Bind her quickly; or,
by this steel,
I’ll tell, although I truss for
company.
Fletcher.
The imperfect light which shone into
the window enabled Jeanie to see that there was scarcely
any chance of making her escape in that direction;
for the aperture was high in the wall, and so narrow,
that, could she have climbed up to it, she might well
doubt whether it would have permitted her to pass
her body through it. An unsuccessful attempt
to escape would be sure to draw down worse treatment
than she now received, and she, therefore, resolved
to watch her opportunity carefully ere making such
a perilous effort. For this purpose she applied
herself to the ruinous clay partition, which divided
the hovel in which she now was from the rest of the
waste barn. It was decayed and full of cracks
and chinks, one of which she enlarged with her fingers,
cautiously and without noise, until she could obtain
a plain view of the old hag and the taller ruffian,
whom they called Levitt, seated together beside the
decayed fire of charcoal, and apparently engaged in
close conference. She was at first terrified
by the sight; for the features of the old woman had
a hideous cast of hardened and inveterate malice and
ill-humour, and those of the man, though naturally
less unfavourable, were such as corresponded well
with licentious habits, and a lawless profession.
“But I remembered,” said
Jeanie, “my worthy fathers tales of a winter
evening, how he was confined with the blessed martyr,
Mr. James Renwick, who lifted up the fallen standard
of the true reformed Kirk of Scotland, after the worthy
and renowned Daniel Cameron, our last blessed banner-man,
had fallen among the swords of the wicked at Airsmoss,
and how the very hearts of the wicked malefactors
and murderers, whom they were confined withal, were
melted like wax at the sound of their doctrine:
and I bethought mysell, that the same help that was
wi’ them in their strait, wad be wi’ me
in mine, an I could but watch the Lord’s time
and opportunity for delivering my feet from their snare;
and I minded the Scripture of the blessed Psalmist,
whilk he insisteth on, as weel in the forty-second
as in the forty-third psalm—’Why art
thou cast down, O my soul, and why art thou disquieted
within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise
Him, who is the health of my countenance, and my God.’”
Strengthened in a mind naturally calm,
sedate, and firm, by the influence of religious confidence,
this poor captive was enabled to attend to, and comprehend,
a great part of an interesting conversation which passed
betwixt those into whose hands she had fallen, notwithstanding
that their meaning was partly disguised by the occasional
use of cant terms, of which Jeanie knew not the import,
by the low tone in which they spoke, and by their
mode of supplying their broken phrases by shrugs and
signs, as is usual amongst those of their disorderly
profession.
The man opened the conversation by
saying, “Now, dame, you see I am true to my
friend. I have not forgot that you planked
a chury,* which helped me through the bars of
the Castle of York, and I came to do your work without
asking questions; for one good turn deserves another.
* Concealed a knife.
But now that Madge, who is as loud
as Tom of Lincoln, is somewhat still, and this same
Tyburn Neddie is shaking his heels after the old nag,
why, you must tell me what all this is about, and
what’s to be done—for d—n
me if I touch the girl, or let her be touched, and
she with Jim Rat’s pass, too.”
“Thou art an honest lad, Frank,”
answered the old woman, “but e’en too
good for thy trade; thy tender heart will get thee
into trouble. I will see ye gang up Holborn Hill
backward, and a’ on the word of some silly loon
that could never hae rapped to ye had ye drawn your
knife across his weasand.”
“You may be balked there, old
one,” answered the robber; “I have known
many a pretty lad cut short in his first summer upon
the road, because he was something hasty with his
flats and sharps. Besides, a man would fain live
out his two years with a good conscience. So,
tell me what all this is about, and what’s to
be done for you that one can do decently?”
“Why, you must know, Frank—but
first taste a snap of right Hollands.”
She drew a flask from her pocket, and filled the fellow
a large bumper, which he pronounced to be the right
thing.—“You must know, then, Frank—wunna
ye mend your hand?” again offering the flask.
“No, no,—when a woman
wants mischief from you, she always begins by filling
you drunk. D—n all Dutch courage.
What I do I will do soberly—I’ll
last the longer for that too.”
“Well, then, you must know,”
resumed the old woman, without any further attempts
at propitiation, “that this girl is going to
London.”
Here Jeanie could only distinguish the word sister.
The robber answered in a louder tone,
“Fair enough that; and what the devil is your
business with it?”
“Business enough, I think.
If the b—queers the noose, that silly cull
will marry her.”
“And who cares if he does?” said the man.
“Who cares, ye donnard Neddie!
I care; and I will strangle her with my own hands,
rather than she should come to Madge’s preferment.”
“Madge’s preferment!
Does your old blind eyes see no farther than that?
If he is as you say, dye think he’ll ever marry
a moon-calf like Madge? Ecod, that’s a
good one—Marry Madge Wildfire
ha! ha!”
“Hark ye, ye crack-rope padder,
born beggar, and bred thief!” replied the hag,
“suppose he never marries the wench, is that
a reason he should marry another, and that other to
hold my daughter’s place, and she crazed, and
I a beggar, and all along of him? But I know that
of him will hang him—I know that of him
will hang him, if he had a thousand lives—I
know that of him will hang—hang—hang
him!”
She grinned as she repeated and dwelt
upon the fatal monosyllable, with the emphasis of
a vindictive fiend.
“Then why don’t you hang—hang—hang
him?” said Frank, repeating her words contemptuously.
“There would be more sense in that, than in
wreaking yourself here upon two wenches that have done
you and your daughter no ill.”
“No ill?” answered the
old woman—“and he to marry this jail-bird,
if ever she gets her foot loose!”
“But as there is no chance of
his marrying a bird of your brood, I cannot, for my
soul, see what you have to do with all this,”
again replied the robber, shrugging his shoulders.
“Where there is aught to be got, I’ll
go as far as my neighbours, but I hate mischief for
mischiefs sake.”
“And would you go nae length
for revenge?” said the hag—“for
revenge—the sweetest morsel to the mouth
that over was cooked in hell!”
“The devil may keep it for his
own eating, then,” said the robber; “for
hang me if I like the sauce he dresses it with.”
“Revenge!” continued the
old woman; “why, it is the best reward the devil
gives us for our time here and hereafter. I have
wrought hard for it—I have suffered for
it—and I have sinned for it—and
I will have it,—or there is neither justice
in heaven or in hell!”
Levitt had by this time lighted a
pipe, and was listening with great composure to the
frantic and vindictive ravings of the old hag.
He was too much, hardened by his course of life to
be shocked with them—too indifferent, and
probably too stupid, to catch any part of their animation
or energy. “But, mother,” he said,
after a pause, “still I say, that if revenge
is your wish, you should take it on the young fellow
himself.”
“I wish I could,” she
said, drawing in her breath, with the eagerness of
a thirsty person while mimicking the action of drinking—“I
wish I could—but no—I cannot—I
cannot.”
“And why not?—You
would think little of peaching and hanging him for
this Scotch affair.—Rat me, one might have
milled the Bank of England, and less noise about it.”
“I have nursed him at this withered
breast,” answered the old woman, folding her
hands on her bosom, as if pressing an infant to it,
“and, though he has proved an adder to me—though
he has been the destruction of me and mine—though
he has made me company for the devil, if there be
a devil, and food for hell, if there be such a place,
yet I cannot take his life.—No, I cannot,”
she continued, with an appearance of rage against
herself; “I have thought of it—I have
tried it—but, Francis Levitt, I canna gang
through wi’t—Na, na—he
was the first bairn I ever nurst—ill I
had been—and man can never ken what woman
feels for the bairn she has held first to her bosom!”
“To be sure,” said Levitt,
“we have no experience; but, mother, they say
you ha’n’t been so kind to other bairns,
as you call them, that have come in your way.—Nay,
d—n me, never lay your hand on the whittle,
for I am captain and leader here, and I will have
no rebellion.”
The hag, whose first motion had been,
upon hearing the question, to grasp the haft of a
large knife, now unclosed her hand, stole it away from
the weapon, and suffered it to fall by her side, while
she proceeded with a sort of smile—“Bairns!
ye are joking, lad—wha wad touch bairns?
Madge, puir thing, had a misfortune wi’ ane—and
the t’other”—Here her voice
sunk so much, that Jeanie, though anxiously upon the
watch, could not catch a word she said, until she
raised her tone at the conclusion of the sentence—“So
Madge, in her daffin’, threw it into the Nor’-lock,
I trow.”
Madge, whose slumbers, like those
of most who labour under mental malady, had been short,
and were easily broken, now made herself heard from
her place of repose.
“Indeed, mother, that’s
a great lie, for I did nae sic thing.”
“Hush, thou hellicat devil,”
said her mother—“By Heaven! the other
wench will be waking too.”
“That may be dangerous,”
said Frank; and he rose, and followed Meg Murdockson
across the floor.
“Rise,” said the hag to
her daughter, “or I sall drive the knife between
the planks into the Bedlam back of thee!”
Apparently she at the same time seconded
her threat by pricking her with the point of a knife,
for Madge, with a faint scream, changed her place,
and the door opened.
[Illustration: Jennie in the Outlaws Hut—80]
The old woman held a candle in one
hand, and a knife in the other. Levitt appeared
behind her, whether with a view of preventing, or assisting
her in any violence she might meditate, could not
be well guessed. Jeanie’s presence of mind
stood her friend in this dreadful crisis. She
had resolution enough to maintain the attitude and
manner of one who sleeps profoundly, and to regulate
even her breathing, notwithstanding the agitation
of instant terror, so as to correspond with her attitude.
The old woman passed the light across
her eyes; and although Jeanie’s fears were so
powerfully awakened by this movement, that she often
declared afterwards, that she thought she saw the figures
of her destined murderers through her closed eyelids,
she had still the resolution to maintain the feint,
on which her safety perhaps depended.
Levitt looked at her with fixed attention;
he then turned the old woman out of the place, and
followed her himself. Having regained the outward
apartment, and seated themselves, Jeanie heard the
highwayman say, to her no small relief, “She’s
as fast as if she were in Bedfordshire.—Now,
old Meg, d—n me if I can understand a glim
of this story of yours, or what good it will do you
to hang the one wench and torment the other; but, rat
me, I will be true to my friend, and serve ye the way
ye like it. I see it will be a bad job; but I
do think I could get her down to Surfleet on the Wash,
and so on board Tom Moonshine’s neat lugger,
and keep her out of the way three or four weeks, if
that will please ye—But d—n me
if any one shall harm her, unless they have a mind
to choke on a brace of blue plums.—It’s
a cruel, bad job, and I wish you and it, Meg, were
both at the devil.”
“Never mind, hinny Levitt,”
said the old woman; “you are a ruffler, and
will have a’ your ain gate—She shanna
gang to heaven an hour sooner for me; I carena whether
she live or die—it’s her sister—ay,
her sister!”
“Well, we’ll say no more
about it; I hear Tom coming in. We’ll couch
a hogshead,* and so better had you.”
* Lay ourselves down to sleep.
They retired to repose accordingly,
and all was silent in this asylum of iniquity.
Jeanie lay for a long time awake.
At break of day she heard the two ruffians leave the
barn, after whispering to the old woman for some time.
The sense that she was now guarded by persons of her
own sex gave her some confidence, and irresistible
lassitude at length threw her into slumber.
When the captive awakened, the sun
was high in heaven, and the morning considerably advanced.
Madge Wildfire was still in the hovel which had served
them for the night, and immediately bid her good-morning,
with her usual air of insane glee. “And
dye ken, lass,” said Madge, “there’s
queer things chanced since ye hae been in the land
of Nod. The constables hae been here, woman,
and they met wi’ my minnie at the door, and they
whirl’d her awa to the Justice’s about
the man’s wheat.—Dear! thae English
churls think as muckle about a blade of wheat or grass,
as a Scotch laird does about his maukins and his muir-poots.
Now, lass, if ye like, we’ll play them a fine
jink; we will awa out and take a walk—they
will mak unco wark when they miss us, but we can easily
be back by dinner time, or before dark night at ony
rate, and it will be some frolic and fresh air.—But
maybe ye wad like to take some breakfast, and then
lie down again? I ken by mysell, there’s
whiles I can sit wi’ my head in my hand the
haill day, and havena a word to cast at a dog—and
other whiles, that I canna sit still a moment.
That’s when the folk think me warst, but I am
aye canny eneugh—ye needna be feared to
walk wi’ me.”
Had Madge Wildfire been the most raging
lunatic, instead of possessing a doubtful, uncertain,
and twilight sort of rationality, varying, probably,
from the influence of the most trivial causes, Jeanie
would hardly have objected to leave a place of captivity,
where she had so much to apprehend. She eagerly
assured Madge that she had no occasion for further
sleep, no desire whatever for eating; and, hoping internally
that she was not guilty of sin in doing so, she flattered
her keeper’s crazy humour for walking in the
woods.
“It’s no a’thegither
for that neither,” said poor Madge; “but
I am judging ye will wun the better out o’ thae
folk’s hands; no that they are a’thegither
bad folk neither, but they have queer ways wi’
them, and I whiles dinna think it has ever been weel
wi’ my mother and me since we kept sic-like
company.”
With the haste, the joy, the fear,
and the hope of a liberated captive, Jeanie snatched
up her little bundle, followed Madge into the free
air, and eagerly looked round her for a human habitation;
but none was to be seen. The ground was partly
cultivated, and partly left in its natural state,
according as the fancy of the slovenly agriculturists
had decided. In its natural state it was waste,
in some places covered with dwarf trees and bushes,
in others swamp, and elsewhere firm and dry downs or
pasture grounds.
Jeanie’s active mind next led
her to conjecture which way the high-road lay, whence
she had been forced. If she regained that public
road, she imagined she must soon meet some person,
or arrive at some house, where she might tell her
story, and request protection. But, after a glance
around her, she saw with regret that she had no means
whatever of directing her course with any degree of
certainty, and that she was still in dependence upon
her crazy companion. “Shall we not walk
upon the high-road?” said she to Madge, in such
a tone as a nurse uses to coax a child. “It’s
brawer walking on the road than amang thae wild bushes
and whins.”
Madge, who was walking very fast,
stopped at this question, and looked at Jeanie with
a sudden and scrutinising glance, that seemed to indicate
complete acquaintance with her purpose. “Aha,
lass!” she exclaimed, “are ye gaun to
guide us that gate?—Ye’ll be for making
your heels save your head, I am judging.”
Jeanie hesitated for a moment, on
hearing her companion thus express herself, whether
she had not better take the hint, and try to outstrip
and get rid of her. But she knew not in which
direction to fly; she was by no means sure that she
would prove the swiftest, and perfectly conscious
that in the event of her being pursued and overtaken,
she would be inferior to the madwoman in strength.
She therefore gave up thoughts for the present of
attempting to escape in that manner, and, saying a
few words to allay Madge’s suspicions, she followed
in anxious apprehension the wayward path by which
her guide thought proper to lead her. Madge,
infirm of purpose, and easily reconciled to the present
scene, whatever it was, began soon to talk with her
usual diffuseness of ideas.
“It’s a dainty thing to
be in the woods on a fine morning like this! I
like it far better than the town, for there isna a
wheen duddie bairns to be crying after ane, as if
ane were a warld’s wonder, just because ane
maybe is a thought bonnier and better put-on than their
neighbours—though, Jeanie, ye suld never
be proud o’ braw claiths, or beauty neither—wae’s
me! they’re but a snare—I ance thought
better o’them, and what came o’t?”
“Are ye sure ye ken the way
ye are taking us?” said Jeanie, who began to
imagine that she was getting deeper into the woods
and more remote from the high-road.
“Do I ken the road?—Wasna
I mony a day living here, and what for shouldna I
ken the road? I might hae forgotten, too, for
it was afore my accident; but there are some things
ane can never forget, let them try it as muckle as
they like.”
By this time they had gained the deepest
part of a patch of woodland. The trees were a
little separated from each other, and at the foot of
one of them, a beautiful poplar, was a hillock of
moss, such as the poet of Grasmere has described.
So soon as she arrived at this spot, Madge Wildfire,
joining her hands above her head with a loud scream
that resembled laughter, flung herself all at once
upon the spot, and remained lying there motionless.
Jeanie’s first idea was to take
the opportunity of flight; but her desire to escape
yielded for a moment to apprehension for the poor insane
being, who, she thought, might perish for want of
relief. With an effort, which in her circumstances,
might be termed heroic, she stooped down, spoke in
a soothing tone, and endeavoured to raise up the forlorn
creature. She effected this with difficulty,
and as she placed her against the tree in a sitting
posture, she observed with surprise, that her complexion,
usually florid, was now deadly pale, and that her face
was bathed in tears. Notwithstanding her own
extreme danger, Jeanie was affected by the situation
of her companion; and the rather, that, through the
whole train of her wavering and inconsistent state
of mind and line of conduct, she discerned a general
colour of kindness towards herself, for which she
felt gratitude.
“Let me alane!—let
me alane!” said the poor young woman, as her
paroxysm of sorrow began to abate—“Let
me alane—it does me good to weep. I
canna shed tears but maybe ance or twice a year, and
I aye come to wet this turf with them, that the flowers
may grow fair, and the grass may be green.”
“But what is the matter with
you?” said Jeanie—“Why do you
weep so bitterly?”
“There’s matter enow,”
replied the lunatic,—“mair than ae
puir mind can bear, I trow. Stay a bit, and I’ll
tell you a’ about it; for I like ye, Jeanie
Deans—a’body spoke weel about ye when
we lived in the Pleasaunts— And I mind
aye the drink o’ milk ye gae me yon day, when
I had been on Arthur’s Seat for four-and-twenty
hours, looking for the ship that somebody was sailing
in.”
These words recalled to Jeanie’s
recollection, that, in fact, she had been one morning
much frightened by meeting a crazy young woman near
her father’s house at an early hour, and that,
as she appeared to be harmless, her apprehension had
been changed into pity, and she had relieved the unhappy
wanderer with some food, which she devoured with the
haste of a famished person. The incident, trifling
in itself, was at present of great importance, if
it should be found to have made a favourable and permanent
impression in her favour on the mind of the object
of her charity.
“Yes,” said Madge, “I’ll
tell ye a’ about it, for ye are a decent man’s
daughter—Douce Davie Deans, ye ken—and
maybe ye’ll can teach me to find out the narrow
way, and the straight path, for I have been burning
bricks in Egypt, and walking through the weary wilderness
of Sinai, for lang and mony a day. But whenever
I think about mine errors, I am like to cover my lips
for shame.”—Here she looked up and
smiled.—“It’s a strange thing
now—I hae spoke mair gude words to you in
ten minutes, than I wad speak to my mother in as mony
years—it’s no that I dinna think on
them—and whiles they are just at my tongue’s
end, but then comes the devil, and brushes my lips
with his black wing, and lays his broad black loof
on my mouth—for a black loof it is, Jeanie—and
sweeps away a’ my gude thoughts, and dits up
my gude words, and pits a wheen fule sangs and idle
vanities in their place.”
“Try, Madge,” said Jeanie,—“try
to settle your mind and make your breast clean, and
you’ll find your heart easier.—Just
resist the devil, and he will flee from you—and
mind that, as my worthy father tells me, there is
nae devil sae deceitfu’ as our ain wandering
thoughts.”
“And that’s true too,
lass,” said Madge, starting up; “and I’ll
gang a gate where the devil daurna follow me; and
it’s a gate that you will like dearly to gang—but
I’ll keep a fast haud o’ your arm, for
fear Apollyon should stride across the path, as he
did in the Pilgrim’s Progress.”
Accordingly she got up, and, taking
Jeanie by the arm, began to walk forward at a great
pace; and soon, to her companion’s no small joy,
came into a marked path, with the meanders of which
she seemed perfectly acquainted. Jeanie endeavoured
to bring her back to the confessional, but the fancy
was gone by. In fact, the mind of this deranged
being resembled nothing so much as a quantity of dry
leaves, which may for a few minutes remain still,
but are instantly discomposed and put in motion by
the first casual breath of air. She had now got
John Bunyan’s parable into her head, to the
exclusion of everything else, and on she went with
great volubility.
“Did ye never read the Pilgrim’s
Progress? And you shall be the woman, Christiana,
and I will be the maiden, Mercy—for ye ken
Mercy was of the fairer countenance, and the more
alluring than her companion—and if I had
my little messan dog here, it would be Great-heart,
their guide, ye ken, for he was e’en as bauld,
that he wad bark at ony thing twenty times his size;
and that was e’en the death of him, for he bit
Corporal MacAlpine’s heels ae morning when they
were hauling me to the guard-house, and Corporal MacAlpine
killed the bit faithfu’ thing wi’ his
Lochaber axe—deil pike the Highland banes
o’ him.”
“O fie! Madge,” said
Jeanie, “ye should not speak such words.”
“It’s very true,”
said Madge, shaking her head; “but then I maunna
think o’ my puir bit doggie, Snap, when I saw
it lying dying in the gutter. But it’s
just as weel, for it suffered baith cauld and hunger
when it was living, and in the grave there is rest
for a’ things—rest for the doggie,
and my puir bairn, and me.”
“Your bairn?” said Jeanie,
conceiving that by speaking on such a topic, supposing
it to be a real one, she could not fail to bring her
companion to a more composed temper.
She was mistaken, however, for Madge
coloured, and replied with some anger, “My
bairn? ay, to be sure, my bairn. Whatfor shouldna
I hae a bairn and lose a bairn too, as weel as your
bonnie tittie, the Lily of St. Leonard’s?”
The answer struck Jeanie with some
alarm, and she was anxious to soothe the irritation
she had unwittingly given occasion to. “I
am very sorry for your misfortune”
“Sorry! what wad ye be sorry
for?” answered Madge. “The bairn was
a blessing—that is, Jeanie, it wad hae
been a blessing if it hadna been for my mother; but
my mother’s a queer woman.—Ye see,
there was an auld carle wi’ a bit land, and
a gude clat o’ siller besides, just the very
picture of old Mr. Feeblemind or Mr. Ready-to-halt,
that Great-heart delivered from Slaygood the giant,
when he was rifling him and about to pick his bones,
for Slaygood was of the nature of the flesh-eaters—and
Great-heart killed Giant Despair too—but
I am doubting Giant Despair’s come alive again,
for a’ the story book—I find him busy
at my heart whiles.”
“Weel, and so the auld carle,”
said Jeanie, for she was painfully interested in getting
to the truth of Madge’s history, which she could
not but suspect was in some extraordinary way linked
and entwined with the fate of her sister. She
was also desirous, if possible, to engage her companion
in some narrative which might be carried on in a lower
tone of voice, for she was in great apprehension lest
the elevated notes of Madge’s conversation should
direct her mother or the robbers in search of them.
“And so the auld carle,”
said Madge, repeating her words—“I
wish ye had seen him stoiting about, aff ae leg on
to the other, wi’ a kind o’ dot-and-go-one
sort o’ motion, as if ilk ane o’ his twa
legs had belanged to sindry folk—but Gentle
George could take him aff brawly—Eh, as
I used to laugh to see George gang hip-hop like him!—I
dinna ken, I think I laughed heartier then than what
I do now, though maybe no just sae muckle.”
“And who was Gentle George?”
said Jeanie, endeavouring to bring her back to her
story.
“O, he was Geordie Robertson,
ye ken, when he was in Edinburgh; but that’s
no his right name neither—His name is—But
what is your business wi’ his name?” said
she, as if upon sudden recollection, “What have
ye to do asking for folk’s names?—Have
ye a mind I should scour my knife between your ribs,
as my mother says?”
As this was spoken with a menacing
tone and gesture, Jeanie hastened to protest her total
innocence of purpose in the accidental question which
she had asked, and Madge Wildfire went on somewhat
pacified.
“Never ask folk’s names,
Jeanie—it’s no civil—I
hae seen half-a-dozen o’ folk in my mother’s
at ance, and ne’er ane a’ them ca’d
the ither by his name; and Daddie Ratton says, it
is the most uncivil thing may be, because the bailie
bodies are aye asking fashions questions, when ye saw
sic a man, or sic a man; and if ye dinna ken their
names, ye ken there can be nae mair speerd about it.”
“In what strange school,”
thought Jeanie to herself, “has this poor creature
been bred up, where such remote precautions are taken
against the pursuits of justice? What would my
father or Reuben Butler think if I were to tell them
there are sic folk in the world? And to abuse
the simplicity of this demented creature! Oh,
that I were but safe at hame amang mine ain leal and
true people! and I’ll bless God, while I have
breath, that placed me amongst those who live in His
fear, and under the shadow of His wing.”
She was interrupted by the insane
laugh of Madge Wildfire, as she saw a magpie hop across
the path.
“See there!—that
was the gate my auld joe used to cross the country,
but no just sae lightly—he hadna wings
to help his auld legs, I trow; but I behoved to have
married him for a’ that, Jeanie, or my mother
wad hae been the dead o’ me. But then came
in the story of my poor bairn, and my mother thought
he wad be deaved wi’ it’s skirling, and
she pat it away in below the bit bourock of turf yonder,
just to be out o’ the gate; and I think she
buried my best wits with it, for I have never been
just mysell since. And only think, Jeanie, after
my mother had been at a’ these pains, the auld
doited body Johnny Drottle turned up his nose, and
wadna hae aught to say to me! But it’s
little I care for him, for I have led a merry life
ever since, and ne’er a braw gentleman looks
at me but ye wad think he was gaun to drop off his
horse for mere love of me. I have ken’d
some o’ them put their hand in their pocket,
and gie me as muckle as sixpence at a time, just for
my weel-faured face.”
This speech gave Jeanie a dark insight
into Madge’s history. She had been courted
by a wealthy suitor, whose addresses her mother had
favoured, notwithstanding the objection of old age
and deformity. She had been seduced by some profligate,
and, to conceal her shame and promote the advantageous
match she had planned, her mother had not hesitated
to destroy the offspring of their intrigue. That
the consequence should be the total derangement of
amind which was constitutionally unsettled by giddiness
and vanity, was extremely natural; and such was, in
fact, the history of Madge Wildfire’s insanity.