CASTLE-BUILDING
I have already hinted that the dainty,
squeamish, and fastidious taste acquired by a surfeit
of idle reading had not only rendered our hero unfit
for serious and sober study, but had even disgusted
him in some degree with that in which he had hitherto
indulged.
He was in his sixteenth year when
his habits of abstraction and love of solitude became
so much marked as to excite Sir Everard’s affectionate
apprehension. He tried to counterbalance these
propensities by engaging his nephew in field-sports,
which had been the chief pleasure of his own youthful
days. But although Edward eagerly carried the
gun for one season, yet when practice had given him
some dexterity, the pastime ceased to afford him amusement.
In the succeeding spring, the perusal
of old Isaac Walton’s fascinating volume determined
Edward to become ’a brother of the angle.’
But of all diversions which ingenuity ever devised
for the relief of idleness, fishing is the worst qualified
to amuse a man who is at once indolent and impatient;
and our hero’s rod was speedily flung aside.
Society and example, which, more than any other motives,
master and sway the natural bent of our passions,
might have had their usual effect upon the youthful
visionary. But the neighbourhood was thinly inhabited,
and the home-bred young squires whom it afforded were
not of a class fit to form Edward’s usual companions,
far less to excite him to emulation in the practice
of those pastimes which composed the serious business
of their lives.
There were a few other youths of better
education and a more liberal character, but from their
society also our hero was in some degree excluded.
Sir Everard had, upon the death of Queen Anne, resigned
his seat in Parliament, and, as his age increased
and the number of his contemporaries diminished, had
gradually withdrawn himself from society; so that
when, upon any particular occasion, Edward mingled
with accomplished and well-educated young men of his
own rank and expectations, he felt an inferiority
in their company, not so much from deficiency of information,
as from the want of the skill to command and to arrange
that which he possessed. A deep and increasing
sensibility added to this dislike of society.
The idea of having committed the slightest solecism
in politeness, whether real or imaginary, was agony
to him; for perhaps even guilt itself does not impose
upon some minds so keen a sense of shame and remorse,
as a modest, sensitive, and inexperienced youth feels
from the consciousness of having neglected etiquette
or excited ridicule. Where we are not at ease,
we cannot be happy; and therefore it is not surprising
that Edward Waverley supposed that he disliked and
was unfitted for society, merely because he had not
yet acquired the habit of living in it with ease and
comfort, and of reciprocally giving and receiving
pleasure.
The hours he spent with his uncle
and aunt were exhausted in listening to the oft-repeated
tale of narrative old age. Yet even there his
imagination, the predominant faculty of his mind, was
frequently excited. Family tradition and genealogical
history, upon which much of Sir Everard’s discourse
turned, is the very reverse of amber, which, itself
a valuable substance, usually includes flies, straws,
and other trifles; whereas these studies, being themselves
very insignificant and trifling, do nevertheless serve
to perpetuate a great deal of what is rare and valuable
in ancient manners, and to record many curious and
minute facts which could have been preserved and conveyed
through no other medium. If, therefore, Edward
Waverley yawned at times over the dry deduction of
his line of ancestors, with their various intermarriages,
and inwardly deprecated the remorseless and protracted
accuracy with which the worthy Sir Everard rehearsed
the various degrees of propinquity between the house
of Waverley-Honour and the doughty barons, knights,
and squires to whom they stood allied; if (notwithstanding
his obligations to the three ermines passant) he sometimes
cursed in his heart the jargon of heraldry, its griffins,
its moldwarps, its wyverns, and its dragons, with
all the bitterness of Hotspur himself, there were
moments when these communications interested his fancy
and rewarded his attention.
The deeds of Wilibert of Waverley
in the Holy Land, his long absence and perilous adventures,
his supposed death, and his return on the evening
when the betrothed of his heart had wedded the hero
who had protected her from insult and oppression during
his absence; the generosity with which the Crusader
relinquished his claims, and sought in a neighbouring
cloister that peace which passeth not away; [Footnote:
See Note 2.]—to these and similar tales
he would hearken till his heart glowed and his eye
glistened. Nor was he less affected when his aunt,
Mrs. Rachel, narrated the sufferings and fortitude
of Lady Alice Waverley during the Great Civil War.
The benevolent features of the venerable spinster
kindled into more majestic expression as she told
how Charles had, after the field of Worcester, found
a day’s refuge at Waverley-Honour, and how,
when a troop of cavalry were approaching to search
the mansion, Lady Alice dismissed her youngest son
with a handful of domestics, charging them to make
good with their lives an hour’s diversion, that
the king might have that space for escape. ‘And,
God help her,’ would Mrs. Rachel continue, fixing
her eyes upon the heroine’s portrait as she
spoke, ’full dearly did she purchase the safety
of her prince with the life of her darling child.
They brought him here a prisoner, mortally wounded;
and you may trace the drops of his blood from the
great hall door along the little gallery, and up to
the saloon, where they laid him down to die at his
mother’s feet. But there was comfort exchanged
between them; for he knew, from the glance of his
mother’s eye, that the purpose of his desperate
defence was attained. Ah! I remember,’
she continued, ’I remember well to have seen
one that knew and loved him. Miss Lucy Saint
Aubin lived and died a maid for his sake, though one
of the most beautiful and wealthy matches in this
country; all the world ran after her, but she wore
widow’s mourning all her life for poor William,
for they were betrothed though not married, and died
in— I cannot think of the date; but I remember,
in the November of that very year, when she found
herself sinking, she desired to be brought to Waverley-Honour
once more, and visited all the places where she had
been with my grand-uncle, and caused the carpets to
be raised that she might trace the impression of his
blood, and if tears could have washed it out, it had
not been there now; for there was not a dry eye in
the house. You would have thought, Edward, that
the very trees mourned for her, for their leaves dropt
around her without a gust of wind, and, indeed, she
looked like one that would never see them green again.’
From such legends our hero would steal
away to indulge the fancies they excited. In
the corner of the large and sombre library, with no
other light than was afforded by the decaying brands
on its ponderous and ample hearth, he would exercise
for hours that internal sorcery by which past or imaginary
events are presented in action, as it were, to the
eye of the muser. Then arose in long and fair
array the splendour of the bridal feast at Waverley-Castle;
the tall and emaciated form of its real lord, as he
stood in his pilgrim’s weeds, an unnoticed spectator
of the festivities of his supposed heir and intended
bride; the electrical shock occasioned by the discovery;
the springing of the vassals to arms; the astonishment
of the bridegroom; the terror and confusion of the
bride; the agony with which Wilibert observed that
her heart as well as consent was in these nuptials;
the air of dignity, yet of deep feeling, with which
he flung down the half-drawn sword, and turned away
for ever from the house of his ancestors. Then
would he change the scene, and fancy would at his wish
represent Aunt Rachel’s tragedy. He saw
the Lady Waverley seated in her bower, her ear strained
to every sound, her heart throbbing with double agony,
now listening to the decaying echo of the hoofs of
the king’s horse, and when that had died away,
hearing in every breeze that shook the trees of the
park, the noise of the remote skirmish. A distant
sound is heard like the rushing of a swoln stream;
it comes nearer, and Edward can plainly distinguish
the galloping of horses, the cries and shouts of men,
with straggling pistol-shots between, rolling forwards
to the Hall. The lady starts up—a
terrified menial rushes in—but why pursue
such a description?
As living in this ideal world became
daily more delectable to our hero, interruption was
disagreeable in proportion. The extensive domain
that surrounded the Hall, which, far exceeding the
dimensions of a park, was usually termed Waverley-Chase,
had originally been forest ground, and still, though
broken by extensive glades, in which the young deer
were sporting, retained its pristine and savage character.
It was traversed by broad avenues, in many places
half grown up with brush-wood, where the beauties
of former days used to take their stand to see the
stag coursed with greyhounds, or to gain an aim at
him with the crossbow. In one spot, distinguished
by a moss-grown Gothic monument, which retained the
name of Queen’s Standing, Elizabeth herself
was said to have pierced seven bucks with her own arrows.
This was a very favourite haunt of Waverley. At
other times, with his gun and his spaniel, which served
as an apology to others, and with a book in his pocket,
which perhaps served as an apology to himself, he
used to pursue one of these long avenues, which, after
an ascending sweep of four miles, gradually narrowed
into a rude and contracted path through the cliffy
and woody pass called Mirkwood Dingle, and opened
suddenly upon a deep, dark, and small lake, named,
from the same cause, Mirkwood-Mere. There stood,
in former times, a solitary tower upon a rock almost
surrounded by the water, which had acquired the name
of the Strength of Waverley, because in perilous times
it had often been the refuge of the family. There,
in the wars of York and Lancaster, the last adherents
of the Red Rose who dared to maintain her cause carried
on a harassing and predatory warfare, till the stronghold
was reduced by the celebrated Richard of Gloucester.
Here, too, a party of Cavaliers long maintained themselves
under Nigel Waverley, elder brother of that William
whose fate Aunt Rachel commemorated. Through
these scenes it was that Edward loved to ‘chew
the cud of sweet and bitter fancy,’ and, like
a child among his toys, culled and arranged, from
the splendid yet useless imagery and emblems with
which his imagination was stored, visions as brilliant
and as fading as those of an evening sky. The
effect of this indulgence upon his temper and character
will appear in the next chapter.