<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
Now, Billy Berwick, keep good heart,<br/>
And of thy talking let me be;<br/>
But if thou art a man, as I am sure thou art,<br/>
Come over the dike and fight with me.<br/>
<br/>
Old Ballad.</p>
<p>The Master of Ravenswood had mounted the ambling hackney which he before rode,
on finding the accident which had happened to his led horse, and, for the
animal’s ease, was proceeding at a slow pace from the Tod’s Den
towards his old tower of Wolf’s Crag, when he heard the galloping of a
horse behind him, and, looking back, perceived that he was pursued by young
Bucklaw, who had been delayed a few minutes in the pursuit by the irresistable
temptation of giving the hostler at the Tod’s Den some recipe for
treating the lame horse. This brief delay he had made up by hard galloping, and
now overtook the Master where the road traversed a waste moor. “Halt,
sir,” cried Bucklaw; “I am no political agent—no Captain
Craigengelt, whose life is too important to be hazarded in defence of his
honour. I am Frank Hayston of Bucklaw, and no man injures me by word, deed,
sign, or look, but he must render me an account of it.”</p>
<p>“This is all very well, Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw,” replied the Master
of Ravenswood, in a tone the most calm and indifferent; “but I have no
quarrel with you, and desire to have none. Our roads homeward, as well as our
roads through life, lie in different directions; there is no occasion for us
crossing each other.”</p>
<p>“Is there not?” said Bucklaw, impetuously. “By Heaven! but I
say that there is, though: you called us intriguing adventurers.”</p>
<p>“Be correct in your recollection, Mr. Hayston; it was to your companion
only I applied that epithet, and you know him to be no better.”</p>
<p>“And what then? He was my companion for the time, and no man shall insult
my companion, right or wrong, while he is in my company.”</p>
<p>“Then, Mr. Hayston,” replied Ravenswood, with the same composure,
“you should choose your society better, or you are like to have much work
in your capacity of their champion. Go home, sir; sleep, and have more reason
in your wrath to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Not so, Master, you have mistaken your man; high airs and wise saws
shall not carry it off thus. Besides, you termed me bully, and you shall
retract the word before we part.”</p>
<p>“Faith, scarcely,” said Ravenswood, “unless you show me
better reason for thinking myself mistaken than you are now producing.”</p>
<p>“Then, Master,” said Bucklaw, “though I should be sorry to
offer it to a man of your quality, if you will not justify your incivility, or
retract it, or name a place of meeting, you must here undergo the hard word and
the hard blow.”</p>
<p>“Neither will be necessary,” said Ravenswood; “I am satisfied
with what I have done to avoid an affair with you. If you are serious, this
place will serve as well as another.”</p>
<p>“Dismount then, and draw,” said Bucklaw, setting him an example.
“I always thought and said you were a pretty man; I should be sorry to
report you otherwise.”</p>
<p>“You shall have no reason, sir,” said Ravenswood, alighting, and
putting himself into a posture of defence.</p>
<p>Their swords crossed, and the combat commenced with great spirit on the part of
Bucklaw, who was well accustomed to affairs of the kind, and distinguished by
address and dexterity at his weapon. In the present case, however, he did not
use his skill to advantage; for, having lost temper at the cool and
contemptuous manner in which the Master of Ravenswood had long refused, and at
length granted, him satisfaction, and urged by his impatience, he adopted the
part of an assailant with inconsiderate eagerness. The Master, with equal
skill, and much greater composure, remained chiefly on the defensive, and even
declined to avail himself of one or two advantages afforded him by the
eagerness of his adversary. At length, in a desperate lunge, which he followed
with an attempt to close, Bucklaw’s foot slipped, and he fell on the
short grassy turf on which they were fighting. “Take your life,
sir,” said the Master of Ravenswood, “and mend it if you
can.”</p>
<p>“It would be but a cobbled piece of work, I fear,” said Bucklaw,
rising slowly and gathering up his sword, much less disconcerted with the issue
of the combat than could have been expected from the impetuosity of his temper.
“I thank you for my life, Master,” he pursued. “There is my
hand; I bear no ill-will to you, either for my bad luck or your better
swordsmanship.”</p>
<p>The Master looked steadily at him for an instant, then extended his hand to
him. “Bucklaw,” he said, “you are a generous fellow, and I
have done you wrong. I heartily ask your pardon for the expression which
offended you; it was hastily and incautiously uttered, and I am convinced it is
totally misapplied.”</p>
<p>“Are you indeed, Master?” said Bucklaw, his face resuming at once
its natural expression of light-hearted carelessness and audacity; “that
is more than I expected of you; for, Master, men say you are not ready to
retract your opinion and your language.”</p>
<p>“Not when I have well considered them,” said the Master.</p>
<p>“Then you are a little wiser than I am, for I always give my friend
satisfaction first, and explanation afterwards. If one of us falls, all
accounts are settled; if not, men are never so ready for peace as after war.
But what does that bawling brat of a boy want?” said Bucklaw. “I
wish to Heaven he had come a few minutes sooner! and yet it must have been
ended some time, and perhaps this way is as well as any other.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, the boy he mentioned came up, cudgelling an ass, on which he was
mounted, to the top of its speed, and sending, like one of Ossian’s
heroes, his voice before him: “Gentlemen—gentlemen, save
yourselves! for the gudewife bade us tell ye there were folk in her house had
taen Captain Craigengelt, and were seeking for Bucklaw, and that ye behoved to
ride for it.”</p>
<p>“By my faith, and that’s very true, my man” said Bucklaw;
“and there’s a silver sixpence for your news, and I would give any
man twice as much would tell me which way I should ride.”</p>
<p>“That will I, Bucklaw,” said Ravenswood; “ride home to
Wolf’s Crag with me. There are places in the old tower where you might
lie hid, were a thousand men to seek you.”</p>
<p>“But that will bring you into trouble yourself, Master; and unless you be
in the Jacobite scrape already, it is quite needless for me to drag you
in.”</p>
<p>“Not a whit; I have nothing to fear.”</p>
<p>“Then I will ride with you blythely, for, to say the truth, I do not know
the rendezvous that Craigie was to guide us to this night; and I am sure that,
if he is taken, he will tell all the truth of me, and twenty lies of you, in
order to save himself from the withie.”</p>
<p>They mounted and rode off in company accordingly, striking off the ordinary
road, and holding their way by wild moorish unfrequented paths, with which the
gentlemen were well acquainted from the exercise of the chase, but through
which others would have had much difficulty in tracing their course. They rode
for some time in silence, making such haste as the condition of
Ravenswood’s horse permitted, until night having gradually closed around
them, they discontinued their speed, both from the difficulty of discovering
their path, and from the hope that they were beyond the reach of pursuit or
observation.</p>
<p>“And now that we have drawn bridle a bit,” said Bucklaw, “I
would fain ask you a question, Master.”</p>
<p>“Ask and welcome,” said Ravenswood, “but forgive not
answering it, unless I think proper.”</p>
<p>“Well, it is simply this,” answered his late antagonist
“What, in the name of old Sathan, could make you, who stand so highly on
your reputation, think for a moment of drawing up with such a rogue as
Craigengelt, and such a scapegrace as folk call Bucklaw?”</p>
<p>“Simply, because I was desperate, and sought desperate associates.”</p>
<p>“And what made you break off from us at the nearest?” again
demanded Bucklaw.</p>
<p>“Because I had changed my mind,” said the Master, “and
renounced my enterprise, at least for the present. And now that I have answered
your questions fairly and frankly, tell me what makes you associate with
Craigengelt, so much beneath you both in birth and in spirit?”</p>
<p>“In plain terms,” answered Bucklaw, “because I am a fool, who
have gambled away my land in these times. My grand-aunt, Lady Girnington, has
taen a new tack of life, I think, and I could only hope to get something by a
change of government. Craigie was a sort of gambling acquaintance; he saw my
condition, and, as the devil is always at one’s elbow, told me fifty lies
about his credentials from Versailles, and his interest at Saint Germains,
promised me a captain’s commission at Paris, and I have been ass enough
to put my thumb under his belt. I dare say, by this time, he has told a dozen
pretty stories of me to the government. And this is what I have got by wine,
women, and dice, cocks, dogs, and horses.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Bucklaw,” said the Master, “you have indeed nourished
in your bosom the snakes that are now stinging you.”</p>
<p>“That’s home as well as true, Master,” replied his companion;
“but, by your leave, you have nursed in your bosom one great goodly snake
that has swallowed all the rest, and is as sure to devour you as my half-dozen
are to make a meal on all that’s left of Bucklaw, which is but what lies
between bonnet and boot-heel.”</p>
<p>“I must not,” answered the Master of Ravenswood, “challenge
the freedom of speech in which I have set example. What, to speak without a
metaphor, do you call this monstrous passion which you charge me with
fostering?”</p>
<p>“Revenge, my good sir—revenge; which, if it be as gentle manlike a
sin as wine and wassail, with their <i>et cæteras</i>, is equally unchristian,
and not so bloodless. It is better breaking a park-pale to watch a doe or
damsel than to shoot an old man.”</p>
<p>“I deny the purpose,” said the Master of Ravenswood. “On my
soul, I had no such intention; I meant but to confront the oppressor ere I left
my native land, and upbraid him with his tyranny and its consequences. I would
have stated my wrongs so that they would have shaken his soul within
him.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Bucklaw, “and he would have collared you, and
cried ‘help,’ and then you would have shaken the soul <i>out</i> of
him, I suppose. Your very look and manner would have frightened the old man to
death.”</p>
<p>“Consider the provocation,” answered
Ravenswood—“consider the ruin and death procured and caused by his
hard-hearted cruelty—an ancient house destroyed, an affectionate father
murdered! Why, in our old Scottish days, he that sat quiet under such wrongs
would have been held neither fit to back a friend nor face a foe.”</p>
<p>“Well, Master, I am glad to see that the devil deals as cunningly with
other folk as he deals with me; for whenever I am about to commit any folly, he
persuades me it is the most necessary, gallant, gentlemanlike thing on earth,
and I am up to saddlegirths in the bog before I see that the ground is soft.
And you, Master, might have turned out a murd——a homicide, just out
of pure respect for your father’s memory.”</p>
<p>“There is more sense in your language, Bucklaw,” replied the
Master, “than might have been expected from your conduct. It is too true,
our vices steal upon us in forms outwardly as fair as those of the demons whom
the superstitious represent as intriguing with the human race, and are not
discovered in their native hideousness until we have clasped them in our
arms.”</p>
<p>“But we may throw them from us, though,” said Bucklaw, “and
that is what I shall think of doing one of these days—that is, when old
Lady Girnington dies.”</p>
<p>“Did you ever hear the expression of the English divine?” said
Ravenswood—“‘Hell is paved with good
intentions,’—as much as to say, they are more often formed than
executed.”</p>
<p>“Well,” replied Bucklaw, “but I will begin this blessed
night, and have determined not to drink above one quart of wine, unless your
claret be of extraordinary quality.”</p>
<p>“You will find little to tempt you at Wolf’s Crag,” said the
Master. “I know not that I can promise you more than the shelter of my
roof; all, and more than all, our stock of wine and provisions was exhausted at
the late occasion.”</p>
<p>“Long may it be ere provision is needed for the like purpose,”
answered Bucklaw; “but you should not drink up the last flask at a dirge;
there is ill luck in that.”</p>
<p>“There is ill luck, I think, in whatever belongs to me,” said
Ravenswood. “But yonder is Wolf’s Crag, and whatever it still
contains is at your service.”</p>
<p>The roar of the sea had long announced their approach to the cliffs, on the
summit of which, like the nest of some sea-eagle, the founder of the fortalice
had perched his eyrie. The pale moon, which had hitherto been contending with
flitting clouds, now shone out, and gave them a view of the solitary and naked
tower, situated on a projecting cliff that beetled on the German Ocean. On
three sides the rock was precipitous; on the fourth, which was that towards the
land, it had been originally fenced by an artificial ditch and drawbridge, but
the latter was broken down and ruinous, and the former had been in part filled
up, so as to allow passage for a horseman into the narrow courtyard, encircled
on two sides with low offices and stables, partly ruinous, and closed on the
landward front by a low embattled wall, while the remaining side of the
quadrangle was occupied by the tower itself, which, tall and narrow, and built
of a greyish stone, stood glimmering in the moonlight, like the sheeted spectre
of some huge giant. A wilder or more disconsolate dwelling it was perhaps
difficult to conceive. The sombrous and heavy sound of the billows,
successively dashing against the rocky beach at a profound distance beneath,
was to the ear what the landscape was to the eye—a symbol of unvaried and
monotonous melancholy, not unmingled with horror.</p>
<p>Although the night was not far advanced, there was no sign of living inhabitant
about this forlorn abode, excepting that one, and only one, of the narrow and
stanchelled windows which appeared at irregular heights and distances in the
walls of the building showed a small glimmer of light.</p>
<p>“There,” said Ravenswood, “sits the only male domestic that
remains to the house of Ravenswood; and it is well that he does remain there,
since otherwise we had little hope to find either light or fire. But follow me
cautiously; the road is narrow, and admits only one horse in front.”</p>
<p>In effect, the path led along a kind of isthmus, at the peninsular extremity of
which the tower was situated, with that exclusive attention to strength and
security, in preference to every circumstances of convenience, which dictated
to the Scottish barons the choice of their situations, as well as their style
of building.</p>
<p>By adopting the cautious mode of approach recommended by the proprietor of this
wild hold, they entered the courtyard in safety. But it was long ere the
efforts of Ravenswood, though loudly exerted by knocking at the low-browed
entrance, and repeated shouts to Caleb to open the gate and admit them,
received any answer.</p>
<p>“The old man must be departed,” he began to say, “or fallen
into some fit; for the noise I have made would have waked the seven
sleepers.”</p>
<p>At length a timid and hesitating voice replied: “Master—Master of
Ravenswood, is it you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, it is I, Caleb; open the door quickly.”</p>
<p>“But it is you in very blood and body? For I would sooner face fifty
deevils as my master’s ghaist, or even his wraith; wherefore, aroint ye,
if ye were ten times my master, unless ye come in bodily shape, lith and
limb.”</p>
<p>“It is I, you old fool,” answered Ravenswood, “in bodily
shape and alive, save that I am half dead with cold.”</p>
<p>The light at the upper window disappeared, and glancing from loophole to
loophole in slow succession, gave intimation that the bearer was in the act of
descending, with great deliberation, a winding staircase occupying one of the
turrets which graced the angles of the old tower. The tardiness of his descent
extracted some exclamations of impatience from Ravenswood, and several oaths
from his less patient and more mecurial companion. Caleb again paused ere he
unbolted the door, and once more asked if they were men of mould that demanded
entrance at this time of night.</p>
<p>“Were I near you, you old fool,” said Bucklaw, “I would give
you sufficient proofs of <i>my</i> bodily condition.”</p>
<p>“Open the gate, Caleb,” said his master, in a more soothing tone,
partly from his regard to the ancient and faithful seneschal, partly perhaps
because he thought that angry words would be thrown away, so long as Caleb had
a stout iron-clenched oaken door betwixt his person and the speakers.</p>
<p>At length Caleb, with a trembling hand, undid the bars, opened the heavy door,
and stood before them, exhibiting his thin grey hairs, bald forehead, and sharp
high features, illuminated by a quivering lamp which he held in one hand, while
he shaded and protected its flame with the other. The timorous, courteous
glance which he threw around him, the effect of the partial light upon his
white hair and illumined features, might have made a good painting; but our
travellers were too impatient for security against the rising storm to permit
them to indulge themselves in studying the picturesque. “Is it you, my
dear master?—is it you yourself, indeed?” exclaimed the old
domestic. “I am wae ye suld hae stude waiting at your ain gate; but wha
wad hae thought o’ seeing ye sae sune, and a strange gentleman with
a—(Here he exclaimed apart, as it were, and to some inmate of the tower,
in a voice not meant to be heard by those in the
court)—Mysie—Mysie, woman! stir for dear life, and get the fire
mended; take the auld three-legged stool, or ony thing that’s readiest
that will make a lowe. I doubt we are but puirly provided, no expecting ye this
some months, when doubtless ye was hae been received conform till your rank, as
gude right is; but natheless——”</p>
<p>“Natheless, Caleb,” said the Master, “we must have our horses
put up, and ourselves too, the best way we can. I hope you are not sorry to see
me sooner than you expected?”</p>
<p>“Sorry, my lord! I am sure ye sall aye be my lord wi’ honest folk,
as your noble ancestors hae been these three hundred years, and never asked a
Whig’s leave. Sorry to see the Lord of Ravenswood at ane o’ his ain
castles! (Then again apart to his unseen associate behind the screen) Mysie,
kill the brood-hen without thinking twice on it; let them care that come ahint.
No to say it’s our best dwelling,” he added, turning to Bucklaw;
“but just a strength for the Lord of Ravenswood to flee until—that
is, no to <i>flee</i>, but to retreat until in troublous times, like the
present, when it was ill convenient for him to live farther in the country in
ony of his better and mair principal manors; but, for its antiquity, maist folk
think that the outside of Wolf’s Crag is worthy of a large
perusal.”</p>
<p>“And you are determined we shall have time to make it,” said
Ravenswood, somewhat amused with the shifts the old man used to detain them
without doors until his confederate Mysie had made her preparations within.</p>
<p>“Oh, never mind the outside of the house, my good friend,” said
Bucklaw; “let’s see the inside, and let our horses see the stable,
that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, sir—ay, sir—unquestionably, sir—my lord and
ony of his honourable companions——”</p>
<p>“But our horses, my friend—our horses; they will be dead-founded by
standing here in the cold after riding hard, and mine is too good to be
spoiled; therefore, once more, our horses!” exclaimed Bucklaw.</p>
<p>“True—ay—your horses—yes—I will call the
grooms”; and sturdily did Caleb roar till the old tower rang again:
“John—William—Saunders! The lads are gane out, or
sleeping,” he observed, after pausing for an answer, which he knew that
he had no human chance of receiving. “A’ gaes wrang when the
Master’s out-bye; but I’ll take care o’ your cattle
mysell.”</p>
<p>“I think you had better,” said Ravenswood, “otherwise I see
little chance of their being attended to at all.”</p>
<p>“Whisht, my lord—whisht, for God’s sake,” said Caleb,
in an imploring tone, and apart to his master; “if ye dinna regard your
ain credit, think on mine; we’ll hae hard eneugh wark to make a decent
night o’t, wi’ a’ the lees I can tell.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, never mind,” said his master; “go to the stable.
There is hay and corn, I trust?”</p>
<p>“Ou ay, plenty of hay and corn”; this was uttered boldly and aloud,
and, in a lower tone, “there was some half fous o’ aits, and some
taits o’ meadow-hay, left after the burial.”</p>
<p>“Very well,” said Ravenswood, taking the lamp from his
domestic’s unwilling hand, “I will show the stranger upstairs
myself.”</p>
<p>“I canna think o’ that, my lord; if ye wad but have five minutes,
or ten minutes, or, at maist, a quarter of an hour’s patience, and look
at the fine moonlight prospect of the Bass and North Berwick Law till I sort
the horses, I would marshal ye up, as reason is ye suld be marshalled, your
lordship and your honourable visitor. And I hae lockit up the siller
candlesticks, and the lamp is not fit——”</p>
<p>“It will do very well in the mean time,” said Ravenswood,
“and you will have no difficulty for want of light in the stable, for, if
I recollect, half the roof is off.”</p>
<p>“Very true, my lord,” replied the trusty adherent, and with ready
wit instantly added, “and the lazy sclater loons have never come to put
it on a’ this while, your lordship.”</p>
<p>“If I were disposed to jest at the calamities of my house,” said
Ravenswood, as he led the way upstairs, “poor old Caleb would furnish me
with ample means. His passion consists in representing things about our
miserable <i>menage</i>, not as they are, but as, in his opinion, they ought to
be; and, to say the truth, I have been often diverted with the poor
wretch’s expedients to supply what he thought was essential for the
credit of the family, and his still more generous apologies for the want of
those articles for which his ingenuity could discover no substitute. But though
the tower is none of the largest, I shall have some trouble without him to find
the apartment in which there is a fire.”</p>
<p>As he spoke thus, he opened the door of the hall. “Here, at least,”
he said, “there is neither hearth nor harbour.”</p>
<p>It was indeed a scene of desolation. A large vaulted room, the beams of which,
combined like those of Westminster Hall, were rudely carved at the extremities,
remained nearly in the situation in which it had been left after the
entertainment at Allan Lord Ravenswood’s funeral. Overturned pitchers,
and black-jacks, and pewter stoups, and flagons still cumbered the large oaken
table; glasses, those more perishable implements of conviviality, many of which
had been voluntarily sacrificed by the guests in their enthusiastic pledges to
favourite toasts, strewed the stone floor with their fragments. As for the
articles of plate, lent for the purpose by friends and kinsfolk, those had been
carefully withdrawn so soon as the ostentatious display of festivity, equally
unnecessary and strangely timed, had been made and ended. Nothing, in short,
remained that indicated wealth; all the signs were those of recent wastefulness
and present desolation. The black cloth hangings, which, on the late mournful
occasion, replaced the tattered moth-eaten tapestries, had been partly pulled
down, and, dangling from the wall in irregular festoons, disclosed the rough
stonework of the building, unsmoothed either by plaster or the chisel. The
seats thrown down, or left in disorder, intimated the careless confusion which
had concluded the mournful revel. “This room,” said Ravenswood,
holding up the lamp—“this room, Mr. Hayston, was riotous when it
should have been sad; it is a just retribution that it should now be sad when
it ought to be cheerful.”</p>
<p>They left this disconsolate apartment, and went upstairs, where, after opening
one or two doors in vain, Ravenswood led the way into a little matted
ante-room, in which, to their great joy, they found a tolerably good fire,
which Mysie, by some such expedient as Caleb had suggested, had supplied with a
reasonable quantity of fuel. Glad at the heart to see more of comfort than the
castle had yet seemed to offer, Bucklaw rubbed his hands heartily over the
fire, and now listened with more complacency to the apologies which the Master
of Ravenswood offered. “Comfort,” he said, “I cannot provide
for you, for I have it not for myself; it is long since these walls have known
it, if, indeed, they were ever acquainted with it. Shelter and safety, I think,
I can promise you.”</p>
<p>“Excellent matters, Master,” replied Bucklaw, “and, with a
mouthful of food and wine, positively all I can require to-night.”</p>
<p>“I fear,” said the Master, “your supper will be a poor one; I
hear the matter in discussion betwixt Caleb and Mysie. Poor Balderstone is
something deaf, amongst his other accomplishments, so that much of what he
means should be spoken aside is overheard by the whole audience, and especially
by those from whom he is most anxious to conceal his private manœuvres.
Hark!”</p>
<p>They listened, and heard the old domestic’s voice in conversation with
Mysie to the following effect:</p>
<p>“Just mak the best o’t—make the besto’t, woman;
it’s easy to put a fair face on ony thing.”</p>
<p>“But the auld brood-hen? She’ll be as teugh as bow-strings and
bend-leather!”</p>
<p>“Say ye made a mistake—say ye made a mistake, Mysie,” replied
the faithful seneschal, in a soothing and undertoned voice; “tak it
a’ on yoursell; never let the credit o’ the house suffer.”</p>
<p>“But the brood-hen,” remonstrated Mysie—“ou,
she’s sitting some gate aneath the dais in the hall, and I am feared to
gae in in the dark for the bogle; and if I didna see the bogle, I could as ill
see the hen, for it’s pit-mirk, and there’s no another light in the
house, save that very blessed lamp whilk the Master has in his ain hand. And if
I had the hen, she’s to pu’, and to draw, and to dress; how can I
do that, and them sitting by the only fire we have?”</p>
<p>“Weel, weel, Mysie,” said the butler, “bide ye there a wee,
and I’ll try to get the lamp wiled away frae them.”</p>
<p>Accordingly, Caleb Balderstone entered the apartment, little aware that so much
of his by-play had been audible there. “Well, Caleb, my old friend, is
there any chance of supper?” said the Master of Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“<i>Chance</i> of supper, your lordship?” said Caleb, with an
emphasis of strong scorn at the implied doubt. “How should there be ony
question of that, and us in your lordship’s house? Chance of supper,
indeed! But ye’ll no be for butcher-meat? There’s walth o’
fat poultry, ready either for spit or brander. The fat capon, Mysie!” he
added, calling out as boldly as if such a thing had been in existence.</p>
<p>“Quite unnecessary,” said Bucklaw, who deemed himself bound in
courtesy to relieve some part of the anxious butler’s perplexity,
“if you have anything cold, or a morsel of bread.”</p>
<p>“The best of bannocks!” exclaimed Caleb, much relieved; “and,
for cauld meat, a’ that we hae is cauld eneugh,—how-beit, maist of
the cauld meat and pastry was gien to the poor folk after the ceremony of
interment, as gude reason was; nevertheless——”</p>
<p>“Come, Caleb,” said the Master of Ravenswood, “I must cut
this matter short. This is the young Laird of Bucklaw; he is under hiding, and
therefore, you know——”</p>
<p>“He’ll be nae nicer than your lordship’s honour, I’se
warrant,” answered Caleb, cheerfully, with a nod of intelligence;
“I am sorry that the gentleman is under distress, but I am blythe that he
canna say muckle agane our housekeeping, for I believe his ain pinches may
match ours; no that we are pinched, thank God,” he added, retracting the
admission which he had made in his first burst of joy, “but nae doubt we
are waur aff than we hae been, or suld be. And for eating—what signifies
telling a lee? there’s just the hinder end of the mutton-ham that has
been but three times on the table, and the nearer the bane the sweeter, as your
honours weel ken; and—there’s the heel of the ewe-milk kebbuck,
wi’ a bit of nice butter, and—and—that’s a’
that’s to trust to.” And with great alacrity he produced his
slender stock of provisions, and placed them with much formality upon a small
round table betwixt the two gentlemen, who were not deterred either by the
homely quality or limited quantity of the repast from doing it full justice.
Caleb in the mean while waited on them with grave officiousness, as if anxious
to make up, by his own respectful assiduity, for the want of all other
attendance.</p>
<p>But, alas! how little on such occasions can form, however anxiously and
scrupulously observed, supply the lack of substantial fare! Bucklaw, who had
eagerly eaten a considerable portion of the thrice-sacked mutton-ham, now began
to demand ale.</p>
<p>“I wanda just presume to recommend our ale,” said Caleb; “the
maut was ill made, and there was awfu’ thunner last week; but siccan
water as the Tower well has ye’ll seldome see, Bucklaw, and that
I’se engage for.”</p>
<p>“But if your ale is bad, you can let us have some wine,” said
Bucklaw, making a grimace at the mention of the pure element which Caleb so
earnestly recommended.</p>
<p>“Wine!” answered Caleb, undauntedly, “eneugh of wine! It was
but twa days syne—wae’s me for the cause—there was as much
wine drunk in this house as would have floated a pinnace. There never was lack
of wine at Wolf’s Crag.”</p>
<p>“Do fetch us some then,” said the master, “instead of talking
about it.” And Caleb boldly departed.</p>
<p>Every expended butt in the old cellar did he set a-tilt, and shake with the
desperate expectation of collecting enough of the grounds of claret to fill the
large pewter measure which he carried in his hand. Alas! each had been too
devoutly drained; and, with all the squeezing and manoeuvring which his craft
as a butler suggested, he could only collect about half a quart that seemed
presentable. Still, however, Caleb was too good a general to renounce the field
without a strategem to cover his retreat. He undauntedly threw down an empty
flagon, as if he had stumbled at the entrance of the apartment, called upon
Mysie to wipe up the wine that had never been spilt, and placing the other
vessel on the table, hoped there was still enough left for their honours. There
was indeed; for even Bucklaw, a sworn friend to the grape, found no
encouragement to renew his first attack upon the vintage of Wolf’s Crag,
but contented himself, however reluctantly, with a draught of fair water.
Arrangements were now made for his repose; and as the secret chamber was
assigned for this purpose, it furnished Caleb with a first-rate and most
plausible apology for all deficiencies of furniture, bedding, etc.</p>
<p>“For wha,” said he, “would have thought of the secret chaumer
being needed? It has not been used since the time of the Gowrie Conspiracy, and
I durst never let a woman ken of the entrance to it, or your honour will allow
that it wad not hae been a secret chaumer lang.”</p>
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