THE BALL
Ensign MacCombich having gone to the
Highland camp upon duty, and Bailie Macwheeble having
retired to digest his dinner and Evan Dhu’s
intimation of martial law in some blind change-house,
Waverley, with the Baron and the Chieftain, proceeded
to Holyrood House. The two last were in full
tide of spirits, and the Baron rallied in his way
our hero upon the handsome figure which his new dress
displayed to advantage. ’If you have any
design upon the heart of a bonny Scotch lassie, I
would premonish you, when you address her, to remember
and quote the words of Virgilius:—
Nunc insanus amor duri me
Martis in armis,
Tela inter media atque adversos
detinet hostes;
whilk verses Robertson of Struan,
Chief of the Clan Donnochy (unless the claims of Lude
ought to be preferred primo loco), has thus elegantly
rendered:—
For cruel love had gartan’d
low my leg,
And clad my hurdies in a philabeg.
Although, indeed, ye wear the trews,
a garment whilk I approve maist of the twa, as mair
ancient and seemly.’ ‘Or rather,’
said Fergus, ’hear my song:—
She wadna hae a Lowland laird,
Nor be an English
lady;
But she’s away with
Duncan Grame,
And he’s
row’d her in his plaidy.’
By this time they reached the palace
of Holyrood, and were announced respectively as they
entered the apartments.
It is but too well known how many
gentlemen of rank, education, and fortune took a concern
in the ill-fated and desperate undertaking of 1745.
The ladies, also, of Scotland very generally espoused
the cause of the gallant and handsome young Prince,
who threw himself upon the mercy of his countrymen
rather like a hero of romance than a calculating politician.
It is not, therefore, to be wondered that Edward,
who had spent the greater part of his life in the
solemn seclusion of Waverley-Honour, should have been
dazzled at the liveliness and elegance of the scene
now exhibited in the long deserted halls of the Scottish
palace. The accompaniments, indeed, fell short
of splendour, being such as the confusion and hurry
of the time admitted; still, however, the general
effect was striking, and, the rank of the company
considered, might well be called brilliant.
It was not long before the lover’s
eye discovered the object of his attachment.
Flora Mac-Ivor was in the act of returning to her
seat, near the top of the room, with Rose Bradwardine
by her side. Among much elegance and beauty,
they had attracted a great degree of the public attention,
being certainly two of the handsomest women present.
The Prince took much notice of both, particularly
of Flora, with whom he danced, a preference which she
probably owed to her foreign education and command
of the French and Italian languages.
When the bustle attending the conclusion
of the dance permitted, Edward almost intuitively
followed Fergus to the place where Miss Mac-Ivor was
seated. The sensation of hope with which he had
nursed his affection in absence of the beloved object
seemed to vanish in her presence, and, like one striving
to recover the particulars of a forgotten dream, he
would have given the world at that moment to have
recollected the grounds on which he had founded expectations
which now seemed so delusive. He accompanied
Fergus with downcast eyes, tingling ears, and the feelings
of the criminal who, while the melancholy cart moves
slowly through the crowds that have assembled to behold
his execution, receives no clear sensation either
from the noise which fills his ears or the tumult
on which he casts his wandering look. Flora seemed
a little—a very little—affected
and discomposed at his approach. ‘I bring
you an adopted son of Ivor,’ said Fergus.
‘And I receive him as a second
brother,’ replied Flora.
There was a slight emphasis on the
word, which would have escaped every ear but one that
was feverish with apprehension. It was, however,
distinctly marked, and, combined with her whole tone
and manner, plainly intimated, ’I will never
think of Mr. Waverley as a more intimate connexion.’
Edward stopped, bowed, and looked at Fergus, who bit
his lip, a movement of anger which proved that he
also had put a sinister interpretation on the reception
which his sister had given his friend. ’This,
then, is an end of my day-dream!’ Such was
Waverley’s first thought, and it was so exquisitely
painful as to banish from his cheek every drop of
blood.
‘Good God!’ said Rose
Bradwardine, ‘he is not yet recovered!’
These words, which she uttered with
great emotion, were overheard by the Chevalier himself,
who stepped hastily forward, and, taking Waverley
by the hand, inquired kindly after his health, and
added that he wished to speak with him. By a
strong and sudden effort; which the circumstances
rendered indispensable, Waverley recovered himself
so far as to follow the Chevalier in silence to a recess
in the apartment.
Here the Prince detained him some
time, asking various questions about the great Tory
and Catholic families of England, their connexions,
their influence, and the state of their affections
towards the house of Stuart. To these queries
Edward could not at any time have given more than
general answers, and it may be supposed that, in the
present state of his feelings, his responses were
indistinct even to confusion. The Chevalier smiled
once or twice at the incongruity of his replies, but
continued the same style of conversation, although
he found himself obliged to occupy the principal share
of it, until he perceived that Waverley had recovered
his presence of mind. It is probable that this
long audience was partly meant to further the idea
which the Prince desired should be entertained among
his followers, that Waverley was a character of political
influence. But it appeared, from his concluding
expressions, that he had a different and good-natured
motive, personal to our hero, for prolonging the conference.
’I cannot resist the temptation,’ he said,
’of boasting of my own discretion as a lady’s
confidant. You see, Mr. Waverley, that I know
all, and I assure you I am deeply interested in the
affair. But, my good young friend, you must put
a more severe restraint upon your feelings. There
are many here whose eyes can see as clearly as mine,
but the prudence of whose tongues may not be equally
trusted,’
So saying, he turned easily away and
joined a circle of officers at a few paces’
distance, leaving Waverley to meditate upon his parting
expression, which, though not intelligible to him in
its whole purport, was sufficiently so in the caution
which the last word recommended. Making, therefore,
an effort to show himself worthy of the interest which
his new master had expressed, by instant obedience
to his recommendation, he walked up to the spot where
Flora and Miss Bradwardine were still seated, and having
made his compliments to the latter, he succeeded, even
beyond his own expectation, in entering into conversation
upon general topics.
If, my dear reader, thou hast ever
happened to take post-horses at——or
at——(one at least of which blanks,
or more probably both, you will be able to fill up
from an inn near your own residence), you must have
observed, and doubtless with sympathetic pain, the
reluctant agony with which the poor jades at first
apply their galled necks to the collars of the harness.
But when the irresistible arguments of the post-boy
have prevailed upon them to proceed a mile or two,
they will become callous to the first sensation; and
being warm in the harness, as the said post-boy may
term it, proceed as if their withers were altogether
unwrung. This simile so much corresponds with
the state of Waverley’s feelings in the course
of this memorable evening, that I prefer it (especially
as being, I trust, wholly original) to any more splendid
illustration with which Byshe’s ‘Art of
Poetry’ might supply me.
Exertion, like virtue, is its own
reward; and our hero had, moreover, other stimulating
motives for persevering in a display of affected composure
and indifference to Flora’s obvious unkindness.
Pride, which supplies its caustic as an useful, though
severe, remedy for the wounds of affection, came rapidly
to his aid. Distinguished by the favour of a
prince; destined, he had room to hope, to play a conspicuous
part in the revolution which awaited a mighty kingdom;
excelling, probably, in mental acquirements, and equalling
at least in personal accomplishments, most of the
noble and distinguished persons with whom he was now
ranked; young, wealthy, and high-born,—could
he, or ought he, to droop beneath the frown of a capricious
beauty?
O nymph, unrelenting and cold
as thou art,
My bosom is proud as thine
own.
With the feeling expressed in these
beautiful lines (which, however, were not then written),
[Footnote: They occur in Miss Seward’s
fine verses, beginning—’To thy rocks,
stormy Lannow, adieu.’] Waverley determined
upon convincing Flora that he was not to be depressed
by a rejection in which his vanity whispered that
perhaps she did her own prospects as much injustice
as his. And, to aid this change of feeling, there
lurked the secret and unacknowledged hope that she
might learn to prize his affection more highly, when
she did not conceive it to be altogether within her
own choice to attract or repulse it. There was
a mystic tone of encouragement, also, in the Chevalier’s
words, though he feared they only referred to the
wishes of Fergus in favour of an union between him
and his sister. But the whole circumstances of
time, place, and incident combined at once to awaken
his imagination and to call upon him for a manly and
decisive tone of conduct, leaving to fate to dispose
of the issue. Should he appear to be the only
one sad and disheartened on the eve of battle, how
greedily would the tale be commented upon by the slander
which had been already but too busy with his fame!
Never, never, he internally resolved, shall my unprovoked
enemies possess such an advantage over my reputation.
Under the influence of these mixed
sensations, and cheered at times by a smile of intelligence
and approbation from the Prince as he passed the group,
Waverley exerted his powers of fancy, animation, and
eloquence, and attracted the general admiration of
the company. The conversation gradually assumed
the tone best qualified for the display of his talents
and acquisitions. The gaiety of the evening was
exalted in character, rather than checked, by the
approaching dangers of the morrow. All nerves
were strung for the future, and prepared to enjoy
the present. This mood of mind is highly favourable
for the exercise of the powers of imagination, for
poetry, and for that eloquence which is allied to
poetry. Waverley, as we have elsewhere observed,
possessed at times a wonderful flow of rhetoric; and
on the present occasion, he touched more than once
the higher notes of feeling, and then again ran off
in a wild voluntary of fanciful mirth. He was
supported and excited by kindred spirits, who felt
the same impulse of mood and time; and even those
of more cold and calculating habits were hurried along
by the torrent. Many ladies declined the dance,
which still went forward, and under various pretences
joined the party to which the ’handsome young
Englishman’ seemed to have attached himself.
He was presented to several of the first rank, and
his manners, which for the present were altogether
free from the bashful restraint by which, in a moment
of less excitation, they were usually clouded, gave
universal delight.
Flora Mac-Ivor appeared to be the
only female present who regarded him with a degree
of coldness and reserve; yet even she could not suppress
a sort of wonder at talents which, in the course of
their acquaintance, she had never seen displayed with
equal brilliancy and impressive effect. I do
not know whether she might not feel a momentary regret
at having taken so decisive a resolution upon the
addresses of a lover who seemed fitted so well to fill
a high place in the highest stations of society.
Certainly she had hitherto accounted among the incurable
deficiencies of Edward’s disposition the mauvaise
honte which, as she had been educated in the first
foreign circles, and was little acquainted with the
shyness of English manners, was in her opinion too
nearly related to timidity and imbecility of disposition.
But if a passing wish occurred that Waverley could
have rendered himself uniformly thus amiable and attractive,
its influence was momentary; for circumstances had
arisen since they met which rendered in her eyes the
resolution she had formed respecting him final and
irrevocable.
With opposite feelings Rose Bradwardine
bent her whole soul to listen. She felt a secret
triumph at the public tribute paid to one whose merit
she had learned to prize too early and too fondly.
Without a thought of jealousy, without a feeling of
fear, pain, or doubt, and undisturbed by a single
selfish consideration, she resigned herself to the
pleasure of observing the general murmur of applause.
When Waverley spoke, her ear was exclusively filled
with his voice, when others answered, her eye took
its turn of observation, and seemed to watch his reply.
Perhaps the delight which she experienced in the course
of that evening, though transient, and followed by
much sorrow, was in its nature the most pure and disinterested
which the human mind is capable of enjoying.
‘Baron,’ said the Chevalier,
’I would not trust my mistress in the company
of your young friend. He is really, though perhaps
somewhat romantic, one of the most fascinating young
men whom I have ever seen.’
‘And by my honour, sir,’
replied the Baron,’the lad can sometimes be
as dowff as a sexagenary like myself. If your
Royal Highness had seen him dreaming and dozing about
the banks of Tully-Veolan like an hypochondriac person,
or, as Burton’s “Anatomia” hath it,
a phrenesiac or lethargic patient, you would wonder
where he hath sae suddenly acquired all this fine
sprack festivity and jocularity.’
‘Truly,’ said Fergus Mac-Ivor,
’I think it can only be the inspiration of the
tartans; for, though Waverley be always a young fellow
of sense and honour, I have hitherto often found him
a very absent and inattentive companion.’
‘We are the more obliged to
him,’ said the Prince, ’for having reserved
for this evening qualities which even such intimate
friends had not discovered. But come, gentlemen,
the night advances, and the business of tomorrow must
be early thought upon. Each take charge of his
fair partner, and honour a small refreshment with
your company.’
He led the way to another suite of
apartments, and assumed the seat and canopy at the
head of a long range of tables with an air of dignity,
mingled with courtesy, which well became his high
birth and lofty pretensions. An hour had hardly
flown away when the musicians played the signal for
parting so well known in Scotland. [Footnote:
Which is, or was wont to be, the old air of ‘Good-night
and joy be wi’ you a’.]
‘Good-night, then,’ said
the Chevalier, rising; ’goodnight, and joy be
with you! Good-night, fair ladies, who have so
highly honoured a proscribed and banished Prince!
Good-night, my brave friends; may the happiness we
have this evening experienced be an omen of our return
to these our paternal halls, speedily and in triumph,
and of many and many future meetings of mirth and
pleasure in the palace of Holyrood!’
When the Baron of Bradwardine afterwards
mentioned this adieu of the Chevalier, he never failed
to repeat, in a melancholy tone,
’Audiit, et voti Phoebus
succedere partem
Mente dedit; partem volucres
dispersit in auras;
which,’ as he added, ’is
weel rendered into English metre by my friend Bangour:—
Ae half the prayer wi’
Phoebus grace did find,
The t’other half he
whistled down the wind.’