MORE OF THE MANOR-HOUSE AND ITS ENVIRONS
After having satisfied his curiosity
by gazing around him for a few minutes, Waverley applied
himself to the massive knocker of the hall-door, the
architrave of which bore the date 1594. But no
answer was returned, though the peal resounded through
a number of apartments, and was echoed from the court-yard
walls without the house, startling the pigeons from
the venerable rotunda which they occupied, and alarming
anew even the distant village curs, which had retired
to sleep upon their respective dunghills. Tired
of the din which he created, and the unprofitable
responses which it excited, Waverley began to think
that he had reached the castle of Orgoglio as entered
by the victorious Prince Arthur,—
When ’gan he loudly
through the house to call,
But no man cared to answer
to his cry;
There reign’d a solemn
silence over all,
Nor voice was heard, nor wight
was seen in bower or hall.
Filled almost with expectation of
beholding some ’old, old man, with beard as
white as snow,’ whom he might question concerning
this deserted mansion, our hero turned to a little
oaken wicket-door, well clenched with iron-nails,
which opened in the court-yard wall at its angle
with the house. It was only latched, notwithstanding
its fortified appearance, and, when opened, admitted
him into the garden, which presented a pleasant scene.
[Footnote: Footnote: At Ravelston may be
seen such a garden, which the taste of the proprietor,
the author’s friend and kinsman, Sir Alexander
Keith, Knight Mareschal, has judiciously preserved.
That, as well as the house is, however, of smaller
dimensions than the Baron of Bradwardine’s mansion
and garden are presumed to have been.] The southern
side of the house, clothed with fruit-trees, and having
many evergreens trained upon its walls, extended its
irregular yet venerable front along a terrace, partly
paved, partly gravelled, partly bordered with flowers
and choice shrubs. This elevation descended by
three several flights of steps, placed in its centre
and at the extremities, into what might be called
the garden proper, and was fenced along the top by
a stone parapet with a heavy balustrade, ornamented
from space to space with huge grotesque figures of
animals seated upon their haunches, among which the
favourite bear was repeatedly introduced. Placed
in the middle of the terrace between a sashed-door
opening from the house and the central flight of steps,
a huge animal of the same species supported on his
head and fore-paws a sun-dial of large circumference,
inscribed with more diagrams than Edward’s mathematics
enabled him to decipher.
The garden, which seemed to be kept
with great accuracy, abounded in fruit-trees, and
exhibited a profusion of flowers and evergreens, cut
into grotesque forms. It was laid out in terraces,
which descended rank by rank from the western wall
to a large brook, which had a tranquil and smooth
appearance, where it served as a boundary to the garden;
but, near the extremity, leapt in tumult over a strong
dam, or wear-head, the cause of its temporary tranquillity,
and there forming a cascade, was overlooked by an
octangular summer-house, with a gilded bear on the
top by way of vane. After this feat, the brook,
assuming its natural rapid and fierce character, escaped
from the eye down a deep and wooded dell, from the
copse of which arose a massive, but ruinous tower,
the former habitation of the Barons of Bradwardine.
The margin of the brook, opposite to the garden, displayed
a narrow meadow, or haugh, as it was called, which
formed a small washing-green; the bank, which retired
behind it, was covered by ancient trees.
The scene, though pleasing, was not
quite equal to the gardens of Alcina; yet wanted not
the ‘due donzellette garrule’ of that
enchanted paradise, for upon the green aforesaid two
bare-legged damsels, each standing in a spacious tub,
performed with their feet the office of a patent washing-machine.
These did not, however, like the maidens of Armida,
remain to greet with their harmony the approaching
guest, but, alarmed at the appearance of a handsome
stranger on the opposite side, dropped their garments
(I should say garment, to be quite correct) over their
limbs, which their occupation exposed somewhat too
freely, and, with a shrill exclamation of ‘Eh,
sirs!’ uttered with an accent between modesty
and coquetry, sprung off like deer in different directions.
Waverley began to despair of gaining
entrance into this solitary and seemingly enchanted
mansion, when a man advanced up one of the garden
alleys, where he still retained his station. Trusting
this might be a gardener, or some domestic belonging
to the house, Edward descended the steps in order
to meet him; but as the figure approached, and long
before he could descry its features, he was struck
with the oddity of its appearance and gestures.
Sometimes this mister wight held his hands clasped
over his head, like an Indian Jogue in the attitude
of penance; sometimes he swung them perpendicularly,
like a pendulum, on each side; and anon he slapped
them swiftly and repeatedly across his breast, like
the substitute used by a hackney-coachman for his
usual flogging exercise, when his cattle are idle
upon the stand, in a clear frosty day. His gait
was as singular as his gestures, for at times he hopped
with great perseverance on the right foot, then exchanged
that supporter to advance in the same manner on the
left, and then putting his feet close together he hopped
upon both at once. His attire also was antiquated
and extravagant. It consisted in a sort of grey
jerkin, with scarlet cuffs and slashed sleeves, showing
a scarlet lining; the other parts of the dress corresponded
in colour, not forgetting a pair of scarlet stockings,
and a scarlet bonnet, proudly surmounted with a turkey’s
feather. Edward, whom he did not seem to observe,
now perceived confirmation in his features of what
the mien and gestures had already announced.
It was apparently neither idiocy nor insanity which
gave that wild, unsettled, irregular expression to
a face which naturally was rather handsome, but something
that resembled a compound of both, where the simplicity
of the fool was mixed with the extravagance of a crazed
imagination. He sung with great earnestness,
and not without some taste, a fragment of an old Scottish
ditty:—
False love, and hast thou
play’d me this
In summer among the flowers?
I will repay thee back again
In winter among the showers.
Unless again, again, my love,
Unless you turn again;
As you with other maidens
rove,
I’ll smile on other
men.
[Footnote: This is a genuine
ancient fragment, with some alteration in the two
last lines.]
Here lifting up his eyes, which had
hitherto been fixed in observing how his feet kept
time to the tune, he beheld Waverley, and instantly
doffed his cap, with many grotesque signals of surprise,
respect, and salutation. Edward, though with little
hope of receiving an answer to any constant question,
requested to know whether Mr. Bradwardine were at
home, or where he could find any of the domestics.
The questioned party replied, and, like the witch
of Thalaba, ’still his speech was song,’—
The Knight’s to the
mountain
His bugle to wind;
The Lady’s to greenwood
Her garland to bind.
The bower of Burd Ellen
Has moss on the floor,
That the step of Lord William
Be silent and sure.
This conveyed no information, and
Edward, repeating his queries, received a rapid answer,
in which, from the haste and peculiarity of the dialect,
the word ‘butler’ was alone intelligible.
Waverley then requested to see the butler; upon which
the fellow, with a knowing look and nod of intelligence,
made a signal to Edward to follow, and began to dance
and caper down the alley up which he had made his
approaches. A strange guide this, thought Edward,
and not much unlike one of Shakespeare’s roynish
clowns. I am not over prudent to trust to his
pilotage; but wiser men have been led by fools.
By this time he reached the bottom of the alley, where,
turning short on a little parterre of flowers, shrouded
from the east and north by a close yew hedge, he found
an old man at work without his coat, whose appearance
hovered between that of an upper servant and gardener;
his red nose and ruffled shirt belonging to the former
profession; his hale and sunburnt visage, with his
green apron, appearing to indicate
Old Adam’s likeness,
set to dress this garden.
The major domo, for such he was, and
indisputably the second officer of state in the barony
(nay, as chief minister of the interior, superior
even to Bailie Macwheeble in his own department of
the kitchen and cellar)—the major domo laid
down his spade, slipped on his coat in haste, and
with a wrathful look at Edward’s guide, probably
excited by his having introduced a stranger while
he was engaged in this laborious, and, as he might
suppose it, degrading office, requested to know the
gentleman’s commands. Being informed that
he wished to pay his respects to his master, that
his name was Waverley, and so forth, the old man’s
countenance assumed a great deal of respectful importance.
’He could take it upon his conscience to say,
his honour would have exceeding pleasure in seeing
him. Would not Mr. Waverley choose some refreshment
after his journey? His honour was with the folk
who were getting doon the dark hag; the twa gardener
lads (an emphasis on the word twa) had been ordered
to attend him; and he had been just amusing himself
in the mean time with dressing Miss Rose’s flower-bed,
that he might be near to receive his honour’s
orders, if need were; he was very fond of a garden,
but had little time for such divertisements.’
’He canna get it wrought in
abune twa days in the week at no rate whatever,’
said Edward’s fantastic conductor.
A grim look from the butler chastised
his interference, and he commanded him, by the name
of Davie Gellatley, in a tone which admitted no discussion,
to look for his honour at the dark hag, and tell him
there was a gentleman from the south had arrived at
the Ha’.
‘Can this poor fellow deliver
a letter?’ asked Edward.
’With all fidelity, sir, to
any one whom he respects. I would hardly trust
him with a long message by word of mouth—though
he is more knave than fool.’
Waverley delivered his credentials
to Mr. Gellatley, who seemed to confirm the butler’s
last observation, by twisting his features at him,
when he was looking another way, into the resemblance
of the grotesque face on the bole of a German tobacco
pipe; after which, with an odd conge to Waverley,
he danced off to discharge his errand.
‘He is an innocent, sir,’
said the butler; ’there is one such in almost
every town in the country, but ours is brought far
ben. [Footnote: See Note 8.] He used to work
a day’s turn weel enough; but he helped Miss
Rose when she was flemit with the Laird of Killancureit’s
new English bull, and since that time we ca’
him Davie Do-little; indeed we might ca’ him
Davie Do-naething, for since he got that gay clothing,
to please his honour and my young mistress (great
folks will have their fancies), he has done naething
but dance up and down about the toun, without doing
a single turn, unless trimming the laird’s fishing-wand
or busking his flies, or may be catching a dish of
trouts at an orra time. But here comes Miss Rose,
who, I take burden upon me for her, will be especial
glad to see one of the house of Waverley at her father’s
mansion of Tully-Veolan.’
But Rose Bradwardine deserves better
of her unworthy historian than to be introduced at
the end of a chapter.
In the mean while it may be noticed,
that Waverley learned two things from this colloquy:
that in Scotland a single house was called a town,
and a natural fool an innocent.