THE ENGLISH PRISONER
The first occupation of Waverley,
after he departed from the Chieftain, was to go in
quest of the officer whose life he had saved.
He was guarded, along with his companions in misfortune,
who were very numerous, in a gentleman’s house
near the field of battle.
On entering the room where they stood
crowded together, Waverley easily recognised the object
of his visit, not only by the peculiar dignity of
his appearance, but by the appendage of Dugald Mahony,
with his battleaxe, who had stuck to him from the moment
of his captivity as if he had been skewered to his
side. This close attendance was perhaps for the
purpose of securing his promised reward from Edward,
but it also operated to save the English gentleman
from being plundered in the scene of general confusion;
for Dugald sagaciously argued that the amount of the
salvage which he might be allowed would be regulated
by the state of the prisoner when he should deliver
him over to Waverley. He hastened to assure Waverley,
therefore, with more words than he usually employed,
that he had ’keepit ta sidier roy haill, and
that he wasna a plack the waur since the fery moment
when his honour forbad her to gie him a bit clamhewit
wi’ her Lochaber-axe.’
Waverley assured Dugald of a liberal
recompense, and, approaching the English officer,
expressed his anxiety to do anything which might contribute
to his convenience under his present unpleasant circumstances.
‘I am not so inexperienced a
soldier, sir,’ answered the Englishman, ’as
to complain of the fortune of war. I am only
grieved to see those scenes acted in our own island
which I have often witnessed elsewhere with comparative
indifference.’
‘Another such day as this,’
said Waverley, ’and I trust the cause of your
regrets will be removed, and all will again return
to peace and order.’
The officer smiled and shook his head.
’I must not forget my situation so far as to
attempt a formal confutation of that opinion; but,
notwithstanding your success and the valour which
achieved it, you have undertaken a task to which your
strength appears wholly inadequate.’
At this moment Fergus pushed into the press.
’Come, Edward, come along; the
Prince has gone to Pinkie House for the night; and
we must follow, or lose the whole ceremony of the
caligae. Your friend, the Baron, has been guilty
of a great piece of cruelty; he has insisted upon
dragging Bailie Macwheeble out to the field of battle.
Now, you must know, the Bailie’s greatest horror
is an armed Highlander or a loaded gun; and there he
stands, listening to the Baron’s instructions
concerning the protest, ducking his head like a sea-gull
at the report of every gun and pistol that our idle
boys are firing upon the fields, and undergoing, by
way of penance, at every symptom of flinching a severe
rebuke from his patron, who would not admit the discharge
of a whole battery of cannon, within point-blank distance,
as an apology for neglecting a discourse in which
the honour of his family is interested.’
‘But how has Mr. Bradwardine
got him to venture so far?’ said Edward.
’Why, he had come as far as
Musselburgh, I fancy, in hopes of making some of our
wills; and the peremptory commands of the Baron dragged
him forward to Preston after the battle was over.
He complains of one or two of our ragamuffins having
put him in peril of his life by presenting their pieces
at him; but as they limited his ransom to an English
penny, I don’t think we need trouble the provost-marshal
upon that subject. So come along, Waverley.’
‘Waverley!’ said the English
officer, with great emotion;’ the nephew of
Sir Everard Waverley, of——shire?’
‘The same, sir,’ replied
our hero, somewhat surprised at the tone in which
he was addressed.
‘I am at once happy and grieved,’
said the prisoner, ’to have met with you.’
‘I am ignorant, sir,’
answered Waverley, ’how I have deserved so much
interest.’
‘Did your uncle never mention
a friend called Talbot?’
‘I have heard him talk with
great regard of such a person,’ replied Edward;
’a colonel, I believe, in the army, and the
husband of Lady Emily Blandeville; but I thought Colonel
Talbot had been abroad.’
‘I am just returned,’
answered the officer; ’and being in Scotland,
thought it my duty to act where my services promised
to be useful. Yes, Mr. Waverley, I am that Colonel
Talbot, the husband of the lady you have named; and
I am proud to acknowledge that I owe alike my professional
rank and my domestic happiness to your generous and
noble-minded relative. Good God! that I should
find his nephew in such a dress, and engaged in such
a cause!’
‘Sir,’ said Fergus, haughtily,
’the dress and cause are those of men of birth
and honour.’
‘My situation forbids me to
dispute your assertion,’ said Colonel Talbot;
’otherwise it were no difficult matter to show
that neither courage nor pride of lineage can gild
a bad cause. But, with Mr. Waverley’s permission
and yours, sir, if yours also must be asked, I would
willingly speak a few words with him on affairs connected
with his own family.’
’Mr. Waverley, sir, regulates
his own motions. You will follow me, I suppose,
to Pinkie,’ said Fergus, turning to Edward, ’when
you have finished your discourse with this new acquaintance?’
So saying, the Chief of Glennaquoich adjusted his
plaid with rather more than his usual air of haughty
assumption and left the apartment.
The interest of Waverley readily procured
for Colonel Talbot the freedom of adjourning to a
large garden belonging to his place of confinement.
They walked a few paces in silence, Colonel Talbot
apparently studying how to open what he had to say;
at length he addressed Edward.
’Mr. Waverley, you have this
day saved my life; and yet I would to God that I had
lost it, ere I had found you wearing the uniform and
cockade of these men.’
’I forgive your reproach, Colonel
Talbot; it is well meant, and your education and prejudices
render it natural. But there is nothing extraordinary
in finding a man whose honour has been publicly and
unjustly assailed in the situation which promised
most fair to afford him satisfaction on his calumniators.’
’I should rather say, in the
situation most likely to confirm the reports which
they have circulated,’ said Colonel Talbot, ’by
following the very line of conduct ascribed to you.
Are you aware, Mr. Waverley, of the infinite distress,
and even danger, which your present conduct has occasioned
to your nearest relatives?’
‘Danger!’
’Yes, sir, danger. When
I left England your uncle and father had been obliged
to find bail to answer a charge of treason, to which
they were only admitted by the exertion of the most
powerful interest. I came down to Scotland with
the sole purpose of rescuing you from the gulf into
which you have precipitated yourself; nor can I estimate
the consequences to your family of your having openly
joined the rebellion, since the very suspicion of
your intention was so perilous to them. Most deeply
do I regret that I did not meet you before this last
and fatal error.’
‘I am really ignorant,’
said Waverley, in a tone of reserve, ’why Colonel
Talbot should have taken so much trouble on my account.’
‘Mr. Waverley,’ answered
Talbot, ’I am dull at apprehending irony; and
therefore I shall answer your words according to their
plain meaning. I am indebted to your uncle for
benefits greater than those which a son owes to a
father. I acknowledge to him the duty of a son;
and as I know there is no manner in which I can requite
his kindness so well as by serving you, I will serve
you, if possible, whether you will permit me or no.
The personal obligation which you have this day laid
me under (although, in common estimation, as great
as one human being can bestow on another) adds nothing
to my zeal on your behalf; nor can that zeal be abated
by any coolness with which you may please to receive
it.’
‘Your intentions may be kind,
sir,’ said Waverley, drily; ’but your
language is harsh, or at least peremptory.’
‘On my return to England,’
continued Colonel Talbot, ’after long absence,
I found your uncle, Sir Everard Waverley, in the custody
of a king’s messenger, in consequence of the
suspicion brought upon him by your conduct. He
is my oldest friend—how often shall I repeat
it?—my best benefactor! he sacrificed his
own views of happiness to mine; he never uttered a
word, he never harboured a thought, that benevolence
itself might not have thought or spoken. I found
this man in confinement, rendered harsher to him by
his habits of life, his natural dignity of feeling,
and—forgive me, Mr. Waverley—by
the cause through which this calamity had come upon
him. I cannot disguise from you my feelings upon
this occasion; they were most painfully unfavorable
to you. Having by my family interest, which you
probably know is not inconsiderable, succeeded in
obtaining Sir Everard’s release, I set out for
Scotland. I saw Colonel Gardiner, a man whose
fate alone is sufficient to render this insurrection
for ever execrable. In the course of conversation
with him I found that, from late circumstances, from
a reexamination of the persons engaged in the mutiny,
and from his original good opinion of your character,
he was much softened towards you; and I doubted not
that, if I could be so fortunate as to discover you,
all might yet be well. But this unnatural rebellion
has ruined all. I have, for the first time in
a long and active military life, seen Britons disgrace
themselves by a panic flight, and that before a foe
without either arms or discipline. And now I
find the heir of my dearest friend— the
son, I may say, of his’ affections—sharing
a triumph for which he ought the first to have blushed.
Why should I lament Gardiner? his lot was happy compared
to mine!’
There was so much dignity in Colonel
Talbot’s manner, such a mixture of military
pride and manly sorrow, and the news of Sir Everard’s
imprisonment was told in so deep a tone of feeling,
that Edward stood mortified, abashed, and distressed
in presence of the prisoner who owed to him his life
not many hours before. He was not sorry when
Fergus interrupted their conference a second time.
‘His Royal Highness commands
Mr. Waverley’s attendance.’ Colonel
Talbot threw upon Edward a reproachful glance, which
did not escape the quick eye of the Highland Chief.
’His immediate attendance,’ he repeated,
with considerable emphasis. Waverley turned again
towards the Colonel.
‘We shall meet again,’
he said; ’in the meanwhile, every possible accommodation—’
‘I desire none,’ said
the Colonel; ’let me fare like the meanest of
those brave men who, on this day of calamity, have
preferred wounds and captivity to flight; I would
almost exchange places with one of those who have
fallen to know that my words have made a suitable
impression on your mind.’
‘Let Colonel Talbot be carefully
secured,’ said Fergus to the Highland officer
who commanded the guard over the prisoners; ’it
is the Prince’s particular command; he is a prisoner
of the utmost importance.’
‘But let him want no accommodation
suitable to his rank,’ said Waverley. ‘Consistent
always with secure custody,’ reiterated Fergus.
The officer signified his acquiescence in both commands,
and Edward followed Fergus to the garden-gate, where
Callum Beg, with three saddle-horses, awaited them.
Turning his head, he saw Colonel Talbot reconducted
to his place of confinement by a file of Highlanders;
he lingered on the threshold of the door and made
a signal with his hand towards Waverley, as if enforcing
the language he had held towards him.
‘Horses,’ said Fergus,
as he mounted, ’are now as plenty as blackberries;
every man may have them for the catching. Come,
let Callum adjust your stirrups and let us to Pinkie
House [Footnote: Charles Edward took up his quarters
after the battle at Pinkie House, adjoining to Musselburgh.]
as fast as these ci-devant dragoon-horses choose to
carry us.’