THE CHIEFTAIN’S SISTER
The drawing-room of Flora Mac-Ivor
was furnished in the plainest and most simple manner;
for at Glennaquoich every other sort of expenditure
was retrenched as much as possible, for the purpose
of maintaining, in its full dignity, the hospitality
of the Chieftain, and retaining and multiplying the
number of his dependants and adherents. But there
was no appearance of this parsimony in the dress of
the lady herself, which was in texture elegant, and
even rich, and arranged in a manner which partook
partly of the Parisian fashion and partly of the more
simple dress of the Highlands, blended together with
great taste. Her hair was not disfigured by the
art of the friseur, but fell in jetty ringlets on
her neck, confined only by a circlet, richly set with
diamonds. This peculiarity she adopted in compliance
with the Highland prejudices, which could not endure
that a woman’s head should be covered before
wedlock.
Flora Mac-Ivor bore a most striking
resemblance to her brother Fergus; so much so that
they might have played Viola and Sebastian with the
same exquisite effect produced by the appearance of
Mrs. Henry Siddons and her brother, Mr. William Murray,
in these characters. They had the same antique
and regular correctness of profile; the same dark
eyes, eye-lashes, and eye-brows; the same clearness
of complexion, excepting that Fergus’s was embrowned
by exercise and Flora’s possessed the utmost
feminine delicacy. But the haughty and somewhat
stern regularity of Fergus’s features was beautifully
softened in those of Flora. Their voices were
also similar in tone, though differing in the key.
That of Fergus, especially while issuing orders to
his followers during their military exercise, reminded
Edward of a favourite passage in the description of
Emetrius:
—whose voice was
heard around,
Loud as a trumpet with a silver
sound.
That of Flora, on the contrary, was
soft and sweet—’an excellent thing
in woman’; yet, in urging any favourite topic,
which she often pursued with natural eloquence, it
possessed as well the tones which impress awe and
conviction as those of persuasive insinuation.
The eager glance of the keen black eye, which, in the
Chieftain, seemed impatient even of the material obstacles
it encountered, had in his sister acquired a gentle
pensiveness. His looks seemed to seek glory,
power, all that could exalt him above others in the
race of humanity; while those of his sister, as if
she were already conscious of mental superiority, seemed
to pity, rather than envy, those who were struggling
for any farther distinction. Her sentiments corresponded
with the expression of her countenance. Early
education had impressed upon her mind, as well as
on that of the Chieftain, the most devoted attachment
to the exiled family of Stuart. She believed
it the duty of her brother, of his clan, of every
man in Britain, at whatever personal hazard, to contribute
to that restoration which the partisans of the Chevalier
St. George had not ceased to hope for. For this
she was prepared to do all, to suffer all, to sacrifice
all. But her loyalty, as it exceeded her brother’s
in fanaticism, excelled it also in purity. Accustomed
to petty intrigue, and necessarily involved in a thousand
paltry and selfish discussions, ambitious also by
nature, his political faith was tinctured, at least,
if not tainted, by the views of interest and advancement
so easily combined with it; and at the moment he should
unsheathe his claymore, it might be difficult to say
whether it would be most with the view of making James
Stuart a king or Fergus Mac-Ivor an earl. This,
indeed, was a mixture of feeling which he did not avow
even to himself, but it existed, nevertheless, in a
powerful degree.
In Flora’s bosom, on the contrary,
the zeal of loyalty burnt pure and unmixed with any
selfish feeling; she would have as soon made religion
the mask of ambitious and interested views as have
shrouded them under the opinions which she had been
taught to think patriotism. Such instances of
devotion were not uncommon among the followers of
the unhappy race of Stuart, of which many memorable
proofs will recur to the minds of most of my readers.
But peculiar attention on the part of the Chevalier
de St. George and his princess to the parents of Fergus
and his sister, and to themselves when orphans, had
riveted their faith. Fergus, upon the death of
his parents, had been for some time a page of honour
in the train of the Chevalier’s lady, and, from
his beauty and sprightly temper, was uniformly treated
by her with the utmost distinction. This was
also extended to Flora, who was maintained for some
time at a convent of the first order at the princess’s
expense, and removed from thence into her own family,
where she spent nearly two years. Both brother
and sister retained the deepest and most grateful
sense of her kindness.
Having thus touched upon the leading
principle of Flora’s character, I may dismiss
the rest more slightly. She was highly accomplished,
and had acquired those elegant manners to be expected
from one who, in early youth, had been the companion
of a princess; yet she had not learned to substitute
the gloss of politeness for the reality of feeling.
When settled in the lonely regions of Glennaquoich,
she found that her resources in French, English, and
Italian literature were likely to be few and interrupted;
and, in order to fill up the vacant time, she bestowed
a part of it upon the music and poetical traditions
of the Highlanders, and began really to feel the pleasure
in the pursuit which her brother, whose perceptions
of literary merit were more blunt, rather affected
for the sake of popularity than actually experienced.
Her resolution was strengthened in these researches
by the extreme delight which her inquiries seemed to
afford those to whom she resorted for information.
Her love of her clan, an attachment
which was almost hereditary in her bosom, was, like
her loyalty, a more pure passion than that of her
brother. He was too thorough a politician, regarded
his patriarchal influence too much as the means of
accomplishing his own aggrandisement, that we should
term him the model of a Highland Chieftain. Flora
felt the same anxiety for cherishing and extending
their patriarchal sway, but it was with the generous
desire of vindicating from poverty, or at least from
want and foreign oppression, those whom her brother
was by birth, according to the notions of the time
and country, entitled to govern. The savings
of her income, for she had a small pension from the
Princess Sobieski, were dedicated, not to add to the
comforts of the peasantry, for that was a word which
they neither knew nor apparently wished to know, but
to relieve their absolute necessities when in sickness
or extreme old age. At every other period they
rather toiled to procure something which they might
share with the Chief, as a proof of their attachment,
than expected other assistance from him save what
was afforded by the rude hospitality of his castle,
and the general division and subdivision of his estate
among them. Flora was so much beloved by them
that, when Mac-Murrough composed a song in which he
enumerated all the principal beauties of the district,
and intimated her superiority by concluding, that
’the fairest apple hung on the highest bough,’
he received, in donatives from the individuals of
the clan, more seed-barley than would have sowed his
Highland Parnassus, the bard’s croft, as it was
called, ten times over.
From situation as well as choice,
Miss Mac-Ivor’s society was extremely limited.
Her most intimate friend had been Rose Bradwardine,
to whom she was much attached; and when seen together,
they would have afforded an artist two admirable subjects
for the gay and the melancholy muse. Indeed Rose
was so tenderly watched by her father, and her circle
of wishes was so limited, that none arose but what
he was willing to gratify, and scarce any which did
not come within the compass of his power. With
Flora it was otherwise. While almost a girl she
had undergone the most complete change of scene, from
gaiety and splendour to absolute solitude and comparative
poverty; and the ideas and wishes which she chiefly
fostered respected great national events, and changes
not to be brought round without both hazard and bloodshed,
and therefore not to be thought of with levity.
Her manner, consequently, was grave, though she readily
contributed her talents to the amusement of society,
and stood very high in the opinion of the old Baron,
who used to sing along with her such French duets
of Lindor and Cloris, etc., as were in fashion
about the end of the reign of old Louis le Grand.
It was generally believed, though
no one durst have hinted it to the Baron of Bradwardine,
that Flora’s entreaties had no small share in
allaying the wrath of Fergus upon occasion of their
quarrel. She took her brother on the assailable
side, by dwelling first upon the Baron’s age,
and then representing the injury which the cause might
sustain, and the damage which must arise to his own
character in point of prudence—so necessary
to a political agent, if he persisted in carrying
it to extremity. Otherwise it is probable it
would have terminated in a duel, both because the
Baron had, on a former occasion, shed blood of the
clan, though the matter had been timely accommodated,
and on account of his high reputation for address
at his weapon, which Fergus almost condescended to
envy. For the same reason she had urged their
reconciliation, which the Chieftain the more readily
agreed to as it favoured some ulterior projects of
his own.
To this young lady, now presiding
at the female empire of the tea-table, Fergus introduced
Captain Waverley, whom she received with the usual
forms of politeness.