“I come,” he
said, “my love, my life,
And—nature’s dearest
name—my wife:
Thy father’s house and friends
resign,
My home, my friends, my sire, are
thine.”
Logan.
The meeting of Jeanie and Butler,
under circumstances promising to crown an affection
so long delayed, was rather affecting, from its simple
sincerity than from its uncommon vehemence of feeling.
David Deans, whose practice was sometimes a little
different from his theory, appalled them at first,
by giving them the opinion of sundry of the suffering
preachers and champions of his younger days, that
marriage, though honourable by the laws of Scripture,
was yet a state over-rashly coveted by professors,
and specially by young ministers, whose desire, he
said, was at whiles too inordinate for kirks, stipends,
and wives, which had frequently occasioned over-ready
compliance with the general defections of the times.
He endeavoured to make them aware also, that hasty
wedlock had been the bane of many a savoury professor—that
the unbelieving wife had too often reversed the text
and perverted the believing husband—that
when the famous Donald Cargill, being then hiding in
Lee-Wood, in Lanarkshire, it being killing-time, did,
upon importunity, marry Robert Marshal of Starry Shaw,
he had thus expressed himself: “What hath
induced Robert to marry this woman? her ill will overcome
his good—he will not keep the way long—his
thriving days are done.” To the sad accomplishment
of which prophecy David said he was himself a living
witness, for Robert Marshal, having fallen into foul
compliances with the enemy, went home, and heard the
curates, declined into other steps of defection, and
became lightly esteemed. Indeed, he observed,
that the great upholders of the standard, Cargill,
Peden, Cameron, and Renwick, had less delight in tying
the bonds of matrimony than in any other piece of their
ministerial work; and although they would neither
dissuade the parties, nor refuse their office, they
considered the being called to it as an evidence of
indifference, on the part of those between whom it
was solemnised, to the many grievous things of the
day. Notwithstanding, however, that marriage
was a snare unto many, David was of opinion (as, indeed,
he had showed in his practice) that it was in itself
honourable, especially if times were such that honest
men could be secure against being shot, hanged, or
banished, and had ane competent livelihood to maintain
themselves, and those that might come after them.
“And, therefore,” as he concluded something
abruptly, addressing Jeanie and Butler, who, with faces
as high-coloured as crimson, had been listening to
his lengthened argument for and against the holy state
of matrimony, “I will leave you to your ain
cracks.”
As their private conversation, however
interesting to themselves, might probably be very
little so to the reader, so far as it respected their
present feelings and future prospects, we shall pass
it over, and only mention the information which Jeanie
received from Butler concerning her sister’s
elopement, which contained many particulars that she
had been unable to extract from her father.
Jeanie learned, therefore, that, for
three days after her pardon had arrived, Effie had
been the inmate of her father’s house at St.
Leonard’s—that the interviews betwixt
David and his erring child, which had taken place
before she was liberated from prison, had been touching
in the extreme; but Butler could not suppress his opinion,
that, when he was freed from the apprehension of losing
her in a manner so horrible, her father had tightened
the bands of discipline, so as, in some degree, to
gall the feelings, and aggravate the irritability of
a spirit naturally impatient and petulant, and now
doubly so from the sense of merited disgrace.
On the third night, Effie disappeared
from St. Leonard’s, leaving no intimation whatever
of the route she had taken. Butler, however, set
out in pursuit of her, and with much trouble traced
her towards a little landing-place, formed by a small
brook which enters the sea betwixt Musselburgh and
Edinburgh. This place, which has been since made
into a small harbour, surrounded by many villas and
lodging-houses, is now termed Portobello. At
this time it was surrounded by a waste common, covered
with furze, and unfrequented, save by fishing-boats,
and now and then a smuggling lugger. A vessel
of this description had been hovering in the firth
at the time of Effie’s elopement, and, as Butler
ascertained, a boat had come ashore in the evening
on which the fugitive had disappeared, and had carried
on board a female. As the vessel made sail immediately,
and landed no part of their cargo, there seemed little
doubt that they were accomplices of the notorious Robertson,
and that the vessel had only come into the firth to
carry off his paramour.
This was made clear by a letter which
Butler himself soon afterwards received by post, signed
E. D., but without bearing any date of place or time.
It was miserably ill written and spelt; sea-sickness
having apparently aided the derangement of Effie’s
very irregular orthography and mode of expression.
In this epistle, however, as in all that unfortunate
girl said or did, there was something to praise as
well as to blame. She said in her letter, “That
she could not endure that her father and her sister
should go into banishment, or be partakers of her
shame,—that if her burden was a heavy one,
it was of her own binding, and she had the more right
to bear it alone,—that in future they could
not be a comfort to her, or she to them, since every
look and word of her father put her in mind of her
transgression, and was like to drive her mad,—that
she had nearly lost her judgment during the three days
she was at St. Leonard’s—her father
meant weel by her, and all men, but he did not know
the dreadful pain he gave her in casting up her sins.
If Jeanie had been at hame, it might hae dune better—Jeanie
was ane, like the angels in heaven, that rather weep
for sinners, than reckon their transgressions.
But she should never see Jeanie ony mair, and that
was the thought that gave her the sairest heart of
a’ that had come and gane yet. On her bended
knees would she pray for Jeanie night and day, baith
for what she had done, and what she had scorned to
do, in her behalf; for what a thought would it have
been to her at that moment o’ time, if that
upright creature had made a fault to save her!
She desired her father would give Jeanie a’
the gear—her ain (i.e. Effie’s)
mother’s and a’—She had made
a deed, giving up her right, and it was in Mr. Novit’s
hand—Warld’s gear was henceforward
the least of her care, nor was it likely to be muckle
her mister—She hoped this would make it
easy for her sister to settle;” and immediately
after this expression, she wished Butler himself all
good things, in return for his kindness to her.
“For herself,” she said, “she kend
her lot would be a waesome ane, but it was of her
own framing, sae she desired the less pity. But,
for her friends’ satisfaction, she wished them
to know that she was gaun nae ill gate—that
they who had done her maist wrong were now willing
to do her what justice was in their power; and she
would, in some warldly respects, be far better off
than she deserved. But she desired her family
to remain satisfied with this assurance, and give themselves
no trouble in making farther inquiries after her.”
To David Deans and to Butler this
letter gave very little comfort; for what was to be
expected from this unfortunate girl’s uniting
her fate to that of a character so notorious as Robertson,
who they readily guessed was alluded to in the last
sentence, excepting that she should become the partner
and victim of his future crimes? Jeanie, who knew
George Staunton’s character and real rank, saw
her sister’s situation under a ray of better
hope. She augured well of the haste he had shown
to reclaim his interest in Effie, and she trusted
he had made her his wife. If so, it seemed improbable
that, with his expected fortune, and high connections,
he should again resume the life of criminal adventure
which he had led, especially since, as matters stood,
his life depended upon his keeping his own secret,
which could only be done by an entire change of his
habits, and particularly by avoiding all those who
had known the heir of Willingham under the character
of the audacious, criminal, and condemned Robertson.
She thought it most likely that the
couple would go abroad for a few years, and not return
to England until the affair of Porteous was totally
forgotten. Jeanie, therefore, saw more hopes for
her sister than Butler or her father had been able
to perceive; but she was not at liberty to impart
the comfort which she felt in believing that she would
be secure from the pressure of poverty, and in little
risk of being seduced into the paths of guilt.
She could not have explained this without making public
what it was essentially necessary for Effie’s
chance of comfort to conceal, the identity, namely,
of George Staunton and George Robertson. After
all, it was dreadful to think that Effie had united
herself to a man condemned for felony, and liable
to trial for murder, whatever might be his rank in
life, and the degree of his repentance. Besides,
it was melancholy to reflect, that, she herself being
in possession of the whole dreadful secret, it was
most probable he would, out of regard to his own feelings,
and fear for his safety, never again permit her to
see poor Effie. After perusing and re-perusing
her sister’s valedictory letter, she gave ease
to her feelings in a flood of tears, which Butler in
vain endeavoured to check by every soothing attention
in his power. She was obliged, however, at length
to look up and wipe her eyes, for her father, thinking
he had allowed the lovers time enough for conference,
was now advancing towards them from the Lodge, accompanied
by the Captain of Knockdunder, or, as his friends
called him for brevity’s sake, Duncan Knock,
a title which some youthful exploits had rendered peculiarly
appropriate.
This Duncan of Knockdunder was a person
of first-rate importance in the island of Roseneath,*
and the continental parishes of Knocktarlitie, Kilmun,
and so forth; nay, his influence extended as far as
Cowal, where, however, it was obscured by that of
another factor.
* [This is, more correctly speaking, a peninsula.]
The Tower of Knockdunder still occupies,
with its remains, a cliff overhanging the Holy Loch.
Duncan swore it had been a royal castle; if so, it
was one of the smallest, the space within only forming
a square of sixteen feet, and bearing therefore a
ridiculous proportion to the thickness of the walls,
which was ten feet at least. Such as it was,
however, it had long given the title of Captain, equivalent
to that of Chatellain, to the ancestors of Duncan,
who were retainers of the house of Argyle, and held
a hereditary jurisdiction under them, of little extent
indeed, but which had great consequence in their own
eyes, and was usually administered with a vigour somewhat
beyond the law.
The present representative of that
ancient family was a stout short man about fifty,
whose pleasure it was to unite in his own person the
dress of the Highlands and Lowlands, wearing on his
head a black tie-wig, surmounted by a fierce cocked-hat,
deeply guarded with gold lace, while the rest of his
dress consisted of the plaid and philabeg. Duncan
superintended a district which was partly Highland,
partly Lowland, and therefore might be supposed to
combine their national habits, in order to show his
impartiality to Trojan or Tyrian. The incongruity,
however, had a whimsical and ludicrous effect, as
it made his head and body look as if belonging to
different individuals; or, as some one said who had
seen the executions of the insurgent prisoners in
1715, it seemed as if some Jacobite enchanter, having
recalled the sufferers to life, had clapped, in his
haste, an Englishman’s head on a Highlander’s
body. To finish the portrait, the bearing of
the gracious Duncan was brief, bluff, and consequential,
and the upward turn of his short copper-coloured nose
indicated that he was somewhat addicted to wrath and
usquebaugh.
When this dignitary had advanced up
to Butler and to Jeanie, “I take the freedom,
Mr. Deans,” he said in a very consequential manner,
“to salute your daughter, whilk I presume this
young lass to be—I kiss every pretty girl
that comes to Roseneath, in virtue of my office.”
Having made this gallant speech, he took out his quid,
saluted Jeanie with a hearty smack, and bade her welcome
to Argyle’s country. Then addressing Butler,
he said, “Ye maun gang ower and meet the carle
ministers yonder the Morn, for they will want to do
your job, and synd it down with usquebaugh doubtless—they
seldom make dry wark in this kintra.”
“And the Laird”—said
David Deans, addressing Butler in farther explanation—
“The Captain, man,” interrupted
Duncan; “folk winna ken wha ye are speaking
aboot, unless ye gie shentlemens their proper title.”
“The Captain, then,” said
David, “assures me that the call is unanimous
on the part of the parishioners—a real harmonious
call, Reuben.”
“I pelieve,” said Duncan,
“it was as harmonious as could pe expected,
when the tae half o’ the bodies were clavering
Sassenach, and the t’other skirting Gaelic,
like sea-maws and clackgeese before a storm. Ane
wad hae needed the gift of tongues to ken preceesely
what they said—but I pelieve the best end
of it was, ’Long live MacCallummore and Knockdunder!’—And
as to its being an unanimous call, I wad be glad to
ken fat business the carles have to call ony thing
or ony body but what the Duke and mysell likes!”
“Nevertheless,” said Mr.
Butler, “if any of the parishioners have any
scruples, which sometimes happen in the mind of sincere
professors, I should be happy of an opportunity of
trying to remove”
“Never fash your peard about
it, man,” interrupted Duncan Knock—“Leave
it a’ to me.—Scruple! deil ane o’
them has been bred up to scruple onything that they’re
bidden to do. And if sic a thing suld happen as
ye speak o’, ye sall see the sincere professor,
as ye ca’ him, towed at the stern of my boat
for a few furlongs. I’ll try if the water
of the Haly Loch winna wash off scruples as weel as
fleas—Cot tam!”
The rest of Duncan’s threat
was lost in a growling gargling sort of sound, which
he made in his throat, and which menaced recusants
with no gentle means of conversion. David Deans
would certainly have given battle in defence of the
right of the Christian congregation to be consulted
in the choice of their own pastor, which, in his estimation,
was one of the choicest and most inalienable of their
privileges; but he had again engaged in close conversation
with Jeanie, and, with more interest than he was in
use to take in affairs foreign alike to his occupation
and to his religious tenets, was inquiring into the
particulars of her London journey. This was,
perhaps, fortunate for the newformed friendship betwixt
him and the Captain of Knockdunder, which rested, in
David’s estimation, upon the proofs he had given
of his skill in managing stock; but, in reality, upon
the special charge transmitted to Duncan from the
Duke and his agent, to behave with the utmost attention
to Deans and his family.
“And now, sirs,” said
Duncan, in a commanding tone, “I am to pray ye
a’ to come in to your supper, for yonder is
Mr. Archibald half famished, and a Saxon woman, that
looks as if her een were fleeing out o’ her head
wi’ fear and wonder, as if she had never seen
a shentleman in a philabeg pefore.”
“And Reuben Butler,” said
David, “will doubtless desire instantly to retire,
that he may prepare his mind for the exercise of to-morrow,
that his work may suit the day, and be an offering
of a sweet savour in the nostrils of the reverend
Presbytery!”
“Hout tout, man, it’s
but little ye ken about them,” interrupted the
Captain. “Teil a ane o’ them wad gie
the savour of the hot venison pasty which I smell”
(turning his squab nose up in the air) “a’
the way frae the Lodge, for a’ that Mr. Putler,
or you either, can say to them.”
David groaned; but judging he had
to do with a Gallio, as he said, did not think it
worth his while to give battle. They followed
the Captain to the house, and arranged themselves
with great ceremony round a well-loaded supper-table.
The only other circumstance of the evening worthy
to be recorded is, that Butler pronounced the blessing;
that Knockdunder found it too long, and David Deans
censured it as too short, from which the charitable
reader may conclude it was exactly the proper length.