INTRIGUES OF SOCIETY AND LOVE
Colonel Talbot became more kindly
in his demeanour towards Waverley after the confidence
he had reposed in him, and, as they were necessarily
much together, the character of the Colonel rose in
Waverley’s estimation. There seemed at first
something harsh in his strong expressions of dislike
and censure, although no one was in the general case
more open to conviction. The habit of authority
had also given his manners some peremptory hardness,
notwithstanding the polish which they had received
from his intimate acquaintance with the higher circles.
As a specimen of the military character, he differed
from all whom Waverley had as yet seen. The soldiership
of the Baron of Bradwardine was marked by pedantry;
that of Major Melville by a sort of martinet attention
to the minutiae and technicalities of discipline, rather
suitable to one who was to manoeuvre a battalion than
to him who was to command an army; the military spirit
of Fergus was so much warped and blended with his
plans and political views, that it was less that of
a soldier than of a petty sovereign. But Colonel
Talbot was in every point the English soldier.
His whole soul was devoted to the service of his king
and country, without feeling any pride in knowing
the theory of his art with the Baron, or its practical
minutiae with the Major, or in applying his science
to his own particular plans of ambition, like the
Chieftain of Glennaquoich. Added to this, he
was a man of extended knowledge and cultivated taste,
although strongly tinged, as we have already observed,
with those prejudices which are peculiarly English.
The character of Colonel Talbot dawned
upon Edward by degrees; for the delay of the Highlanders
in the fruitless siege of Edinburgh Castle occupied
several weeks, during which Waverley had little to
do excepting to seek such amusement as society afforded.
He would willingly have persuaded his new friend to
become acquainted with some of his former intimates.
But the Colonel, after one or two visits, shook his
head, and declined farther experiment. Indeed
he went farther, and characterised the Baron as the
most intolerable formal pedant he had ever had the
misfortune to meet with, and the Chief of Glennaquoich
as a Frenchified Scotchman, possessing all the cunning
and plausibility of the nation where he was educated,
with the proud, vindictive, and turbulent humour of
that of his birth. ‘If the devil,’
he said, ’had sought out an agent expressly
for the purpose of embroiling this miserable country,
I do not think he could find a better than such a
fellow as this, whose temper seems equally active,
supple, and mischievous, and who is followed, and
implicitly obeyed, by a gang of such cut-throats as
those whom you are pleased to admire so much.’
The ladies of the party did not escape
his censure. He allowed that Flora Mac-Ivor was
a fine woman, and Rose Bradwardine a pretty girl.
But he alleged that the former destroyed the effect
of her beauty by an affectation of the grand airs which
she had probably seen practised in the mock court
of St. Germains. As for Rose Bradwardine, he
said it was impossible for any mortal to admire such
a little uninformed thing, whose small portion of
education was as ill adapted to her sex or youth as
if she had appeared with one of her father’s
old campaign-coats upon her person for her sole garment.
Now much of this was mere spleen and prejudice in
the excellent Colonel, with whom the white cockade
on the breast, the white rose in the hair, and the
Mac at the beginning of a name would have made a devil
out of an angel; and indeed he himself jocularly allowed
that he could not have endured Venus herself if she
had been announced in a drawing-room by the name of
Miss Mac-Jupiter.
Waverley, it may easily be believed,
looked upon these young ladies with very different
eyes. During the period of the siege he paid
them almost daily visits, although he observed with
regret that his suit made as little progress in the
affections of the former as the arms of the Chevalier
in subduing the fortress. She maintained with
rigour the rule she had laid down of treating him
with indifference, without either affecting to avoid
him or to shun intercourse with him. Every word,
every look, was strictly regulated to accord with
her system, and neither the dejection of Waverley
nor the anger which Fergus scarcely suppressed could
extend Flora’s attention to Edward beyond that
which the most ordinary politeness demanded.
On the other hand, Rose Bradwardine gradually rose
in Waverley’s opinion. He had several opportunities
of remarking that, as her extreme timidity wore off,
her manners assumed a higher character; that the agitating
circumstances of the stormy time seemed to call forth
a certain dignity of feeling and expression which
he had not formerly observed; and that she omitted
no opportunity within her reach to extend her knowledge
and refine her taste.
Flora Mac-Ivor called Rose her pupil,
and was attentive to assist her in her studies, and
to fashion both her taste and understanding.
It might have been remarked by a very close observer
that in the presence of Waverley she was much more
desirous to exhibit her friend’s excellences
than her own. But I must request of the reader
to suppose that this kind and disinterested purpose
was concealed by the most cautious delicacy, studiously
shunning the most distant approach to affectation.
So that it was as unlike the usual exhibition of one
pretty woman affecting to proner another as the friendship
of David and Jonathan might be to the intimacy of
two Bond Street loungers. The fact is that, though
the effect was felt, the cause could hardly be observed.
Each of the ladies, like two excellent actresses,
were perfect in their parts, and performed them to
the delight of the audience; and such being the case,
it was almost impossible to discover that the elder
constantly ceded to her friend that which was most
suitable to her talents.
But to Waverley Rose Bradwardine possessed
an attraction which few men can resist, from the marked
interest which she took in everything that affected
him. She was too young and too inexperienced
to estimate the full force of the constant attention
which she paid to him. Her father was too abstractedly
immersed in learned and military discussions to observe
her partiality, and Flora Mac-Ivor did not alarm her
by remonstrance, because she saw in this line of conduct
the most probable chance of her friend securing at
length a return of affection.
The truth is, that in her first conversation
after their meeting Rose had discovered the state
of her mind to that acute and intelligent friend,
although she was not herself aware of it. From
that time Flora was not only determined upon the final
rejection of Waverley’s addresses, but became
anxious that they should, if possible, be transferred
to her friend. Nor was she less interested in
this plan, though her brother had from time to time
talked, as between jest and earnest, of paying his
suit to Miss Bradwardine. She knew that Fergus
had the true continental latitude of opinion respecting
the institution of marriage, and would not have given
his hand to an angel unless for the purpose of strengthening
his alliances and increasing his influence and wealth.
The Baron’s whim of transferring his estate to
the distant heir-male, instead of his own daughter,
was therefore likely to be an insurmountable obstacle
to his entertaining any serious thoughts of Rose Bradwardine.
Indeed, Fergus’s brain was a perpetual workshop
of scheme and intrigue, of every possible kind and
description; while, like many a mechanic of more ingenuity
than steadiness, he would often unexpectedly, and without
any apparent motive, abandon one plan and go earnestly
to work upon another, which was either fresh from
the forge of his imagination or had at some former
period been flung aside half finished. It was
therefore often difficult to guess what line of conduct
he might finally adopt upon any given occasion.
Although Flora was sincerely attached
to her brother, whose high energies might indeed have
commanded her admiration even without the ties which
bound them together, she was by no means blind to
his faults, which she considered as dangerous to the
hopes of any woman who should found her ideas of a
happy marriage in the peaceful enjoyment of domestic
society and the exchange of mutual and engrossing
affection. The real disposition of Waverley, on
the other hand, notwithstanding his dreams of tented
fields and military honour, seemed exclusively domestic.
He asked and received no share in the busy scenes
which were constantly going on around him, and was
rather annoyed than interested by the discussion of
contending claims, rights, and interests which often
passed in his presence. All this pointed him out
as the person formed to make happy a spirit like that
of Rose, which corresponded with his own.
She remarked this point in Waverley’s
character one day while she sat with Miss Bradwardine.
‘His genius and elegant taste,’ answered
Rose, ’cannot be interested in such trifling
discussions. What is it to him, for example,
whether the Chief of the Macindallaghers, who has
brought out only fifty men, should be a colonel or
a captain? and how could Mr. Waverley be supposed to
interest himself in the violent altercation between
your brother and young Corrinaschian whether the post
of honour is due to the eldest cadet of a clan or
the youngest?’
’My dear Rose, if he were the
hero you suppose him he would interest himself in
these matters, not indeed as important in themselves,
but for the purpose of mediating between the ardent
spirits who actually do make them the subject of discord.
You saw when Corrinaschian raised his voice in great
passion, and laid his hand upon his sword, Waverley
lifted his head as if he had just awaked from a dream,
and asked with great composure what the matter was.’
’Well, and did not the laughter
they fell into at his absence of mind serve better
to break off the dispute than anything he could have
said to them?’
‘True, my dear,’ answered
Flora; ’but not quite so creditably for Waverley
as if he had brought them to their senses by force
of reason.’
’Would you have him peacemaker
general between all the gunpowder Highlanders in the
army? I beg your pardon, Flora, your brother,
you know, is out of the question; he has more sense
than half of them. But can you think the fierce,
hot, furious spirits of whose brawls we see much and
hear more, and who terrify me out of my life every
day in the world, are at all to be compared to Waverley?’
’I do not compare him with those
uneducated men, my dear Rose. I only lament that,
with his talents and genius, he does not assume that
place in society for which they eminently fit him,
and that he does not lend their full impulse to the
noble cause in which he has enlisted. Are there
not Lochiel, and P—, and M—,
and G—, all men of the highest education
as well as the first talents,— why will
he not stoop like them to be alive and useful?
I often believe his zeal is frozen by that proud cold-blooded
Englishman whom he now lives with so much.’
’Colonel Talbot? he is a very
disagreeable person, to be sure. He looks as
if he thought no Scottish woman worth the trouble of
handing her a cup of tea. But Waverley is so gentle,
so well informed—’
‘Yes,’ said Flora, smiling,
’he can admire the moon and quote a stanza from
Tasso.’
‘Besides, you know how he fought,’
added Miss Bradwardine.
‘For mere fighting,’ answered
Flora,’ I believe all men (that is, who deserve
the name) are pretty much alike; there is generally
more courage required to run away. They have besides,
when confronted with each other, a certain instinct
for strife, as we see in other male animals, such
as dogs, bulls, and so forth. But high and perilous
enterprise is not Waverley’s forte. He would
never have been his celebrated ancestor Sir Nigel,
but only Sir Nigel’s eulogist and poet.
I will tell you where he will be at home, my dear,
and in his place—in the quiet circle of
domestic happiness, lettered indolence, and elegant
enjoyments of Waverley-Honour. And he will refit
the old library in the most exquisite Gothic taste,
and garnish its shelves with the rarest and most valuable
volumes; and he will draw plans and landscapes, and
write verses, and rear temples, and dig grottoes;
and he will stand in a clear summer night in the colonnade
before the hall, and gaze on the deer as they stray
in the moonlight, or lie shadowed by the boughs of
the huge old fantastic oaks; and he will repeat verses
to his beautiful wife, who will hang upon his arm;—and
he will be a happy man.’
And she will be a happy woman, thought
poor Rose. But she only sighed and dropped the
conversation.