A JOURNEY TO LONDON
Theamily at Fasthwaite were soon attached
to Edward. He had, indeed, that gentleness and
urbanity which almost universally attracts corresponding
kindness; and to their simple ideas his learning gave
him consequence, and his sorrows interest. The
last he ascribed, evasively, to the loss of a brother
in the skirmish near Clifton; and in that primitive
state of society, where the ties of affection were
highly deemed of, his continued depression excited
sympathy, but not surprise.
In the end of January his more lively
powers were called out by the happy union of Edward
Williams, the son of his host, with Cicely Jopson.
Our hero would not cloud with sorrow the festivity
attending the wedding of two persons to whom he was
so highly obliged. He therefore exerted himself,
danced, sung, played at the various games of the day,
and was the blithest of the company. The next
morning, however, he had more serious matters to think
of.
The clergyman who had married the
young couple was so much pleased with the supposed
student of divinity, that he came next day from Penrith
on purpose to pay him a visit. This might have
been a puzzling chapter had he entered into any examination
of our hero’s supposed theological studies;
but fortunately he loved better to hear and communicate
the news of the day. He brought with him two
or three old newspapers, in one of which Edward found
a piece of intelligence that soon rendered him deaf
to every word which the Reverend Mr. Twigtythe was
saying upon the news from the north, and the prospect
of the Duke’s speedily overtaking and crushing
the rebels. This was an article in these, or nearly
these words:—
’Died at his house, in Hill
Street, Berkeley Square, upon the 10th inst., Richard
Waverley, Esq., second son of Sir Giles Waverley of
Waverley-Honour, etc. etc. He died of
a lingering disorder, augmented by the unpleasant
predicament of suspicion in which he stood, having
been obliged to find bail to a high amount to meet
an impending accusation of high-treason. An accusation
of the same grave crime hangs over his elder brother,
Sir Everard Waverley, the representative of that ancient
family; and we understand the day of his trial will
be fixed early in the next month, unless Edward Waverley,
son of the deceased Richard, and heir to the Baronet,
shall surrender himself to justice. In that case
we are assured it is his Majesty’s gracious
purpose to drop further proceedings upon the charge
against Sir Everard. This unfortunate young gentleman
is ascertained to have been in arms in the Pretender’s
service, and to have marched along with the Highland
troops into England. But he has not been heard
of since the skirmish at Clifton, on the 18th December
last.’
Such was this distracting paragraph.
‘Good God!’ exclaimed Waverley, ’am
I then a parricide? Impossible! My father,
who never showed the affection of a father while he
lived, cannot have been so much affected by my supposed
death as to hasten his own; no, I will not believe
it, it were distraction to entertain for a moment
such a horrible idea. But it were, if possible,
worse than parricide to suffer any danger to hang
over my noble and generous uncle, who has ever been
more to me than a father, if such evil can be averted
by any sacrifice on my part!’
While these reflections passed like
the stings of scorpions through Waverley’s sensorium,
the worthy divine was startled in a long disquisition
on the battle of Falkirk by the ghastliness which
they communicated to his looks, and asked him if he
was ill? Fortunately the bride, all smirk and
blush, had just entered the room. Mrs. Williams
was none of the brightest of women, but she was good-natured,
and readily concluding that Edward had been shocked
by disagreeable news in the papers, interfered so
judiciously, that, without exciting suspicion, she
drew off Mr. Twigtythe’s attention, and engaged
it until he soon after took his leave. Waverley
then explained to his friends that he was under the
necessity of going to London with as little delay as
possible.
One cause of delay, however, did occur,
to which Waverley had been very little accustomed.
His purse, though well stocked when he first went
to Tully-Veolan, had not been reinforced since that
period; and although his life since had not been of
a nature to exhaust it hastily, for he had lived chiefly
with his friends or with the army, yet he found that,
after settling with his kind landlord, he should be
too poor to encounter the expense of travelling post.
The best course, therefore, seemed to be to get into
the great north road about Boroughbridge, and there
take a place in the northern diligence, a huge old-fashioned
tub, drawn by three horses, which completed the journey
from Edinburgh to London (God willing, as the advertisement
expressed it) in three weeks. Our hero, therefore,
took an affectionate farewell of his Cumberland friends,
whose kindness he promised never to forget, and tacitly
hoped ene day to acknowledge by substantial proofs
of gratitude. After some petty difficulties and
vexatious delays, and after putting his dress into
a shape better befitting his rank, though perfectly
plain and simple, he accomplished crossing the country,
and found himself in the desired vehicle vis-a-vis
to Mrs. Nosebag, the lady of Lieutenant Nosebag, adjutant
and riding-master of the—dragoons, a jolly
woman of about fifty, wearing a blue habit, faced
with scarlet, and grasping a silver-mounted horse-whip.
This lady was one of those active
members of society who take upon them faire lefrais
de la conversation. She had just returned from
the north, and informed Edward how nearly her regiment
had cut the petticoat people into ribands at Falkirk,
’only somehow there was one of those nasty,
awkward marshes, that they are never without in Scotland,
I think, and so our poor dear little regiment suffered
something, as my Nosebag says, in that unsatisfactory
affair. You, sir, have served in the dragoons?’
Waverley was taken so much at unawares that he acquiesced.
’O, I knew it at once; I saw
you were military from your air, and I was sure you
could be none of the foot-wobblers, as my Nosebag
calls them. What regiment, pray?’ Here was
a delightful question. Waverley, however, justly
concluded that this good lady had the whole army-list
by heart; and, to avoid detection by adhering to truth,
answered, ’Gardiner’s dragoons, ma’am;
but I have retired some time.’
’O aye, those as won the race
at the battle of Preston, as my Nosebag says.
Pray, sir, were you there?’
‘I was so unfortunate, madam,’
he replied, ’as to witness that engagement.’
’And that was a misfortune that
few of Gardiner’s stood to witness, I believe,
sir—ha! ha! ha! I beg your pardon;
but a soldier’s wife loves a joke.’
‘Devil confound you,’
thought Waverley: ’what infernal luck has
penned me up with this inquisitive hag!’
Fortunately the good lady did not
stick long to one subject. ’We are coming
to Ferrybridge now,’ she said, ’where there
was a party of ours left to support the beadles,
and constables, and justices, and these sort of creatures
that are examining papers and stopping rebels, and
all that.’ They were hardly in the inn before
she dragged Waverley to the window, exclaiming, ’Yonder
comes Corporal Bridoon, of our poor dear troop; he’s
coming with the constable man. Bridoon’s
one of my lambs, as Nosebag calls ’ern.
Come, Mr.— a—a—pray,
what’s your name, sir?’
‘Butler, ma’am,’
said Waverley, resolved rather to make free with the
name of a former fellow-officer than run the risk of
detection by inventing one not to be found in the
regiment.
’O, you got a troop lately,
when that shabby fellow, Waverley, went over to the
rebels? Lord, I wish our old cross Captain Crump
would go over to the rebels, that Nosebag might get
the troop! Lord, what can Bridoon be standing
swinging on the bridge for? I’ll be hanged
if he a’nt hazy, as Nosebag says. Come,
sir, as you and I belong to the service, we’ll
go put the rascal in mind of his duty.’
Waverley, with feelings more easily
conceived than described, saw himself obliged to follow
this doughty female commander. The gallant trooper
was as like a lamb as a drunk corporal of dragoons,
about six feet high, with very broad shoulders, and
very thin legs, not to mention a great scar across
his nose, could well be. Mrs. Nosebag addressed
him with something which, if not an oath, sounded
very like one, and commanded him to attend to his
duty. ‘You be d—d for a——,’
commenced the gallant cavalier; but, looking up in
order to suit the action to the words, and also to
enforce the epithet which he meditated with an adjective
applicable to the party, he recognised the speaker,
made his military salaam, and altered his tone.
’Lord love your handsome face, Madam Nosebag,
is it you? Why, if a poor fellow does happen
to fire a slug of a morning, I am sure you were never
the lady to bring him to harm.’
’Well, you rascallion, go, mind
your duty; this gentleman and I belong to the service;
but be sure you look after that shy cock in the slouched
hat that sits in the corner of the coach. I believe
he’s one of the rebels in disguise.’
‘D—n her gooseberry
wig,’ said the corporal, when she was out of
hearing, ’that gimlet-eyed jade—mother
adjutant, as we call her —is a greater
plague to the regiment than provost-marshal, sergeant-major,
and old Hubble-de-Shuff, the colonel, into the bargain.
Come, Master Constable, let’s see if this shy
cock, as she calls him (who, by the way, was a Quaker
from Leeds, with whom Mrs. Nosebag had had some tart
argument on the legality of bearing arms), will stand
godfather to a sup of brandy, for your Yorkshire ale
is cold on my stomach.’
The vivacity of this good lady, as
it helped Edward out of this scrape, was like to have
drawn him into one or two others. In every town
where they stopped she wished to examine the corps
de garde, if there was one, and once very narrowly
missed introducing Waverley to a recruiting-sergeant
of his own regiment. Then she Captain’d
and Butler’d him till he was almost mad with
vexation and anxiety; and never was he more rejoiced
in his life at the termination of a journey than when
the arrival of the coach in London freed him from
the attentions of Madam Nosebag.