<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<p class="poem">
<i>Marall:</i> Sir, the man of honour’s come,<br/>
Newly alighted——<br/>
<i>Overreach:</i> In without reply,<br/>
And do as I command....<br/>
Is the loud music I gave order for<br/>
Ready to receive him?<br/>
<br/>
New Way to Pay Old Debts.</p>
<p>Sir William Ashton, although a man of sense, legal information, and great
practical knowledge of the world, had yet some points of character which
corresponded better with the timidity of his disposition and the supple arts by
which he had risen in the world, than to the degree of eminence which he had
attained; as they tended to show an original mediocrity of understanding,
however highly it had been cultivated, and a native meanness of disposition,
however carefully veiled. He loved the ostentatious display of his wealth, less
as a man to whom habit has made it necessary, than as one to whom it is still
delightful from its novelty. The most trivial details did not escape him; and
Lucy soon learned to watch the flush of scorn which crossed Ravenswood’s
cheek, when he heard her father gravely arguing with Lockhard, nay, even with
the old housekeeper, upon circumstances which, in families of rank, are left
uncared for, because it is supposed impossible they can be neglected.</p>
<p>“I could pardon Sir William,” said Ravenswood, one evening after he
had left the room, “some general anxiety upon this occasion, for the
Marquis’s visit is an honour, and should be received as such; but I am
worn out by these miserable minutiae of the buttery, and the larder, and the
very hencoop—they drive me beyond my patience; I would rather endure the
poverty of Wolf’s Crag than be pestered with the wealth of Ravenswood
Castle.”</p>
<p>“And yet,” said Lucy, “it was by attention to these minutiae
that my father acquired the property——”</p>
<p>“Which my ancestors sold for lack of it,” replied Ravenswood.
“Be it so; a porter still bears but a burden, though the burden be of
gold.”</p>
<p>Lucy sighed; she perceived too plainly that her lover held in scorn the manners
and habits of a father to whom she had long looked up as her best and most
partial friend, whose fondness had often consoled her for her mother’s
contemptuous harshness.</p>
<p>The lovers soon discovered that they differed upon other and no less important
topics. Religion, the mother of peace, was, in those days of discord, so much
misconstrued and mistaken, that her rules and forms were the subject of the
most opposite opinions and the most hostile animosities. The Lord Keeper, being
a Whig, was, of course, a Presbyterian, and had found it convenient, at
different periods, to express greater zeal for the kirk than perhaps he really
felt. His family, equally of course, were trained under the same institution.
Ravenswood, as we know, was a High Churchman, or Episcopalian, and frequently
objected to Lucy the fanaticism of some of her own communion, while she
intimated, rather than expressed, horror at the latitudinarian principles which
she had been taught to think connected with the prelatical form of church
government.</p>
<p>Thus, although their mutual affection seemed to increase rather than to be
diminished as their characters opened more fully on each other, the feelings of
each were mingled with some less agreeable ingredients. Lucy felt a secret awe,
amid all her affection for Ravenswood. His soul was of an higher, prouder
character than those with whom she had hitherto mixed in intercourse; his ideas
were more fierce and free; and he contemned many of the opinions which had been
inculcated upon her as chiefly demanding her veneration. On the other hand,
Ravenswood saw in Lucy a soft and flexible character, which, in his eyes at
least, seemed too susceptible of being moulded to any form by those with whom
she lived. He felt that his own temper required a partner of a more independent
spirit, who could set sail with him on his course of life, resolved as himself
to dare indifferently the storm and the favouring breeze. But Lucy was so
beautiful, so devoutly attached to him, of a temper so exquisitely soft and
kind, that, while he could have wished it were possible to inspire her with a
greater degree of firmness and resolution, and while he sometimes became
impatient of the extreme fear which she expressed of their attachment being
prematurely discovered, he felt that the softness of a mind, amounting almost
to feebleness, rendered her even dearer to him, as a being who had voluntarily
clung to him for protection, and made him the arbiter of her fate for weal or
woe. His feelings towards her at such moments were those which have been since
so beautifully expressed by our immortal Joanna Baillie:</p>
<p class="poem">
Thou sweetest thing,<br/>
That e’er did fix its lightly-fibred sprays<br/>
To the rude rock, ah! wouldst thou cling to me?<br/>
Rough and storm-worn I am; yet love me as<br/>
Thou truly dost, I will love thee again<br/>
With true and honest heart, though all unmeet<br/>
To be the mate of such sweet gentleness.</p>
<p>Thus the very points in which they differed seemed, in some measure, to ensure
the continuance of their mutual affection. If, indeed, they had so fully
appreciated each other’s character before the burst of passion in which
they hastily pledged their faith to each other, Lucy might have feared
Ravenswood too much ever to have loved him, and he might have construed her
softness and docile temper as imbecility, rendering her unworthy of his regard.
But they stood pledged to each other; and Lucy only feared that her
lover’s pride might one day teach him to regret his attachment;
Ravenswood, that a mind so ductile as Lucy’s might, in absence or
difficulties, be induced, by the entreaties or influence of those around her,
to renounce the engagement she had formed.</p>
<p>“Do not fear it,” said Lucy, when upon one occasion a hint of such
suspicion escaped her lover; “the mirrors which receive the reflection of
all successive objects are framed of hard materials like glass or steel; the
softer substances, when they receive an impression, retain it undefaced.”</p>
<p>“This is poetry, Lucy,” said Ravenswood; “and in poetry there
is always fallacy, and sometimes fiction.”</p>
<p>“Believe me, then, once more, in honest prose,” said Lucy,
“that, though I will never wed man without the consent of my parents, yet
neither force nor persuasion shall dispose of my hand till you renounce the
right I have given you to it.”</p>
<p>The lovers had ample time for such explanations. Henry was now more seldom
their companion, being either a most unwilling attendant upon the lessons of
his tutor, or a forward volunteer under the instructions of the foresters or
grooms. As for the Keeper, his mornings were spent in his study, maintaining
correspondences of all kinds, and balancing in his anxious mind the various
intelligence which he collected from every quarter concerning the expected
change of Scottish politics, and the probable strength of the parties who were
about to struggle for power. At other times he busied himself about arranging,
and countermanding, and then again arranging, the preparations which he judged
necessary for the reception of the Marquis of A——, whose arrival
had been twice delayed by some necessary cause of detention.</p>
<p>In the midst of all these various avocations, political and domestic, he seemed
not to observe how much his daughter and his guest were thrown into each
other’s society, and was censured by many of his neighbours, according to
the fashion of neighbours in all countries, for suffering such an intimate
connexion to take place betwixt two young persons. The only natural explanation
was, that he designed them for each other; while, in truth, his only motive was
to temporise and procrastinate until he should discover the real extent of the
interest which the Marquis took in Ravenswood’s affairs, and the power
which he was likely to possess of advancing them. Until these points should be
made both clear and manifest, the Lord Keeper resolved that he would do nothing
to commit himself, either in one shape or other; and, like many cunning
persons, he overreached himself deplorably.</p>
<p>Amongst those who had been disposed to censure, with the greatest severity, the
conduct of Sir William Ashton, in permitting the prolonged residence of
Ravenswood under his roof, and his constant attendance on Miss Ashton, was the
new Laird of Girnington, and his faithful squire and bottleholder, personages
formerly well known to us by the names of Hayston and Bucklaw, and his
companion Captain Craigengelt. The former had at length succeeded to the
extensive property of his long-lived grand-aunt, and to considerable wealth
besides, which he had employed in redeeming his paternal acres (by the title
appertaining to which he still chose to be designated), notwithstanding Captain
Craigengelt had proposed to him a most advantageous mode of vesting the money
in Law’s scheme, which was just then broached, and offered his services
to travel express to Paris for the purpose. But Bucklaw had so far derived
wisdom from adversity, that he would listen to no proposal which Craigengelt
could invent, which had the slightest tendency to risk his newly-acquired
independence. He that had once eat pease-bannocks, drank sour wine, and slept
in the secret chamber at Wolf’s Crag, would, he said, prize good cheer
and a soft bed as long as he lived, and take special care never to need such
hospitality again.</p>
<p>Craigengelt, therefore, found himself disappointed in the first hopes he had
entertained of making a good hand of the Laird of Bucklaw. Still, however, he
reaped many advantages from his friend’s good fortune. Bucklaw, who had
never been at all scrupulous in choosing his companions, was accustomed to, and
entertained by, a fellow whom he could either laugh with or laugh at as he had
a mind, who would take, according to Scottish phrase, “the bit and the
buffet,” understood all sports, whether within or without doors, and,
when the laird had a mind for a bottle of wine (no infrequent circumstance),
was always ready to save him from the scandal of getting drunk by himself. Upon
these terms, Craigengelt was the frequent, almost the constant, inmate of the
house of Girnington.</p>
<p>In no time, and under no possibility of circumstances, could good have been
derived from such an intimacy, however its bad consequences might be qualified
by the thorough knowledge which Bucklaw possessed of his dependant’s
character, and the high contempt in which he held it. But, as circumstances
stood, this evil communication was particularly liable to corrupt what good
principles nature had implanted in the patron.</p>
<p>Craigengelt had never forgiven the scorn with which Ravenswood had torn the
mask of courage and honesty from his countenance; and to exasperate
Bucklaw’s resentment against him was the safest mode of revenge which
occurred to his cowardly, yet cunning and malignant, disposition.</p>
<p>He brought up on all occasions the story of the challenge which Ravenswood had
declined to accept, and endeavoured, by every possible insinuation, to make his
patron believe that his honour was concerned in bringing that matter to an
issue by a present discussion with Ravenswood. But respecting this subject
Bucklaw imposed on him, at length, a peremptory command of silence.</p>
<p>“I think,” he said, “the Master has treated me unlike a
gentleman, and I see no right he had to send me back a cavalier answer when I
demanded the satisfaction of one. But he gave me my life once; and, in looking
the matter over at present, I put myself but on equal terms with him. Should he
cross me again, I shall consider the old accompt as balanced, and his
Mastership will do well to look to himself.”</p>
<p>“That he should,” re-echoed Craigengelt; “for when you are in
practice, Bucklaw, I would bet a magnum you are through him before the third
pass.”</p>
<p>“Then you know nothing of the matter,” said Bucklaw, “and you
never saw him fence.”</p>
<p>“And I know nothing of the matter?” said the
dependant—“a good jest, I promise you! And though I never saw
Ravenswood fence, have I not been at Monsieur Sagoon’s school, who was
the first <i>maître d’armes</i> at Paris; and have I not been at Signor
Poco’s at Florence, and Meinheer Durchstossen’s at Vienna, and have
I not seen all their play?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know whether you have or not,” said Bucklaw;
“but what about it, though you had?”</p>
<p>“Only that I will be d—d if ever I saw French, Italian, or
High-Dutchman ever make foot, hand, and eye keep time half so well as you,
Bucklaw.”</p>
<p>“I believe you lie, Craigie,” said Bucklaw; “however, I can
hold my own, both with single rapier, backsword, sword and dagger, broadsword,
or case of falchions—and that’s as much as any gentleman need know
of the matter.”</p>
<p>“And the double of what ninety-nine out of a hundred know,” said
Craigengelt; “they learn to change a few thrusts with the small sword,
and then, forsooth, they understand the noble art of defence! Now, when I was
at Rouen in the year 1695, there was a Chevalier de Chapon and I went to the
opera, where we found three bits of English birkies——”</p>
<p>“Is it a long story you are going to tell?” said Bucklaw,
interrupting him without ceremony.</p>
<p>“Just as you like,” answered the parasite, “for we made short
work of it.”</p>
<p>“Then I like it short,” said Bucklaw. “Is it serious or
merry?”</p>
<p>“Devilish serious, I assure you, and so they found it; for the Chevalier
and I——”</p>
<p>“Then I don’t like it at all,” said Bucklaw; “so fill a
brimmer of my auld auntie’s claret, rest her heart! And, as the
Hielandman says, <i>Skioch doch na skiaill</i>.”</p>
<p>“That was what tough old Sir Even Dhu used to say to me when I was out
with the metall’d lads in 1689. ‘Craigengelt,’ he used to
say, ‘you are as pretty a fellow as ever held steel in his grip, but you
have one fault.’”</p>
<p>“If he had known you as long as I have done,” said Bucklaw,
“he would have found out some twenty more; but hang long stories, give us
your toast, man.”</p>
<p>Craigengelt rose, went a-tiptoe to the door, peeped out, shut it carefully,
came back again, clapped his tarnished gold-laced hat on one side of his head,
took his glass in one hand, and touching the hilt of his hanger with the other,
named, “The King over the water.”</p>
<p>“I tell you what it is, Captain Craigengelt,” said Bucklaw;
“I shall keep my mind to myself on these subjects, having too much
respect for the memory of my venerable Aunt Girnington to put her lands and
tenements in the way of committing treason against established authority. Bring
me King James to Edinburgh, Captain, with thirty thousand men at his back, and
I’ll tell you what I think about his title; but as for running my neck
into a noose, and my good broad lands into the statutory penalties, ‘in
that case made and provided,’ rely upon it, you will find me no such
fool. So, when you mean to vapour with your hanger and your dram-cup in support
of treasonable toasts, you must find your liquor and company elsewhere.”</p>
<p>“Well, then,” said Craigengelt, “name the toast yourself, and
be it what it like, I’ll pledge you, were it a mile to the bottom.”</p>
<p>“And I’ll give you a toast that deserves it, my boy,” said
Bucklaw; “what say you to Miss Lucy Ashton?”</p>
<p>“Up with it,” said the Captain, as he tossed off his brimmer,
“the bonniest lass in Lothian! What a pity the old sneckdrawing
Whigamore, her father, is about to throw her away upon that rag of pride and
beggary, the Master of Ravenswood!”</p>
<p>“That’s not quite so clear,” said Bucklaw, in a tone which,
though it seemed indifferent, excited his companion’s eager curiosity;
and not that only, but also his hope of working himself into some sort of
confidence, which might make him necessary to his patron, being by no means
satisfied to rest on mere sufferance, if he could form by art or industry a
more permanent title to his favour.</p>
<p>“I thought,” said he, after a moment’s pause, “that was
a settled matter; they are continually together, and nothing else is spoken of
betwixt Lammer Law and Traprain.”</p>
<p>“They may say what they please,” replied his patron, “but I
know better; and I’ll give you Miss Lucy Ashton’s health again, my
boy.”</p>
<p>“And I would drink it on my knee,” said Craigengelt, “if I
thought the girl had the spirit to jilt that d—d son of a
Spaniard.”</p>
<p>“I am to request you will not use the word ‘jilt’ and Miss
Ashton’s name together,” said Bucklaw, gravely.</p>
<p>“Jilt, did I say? Discard, my lad of acres—by Jove, I meant to
discard,” replied Craigengelt; “and I hope she’ll discard him
like a small card at piquet, and take in the king of hearts, my boy! But
yet——”</p>
<p>“But what?” said his patron.</p>
<p>“But yet I know for certain they are hours together alone, and in the
woods and the fields.”</p>
<p>“That’s her foolish father’s dotage; that will be soon put
out of the lass’s head, if it ever gets into it,” answered Bucklaw.
“And now fill your glass again, Captain; I am going to make you happy; I
am going to let you into a secret—a plot—a noosing plot—only
the noose is but typical.”</p>
<p>“A marrying matter?” said Craigengelt, and his jaw fell as he asked
the question, for he suspected that matrimony would render his situation at
Girnington much more precarious than during the jolly days of his
patron’s bachelorhood.</p>
<p>“Ay, a marriage, man,” said Bucklaw; “but wherefore droops
thy mighty spirit, and why grow the rubies on thy cheek so pale? The board
will have a corner, and the corner will have a trencher, and the trencher will
have a glass beside it; and the board-end shall be filled, and the trencher and
the glass shall be replenished for thee, if all the petticoats in Lothian had
sworn the contrary. What, man! I am not the boy to put myself into
leading-strings.”</p>
<p>“So says many an honest fellow,” said Craigengelt, “and some
of my special friends; but, curse me if I know the reason, the women could
never bear me, and always contrived to trundle me out of favour before the
honeymoon was over.”</p>
<p>“If you could have kept your ground till that was over, you might have
made a good year’s pension,” said Bucklaw.</p>
<p>“But I never could,” answered the dejected parasite. “There
was my Lord Castle-Cuddy—we were hand and glove: I rode his horses,
borrowed money both for him and from him, trained his hawks, and taught him how
to lay his bets; and when he took a fancy of marrying, I married him to Katie
Glegg, whom I thought myself as sure of as man could be of woman. Egad, she had
me out of the house, as if I had run on wheels, within the first
fortnight!”</p>
<p>“Well!” replied Bucklaw, “I think I have nothing of
Castle-Cuddy about me, or Lucy of Katie Glegg. But you see the thing will go on
whether you like it or no; the only question is, will you be useful?”</p>
<p>“Useful!” exclaimed the Captain, “and to thee, my lad of
lands, my darling boy, whom I would tramp barefooted through the world for!
Name time, place, mode, and circumstances, and see if I will not be useful in
all uses that can be devised.”</p>
<p>“Why, then, you must ride two hundred miles for me,” said the
patron.</p>
<p>“A thousand, and call them a flea’s leap,” answered the
dependant; “I’ll cause saddle my horse directly.”</p>
<p>“Better stay till you know where you are to go, and what you are to
do,” quoth Bucklaw. “You know I have a kinswoman in Northumberland,
Lady Blenkensop by name, whose old acquaintance I had the misfortune to lose in
the period of my poverty, but the light of whose countenance shone forth upon
me when the sun of my prosperity began to arise.”</p>
<p>“D—n all such double-faced jades!” exclaimed Craigengelt,
heroically; “this I will say for John Craigengelt, that he is his
friend’s friend through good report and bad report, poverty and riches;
and you know something of that yourself, Bucklaw.”</p>
<p>“I have not forgot your merits,” said his patron; “I do
remember that, in my extremities, you had a mind to <i>crimp</i> me for the
service of the French king, or of the Pretender; and, moreover, that you
afterwards lent me a score of pieces, when, as I firmly believe, you had heard
the news that old Lady Girnington had a touch of the dead palsy. But
don’t be downcast, John; I believe, after all, you like me very well in
your way, and it is my misfortune to have no better counsellor at present. To
return to this Lady Blenkensop, you must know, she is a close confederate of
Duchess Sarah.”</p>
<p>“What! of Sall Jennings?” exclaimed Craigengelt; “then she
must be a good one.”</p>
<p>“Hold your tongue, and keep your Tory rants to yourself, if it be
possible,” said Bucklaw. “I tell you, that through the Duchess of
Marlborough has this Northumbrian cousin of mine become a crony of Lady Ashton,
the Keeper’s wife, or, I may say, the Lord Keeper’s Lady Keeper,
and she has favoured Lady Blenkensop with a visit on her return from London,
and is just now at her old mansion-house on the banks of the Wansbeck. Now,
sir, as it has been the use and wont of these ladies to consider their husbands
as of no importance in the management of their own families, it has been their
present pleasure, without consulting Sir William Ashton, to put on the
<i>tapis</i> a matrimonial alliance, to be concluded between Lucy Ashton and my
own right honourable self, Lady Ashton acting as self-constituted
plenipotentiary on the part of her daughter and husband, and Mother Blenkensop,
equally unaccredited, doing me the honour to be my representative. You may
suppose I was a little astonished when I found that a treaty, in which I was so
considerably interested, had advanced a good way before I was even
consulted.”</p>
<p>“Capot me! if I think that was according to the rules of the game,”
said his confidant; “and pray, what answer did you return?”</p>
<p>“Why, my first thought was to send the treaty to the devil, and the
negotiators along with it, for a couple of meddling old women; my next was to
laugh very heartily; and my third and last was a settled opinion that the thing
was reasonable, and would suit me well enough.”</p>
<p>“Why, I thought you had never seen the wench but once, and then she had
her riding-mask on; I am sure you told me so.”</p>
<p>“Ay, but I liked her very well then. And Ravenswood’s dirty usage
of me—shutting me out of doors to dine with the lackeys, because he had
the Lord Keeper, forsooth, and his daughter, to be guests in his beggarly
castle of starvation,—d—n me, Craigengelt, if I ever forgive him
till I play him as good a trick!”</p>
<p>“No more you should, if you are a lad of mettle,” said Craigengelt,
the matter now taking a turn in which he could sympathise; “and if you
carry this wench from him, it will break his heart.”</p>
<p>“That it will not,” said Bucklaw; “his heart is all steeled
over with reason and philosophy, things that you, Craigie, know nothing about
more than myself, God help me. But it will break his pride, though, and
that’s what I’m driving at.”</p>
<p>“Distance me!” said Craigengelt, “but I know the reason now
of his unmannerly behaviour at his old tumble-down tower yonder. Ashamed of
your company?—no, no! Gad, he was afraid you would cut in and carry off
the girl.”</p>
<p>“Eh! Craigengelt?” said Bucklaw, “do you really think so? but
no, no! he is a devilish deal prettier man than I am.”</p>
<p>“Who—he?” exclaimed the parasite. “He’s as black
as the crook; and for his size—he’s a tall fellow, to be sure, but
give me a light, stout, middle-sized——”</p>
<p>“Plague on thee!” said Bucklaw, interrupting him, “and on me
for listening to you! You would say as much if I were hunch-backed. But as to
Ravenswood—he has kept no terms with me, I’ll keep none with him;
if I <i>can</i> win this girl from him, I <i>will</i> win her.”</p>
<p>“Win her! ’sblood, you <i>shall</i> win her, point, quint, and
quatorze, my king of trumps; you shall pique, repique, and capot him.”</p>
<p>“Prithee, stop thy gambling cant for one instant,” said Bucklaw.
“Things have come thus far, that I have entertained the proposal of my
kinswoman, agreed to the terms of jointure, amount of fortune, and so forth,
and that the affair is to go forward when Lady Ashton comes down, for she takes
her daughter and her son in her own hand. Now they want me to send up a
confidential person with some writings.”</p>
<p>“By this good win, I’ll ride to the end of the world—the very
gates of Jericho, and the judgment-seat of Prester John, for thee!”
ejaculated the Captain.</p>
<p>“Why, I believe you would do something for me, and a great deal for
yourself. Now, any one could carry the writings; but you will have a little
more to do. You must contrive to drop out before my Lady Ashton, just as if it
were a matter of little consequence, the residence of Ravenswood at her
husband’s house, and his close intercourse with Miss Ashton; and you may
tell her that all the country talks of a visit from the Marquis of
A——, as it is supposed, to make up the match betwixt Ravenswood and
her daughter. I should like to hear what she says to all this; for, rat me! if
I have any idea of starting for the plate at all if Ravenswood is to win the
race, and he has odds against me already.”</p>
<p>“Never a bit; the wench has too much sense, and in that belief I drink
her health a third time; and, were time and place fitting, I would drink it on
bended knees, and he that would not pledge me, I would make his guts garter his
stockings.”</p>
<p>“Hark ye, Craigengelt; as you are going into the society of women of
rank,” said Bucklaw, “I’ll thank you to forget your strange
blackguard oaths and ‘damme’s.’ I’ll write to them,
though, that you are a blunt, untaught fellow.”</p>
<p>“Ay, ay,” replied Craigengelt—“a plain, blunt, honest,
downright soldier.”</p>
<p>“Not too honest, not too much of the soldier neither; but such as thou
art, it is my luck to need thee, for I must have spurs put to Lady
Ashton’s motions.”</p>
<p>“I’ll dash them up to the rowel-heads,” said Craigengelt;
“she shall come here at the gallop, like a cow chased by a whole nest of
hornets, and her tail over her rump like a corkscrew.”</p>
<p>“And hear ye, Craigie,” said Bucklaw; “your boots and doublet
are good enough to drink in, as the man says in the play, but they are somewhat
too greasy for tea-table service; prithee, get thyself a little better rigged
out, and here is to pay all charges.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Bucklaw; on my soul, man, you use me ill. However,” added
Craigengelt, pocketing the money, “if you will have me so far indebted to
you, I must be conforming.”</p>
<p>“Well, horse and away!” said the patron, “so soon as you have
got your riding livery in trim. You may ride the black crop-ear; and, hark ye,
I’ll make you a present of him to boot.”</p>
<p>“I drink to the good luck of my mission,” answered the ambassador,
“in a half-pint bumper.”</p>
<p>“I thank ye, Craigie, and pledge you; I see nothing against it but the
father or the girl taking a tantrum, and I am told the mother can wind them
both round her little finger. Take care not to affront her with any of your
Jacobite jargon.”</p>
<p>“Oh, ay, true—she is a Whig, and a friend of old Sall of
Marlborough; thank my stars, I can hoist any colours at a pinch! I have fought
as hard under John Churchill as ever I did under Dundee or the Duke of
Berwick.”</p>
<p>“I verily believe you, Craigie,” said the lord of the mansion;
“but, Craigie, do you, pray, step down to the cellar, and fetch us up a
bottle of the Burgundy, 1678; it is in the fourth bin from the right-hand turn.
And I say, Craigie, you may fetch up half a dozen whilst you are about it.
Egad, we’ll make a night on’t!”</p>
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