COMPARING OF NOTES
Thearon’s story was short, when
divested of the adages and commonplaces, Latin, English,
and Scotch, with which his erudition garnished it.
He insisted much upon his grief at the loss of Edward
and of Glennaquoich, fought the fields of Falkirk and
Culloden, and related how, after all was lost in the
last battle, he had returned home, under the idea
of more easily finding shelter among his own tenants
and on his own estate than elsewhere. A party
of soldiers had been sent to lay waste his property,
for clemency was not the order of the day. Their
proceedings, however, were checked by an order from
the civil court. The estate, it was found, might
not be forfeited to the crown to the prejudice of
Malcolm Bradwardine of Inch-Grabbit, the heir-male,
whose claim could not be prejudiced by the Baron’s
attainder, as deriving no right through him, and who,
therefore, like other heirs of entail in the same
situation, entered upon possession. But, unlike
many in similar circumstances, the new laird speedily
showed that he intended utterly to exclude his predecessor
from all benefit or advantage in the estate, and that
it was his purpose to avail himself of the old Baron’s
evil fortune to the full extent. This was the
more ungenerous, as it was generally known that, from
a romantic idea of not prejudicing this young man’s
right as heir-male, the Baron had refrained from settling
his estate on his daughter.
This selfish injustice was resented
by the country people, who were partial to their old
master, and irritated against his successor.
In the Baron’s own words, ’The matter did
not coincide with the feelings of the commons of Bradwardine,
Mr. Waverley; and the tenants were slack and repugnant
in payment of their mails and duties; and when my
kinsman came to the village wi’ the new factor,
Mr. James Howie, to lift the rents, some wanchancy
person —I suspect John Heatherblutter,
the auld gamekeeper, that was out wi’ me in
the year fifteen—fired a shot at him in
the gloaming, whereby he was so affrighted, that I
may say with Tullius In Catilinam, “Abiit, evasit,
erupit, effugit.” He fled, sir, as one
may say, incontinent to Stirling. And now he hath
advertised the estate for sale, being himself the
last substitute in the entail. And if I were
to lament about sic matters, this would grieve me
mair than its passing from my immediate possession,
whilk, by the course of nature, must have happened
in a few years; whereas now it passes from the lineage
that should have possessed it in scecula saculorum.
But God’s will be done, humana perpessi sumus.
Sir John of Bradwardine—Black Sir John,
as he is called—who was the common ancestor
of our house and the Inch-Grabbits, little thought
such a person would have sprung from his loins.
Mean time, he has accused me to some of the primates,
the rulers for the time, as if I were a cut-throat,
and an abettor of bravoes and assassinates and coupe-jarrets.
And they have sent soldiers here to abide on the estate,
and hunt me like a partridge upon the mountains, as
Scripture says of good King David, or like our valiant
Sir William Wallace—not that I bring myself
into comparison with either. I thought, when
I heard you at the door, they had driven the auld
deer to his den at last; and so I e’en proposed
to die at bay, like a buck of the first head.
But now, Janet, canna ye gie us something for supper?’
’Ou ay, sir, I’ll brander the moor-fowl
that John Heatherblutter brought in this morning;
and ye see puir Davie’s roasting the black hen’s
eggs. I daur say, Mr. Wauverley, ye never kend
that a’ the eggs that were sae weel roasted
at supper in the Ha’-house were aye turned by
our Davie? there’s no the like o’ him
ony gate for powtering wi’ his fingers amang
the het peat-ashes and roasting eggs.’ Davie
all this while lay with his nose almost in the fire,
nuzzling among the ashes, kicking his heels, mumbling
to himself, turning the eggs as they lay in the hot
embers, as if to confute the proverb, that ‘there
goes reason to roasting of eggs,’ and justify
the eulogium which poor Janet poured out upon
Him whom she loved, her idiot
boy.
’Davie’s no sae silly
as folk tak him for, Mr. Wauverley; he wadna hae brought
you here unless he had kend ye was a friend to his
Honour; indeed the very dogs kend ye, Mr. Wauverley,
for ye was aye kind to beast and body. I can
tell you a story o’ Davie, wi’ his Honour’s
leave. His Honour, ye see, being under hiding
in thae sair times—the mair’s the
pity—he lies a’ day, and whiles a’
night, in the cove in the dern hag; but though it’s
a bieldy eneugh bit, and the auld gudeman o’
Corse-Cleugh has panged it wi’ a kemple o’
strae amaist, yet when the country’s quiet, and
the night very cauld, his Honour whiles creeps doun
here to get a warm at the ingle and a sleep amang
the blankets, and gangs awa in the morning. And
so, ae morning, siccan a fright as I got! Twa
unlucky red-coats were up for black-fishing, or some
siccan ploy—for the neb o’ them’s
never out o’ mischief—and they just
got a glisk o’ his Honour as he gaed into the
wood, and banged aff a gun at him. I out like
a jer-falcon, and cried—“Wad they
shoot an honest woman’s poor innocent bairn?”
And I fleyt at them, and threepit it was my son; and
they damned and swuir at me that it was the auld rebel,
as the villains ca’d his Honour; and Davie was
in the wood, and heard the tuilzie, and he, just out
o’ his ain head, got up the auld grey mantle
that his Honour had flung off him to gang the faster,
and he cam out o’ the very same bit o’
the wood, majoring and looking about sae like his
Honour, that they were clean beguiled, and thought
they had letten aff their gun at crack-brained Sawney,
as they ca’ him; and they gae me saxpence, and
twa saumon fish, to say naething about it. Na,
na, Davie’s no just like other folk, puir fallow;
but he’s no sae silly as folk tak him for.
But, to be sure, how can we do eneugh for his Honour,
when we and ours have lived on his ground this twa
hundred years; and when he keepit my puir Jamie at
school and college, and even at the Ha’-house,
till he gaed to a better place; and when he saved
me frae being ta’en to Perth as a witch—Lord
forgi’e them that would touch sic a puir silly
auld body!—and has maintained puir Davie
at heck and manger maist feck o’ his life?’
Waverley at length found an opportunity
to interrupt Janet’s narrative by an inquiry
after Miss Bradwardine.
‘She’s weel and safe,
thank God! at the Duchran,’ answered the Baron;
’the laird’s distantly related to us, and
more nearly to my chaplain, Mr. Rubrick; and, though
he be of Whig principles, yet he’s not forgetful
of auld friendship at this time. The Bailie’s
doing what he can to save something out of the wreck
for puir Rose; but I doubt, I doubt, I shall never
see her again, for I maun lay my banes in some far
country.’
‘Hout na, your Honour,’
said old Janet, ’ye were just as ill aff in
the feifteen, and got the bonnie baronie back, an’
a’. And now the eggs is ready, and the
muir-cock’s brandered, and there’s ilk
ane a trencher and some saut, and the heel o’
the white loaf that cam frae the Bailie’s, and
there’s plenty o’ brandy in the greybeard
that Luckie Maclearie sent doun, and winna ye be suppered
like princes?’
’I wish one Prince, at least,
of our acquaintance may be no worse off,’ said
the Baron to Waverley, who joined him in cordial hopes
for the safety of the unfortunate Chevalier.
They then began to talk of their future
prospects. The Baron’s plan was very simple.
It was, to escape to France, where, by the interest
of his old friends, he hoped to get some military
employment, of which he still conceived himself capable.
He invited Waverley to go with him, a proposal in
which he acquiesced, providing the interest of Colonel
Talbot should fail in procuring his pardon. Tacitly
he hoped the Baron would sanction his addresses to
Rose, and give him a right to assist him in his exile;
but he forbore to speak on this subject until his own
fate should be decided. They then talked of Glennaquoich,
for whom the Baron expressed great anxiety, although,
he observed, he was ’the very Achilles of Horatius
Flaccus,—
Impiger, iracundus, inexorabilis,
acer; which,’ he continued, ’has been
thus rendered (vernacularly) by Struan Robertson:—
A fiery etter-cap, a fractious
chiel,
As het as ginger, and as stieve
as steel.’
Flora had a large and unqualified
share of the good old man’s sympathy.
It was now wearing late. Old
Janet got into some kind of kennel behind the hallan;
Davie had been long asleep and snoring between Ban
and Buscar. These dogs had followed him to the
hut after the mansion-house was deserted, and there
constantly resided; and their ferocity, with the old
woman’s reputation of being a witch, contributed
a good deal to keep visitors from the glen. With
this view, Bailie Macwheeble provided Janet underhand
with meal for their maintenance, and also with little
articles of luxury for his patron’s use, in
supplying which much precaution was necessarily used.
After some compliments, the Baron occupied his usual
couch, and Waverley reclined in an easy chair of tattered
velvet, which had once garnished the state bed-room
of Tully-Veolan (for the furniture of this mansion
was now scattered through all the cottages in the
vicinity), and went to sleep as comfortably as if
he had been in a bed of down.