—–And must
I ravel out
My weaved-up follies?
Richard II, Act IV.
Having undertaken to give an Introductory
Account of the compositions which are here offered
to the public, with Notes and Illustrations, the Author,
under whose name they are now for the first time collected,
feels that he has the delicate task of speaking more
of himself and his personal concerns than may perhaps
be either graceful or prudent. In this particular
he runs the risk of presenting himself to the public
in the relation that the dumb wife in the jest-book
held to her husband, when, having spent half of his
fortune to obtain the cure of her imperfection, he
was willing to have bestowed the other half to restore
her to her former condition. But this is a risk
inseparable from the task which the Author has undertaken,
and he can only promise to be as little of an egotist
as the situation will permit. It is perhaps an
indifferent sign of a disposition to keep his word,
that, having introduced himself in the third person
singular, he proceeds in the second paragraph to make
use of the first. But it appears to him that
the seeming modesty connected with the former mode
of writing is overbalanced by the inconvenience of
stiffness and affectation which attends it during
a narrative of some length, and which may be observed
less or more in every work in which the third person
is used, from the Commentaries of Caesar to the Autobiography
of Alexander the Corrector.
I must refer to a very early period
of my life, were I to point out my first achievements
as a tale-teller; but I believe some of my old schoolfellows
can still bear witness that I had a distinguished
character for that talent, at a time when the applause
of my companions was my recompense for the disgraces
and punishments which the future romance-writer incurred
for being idle himself, and keeping others idle, during
hours that should have been employed on our tasks.
The chief enjoyment of my holidays was to escape with
a chosen friend, who had the same taste with myself,
and alternately to recite to each other such wild
adventures as we were able to devise. We told,
each in turn, interminable tales of knight-errantry
and battles and enchantments, which were continued
from one day to another as opportunity offered, without
our ever thinking of bringing them to a conclusion.
As we observed a strict secrecy on the subject of
this intercourse, it acquired all the character of
a concealed pleasure, and we used to select for the
scenes of our indulgence long walks through the solitary
and romantic environs of Arthur’s Seat, Salisbury
Crags, Braid Hills, and similar places in the vicinity
of Edinburgh; and the recollection of those holidays
still forms an oasis in the pilgrimage which I have
to look back upon. I have only to add, that my
friend still lives, a prosperous gentleman, but too
much occupied with graver business to thank me for
indicating him more plainly as a confidant of my childish
mystery.
When boyhood advancing into youth
required more serious studies and graver cares, a
long illness threw me back on the kingdom of fiction,
as if it were by a species of fatality. My indisposition
arose, in part at least, from my having broken a blood-vessel;
and motion and speech were for a long time pronounced
positively dangerous. For several weeks I was
confined strictly to my bed, during which time I was
not allowed to speak above a whisper, to eat more
than a spoonful or two of boiled rice, or to have more
covering than one thin counterpane. When the reader
is informed that I was at this time a growing youth,
with the spirits, appetite, and impatience of fifteen,
and suffered, of course, greatly under this severe
regimen, which the repeated return of my disorder
rendered indispensable, he will not be surprised that
I was abandoned to my own discretion, so far as reading
(my almost sole amusement) was concerned, and still
less so, that I abused the indulgence which left my
time so much at my own disposal.
There was at this time a circulating
library in Edinburgh, founded, I believe, by the celebrated
Allan Ramsay, which, besides containing a most respectable
collection of books of every description, was, as
might have been expected, peculiarly rich in works
of fiction. It exhibited specimens of every kind,
from the romances of chivalry and the ponderous folios
of Cyrus and Cassandra, down to the most approved
works of later times. I was plunged into this
great ocean of reading without compass or pilot; and,
unless when some one had the charity to play at chess
with me, I was allowed to do nothing save read from
morning to night. I was, in kindness and pity,
which was perhaps erroneous, however natural, permitted
to select my subjects of study at my own pleasure,
upon the same principle that the humours of children
are indulged to keep them out of mischief. As
my taste and appetite were gratified in nothing else,
I indemnified myself by becoming a glutton of books.
Accordingly, I believe I read almost all the romances,
old plays, and epic poetry in that formidable collection,
and no doubt was unconsciously amassing materials for
the task in which it has been my lot to be so much
employed.
At the same time I did not in all
respects abuse the license permitted me. Familiar
acquaintance with the specious miracles of fiction
brought with it some degree of satiety, and I began
by degrees to seek in histories, memoirs, voyages
and travels, and the like, events nearly as wonderful
as those which were the work of imagination, with
the additional advantage that they were at least in
a great measure true. The lapse of nearly two
years, during which I was left to the exercise of
my own free will, was followed by a temporary residence
in the country, where I was again very lonely but
for the amusement which I derived from a good though
old-fashioned library. The vague and wild use
which I made of this advantage I cannot describe better
than by referring my reader to the desultory studies
of Waverley in a similar situation, the passages concerning
whose course of reading were imitated from recollections
of my own. It must be understood that the resemblance
extends no farther.
Time, as it glided on, brought the
blessings of confirmed health and personal strength,
to a degree which had never been expected or hoped
for. The severe studies necessary to render me
fit for my profession occupied the greater part of
my time; and the society of my friends and companions,
who were about to enter life along with, me, filled
up the interval with the usual amusements of young
men. I was in a situation which rendered serious
labour indispensable; for, neither possessing, on
the one hand, any of those peculiar advantages which
are supposed to favour a hasty advance in the profession
of the law, nor being, on the other hand, exposed
to unusual obstacles to interrupt my progress, I might
reasonably expect to succeed according to the greater
or less degree of trouble which I should take to qualify
myself as a pleader.
It makes no part of the present story
to detail how the success of a few ballads had the
effect of changing all the purpose and tenor of my
life, and of converting a painstaking lawyer of some
years’ standing into a follower of literature.
It is enough to say, that I had assumed the latter
character for several years before I seriously thought
of attempting a work of imagination in prose, although
one or two of my poetical attempts did not differ from
romances otherwise than by being written in verse.
But yet I may observe, that about this time (now,
alas! thirty years since) I had nourished the ambitious
desire of composing a tale of chivalry, which was
to be in the style of the Castle of Otranto, with
plenty of Border characters and supernatural incident.
Having found unexpectedly a chapter of this intended
work among some old papers, I have subjoined it to
this introductory essay, thinking some readers may
account as curious the first attempts at romantic
composition by an author who has since written so much
in that department. [Footnote: See Appendix No
I.] And those who complain, not unreasonably, of the
profusion of the Tales which have followed Waverley,
may bless their stars at the narrow escape they have
made, by the commencement of the inundation, which
had so nearly taken place in the first year of the
century, being postponed for fifteen years later.
This particular subject was never
resumed, but I did not abandon the idea of fictitious
composition in prose, though I determined to give
another turn to the style of the work.
My early recollections of the Highland
scenery and customs made so favourable an impression
in the poem called the Lady of the Lake, that I was
induced to think of attempting something of the same
kind in prose. I had been a good deal in the Highlands
at a time when they were much less accessible and
much less visited than they have been of late years,
and was acquainted with many of the old warriors of
1745, who were, like most veterans, easily induced
to fight their battles over again for the benefit of
a willing listener like myself. It naturally
occurred to me that the ancient traditions and high
spirit of a people who, living in a civilised age
and country, retained so strong a tincture of manners
belonging to an early period of society, must afford
a subject favourable for romance, if it should not
prove a curious tale marred in the telling.
It was with some idea of this kind
that, about the year 1805, I threw together about
one-third part of the first volume of Waverley.
It was advertised to be published by the late Mr. John
Ballantyne, bookseller in Edinburgh, under the name
of Waverley; or, ’Tis Fifty Years Since—a
title afterwards altered to ’Tis Sixty Years
Since, that the actual date of publication might be
made to correspond with the period in which the scene
was laid. Having proceeded as far, I think, as
the seventh chapter, I showed my work to a critical
friend, whose opinion was unfavourable; and having
then some poetical reputation, I was unwilling to risk
the loss of it by attempting a new style of composition.
I therefore threw aside the work I had commenced,
without either reluctance or remonstrance. I
ought to add that, though my ingenious friend’s
sentence was afterwards reversed on an appeal to the
public, it cannot be considered as any imputation
on his good taste; for the specimen subjected to his
criticism did not extend beyond the departure of the
hero for Scotland, and consequently had not entered
upon the part of the story which was finally found
most interesting.
Be that as it may, this portion of
the manuscript was laid aside in the drawers of an
old writing-desk, which, on my first coming to reside
at Abbotsford in 1811, was placed in a lumber garret
and entirely forgotten. Thus, though I sometimes,
among other literary avocations, turned my thoughts
to the continuation of the romance which I had commenced,
yet, as I could not find what I had already written,
after searching such repositories as were within my
reach, and was too indolent to attempt to write it
anew from memory, I as often laid aside all thoughts
of that nature.
Two circumstances in particular recalled
my recollection of the mislaid manuscript. The
first was the extended and well-merited fame of Miss
Edgeworth, whose Irish characters have gone so far
to make the English familiar with the character of
their gay and kind-hearted neighbours of Ireland,
that she may be truly said to have done more towards
completing the Union than perhaps all the legislative
enactments by which it has been followed up.
Without being so presumptuous as to
hope to emulate the rich humour, pathetic tenderness,
and admirable tact which pervade the works of my accomplished
friend, I felt that something might be attempted for
my own country, of the same kind with that which Miss
Edgeworth so fortunately achieved for Ireland—something
which might introduce her natives to those of the sister
kingdom in a more favourable light than they had been
placed hitherto, and tend to procure sympathy for
their virtues and indulgence for their foibles.
I thought also, that much of what I wanted in talent
might be made up by the intimate acquaintance with
the subject which I could lay claim to possess, as
having travelled through most parts of Scotland, both
Highland and Lowland, having been familiar with the
elder as well as more modern race, and having had
from my infancy free and unrestrained communication
with all ranks of my countrymen, from the Scottish
peer to the Scottish plough-man. Such ideas often
occurred to me, and constituted an ambitious branch
of my theory, however far short I may have fallen
of it in practice.
But it was not only the triumphs of
Miss Edgeworth which worked in me emulation, and disturbed
my indolence. I chanced actually to engage in
a work which formed a sort of essay piece, and gave
me hope that I might in time become free of the craft
of romance-writing, and be esteemed a tolerable workman.
In the year 1807-08 I undertook, at
the request of John Murray, Esq., of Albemarle Street,
to arrange for publication some posthumous productions
of the late Mr. Joseph Strutt, distinguished as an
artist and an antiquary, amongst which was an unfinished
romance, entitled Queenhoo Hall. The scene of
the tale was laid in the reign of Henry VI, and the
work was written to illustrate the manners, customs,
and language of the people of England during that
period. The extensive acquaintance which Mr.
Strutt had acquired with such subjects in compiling
his laborious Horda Angel-Cynnan, his Regal and Ecclesiastical
Antiquities, and his Essay on the Sports and Pastimes
of the People of England had rendered him familiar
with all the antiquarian lore necessary for the purpose
of composing the projected romance; and although the
manuscript bore the marks of hurry and incoherence
natural to the first rough draught of the author,
it evinced (in my opinion) considerable powers of
imagination.
As the work was unfinished, I deemed
it my duty, as editor, to supply such a hasty and
inartificial conclusion as could be shaped out from
the story, of which Mr. Strutt had laid the foundation.
This concluding chapter [Footnote: See Appendix
No. II.] is also added to the present Introduction,
for the reason already mentioned regarding the preceding
fragment. It was a step in my advance towards
romantic composition; and to preserve the traces of
these is in a great measure the object of this Essay.
Queenhoo Hall was not, however, very
successful. I thought I was aware of the reason,
and supposed that, by rendering his language too ancient,
and displaying his antiquarian knowledge too liberally,
the ingenious author had raised up an obstacle to his
own success. Every work designed for mere amusement
must be expressed in language easily comprehended;
and when, as is sometimes the case in Queenhoo
hall, the author addresses himself exclusively
to the antiquary, he must be content to be dismissed
by the general reader with the criticism of Mungo,
in the PADLOCK, on the Mauritanian music, ’What
signifies me hear, if me no understand?’
I conceived it possible to avoid this
error; and, by rendering a similar work more light
and obvious to general comprehension, to escape the
rock on which my predecessor was shipwrecked.
But I was, on the other hand, so far
discouraged by the indifferent reception of Mr. Strutt’s
romance as to become satisfied that the manners of
the middle ages did not possess the interest which
I had conceived; and was led to form the opinion that
a romance founded on a Highland story and more modern
events would have a better chance of popularity than
a tale of chivalry.
My thoughts, therefore, returned more
than once to the tale which I had actually commenced,
and accident at length threw the lost sheets in my
way.
I happened to want some fishing-tackle
for the use of a guest, when it occurred to me to
search the old writing-desk already mentioned, in
which I used to keep articles of that nature.
I got access to it with some difficulty;
and, in looking for lines and flies, the long-lost
manuscript presented itself.
I immediately set to work to complete
it according to my original purpose.
And here I must frankly confess that
the mode in which I conducted the story scarcely deserved
the success which the romance afterwards attained.
The tale of Waverley was put
together with so little care that I cannot boast of
having sketched any distinct plan of the work.
The whole adventures of Waverley, in his movements
up and down the country with the Highland cateran
Bean Lean, are managed without much skill. It
suited best, however, the road I wanted to travel,
and permitted me to introduce some descriptions of
scenery and manners, to which the reality gave an
interest which the powers of the Author might have
otherwise failed to attain for them. And though
I have been in other instances a sinner in this sort,
I do not recollect any of these novels in which I
have transgressed so widely as in the first of the
series.
Among other unfounded reports, it
has been said that the copyright of Waverley was,
during the book’s progress through the press,
offered for sale to various book-sellers in London
at a very inconsiderable price. This was not
the case. Messrs. Constable and Cadell, who published
the work, were the only persons acquainted with the
contents of the publication, and they offered a large
sum for it while in the course of printing, which,
however, was declined, the Author not choosing to
part with the copyright.
The origin of the story of Waverley,
and the particular facts on which it is founded, are
given in the separate introduction prefixed to that
romance in this edition, and require no notice in
this place.
Waverley was published in 1814, and,
as the title-page was without the name of the Author,
the work was left to win its way in the world without
any of the usual recommendations. Its progress
was for some time slow; but after the first two or
three months its popularity had increased in a degree
which must have satisfied the expectations of the
Author, had these been far more sanguine than he ever
entertained.
Great anxiety was expressed to learn
the name of the Author, but on this no authentic information
could be attained. My original motive for publishing
the work anonymously was the consciousness that it
was an experiment on the public taste which might very
probably fail, and therefore there was no occasion
to take on myself the personal risk of discomfiture.
For this purpose considerable precautions were used
to preserve secrecy. My old friend and schoolfellow,
Mr. James Ballantyne, who printed these Novels, had
the exclusive task of corresponding with the Author,
who thus had not only the advantage of his professional
talents, but also of his critical abilities.
The original manuscript, or, as it is technically
called, copy, was transcribed under Mr. Ballantyne’s
eye by confidential persons; nor was there an instance
of treachery during the many years in which these
precautions were resorted to, although various individuals
were employed at different times. Double proof-sheets
were regularly printed off. One was forwarded
to the Author by Mr. Ballantyne, and the alterations
which it received were, by his own hand, copied upon
the other proof-sheet for the use of the printers,
so that even the corrected proofs of the Author were
never seen in the printing office; and thus the curiosity
of such eager inquirers as made the most minute investigation
was entirely at fault.
But although the cause of concealing
the Author’s name in the first instance, when
the reception of Waverley was doubtful, was natural
enough, it is more difficult, it may be thought, to
account for the same desire for secrecy during the
subsequent editions, to the amount of betwixt eleven
and twelve thousand copies, which followed each other
close, and proved the success of the work. I
am sorry I can give little satisfaction to queries
on this subject. I have already stated elsewhere
that I can render little better reason for choosing
to remain anonymous than by saying with Shylock, that
such was my humour. It will be observed that
I had not the usual stimulus for desiring personal
reputation, the desire, namely, to float amidst the
conversation of men. Of literary fame, whether
merited or undeserved, I had already as much as might
have contented a mind more ambitious than mine; and
in entering into this new contest for reputation I
might be said rather to endanger what I had than to
have any considerable chance of acquiring more.
I was affected, too, by none of those motives which,
at an earlier period of life, would doubtless have
operated upon me. My friendships were formed,
my place in society fixed, my life had attained its
middle course. My condition in society was higher
perhaps than I deserved, certainly as high as I wished,
and there was scarce any degree of literary success
which could have greatly altered or improved my personal
condition.
I was not, therefore, touched by the
spur of ambition, usually stimulating on such occasions;
and yet I ought to stand exculpated from the charge
of ungracious or unbecoming indifference to public
applause. I did not the less feel gratitude for
the public favour, although I did not proclaim it;
as the lover who wears his mistress’s favour
in his bosom is as proud, though not so vain, of possessing
it as another who displays the token of her grace upon
his bonnet. Far from such an ungracious state
of mind, I have seldom felt more satisfaction than
when, returning from a pleasure voyage, I found Waverley
in the zenith of popularity, and public curiosity
in full cry after the name of the Author. The
knowledge that I had the public approbation was like
having the property of a hidden treasure, not less
gratifying to the owner than if all the world knew
that it was his own. Another advantage was connected
with the secrecy which I observed. I could appear
or retreat from the stage at pleasure, without attracting
any personal notice or attention, other than what
might be founded on suspicion only. In my own
person also, as a successful author in another department
of literature, I might have been charged with too
frequent intrusions on the public patience; but the
Author of Waverley was in this respect as impassible
to the critic as the Ghost of Hamlet to the partisan
of Marcellus. Perhaps the curiosity of the public,
irritated by the existence of a secret, and kept afloat
by the discussions which took place on the subject
from time to time, went a good way to maintain an unabated
interest in these frequent publications. There
was a mystery concerning the Author which each new
novel was expected to assist in unravelling, although
it might in other respects rank lower than its predecessors.
I may perhaps be thought guilty of
affectation, should I allege as one reason of my silence
a secret dislike to enter on personal discussions
concerning my own literary labours. It is in every
case a dangerous intercourse for an author to be dwelling
continually among those who make his writings a frequent
and familiar subject of conversation, but who must
necessarily be partial judges of works composed in
their own society. The habits of self-importance
which are thus acquired by authors are highly injurious
to a well-regulated mind; for the cup of flattery,
if it does not, like that of Circe, reduce men to
the level of beasts, is sure, if eagerly drained,
to bring the best and the ablest down to that of fools.
This risk was in some degree prevented by the mask
which I wore; and my own stores of self-conceit were
left to their natural course, without being enhanced
by the partiality of friends or adulation of flatterers.
If I am asked further reasons for
the conduct I have long observed, I can only resort
to the explanation supplied by a critic as friendly
as he is intelligent; namely, that the mental organisation
of the novelist must be characterised, to speak craniologically,
by an extraordinary development of the passion for
delitescency! I the rather suspect some natural
disposition of this kind; for, from the instant I
perceived the extreme curiosity manifested on the
subject, I felt a secret satisfaction in baffling
it, for which, when its unimportance is considered,
I do not well know how to account.
My desire to remain concealed, in
the character of the Author of these Novels, subjected
me occasionally to awkward embarrassments, as it sometimes
happened that those who were sufficiently intimate
with me would put the question in direct terms.
In this case, only one of three courses could be followed.
Either I must have surrendered my secret, or have
returned an equivocating answer, or, finally, must
have stoutly and boldly denied the fact. The
first was a sacrifice which I conceive no one had a
right to force from me, since I alone was concerned
in the matter. The alternative of rendering a
doubtful answer must have left me open to the degrading
suspicion that I was not unwilling to assume the merit
(if there was any) which I dared not absolutely lay
claim to; or those who might think more justly of
me must have received such an equivocal answer as
an indirect avowal. I therefore considered myself
entitled, like an accused person put upon trial, to
refuse giving my own evidence to my own conviction,
and flatly to deny all that could not be proved against
me. At the same time I usually qualified my denial
by stating that, had I been the Author of these works,
I would have felt myself quite entitled to protect
my secret by refusing my own evidence, when it was
asked for to accomplish a discovery of what I desired
to conceal.
The real truth is, that I never expected
or hoped to disguise my connection with these Novels
from any one who lived on terms of intimacy with me.
The number of coincidences which necessarily existed
between narratives recounted, modes of expression,
and opinions broached in these Tales and such as were
used by their Author in the intercourse of private
life must have been far too great to permit any of
my familiar acquaintances to doubt the identity betwixt
their friend and the Author of Waverley; and I believe
they were all morally convinced of it. But while
I was myself silent, their belief could not weigh
much more with the world than that of others; their
opinions and reasoning were liable to be taxed with
partiality, or confronted with opposing arguments
and opinions; and the question was not so much whether
I should be generally acknowledged to be the Author,
in spite of my own denial, as whether even my own
avowal of the works, if such should be made, would
be sufficient to put me in undisputed possession of
that character.
I have been often asked concerning
supposed cases, in which I was said to have been placed
on the verge of discovery; but, as I maintained my
point with the composure of a lawyer of thirty years’
standing, I never recollect being in pain or confusion
on the subject. In Captain Medwyn’s Conversations
of Lord Byron the reporter states himself to have
asked my noble and highly gifted friend,’ If
he was certain about these Novels being Sir Walter
Scott’s?’ To which Lord Byron replied,
’Scott as much as owned himself the Author of
Waverley to me in Murray’s shop. I was
talking to him about that Novel, and lamented that
its Author had not carried back the story nearer to
the time of the Revolution. Scott, entirely off
his guard, replied, “Ay, I might have done so;
but—” there he stopped. It was
in vain to attempt to correct himself; he looked confused,
and relieved his embarrassment by a precipitate retreat.’
I have no recollection whatever of this scene taking
place, and I should have thought that I was more likely
to have laughed than to appear confused, for I certainly
never hoped to impose upon Lord Byron in a case of
the kind; and from the manner in which he uniformly
expressed himself, I knew his opinion was entirely
formed, and that any disclamations of mine would only
have savoured of affectation. I do not mean to
insinuate that the incident did not happen, but only
that it could hardly have occurred exactly under the
circumstances narrated, without my recollecting something
positive on the subject. In another part of the
same volume Lord Byron is reported to have expressed
a supposition that the cause of my not avowing myself
the Author of Waverley may have been some surmise that
the reigning family would have been displeased with
the work. I can only say, it is the last apprehension
I should have entertained, as indeed the inscription
to these volumes sufficiently proves. The sufferers
of that melancholy period have, during the last and
present reign, been honoured both with the sympathy
and protection of the reigning family, whose magnanimity
can well pardon a sigh from others, and bestow one
themselves, to the memory of brave opponents, who
did nothing in hate, but all in honour.
While those who were in habitual intercourse
with the real author had little hesitation in assigning
the literary property to him, others, and those critics
of no mean rank, employed themselves in investigating
with persevering patience any characteristic features
which might seem to betray the origin of these Novels.
Amongst these, one gentleman, equally remarkable for
the kind and liberal tone of his criticism, the acuteness
of his reasoning, and the very gentlemanlike manner
in which he conducted his inquiries, displayed not
only powers of accurate investigation, but a temper
of mind deserving to be employed on a subject of much
greater importance; and I have no doubt made converts
to his opinion of almost all who thought the point
worthy of consideration. [Footnote: Letters on
the Author of Waverly; Rodwell and Martin, London,
1822.] Of those letters, and other attempts of the
same kind, the Author could not complain, though his
incognito was endangered. He had challenged the
public to a game at bo-peep, and if he was discovered
in his ‘hiding-hole,’ he must submit to
the shame of detection.
Various reports were of course circulated
in various ways; some founded on an inaccurate rehearsal
of what may have been partly real, some on circumstances
having no concern whatever with the subject, and others
on the invention of some importunate persons, who
might perhaps imagine that the readiest mode of forcing
the Author to disclose himself was to assign some
dishonourable and discreditable cause for his silence.
It may be easily supposed that this
sort of inquisition was treated with contempt by the
person whom it principally regarded; as, among all
the rumours that were current, there was only one,
and that as unfounded as the others, which had nevertheless
some alliance to probability, and indeed might have
proved in some degree true.
I allude to a report which ascribed
a great part, or the whole, of these Novels to the
late Thomas Scott, Esq., of the 70th Regiment, then
stationed in Canada. Those who remember that gentleman
will readily grant that, with general talents at least
equal to those of his elder brother, he added a power
of social humour and a deep insight into human character
which rendered him an universally delightful member
of society, and that the habit of composition alone
was wanting to render him equally successful as a writer.
The Author of Waverley was so persuaded of the truth
of this, that he warmly pressed his brother to make
such an experiment, and willingly undertook all the
trouble of correcting and superintending the press.
Mr. Thomas Scott seemed at first very well disposed
to embrace the proposal, and had even fixed on a subject
and a hero. The latter was a person well known
to both of us in our boyish years, from having displayed
some strong traits of character. Mr. T. Scott
had determined to represent his youthful acquaintance
as emigrating to America, and encountering the dangers
and hardships of the New World, with the same dauntless
spirit which he had displayed when a boy in his native
country. Mr. Scott would probably have been highly
successful, being familiarly acquainted with the manners
of the native Indians, of the old French settlers
in Canada, and of the Brules or Woodsmen, and having
the power of observing with accuracy what I have no
doubt he could have sketched with force and expression.
In short, the Author believes his brother would have
made himself distinguished in that striking field
in which, since that period, Mr. Cooper has achieved
so many triumphs. But Mr. T. Scott was already
affected by bad health, which wholly unfitted him for
literary labour, even if he could have reconciled his
patience to the task. He never, I believe, wrote
a single line of the projected work; and I only have
the melancholy pleasure of preserving in the Appendix
[Footnote: See Appendix No. III.] the simple
anecdote on which he proposed to found it.
To this I may add, I can easily conceive
that there may have been circumstances which gave
a colour to the general report of my brother being
interested in these works; and in particular that it
might derive strength from my having occasion to remit
to him, in consequence of certain family transactions,
some considerable sums of money about that period.
To which it is to be added that if any person chanced
to evince particular curiosity on such a subject,
my brother was likely enough to divert himself with
practising on their credulity.
It may be mentioned that, while the
paternity of these Novels was from time to time warmly
disputed in Britain, the foreign booksellers expressed
no hesitation on the matter, but affixed my name to
the whole of the Novels, and to some besides to which
I had no claim.
The volumes, therefore, to which the
present pages form a Preface are entirely the composition
of the Author by whom they are now acknowledged, with
the exception, always, of avowed quotations, and such
unpremeditated and involuntary plagiarisms as can scarce
be guarded against by any one who has read and written
a great deal. The original manuscripts are all
in existence, and entirely written (horresco referens)
in the Author’s own hand, excepting during the
years 1818 and 1819, when, being affected with severe
illness, he was obliged to employ the assistance of
a friendly amanuensis.
The number of persons to whom the
secret was necessarily entrusted, or communicated
by chance, amounted, I should think, to twenty at
least, to whom I am greatly obliged for the fidelity
with which they observed their trust, until the derangement
of the affairs of my publishers, Messrs. Constable
and Co., and the exposure of their account books,
which was the necessary consequence, rendered secrecy
no longer possible. The particulars attending
the avowal have been laid before the public in the
Introduction to the Chronicles of the Canongate.
The preliminary advertisement has
given a sketch of the purpose of this edition.
I have some reason to fear that the notes which accompany
the tales, as now published, may be thought too miscellaneous
and too egotistical. It maybe some apology for
this, that the publication was intended to be posthumous,
and still more, that old men may be permitted to speak
long, because they cannot in the course of nature
have long time to speak. In preparing the present
edition, I have done all that I can do to explain
the nature of my materials, and the use I have made
of them; nor is it probable that I shall again revise
or even read these tales. I was therefore desirous
rather to exceed in the portion of new and explanatory
matter which is added to this edition than that the
reader should have reason to complain that the information
communicated was of a general and merely nominal character.
It remains to be tried whether the public (like a child
to whom a watch is shown) will, after having been satiated
with looking at the outside, acquire some new interest
in the object when it is opened and the internal machinery
displayed to them.
That Waverly and its successors have
had their day of favour and popularity must be admitted
with sincere gratitude; and the Author has studied
(with the prudence of a beauty whose reign has been
rather long) to supply, by the assistance of art, the
charms which novelty no longer affords. The publishers
have endeavoured to gratify the honourable partiality
of the public for the encouragement of British art,
by illustrating this edition with designs by the most
eminent living artists. [Footnote: The illustrations
here referred to were made for the edition of 1829]
To my distinguished countryman, David
Wilkie, to Edwin Landseer, who has exercised his talents
so much on Scottish subjects and scenery, to Messrs.
Leslie and Newton, my thanks are due, from a friend
as well as an author. Nor am I less obliged to
Messrs. Cooper, Kidd, and other artists of distinction
to whom I am less personally known, for the ready
zeal with which they have devoted their talents to
the same purpose.
Farther explanation respecting the
Edition is the business of the publishers, not of
the Author; and here, therefore, the latter has accomplished
his task of introduction and explanation. If,
like a spoiled child, he has sometimes abused or trifled
with the indulgence of the public, he feels himself
entitled to full belief when he exculpates himself
from the charge of having been at any time insensible
of their kindness.
Abbotsford, 1st January, 1829.