Faint the din of battle
bray’d,
Distant down the hollow
wind;
War and terror fled
before,
Wounds and death remain’d
behind. Penrose.
Montrose’s splendid success
over his powerful rival was not attained without some
loss, though not amounting to the tenth of what he
inflicted. The obstinate valour of the Campbells
cost the lives of many brave men of the opposite party;
and more were wounded, the Chief of whom was the brave
young Earl of Menteith, who had commanded the centre.
He was but slightly touched, however, and made rather
a graceful than a terrible appearance when he presented
to his general the standard of Argyle, which he had
taken from the standard-bearer with his own hand,
and slain him in single combat. Montrose dearly
loved his noble kinsman, in whom there was conspicuous
a flash of the generous, romantic, disinterested chivalry
of the old heroic times, entirely different from the
sordid, calculating, and selfish character, which the
practice of entertaining mercenary troops had introduced
into most parts of Europe, and of which degeneracy
Scotland, which furnished soldiers of fortune for
the service of almost every nation, had been contaminated
with a more than usual share. Montrose, whose
native spirit was congenial, although experience had
taught him how to avail himself of the motives of
others, used to Menteith neither the language of praise
nor of promise, but clasped him to his bosom as he
exclaimed, “My gallant kinsman!” And by
this burst of heartfelt applause was Menteith thrilled
with a warmer glow of delight, than if his praises
had been recorded in a report of the action sent directly
to the throne of his sovereign.
“Nothing,” he said, “my
lord, now seems to remain in which I can render any
assistance; permit me to look after a duty of humanity the
Knight of Ardenvohr, as I am told, is our prisoner,
and severely wounded.”
“And well he deserves to be
so,” said Sir Dugald Dalgetty, who came up to
them at that moment with a prodigious addition of acquired
importance, “since he shot my good horse at the
time that I was offering him honourable quarter, which,
I must needs say, was done more like an ignorant Highland
cateran, who has not sense enough to erect a sconce
for the protection of his old hurley-house of a castle,
than like a soldier of worth and quality.”
“Are we to condole with you
then,” said Lord Menteith, “upon the loss
of the famed Gustavus?”
“Even so, my lord,” answered
the soldier, with a deep sigh, “Diem CLAUSIT
supremum, as we said at the Mareschal-College
of Aberdeen. Better so than be smothered like
a cadger’s pony in some flow-moss, or snow-wreath,
which was like to be his fate if this winter campaign
lasted longer. But it has pleased his Excellency”
(making an inclination to Montrose) “to supply
his place by the gift of a noble steed, whom I have
taken the freedom to name ‘loyalty’s
reward,’ in memory of this celebrated occasion.”
“I hope,” said the Marquis,
“you’ll find Loyalty’s Reward, since
you call him so, practised in all the duties of the
field, but I must just hint to you, that
at this time, in Scotland, loyalty is more frequently
rewarded with a halter than with a horse.”
“Ahem! your Excellency is pleased
to be facetious. Loyalty’s Reward is as
perfect as Gustavus in all his exercises, and of a
far finer figure. Marry! his social qualities
are less cultivated, in respect he has kept till now
inferior company.”
“Not meaning his Excellency
the General, I hope,” said Lord Menteith.
“For shame, Sir Dugald!”
“My lord,” answered the
knight gravely, “I am incapable to mean anything
so utterly unbecoming. What I asseverate is, that
his Excellency, having the same intercourse with his
horse during his exercise, that he hath with his soldiers
when training them, may form and break either to every
feat of war which he chooses to practise, and accordingly
that this noble charger is admirably managed.
But as it is the intercourse of private life that
formeth the social character, so I do not apprehend
that of the single soldier to be much polished by the
conversation of the corporal or the sergeant, or that
of Loyalty’s Reward to have been much dulcified,
or ameliorated, by the society of his Excellency’s
grooms, who bestow more oaths, and kicks, and thumps,
than kindness or caresses, upon the animals intrusted
to their charge; whereby many a generous quadruped,
rendered as it were misanthropic, manifests during
the rest of his life a greater desire to kick and bite
his master, than to love and to honour him.”
“Spoken like an oracle,”
said Montrose. “Were there an academy for
the education of horses to be annexed to the Mareschal-College
of Aberdeen, Sir Dugald Dalgetty alone should fill
the chair.”
“Because, being an ass,”
said Menteith, aside to the General, “there
would be some distant relation between the professor
and the students.”
“And now, with your Excellency’s
permission,” said the new-made knight, “I
am going to pay my last visit to the remains of my
old companion in arms.”
“Not with the purpose of going
through the ceremonial of interment?” said the
Marquis, who did not know how far Sir Dugald’s
enthusiasm might lead him; “consider our brave
fellows themselves will have but a hasty burial.”
“Your Excellency will pardon
me,” said Dalgetty; “my purpose is less
romantic. I go to divide poor Gustavus’s
legacy with the fowls of heaven, leaving the flesh
to them, and reserving to myself his hide; which,
in token of affectionate remembrance, I purpose to
form into a cassock and trowsers, after the Tartar
fashion, to be worn under my armour, in respect my
nether garments are at present shamefully the worse
of the wear. Alas! poor Gustavus, why didst
thou not live at least one hour more, to have borne
the honoured weight of knighthood upon thy loins!”
He was now turning away, when the
Marquis called after him, “As you
are not likely to be anticipated in this act of kindness,
Sir Dugald, to your old friend and companion, I trust,”
said the Marquis, “you will first assist me,
and our principal friends, to discuss some of Argyle’s
good cheer, of which we have found abundance in the
Castle.”
“Most willingly, please your
Excellency,” said Sir Dugald; “as meat
and mass never hinder work. Nor, indeed, am I
afraid that the wolves or eagles will begin an onslaught
on Gustavus to-night, in regard there is so much better
cheer lying all around. But,” added he,
“as I am to meet two honourable knights of England,
with others of the knightly degree in your lordship’s
army, I pray it may be explained to them, that now,
and in future, I claim precedence over them all, in
respect of my rank as a Banneret, dubbed in a field
of stricken battle.”
“The devil confound him!”
said Montrose, speaking aside; “he has contrived
to set the kiln on fire as fast as I put it out. ’This
is a point, Sir Dugald,” said he, gravely addressing
him, “which I shall reserve for his Majesty’s
express consideration; in my camp, all must be upon
equality, like the Knights of the Round Table; and
take their places as soldiers should, upon the principle
of, first come, first served.”
“Then I shall take care,”
said Menteith, apart to the Marquis, “that Don
Dugald is not first in place to-day. Sir
Dugald,” added he, raising his voice, “as
you say your wardrobe is out of repair, had you not
better go to the enemy’s baggage yonder, over
which there is a guard placed? I saw them take
out an excellent buff suit, embroidered in front in
silk and silver.”
“Voto A dios! as the
Spaniard says,” exclaimed the Major, “and
some beggarly gilly may get it while I stand prating
here!”
The prospect of booty having at once
driven out of his head both Gustavus and the provant,
he set spurs to Loyalty’s Reward, and rode off
through the field of battle.
“There goes the hound,”
said Menteith, “breaking the face, and trampling
on the body, of many a better man than himself; and
as eager on his sordid spoil as a vulture that stoops
upon carrion. Yet this man the world calls a
soldier and you, my lord, select him as
worthy of the honours of chivalry, if such they can
at this day be termed. You have made the collar
of knighthood the decoration of a mere bloodhound.”
“What could I do?” said
Montrose. “I had no half-picked bones to
give him, and bribed in some manner he must be, I
cannot follow the chase alone. Besides, the dog
has good qualities.”
“If nature has given him such,”
said Menteith, “habit has converted them into
feelings of intense selfishness. He may be punctilious
concerning his reputation, and brave in the execution
of his duty, but it is only because without these
qualities he cannot rise in the service; nay,
his very benevolence is selfish; he may defend his
companion while he can keep his feet, but the instant
he is down, Sir Dugald will be as ready to ease him
of his purse, as he is to convert the skin of Gustavus
into a buff jerkin.”
“And yet, if all this were true,
cousin,” answered Montrose, “there is
something convenient in commanding a soldier, upon
whose motives and springs of action you can calculate
to a mathematical certainty. A fine spirit like
yours, my cousin, alive to a thousand sensations to
which this man’s is as impervious as his corslet, it
is for such that thy friend must feel, while he gives
his advice.” Then, suddenly changing his
tone, he asked Menteith when he had seen Annot Lyle.
The young Earl coloured deeply, and
answered, “Not since last evening, excepting,”
he added, with hesitation, “for one moment, about
half an hour before the battle began.”
“My dear Menteith,” said
Montrose, very kindly, “were you one of the gay
cavaliers of Whitehall, who are, in their way, as great
self-seekers as our friend Dalgetty, should I need
to plague you with enquiring into such an amourette
as this? it would be an intrigue only to be laughed
at. But this is the land of enchantment, where
nets strong as steel are wrought out of ladies’
tresses, and you are exactly the destined knight to
be so fettered. This poor girl is exquisitely
beautiful, and has talents formed to captivate your
romantic temper. You cannot think of injuring
her you cannot think of marrying her?”
“My lord,” replied Menteith,
“you have repeatedly urged this jest, for so
I trust it is meant, somewhat beyond bounds. Annot
Lyle is of unknown birth, a captive, the
daughter, probably, of some obscure outlaw; a dependant
on the hospitality of the M’Aulays.”
“Do not be angry, Menteith,”
said the Marquis, interrupting him; “you love
the classics, though not educated at Mareschal-College;
and you may remember how many gallant hearts captive
beauty has subdued:
Movit Ajacem, Telamone
natum,
Forma captivae
dominum Tecmessae.
In a word, I am seriously anxious
about this I should not have time, perhaps,”
he added very gravely, “to trouble you with my
lectures on the subject, were your feelings, and those
of Annot, alone interested; but you have a dangerous
rival in Allan M’Aulay; and there is no knowing
to what extent he may carry his resentment. It
is my duty to tell you that the King’s service
may be much prejudiced by dissensions betwixt you.”
“My lord,” said Menteith,
“I know what you mean is kind and friendly; I
hope you will be satisfied when I assure you, that
Allan M’Aulay and I have discussed this circumstance;
and that I have explained to him, that it is utterly
remote from my character to entertain dishonourable
views concerning this unprotected female; so, on the
other hand, the obscurity of her birth prevents my
thinking of her upon other terms. I will not
disguise from your lordship, what I have not disguised
from M’Aulay, that if Annot Lyle
were born a lady, she should share my name and rank;
as matters stand, it is impossible. This explanation,
I trust, will satisfy your lordship, as it has satisfied
a less reasonable person.”
Montrose shrugged his shoulders.
“And, like true champions in romance,”
he said, “you have agreed, that you are both
to worship the same mistress, as idolaters do the
same image, and that neither shall extend his pretensions
farther?”
“I did not go so far, my lord,”
answered Menteith “I only said in
the present circumstances and there is no
prospect of their being changed, I could,
in duty to myself and family, stand in no relation
to Annot Lyle, but as that of friend or brother But
your lordship must excuse me; I have,” said
he, looking at his arm, round which he had tied his
handkerchief, “a slight hurt to attend to.”
“A wound?” said Montrose,
anxiously; “let me see it. Alas!”
he said, “I should have heard nothing of this,
had I not ventured to tent and sound another more
secret and more rankling one, Menteith; I am sorry
for you I too have known But
what avails it to awake sorrows which have long slumbered!”
So saying, he shook hands with his
noble kinsman, and walked into the castle.
Annot Lyle, as was not unusual for
females in the Highlands, was possessed of a slight
degree of medical and even surgical skill. It
may readily be believed, that the profession of surgery,
or medicine, as a separate art, was unknown; and the
few rude rules which they observed were intrusted
to women, or to the aged, whom constant casualties
afforded too much opportunity of acquiring experience.
The care and attention, accordingly, of Annot Lyle,
her attendants, and others acting under her direction,
had made her services extremely useful during this
wild campaign. And most readily had these services
been rendered to friend and foe, wherever they could
be most useful. She was now in an apartment of
the castle, anxiously superintending the preparation
of vulnerary herbs, to be applied to the wounded;
receiving reports from different females respecting
those under their separate charge, and distributing
what means she had for their relief, when Allan M’Aulay
suddenly entered the apartment. She started, for
she had heard that he had left the camp upon a distant
mission; and, however accustomed she was to the gloom
of his countenance, it seemed at present to have even
a darker shade than usual. He stood before her
perfectly silent, and she felt the necessity of being
the first to speak.
“I thought,” she said,
with some effort, “you had already set out.”
“My companion awaits me,”
said Allan; “I go instantly.” Yet
still he stood before her, and held her by the arm,
with a pressure which, though insufficient to give
her pain, made her sensible of his great personal
strength, his hand closing on her like the gripe of
a manacle.
“Shall I take the harp?”
she said, in a timid voice; “is is
the shadow falling upon you?”
Instead of replying, he led her to
the window of the apartment, which commanded a view
of the field of the slain, with all its horrors.
It was thick spread with dead and wounded, and the
spoilers were busy tearing the clothes from the victims
of war and feudal ambition, with as much indifference
as if they had not been of the same species, and themselves
exposed, perhaps to-morrow, to the same fate.
“Does the sight please you?” said M’Aulay.
“It is hideous!” said
Annot, covering her eyes with her hands; “how
can you bid me look upon it?”
“You must be inured to it,”
said he, “if you remain with this destined host you
will soon have to search such a field for my brother’s
corpse for Menteith’s for
mine –but that will be a more indifferent
task You do not love me!”
“This is the first time you
have taxed me with unkindness,” said Annot,
weeping. “You are my brother my
preserver my protector and can
I then but love you? But your hour
of darkness is approaching, let me fetch my harp ”
“Remain,” said Allan,
still holding her fast; “be my visions from heaven
or hell, or from the middle sphere of disembodied spirits or
be they, as the Saxons hold, but the delusions of
an over-heated fancy, they do not now influence me;
I speak the language of the natural, of the visible
world. You love not me, Annot you
love Menteith by him you are beloved again,
and Allan is no more to you than one of the corpses
which encumber yonder heath.”
It cannot be supposed that this strange
speech conveyed any new information to her who was
thus addressed. No woman ever lived who could
not, in the same circumstances, have discerned long
since the state of her lover’s mind. But
by thus suddenly tearing off the veil, thin as it
was, Allan prepared her to expect consequences violent
in proportion to the enthusiasm of his character.
She made an effort to repel the charge he had stated.
“You forget,” she said,
“your own worth and nobleness when you insult
so very helpless a being, and one whom fate has thrown
so totally into your power. You know who and
what I am, and how impossible it is that Menteith
or you can use language of affection to me, beyond
that of friendship. You know from what unhappy
race I have too probably derived my existence.”
“I will not believe it,”
said Allan, impetuously; “never flowed crystal
drop from a polluted spring.”
“Yet the very doubt,”
pleaded Annot, “should make you forbear to use
this language to me.”
“I know,” said M’Aulay,
“it places a bar between us but I
know also that it divides you not so inseparably from
Menteith. Hear me, my beloved Annot! leave
this scene of terrors and danger go with
me to Kintail I will place you in the house
of the noble Lady of Seaforth or you shall
be removed in safety to Icolmkill, where some women
yet devote themselves to the worship of God, after
the custom of our ancestors.”
“You consider not what you ask
of me,” replied Annot; “to undertake such
a journey under your sole guardianship, were to show
me less scrupulous than maiden ought. I will
remain here, Allan here under the protection
of the noble Montrose; and when his motions next approach
the Lowlands, I will contrive some proper means to
relieve you of one, who has, she knows not how, become
an object of dislike to you.”
Allan stood as if uncertain whether
to give way to sympathy with her distress, or to anger
at her resistance.
“Annot,” he said, “you
know too well how little your words apply to my feelings
towards you but you avail yourself of your
power, and you rejoice in my departure, as removing
a spy upon your intercourse with Menteith. But
beware both of you,” he added, in a stern tone;
“for when was it ever heard that an injury was
offered to Allan M’Aulay, for which he exacted
not tenfold vengeance?”
So saying, he pressed her arm forcibly,
pulled the bonnet over his brows, and strode out of
the apartment.