And some they whistled—and
some they sang,
And some did loudly say,
Whenever Lord Barnard’s horn
it blew,
“Away, Musgrave away!”
Ballad of Little
Musgrave.
When the man of office returned to
the Heart of Mid-Lothian, he resumed his conference
with Ratcliffe, of whose experience and assistance
he now held himself secure. “You must speak
with this wench, Rat—this Effie Deans—you
must sift her a wee bit; for as sure as a tether she
will ken Robertson’s haunts—till
her, Rat—till her without delay.”
“Craving your pardon, Mr. Sharpitlaw,”
said the turnkey elect, “that’s what I
am not free to do.”
“Free to do, man? what the deil
ails ye now?—I thought we had settled a’
that?”
“I dinna ken, sir,” said
Ratcliffe; “I hae spoken to this Effie—she’s
strange to this place and to its ways, and to a’
our ways, Mr. Sharpitlaw; and she greets, the silly
tawpie, and she’s breaking her heart already
about this wild chield; and were she the mean’s
o’ taking him, she wad break it outright.”
“She wunna hae time, lad,”
said Sharpitlaw; “the woodie will hae it’s
ain o’ her before that—a woman’s
heart takes a lang time o’ breaking.”
“That’s according to the
stuff they are made o’ sir,” replied Ratcliffe—“But
to make a lang tale short, I canna undertake the job.
It gangs against my conscience.”
“Your conscience, Rat?”
said Sharpitlaw, with a sneer, which the reader will
probably think very natural upon the occasion.
“Ou ay, sir,” answered
Ratcliffe, calmly, “just my conscience; a’body
has a conscience, though it may be ill wunnin at it.
I think mine’s as weel out o’ the gate
as maist folk’s are; and yet it’s just
like the noop of my elbow, it whiles gets a bit dirl
on a corner.”
“Weel, Rat,” replied Sharpitlaw,
“since ye are nice, I’ll speak to the
hussy mysell.”
Sharpitlaw, accordingly, caused himself
to be introduced into the little dark apartment tenanted
by the unfortunate Effie Deans. The poor girl
was seated on her little flock-bed, plunged in a deep
reverie. Some food stood on the table, of a quality
better than is usually supplied to prisoners, but
it was untouched. The person under whose care
she was more particularly placed, said, “that
sometimes she tasted naething from the tae end of
the four-and-twenty hours to the t’other, except
a drink of water.”
Sharpitlaw took a chair, and, commanding
the turnkey to retire, he opened the conversation,
endeavouring to throw into his tone and countenance
as much commiseration as they were capable of expressing,
for the one was sharp and harsh, the other sly, acute,
and selfish.
“How’s a’ wi’ ye, Effie?—How
d’ye find yoursell, hinny?”
A deep sigh was the only answer.
“Are the folk civil to ye, Effie?—it’s
my duty to inquire.”
“Very civil, sir,” said
Effie, compelling herself to answer, yet hardly knowing
what she said.
“And your victuals,” continued
Sharpitlaw, in the same condoling tone,—“do
you get what you like?—or is there onything
you would particularly fancy, as your health seems
but silly?”
“It’s a’ very weel,
sir, I thank ye,” said the poor prisoner, in
a tone how different from the sportive vivacity of
those of the Lily of St. Leonard’s!—“it’s
a’ very gude—ower gude for me.”
“He must have been a great villain,
Effie, who brought you to this pass,” said Sharpitlaw.
The remark was dictated partly by
a natural feeling, of which even he could not divest
himself, though accustomed to practise on the passions
of others, and keep a most heedful guard over his own,
and partly by his wish to introduce the sort of conversation
which might, best serve his immediate purpose.
Indeed, upon the present occasion, these mixed motives
of feeling and cunning harmonised together wonderfully;
for, said Sharpitlaw to himself, the greater rogue
Robertson is, the more will be the merit of bringing
him to justice. “He must have been a great
villain, indeed,” he again reiterated; “and
I wish I had the skelping o’ him.”
“I may blame mysell mair than
him,” said Effie; “I was bred up to ken
better; but he, poor fellow,”—(she
stopped).
“Was a thorough blackguard a’
his life, I dare say,” said Sharpitlaw.
“A stranger he was in this country, and a companion
of that lawless vagabond, Wilson, I think, Effie?”
“It wad hae been dearly telling
him that he had ne’er seen Wilson’s face.”
“That’s very true that
you are saying, Effie,” said Sharpitlaw.
“Where was’t that Robertson and you were
used to howff thegither? Somegate about the Laigh
Calton, I am thinking.”
The simple and dispirited girl had
thus far followed Mr. Sharpitlaw’s lead, because
he had artfully adjusted his observations to the thoughts
he was pretty certain must be passing through her own
mind, so that her answers became a kind of thinking
aloud, a mood into which those who are either constitutionally
absent in mind, or are rendered so by the temporary
pressure of misfortune, may be easily led by a skilful
train of suggestions. But the last observation
of the procurator-fiscal was too much of the nature
of a direct interrogatory, and it broke the charm
accordingly.
“What was it that I was saying?”
said Effie, starting up from her reclining posture,
seating herself upright, and hastily shading her dishevelled
hair back from her wasted but still beautiful countenance.
She fixed her eyes boldly and keenly upon Sharpitlaw—“You
are too much of a gentleman, sir,—too much
of an honest man, to take any notice of what a poor
creature like me says, that can hardly ca’ my
senses my ain—God help me!”
“Advantage!—I would
be of some advantage to you if I could,” said
Sharpitlaw, in a soothing tone; “and I ken naething
sae likely to serve ye, Effie, as gripping this rascal,
Robertson.”
“O dinna misca’ him, sir,
that never misca’d you!—Robertson?—I
am sure I had naething to say against ony man o’
the name, and naething will I say.”
“But if you do not heed your
own misfortune, Effie, you should mind what distress
he has brought on your family,” said the man
of law.
“O, Heaven help me!” exclaimed
poor Effie—“My poor father—my
dear Jeanie—O, that’s sairest to
bide of a’! O, sir, if you hae ony kindness—if
ye hae ony touch of compassion—for a’
the folk I see here are as hard as the wa’-stanes—If
ye wad but bid them let my sister Jeanie in the next
time she ca’s! for when I hear them put her awa
frae the door, and canna climb up to that high window
to see sae muckle as her gown-tail, it’s like
to pit me out o’ my judgment.” And
she looked on him with a face of entreaty, so earnest,
yet so humble, that she fairly shook the steadfast
purpose of his mind.
“You shall see your sister,”
he began, “if you’ll tell me,”—then
interrupting himself, he added, in a more hurried tone,—“no,
d—n it, you shall see your sister whether
you tell me anything or no.” So saying,
he rose up and left the apartment.
When he had rejoined Ratcliffe, he
observed, “You are right, Ratton; there’s
no making much of that lassie. But ae thing I
have cleared—that is, that Robertson has
been the father of the bairn, and so I will wager
a boddle it will be he that’s to meet wi’
Jeanie Deans this night at Muschat’s Cairn,
and there we’ll nail him, Rat, or my name is
not Gideon Sharpitlaw.”
“But,” said Ratcliffe,
perhaps because he was in no hurry to see anything
which was like to be connected with the discovery and
apprehension of Robertson, “an that were the
case, Mr. Butler wad hae kend the man in the King’s
Park to be the same person wi’ him in Madge Wildfire’s
claise, that headed the mob.”
“That makes nae difference,
man,” replied Sharpitlaw—“the
dress, the light, the confusion, and maybe a touch
o’ a blackit cork, or a slake o’ paint-hout,
Ratton, I have seen ye dress your ainsell, that the
deevil ye belang to durstna hae made oath t’ye.”
“And that’s true, too,” said Ratcliffe.
“And besides, ye donnard carle,”
continued Sharpitlaw, triumphantly, “the minister
did say that he thought he knew something of
the features of the birkie that spoke to him in the
Park, though he could not charge his memory where
or when he had seen them.”
“It’s evident, then, your
honour will be right,” said Ratcliffe.
“Then, Rat, you and I will go
with the party oursells this night, and see him in
grips or we are done wi’ him.”
“I seena muckle use I can be
o’ to your honour,” said Ratcliffe, reluctantly.
“Use?” answered Sharpitlaw—“You
can guide the party—you ken the ground.
Besides, I do not intend to quit sight o’ you,
my good friend, till I have him in hand.”
“Weel, sir,” said Ratcliffe,
but in no joyful tone of acquiescence; “Ye maun
hae it your ain way—but mind he’s
a desperate man.”
“We shall have that with us,”
answered Sharpitlaw, “that will settle him,
if it is necessary.”
“But, sir,” answered Ratcliffe,
“I am sure I couldna undertake to guide you
to Muschat’s Cairn in the night-time; I ken the
place as mony does, in fair day-light, but how to
find it by moonshine, amang sae mony crags and stanes,
as like to each other as the collier to the deil, is
mair than I can tell. I might as soon seek moonshine
in water.”
“What’s the meaning o’
this, Ratcliffe?” said Sharpitlaw, while he fixed
his eye on the recusant, with a fatal and ominous expression,—“Have
you forgotten that you are still under sentence of
death?”
“No, sir,” said Ratcliffe,
“that’s a thing no easily put out o’
memory; and if my presence be judged necessary, nae
doubt I maun gang wi’ your honour. But
I was gaun to tell your honour of ane that has mair
skeel o’ the gate than me, and that’s
e’en Madge Wildfire.”
“The devil she has!—Do
you think me as mad as she, is, to trust to her guidance
on such an occasion?”
“Your honour is the best judge,”
answered Ratcliffe; “but I ken I can keep her
in tune, and garr her haud the straight path—she
often sleeps out, or rambles about amang thae hills
the haill simmer night, the daft limmer.”
“Weel, Ratcliffe,” replied
the procurator-fiscal, “if you think she can
guide us the right way—but take heed to
what you are about—your life depends on
your behaviour.”
“It’s a sair judgment
on a man,” said Ratcliffe, “when he has
ance gane sae far wrang as I hae done, that deil a
bit he can be honest, try’t whilk way he will.”
Such was the reflection of Ratcliffe,
when he was left for a few minutes to himself, while
the retainer of justice went to procure a proper warrant,
and give the necessary directions.
The rising moon saw the whole party
free from the walls of the city, and entering upon
the open ground. Arthur’s Seat, like a couchant
lion of immense size—Salisbury Crags, like
a huge belt or girdle of granite, were dimly visible.
Holding their path along the southern side of the
Canongate, they gained the Abbey of Holyrood House,
and from thence found their way by step and stile
into the King’s Park. They were at first
four in number—an officer of justice and
Sharpitlaw, who were well armed with pistols and cutlasses;
Ratcliffe, who was not trusted with weapons, lest,
he might, peradventure, have used them on the wrong
side; and the female. But at the last stile,
when they entered the Chase, they were joined by other
two officers, whom Sharpitlaw, desirous to secure sufficient
force for his purpose, and at the same time to avoid
observation, had directed to wait for him at this
place. Ratcliffe saw this accession of strength
with some disquietude, for he had hitherto thought
it likely that Robertson, who was a bold, stout, and
active young fellow, might have made his escape from
Sharpitlaw and the single officer, by force or agility,
without his being implicated in the matter. But
the present strength of the followers of justice was
overpowering, and the only mode of saving Robertson
(which the old sinner was well disposed to do, providing
always he could accomplish his purpose without compromising
his own safety), must be by contriving that he should
have some signal of their approach. It was probably
with this view that Ratcliffe had requested the addition
of Madge to the party, having considerable confidence
in her propensity to exert her lungs. Indeed,
she had already given them so many specimens of her
clamorous loquacity, that Sharpitlaw half determined
to send her back with one of the officers, rather than
carry forward in his company a person so extremely
ill qualified to be a guide in a secret expedition.
It seemed, too, as if the open air, the approach to
the hills, and the ascent of the moon, supposed to
be so portentous over those whose brain is infirm,
made her spirits rise in a degree tenfold more loquacious
than she had hitherto exhibited. To silence her
by fair means seemed impossible; authoritative commands
and coaxing entreaties she set alike at defiance,
and threats only made her sulky and altogether intractable.
“Is there no one of you,”
said Sharpitlaw, impatiently, “that knows the
way to this accursed place—this Nichol Muschat’s
Cairn—excepting this mad clavering idiot?”
“Deil ane o’ them kens
it except mysell,” exclaimed Madge; “how
suld they, the puir fule cowards! But I hae sat
on the grave frae batfleeing time till cook-crow,
and had mony a fine crack wi’ Muschat and Ailie
Muschat, that are lying sleeping below.”
“The devil take your crazy brain,”
said Sharpitlaw; “will you not allow the men
to answer a question?”
The officers obtaining a moment’s
audience while Ratcliffe diverted Madge’s attention,
declared that, though they had a general knowledge
of the spot, they could not undertake to guide the
party to it by the uncertain light of the moon, with
such accuracy as to insure success to their expedition.
“What shall we do, Ratcliffe?”
said Sharpitlaw, “if he sees us before we see
him,—and that’s what he is certain
to do, if we go strolling about, without keeping the
straight road,—we may bid gude day to the
job, and I would rather lose one hundred pounds, baith
for the credit of the police, and because the provost
says somebody maun be hanged for this job o’
Porteous, come o’t what likes.”
“I think,” said Ratcliffe,
“we maun just try Madge; and I’ll see if
I can get her keepit in ony better order. And
at ony rate, if he suld hear her skirting her auld
ends o’ sangs, he’s no to ken for that
that there’s onybody wi’ her.”
“That’s true,” said
Sharpitlaw; “and if he thinks her alone, he’s
as like to come towards her as to rin frae her.
So set forward—we hae lost ower muckle
time already—see to get her to keep the
right road.”
“And what sort o’ house
does Nichol Muschat and his wife keep now?” said
Ratcliffe to the mad woman, by way of humouring her
vein of folly; “they were but thrawn folk lang
syne, an a’ tales be true.”
“Ou, ay, ay, ay—but
a’s forgotten now,” replied Madge, in the
confidential tone of a gossip giving the history of
her next-door neighbour—“Ye see,
I spoke to them mysell, and tauld them byganes suld
be byganes—her throat’s sair misguggled
and mashackered though; she wears her corpse-sheet
drawn weel up to hide it, but that canna hinder the
bluid seiping through, ye ken. I wussed her to
wash it in St. Anthony’s Well, and that will
cleanse if onything can—But they say bluid
never bleaches out o’ linen claith—Deacon
Sanders’s new cleansing draps winna do’t—I
tried them mysell on a bit rag we hae at hame that
was mailed wi’ the bluid of a bit skirting wean
that was hurt some gate, but out it winna come—Weel,
yell say that’s queer; but I will bring it out
to St. Anthony’s blessed Well some braw night
just like this, and I’ll cry up Ailie Muschat,
and she and I will hae a grand bouking-washing, and
bleach our claes in the beams of the bonny Lady Moon,
that’s far pleasanter to me than the sun—the
sun’s ower het, and ken ye, cummers, my brains
are het eneugh already. But the moon, and the
dew, and the night-wind, they are just like a caller
kail-blade laid on my brow; and whiles I think the
moon just shines on purpose to pleasure me, when naebody
sees her but mysell.”
This raving discourse she continued
with prodigious volubility, walking on at a great
pace, and dragging Ratcliffe along with her, while
he endeavoured, in appearance at least, if not in
reality, to induce her to moderate her voice.
All at once she stopped short upon
the top of a little hillock, gazed upward fixedly,
and said not one word for the space of five minutes.
“What the devil is the matter with her now?”
said Sharpitlaw to Ratcliffe—“Can
you not get her forward?”
“Ye maun just take a grain o’
patience wi’ her, sir,” said Ratcliffe.
“She’ll no gae a foot faster than she likes
herself.”
“D—n her,”
said Sharpitlaw, “I’ll take care she has
her time in Bedlam or Bridewell, or both, for she’s
both mad and mischievous.”
In the meanwhile, Madge, who had looked
very pensive when she first stopped, suddenly burst
into a vehement fit of laughter, then paused and sighed
bitterly,—then was seized with a second
fit of laughter—then, fixing her eyes on
the moon, lifted up her voice and sung,—
“Good even, good
fair moon, good even to thee;
I prithee, dear moon, now show to
me
The form and the features, the speech
and degree,
Of the man that true lover of mine
shall be.
But I need not ask that of the bonny
Lady Moon—I ken that weel eneugh mysell—true-love
though he wasna—But naebody shall sae that
I ever tauld a word about the matter—But
whiles I wish the bairn had lived—Weel,
God guide us, there’s a heaven aboon us a’,”—(here
she sighed bitterly), “and a bonny moon, and
sterns in it forby” (and here she laughed once
more).
“Are we to stand, here all night!”
said Sharpitlaw, very impatiently. “Drag
her forward.”
“Ay, sir,” said Ratcliffe,
“if we kend whilk way to drag her, that would
settle it at ance.—Come, Madge, hinny,”
addressing her, “we’ll no be in time to
see Nichol and his wife, unless ye show us the road.”
“In troth and that I will, Ratton,”
said she, seizing him by the arm, and resuming her
route with huge strides, considering it was a female
who took them. “And I’ll tell ye,
Ratton, blithe will Nichol Muschat be to see ye, for
he says he kens weel there isna sic a villain out o’
hell as ye are, and he wad be ravished to hae a crack
wi’ you—like to like ye ken—it’s
a proverb never fails—and ye are baith a
pair o’ the deevil’s peats I trow—hard
to ken whilk deserves the hettest corner o’ his
ingle-side.”
Ratcliffe was conscience-struck, and
could not forbear making an involuntary protest against
this classification. “I never shed blood,”
he replied.
“But ye hae sauld it, Ratton—ye
hae sauld blood mony a time. Folk kill wi’
the tongue as weel as wi’ the hand—wi’
the word as weel as wi’ the gulley!—
It is the ’bonny
butcher lad,
That wears the sleeves of blue,
He sells the flesh on Saturday,
On
Friday that he slew.”
“And what is that I ain doing
now?” thought Ratcliffe. “But I’ll
hae nae wyte of Robertson’s young bluid, if
I can help it;” then speaking apart to Madge,
he asked her, “Whether she did not remember ony
o’ her auld Sangs?”
“Mony a dainty ane,” said
Madge; “and blithely can I sing them, for lightsome
sangs make merry gate.” And she sang,—
“When the glede’s
in the blue cloud,
The lavrock lies still;
When the hound’s in the greenwood.
The hind keeps the hill.”
“Silence her cursed noise, if
you should throttle her,” said Sharpitlaw; “I
see somebody yonder.—Keep close, my boys,
and creep round the shoulder of the height. George
Poinder, stay you with Ratcliffe and tha mad yelling
bitch; and you other two, come with me round under
the shadow of the brae.”
And he crept forward with the stealthy
pace of an Indian savage, who leads his band to surprise
an unsuspecting party of some hostile tribe.
Ratcliffe saw them glide of, avoiding the moonlight,
and keeping as much in: the shade as possible.
“Robertson’s done up,”
said he to himself; “thae young lads are aye
sae thoughtless. What deevil could he hae to
say to Jeanie Deans, or to ony woman on earth, that
he suld gang awa and get his neck raxed for her?
And this mad quean, after cracking like a pen-gun,
and skirling like a pea-hen for the haill night, behoves
just to hae hadden her tongue when her clavers might
have dune some gude! But it’s aye the way
wi’ women; if they ever hand their tongues ava’,
ye may swear it’s for mischief. I wish
I could set her on again without this blood-sucker
kenning what I am doing. But he’s as gleg
as MacKeachan’s elshin,* that ran through sax
plies of bendleather and half-an-inch into the king’s
heel.”
* [Elshin, a shoemaker’s awl.]
He then began to hum, but in a very
low and suppressed tone, the first stanza of a favourite
ballad of Wildfire’s, the words of which bore
some distant analogy with the situation of Robertson,
trusting that the power of association would not fail
to bring the rest to her mind:—
“There’s
a bloodhound ranging Tinwald wood,
There’s harness glancing
sheen:
There’s a maiden sits on Tinwald
brae,
And she sings loud between.”
Madge had no sooner received the catch-word,
than she vindicated Ratcliffe’s sagacity by
setting off at score with the song:—
“O sleep ye sound,
Sir James, she said,
When ye suld rise and ride?
There’s twenty men, wi’
bow and blade,
Are seeking where ye hide.”
Though Ratcliffe was at a considerable
distance from the spot called Muschat’s Cairn,
yet his eyes, practised like those of a cat to penetrate
darkness, could mark that Robertson had caught the
alarm. George Poinder, less keen of sight, or
less attentive, was not aware of his flight any more
than Sharpitlaw and his assistants, whose view, though
they were considerably nearer to the cairn, was intercepted
by the broken nature of the ground under which they
were screening themselves. At length, however,
after the interval of five or six minutes, they also
perceived that Robertson had fled, and rushed hastily
towards the place, while Sharpitlaw called out aloud,
in the harshest tones of a voice which resembled a
saw-mill at work, “Chase, lads—chase—haud
the brae—I see him on the edge of the hill!”
Then hollowing back to the rear-guard of his detachment,
he issued his farther orders: “Ratcliffe,
come here, and detain the woman—George,
run and kepp the stile at the Duke’s Walk—Ratcliffe,
come here directly—but first knock out that
mad bitch’s brains!”
“Ye had better rin for it, Madge,”
said Ratcliffe, “for it’s ill dealing
wi’ an angry man.”
Madge Wildfire was not so absolutely
void of common sense as not to understand this innuendo;
and while Ratcliffe, in seemingly anxious haste of
obedience, hastened to the spot where Sharpitlaw waited
to deliver up Jeanie Deans to his custody, she fled
with all the despatch she could exert in an opposite
direction. Thus the whole party were separated,
and in rapid motion of flight or pursuit, excepting
Ratcliffe and Jeanie, whom, although making no attempt
to escape, he held fast by the cloak, and who remained
standing by Muschat’s Cairn.