Reuben and Rachel, though
as fond as doves,
Were yet discreet and cautious in their
loves,
Nor would attend to Cupid’s wild
commands,
Till cool reflection bade them join
their hands;
When both were poor, they thought it
argued ill
Of hasty love to make them poorer
still.
Crabbe’s
Parish Register.
While widow Butler and widower Deans
struggled with poverty, and the hard and sterile soil
of “those parts and portions” of the lands
of Dumbiedikes which it was their lot to occupy, it
became gradually apparent that Deans was to gain the
strife, and his ally in the conflict was to lose it.
The former was a Man, and not much past the prime of
life—Mrs. Butler a woman, and declined into
the vale of years, This, indeed, ought in time to
have been balanced by the circumstance, that Reuben
was growing up to assist his grandmothers labours,
and that Jeanie Deans, as a girl, could be only supposed
to add to her father’s burdens. But Douce
Davie Deans know better things, and so schooled and
trained the young minion, as he called her, that from
the time she could walk, upwards, she was daily employed
in some task or other, suitable to her age and capacity;
a circumstance which, added to her father’s daily
instructions and lectures, tended to give her mind,
even when a child, a grave, serious, firm, and reflecting
cast. An uncommonly strong and healthy temperament,
free from all nervous affection and every other irregularity,
which, attacking the body in its more noble functions,
so often influences the mind, tended greatly to establish
this fortitude, simplicity, and decision of character.
On the other hand, Reuben was weak
in constitution, and, though not timid in temper might
be safely pronounced anxious, doubtful, and apprehensive.
He partook of the temperament of his mother, who had
died of a consumption in early age. He was a
pale, thin, feeble, sickly boy, and somewhat lame,
from an accident in early youth. He was, besides,
the child of a doting grandmother, whose too solicitous
attention to him soon taught him a sort of diffidence
in himself, with a disposition to overrate his own
importance, which is one of the very worst consequences
that children deduce from over-indulgence.
Still, however, the two children clung
to each other’s society, not more from habit
than from taste. They herded together the handful
of sheep, with the two or three cows, which their
parents turned out rather to seek food than actually
to feed upon the unenclosed common of Dumbiedikes.
It was there that the two urchins might be seen seated
beneath a blooming bush of whin, their little faces
laid close together under the shadow of the same plaid
drawn over both their heads, while the landscape around
was embrowned by an overshadowing cloud, big with the
shower which had driven the children to shelter.
On other occasions they went together to school, the
boy receiving that encouragement and example from his
companion, in crossing the little brooks which intersected
their path, and encountering cattle, dogs, and other
perils, upon their journey, which the male sex in
such cases usually consider it as their prerogative
to extend to the weaker. But when, seated on the
benches of the school-house, they began to con their
lessons together, Reuben, who was as much superior
to Jeanie Deans in acuteness of intellect, as inferior
to her in firmness of constitution, and in that insensibility
to fatigue and danger which depends on the conformation
of the nerves, was able fully to requite the kindness
and countenance with which, in other circumstances,
she used to regard him. He was decidedly the best
scholar at the little parish school; and so gentle
was his temper and disposition, that he was rather
admired than envied by the little mob who occupied
the noisy mansion, although he was the declared favourite
of the master. Several girls, in particular (for
in Scotland they are taught with the boys), longed
to be kind to and comfort the sickly lad, who was
so much cleverer than his companions. The character
of Reuben Butler was so calculated as to offer scope
both for their sympathy and their admiration, the
feelings, perhaps, through which the female sex (the
more deserving part of them at least) is more easily
attached.
But Reuben, naturally reserved and
distant, improved none of these advantages; and only
became more attached to Jeanie Deans, as the enthusiastic
approbation of his master assured him of fair prospects
in future life, and awakened his ambition. In
the meantime, every advance that Reuben made in learning
(and, considering his opportunities, they were uncommonly
great) rendered him less capable of attending to the
domestic duties of his grandmother’s farm.
While studying the pons asinorum in Euclid,
he suffered every cuddie upon the common to
trespass upon a large field of peas belonging to the
Laird, and nothing but the active exertions of Jeanie
Deans, with her little dog Dustiefoot, could have
saved great loss and consequent punishment. Similar
miscarriages marked his progress in his classical studies.
He read Virgil’s Georgics till he did not know
bere from barley; and had nearly destroyed the crofts
of Beersheba while attempting to cultivate them according
to the practice of Columella and Cato the Censor.
These blunders occasioned grief to
his grand-dame, and disconcerted the good opinion
which her neighbour, Davie Deans, had for some time
entertained of Reuben.
“I see naething ye can make
of that silly callant, neighbour Butler,” said
he to the old lady, “unless ye train him to the
wark o’ the ministry. And ne’er was
there mair need of poorfu’ preachers than e’en
now in these cauld Gallio days, when men’s hearts
are hardened like the nether mill-stone, till they
come to regard none of these things. It’s
evident this puir callant of yours will never be able
to do an usefu’ day’s wark, unless it
be as an ambassador from our Master; and I will make
it my business to procure a license when he is fit
for the same, trusting he will be a shaft cleanly
polished, and meet to be used in the body of the kirk;
and that he shall not turn again, like the sow, to
wallow in the mire of heretical extremes and defections,
but shall have the wings of a dove, though he hath
lain among the pots.”
The poor widow gulped down the affront
to her husband’s principles, implied in this
caution, and hastened to take Butler from the High
School, and encourage him in the pursuit of mathematics
and divinity, the only physics and ethics that chanced
to be in fashion at the time.
Jeanie Deans was now compelled to
part from the companion of her labour, her study,
and her pastime, and it was with more than childish
feeling that both children regarded the separation.
But they were young, and hope was high, and they separated
like those who hope to meet again at a more auspicious
hour. While Reuben Butler was acquiring at the
University of St. Andrews the knowledge necessary
for a clergyman, and macerating his body with the
privations which were necessary in seeking food for
his mind, his grand-dame became daily less able to
struggle with her little farm, and was at length obliged
to throw it up to the new Laird of Dumbiedikes.
That great personage was no absolute Jew, and did not
cheat her in making the bargain more than was tolerable.
He even gave her permission to tenant the house in
which she had lived with her husband, as long as it
should be “tenantable;” only he protested
against paying for a farthing of repairs, any benevolence
which he possessed being of the passive, but by no
means of the active mood.
In the meanwhile, from superior shrewdness,
skill, and other circumstances, some of them purely
accidental, Davie Deans gained a footing in the world,
the possession of some wealth, the reputation of more,
and a growing disposition to preserve and increase
his store; for which, when he thought upon it seriously,
he was inclined to blame himself. From his knowledge
in agriculture, as it was then practised, he became
a sort of favourite with the Laird, who had no great
pleasure either in active sports or in society, and
was wont to end his daily saunter by calling at the
cottage of Woodend.
Being himself a man of slow ideas
and confused utterance, Dumbiedikes used to sit or
stand for half-an-hour with an old laced hat of his
father’s upon his head, and an empty tobacco-pipe
in his mouth, with his eyes following Jeanie Deans,
or “the lassie” as he called her, through
the course of her daily domestic labour; while her
father, after exhausting the subject of bestial, of
ploughs, and of harrows, often took an opportunity
of going full-sail into controversial subjects, to
which discussions the dignitary listened with much
seeming patience, but without making any reply, or,
indeed, as most people thought, without understanding
a single word of what the orator was saying. Deans,
indeed, denied this stoutly, as an insult at once
to his own talents for expounding hidden truths, of
which he was a little vain, and to the Laird’s
capacity of understanding them. He said, “Dumbiedikes
was nane of these flashy gentles, wi’ lace on
their skirts and swords at their tails, that were
rather for riding on horseback to hell than gauging
barefooted to heaven. He wasna like his father—nae
profane company-keeper—nae swearer—nae
drinker—nae frequenter of play-house, or
music-house, or dancing-house—nae Sabbath-breaker—nae
imposer of aiths, or bonds, or denier of liberty to
the flock.—He clave to the warld, and the
warld’s gear, a wee ower muckle, but then there
was some breathing of a gale upon his spirit,”
etc. etc. All this honest Davie said
and believed.
It is not to be supposed, that, by
a father and a man of sense and observation, the constant
direction of the Laird’s eyes towards Jeanie
was altogether unnoticed. This circumstance, however,
made a much greater impression upon another member
of his family, a second helpmate, to wit, whom he
had chosen to take to his bosom ten years after the
death of his first. Some people were of opinion,
that Douce Davie had been rather surprised into this
step, for, in general, he was no friend to marriages
or giving in marriage, and seemed rather to regard
that state of society as a necessary evil,—a
thing lawful, and to be tolerated in the imperfect
state of our nature, but which clipped the wings with
which we ought to soar upwards, and tethered the soul
to its mansion of clay, and the creature-comforts
of wife and bairns. His own practice, however,
had in this material point varied from his principles,
since, as we have seen, he twice knitted for himself
this dangerous and ensnaring entanglement.
Rebecca, his spouse, had by no means
the same horror of matrimony, and as she made marriages
in imagination for every neighbour round, she failed
not to indicate a match betwixt Dumbiedikes and her
step-daughter Jeanie. The goodman used regularly
to frown and pshaw whenever this topic was touched
upon, but usually ended by taking his bonnet and walking
out of the house, to conceal a certain gleam of satisfaction,
which, at such a suggestion, involuntarily diffused
itself over his austere features.
The more youthful part of my readers
may naturally ask, whether Jeanie Deans was deserving
of this mute attention of the Laird of Dumbiedikes;
and the historian, with due regard to veracity, is
compelled to answer, that her personal attractions
were of no uncommon description. She was short,
and rather too stoutly made for her size, had grey
eyes, light coloured hair, a round good-humoured face,
much tanned with the sun, and her only peculiar charm
was an air of inexpressible serenity, which a good
conscience, kind feelings, contented temper, and the
regular discharge of all her duties, spread over her
features. There was nothing, it may be supposed,
very appalling in the form or manners of this rustic
heroine; yet, whether from sheepish bashfulness, or
from want of decision and imperfect knowledge of his
own mind on the subject, the Laird of Dumbiedikes,
with his old laced hat and empty tobacco-pipe, came
and enjoyed the beatific vision of Jeanie Deans day
after day, week after week, year after year, without
proposing to accomplish any of the prophecies of the
stepmother.
This good lady began to grow doubly
impatient on the subject, when, after having been
some years married, she herself presented Douce Davie
with another daughter, who was named Euphemia, by
corruption, Effie. It was then that Rebecca began
to turn impatient with the slow pace at which the
Laird’s wooing proceeded, judiciously arguing,
that, as Lady Dumbiedikes would have but little occasion
for tocher, the principal part of her gudeman’s
substance would naturally descend to the child by the
second marriage. Other step-dames have tried
less laudable means for clearing the way to the succession
of their own children; but Rebecca, to do her justice,
only sought little Effie’s advantage through
the promotion, or which must have generally been accounted
such, of her elder sister. She therefore tried
every female art within the compass of her simple skill,
to bring the Laird to a point; but had the mortification
to perceive that her efforts, like those of an unskilful
angler, only scared the trout she meant to catch.
Upon one occasion, in particular, when she joked with
the Laird on the propriety of giving a mistress to
the house of Dumbiedikes, he was so effectually startled,
that neither laced hat, tobacco-pipe, nor the intelligent
proprietor of these movables, visited Woodend for a
fortnight. Rebecca was therefore compelled to
leave the Laird to proceed at his own snail’s
pace, convinced, by experience, of the grave-digger’s
aphorism, that your dull ass will not mend his pace
for beating.
Reuben, in the meantime, pursued his
studies at the university, supplying his wants by
teaching the younger lads the knowledge he himself
acquired, and thus at once gaining the means of maintaining
himself at the seat of learning, and fixing in his
mind the elements of what he had already obtained.
In this manner, as is usual among the poorer students
of divinity at Scottish universities, he contrived
not only to maintain himself according to his simple
wants, but even to send considerable assistance to
his sole remaining parent, a sacred duty, of which
the Scotch are seldom negligent. His progress
in knowledge of a general kind, as well as in the
studies proper to his profession, was very considerable,
but was little remarked, owing to the retired modesty
of his disposition, which in no respect qualified
him to set off his learning to the best advantage.
And thus, had Butler been a man given to make complaints,
he had his tale to tell, like others, of unjust preferences,
bad luck, and hard usage. On these subjects, however,
he was habitually silent, perhaps from modesty, perhaps
from a touch of pride, or perhaps from a conjunction
of both.
He obtained his license as a preacher
of the gospel, with some compliments from the Presbytery
by whom it was bestowed; but this did not lead to
any preferment, and he found it necessary to make the
cottage at Beersheba his residence for some months,
with no other income than was afforded by the precarious
occupation of teaching in one or other of the neighbouring
families. After having greeted his aged grandmother,
his first visit was to Woodend, where he was received
by Jeanie with warm cordiality, arising from recollections
which had never been dismissed from her mind, by Rebecca
with good-humoured hospitality, and by old Deans in
a mode peculiar to himself.
Highly as Douce Davie honoured the
clergy, it was not upon each individual of the cloth
that he bestowed his approbation; and, a little jealous,
perhaps, at seeing his youthful acquaintance erected
into the dignity of a teacher and preacher, he instantly
attacked him upon various points of controversy, in
order to discover whether he might not have fallen
into some of the snares, defections, and desertions
of the time. Butler was not only a man of stanch
Presbyterian principles, but was also willing to avoid
giving pain to his old friend by disputing upon points
of little importance; and therefore he might have hoped
to have come like fine gold out of the furnace of
Davie’s interrogatories. But the result
on the mind of that strict investigator was not altogether
so favourable as might have been hoped and anticipated.
Old Judith Butler, who had hobbled that evening as
far as Woodend, in order to enjoy the congratulations
of her neighbours upon Reuben’s return, and upon
his high attainments, of which she was herself not
a little proud, was somewhat mortified to find that
her old friend Deans did not enter into the subject
with the warmth she expected. At first, in he
seemed rather silent than dissatisfied; and it was
not till Judith had essayed the subject more than
once that it led to the following dialogue.
“Aweel, neibor Deans, I thought
ye wad hae been glad to see Reuben amang us again,
poor fellow.”
“I am glad, Mrs. Butler,”
was the neighbour’s concise answer.
“Since he has lost his grandfather
and his father (praised be Him that giveth and taketh!),
I ken nae friend he has in the world that’s been
sae like a father to him as the sell o’ye, neibor
Deans.”
“God is the only father of the
fatherless,” said Deans, touching his bonnet
and looking upwards. “Give honour where
it is due, gudewife, and not to an unworthy instrument.”
“Aweel, that’s your way
o’ turning it, and nae doubt ye ken best; but
I hae ken’d ye, Davie, send a forpit o’
meal to Beersheba when there wasna a bow left in the
meal-ark at Woodend; ay, and I hae ken’d ye”
“Gudewife,” said Davie,
interrupting her, “these are but idle tales to
tell me; fit for naething but to puff up our inward
man wi’ our ain vain acts. I stude beside
blessed Alexander Peden, when I heard him call the
death and testimony of our happy martyrs but draps
of blude and scarts of ink in respect of fitting discharge
of our duty; and what suld I think of ony thing the
like of me can do?”
“Weel, neibor Deans, ye ken
best; but I maun say that, I am sure you are glad
to see my bairn again—the halt’s gane
now, unless he has to walk ower mony miles at a stretch;
and he has a wee bit colour in his cheek, that glads
my auld een to see it; and he has as decent a black
coat as the minister; and”
“I am very heartily glad he
is weel and thriving,” said Mr. Deans, with a
gravity that seemed intended to cut short the subject;
but a woman who is bent upon a point is not easily
pushed aside from it.
“And,” continued Mrs.
Butler, “he can wag his head in a pulpit now,
neibor Deans, think but of that—my ain oe—and
a’body maun sit still and listen to him, as
if he were the Paip of Rome.”
“The what?—the who?—woman!”
said Deans, with a sternness far beyond his usual
gravity, as soon as these offensive words had struck
upon the tympanum of his ear.
“Eh, guide us!” said the
poor woman; “I had forgot what an ill will ye
had aye at the Paip, and sae had my puir gudeman, Stephen
Butler. Mony an afternoon he wad sit and take
up his testimony again the Paip, and again baptizing
of bairns, and the like.”
“Woman!” reiterated Deans,
“either speak about what ye ken something o’,
or be silent; I say that independency is a foul heresy,
and anabaptism a damnable and deceiving error, whilk
suld be rooted out of the land wi’ the fire
o’ the spiritual, and the sword o’ the
civil magistrate.”
“Weel, weel, neibor, I’ll
no say that ye mayna be right,” answered the
submissive Judith. “I am sure ye are right
about the sawing and the mawing, the shearing and
the leading, and what for suld ye no be right about
kirkwark, too?—But concerning my oe, Reuben
Butler”
“Reuben Butler, gudewife,”
said David, with solemnity, “is a lad I wish
heartily weel to, even as if he were mine ain son—but
I doubt there will be outs and ins in the track of
his walk. I muckle fear his gifts will get the
heels of his grace. He has ower muckle human wit
and learning, and thinks as muckle about the form
of the bicker as he does about the healsomeness of
the food—he maun broider the marriage-garment
with lace and passments, or it’s no gude eneugh
for him. And it’s like he’s something
proud o’ his human gifts and learning, whilk
enables him to dress up his doctrine in that fine
airy dress. But,” added he, at seeing the
old woman’s uneasiness at his discourse, “affliction
may gie him a jagg, and let the wind out o’
him, as out o’ a cow that’s eaten wet
clover, and the lad may do weel, and be a burning and
a shining light; and I trust it will be yours to see,
and his to feel it, and that soon.”
Widow Butler was obliged to retire,
unable to make anything more of her neighbour, whose
discourse, though she did not comprehend it, filled
her with undefined apprehensions on her grandson’s
account, and greatly depressed the joy with which
she had welcomed him on his return. And it must
not be concealed, in justice to Mr. Deans’s discernment,
that Butler, in their conference, had made a greater
display of his learning than the occasion called for,
or than was likely to be acceptable to the old man,
who, accustomed to consider himself as a person preeminently
entitled to dictate upon theological subjects of controversy,
felt rather humbled and mortified when learned authorities
were placed in array against him. In fact, Butler
had not escaped the tinge of pedantry which naturally
flowed from his education, and was apt, on many occasions,
to make parade of his knowledge, when there was no
need of such vanity.
Jeanie Deans, however, found no fault
with this display of learning, but, on the contrary,
admired it; perhaps on the same score that her sex
are said to admire men of courage, on account of their
own deficiency in that qualification. The circumstances
of their families threw the young people constantly
together; their old intimacy was renewed, though upon
a footing better adapted to their age; and it became
at length understood betwixt them, that their union
should be deferred no longer than until Butler should
obtain some steady means of support, however humble.
This, however, was not a matter speedily to be accomplished.
Plan after plan was formed, and plan after plan failed.
The good-humoured cheek of Jeanie lost the first flush
of juvenile freshness; Reuben’s brow assumed
the gravity of manhood, yet the means of obtaining
a settlement seemed remote as ever. Fortunately
for the lovers, their passion was of no ardent or
enthusiastic cast; and a sense of duty on both sides
induced them to bear, with patient fortitude, the
protracted interval which divided them from each other.
In the meanwhile, time did not roll
on without effecting his usual changes. The widow
of Stephen Butler, so long the prop of the family of
Beersheba, was gathered to her fathers; and Rebecca,
the careful spouse of our friend Davie Deans, wa’s
also summoned from her plans of matrimonial and domestic
economy. The morning after her death, Reuben
Butler went to offer his mite of consolation to his
old friend and benefactor. He witnessed, on this
occasion, a remarkable struggle betwixt the force
of natural affection and the religious stoicism which
the sufferer thought it was incumbent upon him to
maintain under each earthly dispensation, whether
of weal or woe.
On his arrival at the cottage, Jeanie,
with her eyes overflowing with tears, pointed to the
little orchard, “in which,” she whispered
with broken accents, “my poor father has been
since his misfortune.” Somewhat alarmed
at this account, Butler entered the orchard, and advanced
slowly towards his old friend, who, seated in a small
rude arbour, appeared to be sunk in the extremity
of his affliction. He lifted his eyes somewhat
sternly as Butler approached, as if offended at the
interruption; but as the young man hesitated whether
he ought to retreat or advance, he arose, and came
forward to meet him with a self-possessed, and even
dignified air.
“Young man,” said the
sufferer, “lay it not to heart, though the righteous
perish, and the merciful are removed, seeing, it may
well be said, that they are taken away from the evils
to come. Woe to me were I to shed a tear for
the wife of my bosom, when I might weep rivers of
water for this afflicted Church, cursed as it is with
carnal seekers, and with the dead of heart.”
“I am happy,” said Butler,
“that you can forget your private affliction
in your regard for public duty.”
“Forget, Reuben?” said
poor Deans, putting his handkerchief to his eyes—“She’s
not to be forgotten on this side of time; but He that
gives the wound can send the ointment. I declare
there have been times during this night when my meditation
hae been so rapt, that I knew not of my heavy loss.
It has been with me as with the worthy John Semple,
called Carspharn John,* upon a like trial—I
have been this night on the banks of Ulai, plucking
an apple here and there!”
* Note E. Carspharn John.
Notwithstanding the assumed fortitude
of Deans, which he conceived to be the discharge of
a great Christian duty, he had too good a heart not
to suffer deeply under this heavy loss. Woodend
became altogether distasteful to him; and as he had
obtained both substance and experience by his management
of that little farm, he resolved to employ them as
a dairy-farmer, or cowfeeder, as they are called in
Scotland. The situation he chose for his new
settlement was at a place called Saint Leonard’s
Crags, lying betwixt Edinburgh and the mountain called
Arthur’s Seat, and adjoining to the extensive
sheep pasture still named the King’s Park, from
its having been formerly dedicated to the preservation
of the royal game. Here he rented a small lonely
house, about half-a-mile distant from the nearest
point of the city, but the site of which, with all
the adjacent ground, is now occupied by the buildings
which form the southeastern suburb. An extensive
pasture-ground adjoining, which Deans rented from
the keeper of the Royal Park, enabled him to feed his
milk-cows; and the unceasing industry and activity
of Jeanie, his oldest daughter, were exerted in making
the most of their produce.
She had now less frequent opportunities
of seeing Reuben, who had been obliged, after various
disappointments, to accept the subordinate situation
of assistant in a parochial school of some eminence,
at three or four miles’ distance from the city.
Here he distinguished himself, and became acquainted
with several respectable burgesses, who, on account
of health, or other reasons, chose that their children
should commence their education in this little village.
His prospects were thus gradually brightening, and
upon each visit which he paid at Saint Leonard’s
he had an opportunity of gliding a hint to this purpose
into Jeanie’s ear. These visits were necessarily
very rare, on account of the demands which the duties
of the school made upon Butler’s time. Nor
did he dare to make them even altogether so frequent
as these avocations would permit. Deans received
him with civility indeed, and even with kindness; but
Reuben, as is usual in such cases, imagined that he
read his purpose in his eyes, and was afraid too premature
an explanation on the subject would draw down his
positive disapproval. Upon the whole, therefore,
he judged it prudent to call at Saint Leonard’s
just so frequently as old acquaintance and neighbourhood
seemed to authorise, and no oftener. There was
another person who was more regular in his visits.
[Illustration: The Laird in Jeanie’s Cottage—130]
When Davie Deans intimated to the
Laird of Dumbiedikes his purpose of “quitting
wi’ the land and house at Woodend,” the
Laird stared and said nothing. He made his usual
visits at the usual hour without remark, until the
day before the term, when, observing the bustle of
moving furniture already commenced, the great east-country
awmrie dragged out of its nook, and standing
with its shoulder to the company, like an awkward
booby about to leave the room, the Laird again stared
mightily, and was heard to ejaculate,—“Hegh,
sirs!” Even after the day of departure was past
and gone, the Laird of Dumbiedikes, at his usual hour,
which was that at which David Deans was wont to “loose
the pleugh,” presented himself before the closed
door of the cottage at Woodend, and seemed as much
astonished at finding it shut against his approach
as if it was not exactly what he had to expect.
On this occasion he was heard to ejaculate, “Gude
guide us!” which, by those who knew him, was
considered as a very unusual mark of emotion.
From that moment forward Dumbiedikes became an altered
man, and the regularity of his movements, hitherto
so exemplary, was as totally disconcerted as those
of a boy’s watch when he has broken the main-spring.
Like the index of the said watch did Dumbiedikes spin
round the whole bounds of his little property, which
may be likened unto the dial of the timepiece, with
unwonted velocity. There was not a cottage into
which he did not enter, nor scarce a maiden on whom
he did not stare. But so it was, that although
there were better farm-houses on the land than Woodend,
and certainly much prettier girls than Jeanie Deans,
yet it did somehow befall that the blank in the Laird’s
time was not so pleasantly filled up as it had been.
There was no seat accommodated him so well as the
“bunker” at Woodend, and no face he loved
so much to gaze on as Jeanie Deans’s. So,
after spinning round and round his little orbit, and
then remaining stationary for a week, it seems to
have occurred to him that he was not pinned down to
circulate on a pivot, like the hands of the watch,
but possessed the power of shifting his central point,
and extending his circle if he thought proper.
To realise which privilege of change of place, he
bought a pony from a Highland drover, and with its
assistance and company stepped, or rather stumbled,
as far as Saint Leonard’s Crags.
Jeanie Deans, though so much accustomed
to the Laird’s staring that she was sometimes
scarce conscious of his presence, had nevertheless
some occasional fears lest he should call in the organ
of speech to back those expressions of admiration
which he bestowed on her through his eyes. Should
this happen, farewell, she thought, to all chance of
a union with Butler. For her father, however
stouthearted and independent in civil and religious
principles, was not without that respect for the laird
of the land, so deeply imprinted on the Scottish tenantry
of the period. Moreover, if he did not positively
dislike Butler, yet his fund of carnal learning was
often the object of sarcasms on David’s part,
which were perhaps founded in jealousy, and which
certainly indicated no partiality for the party against
whom they were launched. And lastly, the match
with Dumbiedikes would have presented irresistible
charms to one who used to complain that he felt himself
apt to take “ower grit an armfu’ o’
the warld.” So that, upon the whole, the
Laird’s diurnal visits were disagreeable to
Jeanie from apprehension of future consequences, and
it served much to console her, upon removing from
the spot where she was bred and born, that she had
seen the last of Dumbiedikes, his laced hat, and tobacco-pipe.
The poor girl no more expected he could muster courage
to follow her to Saint Leonard’s Crags than that
any of her apple-trees or cabbages which she had left
rooted in the “yard” at Woodend, would
spontaneously, and unaided, have undertaken the same
journey. It was therefore with much more surprise
than pleasure that, on the sixth day after their removal
to Saint Leonard’s, she beheld Dumbiedikes arrive,
laced hat, tobacco-pipe, and all, and, with the self-same
greeting of “How’s a’ wi’
ye, Jeanie?—Whare’s the gudeman?”
assume as nearly as he could the same position in
the cottage at Saint Leonard’s which he had so
long and so regularly occupied at Woodend. He
was no sooner, however, seated, than with an unusual
exertion of his powers of conversation, he added,
“Jeanie—I say, Jeanie, woman”—here
he extended his hand towards her shoulder with all
the fingers spread out as if to clutch it, but in
so bashful and awkward a manner, that when she whisked
herself beyond its reach, the paw remained suspended
in the air with the palm open, like the claw of a
heraldic griffin—“Jeanie,” continued
the swain in this moment of inspiration—“I
say, Jeanie, it’s a braw day out-by, and the
roads are no that ill for boot-hose.”
[Illustration: Jeanie—I say, Jeanie,
woman—133
“The deil’s in the daidling
body,” muttered Jeanie between her teeth; “wha
wad hae thought o’ his daikering out this length?”
And she afterwards confessed that she threw a little
of this ungracious sentiment into her accent and manner;
for her father being abroad, and the “body,”
as she irreverently termed the landed proprietor, “looking
unco gleg and canty, she didna ken what he might be
coming out wi’ next.”
Her frowns, however, acted as a complete
sedative, and the Laird relapsed from that day into
his former taciturn habits, visiting the cowfeeder’s
cottage three or four times every week, when the weather
permitted, with apparently no other purpose than to
stare at Jeanie Deans, while Douce Davie poured forth
his eloquence upon the controversies and testimonies
of the day.