<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
The hearth in hall was black and dead,<br/>
No board was dight in bower within,<br/>
Nor merry bowl nor welcome bed;<br/>
“Here’s sorry cheer,” quoth the Heir of Linne.<br/>
<br/>
Old Ballad</p>
<p>The feelings of the prodigal Heir of Linne, as expressed in that excellent old
song, when, after dissipating his whole fortune, he found himself the deserted
inhabitant of “the lonely lodge,” might perhaps have some
resemblance to those of the Master of Ravenswood in his deserted mansion of
Wolf’s Crag. The Master, however, had this advantage over the spendthrift
in the legend, that, if he was in similar distress, he could not impute it to
his own imprudence. His misery had been bequeathed to him by his father, and,
joined to his high blood, and to a title which the courteous might give or the
churlish withhold at their pleasure, it was the whole inheritance he had
derived from his ancestry. Perhaps this melancholy yet consolatory reflection
crossed the mind of the unfortunate young nobleman with a breathing of comfort.
Favourable to calm reflection, as well as to the Muses, the morning, while it
dispelled the shades of night, had a composing and sedative effect upon the
stormy passions by which the Master of Ravenswood had been agitated on the
preceding day. He now felt himself able to analyse the different feelings by
which he was agitated, and much resolved to combat and to subdue them. The
morning, which had arisen calm and bright, gave a pleasant effect even to the
waste moorland view which was seen from the castle on looking to the landward;
and the glorious ocean, crisped with a thousand rippling waves of silver,
extended on the other side, in awful yet complacent majesty, to the verge of
the horizon. With such scenes of calm sublimity the human heart sympathises
even in its most disturbed moods, and deeds of honour and virtue are inspired
by their majestic influence. To seek out Bucklaw in the retreat which he had
afforded him, was the first occupation of the Master, after he had performed,
with a scrutiny unusually severe, the important task of self-examination.
“How now, Bucklaw?” was his morning’s
salutation—“how like you the couch in which the exiled Earl of
Angus once slept in security, when he was pursued by the full energy of a
king’s resentment?”</p>
<p>“Umph!” returned the sleeper awakened; “I have little to
complain of where so great a man was quartered before me, only the mattress was
of the hardest, the vault somewhat damp, the rats rather more mutinous than I
would have expected from the state of Caleb’s larder; and if there had
been shutters to that grated window, or a curtain to the bed, I should think
it, upon the whole, an improvement in your accommodations.”</p>
<p>“It is, to be sure, forlorn enough,” said the Master, looking
around the small vault; “but if you will rise and leave it, Caleb will
endeavour to find you a better breakfast than your supper of last night.”</p>
<p>“Pray, let it be no better,” said Bucklaw, getting up, and
endeavouring to dress himself as well as the obscurity of the place would
permit—“let it, I say, be no better, if you mean me to preserve in
my proposed reformation. The very recollection of Caleb’s beverage has
done more to suppress my longing to open the day with a morning draught than
twenty sermons would have done. And you, master, have you been able to give
battle valiantly to your bosom-snake? You see I am in the way of smothering my
vipers one by one.”</p>
<p>“I have commenced the battle, at least, Bucklaw, and I have had a fair
vision of an angel who descended to my assistance,” replied the Master.</p>
<p>“Woe’s me!” said his guest, “no vision can I expect,
unless my aunt, Lady Grinington, should betake herself to the tomb; and then it
would be the substance of her heritage rather than the appearance of her
phantom that I should consider as the support of my good resolutions. But this
same breakfast, Master—does the deer that is to make the pasty run yet on
foot, as the ballad has it?”</p>
<p>“I will inquire into that matter,” said his entertainer; and,
leaving the apartment, he went in search of Caleb, whom, after some difficulty,
he found in an obscure sort of dungeon, which had been in former times the
buttery of the castle. Here the old man was employed busily in the doubtful
task of burnishing a pewter flagon until it should take the hue and semblance
of silver-plate. “I think it may do—I think it might pass, if they
winna bring it ower muckle in the light o’ the window!” were the
ejaculations which he muttered from time to time, as if to encourage himself in
his undertaking, when he was interrupted by the voice of his master.</p>
<p>“Take this,” said the Master of Ravenswood, “and get what is
necessary for the family.” And with these words he gave to the old butler
the purse which had on the preceding evening so narrowly escaped the fangs of
Craigengelt.</p>
<p>The old man shook his silvery and thin locks, and looked with an expression of
the most heartfelt anguish at his master as he weighed in his hand the slender
treasure, and said in a sorrowful voice, “And is this a’
that’s left?”</p>
<p>“All that is left at present,” said the Master, affecting more
cheerfulness than perhaps he really felt, “is just the green purse and
the wee pickle gowd, as the old song says; but we shall do better one day,
Caleb.”</p>
<p>“Before that day comes,” said Caleb, “I doubt there will be
an end of an auld sang, and an auld serving-man to boot. But it disna become me
to speak that gate to your honour, and you looking sae pale. Tak back the
purse, and keep it to be making a show before company; for if your honour would
just take a bidding, and be whiles taking it out afore folk and putting it up
again, there’s naebody would refuse us trust, for a’ that’s
come and gane yet.”</p>
<p>“But, Caleb,” said the Master, “I still intend to leave this
country very soon, and desire to do so with the reputation of an honest man,
leaving no debt behind me, at least of my own contracting.”</p>
<p>“And gude right ye suld gang away as a true man, and so ye shall; for
auld Caleb can tak the wyte of whatever is taen on for the house, and then it
will be a’ just ae man’s burden; and I will live just as weel in
the tolbooth as out of it, and the credit of the family will be a’ safe
and sound.”</p>
<p>The Master endeavoured, in vain, to make Caleb comprehend that the
butler’s incurring the responsibility of debts in his own person would
rather add to than remove the objections which he had to their being
contracted. He spoke to a premier too busy in devising ways and means to puzzle
himself with refuting the arguments offered against their justice or
expediency.</p>
<p>“There’s Eppie Sma’trash will trust us for ale,” said
Caleb to himself—“she has lived a’ her life under the
family—and maybe wi’ a soup brandy; I canna say for wine—she
is but a lone woman, and gets her claret by a runlet at a time; but I’ll
work a wee drap out o’ her by fair means or foul. For doos, there’s
the doocot; there will be poultry amang the tenants, though Luckie Chirnside
says she has paid the kain twice ower. We’ll mak shift, an it like your
honour—we’ll mak shift; keep your heart abune, for the house sall
haud its credit as lang as auld Caleb is to the fore.”</p>
<p>The entertainment which the old man’s exertions of various kinds enabled
him to present to the young gentlemen for three or four days was certainly of
no splendid description, but it may readily be believed it was set before no
critical guests; and even the distresses, excuses, evasions, and shifts of
Caleb afforded amusement to the young men, and added a sort of interest to the
scrambling and irregular style of their table. They had indeed occasion to
seize on every circumstance that might serve to diversify or enliven time,
which otherwise passed away so heavily.</p>
<p>Bucklaw, shut out from his usual field-sports and joyous carouses by the
necessity of remaining concealed within the walls of the castle, became a
joyless and uninteresting companion. When the Master of Ravenswood would no
longer fence or play at shovel-board; when he himself had polished to the
extremity the coat of his palfrey with brush, curry comb, and hair-cloth; when
he had seen him eat his provender, and gently lie down in his stall, he could
hardly help envying the animal’s apparent acquiescence in a life so
monotonous. “The stupid brute,” he said, “thinks neither of
the race-ground or the hunting-field, or his green paddock at Bucklaw, but
enjoys himself as comfortably when haltered to the rack in this ruinous vault,
as if he had been foaled in it; and, I who have the freedom of a prisoner at
large, to range through the dungeons of this wretched old tower, can hardly,
betwixt whistling and sleeping, contrive to pass away the hour till
dinner-time.”</p>
<p>And with this disconsolate reflection, he wended his way to the bartizan or
battlements of the tower, to watch what objects might appear on the distant
moor, or to pelt, with pebbles and pieces of lime, the sea-mews and cormorants
which established themselves incautiously within the reach of an idle young
man.</p>
<p>Ravenswood, with a mind incalculably deeper and more powerful than that of his
companion, had his own anxious subjects of reflection, which wrought for him
the same unhappiness that sheer enui and want of occupation inflicted on his
companion. The first sight of Lucy Ashton had been less impressive than her
image proved to be upon reflection. As the depth and violence of that
revengeful passion by which he had been actuated in seeking an interview with
the father began to abate by degrees, he looked back on his conduct towards the
daughter as harsh and unworthy towards a female of rank and beauty. Her looks
of grateful acknowledgment, her words of affectionate courtesy, had been
repelled with something which approached to disdain; and if the Master of
Ravenswood had sustained wrongs at the hand of Sir William Ashton, his
conscience told him they had been unhandsomely resented towards his daughter.
When his thoughts took this turn of self-reproach, the recollection of Lucy
Ashton’s beautiful features, rendered yet more interesting by the
circumstances in which their meeting had taken place, made an impression upon
his mind at once soothing and painful. The sweetness of her voice, the delicacy
of her expressions, the vivid glow of her filial affection, embittered his
regret at having repulsed her gratitude with rudeness, while, at the same time,
they placed before his imagination a picture of the most seducing sweetness.</p>
<p>Even young Ravenswood’s strength of moral feeling and rectitude of
purpose at once increased the danger of cherishing these recollections, and the
propensity to entertain them. Firmly resolved as he was to subdue, if possible,
the predominating vice in his character, he admitted with
willingness—nay, he summoned up in his imagination—the ideas by
which it could be most powerfully counteracted; and, while he did so, a sense
of his own harsh conduct towards the daughter of his enemy naturally induced
him, as if by way of recompense, to invest her with more of grace and beauty
than perhaps she could actually claim.</p>
<p>Had any one at this period told the Master of Ravenswood that he had so lately
vowed vengeance against the whole lineage of him whom he considered, not
unjustly, as author of his father’s ruin and death, he might at first
have repelled the charge as a foul calumny; yet, upon serious self-examination,
he would have been compelled to admit that it had, at one period, some
foundation in truth, though, according to the present tone of his sentiments,
it was difficult to believe that this had really been the case.</p>
<p>There already existed in his bosom two contradictory passions—a desire to
revenge the death of his father, strangely qualified by admiration of his
enemy’s daughter. Against the former feeling he had struggled, until it
seemed to him upon the wane; against the latter he used no means of resistance,
for he did not suspect its existence. That this was actually the case was
chiefly evinced by his resuming his resolution to leave Scotland. Yet, though
such was his purpose, he remained day after day at Wolf’s Crag, without
taking measures for carrying it into execution. It is true, that he had written
to one or two kinsmen who resided in a distant quarter of Scotland, and
particularly to the Marquis of A——, intimating his purpose; and
when pressed upon the subject by Bucklaw, he was wont to allege the necessity
of waiting for their reply, especially that of the Marquis, before taking so
decisive a measure.</p>
<p>The Marquis was rich and powerful; and although he was suspected to entertain
sentiments unfavourable to the government established at the Revolution, he had
nevertheless address enough to head a party in the Scottish privy council,
connected with the High Church faction in England, and powerful enough to
menace those to whom the Lord Keeper adhered with a probable subversion of
their power. The consulting with a personage of such importance was a plausible
excuse, which Ravenswood used to Bucklaw, and probably to himself, for
continuing his residence at Wolf’s Crag; and it was rendered yet more so
by a general report which began to be current of a probable change of ministers
and measures in the Scottish administration. The rumours, strongly asserted by
some, and as resolutely denied by others, as their wishes or interest dictated,
found their way even to the ruinous Tower of Wolf’s Crag, chiefly through
the medium of Caleb, the butler, who, among his other excellences, was an
ardent politician, and seldom made an excursion from the old fortress to the
neighbouring village of Wolf’s Hope without bringing back what tidings
were current in the vicinity.</p>
<p>But if Bucklaw could not offer any satisfactory objections to the delay of the
Master in leaving Scotland, he did not the less suffer with impatience the
state of inaction to which it confined him; and it was only the ascendency
which his new companion had acquired over him that induced him to submit to a
course of life so alien to his habits and inclinations.</p>
<p>“You were wont to be thought a stirring active young fellow,
Master,” was his frequent remonstrance; “yet here you seem
determined to live on and on like a rat in a hole, with this trifling
difference, that the wiser vermin chooses a hermitage where he can find food at
least; but as for us, Caleb’s excuses become longer as his diet turns
more spare, and I fear we shall realise the stories they tell of the
sloth,—we have almost eat up the last green leaf on the plant, and have
nothing left for it but to drop from the tree and break our necks.”</p>
<p>“Do not fear it,” said Ravenswood; “there is a fate watches
for us, and we too have a stake in the revolution that is now impending, and
which already has alarmed many a bosom.”</p>
<p>“What fate—what revolution?” inquired his companion.
“We have had one revolution too much already, I think.”</p>
<p>Ravenswood interrupted him by putting into his hands a letter.</p>
<p>“Oh,” answered Bucklaw, “my dream’s out. I thought I
heard Caleb this morning pressing some unfortunate fellow to a drink of cold
water, and assuring him it was better for his stomach in the morning than ale
or brandy.”</p>
<p>“It was my Lord of A——’s courier,” said
Ravenswood, “who was doomed to experience his ostentatious hospitality,
which I believe ended in sour beer and herrings. Read, and you will see the
news he has brought us.”</p>
<p>“I will as fast as I can,” said Bucklaw; “but I am no great
clerk, nor does his lordship seem to be the first of scribes.”</p>
<p>The reader will peruse, in a few seconds, by the aid our friend
Ballantyne’s types, what took Bucklaw a good half hour in perusal, though
assisted by the Master of Ravenswood. The tenor was as follows:</p>
<p class="letter">
“R<small>IGHT</small> H<small>ONOURABLE OUR</small>
C<small>OUSIN</small>:</p>
<p>“Our hearty commendations premised, these come to assure you of the
interest which we take in your welfare, and in your purpose towards its
augmentation. If we have been less active in showing forth our effective
good-will towards you than, as a loving kinsman and blood-relative, we would
willingly have desired, we request that you will impute it to lack of
opportunity to show our good-liking, not to any coldness of our will. Touching
your resolution to travel in foreign parts, as at this time we hold the same
little advisable, in respect that your ill-willers may, according to the custom
of such persons, impute motives for your journey, whereof, although we know and
believe you to be as clear as ourselves, yet natheless their words may find
credence in places where the belief in them may much prejudice you, and which
we should see with more unwillingness and displeasure than with means of
remedy.</p>
<p>“Having thus, as becometh our kindred, given you our poor mind on the
subject of your journeying forth of Scotland, we would willingly add reasons of
weight, which might materially advantage you and your father’s house,
thereby to determine you to abide at Wolf’s Crag, until this harvest
season shall be passed over. But what sayeth the proverb, <i>verbum
sapienti</i>—a word is more to him that hath wisdom than a sermon to a
fool. And albeit we have written this poor scroll with our own hand, and are
well assured of the fidelity of our messenger, as him that is many ways bounden
to us, yet so it is, that sliddery ways crave wary walking, and that we may not
peril upon paper matters which we would gladly impart to you by word of mouth.
Wherefore, it was our purpose to have prayed you heartily to come to this our
barren Highland country to kill a stag, and to treat of the matters which we
are now more painfully inditing to you anent. But commodity does not serve at
present for such our meeting, which, therefore, shall be deferred until sic
time as we may in all mirth rehearse those things whereof we now keep silence.
Meantime, we pray you to think that we are, and will still be, your good
kinsman and well-wisher, waiting but for times of whilk we do, as it were,
entertain a twilight prospect, and appear and hope to be also your effectual
well-doer. And in which hope we heartily write ourself,</p>
<p class="right">
“Right Honourable,<br/>
“Your loving cousin,<br/>
“A——.</p>
<p class="letter">
“Given from our poor house of
B——,” etc.</p>
<p>Superscribed—“For the right honourable, and our honoured kinsman,
the Master of Ravenswood—These, with haste, haste, post haste—ride
and run until these be delivered.”</p>
<p>“What think you of this epistle, Bucklaw?” said the Master, when
his companion had hammered out all the sense, and almost all the words of which
it consisted.</p>
<p>“Truly, that the Marquis’s meaning is as great a riddle as his
manuscript. He is really in much need of <i>Wit’s Interpreter</i>, or the
<i>Complete Letter-Writer</i>, and were I you, I would send him a copy by the
bearer. He writes you very kindly to remain wasting your time and your money in
this vile, stupid, oppressed country, without so much as offering you the
countenance and shelter of his house. In my opinion, he has some scheme in view
in which he supposes you can be useful, and he wishes to keep you at hand, to
make use of you when it ripens, reserving the power of turning you adrift,
should his plot fail in the concoction.”</p>
<p>“His plot! Then you suppose it is a treasonable business,” answered
Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“What else can it be?” replied Bucklaw; “the Marquis has been
long suspected to have an eye to Saint Germains.”</p>
<p>“He should not engage me rashly in such an adventure,” said
Ravenswood; “when I recollect the times of the first and second Charles,
and of the last James, truly I see little reason that, as a man or a patriot, I
should draw my sword for their descendants.”</p>
<p>“Humph!” replied Bucklaw; “so you have set yourself down to
mourn over the crop-eared dogs whom honest Claver’se treated as they
deserved?”</p>
<p>“They first gave the dogs an ill name, and then hanged them,”
replied Ravenswood. “I hope to see the day when justice shall be open to
Whig and Tory, and when these nicknames shall only be used among coffee-house
politicians, as ‘slut’ and ‘jade’ are among
apple-women, as cant terms of idle spite and rancour.”</p>
<p>“That will not be in our days, Master: the iron has entered too deeply
into our sides and our souls.”</p>
<p>“It will be, however, one day,” replied the Master; “men will
not always start at these nicknames as at a trumpet-sound. As social life is
better protected, its comforts will become too dear to be hazarded without some
better reasons than speculative politics.”</p>
<p>“It is fine talking,” answered Bucklaw; “but my heart is with
the old song—</p>
<p class="poem">
To see good corn upon the rigs,<br/>
And a gallow built to hang the Whigs,<br/>
And the right restored where the right should be.<br/>
Oh, that is the thing that would wanton me.”</p>
<p>“You may sing as loudly as you will, <i>cantabit
vacuus</i>,”—answered the Master; “but I believe the Marquis
is too wise, at least too wary, to join you in such a burden. I suspect he
alludes to a revolution in the Scottish privy council, rather than in the
British kingdoms.”</p>
<p>“Oh, confusion to your state tricks!” exclaimed
Bucklaw—“your cold calculating manÅ“uvres, which old gentlemen in
wrought nightcaps and furred gowns execute like so many games at chess, and
displace a treasurer or lord commissioner as they would take a rook or a pawn.
Tennis for my sport, and battle for my earnest! And you, Master, so deep and
considerate as you would seem, you have that within you makes the blood boil
faster than suits your present humour of moralising on political truths. You
are one of those wise men who see everything with great composure till their
blood is up, and then—woe to any one who should put them in mind of their
own prudential maxims!”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said Ravenswood, “you read me more rightly than I
can myself. But to think justly will certainly go some length in helping me to
act so. But hark! I hear Caleb tolling the dinner-bell.”</p>
<p>“Which he always does with the more sonorous grace in proportion to the
meagreness of the cheer which he has provided,” said Bucklaw; “as
if that infernal clang and jangle, which will one day bring the belfry down the
cliff, could convert a starved hen into a fat capon, and a blade-bone of mutton
into a haunch of venison.”</p>
<p>“I wish we may be so well off as your worst conjectures surmise, Bucklaw,
from the extreme solemnity and ceremony with which Caleb seems to place on the
table that solitary covered dish.”</p>
<p>“Uncover, Caleb! uncover, for Heaven’s sake!” said Bucklaw;
“let us have what you can give us without preface. Why, it stands well
enough, man,” he continued, addressing impatiently the ancient butler,
who, without reply, kept shifting the dish, until he had at length placed it
with mathematical precision in the very midst of the table.</p>
<p>“What have we got here, Caleb?” inquired the Master in his turn.</p>
<p>“Ahem! sir, ye suld have known before; but his honour the Laird of
Bucklaw is so impatient,” answered Caleb, still holding the dish with one
hand and the cover with the other, with evident reluctance to disclose the
contents.</p>
<p>“But what is it, a God’s name—not a pair of clean spurs, I
hope, in the Border fashion of old times?”</p>
<p>“Ahem! ahem!” reiterated Caleb, “your honour is pleased to be
facetious; natheless, I might presume to say it was a convenient fashion, and
used, as I have heard, in an honourable and thriving family. But touching your
present dinner, I judged that this being St. Magdalen’s
[Margaret’s] Eve, who was a worthy queen of Scotland in her day, your
honours might judge it decorous, if not altogether to fast, yet only to sustain
nature with some slight refection, as ane saulted herring or the like.”
And, uncovering the dish, he displayed four of the savoury fishes which he
mentioned, adding, in a subdued tone, “that they were no just common
herring neither, being every ane melters, and sauted with uncommon care by the
housekeeper (poor Mysie) for his honour’s especial use.”</p>
<p>“Out upon all apologies!” said the Master, “let us eat the
herrings, since there is nothing better to be had; but I begin to think with
you, Bucklaw, that we are consuming the last green leaf, and that, in spite of
the Marquis’s political machinations, we must positively shift camp for
want of forage, without waiting the issue of them.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />