CHOICE OF A PROFESSION
From the minuteness with which I have
traced Waverley’s pursuits, and the bias which
these unavoidably communicated to his imagination,
the reader may perhaps anticipate, in the following
tale, an imitation of the romance of Cervantes.
But he will do my prudence injustice in the supposition.
My intention is not to follow the steps of that inimitable
author, in describing such total perversion of intellect
as misconstrues the objects actually presented to
the senses, but that more common aberration from sound
judgment, which apprehends occurrences indeed in their
reality, but communicates to them a tincture of its
own romantic tone and colouring. So far was Edward
Waverley from expecting general sympathy with his
own feelings, or concluding that the present state
of things was calculated to exhibit the reality of
those visions in which he loved to indulge, that he
dreaded nothing more than the detection of such sentiments
as were dictated by his musings. He neither had
nor wished to have a confidant, with whom to communicate
his reveries; and so sensible was he of the ridicule
attached to them, that, had he been to choose between
any punishment short of ignominy, and the necessity
of giving a cold and composed account of the ideal
world in which he lived the better part of his days,
I think he would not have hesitated to prefer the
former infliction. This secrecy became doubly
precious as he felt in advancing life the influence
of the awakening passions. Female forms of exquisite
grace and beauty began to mingle in his mental adventures;
nor was he long without looking abroad to compare
the creatures of his own imagination with the females
of actual life.
The list of the beauties who displayed
their hebdomadal finery at the parish church of Waverley
was neither numerous nor select. By far the most
passable was Miss Sissly, or, as she rather chose to
be called, Miss Cecilia Stubbs, daughter of Squire
Stubbs at the Grange. I know not whether it was
by the ’merest accident in the world,’
a phrase which, from female lips, does not always exclude
malice prepense, or whether it was from a conformity
of taste, that Miss Cecilia more than once crossed
Edward in his favourite walks through Waverley-Chase.
He had not as yet assumed courage to accost her on
these occasions; but the meeting was not without its
effect. A romantic lover is a strange idolater,
who sometimes cares not out of what log he frames
the object of his adoration; at least, if nature has
given that object any passable proportion of personal
charms, he can easily play the Jeweller and Dervise
in the Oriental tale, [Footnote: See Hoppner’s
tale of The Seven Lovers.] and supply her richly,
out of the stores of his own imagination, with supernatural
beauty, and all the properties of intellectual wealth.
But ere the charms of Miss Cecilia
Stubbs had erected her into a positive goddess, or
elevated her at least to a level with the saint her
namesake, Mrs. Rachel Waverley gained some intimation
which determined her to prevent the approaching apotheosis.
Even the most simple and unsuspicious of the female
sex have (God bless them!) an instinctive sharpness
of perception in such matters, which sometimes goes
the length of observing partialities that never existed,
but rarely misses to detect such as pass actually
under their observation. Mrs. Rachel applied herself
with great prudence, not to combat, but to elude,
the approaching danger, and suggested to her brother
the necessity that the heir of his house should see
something more of the world than was consistent with
constant residence at Waverley-Honour.
Sir Everard would not at first listen
to a proposal which went to separate his nephew from
him. Edward was a little bookish, he admitted,
but youth, he had always heard, was the season for
learning, and, no doubt, when his rage for letters
was abated, and his head fully stocked with knowledge,
his nephew would take to field-sports and country
business. He had often, he said, himself regretted
that he had not spent some time in study during his
youth: he would neither have shot nor hunted with
less skill, and he might have made the roof of Saint
Stephen’s echo to longer orations than were
comprised in those zealous Noes, with which, when
a member of the House during Godolphin’s administration,
he encountered every measure of government.
Aunt Rachel’s anxiety, however,
lent her address to carry her point. Every representative
of their house had visited foreign parts, or served
his country in the army, before he settled for life
at Waverley-Honour, and she appealed for the truth
of her assertion to the genealogical pedigree, an
authority which Sir Everard was never known to contradict.
In short, a proposal was made to Mr. Richard Waverley,
that his son should travel, under the direction of
his present tutor Mr. Pembroke, with a suitable allowance
from the Baronet’s liberality. The father
himself saw no objection to this overture; but upon
mentioning it casually at the table of the minister,
the great man looked grave. The reason was explained
in private. The unhappy turn of Sir Everard’s
politics, the minister observed, was such as would
render it highly improper that a young gentleman of
such hopeful prospects should travel on the Continent
with a tutor doubtless of his uncle’s choosing,
and directing his course by his instructions.
What might Mr. Edward Waverley’s society be
at Paris, what at Rome, where all manner of snares
were spread by the Pretender and his sons—these
were points for Mr. Waverley to consider. This
he could himself say, that he knew his Majesty had
such a just sense of Mr. Richard Waverley’s
merits, that, if his son adopted the army for a few
years, a troop, he believed, might be reckoned upon
in one of the dragoon regiments lately returned from
Flanders.
A hint thus conveyed and enforced
was not to be neglected with impunity; and Richard
Waverley, though with great dread of shocking his
brother’s prejudices, deemed he could not avoid
accepting the commission thus offered him for his son.
The truth is, he calculated much, and justly, upon
Sir Everard’s fondness for Edward, which made
him unlikely to resent any step that he might take
in due submission to parental authority. Two letters
announced this determination to the Baronet and his
nephew. The latter barely communicated the fact,
and pointed out the necessary preparations for joining
his regiment. To his brother, Richard was more
diffuse and circuitous. He coincided with him,
in the most flattering manner, in the propriety of
his son’s seeing a little more of the world,
and was even humble in expressions of gratitude for
his proposed assistance; was, however, deeply concerned
that it was now, unfortunately, not in Edward’s
power exactly to comply with the plan which had been
chalked out by his best friend and benefactor.
He himself had thought with pain on the boy’s
inactivity, at an age when all his ancestors had borne
arms; even Royalty itself had deigned to inquire whether
young Waverley was not now in Flanders, at an age
when his grandfather was already bleeding for his
king in the Great Civil War. This was accompanied
by an offer of a troop of horse. What could he
do? There was no time to consult his brother’s
inclinations, even if he could have conceived there
might be objections on his part to his nephew’s
following the glorious career of his predecessors.
And, in short, that Edward was now (the intermediate
steps of cornet and lieutenant being overleapt with
great agility) Captain Waverley, of Gardiner’s
regiment of dragoons, which he must join in their
quarters at Dundee in Scotland, in the course of a
month.
Sir Everard Waverley received this
intimation with a mixture of feelings. At the
period of the Hanoverian succession he had withdrawn
from parliament, and his conduct in the memorable year
1715 had not been altogether unsuspected. There
were reports of private musters of tenants and horses
in Waverley-Chase by moonlight, and of cases of carbines
and pistols purchased in Holland, and addressed to
the Baronet, but intercepted by the vigilance of a
riding officer of the excise, who was afterwards tossed
in a blanket on a moonless night, by an association
of stout yeomen, for his officiousness. Nay,
it was even said, that at the arrest of Sir William
Wyndham, the leader of the Tory party, a letter from
Sir Everard was found in the pocket of his night-gown.
But there was no overt act which an attainder could
be founded on, and government, contented with suppressing
the insurrection of 1715, felt it neither prudent
nor safe to push their vengeance farther than against
those unfortunate gentlemen who actually took up arms.
Nor did Sir Everard’s apprehensions
of personal consequences seem to correspond with the
reports spread among his Whig neighbours. It
was well known that he had supplied with money several
of the distressed Northumbrians and Scotchmen, who,
after being made prisoners at Preston in Lancashire,
were imprisoned in Newgate and the Marshalsea, and
it was his solicitor and ordinary counsel who conducted
the defence of some of these unfortunate gentlemen
at their trial. It was generally supposed, however,
that, had ministers possessed any real proof of Sir
Everard’s accession to the rebellion, he either
would not have ventured thus to brave the existing
government, or at least would not have done so with
impunity. The feelings which then dictated his
proceedings were those of a young man, and at an agitating
period. Since that time Sir Everard’s Jacobitism
had been gradually decaying, like a fire which burns
out for want of fuel. His Tory and High-Church
principles were kept up by some occasional exercise
at elections and quarter-sessions; but those respecting
hereditary right were fallen into a sort of abeyance.
Yet it jarred severely upon his feelings, that his
nephew should go into the army under the Brunswick
dynasty; and the more so, as, independent of his high
and conscientious ideas of paternal authority, it was
impossible, or at least highly imprudent, to interfere
authoritatively to prevent it. This suppressed
vexation gave rise to many poohs and pshaws which
were placed to the account of an incipient fit of
gout, until, having sent for the Army List, the worthy
Baronet consoled himself with reckoning the descendants
of the houses of genuine loyalty, Mordaunts, Granvilles,
and Stanleys, whose names were to be found in that
military record; and, calling up all his feelings
of family grandeur and warlike glory, he concluded,
with logic something like Falstaff’s, that when
war was at hand, although it were shame to be on any
side but one, it were worse shame to be idle than
to be on the worst side, though blacker than usurpation
could make it. As for Aunt Rachel, her scheme
had not exactly terminated according to her wishes,
but she was under the necessity of submitting to circumstances;
and her mortification was diverted by the employment
she found in fitting out her nephew for the campaign,
and greatly consoled by the prospect of beholding
him blaze in complete uniform. Edward Waverley
himself received with animated and undefined surprise
this most unexpected intelligence. It was, as
a fine old poem expresses it, ’like a fire to
heather set,’ that covers a solitary hill with
smoke, and illumines it at the same time with dusky
fire. His tutor, or, I should say, Mr. Pembroke,
for he scarce assumed the name of tutor, picked up
about Edward’s room some fragments of irregular
verse, which he appeared to have composed under the
influence of the agitating feelings occasioned by
this sudden page being turned up to him in the book
of life. The doctor, who was a believer in all
poetry which was composed by his friends, and written
out in fair straight lines, with a capital at the
beginning of each, communicated this treasure to Aunt
Rachel, who, with her spectacles dimmed with tears,
transferred them to her commonplace book, among choice
receipts for cookery and medicine, favourite texts,
and portions from High-Church divines, and a few songs,
amatory and Jacobitical, which she had carolled in
her younger days, from whence her nephew’s poetical
tentamina were extracted when the volume itself, with
other authentic records of the Waverley family, were
exposed to the inspection of the unworthy editor of
this memorable history. If they afford the reader
no higher amusement, they will serve, at least, better
than narrative of any kind, to acquaint him with the
wild and irregular spirit of our hero:—
Late, when the Autumn evening
fell
On Mirkwood-Mere’s romantic
dell,
The lake return’d, in
chasten’d gleam,
The purple cloud, the golden
beam:
Reflected in the crystal pool,
Headland and bank lay fair
and cool;
The weather-tinted rock and
tower,
Each drooping tree, each fairy
flower,
So true, so soft, the mirror
gave,
As if there lay beneath the
wave,
Secure from trouble, toil,
and care,
A world than earthly world
more fair.
But distant winds began to
wake,
And roused the Genius of the
Lake!
He heard the groaning of the
oak,
And donn’d at once his
sable cloak,
As warrior, at the battle-cry,
Invests him with his panoply:
Then, as the whirlwind nearer
press’d
He ’gan to shake his
foamy crest
O’er furrow’d
brow and blacken’d cheek,
And bade his surge in thunder
speak.
In wild and broken eddies
whirl’d.
Flitted that fond ideal world,
And to the shore in tumult
tost
The realms of fairy bliss
were lost.
Yet, with a stern delight
and strange,
I saw the spirit-stirring
change,
As warr’d the wind with
wave and wood,
Upon the ruin’d tower
I stood,
And felt my heart more strongly
bound,
Responsive to the lofty sound,
While, joying in the mighty
roar,
I mourn’d that tranquil
scene no more.
So, on the idle dreams of
youth,
Breaks the loud trumpet-call
of truth,
Bids each fair vision pass
away,
Like landscape on the lake
that lay,
As fair, as flitting, and
as frail,
As that which fled the Autumn
gale.—
For ever dead to fancy’s
eye
Be each gay form that glided
by,
While dreams of love and lady’s
charms
Give place to honour and to
arms!
In sober prose, as perhaps these verses
intimate less decidedly, the transient idea of Miss
Cecilia Stubbs passed from Captain Waverley’s
heart amid the turmoil which his new destinies excited.
She appeared, indeed, in full splendour in her father’s
pew upon the Sunday when he attended service for the
last time at the old parish church, upon which occasion,
at the request of his uncle and Aunt Rachel, he was
induced (nothing both, if the truth must be told)
to present himself in full uniform.
There is no better antidote against
entertaining too high an opinion of others than having
an excellent one of ourselves at the very same time.
Miss Stubbs had indeed summoned up every assistance
which art could afford to beauty; but, alas! hoop,
patches, frizzled locks, and a new mantua of genuine
French silk, were lost upon a young officer of dragoons
who wore for the first time his gold-laced hat, jack-boots,
and broadsword. I know not whether, like the
champion of an old ballad,—
His heart was all on honour
bent,
He could not stoop to love;
No lady in the land had power
His frozen heart to move;
or whether the deep and flaming bars
of embroidered gold, which now fenced his breast,
defied the artillery of Cecilia’s eyes; but
every arrow was launched at him in vain.
Yet did I mark where Cupid’s
shaft did light;
It lighted not on little western
flower,
But on bold yeoman, flower
of all the west,
Hight Jonas Culbertfield,
the steward’s son.
Craving pardon for my heroics (which
I am unable in certain cases to resist giving way
to), it is a melancholy fact, that my history must
here take leave of the fair Cecilia, who, like many
a daughter of Eve, after the departure of Edward,
and the dissipation of certain idle visions which
she had adopted, quietly contented herself with a
pisaller, and gave her hand, at the distance of six
months, to the aforesaid Jonas, son of the Baronet’s
steward, and heir (no unfertile prospect) to a steward’s
fortune, besides the snug probability of succeeding
to his father’s office. All these advantages
moved Squire Stubbs, as much as the ruddy brown and
manly form of the suitor influenced his daughter,
to abate somewhat in the article of their gentry; and
so the match was concluded. None seemed more
gratified than Aunt Rachel, who had hitherto looked
rather askance upon the presumptuous damsel (as much
so, peradventure, as her nature would permit), but
who, on the first appearance of the new-married pair
at church, honoured the bride with a smile and a profound
curtsy, in presence of the rector, the curate, the
clerk, and the whole congregation of the united parishes
of Waverley cum Beverley.
I beg pardon, once and for all, of
those readers who take up novels merely for amusement,
for plaguing them so long with old-fashioned politics,
and Whig and Tory, and Hanoverians and Jacobites.
The truth is, I cannot promise them that this story
shall be intelligible, not to say probable, without
it. My plan requires that I should explain the
motives on which its action proceeded; and these motives
necessarily arose from the feelings, prejudices, and
parties of the times. I do not invite my fair
readers, whose sex and impatience give them the greatest
right to complain of these circumstances, into a flying
chariot drawn by hippogriffs, or moved by enchantment.
Mine is a humble English post-chaise, drawn upon four
wheels, and keeping his Majesty’s highway.
Such as dislike the vehicle may leave it at the next
halt, and wait for the conveyance of Prince Hussein’s
tapestry, or Malek the Weaver’s flying sentrybox.
Those who are contented to remain with me will be
occasionally exposed to the dulness inseparable from
heavy roads, steep hills, sloughs, and other terrestrial
retardations; but with tolerable horses and a civil
driver (as the advertisements have it), I engage to
get as soon as possible into a more picturesque and
romantic country, if my passengers incline to have
some patience with me during my first stages. [Footnote:
These Introductory Chapters have been a good deal
censured as tedious and unnecessary. Yet there
are circumstances recorded in them which the author
has not been able to persuade himself to retrench
or cancel.]