DULCE DOMUM
The impression of horror with which
Waverley left Carlisle softened by degrees into melancholy,
a gradation which was accelerated by the painful yet
soothing task of writing to Rose; and, while he could
not suppress his own feelings of the calamity, he
endeavoured to place it in a light which might grieve
her without shocking her imagination. The picture
which he drew for her benefit he gradually familiarised
to his own mind, and his next letters were more cheerful,
and referred to the prospects of peace and happiness
which lay before them. Yet, though his first
horrible sensations had sunk into melancholy, Edward
had reached his native country before he could, as
usual on former occasions, look round for enjoyment
upon the face of nature.
He then, for the first time since
leaving Edinburgh, began to experience that pleasure
which almost all feel who return to a verdant, populous,
and highly cultivated country from scenes of waste
desolation or of solitary and melancholy grandeur.
But how were those feelings enhanced when he entered
on the domain so long possessed by his forefathers;
recognised the old oaks of Waverley-Chace; thought
with what delight he should introduce Rose to all
his favourite haunts; beheld at length the towers of
the venerable hall arise above the woods which embowered
it, and finally threw himself into the arms of the
venerable relations to whom he owed so much duty and
affection!
The happiness of their meeting was
not tarnished by a single word of reproach. On
the contrary, whatever pain Sir Everard and Mrs. Rachel
had felt during Waverley’s perilous engagement
with the young Chevalier, it assorted too well with
the principles in which they had been brought up to
incur reprobation, or even censure. Colonel Talbot
also had smoothed the way with great address for Edward’s
favourable reception by dwelling upon his gallant
behaviour in the military character, particularly his
bravery and generosity at Preston; until, warmed at
the idea of their nephew’s engaging in single
combat, making prisoner, and saving from slaughter
so distinguished an officer as the Colonel himself,
the imagination of the Baronet and his sister ranked
the exploits of Edward with those of Wilibert, Hildebrand,
and Nigel, the vaunted heroes of their line.
The appearance of Waverley, embrowned
by exercise and dignified by the habits of military
discipline, had acquired an athletic and hardy character,
which not only verified the Colonel’s narration,
but surprised and delighted all the inhabitants of
Waverley-Honour. They crowded to see, to hear
him, and to sing his praises. Mr. Pembroke, who
secretly extolled his spirit and courage in embracing
the genuine cause of the Church of England, censured
his pupil gently, nevertheless, for being so careless
of his manuscripts, which indeed, he said, had occasioned
him some personal inconvenience, as, upon the Baronet’s
being arrested by a king’s messenger, he had
deemed it prudent to retire to a concealment called
‘The Priest’s Hole,’ from the use
it had been put to in former days; where, he assured
our hero, the butler had thought it safe to venture
with food only once in the day, so that he had been
repeatedly compelled to dine upon victuals either
absolutely cold or, what was worse, only half warm,
not to mention that sometimes his bed had not been
arranged for two days together. Waverley’s
mind involuntarily turned to the Patmos of the Baron
of Bradwardine, who was well pleased with Janet’s
fare and a few bunches of straw stowed in a cleft
in the front of a sand-cliff; but he made no remarks
upon a contrast which could only mortify his worthy
tutor.
All was now in a bustle to prepare
for the nuptials of Edward, an event to which the
good old Baronet and Mrs. Rachel looked forward as
if to the renewal of their own youth. The match,
as Colonel Talbot had intimated, had seemed to them
in the highest degree eligible, having every recommendation
but wealth, of which they themselves had more than
enough. Mr. Clippurse was therefore summoned
to Waverley-Honour, under better auspices than at the
commencement of our story. But Mr. Clippurse came
not alone; for, being now stricken in years, he had
associated with him a nephew, a younger vulture (as
our English Juvenal, who tells the tale of Swallow
the attorney, might have called him), and they now
carried on business as Messrs. Clippurse and Hookem.
These worthy gentlemen had directions to make the
necessary settlements on the most splendid scale of
liberality, as if Edward were to wed a peeress in
her own right, with her paternal estate tacked to the
fringe of her ermine.
But before entering upon a subject
of proverbial delay, I must remind my reader of the
progress of a stone rolled downhill by an idle truant
boy (a pastime at which I was myself expert in my more
juvenile years), it moves at first slowly, avoiding
by inflection every obstacle of the least importance;
but when it has attained its full impulse, and draws
near the conclusion of its career, it smokes and thunders
down, taking a rood at every spring, clearing hedge
and ditch like a Yorkshire huntsman, and becoming most
furiously rapid in its course when it is nearest to
being consigned to rest for ever. Even such is
the course of a narrative like that which you are
perusing. The earlier events are studiously dwelt
upon, that you, kind reader, may be introduced to
the character rather by narrative than by the duller
medium of direct description; but when the story draws
near its close, we hurry over the circumstances, however
important, which your imagination must have forestalled,
and leave you to suppose those things which it would
be abusing your patience to relate at length.
We are, therefore, so far from attempting
to trace the dull progress of Messrs. Clippurse and
Hookem, or that of their worthy official brethren
who had the charge of suing out the pardons of Edward
Waverley and his intended father-in-law, that we can
but touch upon matters more attractive. The mutual
epistles, for example, which were exchanged between
Sir Everard and the Baron upon this occasion, though
matchless specimens of eloquence in their way, must
be consigned to merciless oblivion. Nor can I
tell you at length how worthy Aunt Rachel, not without
a delicate and affectionate allusion to the circumstances
which had transferred Rose’s maternal diamonds
to the hands of Donald Bean Lean, stocked her casket
with a set of jewels that a duchess might have envied.
Moreover, the reader will have the goodness to imagine
that Job Houghton and his dame were suitably provided
for, although they could never be persuaded that their
son fell otherwise than fighting by the young squire’s
side; so that Alick, who, as a lover of truth, had
made many needless attempts to expound the real circumstances
to them, was finally ordered to say not a word more
upon the subject. He indemnified himself, however,
by the liberal allowance of desperate battles, grisly
executions, and raw-head and bloody-bone stories with
which he astonished the servants’ hall.
But although these important matters
may be briefly told in narrative, like a newspaper
report of a Chancery suit, yet, with all the urgency
which Waverley could use, the real time which the
law proceedings occupied, joined to the delay occasioned
by the mode of travelling at that period, rendered
it considerably more than two months ere Waverley,
having left England, alighted once more at the mansion
of the Laird of Duchran to claim the hand of his plighted
bride.
The day of his marriage was fixed
for the sixth after his arrival. The Baron of
Bradwardine, with whom bridals, christenings, and
funerals were festivals of high and solemn import,
felt a little hurt that, including the family of the
Duchran and all the immediate vicinity who had title
to be present on such an occasion, there could not
be above thirty persons collected. ’When
he was married,’ he observed,’three hundred
horse of gentlemen born, besides servants, and some
score or two of Highland lairds, who never got on
horseback, were present on the occasion.’
But his pride found some consolation
in reflecting that, he and his son-in-law having been
so lately in arms against government, it might give
matter of reasonable fear and offence to the ruling
powers if they were to collect together the kith, kin,
and allies of their houses, arrayed in effeir of war,
as was the ancient custom of Scotland on these occasions—’And,
without dubitation,’ he concluded with a sigh,
’many of those who would have rejoiced most
freely upon these joyful espousals are either gone
to a better place or are now exiles from their native
land.’
The marriage took place on the appointed
day. The Reverend Mr. Rubrick, kinsman to the
proprietor of the hospitable mansion where it was
solemnised, and chaplain to the Baron of Bradwardine,
had the satisfaction to unite their hands; and Frank
Stanley acted as bridesman, having joined Edward with
that view soon after his arrival. Lady Emily
and Colonel Talbot had proposed being present; but
Lady Emily’s health, when the day approached,
was found inadequate to the journey. In amends
it was arranged that Edward Waverley and his lady,
who, with the Baron, proposed an immediate journey
to Waverley-Honour, should in their way spend a few
days at an estate which Colonel Talbot had been tempted
to purchase in Scotland as a very great bargain, and
at which he proposed to reside for some time.