Yet though thou mayst
be dragg’d in scorn
To yonder ignominious tree,
Thou shalt not want one faithful friend
To share the cruel fates’
decree.
Jemmy Dawson.
After spending the greater part of
the morning in his devotions (for his benevolent neighbours
had kindly insisted upon discharging his task of ordinary
labour), David Deans entered the apartment when the
breakfast meal was prepared. His eyes were involuntarily
cast down, for he was afraid to look at Jeanie, uncertain
as he was whether she might feel herself at liberty,
with a good conscience, to attend the Court of Justiciary
that day, to give the evidence which he understood
that she possessed, in order to her sister’s
exculpation. At length, after a minute of apprehensive
hesitation, he looked at her dress to discover whether
it seemed to be in her contemplation to go abroad that
morning. Her apparel was neat and plain, but
such as conveyed no exact intimation of her intentions
to go abroad. She had exchanged her usual garb
for morning labour, for one something inferior to
that with which, as her best, she was wont to dress
herself for church, or any more rare occasion of going
into society. Her sense taught her, that it was
respectful to be decent in her apparel on such an
occasion, while her feelings induced her to lay aside
the use of the very few and simple personal ornaments,
which, on other occasions, she permitted herself to
wear. So that there occurred nothing in her external
appearance which could mark out to her father, with
anything like certainty, her intentions on this occasion.
The preparations for their humble
meal were that morning made in vain. The father
and daughter sat, each assuming the appearance of eating,
when the other’s eyes were turned to them, and
desisting from the effort with disgust, when the affectionate
imposture seemed no longer necessary.
At length these moments of constraint
were removed. The sound of St. Giles’s
heavy toll announced the hour previous to the commencement
of the trial; Jeanie arose, and with a degree of composure
for which she herself could not account, assumed her
plaid, and made her other preparations for a distant
walking. It was a strange contrast between the
firmness of her demeanour, and the vacillation and
cruel uncertainty of purpose indicated in all her
father’s motions; and one unacquainted with both
could scarcely have supposed that the former was,
in her ordinary habits of life, a docile, quiet, gentle,
and even timid country maiden, while her father, with
a mind naturally proud and strong, and supported by
religious opinions of a stern, stoical, and unyielding
character, had in his time undergone and withstood
the most severe hardships, and the most imminent peril,
without depression of spirit, or subjugation of his
constancy. The secret of this difference was,
that Jeanie’s mind had already anticipated the
line of conduct which she must adopt, with all its
natural and necessary consequences; while her father,
ignorant of every other circumstance, tormented himself
with imagining what the one sister might say or swear,
or what effect her testimony might have upon the awful
event of the trial.
He watched his daughter, with a faltering
and indecisive look, until she looked back upon him,
with a look of unutterable anguish, as she was about
to leave the apartment.
“My dear lassie,” said
he, “I will.” His action, hastily
and confusedly searching for his worsted mittans*
and staff, showed his purpose of accompanying her,
though his tongue failed distinctly to announce it.
* A kind of worsted gloves, used by the lower orders.
“Father,” said Jeanie,
replying rather to his action than his words, “ye
had better not.”
“In the strength of my God,”
answered Deans, assuming firmness, “I will go
forth.”
And, taking his daughter’s arm
under his, he began to walk from the door with a step
so hasty, that she was almost unable to keep up with
him. A trifling circumstance, but which marked
the perturbed state of his mind, checked his course.
“Your bonnet, father?”
said Jeanie, who observed he had come out with his
grey hairs uncovered. He turned back with a slight
blush on his cheek, being ashamed to have been detected
in an omission which indicated so much mental confusion,
assumed his large blue Scottish bonnet, and with a
step slower, but more composed, as if the circumstance,
had obliged him to summon up his resolution, and collect
his scattered ideas, again placed his daughter’s
arm under his, and resumed the way to Edinburgh.
The courts of justice were then, and
are still, held in what is called the Parliament Close,
or, according to modern phrase, Parliament Square,
and occupied the buildings intended for the accommodation
of the Scottish Estates. This edifice, though
in an imperfect and corrupted style of architecture,
had then a grave, decent, and, as it were, a judicial
aspect, which was at least entitled to respect from
its antiquity. For which venerable front, I observed,
on my last occasional visit to the metropolis, that
modern taste had substituted, at great apparent expense,
a pile so utterly inconsistent with every monument
of antiquity around, and in itself so clumsy at the
same time and fantastic, that it may be likened to
the decorations of Tom Errand the porter, in the Trip
to the Jubilee, when he appears bedizened with
the tawdry finery of Beau Clincher. Sed transeat
cum caeteris erroribus.
The small quadrangle, or Close, if
we may presume still to give it that appropriate,
though antiquated title, which at Lichfield, Salisbury,
and elsewhere, is properly applied to designate the
enclosure adjacent to a cathedral, already evinced
tokens of the fatal scene which was that day to be
acted. The soldiers of the City Guard were on
their posts, now enduring, and now rudely repelling
with the butts of their muskets, the motley crew who
thrust each other forward, to catch a glance at the
unfortunate object of trial, as she should pass from
the adjacent prison to the Court in which her fate
was to be determined. All must have occasionally
observed, with disgust, the apathy with which the vulgar
gaze on scenes of this nature, and how seldom, unless
when their sympathies are called forth by some striking
and extraordinary circumstance, the crowd evince any
interest deeper than that of callous, unthinking bustle,
and brutal curiosity. They laugh, jest, quarrel,
and push each other to and fro, with the same unfeeling
indifference as if they were assembled for some holiday
sport, or to see an idle procession. Occasionally,
however, this demeanour, so natural to the degraded
populace of a large town, is exchanged for a temporary
touch of human affections; and so it chanced on the
present occasion.
When Deans and his daughter presented
themselves in the Close, and endeavoured to make their
way forward to the door of the Court-house, they became
involved in the mob, and subject, of course, to their
insolence. As Deans repelled with some force the
rude pushes which he received on all sides, his figure
and antiquated dress caught the attention of the rabble,
who often show an intuitive sharpness in ascribing
the proper character from external appearance,—
“Ye’re
welcome, whigs,
Frae Bothwell briggs,”
sung one fellow (for the mob of Edinburgh
were at that time jacobitically disposed, probably
because that was the line of sentiment most diametrically
opposite to existing authority).
“Mess
David Williamson,
Chosen of twenty,
Ran up the pu’pit stair,
And sang Killiecrankie,”
chanted a siren, whose profession
might be guessed by her appearance. A tattered
caidie, or errand-porter, whom David Deans had jostled
in his attempt to extricate himself from the vicinity
of these scorners, exclaimed in a strong north-country
tone, “Ta deil ding out her Cameronian een—what
gies her titles to dunch gentlemans about?”
“Make room for the ruling elder,”
said yet another; “he comes to see a precious
sister glorify God in the Grassmarket!”
“Whisht; shame’s in ye,
sirs,” said the voice of a man very loudly,
which, as quickly sinking, said in a low but distinct
tone, “It’s her father and sister.”
All fell back to make way for the
sufferers; and all, even the very rudest and most
profligate, were struck with shame and silence.
In the space thus abandoned to them by the mob, Deans
stood, holding his daughter by the hand, and said
to her, with a countenance strongly and sternly expressive
of his internal emotion, “Ye hear with your ears,
and ye see with your eyes, where and to whom the backslidings
and defections of professors are ascribed by the scoffers.
Not to themselves alone, but to the kirk of which
they are members, and to its blessed and invisible
Head. Then, weel may we take wi’ patience
our share and portion of this outspreading reproach.”
The man who had spoken, no other than
our old friend, Dumbiedikes, whose mouth, like that
of the prophet’s ass, had been opened by the
emergency of the case, now joined them, and, with
his usual taciturnity, escorted them into the Court-house.
No opposition was offered to their entrance either
by the guards or doorkeepers; and it is even said that
one of the latter refused a shilling of civility-money
tendered him by the Laird of Dumbiedikes, who was
of opinion that “siller wad make a’ easy.”
But this last incident wants confirmation.
Admitted within the precincts of the
Court-house, they found the usual number of busy office-bearers,
and idle loiterers, who attend on these scenes by
choice, or from duty. Burghers gaped and stared;
young lawyers sauntered, sneered, and laughed, as
in the pit of the theatre; while others apart sat
on a bench retired, and reasoned highly, inter apices
juris, on the doctrines of constructive crime,
and the true import of the statute. The bench
was prepared for the arrival of the judges. The
jurors were in attendance. The crown-counsel,
employed in looking over their briefs and notes of
evidence, looked grave, and whispered with each other.
They occupied one side of a large table placed beneath
the bench; on the other sat the advocates, whom the
humanity of the Scottish law (in this particular more
liberal than that of the sister-country) not only
permits, but enjoins, to appear and assist with their
advice and skill all persons under trial. Mr.
Nichil Novit was seen actively instructing the counsel
for the panel (so the prisoner is called in Scottish
law-phraseology), busy, bustling, and important.
When they entered the Court-room, Deans asked the
Laird, in a tremulous whisper, “Where will she
sit?”
Dumbiedikes whispered Novit, who pointed
to a vacant space at the bar, fronting the judges,
and was about to conduct Deans towards it.
“No!” he said; “I
cannot sit by her—I cannot own her—not
as yet, at least—I will keep out of her
sight, and turn mine own eyes elsewhere—better
for us baith.”
Saddletree, whose repeated interference
with the counsel had procured him one or two rebuffs,
and a special request that he would concern himself
with his own matters, now saw with pleasure an opportunity
of playing the person of importance. He bustled
up to the poor old man, and proceeded to exhibit his
consequence, by securing, through his interest with
the bar-keepers and macers, a seat for Deans, in a
situation where he was hidden from the general eye
by the projecting corner of the bench.
“It’s gude to have a friend
at court,” he said, continuing his heartless
harangues to the passive auditor, who neither heard
nor replied to them; “few folk but mysell could
hae sorted ye out a seat like this—the Lords
will be here incontinent, and proceed instanter
to trial. They wunna fence the Court as they
do at the Circuit—the High Court of Justiciary
is aye fenced.—But, Lord’s sake, what’s
this o’t—Jeanie, ye are a cited witness—Macer,
this lass is a witness—she maun be enclosed—she
maun on nae account be at large.—Mr. Novit,
suldna Jeanie Deans be enclosed?”
Novit answered in the affirmative,
and offered to conduct Jeanie to the apartment, where,
according to the scrupulous practice of the Scottish
Court, the witnesses remain in readiness to be called
into Court to give evidence; and separated, at the
same time, from all who might influence their testimony,
or give them information concerning that which was
passing upon the trial.
“Is this necessary?” said
Jeanie, still reluctant to quit her father’s
hand.
“A matter of absolute needcessity,”
said Saddletree, “wha ever heard of witnesses
no being enclosed?”
“It is really a matter of necessity,”
said the younger counsellor, retained for her sister;
and Jeanie reluctantly followed the macer of the Court
to the place appointed.
“This, Mr. Deans,” said
Saddletree, “is ca’d sequestering a witness;
but it’s clean different (whilk maybe ye wadna
fund out o’ yoursell) frae sequestering ane’s
estate or effects, as in cases of bankruptcy.
I hae aften been sequestered as a witness, for the
Sheriff is in the use whiles to cry me in to witness
the declarations at precognitions, and so is Mr. Sharpitlaw;
but I was ne’er like to be sequestered o’
land and gudes but ance, and that was lang syne, afore
I was married. But whisht, whisht! here’s
the Court coming.”
As he spoke, the five Lords of Justiciary,
in their long robes of scarlet, faced with white,
and preceded by their mace-bearer, entered with the
usual formalities, and took their places upon the bench
of judgment.
The audience rose to receive them;
and the bustle occasioned by their entrance was hardly
composed, when a great noise and confusion of persons
struggling, and forcibly endeavouring to enter at the
doors of the Court-room, and of the galleries, announced
that the prisoner was about to be placed at the bar.
This tumult takes place when the doors, at first only
opened to those either having right to be present,
or to the better and more qualified ranks, are at
length laid open to all whose curiosity induces them
to be present on the occasion. With inflamed countenances
and dishevelled dresses, struggling with, and sometimes
tumbling over each other, in rushed the rude multitude,
while a few soldiers, forming, as it were, the centre
of the tide, could scarce, with all their efforts,
clear a passage for the prisoner to the place which
she was to occupy. By the authority of the Court,
and the exertions of its officers, the tumult among
the spectators was at length appeased, and the unhappy
girl brought forward, and placed betwixt two sentinels
with drawn bayonets, as a prisoner at the bar, where
she was to abide her deliverance for good or evil,
according to the issue of her trial.