To this slight attempt at a sketch
of ancient Scottish manners the public have been more
favourable than the Author durst have hoped or expected.
He has heard, with a mixture of satisfaction and humility,
his work ascribed to more than one respectable name.
Considerations, which seem weighty in his particular
situation, prevent his releasing those gentlemen from
suspicion by placing his own name in the title-page;
so that, for the present at least, it must remain
uncertain whether Waverley be the work of a poet or
a critic, a lawyer or a clergyman, or whether the writer,
to use Mrs. Malaprop’s phrase, be, ’like
Cerberus, three gentlemen at once.’ The
Author, as he is unconscious of anything in the work
itself (except perhaps its frivolity) which prevents
its finding an acknowledged father, leaves it to the
candour of the public to choose among the many circumstances
peculiar to different situations in life such as may
induce him to suppress his name on the present occasion.
He may be a writer new to publication, and unwilling
to avow a character to which he is unaccustomed; or
he may be a hackneyed author, who is ashamed of too
frequent appearance, and employs this mystery, as
the heroine of the old comedy used her mask, to attract
the attention of those to whom her face had become
too familiar. He may be a man of a grave profession,
to whom the reputation of being a novel-writer might
be prejudicial; or he may be a man of fashion, to whom
writing of any kind might appear pedantic. He
may be too young to assume the character of an author,
or so old as to make it advisable to lay it aside.
The Author of Waverley has heard it
objected to this novel, that, in the character of
Callum Beg and in the account given by the Baron of
Bradwardine of the petty trespasses of the Highlanders
upon trifling articles of property, he has borne hard,
and unjustly so, upon their national character.
Nothing could be farther from his wish or intention.
The character of Callum Beg is that of a spirit naturally
turned to daring evil, and determined, by the circumstances
of his situation, to a particular species of mischief.
Those who have perused the curious Letters from the
Highlands, published about 1726, will find instances
of such atrocious characters which fell under the
writer’s own observation, though it would be
most unjust to consider such villains as representatives
of the Highlanders of that period, any more than the
murderers of Marr and Williamson can be supposed to
represent the English of the present day. As for
the plunder supposed to have been picked up by some
of the insurgents in 1745, it must be remembered that,
although the way of that unfortunate little army was
neither marked by devastation nor bloodshed, but,
on the contrary, was orderly and quiet in a most wonderful
degree, yet no army marches through a country in a
hostile manner without committing some depredations;
and several, to the extent and of the nature jocularly
imputed to them by the Baron, were really laid to
the charge of the Highland insurgents; for which many
traditions, and particularly one respecting the Knight
of the Mirror, may be quoted as good evidence. [Footnote:
A homely metrical narrative of the events of the period,
which contains some striking particulars, and is still
a great favourite with the lower classes, gives a
very correct statement of the behaviour of the mountaineers
respecting this same military license; and, as the
verses are little known, and contain some good sense,
we venture to insert them.]