirate ship,
+and be himself, perhaps, on hard enough conditions, elected leader;
+and things went so far that way, that Mountain actually threw out
+the proposition. But the rock he split upon was Hastie. This
+fellow was not well liked, being sour and slow, with an ugly,
+glowering disposition, but he had studied some time for the church
+at Edinburgh College, before ill conduct had destroyed his
+prospects, and he now remembered and applied what he had learned.
+Indeed he had not proceeded very far, when the Master rolled
+carelessly upon one side, which was done (in Mountain's opinion) to
+conceal the beginnings of despair upon his countenance. Hastie
+dismissed the most of what they had heard as nothing to the matter:
+what they wanted was the treasure. All that was said of Harris
+might be true, and they would have to see to that in time. But
+what had that to do with the treasure? They had heard a vast of
+words; but the truth was just this, that Mr. Durie was damnably
+frightened and had several times run off. Here he was - whether
+caught or come back was all one to Hastie: the point was to make
+an end of the business. As for the talk of deposing and electing
+captains, he hoped they were all free men and could attend their
+own affairs. That was dust flung in their eyes, and so was the
+proposal to fight Harris. "He shall fight no one in this camp, I
+can tell him that," said Hastie. "We had trouble enough to get his
+arms away from him, and we should look pretty fools to give them
+back again. But if it's excitement the gentleman is after, I can
+supply him with more than perhaps he cares about. For I have no
+intention to spend the remainder of my life in these mountains;
+already I have been too long; and I propose that he should
+immediately tell us where that treasure is, or else immediately be
+shot. And there," says he, producing his weapon, "there is the
+pistol that I mean to use."
+
+"Come, I call you a man," cries the Master, sitting up and looking
+at the speaker with an air of admiration.
+
+"I didn't ask you to call me anything," returned Hastie; "which is
+it to be?"
+
+"That's an idle question," said the Master. "Needs must when the
+devil drives. The truth is we are within easy walk of the place,
+and I will show it you to-morrow."
+
+With that, as if all were quite settled, and settled exactly to his
+mind, he walked off to his tent, whither Secundra had preceded him.
+
+I cannot think of these last turns and wriggles of my old enemy
+except with admiration; scarce even pity is mingled with the
+sentiment, so strongly the man supported, so boldly resisted his
+misfortunes. Even at that hour, when he perceived himself quite
+lost, when he saw he had but effected an exchange of enemies, and
+overthrown Harris to set Hastie up, no sign of weakness appeared in
+his behaviour, and he withdrew to his tent, already determined (I
+must suppose) upon affronting the incredible hazard of his last
+expedient, with the same easy, assured, genteel expression and
+demeanour as he might have left a theatre withal to join a supper
+of the wits. But doubtless within, if we could see there, his soul
+trembled.
+
+Early in the night, word went about the camp that he was sick; and
+the first thing the next morning he called Hastie to his side, and
+inquired most anxiously if he had any skill in medicine. As a
+matter of fact, this was a vanity of that fallen divinity
+student's, to which he had cunningly addressed himself. Hastie
+examined him; and being flattered, ignorant, and highly auspicious,
+knew not in the least whether the man was sick or malingering. In
+this state he went forth again to his companions; and (as the thing
+which would give himself most consequence either way) announced
+that the patient was in a fair way to die.
+
+"For all that," he added with an oath, "and if he bursts by the
+wayside, he must bring us this morning to the treasure."
+
+But there were several in the camp (Mountain among the number) whom
+this brutality revolted. They would have seen the Master
+pistolled, or pistolled him themselves, without the smallest
+sentiment of pity; but they seemed to have been touched by his
+gallant fight and unequivocal defeat the night before; perhaps,
+too, they were even already beginning to oppose themselves to their
+new leader: at least, they now declared that (if the man was sick)
+he should have a day's rest in spite of Hastie's teeth.
+
+The next morning he was manifestly worse, and Hastie himself began
+to display something of humane concern, so easily does even the
+pretence of doctoring awaken sympathy. The third the Master called
+Mountain and Hastie to the tent, announced himself to be dying,
+gave them full particulars as to the position of the cache, and
+begged them to set out incontinently on the quest, so that they
+might see if he deceived them, and (if they were at first
+unsuccessful) he should be able to correct their error.
+
+But here arose a difficulty on which he doubtless counted. None of
+these men would trust another, none would consent to stay behind.
+On the other hand, although the Master seemed extremely low, spoke
+scarce above a whisper, and lay much of the time insensible, it was
+still possible it was a fraudulent sickness; and if all went
+treasure-hunting, it might prove they had gone upon a wild-goose
+chase, and return to find their prisoner flown. They concluded,
+therefore, to hang idling round the camp, alleging sympathy to
+their reason; and certainly, so mingled are our dispositions,
+several were sincerely (if not very deeply) affected by the natural
+peril of the man whom they callously designed to murder. In the
+afternoon, Hastie was called to the bedside to pray: the which
+(incredible as it must appear) he did with unction; about eight at
+night, the wailing of Secundra announced that all was over; and
+before ten, the Indian, with a link stuck in the ground, was
+toiling at the grave. Sunrise of next day beheld the Master's
+burial, all hands attending with great decency of demeanour; and
+the body was laid in the earth, wrapped in a fur robe, with only
+the face uncovered; which last was of a waxy whiteness, and had the
+nostrils plugged according to some Oriental habit of Secundra's.
+No sooner was the grave filled than the lamentations of the Indian
+once more struck concern to every heart; and it appears this gang
+of murderers, so far from resenting his outcries, although both
+distressful and (in such a country) perilous to their own safety,
+roughly but kindly endeavoured to console him.
+
+But if human nature is even in the worst of men occasionally kind,
+it is still, and before all things, greedy; and they soon turned
+from the mourner to their own concerns. The cache of the treasure
+being hard by, although yet unidentified, it was concluded not to
+break camp; and the day passed, on the part of the voyagers, in
+unavailing exploration of the woods, Secundra the while lying on
+his master's grave. That night they placed no sentinel, but lay
+altogether about the fire, in the customary woodman fashion, the
+heads outward, like the spokes of a wheel. Morning found them in
+the same disposition; only Pinkerton, who lay on Mountain's right,
+between him and Hastie, had (in the hours of darkness) been
+secretly butchered, and there lay, still wrapped as to his body in
+his mantle, but offering above that ungodly and horrific spectacle
+of the scalped head. The gang were that morning as pale as a
+company of phantoms, for the pertinacity of Indian war (or to speak
+more correctly, Indian murder) was well known to all. But they
+laid the chief blame on their unsentinelled posture; and fired with
+the neighbourhood of the treasure, determined to continue where
+they were. Pinkerton was buried hard by the Master; the survivors
+again passed the day in exploration, and returned in a mingled
+humour of anxiety and hope, being partly certain they were now
+close on the discovery of what they sought, and on the other hand
+(with the return of darkness) were infected with the fear of
+Indians. Mountain was the first sentry; he declares he neither
+slept nor yet sat down, but kept his watch with a perpetual and
+straining vigilance, and it was even with unconcern that (when he
+saw by the stars his time was up) he drew near the fire to awaken
+his successor. This man (it was Hicks the shoemaker) slept on the
+lee side of the circle, something farther off in consequence than
+those to windward, and in a place darkened by the blowing smoke.
+Mountain stooped and took him by the shoulder; his hand was at once
+smeared by some adhesive wetness; and (the wind at the moment
+veering) the firelight shone upon the sleeper, and showed him, like
+Pinkerton, dead and scalped.
+
+It was clear they had fallen in the hands of one of those matchless
+Indian bravos, that will sometimes follow a party for days, and in
+spite of indefatigable travel, and unsleeping watch, continue to
+keep up with their advance, and steal a scalp at every resting-
+place. Upon this discovery, the treasure-seekers, already reduced
+to a poor half dozen, fell into mere dismay, seized a few
+necessaries, and deserting the remainder of their goods, fled
+outright into the forest. Their fire they left still burning, and
+their dead comrade unburied. All day they ceased not to flee,
+eating by the way, from hand to mouth; and since they feared to
+sleep, continued to advance at random even in the hours of
+darkness. But the limit of man's endurance is soon reached; when
+they rested at last it was to sleep profoundly; and when they woke,
+it was to find that the enemy was still upon their heels, and death
+and mutilation had once more lessened and deformed their company.
+
+By this they had become light-headed, they had quite missed their
+path in the wilderness, their stores were already running low.
+With the further horrors, it is superfluous that I should swell
+this narrative, already too prolonged. Suffice it to say that when
+at length a night passed by innocuous, and they might breathe again
+in the hope that the murderer had at last desisted from pursuit,
+Mountain and Secundra were alone. The trader is firmly persuaded
+their unseen enemy was some warrior of his own acquaintance, and
+that he himself was spared by favour. The mercy extended to
+Secundra he explains on the ground that the East Indian was thought
+to be insane; partly from the fact that, through all the horrors of
+the flight and while others were casting away their very food and
+weapons, Secundra continued to stagger forward with a mattock on
+his shoulder, and partly because, in the last days and with a great
+degree of heat and fluency, he perpetually spoke with himself in
+his own language. But he was sane enough when it came to English.
+
+"You think he will be gone quite away?" he asked, upon their blest
+awakening in safety.
+
+"I pray God so, I believe so, I dare to believe so," Mountain had
+replied almost with incoherence, as he described the scene to me.
+
+And indeed he was so much distempered that until he met us, the
+next morning, he could scarce be certain whether he had dreamed, or
+whether it was a fact, that Secundra had thereupon turned directly
+about and returned without a word upon their footprints, setting
+his face for these wintry and hungry solitudes, along a path whose
+every stage was mile-stoned with a mutilated corpse.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. - THE JOURNEY IN THE WILDERNESS (continued).
+
+
+
+Mountain's story, as it was laid before Sir William Johnson and my
+lord, was shorn, of course, of all the earlier particulars, and the
+expedition described to have proceeded uneventfully, until the
+Master sickened. But the latter part was very forcibly related,
+the speaker visibly thrilling to his recollections; and our then
+situation, on the fringe of the same desert, and the private
+interests of each, gave him an audience prepared to share in his
+emotions. For Mountain's intelligence not only changed the world
+for my Lord Durrisdeer, but materially affected the designs of Sir
+William Johnson.
+
+These I find I must lay more at length before the reader. Word had
+reached Albany of dubious import; it had been rumoured some
+hostility was to be put in act; and the Indian diplomatist had,
+thereupon, sped into the wilderness, even at the approach of
+winter, to nip that mischief in the bud. Here, on the borders, he
+learned that he was come too late; and a difficult choice was thus
+presented to a man (upon the whole) not any more bold than prudent.
+His standing with the painted braves may be compared to that of my
+Lord President Culloden among the chiefs of our own Highlanders at
+the 'forty-five; that is as much as to say, he was, to these men,
+reason's only speaking trumpet, and counsels of peace and
+moderation, if they were to prevail at all, must prevail singly
+through his influence. If, then, he should return, the province
+must lie open to all the abominable tragedies of Indian war - the
+houses blaze, the wayfarer be cut off, and the men of the woods
+collect their usual disgusting spoil of human scalps. On the other
+side, to go farther forth, to risk so small a party deeper in the
+desert, to carry words of peace among warlike savages already
+rejoicing to return to war: here was an extremity from which it
+was easy to perceive his mind revolted.
+
+"I have come too late," he said more than once, and would fall into
+a deep consideration, his head bowed in his hands, his foot patting
+the ground.
+
+At length he raised his face and looked upon us, that is to say
+upon my lord, Mountain, and myself, sitting close round a small
+fire, which had been made for privacy in one corner of the camp.
+
+"My lord, to be quite frank with you, I find myself in two minds,"
+said he. "I think it very needful I should go on, but not at all
+proper I should any longer enjoy the pleasure of your company. We
+are here still upon the water side; and I think the risk to
+southward no great matter. Will not yourself and Mr. Mackellar
+take a single boat's crew and return to Albany?"
+
+My lord, I should say, had listened to Mountain's narrative,
+regarding him throughout with a painful intensity of gaze; and
+since the tale concluded, had sat as in a dream. There was
+something very daunting in his look; something to my eyes not
+rightly human; the face, lean, and dark, and aged, the mouth
+painful, the teeth disclosed in a perpetual rictus; the eyeball
+swimming clear of the lids upon a field of blood-shot white. I
+could not behold him myself without a jarring irritation, such as,
+I believe, is too frequently the uppermost feeling on the sickness
+of those dear to us. Others, I could not but remark. were scarce
+able to support his neighbourhood - Sir William eviting to be near
+him, Mountain dodging his eye, and, when he met it, blenching and
+halting in his story. At this appeal, however, my lord appeared to
+recover his command upon himself.
+
+"To Albany?" said he, with a good voice.
+
+"Not short of it, at least," replied Sir William. "There is no
+safety nearer hand."
+
+"I would be very sweir (11) to return," says my lord. "I am not
+afraid - of Indians," he added, with a jerk.
+
+"I wish that I could say so much," returned Sir William, smiling;
+"although, if any man durst say it, it should be myself. But you
+are to keep in view my responsibility, and that as the voyage has
+now become highly dangerous, and your business - if you ever had
+any," says he, "brought quite to a conclusion by the distressing
+family intelligence you have received, I should be hardly justified
+if I even suffered you to proceed, and run the risk of some obloquy
+if anything regrettable should follow."
+
+My lord turned to Mountain. "What did he pretend he died of?" he
+asked.
+
+"I don't think I understand your honour," said the trader, pausing
+like a man very much affected, in the dressing of some cruel frost-
+bites.
+
+For a moment my lord seemed at a full stop; and then, with some
+irritation, "I ask you what he died of. Surely that's a plain
+question," said he.
+
+"Oh! I don't know," said Mountain. "Hastie even never knew. He
+seemed to sicken natural, and just pass away."
+
+"There it is, you see!" concluded my lord, turning to Sir William.
+
+"Your lordship is too deep for me," replied Sir William.
+
+"Why," says my lord, "this in a matter of succession; my son's
+title may be called in doubt; and the man being supposed to be dead
+of nobody can tell what, a great deal of suspicion would be
+naturally roused."
+
+"But, God damn me, the man's buried!" cried Sir William.
+
+"I will never believe that," returned my lord, painfully trembling.
+"I'll never believe it!" he cried again, and jumped to his feet.
+"Did he LOOK dead?" he asked of Mountain.
+
+"Look dead?" repeated the trader. "He looked white. Why, what
+would he be at? I tell you, I put the sods upon him."
+
+My lord caught Sir William by the coat with a hooked hand. "This
+man has the name of my brother," says he, "but it's well understood
+that he was never canny."
+
+"Canny?" says Sir William. "What is that?"
+
+"He's not of this world," whispered my lord, "neither him nor the
+black deil that serves him. I have struck my sword throughout his
+vitals," he cried; "I have felt the hilt dirl (12) on his
+breastbone, and the hot blood spirt in my very face, time and
+again, time and again!" he repeated, with a gesture indescribable.
+"But he was never dead for that," said he, and I sighed aloud.
+"Why should I think he was dead now? No, not till I see him
+rotting," says he.
+
+Sir William looked across at me with a long face. Mountain forgot
+his wounds, staring and gaping.
+
+"My lord," said I, "I wish you would collect your spirits." But my
+throat was so dry, and my own wits so scattered, I could add no
+more.
+
+"No," says my lord, "it's not to be supposed that he would
+understand me. Mackellar does, for he kens all, and has seen him
+buried before now. This is a very good servant to me, Sir William,
+this man Mackellar; he buried him with his own hands - he and my
+father - by the light of two siller candlesticks. The other man is
+a familiar spirit; he brought him from Coromandel. I would have
+told ye this long syne, Sir William, only it was in the family."
+These last remarks he made with a kind of a melancholy composure,
+and his time of aberration seemed to pass away. "You can ask
+yourself what it all means," he proceeded. "My brother falls sick,
+and dies, and is buried, as so they say; and all seems very plain.
+But why did the familiar go back? I think ye must see for yourself
+it's a point that wants some clearing."
+
+"I will be at your service, my lord, in half a minute," said Sir
+William, rising. "Mr. Mackellar, two words with you;" and he led
+me without the camp, the frost crunching in our steps, the trees
+standing at our elbow, hoar with frost, even as on that night in
+the Long Shrubbery. "Of course, this is midsummer madness," said
+Sir William, as soon as we were gotten out of bearing.
+
+"Why, certainly," said I. "The man is mad. I think that
+manifest."
+
+"Shall I seize and bind him?" asked Sir William. "I will upon your
+authority. If these are all ravings, that should certainly be
+done."
+
+I looked down upon the ground, back at the camp, with its bright
+fires and the folk watching us, and about me on the woods and
+mountains; there was just the one way that I could not look, and
+that was in Sir William's face.
+
+"Sir William," said I at last, "I think my lord not sane, and have
+long thought him so. But there are degrees in madness; and whether
+he should be brought under restraint - Sir William, I am no fit
+judge," I concluded.
+
+"I will be the judge," said he. "I ask for facts. Was there, in
+all that jargon, any word of truth or sanity? Do you hesitate?" he
+asked. "Am I to understand you have buried this gentleman before?"
+
+"Not buried," said I; and then, taking up courage at last, "Sir
+William," said I, "unless I were to tell you a long story, which
+much concerns a noble family (and myself not in the least), it
+would be impossible to make this matter clear to you. Say the
+word, and I will do it, right or wrong. And, at any rate, I will
+say so much, that my lord is not so crazy as he seems. This is a
+strange matter, into the tail of which you are unhappily drifted."
+
+"I desire none of your secrets," replied Sir William; "but I will
+be plain, at the risk of incivility, and confess that I take little
+pleasure in my present company."
+
+"I would be the last to blame you," said I, "for that."
+
+"I have not asked either for your censure or your praise, sir,"
+returned Sir William. "I desire simply to be quit of you; and to
+that effect, I put a boat and complement of men at your disposal."
+
+"This is fairly offered," said I, after reflection. "But you must
+suffer me to say a word upon the other side. We have a natural
+curiosity to learn the truth of this affair; I have some of it
+myself; my lord (it is very plain) has but too much. The matter of
+the Indian's return is enigmatical."
+
+"I think so myself," Sir William interrupted, "and I propose (since
+I go in that direction) to probe it to the bottom. Whether or not
+the man has gone like a dog to die upon his master's grave, his
+life, at least, is in great danger, and I propose, if I can, to
+save it. There is nothing against his character?"
+
+"Nothing, Sir William," I replied.
+
+"And the other?" he said. "I have heard my lord, of course; but,
+from the circumstances of his servant's loyalty, I must suppose he
+had some noble qualities."
+
+"You must not ask me that!" I cried. "Hell may have noble flames.
+I have known him a score of years, and always hated, and always
+admired, and always slavishly feared him."
+
+"I appear to intrude again upon your secrets," said Sir William,
+"believe me, inadvertently. Enough that I will see the grave, and
+(if possible) rescue the Indian. Upon these terms, can you
+persuade your master to return to Albany?"
+
+"Sir William," said I, "I will tell you how it is. You do not see
+my lord to advantage; it will seem even strange to you that I
+should love him; but I do, and I am not alone. If he goes back to
+Albany, it must be by force, and it will be the death-warrant of
+his reason, and perhaps his life. That is my sincere belief; but I
+am in your hands, and ready to obey, if you will assume so much
+responsibility as to command."
+
+"I will have no shred of responsibility; it is my single endeavour
+to avoid the same," cried Sir William. "You insist upon following
+this journey up; and be it so! I wash my hands of the whole
+matter."
+
+With which word, he turned upon his heel and gave the order to
+break camp; and my lord, who had been hovering near by, came
+instantly to my side.
+
+"Which is it to be?" said he.
+
+"You are to have your way," I answered. "You shall see the grave."
+
+
+The situation of the Master's grave was, between guides, easily
+described; it lay, indeed, beside a chief landmark of the
+wilderness, a certain range of peaks, conspicuous by their design
+and altitude, and the source of many brawling tributaries to that
+inland sea, Lake Champlain. It was therefore possible to strike
+for it direct, instead of following back the blood-stained trail of
+the fugitives, and to cover, in some sixteen hours of march, a
+distance which their perturbed wanderings had extended over more
+than sixty. Our boats we left under a guard upon the river; it
+was, indeed, probable we should return to find them frozen fast;
+and the small equipment with which we set forth upon the
+expedition, included not only an infinity of furs to protect us
+from the cold, but an arsenal of snow-shoes to render travel
+possible, when the inevitable snow should fall. Considerable alarm
+was manifested at our departure; the march was conducted with
+soldierly precaution, the camp at night sedulously chosen and
+patrolled; and it was a consideration of this sort that arrested
+us, the second day, within not many hundred yards of our
+destination - the night being already imminent, the spot in which
+we stood well qualified to be a strong camp for a party of our
+numbers; and Sir William, therefore, on a sudden thought, arresting
+our advance.
+
+Before us was the high range of mountains toward which we had been
+all day deviously drawing near. From the first light of the dawn,
+their silver peaks had been the goal of our advance across a
+tumbled lowland forest, thrid with rough streams, and strewn with
+monstrous boulders; the peaks (as I say) silver, for already at the
+higher altitudes the snow fell nightly; but the woods and the low
+ground only breathed upon with frost. All day heaven had been
+charged with ugly vapours, in the which the sun swam and glimmered
+like a shilling piece; all day the wind blew on our left cheek
+barbarous cold, but very pure to breathe. With the end of the
+afternoon, however, the wind fell; the clouds, being no longer
+reinforced, were scattered or drunk up; the sun set behind us with
+some wintry splendour, and the white brow of the mountains shared
+its dying glow.
+
+It was dark ere we had supper; we ate in silence, and the meal was
+scarce despatched before my lord slunk from the fireside to the
+margin of the camp; whither I made haste to follow him. The camp
+was on high ground, overlooking a frozen lake, perhaps a mile in
+its longest measurement; all about us, the forest lay in heights
+and hollows; above rose the white mountains; and higher yet, the
+moon rode in a fair sky. There was no breath of air; nowhere a
+twig creaked; and the sounds of our own camp were hushed and
+swallowed up in the surrounding stillness. Now that the sun and
+the wind were both gone down, it appeared almost warm, like a night
+of July: a singular illusion of the sense, when earth, air, and
+water were strained to bursting with the extremity of frost.
+
+My lord (or what I still continued to call by his loved name) stood
+with his elbow in one hand, and his chin sunk in the other, gazing
+before him on the surface of the wood. My eyes followed his, and
+rested almost pleasantly upon the frosted contexture of the pines,
+rising in moonlit hillocks, or sinking in the shadow of small
+glens. Hard by, I told myself, was the grave of our enemy, now
+gone where the wicked cease from troubling, the earth heaped for
+ever on his once so active limbs. I could not but think of him as
+somehow fortunate to be thus done with man's anxiety and weariness,
+the daily expense of spirit, and that daily river of circumstance
+to be swum through, at any hazard, under the penalty of shame or
+death. I could not but think how good was the end of that long
+travel; and with that, my mind swung at a tangent to my lord. For
+was not my lord dead also? a maimed soldier, looking vainly for
+discharge, lingering derided in the line of battle? A kind man, I
+remembered him; wise, with a decent pride, a son perhaps too
+dutiful, a husband only too loving, one that could suffer and be
+silent, one whose hand I loved to press. Of a sudden, pity caught
+in my windpipe with a sob; I could have wept aloud to remember and
+behold him; and standing thus by his elbow, under the broad moon, I
+prayed fervently either that he should be released, or I
+strengthened to persist in my affection.
+
+"Oh God," said I, "this was the best man to me and to himself, and
+now I shrink from him. He did no wrong, or not till he was broke
+with sorrows; these are but his honourable wounds that we begin to
+shrink from. Oh, cover them up, oh, take him away, before we hate
+him!"
+
+I was still so engaged in my own bosom, when a sound broke suddenly
+upon the night. It was neither very loud, nor very near; yet,
+bursting as it did from so profound and so prolonged a silence, it
+startled the camp like an alarm of trumpets. Ere I had taken
+breath, Sir William was beside me, the main part of the voyagers
+clustered at his back, intently giving ear. Methought, as I
+glanced at them across my shoulder, there was a whiteness, other
+than moonlight, on their cheeks; and the rays of the moon reflected
+with a sparkle on the eyes of some, and the shadows lying black
+under the brows of others (according as they raised or bowed the
+head to listen) gave to the group a strange air of animation and
+anxiety. My lord was to the front, crouching a little forth, his
+hand raised as for silence: a man turned to stone. And still the
+sounds continued, breathlessly renewed with a precipitate rhythm.
+
+Suddenly Mountain spoke in a loud, broken whisper, as of a man
+relieved. "I have it now," he said; and, as we all turned to hear
+him, "the Indian must have known the cache," he added. "That is he
+- he is digging out the treasure."
+
+"Why, to be sure!" exclaimed Sir William. "We were geese not to
+have supposed so much."
+
+"The only thing is," Mountain resumed, "the sound is very close to
+our old camp. And, again, I do not see how he is there before us,
+unless the man had wings!"
+
+"Greed and fear are wings," remarked Sir William. "But this rogue
+has given us an alert, and I have a notion to return the
+compliment. What say you, gentlemen, shall we have a moonlight
+hunt?"
+
+It was so agreed; dispositions were made to surround Secundra at
+his task; some of Sir William's Indians hastened in advance; and a
+strong guard being left at our headquarters, we set forth along the
+uneven bottom of the forest; frost crackling, ice sometimes loudly
+splitting under foot; and overhead the blackness of pine-woods, and
+the broken brightness of the moon. Our way led down into a hollow
+of the land; and as we descended, the sounds diminished and had
+almost died away. Upon the other slope it was more open, only
+dotted with a few pines, and several vast and scattered rocks that
+made inky shadows in the moonlight. Here the sounds began to reach
+us more distinctly; we could now perceive the ring of iron, and
+more exactly estimate the furious degree of haste with which the
+digger plied his instrument. As we neared the top of the ascent, a
+bird or two winged aloft and hovered darkly in the moonlight; and
+the next moment we were gazing through a fringe of trees upon a
+singular picture.
+
+A narrow plateau, overlooked by the white mountains, and
+encompassed nearer hand by woods, lay bare to the strong radiance
+of the moon. Rough goods, such as make the wealth of foresters,
+were sprinkled here and there upon the ground in meaningless
+disarray. About the midst, a tent stood, silvered with frost: the
+door open, gaping on the black interior. At the one end of this
+small stage lay what seemed the tattered remnants of a man.
+Without doubt we had arrived upon the scene of Harris's encampment;
+there were the goods scattered in the panic of flight; it was in
+yon tent the Master breathed his last; and the frozen carrion that
+lay before us was the body of the drunken shoemaker. It was always
+moving to come upon the theatre of any tragic incident; to come
+upon it after so many days, and to find it (in the seclusion of a
+desert) still unchanged, must have impressed the mind of the most
+careless. And yet it was not that which struck us into pillars of
+stone; but the sight (which yet we had been half expecting) of
+Secundra ankle deep in the grave of his late master. He had cast
+the main part of his raiment by, yet his frail arms and shoulders
+glistered in the moonlight with a copious sweat; his face was
+contracted with anxiety and expectation; his blows resounded on the
+grave, as thick as sobs; and behind him, strangely deformed and
+ink-black upon the frosty ground, the creature's shadow repeated
+and parodied his swift gesticulations. Some night birds arose from
+the boughs upon our coming, and then settled back; but Secundra,
+absorbed in his toil; heard or heeded not at all.
+
+I heard Mountain whisper to Sir William, "Good God! it's the grave!
+He's digging him up!" It was what we had all guessed, and yet to
+hear it put in language thrilled me. Sir William violently
+started.
+
+"You damned sacrilegious hound!" he cried. "What's this?"
+
+Secundra leaped in the air, a little breathless cry escaped him,
+the tool flew from his grasp, and he stood one instant staring at
+the speaker. The next, swift as an arrow, he sped for the woods
+upon the farther side; and the next again, throwing up his hands
+with a violent gesture of resolution, he had begun already to
+retrace his steps.
+
+"Well, then, you come, you help - " he was saying. But by now my
+lord had stepped beside Sir William; the moon shone fair upon his
+face, and the words were still upon Secundra's lips, when he beheld
+and recognised his master's enemy. "Him!" he screamed, clasping
+his hands, and shrinking on himself.
+
+"Come, come!" said Sir William. "There is none here to do you
+harm, if you be innocent; and if you be guilty, your escape is
+quite cut off. Speak, what do you here among the graves of the
+dead and the remains of the unburied?"
+
+"You no murderer?" inquired Secundra. "You true man? you see me
+safe?"
+
+"I will see you safe, if you be innocent," returned Sir William.
+"I have said the thing, and I see not wherefore you should doubt
+it."
+
+"There all murderers," cried Secundra, "that is why! He kill -
+murderer," pointing to Mountain; "there two hire-murderers,"
+pointing to my lord and myself - "all gallows - murderers! Ah! I
+see you all swing in a rope. Now I go save the sahib; he see you
+swing in a rope. The sahib," he continued, pointing to the grave,
+"he not dead. He bury, he not dead."
+
+My lord uttered a little noise, moved nearer to the grave, and
+stood and stared in it.
+
+"Buried and not dead?" exclaimed Sir William. "What kind of rant
+is this?"
+
+"See, sahib," said Secundra. "The sahib and I alone with
+murderers; try all way to escape, no way good. Then try this way:
+good way in warm climate, good way in India; here, in this dam cold
+place, who can tell? I tell you pretty good hurry: you help, you
+light a fire, help rub."
+
+"What is the creature talking of?" cried Sir William. "My head
+goes round."
+
+"I tell you I bury him alive," said Secundra. "I teach him swallow
+his tongue. Now dig him up pretty good hurry, and he not much
+worse. You light a fire."
+
+Sir William turned to the nearest of his men. "Light a fire," said
+he. "My lot seems to be cast with the insane."
+
+"You good man," returned Secundra. "Now I go dig the sahib up."
+
+He returned as he spoke to the grave, and resumed his former toil.
+My lord stood rooted, and I at my lord's side, fearing I knew not
+what.
+
+The frost was not yet very deep, and presently the Indian threw
+aside his tool, and began to scoop the dirt by handfuls. Then he
+disengaged a corner of a buffalo robe; and then I saw hair catch
+among his fingers: yet, a moment more, and the moon shone on
+something white. Awhile Secundra crouched upon his knees, scraping
+with delicate fingers, breathing with puffed lips; and when he
+moved aside, I beheld the face of the Master wholly disengaged. It
+was deadly white, the eyes closed, the ears and nostrils plugged,
+the cheeks fallen, the nose sharp as if in death; but for all he
+had lain so many days under the sod, corruption had not approached
+him, and (what strangely affected all of us) his lips and chin were
+mantled with a swarthy beard.
+
+"My God!" cried Mountain, "he was as smooth as a baby when we laid
+him there!"
+
+"They say hair grows upon the dead," observed Sir William; but his
+voice was thick and weak.
+
+Secundra paid no heed to our remarks, digging swift as a terrier in
+the loose earth. Every moment the form of the Master, swathed in
+his buffalo robe, grew more distinct in the bottom of that shallow
+trough; the moon shining strong, and the shadows of the standers-
+by, as they drew forward and back, falling and flitting over his
+emergent countenance. The sight held us with a horror not before
+experienced. I dared not look my lord in the face; but for as long
+as it lasted, I never observed him to draw breath; and a little in
+the background one of the men (I know not whom) burst into a kind
+of sobbing.
+
+"Now," said Secundra, "you help me lift him out."
+
+Of the flight of time, I have no idea; it may have been three
+hours, and it may have been five, that the Indian laboured to
+reanimate his master's body. One thing only I know, that it was
+still night, and the moon was not yet set, although it had sunk
+low, and now barred the plateau with long shadows, when Secundra
+uttered a small cry of satisfaction; and, leaning swiftly forth, I
+thought I could myself perceive a change upon that icy countenance
+of the unburied. The next moment I beheld his eyelids flutter; the
+next they rose entirely, and the week-old corpse looked me for a
+moment in the face.
+
+So much display of life I can myself swear to. I have heard from
+others that he visibly strove to speak, that his teeth showed in
+his beard, and that his brow was contorted as with an agony of pain
+and effort. And this may have been; I know not, I was otherwise
+engaged. For at that first disclosure of the dead man's eyes, my
+Lord Durrisdeer fell to the ground, and when I raised him up, he
+was a corpse.
+
+Day came, and still Secundra could not be persuaded to desist from
+his unavailing efforts. Sir William, leaving a small party under
+my command, proceeded on his embassy with the first light; and
+still the Indian rubbed the limbs and breathed in the mouth of the
+dead body. You would think such labours might have vitalised a
+stone; but, except for that one moment (which was my lord's death),
+the black spirit of the Master held aloof from its discarded clay;
+and by about the hour of noon, even the faithful servant was at
+length convinced. He took it with unshaken quietude.
+
+"Too cold," said he, "good way in India, no good here." And,
+asking for some food, which he ravenously devoured as soon as it
+was set before him, he drew near to the fire and took his place at
+my elbow. In the same spot, as soon as he had eaten, he stretched
+himself out, and fell into a childlike slumber, from which I must
+arouse him, some hours afterwards, to take his part as one of the
+mourners at the double funeral. It was the same throughout; he
+seemed to have outlived at once and with the same effort, his grief
+for his master and his terror of myself and Mountain.
+
+One of the men left with me was skilled in stone-cutting; and
+before Sir William returned to pick us up, I had chiselled on a
+boulder this inscription, with a copy of which I may fitly bring my
+narrative to a close:
+
+
+J. D.,
+
+HEIR TO A SCOTTISH TITLE,
+
+A MASTER OF THE ARTS AND GRACES,
+
+ADMIRED IN EUROPE, ASIA, AMERICA,
+
+IN WAR AND PEACE,
+
+IN THE TENTS OF SAVAGE HUNTERS AND THE
+
+CITADELS OF KINGS, AFTER SO MUCH
+
+ACQUIRED, ACCOMPLISHED, AND
+
+ENDURED, LIES HERE FORGOTTEN.
+
+* * * * *
+
+H. D.,
+
+HIS BROTHER,
+
+AFTER A LIFE OF UNMERITED DISTRESS,
+
+BRAVELY SUPPORTED,
+
+DIED ALMOST IN THE SAME HOUR,
+
+AND SLEEPS IN THE SAME GRAVE
+
+WITH HIS FRATERNAL ENEMY.
+
+* * * * *
+
+THE PIETY OF HIS WIFE AND ONE OLD
+
+SERVANT RAISED THIS STONE
+
+TO BOTH.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+(1) A kind of firework made with damp powder.
+
+(2) "NOTE BY MR. MACKELLAR. Should not this be Alan BRECK Stewart,
+afterwards notorious as the Appin murderer? The Chevalier is
+sometimes very weak on names.
+
+(3) NOTE BY MR. MACKELLAR. This Teach of the SARAH must not be
+confused with the celebrated Blackbeard. The dates and facts by no
+means tally. It is possible the second Teach may have at once
+borrowed the name and imitated the more excessive part of his
+manners from the first. Even the Master of Ballantrae could make
+admirers.
+
+(4) NOTE BY MR. MACKELLAR. And is not this the whole explanation?
+since this Dutton, exactly like the officers, enjoyed the stimulus
+of some responsibility.
+
+(5) NOTE BY MR. MACKELLAR: A complete blunder: there was at this
+date no word of the marriage: see above in my own narration.
+
+(6) Note by Mr. Mackellar. - Plainly Secundra Dass. - E. McK.
+
+(7) Ordered.
+
+(8) Land steward.
+
+(9) Fooling.
+
+(10) Tear-marked.
+
+(11) Unwilling.
+
+(12) Ring.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg eText The Master of Ballantrae
+
diff --git a/old/blntr10.zip b/old/blntr10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..55470fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/blntr10.zip
Binary files differ