<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
And soon they spied the merry-men green,<br/>
And eke the coach and four.<br/>
<br/>
Duke upon Duke.</p>
<p>Craigengelt set forth on his mission so soon as his equipage was complete,
prosecuted his journey with all diligence, and accomplished his commission with
all the dexterity for which bucklaw had given him credit. As he arrived with
credentials from Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw, he was extremely welcome to both
ladies; and those who are prejudiced in favour of a new acquaintance can, for a
time at least, discover excellencies in his very faults and perfections in his
deficiencies. Although both ladies were accustomed to good society, yet, being
pre-determined to find out an agreeable and well-behaved gentleman in Mr.
Hayston’s friend, they succeeded wonderfully in imposing on themselves.
It is true that Craigengelt was now handsomely dressed, and that was a point of
no small consequence. But, independent of outward show, his blackguard
impudence of address was construed into honourable bluntness becoming his
supposed military profession; his hectoring passed for courage, and his
sauciness for wit. Lest, however, any one should think this a violation of
probability, we must add, in fairness to the two ladies, that their discernment
was greatly blinded, and their favour propitiated, by the opportune arrival of
Captain Craigengelt in the moment when they were longing for a third hand to
make a party at tredrille, in which, as in all games, whether of chance or
skill, that worthy person was a great proficient.</p>
<p>When he found himself established in favour, his next point was how best to use
it for the furtherance of his patron’s views. He found Lady Ashton
prepossessed strongly in favour of the motion which Lady Blenkensop, partly
from regard to her kinswoman, partly from the spirit of match-making, had not
hesitated to propose to her; so that his task was an easy one. Bucklaw,
reformed from his prodigality, was just the sort of husband which she desired
to have for her Shepherdess of Lammermoor; and while the marriage gave her an
easy fortune, and a respectable country gentleman for her husband, Lady Ashton
was of opinion that her destinies would be fully and most favourably
accomplished. It so chanced, also, that Bucklaw, among his new acquisitions,
had gained the management of a little political interest in a neighbouring
county where the Douglas family originally held large possessions. It was one
of the bosom-hopes of Lady Ashton that her eldest son, Sholto, should represent
this county in the British Parliament, and she saw this alliance with Bucklaw
as a circumstance which might be highly favourable to her wishes.</p>
<p>Craigengelt, who, in his way, by no means wanted sagacity, no sooner discovered
in what quarter the wind of Lady Ashton’s wishes sate, than he trimmed
his course accordingly. “There was little to prevent Bucklaw himself from
sitting for the county; he must carry the heat—must walk the course. Two
cousins-german, six more distant kinsmen, his factor and his chamberlain, were
all hollow votes; and the Girnington interest had always carried, betwixt love
and fear, about as many more. But Bucklaw cared no more about riding the first
horse, and that sort of thing, than he, Craigengelt, did about a game at
birkie: it was a pity his interest was not in good guidance.”</p>
<p>All this Lady Ashton drank in with willing and attentive ears, resolving
internally to be herself the person who should take the management of the
political influence of her destined son-in-law, for the benefit of her
eldest-born, Sholto, and all other parties concerned.</p>
<p>When he found her ladyship thus favourably disposed, the Captain proceeded, to
use his employer’s phrase, to set spurs to her resolution, by hinting at
the situation of matters at Ravenswood Castle, the long residence which the
heir of that family had made with the Lord Keeper, and the reports
which—though he would be d—d ere he gave credit to any of
them—had been idly circulated in the neighbourhood. It was not the
Captain’s cue to appear himself to be uneasy on the subject of these
rumours; but he easily saw from Lady Ashton’s flushed cheek, hesitating
voice, and flashing eye, that she had caught the alarm which he intended to
communicate. She had not heard from her husband so often or so regularly as she
thought him bound in duty to have written, and of this very interesting
intelligence concerning his visit to the Tower of Wolf’s Crag, and the
guest whom, with such cordiality, he had received at Ravenswood Castle, he had
suffered his lady to remain altogether ignorant, until she now learned it by
the chance information of a stranger. Such concealment approached, in her
apprehension, to a misprision, at last, of treason, if not to actual rebellion
against her matrimonial authority; and in her inward soul she did vow to take
vengeance on the Lord Keeper, as on a subject detected in meditating revolt.
Her indignation burned the more fiercely as she found herself obliged to
suppress it in presence of Lady Blenkensop, the kinswoman, and of Craigengelt,
the confidential friend, of Bucklaw, of whose alliance she now became trebly
desirous, since it occurred to her alarmed imagination that her husband might,
in his policy or timidity, prefer that of Ravenswood.</p>
<p>The Captain was engineer enough to discover that the train was fired; and
therefore heard, in the course of the same day, without the least surprise,
that Lady Ashton had resolved to abridge her visit to Lady Blenkensop, and set
forth with the peep of morning on her return to Scotland, using all the
despatch which the state of the roads and the mode of travelling would possibly
permit.</p>
<p>Unhappy Lord Keeper! little was he aware what a storm was travelling towards
him in all the speed with which an old-fashioned coach and six could possibly
achieve its journey. He, like Don Gayferos, “forgot his lady fair and
true,” and was only anxious about the expected visit of the Marquis of
A——. Soothfast tidings had assured him that this nobleman was at
length, and without fail, to honour his castle at one in the afternoon, being a
late dinner-hour; and much was the bustle in consequence of the annunciation.
The Lord Keeper traversed the chambers, held consultation with the butler in
the cellars, and even ventured, at the risk of a <i>démêlé</i> with a cook of a
spirit lofty enough to scorn the admonitions of Lady Ashton herself, to peep
into the kitchen. Satisfied, at length, that everything was in as active a
train of preparation as was possible, he summoned Ravenswood and his daughter
to walk upon the terrace, for the purpose of watching, from that commanding
position, the earliest symptoms of his lordship’s approach. For this
purpose, with slow and idle step, he paraded the terrace, which, flanked with a
heavy stone battlement, stretched in front of the castle upon a level with the
first story; while visitors found access to the court by a projecting gateway,
the bartizan or flat-leaded roof of which was accessible from the terrace by an
easy flight of low and broad steps. The whole bore a resemblance partly to a
castle, partly to a nobleman’s seat; and though calculated, in some
respects, for defence, evinced that it had been constructed under a sense of
the power and security of the ancient Lords of Ravenswood.</p>
<p>This pleasant walk commanded a beautiful and extensive view. But what was most
to our present purpose, there were seen from the terrace two roads, one leading
from the east, and one from the westward, which, crossing a ridge opposed to
the eminence on which the castle stood, at different angles, gradually
approached each other, until they joined not far from the gate of the avenue.
It was to the westward approach that the Lord Keeper, from a sort of fidgeting
anxiety, his daughter, from complaisance to him, and Ravenswood, though feeling
some symptoms of internal impatience, out of complaisance to his daughter,
directed their eyes to see the precursors of the Marquis’s approach.</p>
<p>These were not long of presenting themselves. Two running footmen, dressed in
white, with black jockey-caps, and long staffs in their hands, headed the
train; and such was their agility, that they found no difficulty in keeping the
necessary advance, which the etiquette of their station required, before the
carriage and horsemen. Onward they came at a long swinging trot, arguing
unwearied speed in their long-breathed calling. Such running footmen are often
alluded to in old plays (I would particularly instance Middleton’s Mad
World, my Masters), and perhaps may be still remembered by some old persons in
Scotland, as part of the retinue of the ancient nobility when travelling in
full ceremony. Behind these glancing meteors, who footed it as if the Avenger
of Blood had been behind them, came a cloud of dust, raised by riders who
preceded, attended, or followed the state-carriage of the Marquis.</p>
<p>The privilege of nobility, in those days, had something in it impressive on the
imagination. The dresses and liveries and number of their attendants, their
style of travelling, the imposing, and almost warlike, air of the armed men who
surrounded them, place them far above the laird, who travelled with his brace
of footmen; and as to rivalry from the mercantile part of the community, these
would as soon have thought of imitating the state equipage of the Sovereign. At
present it is different; and I myself, Peter Pattieson, in a late journey to
Edinburgh, had the honour, in the mail-coach phrase to “change a
leg” with a peer of the realm. It was not so in the days of which I
write; and the Marquis’s approach, so long expected in vain, now took
place in the full pomp of ancient aristocracy. Sir William Ashton was so much
interested in what he beheld, and in considering the ceremonial of reception,
in case any circumstance had been omitted, that he scarce heard his son Henry
exclaim: “There is another coach and six coming down the east road, papa;
can they both belong to the Marquis of A——?”</p>
<p>At length, when the youngster had fairly compelled his attention by pulling his
sleeve,</p>
<p class="poem">
He turned his eyes, and, as he turned, survey’d<br/>
An awful vision.</p>
<p>Sure enough, another coach and six, with four servants or outriders in
attendance, was descending the hill from the eastward, at such a pace as made
it doubtful which of the carriages thus approaching from different quarters
would first reach the gate at the extremity of the avenue. The one coach was
green, the other blue; and not the green and blue chariots in the circus of
Rome or Constantinople excited more turmoil among the citizens than the double
apparition occasioned in the mind of the Lord Keeper.</p>
<p>We all remember the terrible exclamation of the dying profligate, when a
friend, to destroy what he supposed the hypochondriac idea of a spectre
appearing in a certain shape at a given hour, placed before him a person
dressed up in the manner he described. “<i>Mon Dieu!</i>” said the
expiring sinner, who, it seems, saw both the real and polygraphic apparition,
“<i>il y en a deux!</i>”</p>
<p>The surprise of the Lord Keeper was scarcely less unpleasing at the duplication
of the expected arrival; his mind misgave him strangely. There was no neighbour
who would have approached so unceremoniously, at a time when ceremony was held
in such respect. It must be Lady Ashton, said his conscience, and followed up
the hint with an anxious anticipation of the purpose of her sudden and
unannounced return. He felt that he was caught “in the manner.”
That the company in which she had so unluckily surprised him was likely to be
highly distasteful to her, there was no question; and the only hope which
remained for him was her high sense of dignified propriety, which, he trusted,
might prevent a public explosion. But so active were his doubts and fears as
altogether to derange his purposed ceremonial for the reception of the Marquis.</p>
<p>These feelings of apprehension were not confined to Sir William Ashton.
“It is my mother—it is my mother!” said Lucy, turning as pale
as ashes, and clasping her hands together as she looked at Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“And if it be Lady Ashton,” said her lover to her in a low tone,
“what can be the occasion of such alarm? Surely the return of a lady to
the family from which she has been so long absent should excite other
sensations than those of fear and dismay.”</p>
<p>“You do not know my mother,” said Miss Ashton, in a tone almost
breathless with terror; “what will she say when she sees you in this
place!”</p>
<p>“My stay has been too long,” said Ravenswood, somewhat haughtily,
“if her displeasure at my presence is likely to be so formidable. My dear
Lucy,” he resumed, in a tone of soothing encouragement, “you are
too childishly afraid of Lady Ashton; she is a woman of family—a lady of
fashion—a person who must know the world, and what is due to her husband
and her husband’s guests.” Lucy shook her head; and, as if her
mother, still at the distance of half a mile, could have seen and scrutinised
her deportment, she withdrew herself from beside Ravenswood, and, taking her
brother Henry’s arm, led him to a different part of the terrace. The
Keeper also shuffled down towards the portal of the great gate, without
inviting Ravenswood to accompany him; and thus he remained standing alone on
the terrace, deserted and shunned, as it were, by the inhabitants of the
mansion. This suited not the mood of one who was proud in proportion to his
poverty, and who thought that, in sacrificing his deep-rooted resentments so
far as to become Sir William Ashton’s guest, he conferred a favour, and
received none. “I can forgive Lucy,” he said to himself; “she
is young, timid, and conscious of an important engagement assumed without her
mother’s sanction; yet she should remember with whom it has been assumed,
and leave me no reason to suspect that she is ashamed of her choice. For the
Keeper, sense, spirit, and expression seem to have left his face and manner
since he had the first glimpse of Lady Ashton’s carriage. I must watch
how this is to end; and, if they give me reason to think myself an unwelcome
guest, my visit is soon abridged.”</p>
<p>With these suspicions floating on his mind, he left the terrace, and walking
towards the stables of the castle, gave directions that his horse should be
kept in readiness, in case he should have occasion to ride abroad.</p>
<p>In the mean while, the drivers of the two carriages, the approach of which had
occasioned so much dismay at the castle, had become aware of each other’s
presence, as they approached upon different lines to the head of the avenue, as
a common centre. Lady Ashton’s driver and postilions instantly received
orders to get foremost, if possible, her ladyship being desirous of despatching
her first interview with her husband before the arrival of these guests,
whoever they might happen to be. On the other hand, the coachman of the
Marquis, conscious of his own dignity and that of his master, and observing the
rival charioteer was mending his pace, resolved, like a true brother of the
whip, whether ancient or modern, to vindicate his right of precedence. So that,
to increase the confusion of the Lord Keeper’s understanding, he saw the
short time which remained for consideration abridged by the haste of the
contending coachmen, who, fixing their eyes sternly on each other, and applying
the lash smartly to their horses, began to thunder down the descent with
emulous rapidity, while the horsemen who attended them were forced to put on to
a hand-gallop.</p>
<p>Sir William’s only chance now remaining was the possibility of an
overturn, and that his lady or visitor might break their necks. I am not aware
that he formed any distinct wish on the subject, but I have no reason to think
that his grief in either case would have been altogether inconsolable. This
chance, however, also disappeared; for Lady Ashton, though insensible to fear,
began to see the ridicule of running a race with a visitor of distinction, the
goal being the portal of her own castle, and commanded her coachman, as they
approached the avenue, to slacken his pace, and allow precedence to the
stranger’s equipage; a command which he gladly obeyed, as coming in time
to save his honour, the horses of the Marquis’s carriage being better,
or, at least, fresher than his own. He restrained his pace, therefore, and
suffered the green coach to enter the avenue, with all its retinue, which pass
it occupied with the speed of a whirlwind. The Marquis’s laced charioteer
no sooner found the <i>pas d’avance</i> was granted to him than he
resumed a more deliberate pace, at which he advanced under the embowering shade
of the lofty elms, surrounded by all the attendants; while the carriage of Lady
Ashton followed, still more slowly, at some distance.</p>
<p>In the front of the castle, and beneath the portal which admitted guests into
the inner court, stood Sir William Ashton, much perplexed in mind, his younger
son and daughter beside him, and in their rear a train of attendants of various
ranks, in and out of livery. The nobility and gentry of Scotland, at this
period, were remarkable even to extravagance for the number of their servants,
whose services were easily purchased in a country where men were numerous
beyond proportion to the means of employing them.</p>
<p>The manners of a man trained like Sir William Ashton are too much at his
command to remain long disconcerted with the most adverse concurrence of
circumstances. He received the Marquis, as he alighted from his equipage, with
the usual compliments of welcome; and, as he ushered him into the great hall,
expressed his hope that his journey had been pleasant. The Marquis was a tall,
well-made man, with a thoughtful and intelligent countenance, and an eye in
which the fire of ambition had for some years replaced the vivacity of youth; a
bold, proud expression of countenance, yet chastened by habitual caution, and
the desire which, as the head of a party, he necessarily entertained of
acquiring popularity. He answered with courtesy the courteous inquiries of the
Lord Keeper, and was formally presented to Miss Ashton, in the course of which
ceremony the Lord Keeper gave the first symptom of what was chiefly occupying
his mind, by introducing his daughter as “his wife, Lady Ashton.”</p>
<p>Lucy blushed; the Marquis looked surprised at the extremely juvenile appearance
of his hostess, and the Lord Keeper with difficulty rallied himself so far as
to explain. “I should have said my daughter, my lord; but the truth is,
that I saw Lady Ashton’s carriage enter the avenue shortly after your
lordship’s, and——”</p>
<p>“Make no apology, my lord,” replied his noble guest; “let me
entreat you will wait on your lady, and leave me to cultivate Miss
Ashton’s acquaintance. I am shocked my people should have taken
precedence of our hostess at her own gate; but your lordship is aware that I
supposed Lady Ashton was still in the south. Permit me to beseech you will
waive ceremony, and hasten to welcome her.”</p>
<p>This was precisely what the Lord Keeper longed to do; and he instantly profited
by his lordship’s obliging permission. To see Lady Ashton, and encounter
the first burst of her displeasure in private, might prepare her, in some
degree, to receive her unwelcome guests with due decorum. As her carriage,
therefore, stopped, the arm of the attentive husband was ready to assist Lady
Ashton in dismounting. Looking as if she saw him not, she put his arm aside,
and requested that of Captain Craigengelt, who stood by the coach with his
laced hat under his arm, having acted as <i>cavaliere servente</i>, or squire
in attendance, during the journey. Taking hold of this respectable
person’s arm as if to support her, Lady Ashton traversed the court,
uttering a word or two by way of direction to the servants, but not one to Sir
William, who in vain endeavoured to attract her attention, as he rather
followed than accompanied her into the hall, in which they found the Marquis in
close conversation with the Master of Ravenswood. Lucy had taken the first
opportunity of escaping. There was embarrassment on every countenance except
that of the Marquis of A——; for even Craigengelt’s impudence
was hardly able to veil his fear of Ravenswood, and the rest felt the
awkwardness of the position in which they were thus unexpectedly placed.</p>
<p>After waiting a moment to be presented by Sir William Ashton, the Marquis
resolved to introduce himself. “The Lord Keeper,” he said, bowing
to Lady Ashton, “has just introduced to me his daughter as his wife; he
might very easily present Lady Ashton as his daughter, so little does she
differ from what I remember her some years since. Will she permit an old
acquaintance the privilege of a guest?”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0261.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Illustration" /><br/></div>
<p>He saluted the lady with too good a grace to apprehend a repulse, and then
proceeded: “This, Lady Ashton, is a peacemaking visit, and therefore I
presume to introduce my cousin, the young Master of Ravenswood, to your
favourable notice.”</p>
<p>Lady Ashton could not choose but courtesy; but there was in her obeisance an
air of haughtiness approaching to contemptuous repulse. Ravenswood could not
choose but bow; but his manner returned the scorn with which he had been
greeted.</p>
<p>“Allow me,” she said, “to present to your lordship <i>my</i>
friend.” Craigengelt, with the forward impudence which men of his cast
mistake for ease, made a sliding bow to the Marquis, which he graced by a
flourish of his gold-laced hat. The lady turned to her husband. “You and
I, Sir William,” she said, and these were the first words she had
addressed to him, “have acquired new acquaintances since we parted; let
me introduce the acquisition I have made to mine—Captain
Craigengelt.”</p>
<p>Another bow, and another flourish of the gold-laced hat, which was returned by
the Lord Keeper without intimation of former recognition, and with that sort of
anxious readiness which intimated his wish that peace and amnesty should take
place betwixt the contending parties, including the auxiliaries on both sides.
“Let me introduce you to the Master of Ravenswood,” said he to
Captain Craigengelt, following up the same amicable system.</p>
<p>But the Master drew up his tall form to the full extent of his height, and
without so much as looking towards the person thus introduced to him, he said,
in a marked tone: “Captain Craigengelt and I are already perfectly well
acquainted with each other.”</p>
<p>“Perfectly—perfectly,” replied the Captain, in a mumbling
tone, like that of a double echo, and with a flourish of his hat, the
circumference of which was greatly abridged, compared with those which had so
cordially graced his introduction to the Marquis and the Lord Keeper.</p>
<p>Lockhard, followed by three menials, now entered with wine and refreshments,
which it was the fashion to offer as a whet before dinner; and when they were
placed before the guests, Lady Ashton made an apology for withdrawing her
husband from them for some minutes upon business of special import. The
Marquis, of course, requested her ladyship would lay herself under no
restraint; and Craigengelt, bolting with speed a second glass of racy canary,
hastened to leave the room, feeling no great pleasure in the prospect of being
left alone with the Marquis of A—— and the Master of Ravenswood;
the presence of the former holding him in awe, and that of the latter in bodily
terror.</p>
<p>Some arrangements about his horse and baggage formed the pretext for his sudden
retreat, in which he persevered, although Lady Ashton gave Lockhard orders to
be careful most particularly to accommodate Captain Craigengelt with all the
attendance which he could possibly require. The Marquis and the Master of
Ravenswood were thus left to communicate to each other their remarks upon the
reception which they had met with, while Lady Ashton led the way, and her lord
followed somewhat like a condemned criminal, to her ladyship’s
dressing-room.</p>
<p>So soon as the spouses had both entered, her ladyship gave way to that fierce
audacity of temper which she had with difficulty suppressed, out of respect to
appearances. She shut the door behind the alarmed Lord Keeper, took the key out
of the spring-lock, and with a countenance which years had not bereft of its
haughty charms, and eyes which spoke at once resolution and resentment, she
addressed her astounded husband in these words: “My lord, I am not
greatly surprised at the connexions you have been pleased to form during my
absence, they are entirely in conformity with your birth and breeding; and if I
did expect anything else, I heartily own my error, and that I merit, by having
done so, the disappointment you had prepared for me.”</p>
<p>“My dear Lady Ashton—my dear Eleanor [Margaret],” said the
Lord Keeper, “listen to reason for a moment, and I will convince you I
have acted with all the regard due to the dignity, as well as the interest, of
my family.”</p>
<p>“To the interest of <i>your</i> family I conceive you perfectly capable
of attending,” returned the indignant lady, “and even to the
dignity of your own family also, as far as it requires any looking after. But
as mine happens to be inextricably involved with it, you will excuse me if I
choose to give my own attention so far as that is concerned.”</p>
<p>“What would you have, Lady Ashton?” said the husband. “What
is it that displeases you? Why is it that, on your return after so long an
absence, I am arraigned in this manner?”</p>
<p>“Ask your own conscience, Sir William, what has prompted you to become a
renegade to your political party and opinions, and led you, for what I know, to
be on the point of marrying your only daughter to a beggarly Jacobite bankrupt,
the inveterate enemy of your family to the boot.”</p>
<p>“Why, what, in the name of common sense and common civility, would you
have me do, madam?” answered her husband. “Is it possible for me,
with ordinary decency, to turn a young gentleman out of my house, who saved my
daughter’s life and my own, but the other morning, as it were?”</p>
<p>“Saved your life! I have heard of that story,” said the lady.
“The Lord Keeper was scared by a dun cow, and he takes the young fellow
who killed her for Guy of Warwick: any butcher from Haddington may soon have an
equal claim on your hospitality.”</p>
<p>“Lady Ashton,” stammered the Keeper, “this is intolerable;
and when I am desirous, too, to make you easy by any sacrifice, if you would
but tell me what you would be at.”</p>
<p>“Go down to your guests,” said the imperious dame, “and make
your apology to Ravenswood, that the arrival of Captain Craigengelt and some
other friends renders it impossible for you to offer him lodgings at the
castle. I expect young Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw.”</p>
<p>“Good heavens, madam!” ejaculated her husband. “Ravenswood to
give place to Craigengelt, a common gambler and an informer! It was all I could
do to forbear desiring the fellow to get out of my house, and I was much
surprised to see him in your ladyship’s train.”</p>
<p>“Since you saw him there, you might be well assured,” answered this
meek helpmate, “that he was proper society. As to this Ravenswood, he
only meets with the treatment which, to my certain knowledge, he gave to a
much-valued friend of mine, who had the misfortune to be his guest some time
since. But take your resolution; for, if Ravenswood does not quit the house, I
will.”</p>
<p>Sir William Ashton paced up and down the apartment in the most distressing
agitation; fear, and shame, and anger contending against the habitual deference
he was in the use of rendering to his lady. At length it ended, as is usual
with timid minds placed in such circumstances, in his adopting a <i>mezzo
termine</i>, a middle measure.</p>
<p>“I tell you frankly, madam, I neither can nor will be guilty of the
incivility you propose to the Master of Ravenswood; he has not deserved it at
my hand. If you will be so unreasonable as to insult a man of quality under
your own roof, I cannot prevent you; but I will not at least be the agent in
such a preposterous proceeding.”</p>
<p>“You will not?” asked the lady.</p>
<p>“No, by heavens, madam!” her husband replied; “ask me
anything congruent with common decency, as to drop his acquaintance by degrees,
or the like; but to bid him leave my house is what I will not and cannot
consent to.”</p>
<p>“Then the task of supporting the honour of the family will fall on me, as
it has often done before,” said the lady.</p>
<p>She sat down, and hastily wrote a few lines. The Lord Keeper made another
effort to prevent her taking a step so decisive, just as she opened the door to
call her female attendant from the ante-room. “Think what you are doing,
Lady Ashton: you are making a mortal enemy of a young man who is like to have
the means of harming us——”</p>
<p>“Did you ever know a Douglas who feared an enemy?” answered the
lady, contemptuously.</p>
<p>“Ay, but he is as proud and vindictive as an hundred Douglasses, and an
hundred devils to boot. Think of it for a night only.”</p>
<p>“Not for another moment,” answered the lady. “Here, Mrs.
Patullo, give this billet to young Ravenswood.”</p>
<p>“To the Master, madam?” said Mrs. Patullo.</p>
<p>“Ay, to the Master, if you call him so.”</p>
<p>“I wash my hands of it entirely,” said the Keeper; “and I
shall go down into the garden, and see that Jardine gathers the winter fruit
for the dessert.”</p>
<p>“Do so,” said the lady, looking after him with glances of infinite
contempt; “and thank God that you leave one behind you as fit to protect
the honour of the family as you are to look after pippins and pears.”</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper remained long enough in the garden to give her ladyship’s
mind time to explode, and to let, as he thought, at least the first violence of
Ravenswood’s displeasure blow over. When he entered the hall, he found
the Marquis of A—— giving orders to some of his attendants. He
seemed in high displeasure, and interrupted an apology which Sir William had
commenced for having left his lordship alone.</p>
<p>“I presume, Sir William, you are no stranger to this singular billet with
which <i>my</i> kinsman of Ravenswood (an emphasis on the word
‘my’) has been favoured by your lady; and, of course, that you are
prepared to receive my adieus. My kinsman is already gone, having thought it
unnecessary to offer any on his part, since all former civilities had been
cancelled by this singular insult.”</p>
<p>“I protest, my lord,” said Sir William, holding the billet in his
hand, “I am not privy to the contents of this letter. I know Lady Ashton
is a warm-tempered and prejudiced woman, and I am sincerely sorry for any
offence that has been given or taken; but I hope your lordship will consider
that a lady——”</p>
<p>“Should bear herself towards persons of a certain rank with the breeding
of one,” said the Marquis, completing the half-uttered sentence.</p>
<p>“True, my lord,” said the unfortunate Keeper; “but Lady
Ashton is still a woman——”</p>
<p>“And, as such, methinks,” said the Marquis, again interrupting him,
“should be taught the duties which correspond to her station. But here
she comes, and I will learn from her own mouth the reason of this extraordinary
and unexpected affront offered to my near relation, while both he and I were
her ladyship’s guests.”</p>
<p>Lady Ashton accordingly entered the apartment at this moment. Her dispute with
Sir William, and a subsequent interview with her daughter, had not prevented
her from attending to the duties of her toilette. She appeared in full dress;
and, from the character of her countenance and manner, well became the
splendour with which ladies of quality then appeared on such occasions.</p>
<p>The Marquis of A—— bowed haughtily, and she returned the salute
with equal pride and distance of demeanour. He then took from the passive hand
of Sir William Ashton the billet he had given him the moment before he
approached the lady, and was about to speak, when she interrupted him. “I
perceive, my lord, you are about to enter upon an unpleasant subject. I am
sorry any such should have occurred at this time, to interrupt in the slightest
degree the respectful reception due to your lordship; but so it is. Mr. Edgar
Ravenswood, for whom I have addressed the billet in your lordship’s hand,
has abused the hospitality of this family, and Sir William Ashton’s
softness of temper, in order to seduce a young person into engagements without
her parents’ consent, and of which they never can approve.”</p>
<p>Both gentlemen answered at once. “My kinsman is
incapable——” said the Lord Marquis.</p>
<p>“I am confident that my daughter Lucy is still more
incapable——” said the Lord Keeper.</p>
<p>Lady Ashton at once interrupted and replied to them both: “My Lord
Marquis, your kinsman, if Mr. Ravenswood has the honour to be so, has made the
attempt privately to secure the affections of this young and inexperienced
girl. Sir William Ashton, your daughter has been simple enough to give more
encouragement than she ought to have done to so very improper a suitor.”</p>
<p>“And I think, madam,” said the Lord Keeper, losing his accustomed
temper and patience, “that if you had nothing better to tell us, you had
better have kept this family secret to yourself also.”</p>
<p>“You will pardon me, Sir William,” said the lady, calmly;
“the noble Marquis has a right to know the cause of the treatment I have
found it necessary to use to a gentleman whom he calls his
blood-relation.”</p>
<p>“It is a cause,” muttered the Lord Keeper, “which has emerged
since the effect has taken place; for, if it exists at all, I am sure she knew
nothing of it when her letter to Ravenswood was written.”</p>
<p>“It is the first time that I have heard of this,” said the Marquis;
“but, since your ladyship has tabled a subject so delicate, permit me to
say, that my kinsman’s birth and connexions entitled him to a patient
hearing, and at least a civil refusal, even in case of his being so ambitious
as to raise his eyes to the daughter of Sir William Ashton.”</p>
<p>“You will recollect, my lord, of what blood Miss Lucy Ashton is come by
the mother’s side,” said the lady.</p>
<p>“I do remember your descent—from a younger branch of the house of
Angus,” said the Marquis; “and your ladyship—forgive me,
lady—ought not to forget that the Ravenswoods have thrice intermarried
with the main stem. Come, madam, I know how matters stand—old and
long-fostered prejudices are difficult to get over, I make every allowance for
them; I ought not, and I would not, otherwise have suffered my kinsman to
depart alone, expelled, in a manner, from this house, but I had hopes of being
a mediator. I am still unwilling to leave you in anger, and shall not set
forward till after noon, as I rejoin the Master of Ravenswood upon the road a
few miles from hence. Let us talk over this matter more coolly.”</p>
<p>“It is what I anxiously desire, my lord,” said Sir William Ashton,
eagerly. “Lady Ashton, we will not permit my Lord of A—— to
leave us in displeasure. We must compel him to tarry dinner at the
castle.”</p>
<p>“The castle,” said the lady, “and all that it contains, are
at the command of the Marquis, so long as he chooses to honour it with his
residence; but touching the farther discussion of this disagreeable
topic——”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, good madam,” said the Marquis; “but I cannot
allow you to express any hasty resolution on a subject so important. I see that
more company is arriving; and, since I have the good fortune to renew my former
acquaintance with Lady Ashton, I hope she will give me leave to avoid perilling
what I prize so highly upon any disagreeable subject of discussion—at
least till we have talked over more pleasant topics.”</p>
<p>The lady smiled, courtesied, and gave her hand to the Marquis, by whom, with
all the formal gallantry of the time, which did not permit the guest to tuck
the lady of the house under the arm, as a rustic does his sweetheart at a wake,
she was ushered to the eating-room.</p>
<p>Here they were joined by Bucklaw, Craigengelt, and other neighbours, whom the
Lord Keeper had previously invited to meet the Marquis of A——. An
apology, founded upon a slight indisposition, was alleged as an excuse for the
absence of Miss Ashton, whose seat appeared unoccupied. The entertainment was
splendid to profusion, and was protracted till a late hour.</p>
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