Happy’s the wooing
That’s not long a doing
When the first rapturous sensation
occasioned by these excellent tidings had somewhat
subsided, Edward proposed instantly to go down to
the glen to acquaint the Baron with their import.
But the cautious Bailie justly observed that, if the
Baron were to appear instantly in public, the tenantry
and villagers might become riotous in expressing their
joy, and give offence to ’the powers that be,’
a sort of persons for whom the Bailie always had unlimited
respect. He therefore proposed that Mr. Waverley
should go to Janet Gellatley’s and bring the
Baron up under cloud of night to Little Veolan, where
he might once more enjoy the luxury of a good bed.
In the meanwhile, he said, he himself would go to
Captain Foster and show him the Baron’s protection,
and obtain his countenance for harbouring him that
night, and he would have horses ready on the morrow
to set him on his way to the Duchran along with Mr.
Stanley, ’whilk denomination, I apprehend, your
honour will for the present retain,’ said the
Bailie.
’Certainly, Mr. Macwheeble;
but will you not go down to the glen yourself in the
evening to meet your patron?’
‘That I wad wi’ a’
my heart; and mickle obliged to your honour for putting
me in mind o’ mybounden duty. But it will
be past sunset afore I get back frae the Captain’s,
and at these unsonsy hours the glen has a bad name;
there’s something no that canny about auld Janet
Gellatley. The Laird he’ll no believe thae
things, but he was aye ower rash and venturesome,
and feared neither man nor deevil, an sae’s
seen o’t. But right sure am I Sir George
Mackenyie says, that no divine can doubt there are
witches, since the Bible says thou shalt not suffer
them to live; and that no lawyer in Scotland can doubt
it, since it is punishable with death by our law.
So there’s baith law and gospel for it.
An his honour winna believe the Leviticus, he might
aye believe the Statute-book; but he may tak his
ain way o’t; it’s a’ ane to Duncan
Macwheeble. However, I shall send to ask up auld
Janet this e’en; it’s best no to lightly
them that have that character; and we’ll want
Davie to turn the spit, for I’ll gar Eppie put
down a fat goose to the fire for your honours to your
supper.’
When it was near sunset Waverley hastened
to the hut; and he could not but allow that superstition
had chosen no improper locality, or unfit object,
for the foundation of her fantastic terrors. It
resembled exactly the description of Spenser:—
There, in a gloomy hollow
glen, she found
A little cottage built of
sticks and reeds,
In homely wise, and wall’d
with sods around,
In which a witch did dwell
in loathly weeds,
And wilful want, all careless
of her needs,
So choosing solitary to abide
Far from all neighbours, that
her devilish deeds,
And hellish arts, from people
she might hide,
And hurt far off, unknown,
whomsoever she espied.
He entered the cottage with these
verses in his memory. Poor old Janet, bent double
with age and bleared with peat-smoke, was tottering
about the hut with a birch broom, muttering to herself
as she endeavoured to make her hearth and floor a little
clean for the reception of her expected guests.
Waverley’s step made her start, look up, and
fall a-trembling, so much had her nerves been on the
rack for her patron’s safety. With difficulty
Waverley made her comprehend that the Baron was now
safe from personal danger; and when her mind had admitted
that joyful news, it was equally hard to make her
believe that he was not to enter again upon possession
of his estate. ‘It behoved to be,’
she said, ’he wad get it back again; naebody
wad be sae gripple as to tak his gear after they had
gi’en him a pardon: and for that Inch-Grabbit,
I could whiles wish mysell a witch for his sake, if
I werena feared the Enemy wad tak me at my word.’
Waverley then gave her some money, and promised that
her fidelity should be rewarded. ’How can
I be rewarded, sir, sae weel as just to see my auld
maister and Miss Rose come back and bruik their ain?’
Waverley now took leave of Janet,
and soon stood beneath the Baron’s Patmos.
At a low whistle he observed the veteran peeping out
to reconnoitre, like an old badger with his head out
of his hole. ‘Ye hae come rather early,
my good lad,’ said he, descending; ’I
question if the red-coats hae beat the tattoo yet,
and we’re not safe till then.’
‘Good news cannot be told too
soon,’ said Waverley; and with infinite joy
communicated to him the happy tidings. The old
man stood for a moment in silent devotion, then exclaimed,
’Praise be to God! I shall see my bairn
again.’
‘And never, I hope, to part
with her more,’ said Waverley.
’I trust in God not, unless
it be to win the means of supporting her; for my things
are but in a bruckle state;—but what signifies
warld’s gear?’
‘And if,’ said Waverley
modestly, ’there were a situation in life which
would put Miss Bradwardine beyond the uncertainty of
fortune, and in the rank to which she was born, would
you object to it, my dear Baron, because it would
make one of your friends the happiest man in the world?’
The Baron turned and looked at him with great earnestness.
‘Yes,’ continued Edward, ’I shall
not consider my sentence of banishment as repealed
unless you will give me permission to accompany you
to the Duchran, and—’
The Baron seemed collecting all his
dignity to make a suitable reply to what, at another
time, he would have treated as the propounding a treaty
of alliance between the houses of Bradwardine and
Waverley. But his efforts were in vain; the father
was too mighty for the Baron; the pride of birth and
rank were swept away; in the joyful surprise a slight
convulsion passed rapidly over his features, as he
gave way to the feelings of nature, threw his arms
around Waverley’s neck, and sobbed out—’My
son, my son! if I had been to search the world, I
would have made my choice here.’ Edward
returned the embrace with great sympathy of feeling,
and for a little while they both kept silence.
At length it was broken by Edward. ‘But
Miss Bradwardine?’
’She had never a will but her
old father’s; besides, you are a likely youth,
of honest principles and high birth; no, she never
had any other will than mine, and in my proudest days
I could not have wished a mair eligible espousal for
her than the nephew of my excellent old friend, Sir
Everard. But I hope, young man, ye deal na rashly
in this matter? I hope ye hae secured the approbation
of your ain friends and allies, particularly of your
uncle, who is in loco parentis? Ah! we maun tak
heed o’ that.’ Edward assured him
that Sir Everard would think himself highly honoured
in the flattering reception his proposal had met with,
and that it had his entire approbation; in evidence
of which he put Colonel Talbot’s letter into
the Baron’s hand. The Baron read it with
great attention. ‘Sir Everard,’ he
said, ’always despised wealth in comparison
of honour and birth; and indeed he hath no occasion
to court the Diva Pecunia. Yet I now wish, since
this Malcolm turns out such a parricide, for I can
call him no better, as to think of alienating the
family inheritance—I now wish (his eyes
fixed on a part of the roof which was visible above
the trees) that I could have left Rose the auld hurley-house
and the riggs belanging to it. And yet,’
said he, resuming more cheerfully, ’it’s
maybe as weel as it is; for, as Baron of Bradwardine,
I might have thought it my duty to insist upon certain
compliances respecting name and bearings, whilk now,
as a landless laird wi’ a tocherless daughter,
no one can blame me for departing from.’
‘Now, Heaven be praised!’
thought Edward,’that Sir Everard does not hear
these scruples! The three ermines passant and
rampant bear would certainly have gone together by
the ears.’ He then, with all the ardour
of a young lover, assured the Baron that he sought
for his happiness only in Rose’s heart and hand,
and thought himself as happy in her father’s
simple approbation as if he had settled an earldom
upon his daughter.
They now reached Little Veolan.
The goose was smoking on the table, and the Bailie
brandished his knife and fork. A joyous greeting
took place between him and his patron. The kitchen,
too, had its company. Auld Janet was established
at the ingle-nook; Davie had turned the spit to his
immortal honour; and even Ban and Buscar, in the liberality
of Macwheeble’s joy, had been stuffed to the
throat with food, and now lay snoring on the floor.
The next day conducted the Baron and
his young friend to the Duchran, where the former
was expected, in consequence of the success of the
nearly unanimous application of the Scottish friends
of government in his favour. This had been so
general and so powerful that it was almost thought
his estate might have been saved, had it not passed
into the rapacious hands of his unworthy kinsman,
whose right, arising out of the Baron’s attainder,
could not be affected by a pardon from the crown.
The old gentleman, however, said, with his usual spirit,
he was more gratified by the hold he possessed in
the good opinion of his neighbours than he would have
been in being rehabilitated and restored in integrum,
had it been found practicable.’
We shall not attempt to describe the
meeting of the father and daughter, loving each other
so affectionately, and separated under such perilous
circumstances. Still less shall we attempt to
analyse the deep blush of Rose at receiving the compliments
of Waverley, or stop to inquire whether she had any
curiosity respecting the particular cause of his journey
to Scotland at that period. We shall not even
trouble the reader with the humdrum details of a courtship
Sixty Years Since. It is enough to say that,
under so strict a martinet as the Baron, all things
were conducted in due form. He took upon himself,
the morning after their arrival, the task of announcing
the proposal of Waverley to Rose, which she heard
with a proper degree of maiden timidity. Fame
does, however, say that Waverley had the evening before
found five minutes to apprise her of what was coming,
while the rest of the company were looking at three
twisted serpents which formed a, jet d’eau in
the garden.
My fair readers will judge for themselves;
but, for my part, I cannot conceive how so important
an affair could be communicated in so short a space
of time; at least, it certainly took a full hour in
the Baron’s mode of conveying it.
Waverley was now considered as a received
lover in all the forms. He was made, by dint
of smirking and nodding on the part of the lady of
the house, to sit next Miss Bradwardine at dinner,
to be Miss Bradwardine’s partner at cards.
If he came into the room, she of the four Miss Rubricks
who chanced to be next Rose was sure to recollect
that her thimble or her scissors were at the other
end of the room, in order to leave the seat nearest
to Miss Bradwardine vacant for his occupation.
And sometimes, if papa and mamma were not in the way
to keep them on their good behaviour, the misses would
titter a little. The old Laird of Duchran would
also have his occasional jest, and the old lady her
remark. Even the Baron could not refrain; but
here Rose escaped every embarrassment but that of
conjecture, for his wit was usually couched in a Latin
quotation. The very footmen sometimes grinned
too broadly, the maidservants giggled mayhap too loud,
and a provoking air of intelligence seemed to pervade
the whole family. Alice Bean, the pretty maid
of the cavern, who, after her father’s misfortune,
as she called it, had attended Rose as fille-de-chambre,
smiled and smirked with the best of them. Rose
and Edward, however, endured all these little vexatious
circumstances as other folks have done before and
since, and probably contrived to obtain some indemnification,
since they are not supposed, on the whole, to have
been particularly unhappy during Waverley’s six
days’ stay at the Duchran.
It was finally arranged that Edward
should go to Waverley-Honour to make the necessary
arrangements for his marriage, thence to London to
take the proper measures for pleading his pardon, and
return as soon as possible to claim the hand of his
plighted bride. He also intended in his journey
to visit Colonel Talbot; but, above all, it was his
most important object to learn the fate of the unfortunate
Chief of Glennaquoich; to visit him at Carlisle, and
to try whether anything could be done for procuring,
if not a pardon, a commutation at least, or alleviation,
of the punishment to which he was almost certain of
being condemned; and, in case of the worst, to offer
the miserable Flora an asylum with Rose, or otherwise
to assist her views in any mode which might seem possible.
The fate of Fergus seemed hard to be averted.
Edward had already striven to interest his friend,
Colonel Talbot, in his behalf; but had been given
distinctly to understand by his reply that his credit
in matters of that nature was totally exhausted.
The Colonel was still in Edinburgh,
and proposed to wait there for some months upon business
confided to him by the Duke of Cumberland. He
was to be joined by Lady Emily, to whom easy travelling
and goat’s whey were recommended, and who was
to journey northward under the escort of Francis Stanley.
Edward, therefore, met the Colonel at Edinburgh, who
wished him joy in the kindest manner on his approaching
happiness, and cheerfully undertook many commissions
which our hero was necessarily obliged to delegate
to his charge. But on the subject of Fergus he
was inexorable. He satisfied Edward, indeed,
that his interference would be unavailing; but, besides,
Colonel Talbot owned that he could not conscientiously
use any influence in favour of that unfortunate gentleman.
‘Justice,’ he said, ’which demanded
some penalty of those who had wrapped the whole nation
in fear and in mourning, could not perhaps have selected
a fitter victim. He came to the field with the
fullest light upon the nature of his attempt.
He had studied and understood the subject. His
father’s fate could not intimidate him; the
lenity of the laws which had restored to him his father’s
property and rights could not melt him. That
he was brave, generous, and possessed many good qualities
only rendered him the more dangerous; that he was
enlightened and accomplished made his crime the less
excusable; that he was an enthusiast in a wrong cause
only made him the more fit to be its martyr.
Above all, he had been the means of bringing many
hundreds of men into the field who, without him, would
never have broken the peace of the country.
‘I repeat it,’ said the
Colonel,’though Heaven knows with a heart distressed
for him as an individual, that this young gentleman
has studied and fully understood the desperate game
which he has played. He threw for life or death,
a coronet or a coffin; and he cannot now be permitted,
with justice to the country, to draw stakes because
the dice have gone against him.’
Such was the reasoning of those times,
held even by brave and humane men towards a vanquished
enemy. Let us devoutly hope that, in this respect
at least, we shall never see the scenes or hold the
sentiments that were general in Britain Sixty Years
Since.