I did send
for thee,
That Talbot’s name might be in
thee revived,
When sapless age and weak, unable limbs,
Should bring thy father to his drooping
chair.
But—O malignant and ill-boding
stars!—
First part of Henry the
Sixth.
Duncan and his party had not proceeded
very far in the direction of the Caird’s Cove
before they heard a shot, which was quickly followed
by one or two others. “Some tamn’d
villains among the roe-deer,” said Duncan; “look
sharp out, lads.”
The clash of swords was next heard,
and Duncan and his myrmidons, hastening to the spot,
found Butler and Sir George Staunton’s servant
in the hands of four ruffians. Sir George himself
lay stretched on the ground, with his drawn sword
in his hand. Duncan, who was as brave as a lion,
instantly fired his pistol at the leader of the band,
unsheathed his sword, cried out to his men, Claymore!
and run his weapon through the body of the fellow
whom he had previously wounded, who was no other thau
Donacha dhu na Dunaigh himself. The other banditti
were speedily overpowered, excepting one young lad,
who made wonderful resistance for his years, and was
at length secured with difficulty.
[Illustration: Death of Sir George Staunton—404]
Butler, so soon as he was liberated
from the ruffians, ran to raise Sir George Staunton,
but life had wholly left him.
“A creat misfortune,”
said Duncan; “I think it will pe pest that I
go forward to intimate it to the coot lady.—Tavie,
my dear, you hae smelled pouther for the first time
this day—take my sword and hack off Donacha’s
head, whilk will pe coot practice for you against the
time you may wish to do the same kindness to a living
shentleman—or hould! as your father does
not approve, you may leave it alone, as he will pe
a greater object of satisfaction to Leddy Staunton
to see him entire; and I hope she will do me the credit
to pelieve that I can afenge a shentleman’s plood
fery speedily and well.”
Such was the observation of a man
too much accustomed to the ancient state of manners
in the Highlands, to look upon the issue of such a
skirmish as anything worthy of wonder or emotion.
We will not attempt to describe the
very contrary effect which the unexpected disaster
produced upon Lady Staunton, when the bloody corpse
of her husband was brought to the house, where she
expected to meet him alive and well. All was
forgotten, but that he was the lover of her youth;
and whatever were his faults to the world, that he
had towards her exhibited only those that arose from
the inequality of spirits and temper, incident to
a situation of unparalleled difficulty. In the
vivacity of her grief she gave way to all the natural
irritability of her temper; shriek followed shriek,
and swoon succeeded to swoon. It required all
Jeanie’s watchful affection to prevent her from
making known, in these paroxysms of affliction, much
which it was of the highest importance that she should
keep secret.
At length silence and exhaustion succeeded
to frenzy, and Jeanie stole out to take counsel with
her husband, and to exhort him to anticipate the Captain’s
interference, by taking possession, in Lady Staunton’s
name, of the private papers of her deceased husband.
To the utter astonishment of Butler, she now, for
the first time, explained the relation betwixt herself
and Lady Staunton, which authorised, nay, demanded,
that he should prevent any stranger from being unnecessarily
made acquainted with her family affairs. It was
in such a crisis that Jeanie’s active and undaunted
habits of virtuous exertion were most conspicuous.
While the Captain’s attention was still engaged
by a prolonged refreshment, and a very tedious examination,
in Gaelic and English, of all the prisoners, and every
other witness of the fatal transaction, she had the
body of her brother-in-law undressed and properly
disposed. It then appeared, from the crucifix,
the beads, and the shirt of hair which he wore next
his person, that his sense of guilt had induced him
to receive the dogmata of a religion, which pretends,
by the maceration of the body, to expiate the crimes
of the soul. In the packet of papers which the
express had brought to Sir George Staunton from Edinburgh,
and which Butler, authorised by his connection with
the deceased, did not scruple to examine, he found
new and astonishing intelligence, which gave him reason
to thank God he had taken that measure.
Ratcliffe, to whom all sorts of misdeeds
and misdoers were familiar, instigated by the promised
reward, soon found himself in a condition to trace
the infant of these unhappy parents. The woman
to whom Meg Murdockson had sold that most unfortunate
child, had made it the companion of her wanderings
and her beggary, until he was about seven or eight
years old, when, as Ratcliffe learned from a companion
of hers, then in the Correction House of Edinburgh,
she sold him in her turn to Donacha dhu na Dunaigh.
This man, to whom no act of mischief was unknown,
was occasionally an agent in a horrible trade then
carried on betwixt Scotland and America, for supplying
the plantations with servants, by means of kidnapping,
as it was termed, both men and women, but especially
children under age. Here Ratcliffe lost sight
of the boy, but had no doubt but Donacha Dhu could
give an account of him. The gentleman of the
law, so often mentioned, despatched therefore an express,
with a letter to Sir George Staunton, and another
covering a warrant for apprehension of Donacha, with
instructions to the Captain of Knockdunder to exert
his utmost energy for that purpose.
Possessed of this information, and
with a mind agitated by the most gloomy apprehensions,
Butler now joined the Captain, and obtained from him
with some difficulty a sight of the examinations.
These, with a few questions to the elder of the prisoners,
soon confirmed the most dreadful of Butler’s
anticipations. We give the heads of the information,
without descending into minute details.
Donacha Dhu had indeed purchased Effie’s
unhappy child, with the purpose of selling it to the
American traders, whom he had been in the habit of
supplying with human flesh. But no opportunity
occurred for some time; and the boy, who was known
by the name of “The Whistler,” made some
impression on the heart and affections even of this
rude savage, perhaps because he saw in him flashes
of a spirit as fierce and vindictive as his own.
When Donacha struck or threatened him—a
very common occurrence—he did not answer
with complaints and entreaties like other children,
but with oaths and efforts at revenge—he
had all the wild merit, too, by which Woggarwolfe’s
arrow-bearing page won the hard heart of his master:
Like a wild cub, rear’d
at the ruffian’s feet,
He could say biting jests, bold ditties
sing,
And quaff his foaming bumper at the board,
With
all the mockery of a little man.
Ethwald.
In short, as Donacha Dhu said, the
Whistler was a born imp of Satan, and therefore
he should never leave him. Accordingly, from his
eleventh year forward, he was one of the band, and
often engaged in acts of violence. The last of
these was more immediately occasioned by the researches
which the Whistler’s real father made after him
whom he had been taught to consider as such.
Donacha Dhu’s fears had been for some time excited
by the strength of the means which began now to be
employed against persons of his description.
He was sensible he existed only by the precarious
indulgence of his namesake, Duncan of Knockdunder,
who was used to boast that he could put him down or
string him up when he had a mind. He resolved
to leave the kingdom by means of one of those sloops
which were engaged in the traffic of his old kidnapping
friends, and which was about to sail for America;
but he was desirous first to strike a bold stroke.
The ruffian’s cupidity was excited
by the intelligence, that a wealthy Englishman was
coming to the Manse—he had neither forgotten
the Whistler’s report of the gold he had seen
in Lady Staunton’s purse, nor his old vow of
revenge against the minister; and, to bring the whole
to a point, he conceived the hope of appropriating
the money, which, according to the general report
of the country, the minister was to bring from Edinburgh
to pay for his pew purchase. While he was considering
how he might best accomplish his purpose, he received
the intelligence from one quarter, that the vessel
in which he proposed to sail was to sail immediately
from Greenock; from another, that the minister and
a rich English lord, with a great many thousand pounds,
were expected the next evening at the Manse; and from
a third, that he must consult his safety by leaving
his ordinary haunts as soon as possible, for that the
Captain had ordered out a party to scour the glens
for him at break of day. Donacha laid his plans
with promptitude and decision. He embarked with
the Whistler and two others of his band (whom, by the
by, he meant to sell to the kidnappers), and set sail
for the Caird’s Cove. He intended to lurk
till nightfall in the wood adjoining to this place,
which he thought was too near the habitation of men
to excite the suspicion of Duncan Knock, then break
into Butler’s peaceful habitation, and flesh
at once his appetite for plunder and revenge.
When his villany was accomplished, his boat was to
convey him to the vessel, which, according to previous
agreement with the master, was instantly to set sail.
This desperate design would probably
have succeeded, but for the ruffians being discovered
in their lurking-place by Sir George Staunton and
Butler, in their accidental walk from the Caird’s
Cove towards the Manse. Finding himself detected,
and at the same time observing that the servant carried
a casket, or strong-box, Donacha conceived that both
his prize and his victims were within his power, and
attacked the travellers without hesitation. Shots
were fired and swords drawn on both sides; Sir George
Staunton offered the bravest resistance till he fell,
as there was too much reason to believe, by the hand
of a son, so long sought, and now at length so unhappily
met.
While Butler was half-stunned with
this intelligence, the hoarse voice of Knockdunder
added to his consternation.
“I will take the liperty to
take down the pell-ropes, Mr. Putler, as I must pe
taking order to hang these idle people up to-morrow
morning, to teach them more consideration in their
doings in future.”
Butler entreated him to remember the
act abolishing the heritable jurisdictions, and that
he ought to send them to Glasgow or Inverary, to be
tried by the Circuit. Duncan scorned the proposal.
“The Jurisdiction Act,”
he said, “had nothing to do put with the rebels,
and specially not with Argyle’s country; and
he would hang the men up all three in one row before
coot Leddy Staunton’s windows, which would be
a great comfort to her in the morning to see that
the coot gentleman, her husband, had been suitably
afenged.”
And the utmost length that Butler’s
most earnest entreaties could prevail was, that he
would, reserve “the twa pig carles for the Circuit,
but as for him they ca’d the Fustler, he should
try how he could fustle in a swinging tow, for it
suldna be said that a shentleman, friend to the Duke,
was killed in his country, and his people didna take
at least twa lives for ane.”
Butler entreated him to spare the
victim for his soul’s sake. But Knockdunder
answered, “that the soul of such a scum had been
long the tefil’s property, and that, Cot tam!
he was determined to gif the tefil his due.”
All persuasion was in vain, and Duncan
issued his mandate for execution on the succeeding
morning. The child of guilt and misery was separated
from his companions, strongly pinioned, and committed
to a separate room, of which the Captain kept the
key.
In the silence of the night, however,
Mrs. Butler arose, resolved, if possible, to avert,
at least to delay, the fate which hung over her nephew,
especially if, upon conversing with him, she should
see any hope of his being brought to better temper.
She had a master-key that opened every lock in the
house; and at midnight, when all was still, she stood
before the eyes of the astonished young savage, as,
hard bound with cords, he lay, like a sheep designed
for slaughter, upon a quantity of the refuse of flax
which filled a corner in the apartment. Amid features
sunburnt, tawny, grimed with dirt, and obscured by
his shaggy hair of a rusted black colour, Jeanie tried
in vain to trace the likeness of either of his very
handsome parents. Yet how could she refuse compassion
to a creature so young and so wretched,—so
much more wretched than even he himself could be aware
of, since the murder he had too probably committed
with his own hand, but in which he had at any rate
participated, was in fact a parricide? She placed
food on a table near him, raised him, and slacked
the cords on his arms, so as to permit him to feed
himself. He stretched out his hands, still smeared
with blood perhaps that of his father, and he ate
voraciously and in silence.
“What is your first name?”
said Jeanie, by way of opening the conversation.
“The Whistler.”
“But your Christian name, by which you were
baptized?”
“I never was baptized that I
know of—I have no other name than the Whistler.”
“Poor unhappy abandoned lad!”
said Jeanie. “What would ye do if you could
escape from this place, and the death you are to die
to-morrow morning?”
“Join wi’ Rob Roy, or
wi’ Sergeant More Cameron” (noted freebooters
at that time), “and revenge Donacha’s
death on all and sundry.”
“O ye unhappy boy,” said
Jeanie, “do ye ken what will come o’ ye
when ye die?”
“I shall neither feel cauld
nor hunger more,” said the youth doggedly.
“To let him be execute in this
dreadful state of mind would be to destroy baith body
and soul—and to let him gang I dare not—what
will be done?— But he is my sister’s
son—my own nephew—our flesh and
blood—and his hands and feet are yerked
as tight as cords can be drawn.—Whistler,
do the cords hurt you?”
“Very much.”
“But, if I were to slacken them, you would harm
me?”
“No, I would not—you never harmed
me or mine.”
There may be good in him yet, thought
Jeanie; I will try fair play with him.
She cut his bonds—he stood
upright, looked round with a laugh of wild exultation,
clapped his hands together, and sprung from the ground,
as if in transport on finding himself at liberty.
He looked so wild, that Jeanie trembled at what she
had done.
“Let me out,” said the young savage.
“I wunna, unless you promise”
“Then I’ll make you glad to let us both
out.”
He seized the lighted candle and threw
it among the flax, which was instantly in a flame.
Jeanie screamed, and ran out of the room; the prisoner
rushed past her, threw open a window in the passage,
jumped into the garden, sprung over its enclosure,
bounded through the woods like a deer, and gained
the seashore. Meantime, the fire was extinguished,
but the prisoner was sought in vain. As Jeanie
kept her own secret, the share she had in his escape
was not discovered: but they learned his fate
some time afterwards—it was as wild as
his life had hitherto been.
The anxious inquiries of Butler at
length learned, that the youth had gained the ship
in which his master, Donacha, had designed to embark.
But the avaricious shipmaster, inured by his evil
trade to every species of treachery, and disappointed
of the rich booty which Donacha had proposed to bring
aboard, secured the person of the fugitive, and having
transported him to America, sold him as a slave, or
indented servant, to a Virginian planter, far up the
country. When these tidings reached Butler, he
sent over to America a sufficient sum to redeem the
lad from slavery, with instructions that measures
should be taken for improving his mind, restraining
his evil propensities, and encouraging whatever good
might appear in his character. But this aid came
too late. The young man had headed a conspiracy
in which his inhuman master was put to death, and
had then fled to the next tribe of wild Indians.
He was never more heard of; and it may therefore be
presumed that he lived and died after the manner of
that savage people, with whom his previous habits had
well fitted him to associate.
All hopes of the young man’s
reformation being now ended, Mr. and Mrs. Butler thought
it could serve no purpose to explain to Lady Staunton
a history so full of horror. She remained their
guest more than a year, during the greater part of
which period her grief was excessive. In the
latter months, it assumed the appearance of listlessness
and low spirits, which the monotony of her sister’s
quiet establishment afforded no means of dissipating.
Effie, from her earliest youth, was never formed for
a quiet low content. Far different from her sister,
she required the dissipation of society to divert
her sorrow, or enhance her joy. She left the
seclusion of Knocktarlitie with tears of sincere affection,
and after heaping its inmates with all she could think
of that might be valuable in their eyes. But
she did leave it; and, when the anguish of the
parting was over, her departure was a relief to both
sisters.
The family at the Manse of Knocktarlitie,
in their own quiet happiness, heard of the well-dowered
and beautiful Lady Staunton resuming her place in
the fashionable world. They learned it by more
substantial proofs, for David received a commission;
and as the military spirit of Bible Butler seemed
to have revived in him, his good behaviour qualified
the envy of five hundred young Highland cadets, “come
of good houses,” who were astonished at the
rapidity of his promotion. Reuben followed the
law, and rose more slowly, yet surely. Euphemia
Butler, whose fortune, augmented by her aunt’s
generosity, and added to her own beauty, rendered her
no small prize, married a Highland laird, who never
asked the name of her grand-father, and was loaded
on the occasion with presents from Lady Staunton,
which made her the envy of all the beauties in Dumbarton
and Argyle shires.
After blazing nearly ten years in
the fashionable world, and hiding, like many of her
compeers, an aching heart with a gay demeanour—after
declining repeated offers of the most respectable kind
for a second matrimonial engagement, Lady Staunton
betrayed the inward wound by retiring to the Continent,
and taking up her abode in the convent where she had
received her education. She never took the veil,
but lived and died in severe seclusion, and in the
practice of the Roman Catholic religion, in all its
formal observances, vigils, and austerities.
Jeanie had so much of her father’s
spirit as to sorrow bitterly for this apostasy, and
Butler joined in her regret. “Yet any religion,
however imperfect,” he said, “was better
than cold scepticism, or the hurrying din of dissipation,
which fills the ears of worldlings, until they care
for none of these things.”
Meanwhile, happy in each other, in
the prosperity of their family, and the love and honour
of all who knew them, this simple pair lived beloved,
and died lamented.
[Illustration: Jeanie Dean’s Cottage—414]
READER,
THIS
TALE WILL NOT BE TOLD IN VAIN, IF IT SHALL BE FOUND
TO
ILLUSTRATE
THE GREAT TRUTH, THAT GUILT, THOUGH IT MAY ATTAIN
TEMPORAL
SPLENDOUR, CAN NEVER CONFER REAL HAPPINESS; THAT THE
EVIL
CONSEQUENCES OF OUR CRIMES LONG SURVIVE THEIR COMMISSION,
AND,
LIKE THE GHOSTS OF THE MURDERED, FOR EVER HAUNT THE
STEPS
OF
THE MALEFACTOR; AND THAT THE PATHS OF VIRTUE, THOUGH
SELDOM
THOSE
OF WORLDLY GREATNESS, ARE ALWAYS THOSE OF PLEASANTNESS
AND
PEACE.
L’ENVOY,
BY JEDEDIAH
CLEISHBOTHAM.
Thus concludeth the Tale of “The
Heart of Mid-Lothian,” which hath filled more
pages than I opined. The Heart of Mid-Lothian
is now no more, or rather it is transferred to the
extreme side of the city, even as the Sieur Jean Baptiste
Poquelin hath it, in his pleasant comedy called Le
Me’decin Malgre’ Lui, where the simulated
doctor wittily replieth to a charge, that he had placed
the heart on the right side, instead of the left,
“Cela e’tait autrefois ainsi, mais nous
avons change’ tout cela.” Of which
witty speech if any reader shall demand the purport,
I have only to respond, that I teach the French as
well as the Classical tongues, at the easy rate of
five shillings per quarter, as my advertisements are
periodically making known to the public.