What see you there,
That hath so cowarded and chased your
blood
Out of appearance?
Henry the Fifth.
We are under the necessity of returning
to Edinburgh, where the General Assembly was now sitting.
It is well known, that some Scottish nobleman is usually
deputed as High Commissioner, to represent the person
of the King in this convocation; that he has allowances
for the purpose of maintaining a certain outward show
and solemnity, and supporting the hospitality of the
representative of Majesty. Whoever are distinguished
by rank, or office, in or near the capital, usually
attend the morning levees of the Lord Commissioner,
and walk with him in procession to the place where
the Assembly meets.
The nobleman who held this office
chanced to be particularly connected with Sir George
Staunton, and it was in his train that he ventured
to tread the High Street of Edinburgh for the first
time since the fatal night of Porteous’s execution.
Walking at the right hand of the representative of
Sovereignty, covered with lace and embroidery, and
with all the paraphernalia of wealth and rank, the
handsome though wasted figure of the English stranger
attracted all eyes. Who could have recognised
in a form so aristocratic the plebeian convict, that,
disguised in the rags of Madge Wildfire, had led the
formidable rioters to their destined revenge?
There was no possibility that this could happen, even
if any of his ancient acquaintances, a race of men
whose lives are so brief, had happened to survive
the span commonly allotted to evil-doers. Besides,
the whole affair had long fallen asleep, with the
angry passions in which it originated. Nothing
is more certain than that persons known to have had
a share in that formidable riot, and to have fled
from Scotland on that account, had made money abroad,
returned to enjoy it in their native country, and
lived and died undisturbed by the law.
See Arnot’s Criminal Trials, 4to ed.
p. 235.
The forbearance of the magistrate
was, in these instances, wise, certainly, and just;
for what good impression could be made on the public
mind by punishment, when the memory of the offence
was obliterated, and all that was remembered was the
recent inoffensive, or perhaps exemplary conduct of
the offender?
Sir George Staunton might, therefore,
tread the scene of his former audacious exploits,
free from the apprehension of the law, or even of
discovery or suspicion. But with what feelings
his heart that day throbbed, must be left to those
of the reader to imagine. It was an object of
no common interest which had brought him to encounter
so many painful remembrances.
In consequence of Jeanie’s letter
to Lady Staunton, transmitting the confession, he
had visited the town of Carlisle, and had found Archdeacon
Fleming still alive, by whom that confession had been
received. This reverend gentleman, whose character
stood deservedly very high, he so far admitted into
his confidence, as to own himself the father of the
unfortunate infant which had been spirited away by
Madge Wildfire, representing the intrigue as a matter
of juvenile extravagance on his own part, for which
he was now anxious to atone, by tracing, if possible,
what had become of the child. After some recollection
of the circumstances, the clergyman was able to call
to memory, that the unhappy woman had written a letter
to George Staunton, Esq., younger, Rectory, Willingham,
by Grantham; that he had forwarded it to the address
accordingly, and that it had been returned, with a
note from the Reverend Mr. Staunton, Rector of Willingham,
saying, he knew no such person as him to whom the
letter was addressed. As this had happened just
at the time when George had, for the last time, absconded
from his father’s house to carry off Effie,
he was at no loss to account for the cause of the
resentment, under the influence of which his father
had disowned him. This was another instance in
which his ungovernable temper had occasioned his misfortune;
had he remained at Willingham but a few days longer,
he would have received Margaret Murdockson’s
letter, in which were exactly described the person
and haunts of the woman, Annaple Bailzou, to whom
she had parted with the infant. It appeared that
Meg Murdockson had been induced to make this confession,
less from any feelings of contrition, than from the
desire of obtaining, through George Staunton or his
father’s means, protection and support for her
daughter Madge. Her letter to George Staunton
said, “That while the writer lived, her daughter
would have needed nought from any body, and that she
would never have meddled in these affairs, except
to pay back the ill that George had done to her and
hers. But she was to die, and her daughter would
be destitute, and without reason to guide her.
She had lived in the world long enough to know that
people did nothing for nothing;—so she had
told George Staunton all he could wish to know about
his wean, in hopes he would not see the demented young
creature he had ruined perish for want. As for
her motives for not telling them sooner, she had a
long account to reckon for in the next world, and
she would reckon for that too.”
The clergyman said that Meg had died
in the same desperate state of mind, occasionally
expressing some regret about the child which was lost,
but oftener sorrow that the mother had not been hanged—her
mind at once a chaos of guilt, rage, and apprehension
for her daughter’s future safety; that instinctive
feeling of parental anxiety which she had in common
with the she-wolf and lioness, being the last shade
of kindly affection that occupied a breast equally
savage.
The melancholy catastrophe of Madge
Wildfire was occasioned by her taking the confusion
of her mother’s execution, as affording an opportunity
of leaving the workhouse to which the clergyman had
sent her, and presenting herself to the mob in their
fury, to perish in the way we have already seen.
When Dr. Fleming found the convict’s letter was
returned from Lincolnshire, he wrote to a friend in
Edinburgh, to inquire into the fate of the unfortunate
girl whose child had been stolen, and was informed
by his correspondent, that she had been pardoned,
and that, with all her family, she had retired to
some distant part of Scotland, or left the kingdom
entirely. And here the matter rested, until, at
Sir George Staunton’s application, the clergyman
looked out, and produced Margaret Murdockson’s
returned letter, and the other memoranda which he had
kept concerning the affair.
Whatever might be Sir George Staunton’s
feelings in ripping up this miserable history, and
listening to the tragical fate of the unhappy girl
whom he had ruined, he had so much of his ancient wilfulness
of disposition left, as to shut his eyes on everything,
save the prospect which seemed to open itself of recovering
his son. It was true, it would be difficult to
produce him, without telling much more of the history
of his birth, and the misfortunes of his parents,
than it was prudent to make known. But let him
once be found, and, being found, let him but prove
worthy of his father’s protection, and many ways
might be fallen upon to avoid such risk. Sir
George Staunton was at liberty to adopt him as his
heir, if he pleased, without communicating the secret
of his birth; or an Act of Parliament might be obtained,
declaring him legitimate, and allowing him the name
and arms of his father. He was indeed already
a legitimate child according to the law of Scotland,
by the subsequent marriage of his parents. Wilful
in everything, Sir George’s sole desire now
was to see this son, even should his recovery bring
with it a new series of misfortunes, as dreadful as
those which followed on his being lost.
But where was the youth who might
eventually be called to the honours and estates of
this ancient family? On what heath was he wandering,
and shrouded by what mean disguise? Did he gain
his precarious bread by some petty trade, by menial
toil, by violence, or by theft? These were questions
on which Sir George’s anxious investigations
could obtain no light. Many remembered that Annaple
Bailzou wandered through the country as a beggar and
fortune-teller, or spae-wife—some remembered
that she had been seen with an infant in 1737 or 1738,—but
for more than ten years she had not travelled that
district; and that she had been heard to say she was
going to a distant part of Scotland, of which country
she was a native. To Scotland, therefore, came
Sir George Staunton, having parted with his lady at
Glasgow; and his arrival at Edinburg happening to
coincide with the sitting of the General Assembly of
the Kirk, his acquaintance with the nobleman who held
the office of Lord High Commissioner forced him more
into public than suited either his views or inclinations.
At the public table of this nobleman,
Sir George Staunton was placed next to a clergyman
of respectable appearance, and well-bred, though plain
demeanour, whose name he discovered to be Butler.
It had been no part of Sir George’s plan to
take his brother-in-law into his confidence, and he
had rejoiced exceedingly in the assurances he received
from his wife, that Mrs. Butler, the very soul of
integrity and honour, had never suffered the account
he had given of himself at Willingham Rectory to transpire,
even to her husband. But he was not sorry to have
an opportunity to converse with so near a connection
without being known to him, and to form a judgment
of his character and understanding. He saw much,
and heard more, to raise Butler very high in his opinion.
He found he was generally respected by those of his
own profession, as well as by the laity who had seats
in the Assembly. He had made several public appearances
in the Assembly, distinguished by good sense, candour,
and ability; and he was followed and admired as a
sound, and, at the same time, an eloquent preacher.
This was all very satisfactory to
Sir George Staunton’s pride, which had revolted
at the idea of his wife’s sister being obscurely
married. He now began, on the contrary, to think
the connection so much better than he expected, that,
if it should be necessary to acknowledge it, in consequence
of the recovery of his son, it would sound well enough
that Lady Staunton had a sister, who, in the decayed
state of the family, had married a Scottish clergyman,
high in the opinion of his countrymen, and a leader
in the church.
It was with these feelings, that,
when the Lord High Commissioner’s company broke
up, Sir George Staunton, under pretence of prolonging
some inquiries concerning the constitution of the
Church of Scotland, requested Butler to go home to
his lodgings in the Lawnmarket, and drink a cup of
coffee. Butler agreed to wait upon him, providing
Sir George would permit him, in passing, to call at
a friend’s house where he resided, and make
his apology for not coming to partake her tea.
They proceeded up the High Street, entered the Krames,
and passed the begging-box, placed to remind those
at liberty of the distresses of the poor prisoners.
Sir George paused there one instant, and next day a
L20 note was found in that receptacle for public charity.
When he came up to Butler again, he
found him with his eyes fixed on the entrance of the
Tolbooth, and apparently in deep thought.
“That seems a very strong door,”
said Sir George, by way of saying something.
“It is so, sir,” said
Butler, turning off and beginning to walk forward,
“but it was my misfortune at one time to see
it prove greatly too weak.”
At this moment, looking at his companion,
he asked him whether he felt himself ill? and Sir
George Staunton admitted, that he had been so foolish
as to eat ice, which sometimes disagreed with him.
With kind officiousness, that would not be gainsaid,
and ere he could find out where he was going, Butler
hurried Sir George into the friend’s house,
near to the prison, in which he himself had lived since
he came to town, being, indeed, no other than that
of our old friend Bartoline Saddletree, in which Lady
Staunton had served a short noviciate as a shop-maid.
This recollection rushed on her husband’s mind,
and the blush of shame which it excited overpowered
the sensation of fear which had produced his former
paleness. Good Mrs. Saddletree, however, bustled
about to receive the rich English baronet as the friend
of Mr. Butler, and requested an elderly female in
a black gown to sit still, in a way which seemed to
imply a wish, that she would clear the way for her
betters. In the meanwhile, understanding the
state of the case, she ran to get some cordial waters,
sovereign, of course, in all cases of faintishness
whatsoever. During her absence, her visitor, the
female in black, made some progress out of the room,
and might have left it altogether without particular
observation, had she not stumbled at the threshold,
so near Sir George Staunton, that he, in point of
civility, raised her and assisted her to the door.
“Mrs. Porteous is turned very
doited now, puir body,” said Mrs. Saddletree,
as she returned with her bottle in her hand—“She
is no sae auld, but she got a sair back-cast wi’
the slaughter o’ her husband—Ye had
some trouble about that job, Mr. Butler.—I
think, sir,” to Sir George, “ye had better
drink out the haill glass, for to my een ye look waur
than when ye came in.”
And, indeed, he grew as pale as a
corpse, on recollecting who it was that his arm had
so lately supported—the widow whom he had
so large a share in making such.
“It is a prescribed job that
case of Porteous now,” said old Saddletree,
who was confined to his chair by the gout—“clean
prescribed and out of date.”
“I am not clear of that, neighbour,”
said Plumdamas, “for I have heard them say twenty
years should rin, and this is but the fifty-ane—
Porteous’s mob was in thretty-seven.”
“Ye’ll no teach me law,
I think, neighbour—me that has four gaun
pleas, and might hae had fourteen, an it hadna been
the gudewife? I tell ye, if the foremost of the
Porteous mob were standing there where that gentleman
stands, the King’s Advocate wadna meddle wi’
him—it fa’s under the negative prescription.”
“Haud your din, carles,”
said Mrs. Saddletree, “and let the gentleman
sit down and get a dish of comfortable tea.”
But Sir George had had quite enough
of their conversation; and Butler, at his request,
made an apology to Mrs. Saddletree, and accompanied
him to his lodgings. Here they found another
guest waiting Sir George Staunton’s return.
This was no other than our reader’s old acquaintance,
Ratcliffe.
This man had exercised the office
of turnkey with so much vigilance, acuteness, and
fidelity, that he gradually rose to be governor, or
captain of the Tolbooth. And it is yet to be remembered
in tradition, that young men, who rather sought amusing
than select society in their merry-meetings, used
sometimes to request Ratcliffe’s company, in
order that he might regale them with legends of his
extraordinary feats in the way of robbery and escape.
There seems an anachronism in the
history of this person. Ratcliffe, among other
escapes from justice, was released by the Porteous
mob when under sentence of death; and he was again
under the same predicament, when the Highlanders made
a similar jail-delivery in 1745. He was too sincere
a whig to embrace liberation at the hands of the Jacobites,
and in reward was made one of the keepers of the Tolbooth.
So at least runs constant tradition.
But he lived and died without resuming
his original vocation, otherwise than in his narratives
over a bottle.
Under these circumstances, he had
been recommended to Sir George Staunton by a man of
the law in Edinburgh, as a person likely to answer
any questions he might have to ask about Annaple Bailzou,
who, according to the colour which Sir George Staunton
gave to his cause of inquiry, was supposed to have
stolen a child in the west of England, belonging to
a family in which he was interested. The gentleman
had not mentioned his name, but only his official
title; so that Sir George Staunton, when told that
the captain of the Tolbooth was waiting for him in
his parlour, had no idea of meeting his former acquaintance,
Jem Ratcliffe.
This, therefore, was another new and
most unpleasant surprise, for he had no difficulty
in recollecting this man’s remarkable features.
The change, however, from George Robertson to Sir
George Staunton, baffled even the penetration of Ratcliffe,
and he bowed very low to the baronet and his guest,
hoping Mr. Butler would excuse his recollecting that
he was an old acquaintance.
“And once rendered my wife a
piece of great service,” said Mr. Butler, “for
which she sent you a token of grateful acknowledgment,
which I hope came safe and was welcome.”
“Deil a doubt on’t,”
said Ratcliffe, with a knowing nod; “but ye are
muckle changed for the better since I saw ye, Maister
Butler.”
“So much so, that I wonder you knew me.”
“Aha, then!—Deil
a face I see I ever forget,” said Ratcliffe while
Sir George Staunton, tied to the stake, and incapable
of escaping, internally cursed the accuracy of his
memory. “And yet, sometimes,” continued
Ratcliffe, “the sharpest hand will be ta’en
in. There is a face in this very room, if I might
presume to be sae bauld, that, if I didna ken the
honourable person it belangs to, I might think it had
some cut of an auld acquaintance.”
“I should not be much flattered,”
answered the Baronet, sternly, and roused by the risk
in which he saw himself placed, “if it is to
me you mean to apply that compliment.”
“By no manner of means, sir,”
said Ratcliffe, bowing very low; “I am come
to receive your honour’s commands, and no to
trouble your honour wi’ my poor observations.”
“Well, sir,” said Sir
George, “I am told you understand police matters—
So do I.—To convince you of which, here
are ten guineas of retaining fee—I make
them fifty when you can find me certain notice of a
person, living or dead, whom you will find described
in that paper. I shall leave town presently—you
may send your written answer to me to the care of Mr.
” (naming his highly respectable agent), “or
of his Grace the Lord High Commissioner.”
Rateliffe bowed and withdrew.
“I have angered the proud peat
now,” he said to himself, “by finding out
a likeness; but if George Robertson’s father
had lived within a mile of his mother, d—n
me if I should not know what to think, for as high
as he carries his head.”
When he was left alone with Butler,
Sir George Staunton ordered tea and coffee, which
were brought by his valet, and then, after considering
with himself for a minute, asked his guest whether
he had lately heard from his wife and family.
Butler, with some surprise at the question, replied,
“that he had received no letter for some time;
his wife was a poor penwoman.”
“Then,” said Sir George
Staunton, “I am the first to inform you there
has been an invasion of your quiet premises since
you left home. My wife, whom the Duke of Argyle
had the goodness to permit to use Roseneath Lodge,
while she was spending some weeks in your country,
has sallied across and taken up her quarters in the
Manse, as she says, to be nearer the goats, whose
milk she is using; but, I believe, in reality, because
she prefers Mrs. Butler’s company to that of
the respectable gentleman who acts as seneschal on
the Duke’s domains.”
Mr. Butler said, “He had often
heard the late Duke and the present speak with high
respect of Lady Staunton, and was happy if his house
could accommodate any friend of theirs—it
would be but a very slight acknowledgment of the many
favours he owed them.”
“That does not make Lady Staunton
and myself the less obliged to your hospitality, sir,”
said Sir George. “May I inquire if you think
of returning home soon?”
“In the course of two days,”
Mr. Butler answered, “his duty in the Assembly
would be ended; and the other matters he had in town
being all finished, he was desirous of returning to
Dumbartonshire as soon as he could; but he was under
the necessity of transporting a considerable sum in
bills and money with him, and therefore wished to travel
in company with one or two of his brethren of the
clergy.”
“My escort will be more safe,”
said Sir George Staunton, “and I think of setting
off to-morrow or next day. If you will give me
the pleasure of your company, I will undertake to
deliver you and your charge safe at the Manse, provided
you will admit me along with you.”
Mr. Butler gratefully accepted of
this proposal; the appointment was made accordingly,
and, by despatches with one of Sir George’s servants,
who was sent forward for the purpose, the inhabitants
of the manse of Knocktarlitie were made acquainted
with the intended journey; and the news rung through
the whole vicinity, “that the minister was coming
back wi’ a braw English gentleman and a’
the siller that was to pay for the estate of Craigsture.”
This sudden resolution of going to
Knocktarlitie had been adopted by Sir George Staunton
in consequence of the incidents of the evening.
In spite of his present consequence, he felt he had
presumed too far in venturing so near the scene of
his former audacious acts of violence, and he knew
too well, from past experience, the acuteness of a
man like Ratcliffe, again to encounter him. The
next two days he kept his lodgings, under pretence
of indisposition, and took leave by writing of his
noble friend the High Commissioner, alleging the opportunity
of Mr. Butler’s company as a reason for leaving
Edinburgh sooner than he had proposed. He had
a long conference with his agent on the subject of
Annaple Bailzou; and the professional gentleman, who
was the agent also of the Argyle family, had directions
to collect all the information which Ratcliffe or others
might be able to obtain concerning the fate of that
woman and the unfortunate child, and so soon as anything
transpired which had the least appearance of being
important, that he should send an express with it instantly
to Knocktarlitie. These instructions were backed
with a deposit of money, and a request that no expense
might be spared; so that Sir George Staunton had little
reason to apprehend negligence on the part of the
persons intrusted with the commission.
The journey, which the brothers made
in company, was attended with more pleasure, even
to Sir George Staunton, than he had ventured to expect.
His heart lightened in spite of himself when they lost
sight of Edinburgh; and the easy, sensible conversation
of Butler was well calculated to withdraw his thoughts
from painful reflections. He even began to think
whether there could be much difficulty in removing
his wife’s connections to the rectory of Willingham;
it was only on his part procuring some still better
preferment for the present incumbent, and on Butler’s,
that he should take orders according to the English
Church, to which he could not conceive a possibility
of his making objection, and then he had them residing
under his wing. No doubt there was pain in seeing
Mrs. Butler, acquainted, as he knew her to be, with
the full truth of his evil history; but then her silence,
though he had no reason to complain of her indiscretion
hitherto, was still more absolutely ensured.
It would keep his lady, also, both in good temper and
in more subjection; for she was sometimes troublesome
to him by insisting on remaining in town when he desired
to retire to the country, alleging the total want of
society at Willingham. “Madam, your sister
is there,” would, he thought, be a sufficient
answer to this ready argument.
He sounded Butler on this subject,
asking what he would think of an English living of
twelve hundred pounds yearly, with the burden of affording
his company now and then to a neighbour, whose health
was not strong or his spirits equal. “He
might meet,” he said, “occasionally, a
very learned and accomplished gentleman, who was in
orders as a Catholic priest, but he hoped that would
be no insurmountable objection to a man of his liberality
of sentiment. What,” he said, “would
Mr. Butler think of as an answer, if the offer should
be made to him?”
“Simply that I could not accept
of it,” said Mr. Butler. “I have no
mind to enter into the various debates between the
churches; but I was brought up in mine own, have received
her ordination, am satisfied of the truth of her doctrines,
and will die under the banner I have enlisted to.”
“What may be the value of your
preferment?” said Sir George Staunton, “unless
I am asking an indiscreet question.”
“Probably one hundred a-year,
one year with another, besides my glebe and pasture-ground.”
“And you scruple to exchange
that for twelve hundred a-year, without alleging any
damning difference of doctrine betwixt the two churches
of England and Scotland?”
“On that, sir, I have reserved
my judgment; there may be much good, and there are
certainly saving means in both; but every man must
act according to his own lights. I hope I have
done, and am in the course of doing, my Master’s
work in this Highland parish; and it would ill become
me, for the sake of lucre, to leave my sheep in the
wilderness. But, even in the temporal view which
you have taken of the matter, Sir George, this hundred
pounds a-year of stipend hath fed and clothed us, and
left us nothing to wish for; my father-in-law’s
succession, and other circumstances, have added a
small estate of about twice as much more, and how
we are to dispose of it I do not know—So
I leave it to you, sir, to think if I were wise, not
having the wish or opportunity of spending three hundred
a-year, to covet the possession of four times that
sum.”
“This is philosophy,”
said Sir George; “I have heard of it, but I never
saw it before.”
“It is common sense,”
replied Butler, “which accords with philosophy
and religion more frequently than pedants or zealots
are apt to admit.”
Sir George turned the subject, and
did not again resume it. Although they travelled
in Sir George’s chariot, he seemed so much fatigued
with the motion, that it was necessary for him to
remain for a day at a small town called Mid-Calder,
which was their first stage from Edinburgh. Glasgow
occupied another day, so slow were their motions.
They travelled on to Dumbarton, where
they had resolved to leave the equipage and to hire
a boat to take them to the shores near the manse, as
the Gare-Loch lay betwixt them and that point, besides
the impossibility of travelling in that district with
wheel-carriages. Sir George’s valet, a
man of trust, accompanied them, as also a footman;
the grooms were left with the carriage. Just
as this arrangement was completed, which was about
four o’clock in the afternoon, an express arrived
from Sir George’s agent in Edinburgh, with a
packet, which he opened and read with great attention,
appearing much interested and agitated by the contents.
The packet had been despatched very soon after their
leaving Edinburgh, but the messenger had missed the
travellers by passing through Mid-Calder in the night,
and overshot his errand by getting to Roseneath before
them. He was now on his return, after having
waited more than four-and-twenty hours. Sir George
Staunton instantly wrote back an answer, and rewarding
the messenger liberally, desired him not to sleep till
he placed it in his agent’s hands.
At length they embarked in the boat,
which had waited for them some time. During their
voyage, which was slow, for they were obliged to row
the whole way, and often against the tide, Sir George
Staunton’s inquiries ran chiefly on the subject
of the Highland banditti who had infested that country
since the year 1745. Butler informed him that
many of them were not native Highlanders, but gipsies,
tinkers, and other men of desperate fortunes, who
had taken advantage of the confusion introduced by
the civil war, the general discontent of the mountaineers,
and the unsettled state of police, to practise their
plundering trade with more audacity. Sir George
next inquired into their lives, their habits, whether
the violences which they committed were not sometimes
atoned for by acts of generosity, and whether they
did not possess the virtues as well as the vices of
savage tribes?
Butler answered, that certainly they
did sometimes show sparks of generosity, of which
even the worst class of malefactors are seldom utterly
divested; but that their evil propensities were certain
and regular principles of action, while any occasional
burst of virtuous feeling was only a transient impulse
not to be reckoned upon, and excited probably by some
singular and unusual concatenation of circumstances.
In discussing these inquiries, which Sir George pursued
with an apparent eagerness that rather surprised Butler,
the latter chanced to mention the name of Donacha
dhu na Dunaigh, with which the reader is already acquainted.
Sir George caught the sound up eagerly, and as if it
conveyed particular interest to his ear. He made
the most minute inquiries concerning the man whom
he mentioned, the number of his gang, and even the
appearance of those who belonged to it. Upon these
points Butler could give little answer. The man
had a name among the lower class, but his exploits
were considerably exaggerated; he had always one or
two fellows with him, but never aspired to the command
of above three or four. In short, he knew little
about him, and the small acquaintance he had had by
no means inclined him to desire more.
“Nevertheless, I should like
to see him some of these days.”
“That would be a dangerous meeting,
Sir George, unless you mean we are to see him receive
his deserts from the law, and then it were a melancholy
one.”
“Use every man according to
his deserts, Mr. Butler, and who shall escape whipping?
But I am talking riddles to you. I will explain
them more fully to you when I have spoken over the
subject with Lady Staunton.—Pull away,
my lads,” he added, addressing himself to the
rowers; “the clouds threaten us with a storm.”
In fact, the dead and heavy closeness
of the air, the huge piles of clouds which assembled
in the western horizon, and glowed like a furnace
under the influence of the setting sun—that
awful stillness in which nature seems to expect the
thunder-burst, as a condemned soldier waits for the
platoon fire which is to stretch him on the earth,
all betokened a speedy storm. Large broad drops
fell from time to time, and induced the gentlemen
to assume the boat-cloaks; but the rain again ceased,
and the oppressive heat, so unusual in Scotland in
the end of May, inclined them to throw them aside.
“There is something solemn in this delay of the
storm,” said Sir George; “it seems as if
it suspended its peal till it solemnised some important
event in the world below.”
“Alas!” replied Butler,
“what are we that the laws of nature should
correspond in their march with our ephemeral deeds
or sufferings! The clouds will burst when surcharged
with the electric fluid, whether a goat is falling
at that instant from the cliffs of Arran, or a hero
expiring on the field of battle he has won.”
“The mind delights to deem it
otherwise,” said Sir George Staunton; “and
to dwell on the fate of humanity as on that which is
the prime central movement of the mighty machine.
We love not to think that we shall mix with the ages
that have gone before us, as these broad black raindrops
mingle with the waste of waters, making a trifling
and momentary eddy, and are then lost for ever.”
“For ever!—we
are not—we cannot be lost for ever,”
said Butler, looking upward; “death is to us
change, not consummation; and the commencement of
a new existence, corresponding in character to the
deeds which we have done in the body.”
While they agitated these grave subjects,
to which the solemnity of the approaching storm naturally
led them, their voyage threatened to be more tedious
than they expected, for gusts of wind, which rose and
fell with sudden impetuosity, swept the bosom of the
firth, and impeded the efforts of the rowers.
They had now only to double a small headland, in order
to get to the proper landing-place in the mouth of
the little river; but in the state of the weather,
and the boat being heavy, this was like to be a work
of time, and in the meanwhile they must necessarily
be exposed to the storm.
“Could we not land on this side
of the headland,” asked Sir George, “and
so gain some shelter?”
Butler knew of no landing-place, at
least none affording a convenient or even practicable
passage up the rocks which surrounded the shore.
“Think again,” said Sir
George Staunton; “the storm will soon be violent.”
“Hout, ay,” said one of
the boatmen, “there’s the Caird’s
Cove; but we dinna tell the minister about it, and
I am no sure if I can steer the boat to it, the bay
is sae fa’ o’ shoals and sunk rocks.”
“Try,” said Sir George,
“and I will give you half-a-guinea.”
The old fellow took the helm, and
observed, “That, if they could get in, there
was a steep path up from the beach, and half-an-hour’s
walk from thence to the Manse.”
“Are you sure you know the way?”
said Butler to the old man.
“I maybe kend it a wee better
fifteen years syne, when Dandie Wilson was in the
firth wi’ his clean-ganging lugger. I mind
Dandie had a wild young Englisher wi’ him, that
they ca’d”
“If you chatter so much,”
said Sir George Staunton, “you will have the
boat on the Grindstone—bring that white
rock in a line with the steeple.”
“By G—,” said
the veteran, staring, “I think your honour kens
the bay as weel as me.—Your honour’s
nose has been on the Grindstone ere now, I’m
thinking.”
As they spoke thus, they approached
the little cove, which, concealed behind crags, and
defended on every point by shallows and sunken rocks,
could scarce be discovered or approached, except by
those intimate with the navigation. An old shattered
boat was already drawn up on the beach within the
cove, close beneath the trees, and with precautions
for concealment.
Upon observing this vessel, Butler
remarked to his companion, “It is impossible
for you to conceive, Sir George, the difficulty I have
had with my poor people, in teaching them the guilt
and the danger of this contraband trade—yet
they have perpetually before their eyes all its dangerous
consequences. I do not know anything that more
effectually depraves and ruins their moral and religious
principles.”
Sir George forced himself to say something
in a low voice about the spirit of adventure natural
to youth, and that unquestionably many would become
wiser as they grew older.
“Too seldom, sir,” replied
Butler. “If they have been deeply engaged,
and especially if they, have mingled in the scenes
of violence and blood to which their occupation naturally
leads, I have observed, that, sooner or later, they
come to an evil end. Experience, as well as Scripture,
teaches us, Sir George, that mischief shall hunt the
violent man, and that the bloodthirsty man shall not
live half his days—But take my arm to help
you ashore.”
Sir George needed assistance, for
he was contrasting in his altered thought the different
feelings of mind and frame with which he had formerly
frequented the same place. As they landed, a low
growl of thunder was heard at a distance.
“That is ominous, Mr. Butler,” said Sir
George.
“Intonuit laevum—it
is ominous of good, then,” answered Butler,
smiling.
The boatmen were ordered to make the
best of their way round the headland to the ordinary
landing-place; the two gentlemen, followed by their
servant, sought their way by a blind and tangled path,
through a close copsewood, to the Manse of Knocktarlitie,
where their arrival was anxiously expected.
The sisters in vain had expected their
husbands’ return on the preceding day, which
was that appointed by Sir George’s letter.
The delay of the travellers at Calder had occasioned
this breach of appointment. The inhabitants of
the Manse began even to doubt whether they would arrive
on the present day. Lady Staunton felt this hope
of delay as a brief reprieve, for she dreaded the
pangs which her husband’s pride must undergo
at meeting with a sister-in-law, to whom the whole
of his unhappy and dishonourable history was too well
known. She knew, whatever force or constraint
he might put upon his feelings in public, that she
herself must be doomed to see them display themselves
in full vehemence in secret,—consume his
health, destroy his temper, and render him at once
an object of dread and compassion. Again and again
she cautioned Jeanie to display no tokens of recognition,
but to receive him as a perfect stranger,—and
again and again Jeanie renewed her promise to comply
with her wishes.
Jeanie herself could not fail to bestow
an anxious thought on the awkwardness of the approaching
meeting; but her conscience was ungalled—and
then she was cumbered with many household cares of
an unusual nature, which, joined to the anxious wish
once more to see Butler, after an absence of unusual
length, made her extremely desirous that the travellers
should arrive as soon as possible. And—why
should I disguise the truth?—ever and anon
a thought stole across her mind that her gala dinner
had now been postponed for two days; and how few of
the dishes, after every art of her simple cuisine
had been exerted to dress them, could with any credit
or propriety appear again upon the third; and what
was she to do with the rest?—Upon this last
subject she was saved the trouble of farther deliberation,
by the sudden appearance of the Captain at the head
of half-a-dozen stout fellows, dressed and armed in
the Highland fashion.
“Goot-morrow morning to ye,
Leddy Staunton, and I hope I hae the pleasure to see
you weel—And goot-morrow to you, goot Mrs.
Putler—I do peg you will order some victuals
and ale and prandy for the lads, for we hae peen out
on firth and moor since afore daylight, and a’
to no purpose neither—Cot tam!”
So saying, he sate down, pushed back
his brigadier wig, and wiped his head with an air
of easy importance; totally regardless of the look
of well-bred astonishment by which Lady Staunton endeavoured
to make him comprehend that he was assuming too great
a liberty.
“It is some comfort, when one
has had a sair tussel,” continued the Captain,
addressing Lady Staunton, with an air of gallantry,
“that it is in a fair leddy’s service,
or in the service of a gentleman whilk has a fair
leddy, whilk is the same thing, since serving the husband
is serving the wife, as Mrs. Putler does very weel
know.”
“Really, sir,” said Lady
Staunton, “as you seem to intend this compliment
for me, I am at a loss to know what interest Sir George
or I can have in your movements this morning.”
“O, Cot tam!—this
is too cruel, my leddy—as if it was not
py special express from his Grace’s honourable
agent and commissioner at Edinburgh, with a warrant
conform, that I was to seek for and apprehend Donacha
dhu na Dunaigh, and pring him pefore myself and Sir
George Staunton, that he may have his deserts, that
is to say, the gallows, whilk he has doubtless deserved,
py peing the means of frightening your leddyship, as
weel as for something of less importance.”
“Frightening me!” said
her ladyship; “why, I never wrote to Sir George
about my alarm at the waterfall.”
“Then he must have heard it
otherwise; for what else can give him sic an earnest
tesire to see this rapscallion, that I maun ripe the
haill mosses and muirs in the country for him, as
if I were to get something for finding him, when the
pest o’t might pe a pall through my prains?”
“Can it be really true, that
it is on Sir George’s account that you have
been attempting to apprehend this fellow?”
“Py Cot, it is for no other
cause that I know than his honour’s pleasure;
for the creature might hae gone on in a decent quiet
way for me, sae lang as he respectit the Duke’s
pounds—put reason goot he suld be taen,
and hangit to poet, if it may pleasure ony honourable
shentleman that is the Duke’s friend—Sae
I got the express over night, and I caused warn half
a score of pretty lads, and was up in the morning
pefore the sun, and I garr’d the lads take their
kilts and short coats.”
“I wonder you did that, Captain,”
said Mrs. Butler, “when you know the act of
Parliament against wearing the Highland dress.”
“Hout, tout, ne’er fash
your thumb, Mrs. Putler. The law is put twa-three
years auld yet, and is ower young to hae come our length;
and pesides, how is the lads to climb the praes wi’
thae tamn’d breekens on them? It makes
me sick to see them. Put ony how, I thought I
kend Donacha’s haunt gey and weel, and I was
at the place where he had rested yestreen; for I saw
the leaves the limmers had lain on, and the ashes of
them; by the same token, there was a pit greeshoch
purning yet. I am thinking they got some word
oat o’ the island what was intended—I
sought every glen and clench, as if I had been deer-stalking,
but teil a want of his coat-tail could I see—Cot
tam!”
“He’ll be away down the
Firth to Cowal,” said David; and Reuben, who
had been out early that morning a-nutting, observed,
“That he had seen a boat making for the Caird’s
Cove;” a place well known to the boys, though
their less adventurous father was ignorant of its existence.
“Py Cot,” said Duncan,
“then I will stay here no longer than to trink
this very horn of prandy and water, for it’s
very possible they will pe in the wood. Donacha’s
a clever fellow, and maype thinks it pest to sit next
the chimley when the lum reeks. He thought naebody
would look for him sae near hand! I peg your
leddyship will excuse my aprupt departure, as I will
return forthwith, and I will either pring you Donacha
in life, or else his head, whilk I dare to say will
be as satisfactory. And I hope to pass a pleasant
evening with your leddyship; and I hope to have mine
revenges on Mr. Putler at backgammon, for the four
pennies whilk he won, for he will pe surely at home
soon, or else he will have a wet journey, seeing it
is apout to pe a scud.”
Thus saying, with many scrapes and
bows, and apologies for leaving them, which were very
readily received, and reiterated assurances of his
speedy return (of the sincerity whereof Mrs. Butler
entertained no doubt, so long as her best greybeard
of brandy was upon duty), Duncan left the Manse, collected
his followers, and began to scour the close and entangled
wood which lay between the little glen and the Caird’s
Cove. David, who was a favourite with the Captain,
on account of his spirit and courage, took the opportunity
of escaping, to attend the investigations of that
great man.