<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<p class="poem">
We worldly men, when we see friends and kinsmen<br/>
Past hope sunk in their fortunes, lend no hand<br/>
To lift them up, but rather set our feet<br/>
Upon their heads to press them to the bottom,<br/>
As I must yield with you I practised it;<br/>
But now I see you in a way to rise,<br/>
I can and will assist you.<br/>
<br/>
New Way to Pay Old Debts.</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper carried with him, to a couch harder than he was accustomed to
stretch himself upon, the same ambitious thoughts and political perplexities
which drive sleep from the softest down that ever spread a bed of state. He had
sailed long enough amid the contending tides and currents of the time to be
sensible of their peril, and of the necessity of trimming his vessel to the
prevailing wind, if he would have her escape shipwreck in the storm. The nature
of his talents, and the timorousness of disposition connected with them, had
made him assume the pliability of the versatile old Earl of Northampton, who
explained the art by which he kept his ground during all the changes of state,
from the reign of Henry VIII. to that of Elizabeth, by the frank avowal, that
he was born of the willow, not of the oak. It had accordingly been Sir William
Ashton’s policy, on all occasions, to watch the changes in the political
horizon, and, ere yet the conflict was decided, to negotiate some interest for
himself with the party most likely to prove victorious. His time-serving
disposition was well-known, and excited the contempt of the more daring leaders
of both factions in the state. But his talents were of a useful and practical
kind, and his legal knowledge held in high estimation; and they so far
counterbalanced other deficiencies that those in power were glad to use and to
reward, though without absolutely trusting or greatly respecting, him.</p>
<p>The Marquis of A—— had used his utmost influence to effect a change
in the Scottish cabinet, and his schemes had been of late so well laid and so
ably supported, that there appeared a very great chance of his proving
ultimately successful. He did not, however, feel so strong or so confident as
to neglect any means of drawing recruits to his standard. The acquisition of
the Lord Keeper was deemed of some importance, and a friend, perfectly
acquainted with his circumstances and character, became responsible for his
political conversion.</p>
<p>When this gentleman arrived at Ravenswood Castle upon a visit, the real purpose
of which was disguised under general courtesy, he found the prevailing fear
which at present beset the Lord Keeper was that of danger to his own person
from the Master of Ravenswood. The language which the blind sibyl, Old Alice,
had used; the sudden appearance of the Master, armed, and within his precincts,
immediately after he had been warned against danger from him; the cold and
haughty return received in exchange for the acknowledgments with which he
loaded him for his timely protection, had all made a strong impression on his
imagination.</p>
<p>So soon as the Marquis’s political agent found how the wind sate, he
began to insinuate fears and doubts of another kind, scarce less calculated to
affect the Lord Keeper. He inquired with seeming interest, whether the
proceedings in Sir William’s complicated litigation with the Ravenswood
family were out of court, and settled without the possibility of appeal. The
Lord Keeper answered in the affirmative; but his interrogator was too well
informed to be imposed upon. He pointed out to him, by unanswerable arguments,
that some of the most important points which had been decided in his favour
against the house of Ravenswood were liable, under the Treaty of Union, to be
reviewed by the British House of Peers, a court of equity of which the Lord
Keeper felt an instinctive dread. This course came instead of an appeal to the
old Scottish Parliament, or, as it was technically termed, “a
protestation for remeid in law.”</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper, after he had for some time disputed the legality of such a
proceeding, was compelled, at length, to comfort himself with the improbability
of the young Master of Ravenswood’s finding friends in parliament capable
of stirring in so weighty an affair.</p>
<p>“Do not comfort yourself with that false hope,” said his wily
friend; “it is possible that, in the next session of Parliament, young
Ravenswood may find more friends and favour even than your lordship.”</p>
<p>“That would be a sight worth seeing,” said the Keeper, scornfully.</p>
<p>“And yet,” said his friend, “such things have been seen ere
now, and in our own time. There are many at the head of affairs even now that a
few years ago were under hiding for their lives; and many a man now dines on
plate of silver that was fain to eat his crowdy without a bicker; and many a
high head has been brought full low among us in as short a space. Scott of
Scotsarvet’s Staggering State of Scots Statesmen, of which curious memoir
you showed me a manuscript, has been outstaggered in our time.”</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper answered with a deep sigh, “That these mutations were no
new sights in Scotland, and had been witnessed long before the time of the
satirical author he had quoted. It was many a long year,” he said,
“since Fordun had quoted as an ancient proverb, ‘<i>Neque dives,
neque fortis, sed nec sapiens Scotus, prædominante invidia, diu durabit in
terra</i>.’”</p>
<p>“And be assured, my esteemed friend,” was the answer, “that
even your long services to the state, or deep legal knowledge, will not save
you, or render your estate stable, if the Marquis of A—— comes in
with a party in the British Parliament. You know that the deceased Lord
Ravenswood was his near ally, his lady being fifth in descent from the Knight
of Tillibardine; and I am well assured that he will take young Ravenswood by
the hand, and be his very good lord and kinsman. Why should he not? The Master
is an active and stirring young fellow, able to help himself with tongue and
hands; and it is such as he that finds friends among their kindred, and not
those unarmed and unable Mephibosheths that are sure to be a burden to every
one that takes them up. And so, if these Ravenswood cases be called over the
coals in the House of Peers, you will find that the Marquis will have a crow to
pluck with you.”</p>
<p>“That would be an evil requital,” said the Lord Keeper, “for
my long services to the state, and the ancient respect in which I have held his
lordship’s honourable family and person.”</p>
<p>“Ay, but,” rejoined the agent of the Marquis, “it is in vain
to look back on past service and auld respect, my lord; it will be present
service and immediate proofs of regard which, in these sliddery times, will be
expected by a man like the Marquis.”</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper now saw the full drift of his friend’s argument, but he
was too cautious to return any positive answer.</p>
<p>“He knew not,” he said, “the service which the Lord Marquis
could expect from one of his limited abilities, that had not always stood at
his command, still saving and reserving his duty to his king and
country.”</p>
<p>Having thus said nothing, while he seemed to say everything, for the exception
was calculated to cover whatever he might afterwards think proper to bring
under it, Sir William Ashton changed the conversation, nor did he again permit
the same topic to be introduced. His guest departed, without having brought the
wily old statesman the length of committing himself, or of pledging himself to
any future line of conduct, but with the certainty that he had alarmed his
fears in a most sensible point, and laid a foundation for future and farther
treaty.</p>
<p>When he rendered an account of his negotiation to the Marquis, they both agreed
that the Keeper ought not to be permitted to relapse into security, and that he
should be plied with new subjects of alarm, especially during the absence of
his lady. They were well aware that her proud, vindictive, and predominating
spirit would be likely to supply him with the courage in which he was
deficient; that she was immovably attached to the party now in power, with whom
she maintained a close correspondence and alliance; and that she hated, without
fearing, the Ravenswood family (whose more ancient dignity threw discredit on
the newly acquired grandeur of her husband) to such a degree that she would
have perilled the interest of her own house to have the prospect of altogether
crushing that of her enemy.</p>
<p>But Lady Ashton was now absent. The business which had long detained her in
Edinburgh had afterwards induced her to travel to London, not without the hope
that she might contribute her share to disconcert the intrigues of the Marquis
at court; for she stood high in favour with the celebrated Sarah, Duchess of
Marlborough, to whom, in point of character, she bore considerable resemblance.
It was necessary to press her husband hard before her return; and, as a
preparatory step, the Marquis wrote to the Master of Ravenswood the letter
which we rehearsed in a former chapter. It was cautiously worded, so as to
leave it in the power of the writer hereafter to take as deep or as slight an
interest in the fortunes of his kinsmen as the progress of his own schemes
might require. But however unwilling, as a statesman, the Marquis might be to
commit himself, or assume the character of a patron, while he had nothing to
give away, it must be said to his honour that he felt a strong inclination
effectually to befriend the Master of Ravenswood, as well as to use his name as
a means of alarming the terrors of the Lord Keeper.</p>
<p>As the messenger who carried this letter was to pass near the house of the Lord
Keeper, he had it in direction that, in the village adjoining to the park-gate
of the castle, his horse should lose a shoe, and that, while it was replaced by
the smith of the place, he should express the utmost regret for the necessary
loss of time, and in the vehemence of his impatience give it to be understood
that he was bearing a message from the Marquis of A—— to the Master
of Ravenswood upon a matter of life and death.</p>
<p>This news, with exaggerations, was speedily carried from various quarters to
the ears of the Lord Keeper, and each reporter dwelt upon the extreme
impatience of the courier, and the surprising short time in which he had
executed his journey. The anxious statesman heard in silence; but in private
Lockhard received orders to watch the courier on his return, to waylay him in
the village, to ply him with liquor, if possible, and to use all means, fair or
foul, to learn the contents of the letter of which he was the bearer. But as
this plot had been foreseen, the messenger returned by a different and distant
road, and thus escaped the snare that was laid for him.</p>
<p>After he had been in vain expected for some time, Mr. Dingwall had orders to
made especial inquiry among his clients of Wolf’s Hope, whether such a
domestic belonging to the Marquis of A——had actually arrived at the
neighbouring castle. This was easily ascertained; for Caleb had been in the
village one morning by five o’clock, to borrow “twa chappins of ale
and a kipper” for the messenger’s refreshment, and the poor fellow
had been ill for twenty-four hours at Luckie Sma’trash’s, in
consequence of dining upon “saut saumon and sour drink.” So that
the existence of a correspondence betwixt the Marquis and his distressed
kinsman, which Sir William Ashton had sometimes treated as a bugbear, was
proved beyond the possibility of further doubt.</p>
<p>The alarm of the Lord Keeper became very serious; since the Claim of Right, the
power of appealing from the decisions of the civil court to the Estates of
Parliament, which had formerly been held incompetent, had in many instances
been claimed, and in some allowed, and he had no small reason to apprehend the
issue, if the English House of Lords should be disposed to act upon an appeal
from the Master of Ravenswood “for remeid in law.” It would resolve
into an equitable claim, and be decided, perhaps, upon the broad principles of
justice, which were not quite so favourable to the Lord Keeper as those of
strict law. Besides, judging, though most inaccurately, from courts which he
had himself known in the unhappy times preceding the Scottish Union, the Keeper
might have too much right to think that, in the House to which his lawsuits
were to be transferred, the old maxim might prevail which was too well
recognised in Scotland in former times: “Show me the man, and I’ll
show you the law.” The high and unbiased character of English judicial
proceedings was then little known in Scotland, and the extension of them to
that country was one of the most valuable advantages which it gained by the
Union. But this was a blessing which the Lord Keeper, who had lived under
another system, could not have the means of foreseeing. In the loss of his
political consequence, he anticipated the loss of his lawsuit. Meanwhile, every
report which reached him served to render the success of the Marquis’s
intrigues the more probable, and the Lord Keeper began to think it
indispensable that he should look round for some kind of protection against the
coming storm. The timidity of his temper induced him to adopt measures of
compromise and conciliation. The affair of the wild bull, properly managed,
might, he thought, be made to facilitate a personal communication and
reconciliation betwixt the Master and himself. He would then learn, if
possible, what his own ideas were of the extent of his rights, and the means of
enforcing them; and perhaps matters might be brought to a compromise, where one
party was wealthy and the other so very poor. A reconciliation with Ravenswood
was likely to give him an opportunity to play his own game with the Marquis of
A——. “And besides,” said he to himself, “it will
be an act of generosity to raise up the heir of this distressed family; and if
he is to be warmly and effectually befriended by the new government, who knows
but my virtue may prove its own reward?”</p>
<p>Thus thought Sir William Ashton, covering with no unusual self-delusion his
interested views with a hue of virtue; and having attained this point, his
fancy strayed still farther. He began to bethink himself, “That if
Ravenswood was to have a distinguished place of power and trust, and if such a
union would sopite the heavier part of his unadjusted claims, there might be
worse matches for his daughter Lucy: the Master might be reponed against the
attainder. Lord Ravenswood was an ancient title, and the alliance would, in
some measure, legitimate his own possession of the greater part of the
Master’s spoils, and make the surrender of the rest a subject of less
bitter regret.”</p>
<p>With these mingled and multifarious plans occupying his head, the Lord Keeper
availed himself of my Lord Bittlebrains’s repeated invitation to his
residence, and thus came within a very few miles of Wolf’s Crag. Here he
found the lord of the mansion absent, but was courteously received by the lady,
who expected her husband’s immediate return. She expressed her particular
delight at seeing Miss Ashton, and appointed the hounds to be taken out for the
Lord Keeper’s special amusement. He readily entered into the proposal, as
giving him an opportunity to reconnoitre Wolf’s Crag, and perhaps to make
some acquaintance with the owner, if he should be tempted from his desolate
mansion by the chase. Lockhard had his orders to endeavour on his part to make
some acquaintance with the inmates of the castle, and we have seen how he
played his part.</p>
<p>The accidental storm did more to further the Lord Keeper’s plan of
forming a personal acquaintance with young Ravenswood than his most sanguine
expectations could have anticipated. His fear of the young nobleman’s
personal resentment had greatly decreased since he considered him as formidable
from his legal claims and the means he might have of enforcing them. But
although he thought, not unreasonably, that only desperate circumstances drove
men on desperate measures, it was not without a secret terror, which shook his
heart within him, that he first felt himself inclosed within the desolate Tower
of Wolf’s Crag; a place so well fitted, from solitude and strength, to be
a scene of violence and vengeance. The stern reception at first given to them
by the Master of Ravenswood, and the difficulty he felt in explaining to that
injured nobleman what guests were under the shelter of his roof, did not soothe
these alarms; so that when Sir William Ashton heard the door of the courtyard
shut behind him with violence, the words of Alice rung in his ears, “That
he had drawn on matters too hardly with so fierce a race as those of
Ravenswood, and that they would bide their time to be avenged.”</p>
<p>The subsequent frankness of the Master’s hospitality, as their
acquaintance increased, abated the apprehensions these recollections were
calculated to excite; and it did not escape Sir William Ashton, that it was to
Lucy’s grace and beauty he owed the change in their host’s
behavior.</p>
<p>All these thoughts thronged upon him when he took possession of the secret
chamber. The iron lamp, the unfurnished apartment, more resembling a prison
than a place of ordinary repose, the hoarse and ceaseless sound of the waves
rushing against the base of the rock on which the castle was founded, saddened
and perplexed his mind. To his own successful machinations, the ruin of the
family had been in a great measure owing, but his disposition was crafty, and
not cruel; so that actually to witness the desolation and distress he had
himself occasioned was as painful to him as it would be to the humane mistress
of a family to superintend in person the execution of the lambs and poultry
which are killed by her own directions. At the same time, when he thought of
the alternative of restoring to Ravenswood a large proportion of his spoils, or
of adopting, as an ally and member of his own family, the heir of this
impoverished house, he felt as the spider may be supposed to do when his whole
web, the intricacies of which had been planned with so much art, is destroyed
by the chance sweep of a broom. And then, if he should commit himself too far
in this matter, it gave rise to a perilous question, which many a good husband,
when under temptation to act as a free agent, has asked himself without being
able to return a satisfactory answer: “What will my wife—what will
Lady Ashton say?” On the whole, he came at length to the resolution in
which minds of a weaker cast so often take refuge. He resolved to watch events,
to take advantage of circumstances as they occurred, and regulate his conduct
accordingly. In this spirit of temporising policy, he at length composed his
mind to rest.</p>
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