This is no mine ain house,
I ken by the bigging o’t
Old Song.
The nuptial party travelled in great
style. There was a coach and six after the newest
pattern, which Sir Everard had presented to his nephew,
that dazzled with its splendour the eyes of one half
of Scotland; there was the family coach of Mr. Rubrick;—both
these were crowded with ladies,—and there
were gentlemen on horseback, with their servants,
to the number of a round score. Nevertheless,
without having the fear of famine before his eyes,
Bailie Macwheeble met them in the road to entreat that
they would pass by his house at Little Veolan.
The Baron stared, and said his son and he would certainly
ride by Little Veolan and pay their compliments to
the Bailie, but could not think of bringing with them
the ‘haill comitatus nuptialis, or matrimonial
procession.’ He added, ’that, as
he understood that the barony had been sold by its
unworthy possessor, he was glad to see his old friend
Duncan had regained his situation under the new Dominus,
or proprietor.’ The Bailie ducked, bowed,
and fidgeted, and then again insisted upon his invitation;
until the Baron, though rather piqued at the pertinacity
of his instances, could not nevertheless refuse to
consent without making evident sensations which he
was anxious to conceal.
He fell into a deep study as they
approached the top of the avenue, and was only startled
from it by observing that the battlements were replaced,
the ruins cleared away, and (most wonderful of all)
that the two great stone bears, those mutilated Dagons
of his idolatry, had resumed their posts over the gateway.
‘Now this new proprietor,’ said he to Edward,
’has shown mair gusto, as the Italians call
it, in the short time he has had this domain, than
that hound Malcolm, though I bred him here mysell,
has acquired vita adhuc durante. And now I talk
of hounds, is not yon Ban and Buscar who come scouping
up the avenue with Davie Gellatley?’
‘I vote we should go to meet
them, sir,’ said Waverley, ’for I believe
the present master of the house is Colonel Talbot,
who will expect to see us. We hesitated to mention
to you at first that he had purchased your ancient
patrimonial property, and even yet, if you do not
incline to visit him, we can pass on to the Bailie’s.’
The Baron had occasion for all his
magnanimity. However, he drew a long breath,
took a long snuff, and observed, since they had brought
him so far, he could not pass the Colonel’s gate,
and he would be happy to see the new master of his
old tenants. He alighted accordingly, as did
the other gentlemen and ladies; he gave his arm to
his daughter, and as they descended the avenue pointed
out to her how speedily the ’Diva Pecunia of
the Southron —their tutelary deity, he
might call her—had removed the marks of
spoliation.’
In truth, not only had the felled
trees been removed, but, their stumps being grubbed
up and the earth round them levelled and sown with
grass, every mark of devastation, unless to an eye
intimately acquainted with the spot, was already totally
obliterated. There was a similar reformation
in the outward man of Davie Gellatley, who met them,
every now and then stopping to admire the new suit
which graced his person, in the same colours as formerly,
but bedizened fine enough to have served Touchstone
himself. He danced up with his usual ungainly
frolics, first to the Baron and then to Rose, passing
his hands over his clothes, crying, ‘Bra’,
bra’ Davie,’ and scarce able to sing a
bar to an end of his thousand-and-one songs for the
breathless extravagance of his joy. The dogs
also acknowledged their old master with a thousand
gambols. ’Upon my conscience, Rose,’
ejaculated the Baron, ‘the gratitude o’
thae dumb brutes and of that puir innocent brings
the tears into my auld een, while that schellum Malcolm—but
I’m obliged to Colonel Talbot for putting my
hounds into such good condition, and likewise for
puir Davie. But, Rose, my dear, we must not permit
them to be a life-rent burden upon the estate.’
As he spoke, Lady Emily, leaning upon
the arm of her husband, met the party at the lower
gate with a thousand welcomes. After the ceremony
of introduction had been gone through, much abridged
by the ease and excellent breeding of Lady Emily,
she apologised for having used a little art to wile
them back to a place which might awaken some painful
reflections—’But as it was to change
masters, we were very desirous that the Baron—’
‘Mr. Bradwardine, madam, if
you please,’ said the old gentleman.
’—Mr. Bradwardine,
then, and Mr. Waverley should see what we have done
towards restoring the mansion of your fathers to its
former state.’
The Baron answered with a low bow.
Indeed, when he entered the court, excepting that
the heavy stables, which had been burnt down, were
replaced by buildings of a lighter and more picturesque
appearance, all seemed as much as possible restored
to the state in which he had left it when he assumed
arms some months before. The pigeon-house was
replenished; the fountain played with its usual activity,
and not only the bear who predominated over its basin,
but all the other bears whatsoever, were replaced on
their several stations, and renewed or repaired with
so much care that they bore no tokens of the violence
which had so lately descended upon them. While
these minutiae had been so needfully attended to,
it is scarce necessary to add that the house itself
had been thoroughly repaired, as well as the gardens,
with the strictest attention to maintain the original
character of both, and to remove as far as possible
all appearance of the ravage they had sustained.
The Baron gazed in silent wonder; at length he addressed
Colonel Talbot—
’While I acknowledge my obligation
to you, sir, for the restoration of the badge of our
family, I cannot but marvel that you have nowhere
established your own crest, whilk is, I believe, a
mastiff, anciently called a talbot; as the poet has
it,
A talbot strong, a sturdy
tyke.
At least such a dog is the crest of
the martial and renowned Earls of Shrewsbury, to whom
your family are probably blood-relations.’
‘I believe,’ said the
Colonel, smiling, ’our dogs are whelps of the
same litter; for my part, if crests were to dispute
precedence, I should be apt to let them, as the proverb
says, “fight dog, fight bear.”’
As he made this speech, at which the
Baron took another long pinch of snuff, they had entered
the house, that is, the Baron, Rose, and Lady Emily,
with young Stanley and the Bailie, for Edward and
the rest of the party remained on the terrace to examine
a new greenhouse stocked with the finest plants.
The Baron resumed his favourite topic—’However
it may please you to derogate from the honour of your
burgonet, Colonel Talbot, which is doubtless your
humour, as I have seen in other gentlemen of birth
and honour in your country, I must again repeat it
as a most ancient and distinguished bearing, as well
as that of my young friend Francis Stanley, which
is the eagle and child.’
‘The bird and bantling they
call it in Derbyshire, sir,’ said Stanley.
‘Ye’re a daft callant,
sir,’ said the Baron, who had a great liking
to this young man, perhaps because he sometimes teased
him —’Ye’re a daft callant,
and I must correct you some of these days,’
shaking his great brown fist at him. ’But
what I meant to say, Colonel Talbot, is, that yours
is an ancient prosapia, or descent, and since you
have lawfully and justly acquired the estate for you
and yours which I have lost for me and mine, I wish
it may remain in your name as many centuries as it
has done in that of the late proprietor’s.’
‘That,’ answered the Colonel,
’is very handsome, Mr. Bradwardine, indeed.’
’And yet, sir, I cannot but
marvel that you, Colonel, whom I noted to have so
much of the amor patritz when we met in Edinburgh as
even to vilipend other countries, should have chosen
to establish your Lares, or household gods, procul
a patrice finibus, and in a manner to expatriate yourself.’
’Why really, Baron, I do not
see why, to keep the secret of these foolish boys,
Waverley and Stanley, and of my wife, who is no wiser,
one old soldier should continue to impose upon another.
You must know, then, that I have so much of that same
prejudice in favour of my native country, that the
sum of money which I advanced to the seller of this
extensive barony has only purchased for me a box in——shire,
called Brere-wood Lodge, with about two hundred and
fifty acres of land, the chief merit of which is,
that it is within a very few miles of Waverley-Honour.’
‘And who, then, in the name
of Heaven, has bought this property?’
‘That,’ said the Colonel,
’it is this gentleman’s profession to
explain.’
The Bailie, whom this reference regarded,
and who had all this while shifted from one foot to
another with great impatience, ‘like a hen,’
as he afterwards said, ‘upon a het girdle’;
and chuckling, he might have added, like the said
hen in all the glory of laying an egg, now pushed
forward. ’That I can, that I can, your
honour,’ drawing from his pocket a budget of
papers, and untying the red tape with a hand trembling
with eagerness. ’Here is the disposition
and assignation by Malcolm Bradwardine of Inch-Grabbit,
regularly signed and tested in terms of the statute,
whereby, for a certain sum of sterling money presently
contented and paid to him, he has disponed, alienated,
and conveyed the whole estate and barony of Bradwardine,
Tully-Veolan, and others, with the fortalice and manor-place—’
‘For God’s sake, to the
point, sir; I have all that by heart,’ said
the Colonel.
‘—To Cosmo Comyne
Bradwardme, Esq.,’ pursued the Bailie, ’his
heirs and assignees, simply and irredeemably, to be
held either a me vel de me—’
‘Pray read short, sir.’
’On the conscience of an honest
man, Colonel, I read as short as is consistent with
style—under the burden and reservation always—’
’Mr. Macwheeble, this would
outlast a Russian winter; give me leave. In short,
Mr. Bradwardine, your family estate is your own once
more in full property, and at your absolute disposal,
but only burdened with the sum advanced to re-purchase
it, which I understand is utterly disproportioned
to its value.’
‘An auld sang—an
auld sang, if it please your honours,’ cried
the Bailie, rubbing his hands; ‘look at the
rental book.’
’—Which sum being
advanced, by Mr. Edward Waverley, chiefly from the
price of his father’s property which I bought
from him, is secured to his lady your daughter and
her family by this marriage.’
‘It is a catholic security,’
shouted the Bailie,’ to Rose Comyne Bradwardine,
alias Wauverley, in life-rent, and the children of
the said marriage in fee; and I made up a wee bit minute
of an antenuptial contract, intuitu matrimonij, so
it cannot be subject to reduction hereafter, as a
donation inter virum et uxorem.’
It is difficult to say whether the
worthy Baron was most delighted with the restitution
of his family property or with the delicacy and generosity
that left him unfettered to pursue his purpose in
disposing of it after his death, and which avoided
as much as possible even the appearance of laying
him under pecuniary obligation. When his first
pause of joy and astonishment was over, his thoughts
turned to the unworthy heir-male, who, he pronounced,
had sold his birthright, like Esau, for a mess o’
pottage.
‘But wha cookit the parritch
for him?’ exclaimed the Bailie; ’I wad
like to ken that;—wha but your honour’s
to command, Duncan Macwheeble? His honour, young
Mr. Wauverley, put it a’ into my hand frae the
beginning—frae the first calling o’
the summons, as I may say. I circumvented them—I
played at bogle about the bush wi’ them—I
cajolled them; and if I havena gien Inch-Grabbit and
Jamie Howie a bonnie begunk, they ken themselves.
Him a writer! I didna gae slapdash to them wi’
our young bra’ bridegroom, to gar them baud
up the market. Na, na; I scared them wi’
our wild tenantry, and the Mac-Ivors, that are but
ill settled yet, till they durstna on ony errand whatsoever
gang ower the doorstane after gloaming, for fear John
Heatherblutter, or some siccan dare-the-deil, should
tak a baff at them; then, on the other hand, I beflummed
them wi’ Colonel Talbot; wad they offer to keep
up the price again’ the Duke’s friend?
did they na ken wha was master? had they na seen eneugh,
by the sad example of mony a puir misguided unhappy
body—’
‘Who went to Derby, for example,
Mr. Macwheeble?’ said the Colonel to him aside.
‘O whisht, Colonel, for the
love o’ God! let that flee stick i’ the
wa’. There were mony good folk at Derby;
and it’s ill speaking of halters’—with
a sly cast of his eye toward the Baron, who was in
a deep reverie.
Starting out of it at once, he took
Macwheeble by the button and led him into one of the
deep window recesses, whence only fragments of their
conversation reached the rest of the party. It
certainly related to stamp-paper and parchment; for
no other subject, even from the mouth of his patron,
and he once more an efficient one, could have arrested
so deeply the Bailie’s reverent and absorbed
attention.
’I understand your honour perfectly;
it can be dune as easy as taking out a decreet in
absence.’
’To her and him, after my demise,
and to their heirs-male, but preferring the second
son, if God shall bless them with two, who is to carry
the name and arms of Bradwardine of that ilk, without
any other name or armorial bearings whatsoever.’
‘Tut, your honour!’ whispered
the Bailie, ’I’ll mak a slight jotting
the morn; it will cost but a charter of resignation
in favorem; and I’ll hae it ready for the next
term in Exchequer.’
Their private conversation ended,
the Baron was now summoned to do the honours of Tully-Veolan
to new guests. These were Major Melville of Cairnvreckan
and the Reverend Mr. Morton, followed by two or three
others of the Baron’s acquaintances, who had
been made privy to his having again acquired the estate
of his fathers. The shouts of the villagers were
also heard beneath in the court-yard; for Saunders
Saunderson, who had kept the secret for several days
with laudable prudence, had unloosed his tongue upon
beholding the arrival of the carriages.
But, while Edward received Major Melville
with politeness and the clergyman with the most affectionate
and grateful kindness, his father-in-law looked a
little awkward, as uncertain how he should answer
the necessary claims of hospitality to his guests,
and forward the festivity of his tenants. Lady
Emily relieved him by intimating that, though she
must be an indifferent representative of Mrs. Edward
Waverley in many respects, she hoped the Baron would
approve of the entertainment she had ordered in expectation
of so many guests; and that they would find such other
accommodations provided as might in some degree support
the ancient hospitality of Tully-Veolan. It is
impossible to describe the pleasure which this assurance
gave the Baron, who, with an air of gallantry half
appertaining to the stiff Scottish laird and half
to the officer in the French service, offered his arm
to the fair speaker, and led the way, in something
between a stride and a minuet step, into the large
dining parlour, followed by all the rest of the good
company.
By dint of Saunderson’s directions
and exertions, all here, as well as in the other apartments,
had been disposed as much as possible according to
the old arrangement; and where new movables had been
necessary, they had been selected in the same character
with the old furniture. There was one addition
to this fine old apartment, however, which drew tears
into the Baron’s eyes. It was a large and
spirited painting, representing Fergus Mac-Ivor and
Waverley in their Highland dress, the scene a wild,
rocky, and mountainous pass, down which the clan were
descending in the background. It was taken from
a spirited sketch, drawn while they were in Edinburgh
by a young man of high genius, and had been painted
on a full-length scale by an eminent London artist.
Raeburn himself (whose ‘Highland Chiefs’
do all but walk out of the canvas) could not have
done more justice to the subject; and the ardent,
fiery, and impetuous character of the unfortunate
Chief of Glennaquoich was finely contrasted with the
contemplative, fanciful, and enthusiastic expression
of his happier friend. Beside this painting hung
the arms which Waverley had borne in the unfortunate
civil war. The whole piece was beheld with admiration
and deeper feelings.
Men must, however, eat, in spite both
of sentiment and vertu; and the Baron, while he assumed
the lower end of the table, insisted that Lady Emily
should do the honours of the head, that they might,
he said, set a meet example to the young folk.
After a pause of deliberation, employed in adjusting
in his own brain the precedence between the Presbyterian
kirk and Episcopal church of Scotland, he requested
Mr. Morton, as the stranger, would crave a blessing,
observing that Mr. Rubrick, who was at home, would
return thanks for the distinguished mercies it had
been his lot to experience. The dinner was excellent.
Saunderson attended in full costume, with all the
former domestics, who had been collected, excepting
one or two, that had not been heard of since the affair
of Culloden. The cellars were stocked with wine
which was pronounced to be superb, and it had been
contrived that the Bear of the Fountain, in the courtyard,
should (for that night only) play excellent brandy
punch for the benefit of the lower orders.
When the dinner was over the Baron,
about to propose a toast, cast a somewhat sorrowful
look upon the sideboard, which, however, exhibited
much of his plate, that had either been secreted or
purchased by neighbouring gentlemen from the soldiery,
and by them gladly restored to the original owner.
“In the late times,” he
said, “those must be thankful who have saved
life and land; yet when I am about to pronounce this
toast, I cannot but regret an old heirloom, Lady Emily,
a poculum potatorium, Colonel Talbot—”
Here the Baron’s elbow was gently
touched by his major-domo, and, turning round, he
beheld in the hands of Alexander ab Alexandro the
celebrated cup of Saint Duthac, the Blessed Bear of
Bradwardine! I question if the recovery of his
estate afforded him more rapture. “By my
honour,” he said, “one might almost believe
in brownies and fairies, Lady Emily, when your ladyship
is in presence!”
“I am truly happy,” said
Colonel Talbot, “that, by the recovery of this
piece of family antiquity, it has fallen within my
power to give you some token of my deep interest in
all that concerns my young friend Edward. But
that you may not suspect Lady Emily for a sorceress,
or me for a conjuror, which is no joke in Scotland,
I must tell you that Frank Stanley, your friend, who
has been seized with a tartan fever ever since he
heard Edward’s tales of old Scottish manners,
happened to describe to us at second-hand this remarkable
cup. My servant, Spontoon, who, like a true old
soldier, observes everything and says little, gave
me afterwards to understand that he thought he had
seen the piece of plate Mr. Stanley mentioned in the
possession of a certain Mrs. Nosebag, who, having
been originally the helpmate of a pawnbroker, had
found opportunity during the late unpleasant scenes
in Scotland to trade a little in her old line, and
so became the depositary of the more valuable part
of the spoil of half the army. You may believe
the cup was speedily recovered; and it will give me
very great pleasure if you allow me to suppose that
its value is not diminished by having been restored
through my means.”
A tear mingled with the wine which
the Baron filled, as he proposed a cup of gratitude
to Colonel Talbot, and ’The Prosperity of the
united Houses of Waverley-Honour and Bradwardine!’
It only remains for me to say that,
as no wish was ever uttered with more affectionate
sincerity, there are few which, allowing for the necessary
mutability of human events, have been upon the whole
more happily fulfilled.