A SCOTTISH MANOR-HOUSE SIXTY YEARS SINCE
It was about noon when Captain Waverley
entered the straggling village, or rather hamlet,
of Tully-Veolan, close to which was situated the mansion
of the proprietor. The houses seemed miserable
in the extreme, especially to an eye accustomed to
the smiling neatness of English cottages. They
stood, without any respect for regularity, on each
side of a straggling kind of unpaved street, where
children, almost in a primitive state of nakedness,
lay sprawling, as if to be crushed by the hoofs of
the first passing horse. Occasionally, indeed,
when such a consummation seemed inevitable, a watchful
old grandam, with her close cap, distaff, and spindle,
rushed like a sibyl in frenzy out of one of these
miserable cells, dashed into the middle of the path,
and snatching up her own charge from among the sunburnt
loiterers, saluted him with a sound cuff, and transported
him back to his dungeon, the little white-headed varlet
screaming all the while, from the very top of his
lungs, a shrilly treble to the growling remonstrances
of the enraged matron. Another part in this concert
was sustained by the incessant yelping of a score of
idle useless curs, which followed, snarling, barking,
howling, and snapping at the horses’ heels;
a nuisance at that time so common in Scotland, that
a French tourist, who, like other travellers, longed
to find a good and rational reason for everything he
saw, has recorded, as one of the memorabilia of Caledonia,
that the state maintained, in each village a relay
of curs, called collies, whose duty it was to chase
the chevaux de poste (too starved and exhausted to
move without such a stimulus) from one hamlet to another,
till their annoying convoy drove them to the end of
their stage. The evil and remedy (such as it
is) still exist.—But this is remote from
our present purpose, and is only thrown out for consideration
of the collectors under Mr. Dent’s Dog Bill.
As Waverley moved on, here and there
an old man, bent as much by toil as years, his eyes
bleared with age and smoke, tottered to the door of
his hut, to gaze on the dress of the stranger and the
form and motions of the horses, and then assembled,
with his neighbours, in a little group at the smithy,
to discuss the probabilities of whence the stranger
came and where he might be going. Three or four
village girls, returning from the well or brook with
pitchers and pails upon their heads, formed more pleasing
objects, and, with their thin short-gowns and single
petticoats, bare arms, legs, and feet, uncovered heads
and braided hair, somewhat resembled Italian forms
of landscape. Nor could a lover of the picturesque
have challenged either the elegance of their costume
or the symmetry of their shape; although, to say the
truth, a mere Englishman in search of the comfortable,
a word peculiar to his native tongue, might have wished
the clothes less scanty, the feet and legs somewhat
protected from the weather, the head and complexion
shrouded from the sun, or perhaps might even have
thought the whole person and dress considerably improved
by a plentiful application of spring water, with a
quantum sufficit of soap. The whole scene was
depressing; for it argued, at the first glance, at
least a stagnation of industry, and perhaps of intellect.
Even curiosity, the busiest passion of the idle, seemed
of a listless cast in the village of Tully-Veolan:
the curs aforesaid alone showed any part of its activity;
with the villagers it was passive. They stood,
and gazed at the handsome young officer and his attendant,
but without any of those quick motions and eager looks
that indicate the earnestness with which those who
live in monotonous ease at home look out for amusement
abroad. Yet the physiognomy of the people, when
more closely examined, was far from exhibiting the
indifference of stupidity; their features were rough,
but remarkably intelligent; grave, but the very reverse
of stupid; and from among the young women an artist
might have chosen more than one model whose features
and form resembled those of Minerva. The children
also, whose skins were burnt black, and whose hair
was bleached white, by the influence of the sun, had
a look and manner of life and interest. It seemed,
upon the whole, as if poverty, and indolence, its too
frequent companion, were combining to depress the natural
genius and acquired information of a hardy, intelligent,
and reflecting peasantry.
Some such thoughts crossed Waverley’s
mind as he paced his horse slowly through the rugged
and flinty street of Tully-Veolan, interrupted only
in his meditations by the occasional caprioles which
his charger exhibited at the reiterated assaults of
those canine Cossacks, the collies before mentioned.
The village was more than half a mile long, the cottages
being irregularly divided from each other by gardens,
or yards, as the inhabitants called them, of different
sizes, where (for it is Sixty Years Since) the now
universal potato was unknown, but which were stored
with gigantic plants of kale or colewort, encircled
with groves of nettles, and exhibited here and there
a huge hemlock, or the national thistle, overshadowing
a quarter of the petty inclosure. The broken
ground on which the village was built had never been
levelled; so that these inclosures presented declivities
of every degree, here rising like terraces, there
sinking like tan-pits. The dry-stone walls which
fenced, or seemed to fence (for they were sorely breached),
these hanging gardens of Tully-Veolan were intersected
by a narrow lane leading to the common field, where
the joint labour of the villagers cultivated alternate
ridges and patches of rye, oats, barley, and pease,
each of such minute extent that at a little distance
the unprofitable variety of the surface resembled
a tailor’s book of patterns. In a few favoured
instances, there appeared behind the cottages a miserable
wigwam, compiled of earth, loose stones, and turf,
where the wealthy might perhaps shelter a starved
cow or sorely galled horse. But almost every
hut was fenced in front by a huge black stack of turf
on one side of the door, while on the other the family
dunghill ascended in noble emulation.
About a bowshot from the end of the
village appeared the inclosures proudly denominated
the Parks of Tully-Veolan, being certain square fields,
surrounded and divided by stone walls five feet in
height. In the centre of the exterior barrier
was the upper gate of the avenue, opening under an
archway, battlemented on the top, and adorned with
two large weather-beaten mutilated masses of upright
stone, which, if the tradition of the hamlet could
be trusted, had once represented, at least had been
once designed to represent, two rampant Bears, the
supporters of the family of Bradwardine. This
avenue was straight and of moderate length, running
between a double row of very ancient horse-chestnuts,
planted alternately with sycamores, which rose to such
huge height, and nourished so luxuriantly, that their
boughs completely over-arched the broad road beneath.
Beyond these venerable ranks, and running parallel
to them, were two high walls, of apparently the like
antiquity, overgrown with ivy, honeysuckle, and other
climbing plants. The avenue seemed very little
trodden, and chiefly by foot-passengers; so that being
very broad, and enjoying a constant shade, it was
clothed with grass of a deep and rich verdure, excepting
where a foot-path, worn by occasional passengers,
tracked with a natural sweep the way from the upper
to the lower gate. This nether portal, like the
former, opened in front of a wall ornamented with
some rude sculpture, with battlements on the top,
over which were seen, half-hidden by the trees of
the avenue, the high steep roofs and narrow gables
of the mansion, with lines indented into steps, and
corners decorated with small turrets. One of
the folding leaves of the lower gate was open, and
as the sun shone full into the court behind, a long
line of brilliancy was flung upon the aperture up the
dark and gloomy avenue. It was one of those effects
which a painter loves to represent, and mingled well
with the struggling light which found its way between
the boughs of the shady arch that vaulted the broad
green alley.
The solitude and repose of the whole
scene seemed almost monastic; and Waverley, who had
given his horse to his servant on entering the first
gate, walked slowly down the avenue, enjoying the
grateful and cooling shade, and so much pleased with
the placid ideas of rest and seclusion excited by
this confined and quiet scene, that he forgot the
misery and dirt of the hamlet he had left behind him.
The opening into the paved court-yard corresponded
with the rest of the scene. The house, which seemed
to consist of two or three high, narrow, and steep-roofed
buildings, projecting from each other at right angles,
formed one side of the inclosure. It had been
built at a period when castles were no longer necessary,
and when the Scottish architects had not yet acquired
the art of designing a domestic residence. The
windows were numberless, but very small; the roof had
some nondescript kind of projections, called bartizans,
and displayed at each frequent angle a small turret,
rather resembling a pepper-box than a Gothic watchtower.
Neither did the front indicate absolute security from
danger. There were loop-holes for musketry, and
iron stanchions on the lower windows, probably to repel
any roving band of gypsies, or resist a predatory
visit from the caterans of the neighbouring Highlands.
Stables and other offices occupied another side of
the square. The former were low vaults, with
narrow slits instead of windows, resembling, as Edward’s
groom observed, ’rather a prison for murderers,
and larceners, and such like as are tried at ’sizes,
than a place for any Christian cattle.’
Above these dungeon-looking stables were granaries,
called girnels, and other offices, to which there was
access by outside stairs of heavy masonry. Two
battlemented walls, one of which faced the avenue,
and the other divided the court from the garden, completed
the inclosure.
Nor was the court without its ornaments.
In one corner was a tun-bellied pigeon-house, of
great size and rotundity, resembling in figure and
proportion the curious edifice called Arthur’s
Oven, which would have turned the brains of all the
antiquaries in England, had not the worthy proprietor
pulled it down for the sake of mending a neighbouring
dam-dyke. This dove-cot, or columbarium, as the
owner called it, was no small resource to a Scottish
laird of that period, whose scanty rents were eked
out by the contributions levied upon the farms by
these light foragers, and the conscriptions exacted
from the latter for the benefit of the table.
Another corner of the court displayed
a fountain, where a huge bear, carved in stone, predominated
over a large stone-basin, into which he disgorged
the water. This work of art was the wonder of
the country ten miles round. It must not be forgotten,
that all sorts of bears, small and large, demi or
in full proportion, were carved over the windows,
upon the ends of the gables, terminated the spouts,
and supported the turrets, with the ancient family
motto, ‘Beware the Bear’, cut under each
hyperborean form. The court was spacious, well
paved, and perfectly clean, there being probably another
entrance behind the stables for removing the litter.
Everything around appeared solitary, and would have
been silent, but for the continued plashing of the
fountain; and the whole scene still maintained the
monastic illusion which the fancy of Waverley had
conjured up. And here we beg permission to close
a chapter of still life. [Footnote: See Note
7.]