To morrow? O that’s
sudden!—Spare him, spare him’
Shakspeare
Edward, attended by his former servant
Alick Polwarth, who had reentered his service at Edinburgh,
reached Carlisle while the commission of Oyer and
Terminer on his unfortunate associates was yet sitting.
He had pushed forward in haste, not, alas! with the
most distant hope of saving Fergus, but to see him
for the last time. I ought to have mentioned
that he had furnished funds for the defence of the
prisoners in the most liberal manner, as soon as he
heard that the day of trial was fixed. A solicitor
and the first counsel accordingly attended; but it
was upon the same footing on which the first physicians
are usually summoned to the bedside of some dying
man of rank—the doctors to take the advantage
of some incalculable chance of an exertion of nature,
the lawyers to avail themselves of the barely possible
occurrence of some legal flaw. Edward pressed
into the court, which was extremely crowded; but by
his arriving from the north, and his extreme eagerness
and agitation, it was supposed he was a relation of
the prisoners, and people made way for him. It
was the third sitting of the court, and there were
two men at the bar. The verdict of guilty
was already pronounced. Edward just glanced at
the bar during the momentous pause which ensued.
There was no mistaking the stately form and noble
features of Fergus Mac-Ivor, although his dress was
squalid and his countenance tinged with the sickly
yellow hue of long and close imprisonment. By
his side was Evan Maccombich. Edward felt sick
and dizzy as he gazed on them; but he was recalled
to himself as the Clerk of Arraigns pronounced the
solemn words: ’Fergus Mac-Ivor of Glennaquoich,
otherwise called Vich Ian Vohr, and Evan Mac-Ivor,
in the Dhu of Tarrascleugh, otherwise called Evan
Dhu, otherwise called Evan Maccombich, or Evan Dhu
MacCombich—you, and each of you, stand
attainted of high treason. What have you to say
for yourselves why the Court should not pronounce
judgment against you, that you die according to law?’
Fergus, as the presiding Judge was
putting on the fatal cap of judgment, placed his own
bonnet upon his head, regarded him with a steadfast
and stern look, and replied in a firm voice, ’I
cannot let this numerous audience suppose that to
such an appeal I have no answer to make. But
what I have to say you would not bear to hear, for
my defence would be your condemnation. Proceed,
then, in the name of God, to do what is permitted
to you. Yesterday and the day before you have
condemned loyal and honourable blood to be poured
forth like water. Spare not mine. Were that
of all my ancestors in my veins, I would have perilled
it in this quarrel.’ He resumed his seat
and refused again to rise.
Evan Maccombich looked at him with
great earnestness, and, rising up, seemed anxious
to speak; but the confusion of the court, and the
perplexity arising from thinking in a language different
from that in which he was to express himself, kept
him silent. There was a murmur of compassion
among the spectators, from the idea that the poor
fellow intended to plead the influence of his superior
as an excuse for his crime. The Judge commanded
silence, and encouraged Evan to proceed. ’I
was only ganging to say, my lord,’ said Evan,
in what he meant to be an insinuating manner, ’that
if your excellent honour and the honourable Court would
let Vich Ian Vohr go free just this once, and let
him gae back to France, and no to trouble King George’s
government again, that ony six o’ the very best
of his clan will be willing to be justified in his
stead; and if you’ll just let me gae down to
Glennaquoich, I’ll fetch them up to ye mysell,
to head or hang, and you may begin wi’ me the
very first man.’
Notwithstanding the solemnity of the
occasion, a sort of laugh was heard in the court at
the extraordinary nature of the proposal. The
Judge checked this indecency, and Evan, looking sternly
around, when the murmur abated, ’If the Saxon
gentlemen are laughing,’ he said, ’because
a poor man, such as me, thinks my life, or the life
of six of my degree, is worth that of Vich Ian Vohr,
it’s like enough they may be very right; but
if they laugh because they think I would not keep
my word and come back to redeem him, I can tell them
they ken neither the heart of a Hielandman nor the
honour of a gentleman.’
There was no farther inclination to
laugh among the audience, and a dead silence ensued.
The Judge then pronounced upon both
prisoners the sentence of the law of high treason,
with all its horrible accompaniments. The execution
was appointed for the ensuing day. ’For
you, Fergus Mac-Ivor,’ continued the Judge,
’I can hold out no hope of mercy. You must
prepare against to-morrow for your last sufferings
here, and your great audit hereafter.’
‘I desire nothing else, my lord,’
answered Fergus, in the same manly and firm tone.
The hard eyes of Evan, which had been
perpetually bent on his Chief, were moistened with
a tear. ‘For you, poor ignorant man,’
continued the Judge, ’who, following the ideas
in which you have been educated, have this day given
us a striking example how the loyalty due to the king
and state alone is, from your unhappy ideas of clanship,
transferred to some ambitious individual who ends
by making you the tool of his crimes—for
you, I say, I feel so much compassion that, if you
can make up your mind to petition for grace, I will
endeavour to procure it for you. Otherwise—’
‘Grace me no grace,’ said
Evan; ’since you are to shed Vich Ian Vohr’s
blood, the only favour I would accept from you is to
bid them loose my hands and gie me my claymore, and
bide you just a minute sitting where you are!’
‘Remove the prisoners,’
said the Judge; ’his blood be upon his own head.’
Almost stupefied with his feelings,
Edward found that the rush of the crowd had conveyed
him out into the street ere he knew what he was doing.
His immediate wish was to see and speak with Fergus
once more. He applied at the Castle where his
unfortunate friend was confined, but was refused admittance.
‘The High Sheriff,’ a non-commissioned
officer said, ’had requested of the governor
that none should be admitted to see the prisoner excepting
his confessor and his sister.’
‘And where was Miss Mac-Ivor?’
They gave him the direction. It was the house
of a respectable Catholic family near Carlisle.
Repulsed from the gate of the Castle,
and not venturing to make application to the High
Sheriff or Judges in his own unpopular name, he had
recourse to the solicitor who came down in Fergus’s
behalf. This gentleman told him that it was thought
the public mind was in danger of being debauched by
the account of the last moments of these persons,
as given by the friends of the Pretender; that there
had been a resolution, therefore, to exclude all such
persons as had not the plea of near kindred for attending
upon them. Yet he promised (to oblige the heir
of Waverley-Honour) to get him an order for admittance
to the prisoner the next morning, before his irons
were knocked off for execution.
‘Is it of Fergus Mac-Ivor they
speak thus,’ thought Waverley, ’or do
I dream? Of Fergus, the bold, the chivalrous,
the free-minded, the lofty chieftain of a tribe devoted
to him? Is it he, that I have seen lead the chase
and head the attack, the brave, the active, the young,
the noble, the love of ladies, and the theme of song,—is
it he who is ironed like a malefactor, who is to be
dragged on a hurdle to the common gallows, to die a
lingering and cruel death, and to be mangled by the
hand of the most outcast of wretches? Evil indeed
was the spectre that boded such a fate as this to
the brave Chief of Glennaquoich!’
With a faltering voice he requested
the solicitor to find means to warn Fergus of his
intended visit, should he obtain permission to make
it. He then turned away from him, and, returning
to the inn, wrote a scarcely intelligible note to
Flora Mac-Ivor, intimating his purpose to wait upon
her that evening. The messenger brought back
a letter in Flora’s beautiful Italian hand, which
seemed scarce to tremble even under this load of misery.
’Miss Flora Mac-Ivor,’ the letter bore,
’could not refuse to see the dearest friend
of her dear brother, even in her present circumstances
of unparalleled distress.’
When Edward reached Miss Mac-Ivor’s
present place of abode he was instantly admitted.
In a large and gloomy tapestried apartment Flora was
seated by a latticed window, sewing what seemed to
be a garment of white flannel. At a little distance
sat an elderly woman, apparently a foreigner, and
of a religious order. She was reading in a book
of Catholic devotion, but when Waverley entered laid
it on the table and left the room. Flora rose
to receive him, and stretched out her hand, but neither
ventured to attempt speech. Her fine complexion
was totally gone; her person considerably emaciated;
and her face and hands as white as the purest statuary
marble, forming a strong contrast with her sable dress
and jet-black hair. Yet, amid these marks of distress
there was nothing negligent or ill-arranged about
her attire; even her hair, though totally without
ornament, was disposed with her usual attention to
neatness. The first words she uttered were, ’Have
you seen him?’
‘Alas, no,’ answered Waverley,
‘I have been refused admittance.’
‘It accords with the rest,’
she said; ’but we must submit. Shall you
obtain leave, do you suppose?’
‘For—for—tomorrow,’
said Waverley; but muttering the last word so faintly
that it was almost unintelligible.
‘Ay, then or never,’ said
Flora, ’until’—she added, looking
upward—’the time when, I trust, we
shall all meet. But I hope you will see him while
earth yet bears him. He always loved you at his
heart, though—but it is vain to talk of
the past.’
‘Vain indeed!’ echoed Waverley.
‘Or even of the future, my good
friend,’ said Flora,’so far as earthly
events are concerned; for how often have I pictured
to myself the strong possibility of this horrid issue,
and tasked myself to consider how I could support
my part; and yet how far has all my anticipation fallen
short of the unimaginable bitterness of this hour!’
‘Dear Flora, if your strength of mind—’
‘Ay, there it is,’ she
answered, somewhat wildly; ’there is, Mr. Waverley,
there is a busy devil at my heart that whispers—but
it were madness to listen to it—that the
strength of mind on which Flora prided herself has
murdered her brother!’
‘Good God! how can you give
utterance to a thought so shocking?’
’Ay, is it not so? but yet it
haunts me like a phantom; I know it is unsubstantial
and vain; but it will be present; will intrude its
horrors on my mind; will whisper that my brother, as
volatile as ardent, would have divided his energies
amid a hundred objects. It was I who taught him
to concentrate them and to gage all on this dreadful
and desperate cast. Oh that I could recollect
that I had but once said to him, “He that striketh
with the sword shall die by the sword”; that
I had but once said, “Remain at home; reserve
yourself, your vassals, your life, for enterprises
within the reach of man.” But O, Mr. Waverley,
I spurred his fiery temper, and half of his ruin at
least lies with his sister!’
The horrid idea which she had intimated,
Edward endeavoured to combat by every incoherent argument
that occurred to him. He recalled to her the
principles on which both thought it their duty to
act, and in which they had been educated.
‘Do not think I have forgotten
them,’ she said, looking up with eager quickness;
’I do not regret his attempt because it was
wrong!—O no! on that point I am armed—but
because it was impossible it could end otherwise than
thus.’
’Yet it did not always seem
so desperate and hazardous as it was; and it would
have been chosen by the bold spirit of Fergus whether
you had approved it or no; your counsels only served
to give unity and consistence to his conduct; to dignify,
but not to precipitate, his resolution.’
Flora had soon ceased to listen to Edward, and was
again intent upon her needlework.
‘Do you remember,’ she
said, looking up with a ghastly smile, ’you
once found me making Fergus’s bride-favours,
and now I am sewing his bridal garment. Our friends
here,’ she continued, with suppressed emotion,
’are to give hallowed earth in their chapel to
the bloody relics of the last Vich Ian Vohr. But
they will not all rest together; no—his
head!—I shall not have the last miserable
consolation of kissing the cold lips of my dear, dear
Fergus!’
The unfortunate Flora here, after
one or two hysterical sobs, fainted in her chair.
The lady, who had been attending in the ante-room,
now entered hastily, and begged Edward to leave the
room, but not the house.
When he was recalled, after the space
of nearly half an hour, he found that, by a strong
effort, Miss Mac-Ivor had greatly composed herself.
It was then he ventured to urge Miss Bradwardine’s
claim to be considered as an adopted sister, and empowered
to assist her plans for the future.
‘I have had a letter from my
dear Rose,’ she replied, ’to the same
purpose. Sorrow is selfish and engrossing, or
I would have written to express that, even in my own
despair, I felt a gleam of pleasure at learning her
happy prospects, and at hearing that the good old
Baron has escaped the general wreck. Give this
to my dearest Rose; it is her poor Flora’s only
ornament of value, and was the gift of a princess.’
She put into his hands a case containing the chain
of diamonds with which she used to decorate her hair.
’To me it is in future useless. The kindness
of my friends has secured me a retreat in the convent
of the Scottish Benedictine nuns in Paris. Tomorrow—if
indeed I can survive tomorrow—I set forward
on my journey with this venerable sister. And
now, Mr. Waverley, adieu! May you be as happy
with Rose as your amiable dispositions deserve; and
think sometimes on the friends you have lost.
Do not attempt to see me again; it would be mistaken
kindness.’
She gave him her hand, on which Edward
shed a torrent of tears, and with a faltering step
withdrew from the apartment, and returned to the town
of Carlisle. At the inn he found a letter from
his law friend intimating that he would be admitted
to Fergus next morning as soon as the Castle gates
were opened, and permitted to remain with him till
the arrival of the Sheriff gave signal for the fatal
procession.