<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
<p class="poem">
What doth ensue<br/>
But moody and dull melancholy,<br/>
Kinsman to grim and comfortless despair,<br/>
And at her heel, a huge infectious troop<br/>
Of pale distemperatures, and foes to life?<br/>
<br/>
Comedy of Errors.</p>
<p>As some vindication of the ease with which Bucklaw (who otherwise, as he termed
himself, was really a very good-humoured fellow) resigned his judgment to the
management of Lady Ashton, while paying his addresses to her daughter, the
reader must call to mind the strict domestic discipline which, at this period,
was exercised over the females of a Scottish family.</p>
<p>The manners of the country in this, as in many other respects, coincided with
those of France before the Revolution. Young women of the higher rank seldom
mingled in society until after marriage, and, both in law and fact, were held
to be under the strict tutelage of their parents, who were too apt to enforce
the views for their settlement in life without paying any regard to the
inclination of the parties chiefly interested. On such occasions, the suitor
expected little more from his bride than a silent acquiescence in the will of
her parents; and as few opportunities of acquaintance, far less of intimacy,
occurred, he made his choice by the outside, as the lovers in the Merchant of
Venice select the casket, contented to trust to chance the issue of the lottery
in which he had hazarded a venture.</p>
<p>It was not therefore surprising, such being the general manners of the age,
that Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw, whom dissipated habits had detached in some degree
from the best society, should not attend particularly to those feelings in his
elected bride to which many men of more sentiment, experience, and reflection
would, in all probability, have been equally indifferent. He knew what all
accounted the principal point, that her parents and friends, namely, were
decidedly in his favour, and that there existed most powerful reasons for their
predilection.</p>
<p>In truth, the conduct of the Marquis of A——, since
Ravenswood’s departure, had been such as almost to bar the possibility of
his kinsman’s union with Lucy Ashton. The Marquis was Ravenswood’s
sincere but misjudging friend; or rather, like many friends and patrons, he
consulted what he considered to be his relation’s true interest, although
he knew that in doing so he ran counter to his inclinations.</p>
<p>The Marquis drove on, therefore, with the plentitude of ministerial authority,
an appeal to the British House of Peers against those judgments of the courts
of law by which Sir William became possessed of Ravenswood’s hereditary
property. As this measure, enforced with all the authority of power, was new in
Scottish judicial proceedings, though now so frequently resorted to, it was
exclaimed against by the lawyers on the opposite side of politics, as an
interference with the civil judicature of the country, equally new, arbitrary,
and tyrannical. And if it thus affected even strangers connected with them only
by political party, it may be guessed what the Ashton family themselves said
and thought under so gross a dispensation. Sir William, still more
worldly-minded than he was timid, was reduced to despair by the loss by which
he was threatened. His son’s haughtier spirit was exalted into rage at
the idea of being deprived of his expected patrimony. But to Lady
Ashton’s yet more vindictive temper the conduct of Ravenswood, or rather
of his patron, appeared to be an offence challenging the deepest and most
immortal revenge. Even the quiet and confiding temper of Lucy herself, swayed
by the opinions expressed by all around her, could not but consider the conduct
of Ravenswood as precipitate, and even unkind. “It was my father,”
she repeated with a sigh, “who welcomed him to this place, and
encouraged, or at least allowed, the intimacy between us. Should he not have
remembered this, and requited it with at least some moderate degree of
procrastination in the assertion of his own alleged rights? I would have
forfeited for him double the value of these lands, which he pursues with an
ardour that shows he has forgotten how much I am implicated in the
matter.”</p>
<p>Lucy, however, could only murmur these things to herself, unwilling to increase
the prejudices against her lover entertained by all around her, who exclaimed
against the steps pursued on his account as illegal, vexatious, and tyrannical,
resembling the worst measures in the worst times of the worst Stuarts, and a
degradation of Scotland, the decisions of whose learned judges were thus
subjected to the review of a court composed indeed of men of the highest rank,
and who were not trained to the study of any municipal law, and might be
supposed specially to hold in contempt that of Scotland. As a natural
consequence of the alleged injustice meditated towards her father, every means
was restored to, and every argument urged to induce Miss Ashton to break off
her engagement with Ravenswood, as being scandalous, shameful, and sinful,
formed with the mortal enemy of her family, and calculated to add bitterness to
the distress of her parents.</p>
<p>Lucy’s spirit, however, was high, and, although unaided and alone, she
could have borne much: she could have endured the repinings of her father; his
murmurs against what he called the tyrannical usage of the ruling party; his
ceaseless charges of ingratitude against Ravenswood; his endless lectures on
the various means by which contracts may be voided and annulled; his quotations
from the civil, municipal, and the canon law; and his prelections upon the
<i>patria potestas</i>.</p>
<p>She might have borne also in patience, or repelled with scorn, the bitter
taunts and occasional violence of her brother, Colonel Douglas Ashton, and the
impertinent and intrusive interference of other friends and relations. But it
was beyond her power effectually to withstand or elude the constant and
unceasing persecution of Lady Ashton, who, laying every other wish aside, had
bent the whole efforts of her powerful mind to break her daughter’s
contract with Ravenswood, and to place a perpetual bar between the lovers, by
effecting Lucy’s union with Bucklaw. Far more deeply skilled than her
husband in the recesses of the human heart, she was aware that in this way she
might strike a blow of deep and decisive vengeance upon one whom she esteemed
as her mortal enemy; nor did she hesitate at raising her arm, although she knew
that the wound must be dealt through the bosom of her daughter. With this stern
and fixed purpose, she sounded every deep and shallow of her daughter’s
soul, assumed alternately every disguise of manner which could serve her
object, and prepared at leisure every species of dire machinery by which the
human mind can be wrenched from its settled determination. Some of these were
of an obvious description, and require only to be cursorily mentioned; others
were characteristic of the time, the country, and the persons engaged in this
singular drama.</p>
<p>It was of the last consequence that all intercourse betwixt the lovers should
be stopped, and, by dint of gold and authority, Lady Ashton contrived to
possess herself of such a complete command of all who were placed around her
daughter, that, if fact, no leaguered fortress was ever more completely
blockaded; while, at the same time, to all outward appearance Miss Ashton lay
under no restriction. The verge of her parents’ domains became, in
respect to her, like the viewless and enchanted line drawn around a fairy
castle, where nothing unpermitted can either enter from without or escape from
within. Thus every letter, in which Ravenswood conveyed to Lucy Ashton the
indispensable reasons which detained him abroad, and more than one note which
poor Lucy had addressed to him through what she thought a secure channel, fell
into the hands of her mother. It could not be but that the tenor of these
intercepted letters, especially those of Ravenswood, should contain something
to irritate the passions and fortify the obstinacy of her into whose hands they
fell; but Lady Ashton’s passions were too deep-rooted to require this
fresh food. She burnt the papers as regularly as she perused them; and as they
consumed into vapour and tinder, regarded them with a smile upon her compressed
lips, and an exultation in her steady eye, which showed her confidence that the
hopes of the writers should soon be rendered equally unsubstantial.</p>
<p>It usually happens that fortune aids the machinations of those who are prompt
to avail themselves of every chance that offers. A report was wafted from the
continent, founded, like others of the same sort, upon many plausible
circumstances, but without any real basis, stating the Master of Ravenswood to
be on the eve of marriage with a foreign lady of fortune and distinction. This
was greedily caught up by both the political parties, who were at once
struggling for power and for popular favour, and who seized, as usual, upon the
most private circumstances in the lives of each other’s partisans to
convert them into subjects of political discussion.</p>
<p>The Marquis of A—— gave his opinion aloud and publicly, not indeed
in the coarse terms ascribed to him by Captain Craigengelt, but in a manner
sufficiently offensive to the Ashtons. “He thought the report,” he
said, “highly probable, and heartily wished it might be true. Such a
match was fitter and far more creditable for a spirited young fellow than a
marriage with the daughter of an old Whig lawyer, whose chicanery had so nearly
ruined his father.”</p>
<p>The other party, of course, laying out of view the opposition which the Master
of Ravenswood received from Miss Ashton’s family, cried shame upon his
fickleness and perfidy, as if he had seduced the young lady into an engagement,
and wilfully and causelessly abandoned her for another.</p>
<p>Sufficient care was taken that this report should find its way to Ravenswood
Castle through every various channel, Lady Ashton being well aware that the
very reiteration of the same rumour, from so many quarters, could not but give
it a semblance of truth. By some it was told as a piece of ordinary news, by
some communicated as serious intelligence; now it was whispered to Lucy
Ashton’s ear in the tone of malignant pleasantry, and now transmitted to
her as a matter of grave and serious warning.</p>
<p>Even the boy Henry was made the instrument of adding to his sister’s
torments. One morning he rushed into the room with a willow branch in his hand,
which he told her had arrived that instant from Germany for her special
wearing. Lucy, as we have seen, was remarkably fond of her younger brother, and
at that moment his wanton and thoughtless unkindness seemed more keenly
injurious than even the studied insults of her elder brother. Her grief,
however, had no shade of resentment; she folded her arms about the boy’s
neck, and saying faintly, “Poor Henry! you speak but what they tell
you” she burst into a flood of unrestrained tears. The boy was moved,
notwithstanding the thoughtlessness of his age and character. “The devil
take me,” said he, “Lucy, if I fetch you any more of these
tormenting messages again; for I like you better,” said he, kissing away
the tears, “than the whole pack of them; and you shall have my grey pony
to ride on, and you shall canter him if you like—ay, and ride beyond the
village, too, if you have a mind.”</p>
<p>“Who told you,” said Lucy, “that I am not permitted to ride
where I please?”</p>
<p>“That’s a secret,” said the boy; “but you will find you
can never ride beyond the village but your horse will cast a shoe, or fall
lame, or the cattle bell will ring, or something will happen to bring you back.
But if I tell you more of these things, Douglas will not get me the pair of
colours they have promised me, and so good-morrow to you.”</p>
<p>This dialogue plunged Lucy in still deeper dejection, as it tended to show her
plainly what she had for some time suspected, that she was little better than a
prisoner at large in her father’s house. We have described her in the
outset of our story as of a romantic disposition, delighting in tales of love
and wonder, and readily identifying herself with the situation of those
legendary heroines with whose adventures, for want of better reading, her
memory had become stocked. The fairy wand, with which in her solitude she had
delighted to raise visions of enchantment, became now the rod of a magician,
the bond slave of evil <i>genii</i>, serving only to invoke spectres at which
the exorcist trembled. She felt herself the object of suspicion, of scorn, of
dislike at least, if not of hatred, to her own family; and it seemed to her
that she was abandoned by the very person on whose account she was exposed to
the enmity of all around her. Indeed, the evidence of Ravenswood’s
infidelity began to assume every day a more determined character. A soldier of
fortune, of the name of Westenho, an old familiar of Craigengelt’s,
chanced to arrive from abroad about this time. The worthy Captain, though
without any precise communication with Lady Ashton, always acted most regularly
and sedulously in support of her plans, and easily prevailed upon his friend,
by dint of exaggeration of real circumstances and coming of others, to give
explicit testimony to the truth of Ravenswood’s approaching marriage.</p>
<p>Thus beset on all hands, and in a manner reduced to despair, Lucy’s
temper gave way under the pressure of constant affliction and persecution. She
became gloomy and abstracted, and, contrary to her natural and ordinary habit
of mind, sometimes turned with spirit, and even fierceness, on those by whom
she was long and closely annoyed. Her health also began to be shaken, and her
hectic cheek and wandering eye gave symptoms of what is called a fever upon the
spirits. In most mothers this would have moved compassion; but Lady Ashton,
compact and firm of purpose, saw these waverings of health and intellect with
no greater sympathy than that with which the hostile engineer regards the
towers of a beleaguered city as they reel under the discharge of his artillery;
or rather, she considered these starts and inequalities of temper as symptoms
of Lucy’s expiring resolution; as the angler, by the throes and
convulsive exertions of the fish which he has hooked, becomes aware that he
soon will be able to land him. To accelerate the catastrophe in the present
case, Lady Ashton had recourse to an expedient very consistent with the temper
and credulity of those times, but which the reader will probably pronounce
truly detestable and diabolical.</p>
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