2972 lines
123 KiB
Plaintext
2972 lines
123 KiB
Plaintext
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Walter Scott: The Keepsake Stories
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a machine-readable transcription
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[For archival on the Internet Wiretap, the three stories
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have been concatenated. No other changes have been made.]
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Version 1.0: 1993-02-06
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1.1: 1993-03-06 several transcription errors fixed,
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mainly in the Mirror
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The text of the three stories is taken from Waverley Novels, vol. XLI:
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'The Highland Widow', published by Archibald Constable and Co,
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Westminster, 1896.
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The order of the stories in the original is:
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Aunt Margaret's Mirror
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The Tapestried Chamber
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The Laird's Jock
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Each story is placed in a separate file, and each file contains the
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author's introduction to the story.
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The lines of the files follow that of the text, except that
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end-of-line hyphenations have been removed. Three misprints have been
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removed:
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p. ???: extraneous period (Mrs. Swinton)
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(Mr and Mrs is set without periods in the text)
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p. 328: a double (re- || remain)
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p. 344: a missing inner quote (how then shall I ask it?'')
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all of which where found in the Mirror.
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Special markup:
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_ _ indicates italics in the original text
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--- indicates an em-dash
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<oe> indicates the oe ligature
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<c,> indicates the c-cedilla
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<e'> indicates e acute
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Small capitals have been replaced with lower-case letters.
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Notes:
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The sequence `L.20' which appears in the introduction to the `Mirror'
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is so printed in the text. The Centenary Edition of the Waverley
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Novels uses a pound sterling sign instead of the `L.'.
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The transcription and proof-reading were done by Anders Thulin,
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Rydsvagen 288, S-583 30 Linkoping, Sweden.
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Email: ath@linkoping.trab.se
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I'd be grateful to learn of any errors you find in the text.
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[1. My Aunt Margaret's Mirror]
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INTRODUCTION.
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The species of publication which has come
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to be generally known by the title of _Annual_,
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being a miscellany of prose and verse, equipped
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with numerous engravings, and put forth every
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year about Christmas, had flourished for a long
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while in Germany, before it was imitated in
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this country by an enterprising bookseller, a
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German by birth, Mr Ackermann. The rapid
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success of his work, as is the custom of the
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time, gave birth to a host of rivals, and, among
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others, to an Annual styled The Keepsake,
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the first volume of which appeared in 1828,
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and attracted much notice, chiefly in consequence
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of the very uncommon splendour of
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its illustrative accompaniments. The expenditure
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which the spirited proprietors lavished
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on this magnificent volume, is understood to
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have been not less than from ten to twelve
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thousand pounds sterling!
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Various gentlemen of such literary reputation
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that any one might think it an honour to be
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associated with them, had been announced as
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contributors to this Annual, before application
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was made to me to assist in it; and I accordingly
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placed with much pleasure at the Editor's
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disposal a few fragments, originally designed
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to have been worked into the Chronicles
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of the Canongate, besides a MS. Drama, the
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long-neglected performance of my youthful
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days---The House of Aspen.
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The Keepsake for 1828 included, however,
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only three of these little prose tales---of which
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the first in order was that entitled ``My Aunt
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Margaret's Mirror.'' By way of _introduction_
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to this, when now included in a general collection
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of my lucubrations, I have only to say, that
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it is a mere transcript, or at least with very little
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embellishment, of a story that I remembered
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being struck with in my childhood, when told
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at the fireside by a lady of eminent virtues,
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and no inconsiderable share of talent, one of
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the ancient and honourable house of Swinton.
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She was a kind relation of my own, and met
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her death in a manner so shocking, being killed
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in a fit of insanity by a female attendant who
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had been attached to her person for half a lifetime,
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that I cannot now recall her memory,
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child as I was when the catastrophe occurred,
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without a painful re-awakening of perhaps the
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first images of horror that the scenes of real
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life stamped on my mind.
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This good spinster had in her composition a
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strong vein of the superstitious, and was pleased,
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among other fancies, to read alone in her
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chamber by a taper fixed in a candlestick which
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she had had formed out of a human skull.
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One night this strange piece of furniture acquired
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suddenly the power of locomotion, and,
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after performing some odd circles on her chimney-piece,
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fairly leaped on the floor, and continued
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to roll about the apartment. Mrs Swinton
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calmly proceeded to the adjoining room
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for another light, and had the satisfaction to
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penetrate the mystery on the spot. Rats
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abounded in the ancient building she inhabited,
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and one of these had managed to ensconce
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itself within her favourite _memento mori_. Though
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thus endowed with a more than feminine share
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of nerve, she entertained largely that belief in
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supernaturals, which in those times was not
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considered as sitting ungracefully on the grave
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and aged of her condition; and the story of
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the Magic Mirror was one for which she vouched
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with particular confidence, alleging indeed
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that one of her own family had been an eye-witness
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of the incidents recorded in it.
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``I tell the tale as it was told to me.''
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Stories enow of much the same cast will
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present themselves to the recollection of such
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of my readers as have ever dabbled in a species
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of lore to which I certainly gave more hours,
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at one period of my life, than I should gain any
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credit by confessing.
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_August_, 1831.
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MY AUNT MARGARET'S MIRROR.
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``There are times
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When Fancy plays her gambols, in despite
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Even of our watchful senses, when in sooth
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Substance seems shadow, shadow substance seems,
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When the broad, palpable, and mark'd partition,
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'Twixt that which is and is not, seems dissolved,
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As if the mental eye gain'd power to gaze
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Beyond the limits of the existing world.
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Such hours of shadowy dreams I better love
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Than all the gross realities of life.''
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Anonymous.
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My Aunt Margaret was one of that respected
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sisterhood, upon whom devolve all the trouble and
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solicitude incidental to the possession of children,
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excepting only that which attends their entrance
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into the world. We were a large family, of very
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different dispositions and constitutions. Some were
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dull and peevish---they were sent to Aunt Margaret
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to be amused; some were rude, romping, and
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boisterous---they were sent to Aunt Margaret to
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be kept quiet, or rather, that their noise might be
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removed out of hearing: those who were indisposed
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were sent with the prospect of being nursed---
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those who were stubborn, with the hope of their
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being subdued by the kindness of Aunt Margaret's
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discipline; in short, she had all the various duties
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of a mother, without the credit and dignity of the
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maternal character. The busy scene of her various
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cares is now over---of the invalids and the robust,
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the kind and the rough, the peevish and pleased
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children, who thronged her little parlour from morning
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to night, not one now remains alive but myself;
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who, afflicted by early infirmity, was one of the
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most delicate of her nurselings, yet, nevertheless,
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have outlived them all.
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It is still my custom, and shall be so while I have
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the use of my limbs, to visit my respected relation
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at least three times a-week. Her abode is about
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half a mile from the suburbs of the town in which
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I reside; and is accessible, not only by the high-road,
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from which it stands at some distance, but by
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means of a greensward footpath, leading through
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some pretty meadows. I have so little left to torment
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me in life, that it is one of my greatest vexations
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to know that several of these sequestered
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fields have been devoted as sites for building. In
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that which is nearest the town, wheelbarrows have
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been at work for several weeks in such numbers,
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that, I verily believe, its whole surface, to the
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depth of at least eighteen inches, was mounted in
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these monotrochs at the same moment, and in the
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act of being transported from one place to another.
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Huge triangular piles of planks are also reared in
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different parts of the devoted messuage; and a little
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group of trees, that still grace the eastern end,
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which rises in a gentle ascent, have just received
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warning to quit, expressed by a daub of white
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paint, and are to give place to a curious grove of
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chimneys.
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It would, perhaps, hurt others in my situation to
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reflect that this little range of pasturage once belonged
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to my father, (whose family was of some
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consideration in the world,) and was sold by patches
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to remedy distresses in which be involved himself
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in an attempt by commercial adventure to redeem
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his diminished fortune. While the building scheme
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was in full operation, this circumstance was often
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pointed out to me by the class of friends who are
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anxious that no part of your misfortunes should
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escape your observation. ``Such pasture-ground!
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---lying at the very town's end---in turnips and potatoes,
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the parks would bring L.20 per acre, and if
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leased for building---O, it was a gold mine!---And
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all sold for an old song out of the ancient possessor's
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hands!'' My comforters cannot bring me to
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repine much on this subject. If I could be allowed
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to look back on the past without interruption, I
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could willingly give up the enjoyment of present
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income, and the hope of future profit, to those who
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have purchased what my father sold. I regret the
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alteration of the ground only because it destroys
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associations, and I would more willingly (I think)
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see the Earl's Closes in the hands of strangers, retaining
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their silvan appearance, than know them
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for my own, if torn up by agriculture, or covered
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with buildings. Mine are the sensations of poor
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Logan:
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``The horrid slough has rased the green
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Where yet a child I stray'd;
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The axe has fell'd the hawthorn screen,
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The schoolboy's summer shade.''
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I hope, however, the threatened devastation will
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not be consummated in my day. Although the
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adventurous spirit of times short while since passed
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gave rise to the undertaking, I have been encouraged
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to think, that the subsequent changes
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have so far damped the spirit of speculation, that
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the rest of the woodland footpath leading to Aunt
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Margaret's retreat will be left undisturbed for her
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time and mine. I am interested in this, for every
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step of the way, after I have passed through the
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green already mentioned, has for me something of
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early remembrance:---There is the stile at which I
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can recollect a cross child's-maid upbraiding me
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with my infirmity, as she lifted me coarsely and
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carelessly over the flinty steps, which my brothers
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traversed with shout and bound. I remember the
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suppressed bitterness of the moment, and, conscious
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of my own inferiority, the feeling of envy
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with which I regarded the easy movements and
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elastic steps of my more happily formed brethren.
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Alas! these goodly barks have all perished on life's
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wide ocean, and only that which seemed so little
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seaworthy, as the naval phrase goes, has reached
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the port when the tempest is over. Then there is
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the pool, where, man<oe>uvring our little navy, constructed
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out of the broad water-flags, my elder
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brother fell in, and was scarce saved from the
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watery element to die under Nelson's banner. There
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is the hazel copse also, in which my brother Henry
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used to gather nuts, thinking little that he was to
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die in an Indian jungle in quest of rupees.
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There is so much more of remembrance about
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the little walk, that---as I stop, rest on my crutch-headed
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cane, and look round with that species of
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comparison between the thing I was and that which
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I now am---it almost induces me to doubt my own
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identity; until I found myself in face of the honeysuckle
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porch of Aunt Margaret's dwelling, with
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its irregularity of front, and its odd projecting latticed
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windows; where the workmen seem to have
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made a study that no one of them should resemble
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another, in form, size, or in the old-fashioned stone
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entablature and labels which adorn them. This
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tenement, once the manor-house of Earl's Closes,
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we still retain a slight hold upon; for, in some family
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arrangements, it had been settled upon Aunt
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Margaret during the term of her life. Upon this
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frail tenure depends, in a great measure, the last
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shadow of the family of Bothwell of Earl's Closes,
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and their last slight connexion with their paternal
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inheritance. The only representative will then be
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an infirm old man, moving not unwillingly to the
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grave, which has devoured all that were dear to
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his affections.
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When I have indulged such thoughts for a minute
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or two, I enter the mansion, which is said to
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have been the gatehouse only of the original building,
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and find one being on whom time seems to
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have made little impression; for the Aunt Margaret
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of to-day bears the same proportional age to
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the Aunt Margaret of my early youth, that the
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boy of ten years old does to the Man of (by'r
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Lady!) some fifty-six years. The old lady's invariable
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costume has doubtless some share in confirming
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one in the opinion, that time has stood still
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with Aunt Margaret.
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The brown or chocolate-coloured silk gown, with
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ruffles of the same stuff at the elbow, within which
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are others of Mechlin lace---the black silk gloves,
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or mitts, the white hair combed back upon a roll,
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and the cap of spotless cambric, which closes around
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the venerable countenance, as they were not the
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costume of 1780, so neither were they that of 1826;
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they are altogether a style peculiar to the individual
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Aunt Margaret. There she still sits, as she
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sat thirty years since, with her wheel or the stocking,
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which she works by the fire in winter, and by
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the window in summer, or, perhaps, venturing as
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far as the porch in an unusually fine summer evening.
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Her frame, like some well-constructed piece
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of mechanics, still performs the operations for
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which it had seemed destined; going its round
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with an activity which is gradually diminished, yet
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indicating no probability that it will soon come to
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a period.
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The solicitude and affection which had made
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Aunt Margaret the willing slave to the inflictions
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of a whole nursery, have now for their object the
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health and comfort of one old and infirm man; the
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last remaining relative of her family, and the only
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one who can still find interest in the traditional
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stores which she hoards; as some miser hides the
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gold which he desires that no one should enjoy
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after his death.
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My conversation with Aunt Margaret generally
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relates little either to the present or to the future:
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for the passing day we possess as much as we require,
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and we neither of us wish for more; and for
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that which is to follow we have on this side of the
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grave neither hopes, nor fears, nor anxiety. We
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therefore naturally look back to the past; and
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forget the present fallen fortunes and declined importance
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of our family, in recalling the hours when
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it was wealthy and prosperous.
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With this slight introduction, the reader will
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know as much of Aunt Margaret and her nephew
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as is necessary to comprehend the following conversation
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and narrative.
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Last week, when, late in a summer evening, I
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went to call on the old lady to whom my reader is
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now introduced, I was received by her with all her
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usual affection and benignity; while, at the same
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time, she seemed abstracted and disposed to silence.
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I asked her the reason. ``They have been clearing
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out the old chapel,'' she said; ``John Clayhudgeons
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having, it seems, discovered that the stuff
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within---being, I suppose, the remains of our ancestors---
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was excellent for top-dressing the meadows.'''
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Here I started up with more alacrity than I
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have displayed for some years; but sat down
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while my aunt added, laying her hand upon my
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sleeve, ``The chapel has been long considered as
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common ground, my dear, and used for a penfold,
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and what objection can we have to the man for
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employing what is his own, to his own profit?
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Besides, I did speak to him, and he very readily
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and civilly promised, that if he found bones or
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monuments, they should be carefully respected and
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reinstated; and what more could I ask? So, the
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first stone they found bore the name of Margaret
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Bothwell, 1585, and I have caused it to be laid
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carefully aside, as I think it betokens death; and
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having served my namesake two hundred years, it
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has just been cast up in time to do me the same
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good turn. My house has been long put in order,
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as far as the small earthly concerns require it, but
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who shall say that their account with Heaven is
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sufficiently revised!''
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``After what you have said, aunt,'' I replied,
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``perhaps I ought to take my hat and go away,
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and so I should, but that there is on this occasion
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a little alloy mingled with your devotion. To think
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of death at all times is a duty---to suppose it nearer,
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from the finding an old gravestone, is superstition;
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and you, with your strong useful common sense,
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which was so long the prop of a fallen family, are
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||
|
the last person whom I should have suspected of
|
||
|
such weakness.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Neither would I deserve your suspicions, kinsman,''
|
||
|
answered Aunt Margaret, ``if we were
|
||
|
speaking of any incident occurring in the actual
|
||
|
business of human life. But for all this, I have a
|
||
|
sense of superstition about me, which I do not
|
||
|
wish to part with. It is a feeling which separates
|
||
|
me from this age, and links me with that to which
|
||
|
I am hastening; and even when it seems, as now,
|
||
|
to lead me to the brink of the grave, and bids me
|
||
|
gaze on it, I do not love that it should be dispelled.
|
||
|
It soothes my imagination, without influencing my
|
||
|
reason or conduct.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I profess, my good lady,'' replied I, ``that had
|
||
|
any one but you made such a declaration, I should
|
||
|
have thought it as capricious as that of the clergyman,
|
||
|
who, without vindicating his false reading,
|
||
|
preferred, from habit's sake, his old Mumpsimus
|
||
|
to the modern Sumpsimus.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Well,'' answered my aunt, ``I must explain
|
||
|
my inconsistency in this particular, by comparing
|
||
|
it to another. I am, as you know, a piece of that
|
||
|
old-fashioned thing called a Jacobite; but I am so
|
||
|
in sentiment and feeling only; for a more loyal
|
||
|
subject never joined in prayers for the health and
|
||
|
wealth of George the Fourth, whom God long
|
||
|
preserve! But I dare say that kind-hearted sovereign
|
||
|
would not deem that an old woman did him
|
||
|
much injury, if she leaned back in her arm-chair,
|
||
|
just in such a twilight as this, and thought of the
|
||
|
high-mettled men, whose sense of duty called them
|
||
|
to arms against his grandfather; and how, in a
|
||
|
cause which they deemed that of their rightful
|
||
|
prince and country,
|
||
|
|
||
|
`They fought till their hand to the broadsword was glued,
|
||
|
They fought against fortune with hearts unsubdued.'
|
||
|
|
||
|
Do not come at such a moment, when my head is
|
||
|
fall of plaids, pibrochs, and claymores, and ask my
|
||
|
reason to admit what, I am afraid, it cannot deny---
|
||
|
I mean, that the public advantage peremptorily
|
||
|
demanded that these things should cease to exist.
|
||
|
I cannot, indeed, refuse to allow the justice of
|
||
|
your reasoning; but yet, being convinced against
|
||
|
my will, you will gain little by your motion. You
|
||
|
might as well read to an infatuated lover the catalogue
|
||
|
of his mistress's imperfections; for, when
|
||
|
he has been compelled to listen to the summary,
|
||
|
you will only get for answer, that, `he lo'es her a'
|
||
|
the better.' ''
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was not sorry to have changed the gloomy
|
||
|
train of Aunt Margaret's thoughts, and replied in
|
||
|
the same tone, ``Well, I can't help being persuaded
|
||
|
that our good King is the more sure of
|
||
|
Mrs Bothwell's loyal affection, that he has the
|
||
|
Stuart right of birth, as well as the Act of Succession
|
||
|
in his favour.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Perhaps my attachment, were it source of
|
||
|
consequence, might be found warmer for the union
|
||
|
of the rights you mention,'' said Aunt Margaret;
|
||
|
``but, upon my word, it would be as sincere if the
|
||
|
King's right were founded only on the will of the
|
||
|
nation, as declared at the Revolution. I am none
|
||
|
of your _jure divino_ folks.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And a Jacobite notwithstanding.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And a Jacobite notwithstanding; or rather, I
|
||
|
will give you leave to call me one of the party,
|
||
|
which, in Queen Anne's time, were called Whimsicals;
|
||
|
because they were sometimes operated upon
|
||
|
by feelings, sometimes by principle. After all, it
|
||
|
is very hard that you will not allow an old woman
|
||
|
to be as inconsistent in her political sentiments, as
|
||
|
mankind in general show themselves in all the
|
||
|
various courses of life; since you cannot point out
|
||
|
one of them, in which the passions and prejudice
|
||
|
of those who pursue it are not perpetually carrying
|
||
|
us away from the path which our reason points
|
||
|
out.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``True, aunt; but you are a wilful wanderer,
|
||
|
who should be forced back into the right path.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Spare me, I entreat you,'' replied Aunt Margaret.
|
||
|
``You remember the Gaelic song, though
|
||
|
I dare say I mispronounce the words---
|
||
|
|
||
|
'Hatil mohatil, na dowski mi.'
|
||
|
'I am asleep, do not waken me.'
|
||
|
|
||
|
I tell you, kinsman, that the sort of waking dreams
|
||
|
which my imagination spins out, in what your
|
||
|
favourite Wordsworth calls `moods of my own
|
||
|
mind,' are worth all the rest of my more active
|
||
|
days. Then, instead of looking forwards, as I did
|
||
|
in youth, and forming for myself fairy palaces,
|
||
|
upon the verge of the grave, I turn my eyes backward
|
||
|
upon the days and manners of my better
|
||
|
time; and the sad, yet soothing recollections come
|
||
|
so close and interesting, that I almost think it
|
||
|
sacrilege to be wiser or more rational, or less prejudiced,
|
||
|
than those to whom I looked up in my
|
||
|
younger years.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I think I now understand what you mean,'' I
|
||
|
answered, ``and can comprehend why you should
|
||
|
occasionally prefer the twilight of illusion to the
|
||
|
steady light of reason.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Where there is no task,'' she rejoined, ``to be
|
||
|
performed, we may sit in the dark if we like it---
|
||
|
if we go to work, we must ring for candles.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And amidst such shadowy and doubtful light,''
|
||
|
continued I, ``imagination frames her enchanted
|
||
|
and enchanting visions, and sometimes passes them
|
||
|
upon the senses for reality.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Yes,'' said Aunt Margaret, who is a well-read
|
||
|
woman, ``to those who resemble the translator of
|
||
|
Tasso,
|
||
|
|
||
|
`Prevailing poet, whose undoubting Mind
|
||
|
Believed the magic wonders which he sung.'
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is not required for this purpose, that you
|
||
|
should be sensible of the painful horrors which an
|
||
|
actual belief in such prodigies inflicts---such a belief,
|
||
|
now-a-days, belongs only to fools and children.
|
||
|
It is not necessary that your ears should tingle,
|
||
|
and your complexion change, like that of Theodore,
|
||
|
at the approach of the spectral huntsman. All
|
||
|
that is indispensable for the enjoyment of the milder
|
||
|
feeling of supernatural awe is, that you should be
|
||
|
susceptible of the slight shuddering which creeps
|
||
|
over you when you hear a tale of terror---that
|
||
|
well-vouched tale which the narrator, having first
|
||
|
expressed his general disbelief of all such legendary
|
||
|
lore, selects and produces, as having something in
|
||
|
it which he has been always obliged to give up as
|
||
|
inexplicable. Another symptom is, a momentary
|
||
|
hesitation to look round you, when the interest of
|
||
|
the narrative is at the highest; and the third, a desire
|
||
|
to avoid looking into a mirror, when you are
|
||
|
alone, in your chamber, for the evening. I mean
|
||
|
such are signs which indicate the crisis, when a female
|
||
|
imagination is in due temperature to enjoy a
|
||
|
ghost story. I do not pretend to describe those
|
||
|
which express the same disposition in a gentleman.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That last symptom, dear aunt, of shunning the
|
||
|
mirror, seems likely to be a rare occurrence amongst
|
||
|
the fair sex.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You are a novice in toilet fashions, my dear
|
||
|
cousin. All women consult the looking-glass with
|
||
|
anxiety before they go into company; but when
|
||
|
they return home, the mirror has not the same charm.
|
||
|
The die has been cast---the party has been successful
|
||
|
or unsuccessful, in the impression which she desired
|
||
|
to make. But, without going deeper into the
|
||
|
mysteries of the dressing-table, I will tell you that
|
||
|
I myself, like many other honest folks, do not like
|
||
|
to see the blank black front of a large mirror in a
|
||
|
room dimly lighted, and where the reflection of
|
||
|
the candle seems rather to lose itself in the deep
|
||
|
obscurity of the glass, than to be reflected back
|
||
|
again into the apartment. That space of inky darkness
|
||
|
seems to be a field for Fancy to play her revels
|
||
|
in. She may call up other features to meet us, instead
|
||
|
of the reflection of our own; or, as in the
|
||
|
spells of Halloween, which we learned in childhood,
|
||
|
some unknown form may be seen peeping
|
||
|
over our shoulder. In short, when I am in a ghost-seeing
|
||
|
humour, I make my handmaiden draw the
|
||
|
green curtains over the mirror, before I go into the
|
||
|
room, so that she may have the first shock of the
|
||
|
apparition, if there be any to be seen. But, to tell
|
||
|
you the truth, the dislike to look into a mirror in
|
||
|
particular times and places, has, I believe, its original
|
||
|
foundation from my grandmother, who was a part
|
||
|
concerned in the scene of which I will now tell you.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE MIRROR.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 1.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You are fond (said my aunt) of sketches of the
|
||
|
society which has passed away. I wish I could describe
|
||
|
to you Sir Philip Forester, the ``chartered
|
||
|
libertine'' of Scottish good company, about the end
|
||
|
of the last century. I never saw him indeed; but
|
||
|
my mother's traditions were full of his wit, gallantry,
|
||
|
and dissipation. This gay knight flourished
|
||
|
about the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th
|
||
|
century. He was the Sir Charles Easy and the
|
||
|
Lovelace of his day and country: renowned for the
|
||
|
number of duels he had fought, and the successful
|
||
|
intrigues which he had carried on. The supremacy
|
||
|
which he had attained in the fashionable world was
|
||
|
absolute; and when we combine it with one or two
|
||
|
anecdotes, for which, ``if laws were made for every
|
||
|
degree,'' he ought certainly to have been hanged,
|
||
|
the popularity of such a person really serves to show,
|
||
|
either, that the present times are much more decent,
|
||
|
if not more virtuous, than they formerly were; or,
|
||
|
that high breeding then was of more difficult attainment
|
||
|
than that which is now so called; and, consequently,
|
||
|
entitled the successful professor to a proportional
|
||
|
degree of plenary indulgences and privileges.
|
||
|
No beau of this day could have borne out
|
||
|
so ugly a story as that of Pretty Peggy Grindstone,
|
||
|
the miller's daughter at Sillermills---it had well-nigh
|
||
|
made work for the Lord Advocate. But it
|
||
|
hurt Sir Philip Forester no more than the hail hurts
|
||
|
the hearthstone. He was as well received in society
|
||
|
as ever, and dined with the Duke of A------ the
|
||
|
day the poor girl was buried. She died of heartbreak.
|
||
|
But that has nothing to do with my story.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now, you must listen to a single word upon kith,
|
||
|
kin, and ally; I promise you I will not be prolix.
|
||
|
But it is necessary to the authenticity of my legend,
|
||
|
that you should know that Sir Philip Forester, with
|
||
|
his handsome person, elegant accomplishments, and
|
||
|
fashionable manners, married the younger Miss Falconer
|
||
|
of King's-Copland. The elder sister of this
|
||
|
lady had previously become the wife of my grandfather,
|
||
|
Sir Geoffrey Bothwell, and brought into
|
||
|
our family a good fortune. Miss Jemima, or Miss
|
||
|
Jemmie Falconer, as she was usually called, had
|
||
|
also about ten thousand pounds sterling---then
|
||
|
thought a very handsome portion indeed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two sisters were extremely different, though
|
||
|
each had their admirers while they remained single.
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell had some touch of the old King's-Copland
|
||
|
blood about her. She was bold, though
|
||
|
not to the degree of audacity: ambitious, and desirous
|
||
|
to raise her house and family; and was, as
|
||
|
has been said, a considerable spur to my grandfather,
|
||
|
who was otherwise an indolent man; but
|
||
|
whom unless he has been slandered, his lady's influence
|
||
|
involved in some political matters which
|
||
|
had been more wisely let alone. She was a woman
|
||
|
of high principle, however, and masculine good
|
||
|
sense, as some of her letters testify, which are still
|
||
|
in my wainscot cabinet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jemmie Falconer was the reverse of her sister
|
||
|
in every respect. Her understanding did not reach
|
||
|
above the ordinary pitch, if, indeed, she could be
|
||
|
said to have attained it. Her beauty, while it lasted,
|
||
|
consisted, in a great measure, of delicacy of
|
||
|
complexion and regularity of features, without any
|
||
|
peculiar force of expression. Even these charms
|
||
|
faded under the sufferings attendant on an ill-sorted
|
||
|
match. She was passionately attached to her husband,
|
||
|
by whom she was treated with a callous, yet
|
||
|
polite indifference; which, to one whose heart was
|
||
|
as tender as her judgment was weak, was more painful
|
||
|
perhaps than absolute ill usage. Sir Philip was
|
||
|
a voluptuary, that is, a completely selfish egotist:
|
||
|
whose disposition and character resembled the rapier
|
||
|
he wore, polished, keen, and brilliant, but inflexible
|
||
|
and unpitying. As he observed carefully
|
||
|
all the usual forms towards his lady, he had the art
|
||
|
to deprive her even of the compassion of the world;
|
||
|
and useless and unavailing as that may be while
|
||
|
actually possessed by the sufferer, it is, to a mind
|
||
|
like Lady Forester's, most painful to know she has
|
||
|
it not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The tattle of society did its best to place the peccant
|
||
|
husband above the suffering wife. Some called
|
||
|
her a poor spiritless thing, and declared, that, with
|
||
|
a little of her sister's spirit, she might have brought
|
||
|
to reason any Sir Philip whatsoever, were it the
|
||
|
termagant Falconbridge himself. But the greater
|
||
|
part of their acquaintance affected candour, and saw
|
||
|
faults on both sides; though, in fact, there only existed
|
||
|
the oppressor and the oppressed. The tone
|
||
|
of such critics was---``To be sure, no one will justify
|
||
|
Sir Philip Forester, but then we all know Sir
|
||
|
Philip, and Jemmie Falconer might have known
|
||
|
what she had to expect from the beginning.---What
|
||
|
made her set her cap at Sir Philip?---He would
|
||
|
never have looked at her if she had not thrown herself
|
||
|
at his head, with her poor ten thousand pounds.
|
||
|
I am sure, if it is money he wanted, she spoiled his
|
||
|
market. I know where Sir Philip could have done
|
||
|
much better.---And then, if she _would_ have the man,
|
||
|
could not she try to make him more comfortable at
|
||
|
home, and have his friends oftener, and not plague
|
||
|
him with the squalling children, and take care all
|
||
|
was handsome and in good style about the house?
|
||
|
I declare I think Sir Philip would have made a
|
||
|
very domestic man, with a woman who knew how
|
||
|
to manage him.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now these fair critics, in raising their profound
|
||
|
edifice of domestic felicity, did not recollect that
|
||
|
the corner-stone was wanting; and that to receive
|
||
|
good company with good cheer, the means of the
|
||
|
banquet ought to have been furnished by Sir Philip;
|
||
|
whose income (dilapidated as it was) was not equal
|
||
|
to the display of the hospitality required, and, at
|
||
|
the same time, to the supply of the good knight's
|
||
|
_menus plaisirs_. So, in spite of all that was so sanely
|
||
|
suggested by female friends, Sir Philip carried
|
||
|
his good humour every where abroad, and left at
|
||
|
home a solitary mansion and a pining spouse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At length, inconvenienced in his money affairs,
|
||
|
and tired even of the short time which he spent in
|
||
|
his own dull house, Sir Philip Forester determined
|
||
|
to take a trip to the continent, in the capacity of a
|
||
|
volunteer. It was then common for men of fashion
|
||
|
to do so; and our knight perhaps was of opinion
|
||
|
that a touch of the military character, just enough
|
||
|
to exalt, but not render pedantic, his qualities as a
|
||
|
_beau gar<c,>on_ was necessary to maintain possession
|
||
|
of the elevated situation which he held in the ranks
|
||
|
of fashion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sir Philip's resolution threw his wife into agonies
|
||
|
of terror; by which the worthy baronet was so
|
||
|
much annoyed, that, contrary to his wont, he took
|
||
|
some trouble to soothe her apprehensions; and
|
||
|
once more brought her to shed tears, in which sorrow
|
||
|
was not altogether unmingled with pleasure.
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell asked, as a favour, Sir Philip's permission
|
||
|
to receive her sister and her family into
|
||
|
her own house during his absence on the continent.
|
||
|
Sir Philip readily assented to a proposition which
|
||
|
saved expense, silenced the foolish people who
|
||
|
might have talked of a deserted wife and family,
|
||
|
and gratified Lady Bothwell; for whom he felt some
|
||
|
respect, as for one who often spoke to him, always
|
||
|
with freedom, and sometimes with severity, without
|
||
|
being deterred either by his raillery, or the
|
||
|
_prestige_ of his reputation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A day or two before Sir Philip's departure, Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell took the liberty of asking him, in her
|
||
|
sister's presence, the direct question, which his
|
||
|
timid wife had often desired, but never ventured,
|
||
|
to put to him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Pray, Sir Philip, what route do you take when
|
||
|
you reach the continent?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I go from Leith to Helvoet by a packet with
|
||
|
advices.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That I comprehend perfectly,'' said Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell dryly; ``but you do not mean to remain
|
||
|
long at Helvoet, I presume, and I should like to
|
||
|
know what is your next object?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You ask me, my dear lady,'' answered Sir
|
||
|
Philip, ``a question which I have not dared to ask
|
||
|
myself. The answer depends on the fate of war.
|
||
|
I shall, of course, go to head-quarters, wherever
|
||
|
they may happen to be for the time; deliver my letters
|
||
|
of introduction; learn as much of the noble art
|
||
|
of war as may suffice a poor interloping amateur;
|
||
|
and then take a glance at the sort of thing of which
|
||
|
we read so much in the Gazette.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And I trust, Sir Philip,'' said Lady Bothwell,
|
||
|
``that you will remember that you are a husband
|
||
|
and a father; and that though you think fit to indulge
|
||
|
this military fancy, you will not let it hurry
|
||
|
you into dangers which it is certainly unnecessary
|
||
|
for any save professional persons to encounter?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Lady Bothwell does me too much honour,''
|
||
|
replied the adventurous knight, ``in regarding
|
||
|
such a circumstance with the slightest interest.
|
||
|
But to soothe your flattering anxiety, I trust your
|
||
|
ladyship will recollect, that I cannot expose to
|
||
|
hazard the venerable and paternal character which
|
||
|
you so obligingly recommend to my protection,
|
||
|
without putting in some peril an honest fellow,
|
||
|
called Philip Forester, with whom I have kept
|
||
|
company for thirty years, and with whom, though
|
||
|
some folks consider him a coxcomb, I have not the
|
||
|
least desire to part.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Well, Sir Philip, you are the best judge of
|
||
|
your own affairs; I have little right to interfere---
|
||
|
you are not my husband.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``God forbid!''---said Sir Philip hastily; instantly
|
||
|
adding, however, ``God forbid that I should
|
||
|
deprive my friend Sir Geoffrey of so inestimable
|
||
|
a treasure.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``But you are my sister's husband,'' replied the
|
||
|
lady; ``and I suppose you are aware of her present
|
||
|
distress of mind------''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``If hearing of nothing else from morning to
|
||
|
night can make me aware of it,'' said Sir Philip,
|
||
|
``I should know something of the matter.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I do not pretend to reply to your wit, Sir
|
||
|
Philip,'' answered Lady Bothwell; ``but you must
|
||
|
be sensible that all this distress is on account of
|
||
|
apprehensions for your personal safety.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``In that case, I am surprised that Lady Bothwell,
|
||
|
at least, should give herself so much trouble
|
||
|
upon so insignificant a subject.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``My sister's interest may account for my being
|
||
|
anxious to learn something of Sir Philip Forester's
|
||
|
motions; about which otherwise, I know, he would
|
||
|
not wish me to concern myself: I have a brother's
|
||
|
safety too to be anxious for.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You mean Major Falconer, your brother by
|
||
|
the mother's side:---What can he possibly have
|
||
|
to do with our present agreeable conversation?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You have had words together, Sir Philip,''
|
||
|
said Lady Bothwell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Naturally; we are connexions,'' replied Sir
|
||
|
Philip, ``and as such have always had the usual
|
||
|
intercourse.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That is an evasion of the subject,'' answered
|
||
|
the lady. ``By words, I mean angry words, on
|
||
|
the subject of your usage of your wife.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``If,'' replied Sir Philip Forester, ``you suppose
|
||
|
Major Falconer simple enough to intrude his
|
||
|
advice upon me, Lady Bothwell, in my domestic
|
||
|
matters, you are indeed warranted in believing
|
||
|
that I might possibly be so far displeased with the
|
||
|
interference, as to request him to reserve his advice
|
||
|
till it was asked.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And being on these terms, you are going to
|
||
|
join the very army in which my brother Falconer
|
||
|
is now serving?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``No man knows the path of honour better than
|
||
|
Major Falconer,'' said Sir Philip. ``An aspirant
|
||
|
after fame, like me, cannot choose a better guide
|
||
|
than his footsteps.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell rose and went to the window,
|
||
|
the tears gushing from her eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And this heartless raillery,'' she said, ``is all
|
||
|
the consideration that is to be given to our apprehensions
|
||
|
of a quarrel which may bring on the most
|
||
|
terrible consequences? Good God! of what can
|
||
|
men's hearts be made, who can thus dally with the
|
||
|
agony of others?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sir Philip Forester was moved; he laid aside
|
||
|
the mocking tone in which he had hitherto spoken.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Dear Lady Bothwell,'' he said, taking her reluctant
|
||
|
hand, ``we are both wrong:---you are
|
||
|
too deeply serious; I, perhaps, too little so. The
|
||
|
dispute I had with Major Falconer was of no
|
||
|
earthly consequence. Had any thing occurred betwixt
|
||
|
us that ought to have been settled _par voie
|
||
|
du fait_, as we say in France, neither of us are persons
|
||
|
that are likely to postpone such a meeting.
|
||
|
Permit me to say, that were it generally known
|
||
|
that you or my Lady Forester are apprehensive of
|
||
|
such a catastrophe, it might be the very means of
|
||
|
bringing about what would not otherwise be likely
|
||
|
to happen. I know your good sense, Lady Bothwell,
|
||
|
and that you will understand me when I say,
|
||
|
that really my affairs require my absence for some
|
||
|
months;---this Jemima cannot understand; it is a
|
||
|
perpetual recurrence of questions, why can you not
|
||
|
do this, or that, or the third thing; and, when you
|
||
|
have proved to her that her expedients are totally
|
||
|
ineffectual, you have just to begin the whole round
|
||
|
again. Now, do you tell her, dear Lady Bothwell
|
||
|
that _you_ are satisfied. She is, you must confess,
|
||
|
one of those persons with whom authority goes
|
||
|
farther than reasoning. Do but repose a little
|
||
|
confidence in me, and you shall see how amply I
|
||
|
will repay it.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell shook her head, as one but half
|
||
|
satisfied. ``How difficult it is to extend confidence,
|
||
|
when the basis on which it ought to rest has been
|
||
|
so much shaken! But I will do my best to make
|
||
|
Jemima easy; and farther, I can only say, that for
|
||
|
keeping your present purpose I hold you responsible
|
||
|
both to God and man.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Do not fear that I will deceive you,'' said Sir
|
||
|
Philip; ``the safest conveyance to me will be
|
||
|
through the general post-office, Helvoetsluys,
|
||
|
where I will take care to leave orders for forwarding
|
||
|
my letters. As for Falconer, our only encounter
|
||
|
will be over a bottle of Burgundy; so make
|
||
|
yourself perfectly easy on his score.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell could _not_ make herself easy; yet
|
||
|
she was sensible that her sister hurt her own cause
|
||
|
by _taking on_, as the maid-servants call it, too vehemently;
|
||
|
and by showing before every stranger, by
|
||
|
manner, and sometimes by words also, a dissatisfaction
|
||
|
with her husband's journey, that was sure
|
||
|
to come to his ears, and equally certain to displease
|
||
|
him. But there was no help for this domestic dissension,
|
||
|
which ended only with the day of separation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am sorry I cannot tell, with precision, the year
|
||
|
in which Sir Philip Forester went over to Flanders;
|
||
|
but it was one of those in which the campaign
|
||
|
opened with extraordinary fury; and many
|
||
|
bloody, though indecisive, skirmishes were fought
|
||
|
between the French on the one side, and the Allies
|
||
|
on the other. In all our modern improvements,
|
||
|
there are none, perhaps, greater than in the accuracy
|
||
|
and speed with which intelligence is transmitted
|
||
|
from any scene of action to those in this
|
||
|
country whom it may concern. During Marlborough's
|
||
|
campaigns, the sufferings of the many
|
||
|
who had relations in, or along with, the army, were
|
||
|
greatly augmented by the suspense in which they
|
||
|
were detained for weeks, after they had heard of
|
||
|
bloody battles, in which, in all probability, those
|
||
|
for whom their bosoms throbbed with anxiety had
|
||
|
been personally engaged. Amongst those who
|
||
|
were most agonized by this state of uncertainty
|
||
|
was the---I had almost said deserted---wife of the
|
||
|
gay Sir Philip Forester. A single letter had informed
|
||
|
her of his arrival on the continent---no
|
||
|
others were received. One notice occurred in the
|
||
|
newspapers, in which Volunteer Sir Philip Forester
|
||
|
was mentioned as having been intrusted with a
|
||
|
dangerous reconnoissance, which he had executed
|
||
|
with the greatest courage, dexterity, and intelligence,
|
||
|
and received the thanks of the commanding
|
||
|
officer. The sense of his having acquired distinction
|
||
|
brought a momentary glow into the lady's
|
||
|
pale cheek; but it was instantly lost in ashen
|
||
|
whiteness at the recollection of his danger. After
|
||
|
this, they had no news whatever, neither from Sir
|
||
|
Philip, nor even from their brother Falconer. The
|
||
|
case of Lady Forester was not indeed different
|
||
|
from that of hundreds in the same situation; but
|
||
|
a feeble mind is necessarily an irritable one, and the
|
||
|
suspense which some bear with constitutional indifference
|
||
|
or philosophical resignation, and some
|
||
|
with a disposition to believe and hope the best,
|
||
|
was intolerable to Lady Forester, at once solitary
|
||
|
and sensitive, low-spirited, and devoid of strength
|
||
|
of mind, whether natural or acquired.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER II.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As she received no further news of Sir Philip,
|
||
|
whether directly or indirectly, his unfortunate lady
|
||
|
began now to feel a sort of consolation, even in
|
||
|
those careless habits which had so often given her
|
||
|
pain. ``He is so thoughtless,'' she repeated a hundred
|
||
|
times a-day to her sister, ``he never writes
|
||
|
when things are going on smoothly; it is his way:
|
||
|
had any thing happened he would have informed
|
||
|
us.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell listened to her sister without attempting
|
||
|
to console her. Probably she might be
|
||
|
of opinion, that even the worst intelligence which
|
||
|
could be received from Flanders might not be without
|
||
|
some touch of consolation; and that the Dowager
|
||
|
Lady Forester, if so she was doomed to be called,
|
||
|
might have a source of happiness unknown to the
|
||
|
wife of the gayest and finest gentleman in Scotland.
|
||
|
This conviction became stronger as they learned
|
||
|
from enquiries made at head-quarters, that Sir Philip
|
||
|
was no longer with the army; though whether
|
||
|
he had been taken or slain in some of those skirmishes
|
||
|
which were perpetually occurring, and in
|
||
|
which he loved to distinguish himself, or whether
|
||
|
he had, for some unknown reason or capricious
|
||
|
change of mind, voluntarily left the service, none
|
||
|
of his countrymen in the camp of the allies could
|
||
|
form even a conjecture. Meantime his creditors at
|
||
|
home became clamorous, entered into possession of
|
||
|
his property, and threatened his person, should he
|
||
|
be rash enough to return to Scotland. These additional
|
||
|
disadvantages aggravated Lady Bothwell's
|
||
|
displeasure against the fugitive husband; while her
|
||
|
sister saw nothing in any of them, save what tended
|
||
|
to increase her grief for the absence of him whom
|
||
|
her imagination now represented,---as it had before
|
||
|
marriage,---gallant, gay, and affectionate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
About this period there appeared in Edinburgh
|
||
|
a man of singular appearance and pretensions. He
|
||
|
was commonly called the Paduan Doctor, from having
|
||
|
received his education at that famous university.
|
||
|
He was supposed to possess some rare receipts
|
||
|
in medicine, with which, it was affirmed, he
|
||
|
had wrought remarkable cures. But though, on
|
||
|
the one hand, the physicians of Edinburgh termed
|
||
|
him an empiric, there were many persons, and
|
||
|
among them some of the clergy, who, while they
|
||
|
admitted the truth of the cures and the force of his
|
||
|
remedies, alleged that Doctor Baptista Damiotti
|
||
|
made use of charms and unlawful arts in order to
|
||
|
obtain success in his practice. The resorting to
|
||
|
him was even solemnly preached against, as a seeking
|
||
|
of health from idols, and a trusting to the help
|
||
|
which was to come from Egypt. But the protection
|
||
|
which the Paduan Doctor received from some
|
||
|
friends of interest and consequence, enabled him to
|
||
|
set these imputations at defiance, and to assume,
|
||
|
even in the city of Edinburgh, famed as it was for
|
||
|
abhorrence of witches and necromancers, the dangerous
|
||
|
character of an expounder of futurity. It
|
||
|
was at length rumoured, that, for a certain gratification,
|
||
|
which of course was not an inconsiderable
|
||
|
one, Doctor Baptista Damiotti could tell the fate of
|
||
|
the absent, and even show his visitors the personal
|
||
|
form of their absent friends, and the action in which
|
||
|
they were engaged at the moment. This rumour
|
||
|
came to the ears of Lady Forester, who had reached
|
||
|
that pitch of mental agony in which the sufferer
|
||
|
will do any thing, or endure any thing, that suspense
|
||
|
may be converted into certainty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gentle and timid in most cases, her state of mind
|
||
|
made her equally obstinate and reckless, and it was
|
||
|
with no small surprise and alarm that her sister,
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell, heard her express a resolution to
|
||
|
visit this man of art, and learn from him the fate
|
||
|
of her husband. Lady Bothwell remonstrated on
|
||
|
the improbability that such pretensions as those of
|
||
|
this foreigner could be founded in any thing but
|
||
|
imposture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I care not,'' said the deserted wife, ``what degree
|
||
|
of ridicule I may incur; if there be any one
|
||
|
chance out of a hundred that I may obtain some
|
||
|
certainty of my husband's fate, I would not miss
|
||
|
that chance for whatever else the world can offer
|
||
|
me.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell next urged the unlawfulness of
|
||
|
resorting to such sources of forbidden knowledge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Sister,'' replied the sufferer, ``he who is dying
|
||
|
of thirst cannot refrain from drinking even poisoned
|
||
|
water. She who suffers under suspense must seek
|
||
|
information, even were the powers which offer it
|
||
|
unhallowed and infernal. I go to learn my fate
|
||
|
alone; and this very evening will I know it: the
|
||
|
sun that rises to-morrow shall find me, if not more
|
||
|
happy, at least more resigned.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Sister,'' said Lady Bothwell, ``if you are determined
|
||
|
upon this wild step, you shall not go alone.
|
||
|
If this man be an impostor, you may be too much
|
||
|
agitated by your feelings to detect his villainy. If,
|
||
|
which I cannot believe, there be any truth in what
|
||
|
he pretends, you shall not be exposed alone to a
|
||
|
communication of so extraordinary a nature. I will
|
||
|
go with you, if indeed you determine to go. But
|
||
|
yet reconsider your project, and renounce enquiries
|
||
|
which cannot be prosecuted without guilt, and
|
||
|
perhaps without danger.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Forester threw herself into her sister's
|
||
|
arms, and, clasping her to her bosom, thanked her
|
||
|
a hundred times for the offer of her company;
|
||
|
while she declined with a melancholy gesture the
|
||
|
friendly advice with which it was accompanied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the hour of twilight arrived,---which was
|
||
|
the period when the Paduan Doctor was understood
|
||
|
to receive the visits of those who came to consult
|
||
|
with him,---the two ladies left their apartments in
|
||
|
the Canongate of Edinburgh, having their dress arranged
|
||
|
like that of women of an inferior description,
|
||
|
and their plaids disposed around their faces as they
|
||
|
were worn by the same class; for, in those days of
|
||
|
aristocracy, the quality of the wearer was generally
|
||
|
indicated by the manner in which her plaid was disposed,
|
||
|
as well as by the fineness of its texture. It
|
||
|
was Lady Bothwell who had suggested this species
|
||
|
of disguise, partly to avoid observation as they
|
||
|
should go to the conjurer's house, and partly in
|
||
|
order to make trial of his penetration, by appearing
|
||
|
before him in a feigned character. Lady Forester's
|
||
|
servant, of tried fidelity, had been employed by her
|
||
|
to propitiate the Doctor by a suitable fee, and a
|
||
|
story intimating that a soldier's wife desired to
|
||
|
know the fate of her husband: a subject upon which,
|
||
|
in all probability, the sage was very frequently consulted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the last moment, when the palace clock struck
|
||
|
eight, Lady Bothwell earnestly watched her sister
|
||
|
in hopes that she might retreat from her rash undertaking;
|
||
|
but as mildness, and even timidity, is
|
||
|
capable at times of vehement and fixed purposes,
|
||
|
she found Lady Forester resolutely unmoved and
|
||
|
determined when the moment of departure arrived.
|
||
|
Ill satisfied with the expedition, but determined not
|
||
|
to leave her sister at such a crisis, Lady Bothwell
|
||
|
accompanied Lady Forester through more than one
|
||
|
obscure street and lane, the servant walking before,
|
||
|
and acting as their guide. At length he suddenly
|
||
|
turned into a narrow court, and knocked at an arched
|
||
|
door which seemed to belong to a building of
|
||
|
some antiquity. It opened, though no one appeared
|
||
|
to act as porter; and the servant stepping aside
|
||
|
from the entrance, motioned the ladies to enter.
|
||
|
They had no sooner done so, than it shut, and excluded
|
||
|
their guide. The two ladies found themselves
|
||
|
in a small vestibule, illuminated by a dim
|
||
|
lamp, and having, when the door was closed, no
|
||
|
communication with the external light or air. The
|
||
|
door of an inner apartment, partly open, was at
|
||
|
the further side of the vestibule.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``We must not hesitate now, Jemima,'' said Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell, and walked forwards into the inner room,
|
||
|
where, surrounded by books, maps, philosophical
|
||
|
utensils, and other implements of peculiar shape
|
||
|
and appearance, they found the man of art.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was nothing very peculiar in the Italian's
|
||
|
appearance. He had the dark complexion and marked
|
||
|
features of his country, seemed about fifty years
|
||
|
old, and was handsomely, but plainly, dressed in a
|
||
|
full suit of black clothes, which was then the universal
|
||
|
costume of the medical profession. Large
|
||
|
wax-lights, in silver sconces, illuminated the apartment,
|
||
|
which was reasonably furnished. He rose as
|
||
|
the ladies entered; and, notwithstanding the inferiority
|
||
|
of their dress, received them with the marked
|
||
|
respect due to their quality, and which foreigners
|
||
|
are usually punctilious in rendering to those to
|
||
|
whom such honours are due.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell endeavoured to maintain her proposed
|
||
|
incognito; and, as the Doctor ushered them to
|
||
|
the upper end of the room, made a motion declining
|
||
|
his courtesy, as unfitted for their condition.
|
||
|
``We are poor people, sir,'' she said; ``only my
|
||
|
sister's distress has brought us to consult your worship
|
||
|
whether---''
|
||
|
|
||
|
He smiled as he interrupted her---``I am aware,
|
||
|
madam, of your sister's distress, and its cause; I
|
||
|
am aware, also, that I am honoured with a visit
|
||
|
from two ladies of the highest consideration---
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell and Lady Forester. If I could
|
||
|
not distinguish them from the class of society which
|
||
|
their present dress would indicate, there would be
|
||
|
small possibility of my being able to gratify them
|
||
|
by giving the information which they come to
|
||
|
seek.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I can easily understand,'' said Lady Bothwell------
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Pardon my boldness to interrupt you, milady,''
|
||
|
cried the Italian; ``your ladyship was about
|
||
|
to say, that you could easily understand that I had
|
||
|
got possession of your names by means of your domestic.
|
||
|
But in thinking so, you do injustice to the
|
||
|
fidelity of your servant, and, I may add, to the skill
|
||
|
of one who is also not less your humble servant---
|
||
|
Baptista Damiotti.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I have no intention to do either, sir,'' said
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell, maintaining a tone of composure,
|
||
|
though somewhat surprised, ``but the situation is
|
||
|
something new to me. If you know who we are,
|
||
|
you also know, sir, what brought us here.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Curiosity to know the fate of a Scottish gentleman
|
||
|
of rank, now, or lately, upon the continent,''
|
||
|
answered the seer; ``his name is Il Cavaliero Philippo
|
||
|
Forester; a gentleman who has the honour
|
||
|
to be husband to this lady, and, with your ladyship's
|
||
|
permission for using plain language, the misfortune
|
||
|
not to value as it deserves that inestimable advantage.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Forester sighed deeply, and Lady Bothwell
|
||
|
replied---
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Since you know our object without our telling
|
||
|
it, the only question that remains is, whether you
|
||
|
have the power to relieve my sister's anxiety?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I have, madam,'' answered the Paduan scholar;
|
||
|
``but there is still a previous enquiry. Have
|
||
|
you the courage to behold with your own eyes
|
||
|
what the Cavaliero Philippo Forester is now doing?
|
||
|
or will you take it on my report?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That question my sister must answer for herself,''
|
||
|
said Lady Bothwell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``With my own eyes will I endure to see whatever
|
||
|
you have power to show me,'' said Lady Forester,
|
||
|
with the same determined spirit which had
|
||
|
stimulated her since her resolution was taken upon
|
||
|
this subject.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``There may be danger in it.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``If gold can compensate the risk,'' said Lady
|
||
|
Forester, taking out her purse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I do not such things for the purpose of gain,''
|
||
|
answered the foreigner. ``I dare not turn my art
|
||
|
to such a purpose. If I take the gold of the
|
||
|
wealthy, it is but to bestow it on the poor; nor do
|
||
|
I ever accept more than the sum I have already received
|
||
|
from your servant. Put up your purse, madam;
|
||
|
an adept needs not your gold.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell, considering this rejection of her
|
||
|
sister's offer as a mere trick of an empiric, to induce
|
||
|
her to press a larger sum upon him, and willing
|
||
|
that the scene should be commenced and ended,
|
||
|
offered some gold in turn, observing that it was
|
||
|
only to enlarge the sphere of his charity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Let Lady Bothwell enlarge the sphere of her
|
||
|
own charity,'' said the Paduan, ``not merely in
|
||
|
giving of alms, in which I know she is not deficient,
|
||
|
but in judging the character of others; and
|
||
|
let her oblige Baptista Damiotti by believing him
|
||
|
honest, till she shall discover him to be a knave.
|
||
|
Do not be surprised, madam, if I speak in answer
|
||
|
to your thoughts rather than your expressions, and
|
||
|
tell me once more whether you have courage to
|
||
|
look on what I am prepared to show?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I own, sir,'' said Lady Bothwell, ``that your
|
||
|
words strike me with some sense of fear; but whatever
|
||
|
my sister desires to witness, I will not shrink
|
||
|
from witnessing along with her.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Nay, the danger only consists in the risk of
|
||
|
your resolution failing you. The sight can only
|
||
|
last for the space of seven minutes; and should you
|
||
|
interrupt the vision by speaking a single word, not
|
||
|
only would the charm be broken, but some danger
|
||
|
might result to the spectators. But if you can remain
|
||
|
steadily silent for the seven minutes, your
|
||
|
curiosity will be gratified without the slightest risk;
|
||
|
and for this I will engage my honour.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Internally Lady Bothwell thought the security
|
||
|
was but an indifferent one; but she suppressed the
|
||
|
suspicion, as if she had believed that the adept,
|
||
|
whose dark features wore a half-formed smile, could
|
||
|
in reality read even her most secret reflections. A
|
||
|
solemn pause then ensued, until Lady Forester gathered
|
||
|
courage enough to reply to the physician,
|
||
|
as he termed himself, that she would abide with
|
||
|
firmness and silence the sight which he had promised
|
||
|
to exhibit to them. Upon this, he made them
|
||
|
a low obeisance, and saying he went to prepare
|
||
|
matters to meet their wish, left the apartment.
|
||
|
The two sisters, hand in hand, as if seeking by that
|
||
|
close union to divert any danger which might threaten
|
||
|
them, sat down on two seats in immediate contact
|
||
|
with each other: Jemima seeking support in
|
||
|
the manly and habitual courage of Lady Bothwell;
|
||
|
and she, on the other hand, more agitated than she
|
||
|
had expected, endeavouring to fortify herself by
|
||
|
the desperate resolution which circumstances had
|
||
|
forced her sister to assume. The one perhaps said
|
||
|
to herself, that her sister never feared any thing;
|
||
|
and the other might reflect, that what so feeble a
|
||
|
minded woman as Jemima did not fear, could not
|
||
|
properly be a subject of apprehension to a person
|
||
|
of firmness and resolution like her own.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a few moments the thoughts of both were
|
||
|
diverted from their own situation, by a strain of
|
||
|
music so singularly sweet and solemn, that, while
|
||
|
it seemed calculated to avert or dispel any feeling
|
||
|
unconnected with its harmony, increased, at the
|
||
|
same time, the solemn excitation which the preceding
|
||
|
interview was calculated to produce. The
|
||
|
music was that of some instrument with which they
|
||
|
were unacquainted; but circumstances afterwards
|
||
|
led my ancestress to believe that it was that of the
|
||
|
harmonica, which she heard at a much later period
|
||
|
in life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When these heaven-born sounds had ceased, a
|
||
|
door opened in the upper end of the apartment,
|
||
|
and they saw Damiotti, standing at the head of two
|
||
|
or three steps, sign to them to advance. His dress
|
||
|
was so different from that which he had worn a
|
||
|
few minutes before, that they could hardly recognise
|
||
|
him; and the deadly paleness of his countenance,
|
||
|
and a certain stern rigidity of muscles, like
|
||
|
that of one whose mind is made up to some strange
|
||
|
and daring action, had totally changed the somewhat
|
||
|
sarcastic expression with which he had previously
|
||
|
regarded them both, and particularly Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell. He was barefooted, excepting a species
|
||
|
of sandals in the antique fashion; his legs were
|
||
|
naked beneath the knees; above them he wore hose,
|
||
|
and a doublet of dark crimson silk close to his body;
|
||
|
and over that a flowing loose robe, something resembling
|
||
|
a surplice, of snow-white linen: his throat
|
||
|
and neck were uncovered, and his long, straight,
|
||
|
black hair was carefully combed down at full
|
||
|
length.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As the ladies approached at his bidding, he showed
|
||
|
no gesture of that ceremonious courtesy of which
|
||
|
be had been formerly lavish. On the contrary, he
|
||
|
made the signal of advance with an air of command;
|
||
|
and when, arm in arm, and with insecure steps, the
|
||
|
sisters approached the spot where he stood, it was
|
||
|
with a warning frown that be pressed his finger to
|
||
|
his lips, as if reiterating his condition of absolute
|
||
|
silence, while, stalking before them, he led the way
|
||
|
into the next apartment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was a large room, hung with black, as if for
|
||
|
a funeral. At the upper end was a table, or rather
|
||
|
a species of altar, covered with the same lugubrious
|
||
|
colour, on which lay divers objects resembling the
|
||
|
usual implements of sorcery. These objects were
|
||
|
not indeed visible as they advanced into the apartment;
|
||
|
for the light which displayed them, being
|
||
|
only that of two expiring lamps, was extremely
|
||
|
faint. The master---to use the Italian phrase for
|
||
|
persons of this description---approached the upper
|
||
|
end of the room, with a genuflexion like that of a
|
||
|
Catholic to the crucifix, and at the same time crossed
|
||
|
himself. The ladies followed in silence, and arm
|
||
|
in arm. Two or three low broad steps led to a
|
||
|
platform in front of the altar, or what resembled
|
||
|
such. Here the sage took his stand, and placed
|
||
|
the ladies beside him, once more earnestly repeating
|
||
|
by signs his injunctions of silence. The Italian
|
||
|
then, extending his bare arm from under his linen
|
||
|
vestment, pointed with his forefinger to five large
|
||
|
flambeaux, or torches, placed on each side of the
|
||
|
altar. They took fire successively at the approach
|
||
|
of his hand, or rather of his finger, and spread a
|
||
|
strong light through the room. By this the visitors
|
||
|
could discern that, on the seeming altar, were
|
||
|
disposed two naked swords laid crosswise; a large
|
||
|
open book, which they conceived to be a copy of
|
||
|
the Holy Scriptures, but in a language to them
|
||
|
unknown; and beside this mysterious volume was
|
||
|
placed a human skull. But what struck the sisters
|
||
|
most was a very tall and broad mirror, which occupied
|
||
|
all the space behind the altar, and, illumined
|
||
|
by the lighted torches, reflected the mysterious
|
||
|
articles which were laid upon it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The master then placed himself between the two
|
||
|
ladies, and, pointing to the mirror, took each by the
|
||
|
hand, but without speaking a syllable. They gazed
|
||
|
intently on the polished and sable space to which
|
||
|
he had directed their attention. Suddenly the surface
|
||
|
assumed a new and singular appearance. It
|
||
|
no longer simply reflected the objects placed before
|
||
|
it, but, as if it had self-contained scenery of its own,
|
||
|
objects began to appear within it, at first in a disorderly,
|
||
|
indistinct, and miscellaneous manner, like
|
||
|
form arranging itself out of chaos; at length, in
|
||
|
distinct and defined shape and symmetry. It was
|
||
|
thus that, after some shifting of light and darkness
|
||
|
over the face of the wonderful glass, a long perspective
|
||
|
of arches and columns began to arrange
|
||
|
itself on its sides, and a vaulted roof on the upper
|
||
|
part of it; till, after many oscillations, the whole
|
||
|
vision gained a fixed and stationary appearance,
|
||
|
representing the interior of a foreign church. The
|
||
|
pillars were stately, and hung with scutcheons;
|
||
|
the arches were lofty and magnificent; the floor
|
||
|
was lettered with funeral inscriptions. But there
|
||
|
were no separate shrines, no images, no display of
|
||
|
chalice or crucifix on the altar. It was, therefore,
|
||
|
a Protestant church upon the continent. A clergyman
|
||
|
dressed in the Geneva gown and band stood
|
||
|
by the communion-table, and, with the Bible opened
|
||
|
before him, and his clerk awaiting in the background,
|
||
|
seemed prepared to perform some service
|
||
|
of the church to which he belonged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At length, there entered the middle aisle of the
|
||
|
building a numerous party, which appeared to be
|
||
|
a bridal one, as a lady and gentleman walked first,
|
||
|
hand in hand, followed by a large concourse of
|
||
|
persons of both sexes, gaily, nay richly, attired.
|
||
|
The bride, whose features they could distinctly
|
||
|
see, seemed not more than sixteen years old, and
|
||
|
extremely beautiful. The bridegroom, for some
|
||
|
seconds, moved rather with his shoulder towards
|
||
|
them, and his face averted; but his elegance of
|
||
|
form and step struck the sisters at once with the
|
||
|
same apprehension. As he turned his face suddenly,
|
||
|
it was frightfully realized, and they saw, in
|
||
|
the gay bridegroom before them, Sir Philip Forester.
|
||
|
His wife uttered an imperfect exclamation,
|
||
|
at the sound of which the whole scene stirred and
|
||
|
seemed to separate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I could compare it to nothing,'' said Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell, while recounting the wonderful tale,
|
||
|
``but to the dispersion of the reflection offered by
|
||
|
a deep and calm pool, when a stone is suddenly
|
||
|
cast into it, and the shadows become dissipated and
|
||
|
broken.'' The master pressed both the ladies' hands
|
||
|
severely, as if to remind them of their promise, and
|
||
|
of the danger which they incurred. The exclamation
|
||
|
died away on Lady Forester's tongue, without
|
||
|
attaining perfect utterance, and the scene in the
|
||
|
glass, after the fluctuation of a minute, again resumed
|
||
|
to the eye its former appearance of a real
|
||
|
scene, existing within the mirror, as if represented
|
||
|
in a picture, save that the figures were movable
|
||
|
instead of being stationary.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The representation of Sir Philip Forester, now
|
||
|
distinctly visible in form and feature, was seen to
|
||
|
lead on towards the clergyman that beautiful girl,
|
||
|
who advanced at once with diffidence, and with a
|
||
|
species of affectionate pride. In the meantime,
|
||
|
and just as the clergyman had arranged the bridal
|
||
|
company before him, and seemed about to commence
|
||
|
the service, another group of persons, of
|
||
|
whom two or three were officers, entered the church.
|
||
|
They moved, at first, forward, as though they came
|
||
|
to witness the bridal ceremony, but suddenly one
|
||
|
of the officers, whose back was towards the spectators,
|
||
|
detached himself from his companions, and
|
||
|
rushed hastily towards the marriage party, when
|
||
|
the whole of them turned towards him, as if attracted
|
||
|
by some exclamation which had accompanied
|
||
|
his advance. Suddenly the intruder drew his
|
||
|
sword; the bridegroom unsheathed his own, and
|
||
|
made towards him; swords were also drawn by
|
||
|
other individuals, both of the marriage party, and
|
||
|
of those who had last entered. They fell into a
|
||
|
sort of confusion, the clergyman, and some elder
|
||
|
and graver persons, labouring apparently to keep
|
||
|
the peace, while the hotter spirits on both sides
|
||
|
brandished their weapons. But now, the period
|
||
|
of the brief space during which the soothsayer, as
|
||
|
he pretended, was permitted to exhibit his art,
|
||
|
was arrived. The fumes again mixed together,
|
||
|
and dissolved gradually from observation; the
|
||
|
vaults and columns of the church rolled asunder,
|
||
|
and disappeared; and the front of the mirror reflected
|
||
|
nothing save the blazing torches, and the
|
||
|
melancholy apparatus placed on the altar or table
|
||
|
before it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The doctor led the ladies, who greatly required
|
||
|
his support, into the apartment from whence they
|
||
|
came; where wine, essences, and other means of
|
||
|
restoring suspended animation, had been provided
|
||
|
during his absence. He motioned them to chairs,
|
||
|
which they occupied in silence; Lady Forester, in
|
||
|
particular, wringing her hands, and casting her
|
||
|
eyes up to heaven, but without speaking a word,
|
||
|
as if the spell had been still before her eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And what we have seen is even now acting?''
|
||
|
said Lady Bothwell, collecting herself with difficulty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That,' answered Baptista Damiotti, ``I cannot
|
||
|
justly, or with certainty, say. But it is either
|
||
|
now acting, or has been acted, during a short space
|
||
|
before this. It is the last remarkable transaction
|
||
|
in which the Cavalier Forester has been engaged.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell then expressed anxiety concerning
|
||
|
her sister, whose altered countenance, and apparent
|
||
|
unconsciousness of what passed around her,
|
||
|
excited her apprehensions how it might be possible
|
||
|
to convey her home.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I have prepared for that,'' answered the adept;
|
||
|
``I have directed the servant to bring your equipage
|
||
|
as near to this place as the narrowness of the
|
||
|
street will permit. Fear not for your sister; but
|
||
|
give her, when you return home, this composing
|
||
|
draught, and she will be better to-morrow morning.
|
||
|
Few,'' he added, in a melancholy tone, ``leave
|
||
|
this house as well in health as they entered it.
|
||
|
Such being the consequence of seeking knowledge
|
||
|
by mysterious means, I leave you to judge the
|
||
|
condition of those who have the power of gratifying
|
||
|
such irregular curiosity. Farewell, and forget
|
||
|
not the potion.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I will give her nothing that comes from you,''
|
||
|
said Lady Bothwell; ``I have seen enough of your
|
||
|
art already. Perhaps you would poison us both to
|
||
|
conceal your own necromancy. But we are persons
|
||
|
who want neither the means of making our
|
||
|
wrongs known, nor the assistance of friends to
|
||
|
right them.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You have had no wrongs from me, madam,''
|
||
|
said the adept. ``You sought one who is little
|
||
|
grateful for such honour. He seeks no one, and
|
||
|
only gives responses to those who invite and call
|
||
|
upon him. After all, you have but learned a little
|
||
|
sooner the evil which you must still be doomed to
|
||
|
endure. I hear your servant's step at the door,
|
||
|
and will detain your ladyship and Lady Forester
|
||
|
no longer. The next packet from the continent
|
||
|
will explain what you have already partly witnessed.
|
||
|
Let it not, if I may advise, pass too suddenly
|
||
|
into your sister's hands.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
So saying, he bid Lady Bothwell good-night.
|
||
|
She went, lighted by the adept, to the vestibule,
|
||
|
where he hastily threw a black cloak over his
|
||
|
singular dress, and opening the door, intrusted
|
||
|
his visitors to the care of the servant. It was with
|
||
|
difficulty that Lady Bothwell sustained her sister
|
||
|
to the carriage, though it was only twenty steps
|
||
|
distant. When they arrived at home, Lady Forester
|
||
|
required medical assistance. The physician
|
||
|
of the family attended, and shook his head on
|
||
|
feeling her pulse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Here has been,'' he said, ``a violent and sudden
|
||
|
shock on the nerves. I must know how it has
|
||
|
happened.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell admitted they had visited the
|
||
|
conjurer, and that Lady Forester had received
|
||
|
some bad news respecting her husband, Sir Philip.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That rascally quack would make my fortune;
|
||
|
were he to stay in Edinburgh,'' said the graduate;
|
||
|
``his is the seventh nervous case I have heard of
|
||
|
his making for me, and all by effect of terror.''
|
||
|
He next examined the composing draught which
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell had unconsciously brought in her
|
||
|
hand, tasted it, and pronounced it very germain to
|
||
|
the matter, and what would save an application to
|
||
|
the apothecary. He then paused, and looking at
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell very significantly, at length added,
|
||
|
``I suppose I must not ask your ladyship any thing
|
||
|
about this Italian warlock's proceedings?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Indeed, Doctor,'' answered Lady Bothwell, ``I
|
||
|
consider what passed as confidential; and though
|
||
|
the man may be a rogue, yet, as we were fools
|
||
|
enough to consult him, we should, I think, be
|
||
|
honest enough to keep his counsel.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``_May_ be a knave---come,'' said the Doctor, ``I
|
||
|
am glad to hear your ladyship allows such a possibility
|
||
|
in any thing that comes from Italy.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``What comes from Italy may be as good as
|
||
|
what comes from Hanover, Doctor. But you and
|
||
|
I will remain good friends, and that it may be so,
|
||
|
we will say nothing of Whig and Tory.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Not I,'' said the Doctor, receiving his fee, and
|
||
|
taking his hat; ``a Carolus serves my purpose as
|
||
|
well as a Willielmus. But I should like to know
|
||
|
why old Lady Saint Ringan's, and all that set, go
|
||
|
about wasting their decayed lungs in puffing this
|
||
|
foreign fellow.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Ay---you had best set him down a Jesuit, as
|
||
|
Scrub says.'' On these terms they parted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The poor patient---whose nerves, from an extraordinary
|
||
|
state of tension, had at length become
|
||
|
relaxed in as extraordinary a degree---continued
|
||
|
to struggle with a sort of imbecility, the growth
|
||
|
of superstitious terror, when the shocking tidings
|
||
|
were brought from Holland, which fulfilled even
|
||
|
her worst expectations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were sent by the celebrated Earl of Stair,
|
||
|
and contained the melancholy event of a duel betwixt
|
||
|
Sir Philip Forester, and his wife's half-brother,
|
||
|
Captain Falconer, of the Scotch-Dutch, as
|
||
|
they were then called, in which the latter had been
|
||
|
killed. The cause of quarrel rendered the incident
|
||
|
still more shocking. It seemed that Sir Philip had
|
||
|
left the army suddenly, in consequence of being
|
||
|
unable to pay a very considerable sum, which he
|
||
|
had lost to another volunteer at play. He had
|
||
|
changed his name, and taken up his residence at
|
||
|
Rotterdam, where he had insinuated himself into
|
||
|
the good graces of an ancient and rich burgomaster,
|
||
|
and, by his handsome person and graceful
|
||
|
manners, captivated the affections of his only child,
|
||
|
a very young person, of great beauty, and the
|
||
|
heiress of much wealth. Delighted with the specious
|
||
|
attractions of his proposed son-in-law, the
|
||
|
wealthy merchant---whose idea of the British character
|
||
|
was too high to admit of his taking any
|
||
|
precaution to acquire evidence of his condition and
|
||
|
circumstances---gave his consent to the marriage.
|
||
|
It was about to be celebrated in the principal
|
||
|
church of the city, when it was interrupted by a
|
||
|
singular occurrence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Captain Falconer having been detached to Rotterdam
|
||
|
to bring up a part of the brigade of Scottish
|
||
|
auxiliaries, who were in quarters there, a person
|
||
|
of consideration in the town, to whom he had
|
||
|
been formerly known, proposed to him for amusement
|
||
|
to go to the high church, to see a countryman
|
||
|
of his own married to the daughter of a wealthy
|
||
|
burgomaster. Captain Falconer went accordingly,
|
||
|
accompanied by his Dutch acquaintance, with a
|
||
|
party of his friends, and two or three officers of
|
||
|
the Scotch brigade. His astonishment may be conceived
|
||
|
when he saw his own brother-in-law, a married
|
||
|
man, on the point of leading to the altar the
|
||
|
innocent and beautiful creature, upon whom he
|
||
|
was about to practise a base and unmanly deceit.
|
||
|
He proclaimed his villainy on the spot, and the
|
||
|
marriage was interrupted of course. But against
|
||
|
the opinion of more thinking men, who considered
|
||
|
Sir Philip Forester as having thrown himself out
|
||
|
of the rank of men of honour, Captain Falconer
|
||
|
admitted him to the privilege of such, accepted a
|
||
|
challenge from him, and in the rencounter received
|
||
|
a mortal wound. Such are the ways of Heaven,
|
||
|
mysterious in our eyes. Lady Forester never recovered
|
||
|
the shock of this dismal intelligence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-------
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And did this tragedy,'' said I, ``take place
|
||
|
exactly at the time when the scene in the mirror
|
||
|
was exhibited?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``It is hard to be obliged to maim one's story,''
|
||
|
answered my aunt; ``but, to speak the truth, it happened
|
||
|
some days sooner than the apparition was
|
||
|
exhibited.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And so there remained a possibility,'' said I,
|
||
|
``that by some secret and speedy communication
|
||
|
the artist might have received early intelligence of
|
||
|
that incident.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``The incredulous pretended so,'' replied my
|
||
|
aunt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``What became of the adept?'' demanded I.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Why, a warrant came down shortly afterwards
|
||
|
to arrest him for high-treason, as an agent of the
|
||
|
Chevalier St George; and Lady Bothwell, recollecting
|
||
|
the hints which had escaped the Doctor, an
|
||
|
ardent friend of the Protestant succession, did then
|
||
|
call to remembrance, that this man was chiefly
|
||
|
_pron<e'>_ among the ancient matrons of her own political
|
||
|
persuasion. It certainly seemed probable that
|
||
|
intelligence from the continent, which could easily
|
||
|
have been transmitted by an active and powerful
|
||
|
agent, might have enabled him to prepare such a
|
||
|
scene of phantasmagoria as she had herself witnessed.
|
||
|
Yet there were so many difficulties in
|
||
|
assigning a natural explanation, that, to the day of
|
||
|
her death, she remained in great doubt on the subject,
|
||
|
and much disposed to cut the Gordian knot,
|
||
|
by admitting the existence of supernatural agency.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``But, my dear aunt,'' said I, ``what became of
|
||
|
the man of skill?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Oh, he was too good a fortune-teller not to be
|
||
|
able to foresee that his own destiny would be tragical
|
||
|
if he waited the arrival of the man with the
|
||
|
silver greyhound upon his sleeve. He made, as we
|
||
|
say, a moonlight flitting, and was nowhere to be
|
||
|
seen or heard of. Some noise there was about
|
||
|
papers or letters found in the house, but it died
|
||
|
away, and Doctor Baptista Damiotti was soon as
|
||
|
little talked of as Galen or Hippocrates.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And Sir Philip Forester,'' said I, ``did he too
|
||
|
vanish for ever from the public scene?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``No,'' replied my kind informer. ``He was
|
||
|
heard of once more, and it was upon a remarkable
|
||
|
occasion. It is said that we Scots, when there was
|
||
|
such a nation in existence, have, among our full
|
||
|
peck of virtues, one or two little barleycorns of
|
||
|
vice. In particular, it is alleged that we rarely
|
||
|
forgive, and never forget, any injuries received;
|
||
|
that we used to make an idol of our resentment, as
|
||
|
poor Lady Constance did of her grief; and are addicted,
|
||
|
as Burns says, to `nursing our wrath to
|
||
|
keep it warm.' Lady Bothwell was not without
|
||
|
this feeling; and, I believe, nothing whatever,
|
||
|
scarce the restoration of the Stewart line, could have
|
||
|
happened so delicious to her feelings as an opportunity
|
||
|
of being revenged on Sir Philip Forester
|
||
|
for the deep and double injury which had deprived
|
||
|
her of a sister and of a brother. But nothing of
|
||
|
him was heard or known till many a year had passed
|
||
|
away.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
At length---it was on a Fastern's E'en (Shrovetide)
|
||
|
assembly, at which the whole fashion of Edinburgh
|
||
|
attended, full and frequent, and when Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell had a seat amongst the lady patronesses,
|
||
|
that one of the attendants on the company whispered
|
||
|
into her ear, that a gentleman wished to
|
||
|
speak with her in private.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``In private? and in an assembly room?---he
|
||
|
must be mad---tell him to call upon me to-morrow
|
||
|
morning.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I said so, my lady,'' answered the man, ``but
|
||
|
he desired me to give you this paper.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
She undid the billet, which was curiously folded
|
||
|
and sealed. It only bore the words, ``_On business
|
||
|
of life and death_,'' written in a hand which
|
||
|
she had never seen before. Suddenly it occurred
|
||
|
to her that it might concern the safety of some of
|
||
|
her political friends; she therefore followed the
|
||
|
messenger to a small apartment where the refreshments
|
||
|
were prepared, and from which the general
|
||
|
company was excluded. She found an old man,
|
||
|
who at her approach rose up and bowed profoundly.
|
||
|
His appearance indicated a broken constitution,
|
||
|
and his dress, though sedulously rendered
|
||
|
conforming to the etiquette of a ball-room, was
|
||
|
worn and tarnished, and hung in folds about his
|
||
|
emaciated person. Lady Bothwell was about to
|
||
|
feel for her purse, expecting to get rid of the supplicant
|
||
|
at the expense of a little money, but some
|
||
|
fear of a mistake arrested her purpose. She therefore
|
||
|
gave the man leisure to explain himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I have the honour to speak with the Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I am Lady Bothwell; allow me to say that this
|
||
|
is no time or place for long explanations.---What
|
||
|
are your commands with me?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Your ladyship,'' said the old man, ``had once
|
||
|
a sister.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``True; whom I loved as my own soul.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``And a brother.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``The bravest, the kindest, the most affectionate!''---
|
||
|
said Lady Bothwell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Both these beloved relatives you lost by the
|
||
|
fault of an unfortunate man,'' continued the stranger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``By the crime of an unnatural, bloody-minded
|
||
|
murderer,'' said the lady.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I am answered,'' replied the old man, bowing,
|
||
|
as if to withdraw.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Stop, sir, I command you,'' said Lady Bothwell.---
|
||
|
``Who are you, that, at such a place and
|
||
|
time, come to recall these horrible recollections? I
|
||
|
insist upon knowing.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I am one who intends Lady Bothwell no injury;
|
||
|
but, on the contrary, to offer her the means
|
||
|
of doing a deed of Christian charity, which the
|
||
|
world would wonder at, and which Heaven would
|
||
|
reward; but I find her in no temper for such a
|
||
|
sacrifice as I was prepared to ask.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Speak out, sir; what is your meaning?'' said
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``The wretch that has wronged you so deeply,''
|
||
|
rejoined the stranger, ``is now on his death-bed.
|
||
|
His days have been days of misery, his nights have
|
||
|
been sleepless hours of anguish---yet he cannot die
|
||
|
without your forgiveness. His life has been an
|
||
|
unremitting penance---yet he dares not part from
|
||
|
his burden while your curses load his soul.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Tell him,'' said Lady Bothwell sternly, ``to
|
||
|
ask pardon of that Being whom he has so greatly
|
||
|
offended; not of an erring mortal like himself
|
||
|
What could my forgiveness avail him?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Much,'' answered the old man. ``It will be an
|
||
|
earnest of that which he may then venture to ask
|
||
|
from his Creator, lady, and from yours. Remember,
|
||
|
Lady Bothwell, you too have a death-bed to
|
||
|
look forward to; your soul may, all human souls
|
||
|
must, feel the awe of facing the judgment-seat,
|
||
|
with the wounds of an untented conscience, raw,
|
||
|
and rankling---what thought would it be then that
|
||
|
should whisper, `I have given no mercy, how then
|
||
|
shall I ask it?' ''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Man, whosoever thou mayst be,'' replied Lady
|
||
|
Bothwell, ``urge me not so cruelly. It would be
|
||
|
but blasphemous hypocrisy to utter with my lips
|
||
|
the words which every throb of my heart protests
|
||
|
against. They would open the earth and give to
|
||
|
light the wasted form of my sister---the bloody
|
||
|
form of my murdered brother---Forgive him?---
|
||
|
Never, never!''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Great God!'' cried the old man, holding up his
|
||
|
hands, ``is it thus the worms which thou hast
|
||
|
called out of dust obey the commands of their
|
||
|
Maker? Farewell, proud and unforgiving woman.
|
||
|
Exult that thou hast added to a death in want and
|
||
|
pain the agonies of religious despair; but never
|
||
|
again mock Heaven by petitioning for the pardon
|
||
|
which thou hast refused to grant.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was turning from her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Stop,'' she exclaimed; ``I will try; yes, I will
|
||
|
try to pardon him.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Gracious lady,'' said the old man, ``you will
|
||
|
relieve the over-burdened soul which dare not
|
||
|
sever itself from its sinful companion of earth without
|
||
|
being at peace with you. What do I know---
|
||
|
your forgiveness may perhaps preserve for penitence
|
||
|
the dregs of a wretched life.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Ha!'' said the lady, as a sudden light broke
|
||
|
on her, ``it is the villain himself!'' And grasping
|
||
|
Sir Philip Forester---for it was he, and no other---
|
||
|
by the collar, she raised a cry of ``Murder, murder!
|
||
|
seize the murderer!''
|
||
|
|
||
|
At an exclamation so singular, in such a place,
|
||
|
the company thronged into the apartment, but Sir
|
||
|
Philip Forester was no longer there. He had forcibly
|
||
|
extricated himself from Lady Bothwell's hold,
|
||
|
and had run out of the apartment which opened
|
||
|
on the landing-place of the stair. There seemed
|
||
|
no escape in that direction, for there were several
|
||
|
persons coming up the steps, and others descending.
|
||
|
But the unfortunate man was desperate. He
|
||
|
threw himself over the balustrade, and alighted
|
||
|
safely in the lobby, though a leap of fifteen feet at
|
||
|
least, then dashed into the street, and was lost in
|
||
|
darkness. Some of the Bothwell family made pursuit,
|
||
|
and had they come up with the fugitive they
|
||
|
might have perhaps slain him; for in those days
|
||
|
men's blood ran warm in their veins. But the
|
||
|
police did not interfere; the matter most criminal
|
||
|
having happened long since, and in a foreign land.
|
||
|
Indeed it was always thought that this extraordinary
|
||
|
scene originated in a hypocritical experiment,
|
||
|
by which Sir Philip desired to ascertain whether
|
||
|
he might return to his native country in safety
|
||
|
from the resentment of a family which he had injured
|
||
|
so deeply. As the result fell out so contrary
|
||
|
to his wishes, he is believed to have returned to
|
||
|
the continent, and there died in exile. So closed
|
||
|
the tale of the Mysterious Mirror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[2. The Tapestried Chamber]
|
||
|
|
||
|
INTRODUCTION.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is another little story, from the Keepsake
|
||
|
of 1828. It was told to me many years
|
||
|
ago, by the late Miss Anna Seward, who,
|
||
|
among other accomplishments that rendered
|
||
|
her an amusing inmate in a country house, had
|
||
|
that of recounting narratives of this sort with
|
||
|
very considerable effect; much greater, indeed,
|
||
|
than any one would be apt to guess from the
|
||
|
style of her written performances. There are
|
||
|
hours and moods when most people are not
|
||
|
displeased to listen to such things; and I have
|
||
|
heard some of the greatest and wisest of my
|
||
|
contemporaries take their share in telling
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
_August_, 1831.
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE
|
||
|
|
||
|
TAPESTRIED CHAMBER;
|
||
|
|
||
|
or,
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE LADY IN THE SACQUE.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following narrative is given from the pen, so
|
||
|
far as memory permits, in the same character in
|
||
|
which it was presented to the author's ear; nor
|
||
|
has he claim to further praise, or to be more deeply
|
||
|
censured, than in proportion to the good or bad
|
||
|
judgment which he has employed in selecting his
|
||
|
materials, as he has studiously avoided any attempt
|
||
|
at ornament which might interfere with the simplicity
|
||
|
of the tale.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the same time it must be admitted, that the
|
||
|
particular class of stories which turns on the marvellous,
|
||
|
possesses a stronger influence when told,
|
||
|
than when committed to print. The volume taken
|
||
|
up at noonday, though rehearsing the same incidents,
|
||
|
conveyed a much more feeble impression,
|
||
|
than is achieved by the voice of the speaker on a
|
||
|
circle of fireside auditors, who hang upon the narrative
|
||
|
as the narrator details the minute incidents
|
||
|
which serve to give it authenticity, and lowers his
|
||
|
voice with an affectation of mystery while he approaches
|
||
|
the fearful and wonderful part. It was
|
||
|
with such advantages that the present writer heard
|
||
|
the following events related, more than twenty
|
||
|
years since, by the celebrated Miss Seward, of
|
||
|
Litchfield, who, to her numerous accomplishments,
|
||
|
added, in a remarkable degree, the power of narrative
|
||
|
in private conversation. In its present form
|
||
|
the tale must necessarily lose all the interest which
|
||
|
was attached to it, by the flexible voice and intelligent
|
||
|
features of the gifted narrator. Yet still,
|
||
|
read aloud, to an undoubting audience by the
|
||
|
doubtful light of the closing evening, or, in silence,
|
||
|
by a decaying taper, and amidst the solitude of a
|
||
|
half-lighted apartment, it may redeem its character
|
||
|
as a good ghost-story. Miss Seward always
|
||
|
affirmed that she had derived her information from
|
||
|
an authentic source, although she suppressed the
|
||
|
names of the two persons chiefly concerned. I will
|
||
|
not avail myself of any particulars I may have since
|
||
|
received concerning the localities of the detail, but
|
||
|
suffer them to rest under the same general description
|
||
|
in which they were first related to me; and,
|
||
|
for the same reason, I will not add to, or diminish
|
||
|
the narrative, by any circumstance, whether more
|
||
|
or less material, but simply rehearse, as I heard it,
|
||
|
a story of supernatural terror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
About the end of the American war, when the
|
||
|
officers of Lord Cornwallis's army, which surrendered
|
||
|
at York-town, and others, who had been made
|
||
|
prisoners during the impolitic and ill-fated controversy,
|
||
|
were returning to their own country, to relate
|
||
|
their adventures, and repose themselves after
|
||
|
their fatigues; there was amongst them a general
|
||
|
officer, to whom Miss S. gave the name of Browne,
|
||
|
but merely, as I understood, to save the inconvenience
|
||
|
of introducing a nameless agent in the narrative.
|
||
|
He was an officer of merit, as well as a
|
||
|
gentleman of high consideration for family and attainments.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some business had carried General Browne upon
|
||
|
a tour through the western counties, when, in the
|
||
|
conclusion of a morning stage, he found himself
|
||
|
in the vicinity of a small country town, which presented
|
||
|
a scene of uncommon beauty, and of a character
|
||
|
peculiarly English.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The little town, with its stately old church,
|
||
|
whose tower bore testimony to the devotion of
|
||
|
ages long past, lay amidst pastures and corn-fields
|
||
|
of small extent, but bounded and divided with
|
||
|
hedgerow timber of great age and size. There
|
||
|
were few marks of modern improvement. The
|
||
|
environs of the place intimated neither the solitude
|
||
|
of decay, nor the bustle of novelty; the houses
|
||
|
were old, but in good repair; and the beautiful
|
||
|
little river murmured freely on its way to the left
|
||
|
of the town, neither restrained by a dam, nor bordered
|
||
|
by a towing-path.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon a gentle eminence, nearly a mile to the
|
||
|
southward of the town, were seen, amongst many
|
||
|
venerable oaks and tangled thickets, the turrets of
|
||
|
a castle, as old as the walls of York and Lancaster,
|
||
|
but which seemed to have received important alterations
|
||
|
during the age of Elizabeth and her successor.
|
||
|
It had not been a place of great size; but
|
||
|
whatever accommodation it formerly afforded, was,
|
||
|
it must be supposed, still to be obtained within its
|
||
|
walls; at least, such was the inference which General
|
||
|
Browne drew from observing the smoke arise
|
||
|
merrily from several of the ancient wreathed and
|
||
|
carved chimney-stalks. The wall of the park ran
|
||
|
alongside of the highway for two or three hundred
|
||
|
yards; and through the different points by which
|
||
|
the eye found glimpses into the woodland scenery,
|
||
|
it seemed to be well stocked. Other points of
|
||
|
view opened in succession; now a full one, of the
|
||
|
front of the old castle, and now a side glimpse at
|
||
|
its particular towers; the former rich in all the
|
||
|
bizarrerie of the Elizabethan school, while the
|
||
|
simple and solid strength of other parts of the building
|
||
|
seemed to show that they had been raised more
|
||
|
for defence than ostentation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delighted with the partial glimpses which he
|
||
|
obtained of the castle through the woods and glades
|
||
|
by which this ancient feudal fortress was surrounded,
|
||
|
our military traveller was determined to enquire
|
||
|
whether it might not deserve a nearer view,
|
||
|
and whether it contained family pictures or other
|
||
|
objects of curiosity worthy of a stranger's visit;
|
||
|
when, leaving the vicinity of the park, he rolled
|
||
|
through a clean and well-paved street, and stopped
|
||
|
at the door of a well-frequented inn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before ordering horses to proceed on his journey,
|
||
|
General Browne made enquiries concerning
|
||
|
the proprietor of the chateau which had so attracted
|
||
|
his admiration; and was equally surprised and
|
||
|
pleased at hearing in reply a nobleman named,
|
||
|
whom we shall call Lord Woodville. How fortunate!
|
||
|
Much of Browne's early recollections, both
|
||
|
at school and at college, had been connected with
|
||
|
young Woodville, whom, by a few questions, he
|
||
|
now ascertained to be the same with the owner of
|
||
|
this fair domain. He had been raised to the peerage
|
||
|
by the decease of his father a few months before,
|
||
|
and, as the General learned from the landlord,
|
||
|
the term of mourning being ended, was now taking
|
||
|
possession of his paternal estate, in the jovial season
|
||
|
of merry autumn, accompanied by a select party
|
||
|
of friends to enjoy the sports of a country famous
|
||
|
for game.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was delightful news to our traveller. Frank
|
||
|
Woodville had been Richard Browne's fag at
|
||
|
Eton, and his chosen intimate at Christ Church;
|
||
|
their pleasures and their tasks had been the same;
|
||
|
and the honest soldier's heart warmed to find his
|
||
|
early friend in possession of so delightful a residence,
|
||
|
and of an estate, as the landlord assured
|
||
|
him with a nod and a wink, fully adequate to maintain
|
||
|
and add to his dignity. Nothing was more
|
||
|
natural than that the traveller should suspend a
|
||
|
journey, which there was nothing to render hurried,
|
||
|
to pay a visit to an old friend under such agreeable
|
||
|
circumstances.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fresh horses, therefore, had only the brief
|
||
|
task of conveying the General's travelling carriage
|
||
|
to Woodville Castle. A porter admitted them at
|
||
|
a modern Gothic lodge, built in that style to correspond
|
||
|
with the castle itself, and at the same
|
||
|
time rang a bell to give warning of the approach
|
||
|
of visitors. Apparently the sound of the bell had
|
||
|
suspended the separation of the company, bent on
|
||
|
the various amusements of the morning; for, on
|
||
|
entering the court of the chateau, several young
|
||
|
men were lounging about in their sporting dresses,
|
||
|
looking at, and criticising, the dogs which the
|
||
|
keepers held in readiness to attend their pastime.
|
||
|
As General Browne alighted, the young lord came
|
||
|
to the gate of the hall, and for an instant gazed, as
|
||
|
at a stranger, upon the countenance of his friend,
|
||
|
on which war, with its fatigues and its wounds, had
|
||
|
made a great alteration. But the uncertainty lasted
|
||
|
no longer than till the visitor had spoken, and the
|
||
|
hearty greeting which followed was such as can
|
||
|
only be exchanged betwixt those who have passed
|
||
|
together the merry days of careless boyhood or
|
||
|
early youth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``If I could have formed a wish, my dear Browne,''
|
||
|
said Lord Woodville, ``it would have been to have
|
||
|
you here, of all men, upon this occasion, which my
|
||
|
friends are good enough to hold as a sort of holiday.
|
||
|
Do not think you have been unwatched during
|
||
|
the years you have been absent from us. I
|
||
|
have traced you through your dangers, your triumphs,
|
||
|
your misfortunes, and was delighted to see
|
||
|
that, whether in victory or defeat, the name of my
|
||
|
old friend was always distinguished with applause.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General made a suitable reply, and congratulated
|
||
|
his friend on his new dignities, and the
|
||
|
possession of a place and domain so beautiful.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Nay, you have seen nothing of it as yet,'' said
|
||
|
Lord Woodville, ``and I trust you do not mean to
|
||
|
leave us till you are better acquainted with it. It
|
||
|
is true, I confess, that my present party is pretty
|
||
|
large, and the old house, like other places of the
|
||
|
kind, does not possess so much accommodation as
|
||
|
the extent of the outward walls appears to promise.
|
||
|
But we can give you a comfortable old-fashioned
|
||
|
room, and I venture to suppose that your campaigns
|
||
|
have taught you to be glad of worse quarters.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General shrugged his shoulders, and laughed.
|
||
|
``I presume,'' he said, ``the worst apartment
|
||
|
in your chateau is considerably superior to the
|
||
|
old tobacco-cask, in which I was fain to take up
|
||
|
my night's lodging when I was in the Bush, as the
|
||
|
Virginians call it, with the light corps. There I
|
||
|
lay, like Diogenes himself, so delighted with my
|
||
|
covering from the elements, that I made a vain attempt
|
||
|
to have it rolled on to my next quarters;
|
||
|
but my commander for the time would give way
|
||
|
to no such luxurious provision, and I took farewell
|
||
|
of my beloved cask with tears in my eyes.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Well, then, since you do not fear your quarters,''
|
||
|
said Lord Woodville, ``you will stay with
|
||
|
me a week at least. Of guns, dogs, fishing-rods,
|
||
|
flies, and means of sport by sea and land, we have
|
||
|
enough and to spare: you cannot pitch on an
|
||
|
amusement but we will find the means of pursuing
|
||
|
it. But if you prefer the gun and pointers, I will
|
||
|
go with you myself, and see whether you have
|
||
|
mended your shooting since you have been amongst
|
||
|
the Indians of the back settlements.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General gladly accepted his friendly host's
|
||
|
proposal in all its points. After a morning of
|
||
|
manly exercise, the company met at dinner, where
|
||
|
it was the delight of Lord Woodville to conduce
|
||
|
to the display of the high properties of his recovered
|
||
|
friend, so as to recommend him to his guests,
|
||
|
most of whom were persons of distinction. He led
|
||
|
General Browne to speak of the scenes he had
|
||
|
witnessed; and as every word marked alike the
|
||
|
brave officer and the sensible man, who retained
|
||
|
possession of his cool judgment under the most imminent
|
||
|
dangers, the company looked upon the
|
||
|
soldier with general respect, as on one who had
|
||
|
proved himself possessed of an uncommon portion
|
||
|
of personal courage; that attribute, of all others, of
|
||
|
which every body desires to be thought possessed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The day at Woodville Castle ended as usual in
|
||
|
such mansions. The hospitality stopped within
|
||
|
the limits of good order; music, in which the
|
||
|
young lord was a proficient, succeeded to the circulation
|
||
|
of the bottle: cards and billiards, for those
|
||
|
who preferred such amusements, were in readiness:
|
||
|
but the exercise of the morning required
|
||
|
early hours, and not long after eleven o'clock the
|
||
|
guests began to retire to their several apartments.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young lord himself conducted his friend,
|
||
|
General Browne, to the chamber destined for him,
|
||
|
which answered the description he had given of it,
|
||
|
being comfortable, but old-fashioned. The bed
|
||
|
was of the massive form used in the end of the
|
||
|
seventeenth century, and the curtains of faded silk,
|
||
|
heavily trimmed with tarnished gold. But then
|
||
|
the sheets, pillows, and blankets looked delightful
|
||
|
to the campaigner, when he thought of his ``mansion,
|
||
|
the cask.'' There was an air of gloom in the
|
||
|
tapestry hangings, which, with their worn-out
|
||
|
graces, curtained the walls of the little chamber,
|
||
|
and gently undulated as the autumnal breeze found
|
||
|
its way through the ancient lattice-window, which
|
||
|
pattered and whistled as the air gained entrance.
|
||
|
The toilet too, with its mirror, turbaned after
|
||
|
the manner of the beginning of the century, with a
|
||
|
coiffure of murrey-coloured silk, and its hundred
|
||
|
strange-shaped boxes, providing for arrangements
|
||
|
which had been obsolete for more than fifty years,
|
||
|
had an antique, and in so far a melancholy, aspect.
|
||
|
But nothing could blaze more brightly and cheerfully
|
||
|
than the two large wax candles; or if aught could
|
||
|
rival them, it was the flaming bickering fagots in
|
||
|
the chimney, that sent at once their gleam and their
|
||
|
warmth through the snug apartment; which, notwithstanding
|
||
|
the general antiquity of its appearance,
|
||
|
was not wanting in the least convenience,
|
||
|
that modern habits rendered either necessary or
|
||
|
desirable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``This is an old-fashioned sleeping apartment,
|
||
|
General,'' said the young lord; ``but I hope you
|
||
|
find nothing that makes you envy your old tobacco-cask.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I am not particular respecting my lodgings,''
|
||
|
replied the General; ``yet were I to make any choice,
|
||
|
I would prefer this chamber by many degrees, to
|
||
|
the gayer and more modern rooms of your family
|
||
|
mansion. Believe me, that when I unite its modern
|
||
|
air of comfort with its venerable antiquity,
|
||
|
and recollect that it is your lordship's property, I
|
||
|
shall feel in better quarters here, than if I were in
|
||
|
the best hotel London could afford.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I trust---I have no doubt---that you will find
|
||
|
yourself as comfortable as I wish you, my dear
|
||
|
General,'' said the young nobleman; and once more
|
||
|
bidding his guest good-night, he shook him by the
|
||
|
hand, and withdrew.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General once more looked round him, and
|
||
|
internally congratulating himself on his return to
|
||
|
peaceful life, the comforts of which were endeared
|
||
|
by the recollection of the hardships and dangers
|
||
|
he had lately sustained, undressed himself, and
|
||
|
prepared for a luxurious night's rest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here, contrary to the custom of this species of
|
||
|
tale, we leave the General in possession of his apartment
|
||
|
until the next morning.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The company assembled for breakfast at an early
|
||
|
hour, but without the appearance of General
|
||
|
Browne, who seemed the guest that Lord Woodville
|
||
|
was desirous of honouring above all whom his
|
||
|
hospitality had assembled around him. He more
|
||
|
than once expressed surprise at the General's absence,
|
||
|
and at length sent a servant to make enquiry
|
||
|
after him. The man brought back information that
|
||
|
General Browne had been walking abroad since an
|
||
|
early hour of the morning, in defiance of the weather,
|
||
|
which was misty and ungenial.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``The custom of a soldier,''---said the young
|
||
|
nobleman to his friends; ``many of them acquire
|
||
|
habitual vigilance, and cannot sleep after the early
|
||
|
hour at which their duty usually commands them
|
||
|
to be alert.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yet the explanation which Lord Woodville thus
|
||
|
offered to the company seemed hardly satisfactory
|
||
|
to his own mind, and it was in a fit of silence and
|
||
|
abstraction that he waited the return of the General.
|
||
|
It took place near an hour after the breakfast
|
||
|
bell had rung. He looked fatigued and feverish.
|
||
|
His hair, the powdering and arrangement of
|
||
|
which was at this time one of the most important
|
||
|
occupations of a man's whole day, and marked his
|
||
|
fashion as much as, in the present time, the tying
|
||
|
of a cravat, or the want of one, was dishevelled,
|
||
|
uncurled, void of powder, and dank with dew. His
|
||
|
clothes were huddled on with a careless negligence,
|
||
|
remarkable in a military man, whose real or supposed
|
||
|
duties are usually held to include some attention
|
||
|
to the toilet; and his looks were haggard
|
||
|
and ghastly in a peculiar degree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``So you have stolen a march upon us this morning,
|
||
|
my dear General,'' said Lord Woodville; ``or
|
||
|
you have not found your bed so much to your mind
|
||
|
as I had hoped and you seemed to expect. How
|
||
|
did you rest last night?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Oh, excellently well! remarkably well! never
|
||
|
better in my life''---said General Browne rapidly,
|
||
|
and yet with an air of embarrassment which was
|
||
|
obvious to his friend. He then hastily swallowed
|
||
|
a cup of tea, and, neglecting or refusing whatever
|
||
|
else was offered, seemed to fall into a fit of abstraction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``You will take the gun to-day, General?'' said
|
||
|
his friend and host, but had to repeat the question
|
||
|
twice ere he received the abrupt answer, ``No, my
|
||
|
lord; I am sorry I cannot have the honour of
|
||
|
spending another day with your lordship; my post
|
||
|
horses are ordered, and will be here directly.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
All who were present showed surprise, and Lord
|
||
|
Woodville immediately replied, ``Post horses, my
|
||
|
good friend! what can you possibly want with
|
||
|
them, when you promised to stay with me quietly
|
||
|
for at least a week?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I believe,'' said the General, obviously much
|
||
|
embarrassed, ``that I might, in the pleasure of my
|
||
|
first meeting with your lordship, have said something
|
||
|
about stopping here a few days; but I have
|
||
|
since found it altogether impossible.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``That is very extraordinary,'' answered the
|
||
|
young nobleman. ``You seemed quite disengaged
|
||
|
yesterday, and you cannot have had a summons
|
||
|
to-day; for our post has not come up from the town,
|
||
|
and therefore you cannot have received any letters.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
General Browne, without giving any further
|
||
|
explanation, muttered something of indispensable
|
||
|
business, and insisted on the absolute necessity of
|
||
|
his departure in a manner which silenced all opposition
|
||
|
on the part of his host, who saw that his resolution
|
||
|
was taken, and forbore all further importunity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``At least, however,'' he said, ``permit me, my
|
||
|
dear Browne, since go you will or must, to show
|
||
|
you the view from the terrace, which the mist, that
|
||
|
is now rising, will soon display.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
He threw open a sash-window, and stepped down
|
||
|
upon the terrace as he spoke. The General followed
|
||
|
him mechanically, but seemed little to attend
|
||
|
to what his host was saying, as, looking across an
|
||
|
extended and rich prospect, he pointed out the
|
||
|
different objects worthy of observation. Thus they
|
||
|
moved on till Lord Woodville had attained his
|
||
|
purpose of drawing his guest entirely apart from
|
||
|
the rest of the company, when, turning round upon
|
||
|
him with an air of great solemnity, he addressed
|
||
|
him thus:
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Richard Browne, my old and very dear friend,
|
||
|
we are now alone. Let me conjure you to answer
|
||
|
me upon the word of a friend, and the honour of a
|
||
|
soldier. How did you in reality rest during last
|
||
|
night?''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Most wretchedly indeed, my lord,'' answered
|
||
|
the General, in the same tone of solemnity;---``so
|
||
|
miserably, that I would not run the risk of such a
|
||
|
second night, not only for all the lands belonging
|
||
|
to this castle, but for all the country which I see
|
||
|
from this elevated point of view.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``This is most extraordinary,'' said the young
|
||
|
lord, as if speaking to himself; ``then there must
|
||
|
be something in the reports concerning that apartment.''
|
||
|
Again turning to the General, he said,
|
||
|
``For God's sake, my dear friend, be candid with
|
||
|
me, and let me know the disagreeable particulars
|
||
|
which have befallen you under a roof, where, with
|
||
|
consent of the owner, you should have met nothing
|
||
|
save comfort.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General seemed distressed by this appeal,
|
||
|
and paused a moment before he replied. ``My dear
|
||
|
lord,'' he at length said, ``what happened to me
|
||
|
last night is of a nature so peculiar and so unpleasant,
|
||
|
that I could hardly bring myself to detail it
|
||
|
even to your lordship, were it not that, independent
|
||
|
of my wish to gratify any request of yours, I
|
||
|
think that sincerity on my part may lead to some
|
||
|
explanation about a circumstance equally painful
|
||
|
and mysterious. To others, the communication I
|
||
|
am about to make, might place me in the light of
|
||
|
a weak-minded, superstitious fool, who suffered his
|
||
|
own imagination to delude and bewilder him; but
|
||
|
you have known me in childhood and youth, and
|
||
|
will not suspect me of having adopted in manhood
|
||
|
the feelings and frailties from which my early years
|
||
|
were free.'' Here he paused, and his friend replied:
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Do not doubt my perfect confidence in the
|
||
|
truth of your communication, however strange it
|
||
|
may be,'' replied Lord Woodville; ``I know your
|
||
|
firmness of disposition too well, to suspect you
|
||
|
could be made the object of imposition, and am
|
||
|
aware that your honour and your friendship will
|
||
|
equally deter you from exaggerating whatever you
|
||
|
may have witnessed.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Well then,'' said the General, ``I will proceed
|
||
|
with my story as well as I can, relying upon your
|
||
|
candour; and yet distinctly feeling that I would rather
|
||
|
face a battery than recall to my mind the odious
|
||
|
recollections of last night.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
He paused a second time, and then perceiving
|
||
|
that Lord Woodville remained silent and in an
|
||
|
attitude of attention, he commenced, though not
|
||
|
without obvious reluctance, the history of his night
|
||
|
adventures in the Tapestried Chamber.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I undressed and went to bed, so soon as your
|
||
|
lordship left me yesterday evening; but the wood
|
||
|
in the chimney, which nearly fronted my bed,
|
||
|
blazed brightly and cheerfully, and, aided by a
|
||
|
hundred exciting recollections of my childhood and
|
||
|
youth, which had been recalled by the unexpected
|
||
|
pleasure of meeting your lordship, prevented me
|
||
|
from falling immediately asleep. I ought, however,
|
||
|
to say, that these reflections were all of a pleasant
|
||
|
and agreeable kind, grounded on a sense of having
|
||
|
for a time exchanged the labour, fatigues, and
|
||
|
dangers of my profession, for the enjoyments of a
|
||
|
peaceful life, and the reunion of those friendly and
|
||
|
affectionate ties, which I had torn asunder at the
|
||
|
rude summons of war.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``While such pleasing reflections were stealing
|
||
|
over my mind, and gradually lulling me to slumber,
|
||
|
I was suddenly aroused by a sound like that
|
||
|
of the rustling of a silken gown, and the tapping
|
||
|
of a pair of high-heeled shoes, as if a woman were
|
||
|
walking in the apartment. Ere I could draw the
|
||
|
curtain to see what the matter was, the figure of a
|
||
|
little woman passed between the bed and the fire.
|
||
|
The back of this form was turned to me, and I
|
||
|
could observe, from the shoulders and neck, it was
|
||
|
that of an old woman, whose dress was an old-fashioned
|
||
|
gown, which, I think, ladies call a sacque;
|
||
|
that is, a sort of robe completely loose in the body,
|
||
|
but gathered into broad plaits upon the neck and
|
||
|
shoulders, which fall down to the ground, and terminate
|
||
|
in a species of train.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I thought the intrusion singular enough, but
|
||
|
never harboured for a moment the idea that what
|
||
|
I saw was any thing more than the mortal form
|
||
|
of some old woman about the establishment, who
|
||
|
had a fancy to dress like her grandmother, and who,
|
||
|
having perhaps (as your lordship mentioned that
|
||
|
you were rather straitened for room) been dislodged
|
||
|
from her chamber for my accommodation,
|
||
|
had forgotten the circumstance, and returned by
|
||
|
twelve to her old haunt. Under this persuasion
|
||
|
I moved myself in bed and coughed a little, to make
|
||
|
the intruder sensible of my being in possession of
|
||
|
the premises.---She turned slowly round, but, gracious
|
||
|
heaven! my lord, what a countenance did
|
||
|
she display to me! There was no longer any
|
||
|
question what she was, or any thought of her being
|
||
|
a living being. Upon a face which wore the fixed
|
||
|
features of a corpse, were imprinted the traces of
|
||
|
the vilest and most hideous passions which had
|
||
|
animated her while she lived. The body of some
|
||
|
atrocious criminal seemed to have been given up
|
||
|
from the grave, and the soul restored from the
|
||
|
penal fire, in order to form, for a space, an union
|
||
|
with the ancient accomplice of its guilt. I started
|
||
|
up in bed, and sat upright, supporting myself on
|
||
|
my palms, as I gazed on this horrible spectre. The
|
||
|
hag made, as it seemed, a single and swift stride
|
||
|
to the bed where I lay, and squatted herself down
|
||
|
upon it, in precisely the same attitude which I had
|
||
|
assumed in the extremity of horror, advancing her
|
||
|
diabolical countenance within half a yard of mine,
|
||
|
with a grin which seemed to intimate the malice
|
||
|
and the derision of an incarnate fiend.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here General Browne stopped, and wiped from
|
||
|
his brow the cold perspiration with which the recollection
|
||
|
of his horrible vision had covered it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``My lord,'' he said, ``I am no coward. I have
|
||
|
been in all the mortal dangers incidental to my
|
||
|
profession, and I may truly boast, that no man ever
|
||
|
knew Richard Browne dishonour the sword he
|
||
|
wears; but in these horrible circumstances, under
|
||
|
the eyes, and, as it seemed, almost in the grasp of
|
||
|
an incarnation of an evil spirit, all firmness forsook
|
||
|
me, all manhood melted from me like wax in the
|
||
|
furnace, and I felt my hair individually bristle.
|
||
|
The current of my life-blood ceased to flow, and I
|
||
|
sank back in a swoon, as very a victim to panic
|
||
|
terror as ever was a village girl, or a child of ten
|
||
|
years old. How long I lay in this condition I cannot
|
||
|
pretend to guess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``But I was roused by the castle clock striking
|
||
|
one, so loud that it seemed as if it were in the very
|
||
|
room. It was some time before I dared open my
|
||
|
eyes, lest they should again encounter the horrible
|
||
|
spectacle. When, however, I summoned courage
|
||
|
to look up, she was no longer visible. My first
|
||
|
idea was to pull my bell, wake the servants, and
|
||
|
remove to a garret or a hay-loft, to be ensured
|
||
|
against a second visitation. Nay, I will confess the
|
||
|
truth, that my resolution was altered, not by the
|
||
|
shame of exposing myself, but by the fear that, as
|
||
|
the bell-cord hung by the chimney, I might in
|
||
|
making my way to it, be again crossed by the
|
||
|
fiendish hag, who, I figured to myself, might be
|
||
|
still lurking about some corner of the apartment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I will not pretend to describe what hot and
|
||
|
cold fever-fits tormented me for the rest of the
|
||
|
night, through broken sleep, weary vigils, and that
|
||
|
dubious state which forms the neutral ground between
|
||
|
them. An hundred terrible objects appeared
|
||
|
to haunt me; but there was the great difference
|
||
|
betwixt the vision which I have described, and
|
||
|
those which followed, that I knew the last to be
|
||
|
deceptions of my own fancy and over-excited
|
||
|
nerves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Day at last appeared, and I rose from my bed
|
||
|
ill in health, and humiliated in mind. I was ashamed
|
||
|
of myself as a man and a soldier, and still
|
||
|
more so, at feeling my own extreme desire to escape
|
||
|
from the haunted apartment, which, however, conquered
|
||
|
all other considerations; so that, huddling
|
||
|
on my clothes with the most careless haste, I made
|
||
|
my escape from your lordship's mansion, to seek
|
||
|
in the open air some relief to my nervous system,
|
||
|
shaken as it was by this horrible rencounter with
|
||
|
a visitant, for such I must believe her, from the
|
||
|
other world. Your lordship has now heard the
|
||
|
cause of my discomposure, and of my sudden desire
|
||
|
to leave your hospitable castle. In other places I
|
||
|
trust we may often meet; but God protect me from
|
||
|
ever spending a second night under that roof!''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Strange as the General's tale was, he spoke with
|
||
|
such a deep air of conviction, that it cut short all
|
||
|
the usual commentaries which are made on such
|
||
|
stories. Lord Woodville never once asked him if
|
||
|
he was sure he did not dream of the apparition, or
|
||
|
suggested any of the possibilities by which it is
|
||
|
fashionable to explain supernatural appearances, as
|
||
|
wild vagaries of the fancy, or deceptions of the
|
||
|
optic nerves. On the contrary, he seemed deeply
|
||
|
impressed with the truth and reality of what he had
|
||
|
heard; and, after a considerable pause, regretted,
|
||
|
with much appearance of sincerity, that his early
|
||
|
friend should in his house have suffered so severely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``I am the more sorry for your pain, my dear
|
||
|
Browne,'' he continued, ``that it is the unhappy,
|
||
|
though most unexpected, result of an experiment
|
||
|
of my own. You must know, that for my father
|
||
|
and grandfather's time, at least, the apartment
|
||
|
which was assigned to you last night, had been
|
||
|
shut on account of reports that it was disturbed by
|
||
|
supernatural sights and noises. When I came, a
|
||
|
few weeks since, into possession of the estate, I
|
||
|
thought the accommodation, which the castle afforded
|
||
|
for my friends, was not extensive enough
|
||
|
to permit the inhabitants of the invisible world to
|
||
|
retain possession of a comfortable sleeping apartment.
|
||
|
I therefore caused the Tapestried Chamber,
|
||
|
as we call it, to be opened; and, without destroying
|
||
|
its air of antiquity, I had such new articles of
|
||
|
furniture placed in it as became the modern times.
|
||
|
Yet as the opinion that the room was haunted very
|
||
|
strongly prevailed among the domestics, and was
|
||
|
also known in the neighbourhood and to many of
|
||
|
my friends, I feared some prejudice might be entertained
|
||
|
by the first occupant of the Tapestried
|
||
|
Chamber, which might tend to revive the evil report
|
||
|
which it had laboured under, and so disappoint
|
||
|
my purpose of rendering it an useful part of the
|
||
|
house. I must confess, my dear Browne, that your
|
||
|
arrival yesterday, agreeable to me for a thousand
|
||
|
reasons besides, seemed the most favourable opportunity
|
||
|
of removing the unpleasant rumours which
|
||
|
attached to the room, since your courage was indubitable,
|
||
|
and your mind free of any pre-occupation
|
||
|
on the subject. I could not, therefore, have
|
||
|
chosen a more fitting subject for my experiment.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Upon my life,'' said General Browne, somewhat
|
||
|
hastily, ``I am infinitely obliged to your
|
||
|
lordship---very particularly indebted indeed. I am
|
||
|
likely to remember for some time the consequences
|
||
|
of the experiment, as your lordship is pleased to
|
||
|
call it.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Nay, now you are unjust, my dear friend,''
|
||
|
said Lord Woodville. ``You have only to reflect
|
||
|
for a single moment, in order to be convinced that
|
||
|
I could not augur the possibility of the pain to
|
||
|
which you have been so unhappily exposed. I was
|
||
|
yesterday morning a complete sceptic on the subject
|
||
|
of supernatural appearances. Nay, I am sure
|
||
|
that had I told you what was said about that room,
|
||
|
those very reports would have induced you, by
|
||
|
your own choice, to select it for your accommodation.
|
||
|
It was my misfortune, perhaps my error,
|
||
|
but really cannot be termed my fault, that you
|
||
|
have been afflicted so strangely.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Strangely indeed!'' said the General, resuming
|
||
|
his good temper; ``and I acknowledge that I have
|
||
|
no right to be offended with your lordship for
|
||
|
treating me like what I used to think myself---a
|
||
|
man of some firmness and courage.---But I see my
|
||
|
post horses are arrived, and I must not detain your
|
||
|
lordship from your amusement.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``Nay, my old friend,'' said Lord Woodville,
|
||
|
since you cannot stay with us another day, which,
|
||
|
indeed, I can no longer urge, give me at least half
|
||
|
an hour more. You used to love pictures, and I
|
||
|
have a gallery of portraits, some of them by Vandyke,
|
||
|
representing ancestry to whom this property
|
||
|
and castle formerly belonged. I think that several
|
||
|
of them will strike you as possessing merit.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
General Browne accepted the invitation, though
|
||
|
somewhat unwillingly. It was evident he was not
|
||
|
to breathe freely or at ease till he left Woodville
|
||
|
Castle far behind him. He could not refuse his
|
||
|
friend's invitation, however; and the less so, that
|
||
|
he was a little ashamed of the peevishness which
|
||
|
he had displayed towards his well-meaning entertainer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The General, therefore, followed Lord Woodville
|
||
|
through several rooms, into a long gallery
|
||
|
hung with pictures, which the latter pointed out
|
||
|
to his guest, telling the names, and giving some
|
||
|
account of the personages whose portraits presented
|
||
|
themselves in progression. General Browne
|
||
|
was but little interested in the details which these
|
||
|
accounts conveyed to him. They were, indeed, of
|
||
|
the kind which are usually found in an old family
|
||
|
gallery. Here, was a cavalier who had ruined the
|
||
|
estate in the royal cause; there, a fine lady who
|
||
|
had reinstated it by contracting a match with a
|
||
|
wealthy Roundhead. There, hung a gallant who
|
||
|
had been in danger for corresponding with the
|
||
|
exiled Court at Saint Germain's; here, one who
|
||
|
had taken arms for William at the Revolution; and
|
||
|
there, a third that had thrown his weight alternately
|
||
|
into the scale of whig and tory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Lord Woodville was cramming these
|
||
|
words into his guest's car, ``against the stomach
|
||
|
of his sense,'' they gained the middle of the gallery,
|
||
|
when he beheld General Browne suddenly
|
||
|
start, and assume an attitude of the utmost, surprise,
|
||
|
not unmixed with fear, as his eyes were
|
||
|
caught and suddenly riveted by a portrait of an
|
||
|
old lady in a sacque, the fashionable dress of the
|
||
|
end of the seventeenth century.
|
||
|
|
||
|
``There she is!'' he exclaimed; ``there she is
|
||
|
in form and features, though inferior in demoniac
|
||
|
expression to the accursed hag who visited me
|
||
|
last night!''
|
||
|
|
||
|
``If that be the case,'' said the young nobleman,
|
||
|
there can remain no longer any doubt of the
|
||
|
horrible reality of your apparition. That is the
|
||
|
picture of a wretched ancestress of mine, of whose
|
||
|
crimes a black and fearful catalogue is recorded in
|
||
|
a family history in my charter-chest. The recital
|
||
|
of them would be too horrible; it is enough to
|
||
|
say, that in yon fatal apartment incest and unnatural
|
||
|
murder were committed. I will restore
|
||
|
it to the solitude to which the better judgment of
|
||
|
those who preceded me had consigned it; and never
|
||
|
shall any one, so long as I can prevent it, be
|
||
|
exposed to a repetition of the supernatural horrors
|
||
|
which could shake such courage as yours.''
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus the friends, who had met with such glee,
|
||
|
parted in a very different mood; Lord Woodville
|
||
|
to command the Tapestried Chamber to be unmantled,
|
||
|
and the door built up; and General Browne
|
||
|
to seek in some less beautiful country, and with
|
||
|
some less dignified friend, forgetfulness of the
|
||
|
painful night which he had passed in Woodville
|
||
|
Castle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[3. Death of The Laird's Jock]
|
||
|
|
||
|
DEATH
|
||
|
|
||
|
OF
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE LAIRD'S JOCK.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[The manner in which this trifle was introduced
|
||
|
at the time to Mr. F. M. Reynolds,
|
||
|
editor of The Keepsake of 1828, leaves no
|
||
|
occasion for a preface.]
|
||
|
|
||
|
_August_, 1831.
|
||
|
|
||
|
---------
|
||
|
|
||
|
TO THE EDITOR OF THE KEEPSAKE.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You have asked me, sir, to point out a subject
|
||
|
for the pencil, and I feel the difficulty of complying
|
||
|
with your request; although I am not certainly
|
||
|
unaccustomed to literary composition, or a total
|
||
|
stranger to the stores of history and tradition,
|
||
|
which afford the best copies for the painter's art.
|
||
|
But although _sicut pictura poesis_ is an ancient and
|
||
|
undisputed axiom---although poetry and painting
|
||
|
both address themselves to the same object of exciting
|
||
|
the human imagination, by presenting to it
|
||
|
pleasing or sublime images of ideal scenes; yet
|
||
|
the one conveying itself through the ears to the
|
||
|
understanding, and the other applying itself only
|
||
|
to the eyes, the subjects which are best suited to
|
||
|
the bard or tale-teller are often totally unfit for
|
||
|
painting, where the artist must present in a single
|
||
|
glance all that his art has power to tell us. The
|
||
|
artist can neither recapitulate the past nor intimate
|
||
|
the future. The single _now_ is all which he can
|
||
|
present; and hence, unquestionably, many subjects
|
||
|
which delight us in poetry or in narrative, whether
|
||
|
real or fictitious, cannot with advantage be transferred
|
||
|
to the canvass.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Being in some degree aware of these difficulties,
|
||
|
though doubtless unacquainted both with their extent,
|
||
|
and the means by which they may be modified
|
||
|
or surmounted, I have, nevertheless, ventured
|
||
|
to draw up the following traditional narrative as
|
||
|
a story in which, when the general details are
|
||
|
known, the interest is so much concentrated in one
|
||
|
strong moment of agonizing passion, that it can
|
||
|
be understood, and sympathized with, at a single
|
||
|
glance. I therefore presume that it may be acceptable
|
||
|
as a hint to some one among the numerous
|
||
|
artists, who have of late years distinguished themselves
|
||
|
as rearing up and supporting the British
|
||
|
school.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Enough has been said and sung about
|
||
|
|
||
|
The well contested ground,
|
||
|
The warlike border-land---
|
||
|
|
||
|
to render the habits of the tribes who inhabited
|
||
|
them before the union of England and Scotland
|
||
|
familiar to most of your readers. The rougher
|
||
|
and sterner features of their character were softened
|
||
|
by their attachment to the fine arts, from which
|
||
|
has arisen the saying that, on the frontiers, every
|
||
|
dale had its battle, and every river its song. A
|
||
|
rude species of chivalry was in constant use, and
|
||
|
single combats were practised as the amusement
|
||
|
of the few intervals of truce which suspended the
|
||
|
exercise of war. The inveteracy of this custom
|
||
|
may be inferred from the following incident.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bernard Gilpin, the apostle of the north, the
|
||
|
first who undertook to preach the Protestant doctrines
|
||
|
to the Border dalesmen, was surprised, on
|
||
|
entering one of their churches, to see a gauntlet or
|
||
|
mail-glove hanging above the altar. Upon enquiring
|
||
|
the meaning of a symbol so indecorous
|
||
|
being displayed in that sacred place, he was informed
|
||
|
by the clerk that the glove was that of a
|
||
|
famous swordsman, who hung it there as an emblem
|
||
|
of a general challenge and gage of battle, to any
|
||
|
who should dare to take the fatal token down.
|
||
|
``Reach it to me,'' said the reverend churchman.
|
||
|
The clerk and sexton equally declined the perilous
|
||
|
office, and the good Bernard Gilpin was obliged to
|
||
|
remove the glove with his own hands, desiring
|
||
|
those who were present to inform the champion
|
||
|
that he, and no other, had possessed himself of the
|
||
|
gage of defiance. But the champion was as much
|
||
|
ashamed to face Bernard Gilpin as the officials of
|
||
|
the church had been to displace his pledge of
|
||
|
combat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The date of the following story is about the
|
||
|
latter years of Queen Elizabeth's reign; and the
|
||
|
events took place in Liddesdale, a hilly and pastoral
|
||
|
district of Roxburghshire, which, on a part
|
||
|
of its boundary, is divided from England only by
|
||
|
a small river.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During the good old times of _rugging and riving_,
|
||
|
(that is, tugging and tearing,) under which term
|
||
|
the disorderly doings of the warlike age are affectionately
|
||
|
remembered, this valley was principally
|
||
|
cultivated by the sept or clan of the Armstrongs.
|
||
|
The chief of this warlike race was the Laird of
|
||
|
Mangerton. At the period of which I speak, the
|
||
|
estate of Mangerton, with the power and dignity
|
||
|
of chief, was possessed by John Armstrong, a man
|
||
|
of great size, strength, and courage. While his
|
||
|
father was alive, he was distinguished from others
|
||
|
of his clan who bore the same name, by the epithet
|
||
|
of the _Laird's Jock_, that is to say, the Laird's son
|
||
|
Jock, or Jack. This name he distinguished by so
|
||
|
many bold and desperate achievements, that he
|
||
|
retained it even after his father's death, and is
|
||
|
mentioned under it both in authentic records and
|
||
|
in tradition. Some of his feats are recorded in the
|
||
|
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, and others mentioned
|
||
|
in contemporary chronicles.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the species of singular combat which we have
|
||
|
described, the Laird's Jock was unrivalled, and
|
||
|
no champion of Cumberland, Westmoreland, or
|
||
|
Northumberland, could endure the sway of the
|
||
|
huge two-handed sword which he wielded, and
|
||
|
which few others could even lift. This ``awful
|
||
|
sword,'' as the common people term it, was as dear
|
||
|
to him as Durindana or Fushberta to their respective
|
||
|
masters, and was nearly as formidable to his
|
||
|
enemies as those renowned falchions proved to the
|
||
|
foes of Christendom. The weapon had been bequeathed
|
||
|
to him by a celebrated English outlaw
|
||
|
named Hobbie Noble, who, having committed some
|
||
|
deed for which he was in danger from justice fled
|
||
|
to Liddesdale, and became a follower, or rather a
|
||
|
brother-in-arms, to the renowned Laird's Jock;
|
||
|
till, venturing into England with a small escort, a
|
||
|
faithless guide, and with a light single-handed
|
||
|
sword instead of his ponderous brand, Hobbie Noble,
|
||
|
attacked by superior numbers, was made prisoner
|
||
|
and executed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With this weapon, and by means of his own
|
||
|
strength and address, the Laird's Jock maintained
|
||
|
the reputation of the best swordsman on the border
|
||
|
side, and defeated or slew many who ventured
|
||
|
to dispute with him the formidable title.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But years pass on with the strong and the brave
|
||
|
as with the feeble and the timid. In process of,
|
||
|
time, the Laird's Jock grew incapable of wielding
|
||
|
his weapons, and finally of all active exertion, even
|
||
|
of the most ordinary kind. The disabled champion
|
||
|
became at length totally bed-ridden, and entirely
|
||
|
dependent for his comfort on the pious duties
|
||
|
of an only daughter, his perpetual attendant
|
||
|
and companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Besides this dutiful child, the Laird's Jock had
|
||
|
an only son, upon whom devolved the perilous task
|
||
|
of leading the clan to battle, and maintaining the
|
||
|
warlike renown of his native country, which was
|
||
|
now disputed by the English upon many occasions.
|
||
|
The young Armstrong was active, brave, and
|
||
|
strong, and brought home from dangerous adventures
|
||
|
many tokens of decided success. Still the
|
||
|
ancient chief conceived, as it would seem, that his
|
||
|
son was scarce yet entitled by age and experience
|
||
|
to be intrusted with the two-handed sword, by the
|
||
|
use of which he had himself been so dreadfully distinguished.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At length, an English champion, one of the
|
||
|
name of Foster, (if I rightly recollect,) had the
|
||
|
audacity to send a challenge to the best swordsman
|
||
|
in Liddesdale; and young Armstrong, burning
|
||
|
for chivalrous distinction, accepted the challenge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The heart of the disabled old man swelled with
|
||
|
joy, when he heard that the challenge was passed
|
||
|
and accepted, and the meeting fixed at a neutral
|
||
|
spot, used as the place of rencontre upon such occasions,
|
||
|
and which he himself had distinguished by
|
||
|
numerous victories. He exulted so much in the conquest
|
||
|
which he anticipated, that, to nerve his son
|
||
|
to still bolder exertions, he conferred upon him,
|
||
|
as champion of his clan and province, the celebrated
|
||
|
weapon which he had hitherto retained in his
|
||
|
own custody.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This was not all. When the day of combat arrived,
|
||
|
the Laird's Jock, in spite of his daughter's
|
||
|
affectionate remonstrances, determined, though he
|
||
|
had not left his bed for two years' to be a personal
|
||
|
witness of the duel. His will was still a law to his
|
||
|
people, who bore him on their shoulders, wrapt
|
||
|
in plaids and blankets, to the spot where the combat
|
||
|
was to take place, and seated him on a fragment
|
||
|
of rock, which is still called the Laird's Jock's
|
||
|
stone. There he remained with eyes fixed on the
|
||
|
lists or barrier, within which the champions were
|
||
|
about to meet. His daughter, having done all she
|
||
|
could for his accommodation, stood motionless beside
|
||
|
him, divided between anxiety for his health,
|
||
|
and for the event of the combat to her beloved
|
||
|
brother. Ere yet the fight began, the old men
|
||
|
gazed on their chief, now seen for the first time
|
||
|
after several years, and sadly compared his altered
|
||
|
features and wasted frame, with the paragon of
|
||
|
strength and manly beauty which they once remembered.
|
||
|
The young men gazed on his large
|
||
|
form and powerful make, as upon some antediluvian
|
||
|
giant who had survived the destruction of
|
||
|
the Flood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the sound of the trumpets on both sides
|
||
|
recalled the attention of every one to the lists,
|
||
|
surrounded as they were by numbers of both
|
||
|
nations eager to witness the event of the day.
|
||
|
The combatants met in the lists. It is needless to
|
||
|
describe the struggle: the Scottish champion fell.
|
||
|
Foster, placing his foot on his antagonist, seized
|
||
|
on the redoubted sword, so precious in the eyes of
|
||
|
its aged owner, and brandished it over his head as
|
||
|
a trophy of his conquest. The English shouted in
|
||
|
triumph. But the despairing cry of the aged champion,
|
||
|
who saw his country dishonoured, and his
|
||
|
sword, long the terror of their race, in possession
|
||
|
of an Englishman, was heard high above the acclamations
|
||
|
of victory. He seemed, for an instant,
|
||
|
animated by all his wonted power; for he started
|
||
|
from the rock on which he sat, and while the garments
|
||
|
with which he had been invested fell from
|
||
|
his wasted frame, and showed the ruins of his
|
||
|
strength, he tossed his arms wildly to heaven, and
|
||
|
uttered a cry of indignation, horror, and despair,
|
||
|
which, tradition says, was heard to a preternatural
|
||
|
distance and resembled the cry of a dying lion
|
||
|
more than a human sound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His friends received him in their arms as he sank
|
||
|
utterly exhausted by the effort, and bore him back
|
||
|
to his castle in mute sorrow; while his daughter
|
||
|
at once wept for her brother, and endeavoured to
|
||
|
mitigate and soothe the despair of her father. But
|
||
|
this was impossible; the old man's only tie to life
|
||
|
was rent rudely asunder, and his heart had broken
|
||
|
with it. The death of his son had no part in his
|
||
|
sorrow: if he thought of him at all, it was as the
|
||
|
degenerate boy, through whom the honour of his
|
||
|
country and clan had been lost, and he died in the
|
||
|
course of three days, never even mentioning his
|
||
|
name, but pouring out unintermitted lamentations
|
||
|
for the loss of his noble sword.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I conceive, that the moment when the disabled
|
||
|
chief was roused into a last exertion by the agony
|
||
|
of the moment is favourable to the object of a painter.
|
||
|
He might obtain the full advantage of contrasting
|
||
|
the form of the rugged old man, in the
|
||
|
extremity of furious despair, with the softness and
|
||
|
beauty of the female form. The fatal field might
|
||
|
be thrown into perspective, so as to give full effect
|
||
|
to these two principal figures, and with the single
|
||
|
explanation, that the piece represented a soldier
|
||
|
beholding his son slain, and the honour of his country
|
||
|
lost, the picture would be sufficiently intelligible
|
||
|
at the first glance. If it was thought necessary
|
||
|
to show more clearly the nature of the conflict,
|
||
|
it might be indicated by the pennon of Saint
|
||
|
George being displayed at one end of the lists, and
|
||
|
that of Saint Andrew at the other.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I remain, sir,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Your obedient servant,
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE AUTHOR OF WAVERLEY.
|
||
|
|
||
|
[End of The Keepsake Stories]
|