<h3> CHAPTER XLII <br/><br/> A SCOTTISH LEGEND </h3>
<p>Among the recollections of Scotland which
come thronging on from other days, the supernatural
always plays a part. I admit they are not
easy to deal with. If you believe in ghosts or in
legends, a great majority of your readers do not
believe in you. If you are a sceptic, the credulous
pass you by with an air of pained superiority. If
you neither believe nor disbelieve, you are set
down as an agnostic; and there are great numbers
of excellent people to whom the word agnostic
implies reproach. An agnostic, however, is not
one who believes or disbelieves, but who, whatever
his private conviction may be, declines either to
affirm or deny the truth of the matter in question.</p>
<p>But, although an unbeliever, I know of one story
connecting itself with a famous legend, which is,
so far as it goes, absolutely true, and this I am going
to tell exactly as it happened.</p>
<p>In 1883 I was staying at Brechin Castle with
Lord and Lady Dalhousie, and Lady Dalhousie
proposed one morning that we should drive over
to Cortachy Castle to lunch. Brechin Castle and
Cortachy Castle are both in Forfarshire and
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P396"></SPAN>396}</span>
fourteen miles apart. At that time Cortachy Castle
was let to the late Earl of Dudley; the seventh
Earl of Airlie to whom it belonged having lately
died. There's a tragic atmosphere for the eighth
Earl was killed at Diamond Hill in South Africa
in 1900; one of the many men of rank and position
and fortune and everything to live for who, in the
early disastrous days of the Boer War, gave up
everything to fight for the flag and for their country
and sovereign.</p>
<p>The family name is Ogilvy, and the family name
and title are both old, going back to at least 1491.
They were Ambassadors and great officers of State,
and the seventh Lord Ogilvy was made an Earl.
Two acts of attainder are testimony to the active
part they took in those troubled times, and to their
capacity for holding fast to the losing side. They
were in the Earl of Mar's rebellion in 1715, and
fought for the Pretender at Culloden.</p>
<p>Besides all that, the Ogilvys carried on for
generations a feud with the Campbells. On both
sides there were burnings and harryings and much
shedding of blood. There's no need to ask which
of them was the more in fault. The standards of
those days were not as the standards of ours; and
there was a good deal less of that homage which
vice now pays to virtue. So it happened that
one day early in the seventeenth century the
Ogilvys found themselves besieged in Cortachy
Castle by the then Earl of Argyll or his lieutenant.
The besiegers sent in a herald with a drummer-boy
to demand the surrender of the castle. The
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P397"></SPAN>397}</span>
Ogilvy people took the drummer-boy and hanged
him over the battlements, his mother looking from
the camp outside. As the fashion was in those
days, she launched a curse, or more than one, at
the Ogilvys, and a prophecy. She foretold that
whenever, through all the ages to come, death or
disaster should visit them they would first hear
the beating of the drum by the drummer-boy.</p>
<p>Such is the story as it was told to me. It is
a well-known tradition, and you are told also that
her prophecy has been strictly fulfilled. The
beating of the drum by the drummer-boy has been
heard at least once in each generation during the
centuries that ever since then have witnessed the
varying fortunes of this family. That is a matter
as to which I neither affirm nor deny. How could
I? I was not there. But the narrative is a
necessary preface to the account of the day when the
events I set out to describe did actually occur.</p>
<p>At luncheon Lady Dudley, known then and still
as the beautiful Lady Dudley, told us that when
Lord Hardwicke, one of the guests staying with
them, came down to breakfast that morning he
asked her whether the drummer-boy legend applied
to the tenants of the castle for the time being or
only to the Ogilvys.</p>
<p>"Oh, only to the Ogilvys, of course."</p>
<p>"Then you won't mind my telling you that I
heard the drummer-boy beating his drum last
night."</p>
<p>And Lady Dudley added:</p>
<p>"I did not mind in the least. Whether I believe
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P398"></SPAN>398}</span>
in the menace or not, I never heard that it had
anything to do with anybody but the Ogilvys. If
it could effect anybody in this case it would be Lord
Hardwicke, who heard it, and not us who did not
hear it."</p>
<p>With which we naturally agreed. We finished
our lunch peacefully and pleasantly, and at three
o'clock Lady Dalhousie and I drove back to
Brechin Castle, where there were in all twelve guests.
We dined as usual at a quarter past eight, and
shortly before ten the ladies left the dining-room.
Just after ten the door opened again. Lady Dalhousie
sailed in, her face brilliant with excitement,
but her manner serene as usual, and said to her
husband:</p>
<p>"Dalhousie, Cortachy Castle is burnt to the
ground; the Dudleys are here and you must
come at once."</p>
<p>At the drawing-room door stood Lady Dudley,
pale and beautiful, and warned us that her husband
knew as yet nothing of what had happened, and
asked us to be careful to say nothing which should
alarm him. He was at that time very ill, and his
mind was affected. The rest of the evening after
we went into the drawing-room passed without any
mention of the disaster to Cortachy. Lord Dudley
sat down to his rubber of whist, won it, and went
to bed not knowing that the house in which he had
expected to sleep had been destroyed by fire.
When he was told next morning he said, "Very
well," and turned again to his newspaper.</p>
<p>The explanation was this: After Lady Dalhousie
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P399"></SPAN>399}</span>
and I left Cortachy Lady Dudley took her husband
for a drive, as usual. As they were returning, late,
they were stopped by a messenger who handed
Lady Dudley a note from the factor, saying the
castle was on fire and there was no hope of saving
it.</p>
<p>"What is it?" asked Lord Dudley.</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing much," answered his wife. "The
kitchen chimney has been on fire and the place is
in a mess. I think we had better drive over to
Brechin and ask the Dalhousies to give us dinner."</p>
<p>This ready wit carried the day and saved Lord
Dudley the shock which his wife dreaded. But
the whole company of guests at Cortachy were
also left homeless, and they also came to Brechin
and slept there. I never quite understood how,
for Brechin Castle can put up, in a normal way,
fourteen people, and we slept that night fifty-six.
But Lady Dalhousie besides being a reigning beauty,
had practical talents and managed it all as if an
inundation of unexpected guests were an everyday
affair.</p>
<p>There is one thing to be added. Past Cortachy
Castle flows a shallow stream with a stony bed.
It was early in September. The water was very
low, and what there was rippled and broke over
the stones with a noise which, at night and amid
uncertain slumbers, might easily be mistaken for
the beating of a drum by a man whose mind was
full of the drummer-boy story. After I had heard
about Lord Hardwicke at luncheon I had walked
along the banks of this burn, and the faint likeness
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P400"></SPAN>400}</span>
of the waters beating on the stones to the
beating of a drum occurred to me. Perhaps a mere
fancy on my part. I don't press it. If anybody
prefers to believe in the legend I don't ask him to
believe in my conjecture. By all means let him
nourish his own faith in his own way.</p>
<p>He may like to know, moreover, that Lord Hardwicke,
now dead, was one of the last persons in the
world to conceive or cherish an illusion. A
well-known man of the world; in his way a celebrity,
if only known for his hats, which were the glossiest
ever seen outside of the stock Exchange. He had
gone the pace; "climbed outside of every stick of
property he possessed," said one of his friends,
and had acquired a vast and varied stock of
experience in the process. On the face of it, not at
all the kind of man to believe too much; nor to
believe in anything, as was said of Mr. Lowe, which
he could not bite.</p>
<p>He came into the dining-room that night at
Brechin and stayed on the next day. Among
Lady Dalhousie's guests was Mr. Huxley. Certainly
a man of the world was Mr. Huxley, but of a
different world from Lord Hardwicke's. They had
never met. You might have said they had not a
subject in common. But they talked to each other,
and to the surprise of the company it presently
became evident that they got on together. I said
as much to Mr. Huxley afterward. He answered
in his decisive way:</p>
<p>"Don't make any mistake. Lord Hardwicke
has powers of mind for which even his own set, so
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P401"></SPAN>401}</span>
far as I know, has never given him credit. We
did not talk about the weather. He was a man
who would put his mind to yours no matter what
you talked about, and it would take you all your
time to keep up with him."</p>
<p>Years afterward I reminded Mr. Huxley of this,
and asked him had he ever met Lord Hardwicke
again.</p>
<p>"No, never; and I regret it. But we did not
move quite in the same orbits. I have hardly seen
anybody since who made such an impression on me.
It's not a question of orbits, it's a question of
men."</p>
<p>I asked Lord Hardwicke about the same time
whether he remembered meeting Mr. Huxley.</p>
<p>"Remember? How many Huxleys are there in
the world that you should suppose I could forget
this one?"</p>
<p>It is one of the distinctions of English life in
general, and of London, to which New York will
perhaps some day attain, that sooner or later it
brings together men and women, each of the first
rank in his or her own department and each unlike
the other. They have long understood here that
a society which is not various ends in monotony;
and of all forms of dulness that is the dullest.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap43"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P402"></SPAN>402}</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />