I made the last of my journey in the
cold end of December, in a mighty dry day of frost,
and who should be my guide but Patey Macmorland, brother
of Tam! For a tow-headed, bare-legged brat of
ten, he had more ill tales upon his tongue than ever
I heard the match of; having drunken betimes in his
brother’s cup. I was still not so old myself;
pride had not yet the upper hand of curiosity; and
indeed it would have taken any man, that cold morning,
to hear all the old clashes of the country, and be
shown all the places by the way where strange things
had fallen out. I had tales of Claverhouse as
we came through the bogs, and tales of the devil as
we came over the top of the scaur. As we came
in by the abbey I heard somewhat of the old monks,
and more of the free-traders, who use its ruins for
a magazine, landing for that cause within a cannon-shot
of Durrisdeer; and along all the road the Duries and
poor Mr. Henry were in the first rank of slander.
My mind was thus highly prejudiced against the family
I was about to serve, so that I was half surprised
when I beheld Durrisdeer itself, lying in a pretty,
sheltered bay, under the Abbey Hill; the house most
commodiously built in the French fashion, or perhaps
Italianate, for I have no skill in these arts; and
the place the most beautified with gardens, lawns,
shrubberies, and trees I had ever seen. The money
sunk here unproductively would have quite restored
the family; but as it was, it cost a revenue to keep
it up.
Mr. Henry came himself to the door
to welcome me: a tall dark young gentleman (the
Duries are all black men) of a plain and not cheerful
face, very strong in body, but not so strong in health;
taking me by the hand without any pride, and putting
me at home with plain kind speeches. He led me
into the hall, booted as I was, to present me to my
lord. It was still daylight; and the first thing
I observed was a lozenge of clear glass in the midst
of the shield in the painted window, which I remember
thinking a blemish on a room otherwise so handsome,
with its family portraits, and the pargeted ceiling
with pendants, and the carved chimney, in one corner
of which my old lord sat reading in his Livy.
He was like Mr. Henry, with much the same plain countenance,
only more subtle and pleasant, and his talk a thousand
times more entertaining. He had many questions
to ask me, I remember, of Edinburgh College, where
I had just received my mastership of arts, and of
the various professors, with whom and their proficiency
he seemed well acquainted; and thus, talking of things
that I knew, I soon got liberty of speech in my new
home.
In the midst of this came Mrs. Henry
into the room; she was very far gone, Miss Katharine
being due in about six weeks, which made me think
less of her beauty at the first sight; and she used
me with more of condescension than the rest; so that,
upon all accounts, I kept her in the third place of
my esteem.
It did not take long before all Patey
Macmorland’s tales were blotted out of my belief,
and I was become, what I have ever since remained,
a loving servant of the house of Durrisdeer.
Mr. Henry had the chief part of my affection.
It was with him I worked; and I found him an exacting
master, keeping all his kindness for those hours in
which we were unemployed, and in the steward’s
office not only loading me with work, but viewing
me with a shrewd supervision. At length one day
he looked up from his paper with a kind of timidness,
and says he, “Mr. Mackellar, I think I ought
to tell you that you do very well.” That
was my first word of commendation; and from that day
his jealousy of my performance was relaxed; soon it
was “Mr. Mackellar” here, and “Mr.
Mackellar” there, with the whole family; and
for much of my service at Durrisdeer I have transacted
everything at my own time, and to my own fancy, and
never a farthing challenged. Even while he was
driving me, I had begun to find my heart go out to
Mr. Henry; no doubt, partly in pity, he was a man
so palpably unhappy. He would fall into a deep
muse over our accounts, staring at the page or out
of the window; and at those times the look of his
face, and the sigh that would break from him, awoke
in me strong feelings of curiosity and commiseration.
One day, I remember, we were late upon some business
in the steward’s room. This room is in
the top of the house, and has a view upon the bay,
and over a little wooded cape, on the long sands;
and there, right over against the sun, which was then
dipping, we saw the free-traders, with a great force
of men and horses, scouring on the beach. Mr.
Henry had been staring straight west, so that I marvelled
he was not blinded by the sun; suddenly he frowns,
rubs his hand upon his brow, and turns to me with a
smile.
“You would not guess what I
was thinking,” says he. “I was thinking
I would be a happier man if I could ride and run the
danger of my life with these lawless companions.”
I told him I had observed he did not
enjoy good spirits; and that it was a common fancy
to envy others and think we should be the better of
some change; quoting Horace to the point, like a young
man fresh from college.
“Why, just so,” said he.
“And with that we may get back to our accounts.”
It was not long before I began to
get wind of the causes that so much depressed him.
Indeed, a blind man must have soon discovered there
was a shadow on that house, the shadow of the Master
of Ballantrae. Dead or alive (and he was then
supposed to be dead) that man was his brother’s
rival: his rival abroad, where there was never
a good word for Mr. Henry, and nothing but regret
and praise for the Master; and his rival at home,
not only with his father and his wife, but with the
very servants.
They were two old serving-men that
were the leaders. John Paul, a little, bald,
solemn, stomachy man, a great professor of piety and
(take him for all in all) a pretty faithful servant,
was the chief of the Master’s faction.
None durst go so far as John. He took a pleasure
in disregarding Mr. Henry publicly, often with a slighting
comparison. My lord and Mrs. Henry took him up,
to be sure, but never so resolutely as they should;
and he had only to pull his weeping face and begin
his lamentations for the Master “his
laddie,” as he called him to have
the whole condoned. As for Henry, he let these
things pass in silence, sometimes with a sad and sometimes
with a black look. There was no rivalling the
dead, he knew that; and how to censure an old serving-man
for a fault of loyalty was more than he could see.
His was not the tongue to do it.
Macconochie was chief upon the other
side; an old, ill-spoken, swearing, ranting, drunken
dog; and I have often thought it an odd circumstance
in human nature that these two serving-men should
each have been the champion of his contrary, and blackened
their own faults, and made light of their own virtues,
when they beheld them in a master. Macconochie
had soon smelled out my secret inclination, took me
much into his confidence, and would rant against the
Master by the hour, so that even my work suffered.
“They’re a’ daft here,” he
would cry, “and be damned to them! The
Master the deil’s in their thrapples
that should call him sae! it’s Mr. Henry should
be master now! They were nane sae fond o’
the Master when they had him, I’ll can tell
ye that. Sorrow on his name! Never a guid
word did I hear on his lips, nor naebody else, but
just fleering and flyting and profane cursing deil
ha’e him! There’s nane kennt his
wickedness: him a gentleman! Did ever ye
hear tell, Mr. Mackellar, o’ Wully White the
wabster? No? Aweel, Wully was an unco praying
kind o’ man; a dreigh body, nane o’ my
kind, I never could abide the sight of him; onyway
he was a great hand by his way of it, and he up and
rebukit the Master for some of his ongoings. It
was a grand thing for the Master o’ Ball’ntrae
to tak’ up a feud wi’ a wabster, wasna’t?”
Macconochie would sneer; indeed, he never took the
full name upon his lips but with a sort of a whine
of hatred. “But he did! A fine employ
it was: chapping at the man’s door, and
crying ‘boo’ in his lum, and puttin’
poother in his fire, and pee-oys in his window;
till the man thought it was Auld Hornie was come seekin’
him. Weel, to mak’ a lang story short,
Wully gaed gyte. At the hinder end they couldna
get him frae his knees, but he just roared and prayed
and grat straucht on, till he got his release.
It was fair murder, a’body said that. Ask
John Paul he was brawly ashamed o’
that game, him that’s sic a Christian man!
Grand doin’s for the Master o’ Ball’ntrae!”
I asked him what the Master had thought of it himself.
“How would I ken?” says he. “He
never said naething.” And on again in his
usual manner of banning and swearing, with every now
and again a “Master of Ballantrae” sneered
through his nose. It was in one of these confidences
that he showed me the Carlisle letter, the print of
the horse-shoe still stamped in the paper. Indeed,
that was our last confidence; for he then expressed
himself so ill-naturedly of Mrs. Henry that I had to
reprimand him sharply, and must thenceforth hold him
at a distance.
My old lord was uniformly kind to
Mr. Henry; he had even pretty ways of gratitude, and
would sometimes clap him on the shoulder and say, as
if to the world at large: “This is a very
good son to me.” And grateful he was, no
doubt, being a man of sense and justice. But I
think that was all, and I am sure Mr. Henry thought
so. The love was all for the dead son. Not
that this was often given breath to; indeed, with me
but once. My lord had asked me one day how I
got on with Mr. Henry, and I had told him the truth.
“Ay,” said he, looking
sideways on the burning fire, “Henry is a good
lad, a very good lad,” said he. “You
have heard, Mr. Mackellar, that I had another son?
I am afraid he was not so virtuous a lad as Mr. Henry;
but dear me, he’s dead, Mr. Mackellar! and while
he lived we were all very proud of him, all very proud.
If he was not all he should have been in some ways,
well, perhaps we loved him better!” This last
he said looking musingly in the fire; and then to
me, with a great deal of briskness, “But I am
rejoiced you do so well with Mr. Henry. You will
find him a good master.” And with that he
opened his book, which was the customary signal of
dismission. But it would be little that he read,
and less that he understood; Culloden field and the
Master, these would be the burthen of his thought;
and the burthen of mine was an unnatural jealousy
of the dead man for Mr. Henry’s sake, that had
even then begun to grow on me.
I am keeping Mrs. Henry for the last,
so that this expression of my sentiment may seem unwarrantably
strong: the reader shall judge for himself when
I have done. But I must first tell of another
matter, which was the means of bringing me more intimate.
I had not yet been six months at Durrisdeer when it
chanced that John Paul fell sick and must keep his
bed; drink was the root of his malady, in my poor thought;
but he was tended, and indeed carried himself, like
an afflicted saint; and the very minister, who came
to visit him, professed himself edified when he went
away. The third morning of his sickness Mr. Henry
comes to me with something of a hang-dog look.
“Mackellar,” says he,
“I wish I could trouble you upon a little service.
There is a pension we pay; it is John’s part
to carry it, and now that he is sick I know not to
whom I should look, unless it was yourself. The
matter is very delicate; I could not carry it with
my own hand for a sufficient reason; I dare not send
Macconochie, who is a talker, and I am I
have I am desirous this should not come
to Mrs. Henry’s ears,” says he, and flushed
to his neck as he said it.
To say truth, when I found I was to
carry money to one Jessie Broun, who was no better
than she should be, I supposed it was some trip of
his own that Mr. Henry was dissembling. I was
the more impressed when the truth came out.
It was up a wynd off a side street
in St. Bride’s that Jessie had her lodging.
The place was very ill inhabited, mostly by the free-trading
sort. There was a man with a broken head at the
entry; half-way up, in a tavern, fellows were roaring
and singing, though it was not yet nine in the day.
Altogether, I had never seen a worse neighbourhood,
even in the great city of Edinburgh, and I was in
two minds to go back. Jessie’s room was
of a piece with her surroundings, and herself no better.
She would not give me the receipt (which Mr. Henry
had told me to demand, for he was very methodical)
until she had sent out for spirits, and I had pledged
her in a glass; and all the time she carried on in
a light-headed, reckless way now aping
the manners of a lady, now breaking into unseemly
mirth, now making coquettish advances that oppressed
me to the ground. Of the money she spoke more
tragically.
“It’s blood-money!”
said she; “I take it for that: blood-money
for the betrayed! See what I’m brought
down to! Ah, if the bonny lad were back again,
it would be changed days. But he’s deid he’s
lyin’ deid amang the Hieland hills the
bonny lad, the bonny lad!”
She had a rapt manner of crying on
the bonny lad, clasping her hands and casting up her
eyes, that I think she must have learned of strolling
players; and I thought her sorrow very much of an affectation,
and that she dwelled upon the business because her
shame was now all she had to be proud of. I will
not say I did not pity her, but it was a loathing
pity at the best; and her last change of manner wiped
it out. This was when she had had enough of me
for an audience, and had set her name at last to the
receipt. “There!” says she, and, taking
the most unwomanly oaths upon her tongue, bade me
begone and carry it to the Judas who had sent me.
It was the first time I had heard the name applied
to Mr. Henry; I was staggered besides at her sudden
vehemence of word and manner, and got forth from the
room, under this shower of curses, like a beaten dog.
But even then I was not quit, for the vixen threw up
her window, and, leaning forth, continued to revile
me as I went up the wynd; the free-traders, coming
to the tavern door, joined in the mockery, and one
had even the inhumanity to set upon me a very savage
small dog, which bit me in the ankle. This was
a strong lesson, had I required one, to avoid ill
company; and I rode home in much pain from the bite,
and considerable indignation of mind.
Mr. Henry was in the steward’s
room, affecting employment, but I could see he was
only impatient to hear of my errand.
“Well?” says he, as soon
as I came in; and when I had told him something of
what passed, and that Jessie seemed an undeserving
woman, and far from grateful: “She is no
friend to me,” said he; “but indeed, Mackellar,
I have few friends to boast of, and Jessie has some
cause to be unjust. I need not dissemble what
all the country knows: she was not very well
used by one of our family.” This was the
first time I had heard him refer to the Master, even
distantly; and I think he found his tongue rebellious
even for that much, but presently he resumed “This
is why I would have nothing said. It would give
pain to Mrs. Henry ... and to my father,” he
added, with another flush.
“Mr. Henry,” said I, “if
you will take a freedom at my hands, I would tell
you to let that woman be. What service is your
money to the like of her? She has no sobriety
and no economy as for gratitude, you will
as soon get milk from a whinstone; and if you will
pretermit your bounty, it will make no change at all
but just to save the ankles of your messengers.”
Mr. Henry smiled. “But
I am grieved about your ankle,” said he the next
moment, with a proper gravity.
“And observe,” I continued,
“I give you this advice upon consideration;
and yet my heart was touched for the woman in the beginning.”
“Why, there it is, you see!”
said Mr. Henry. “And you are to remember
that I knew her once a very decent lass. Besides
which, although I speak little of my family, I think
much of its repute.”
And with that he broke up the talk,
which was the first we had together in such confidence.
But the same afternoon I had the proof that his father
was perfectly acquainted with the business, and that
it was only from his wife that Mr. Henry kept it secret.
“I fear you had a painful errand
to-day,” says my lord to me, “for which,
as it enters in no way among your duties, I wish to
thank you, and to remind you at the same time (in
case Mr. Henry should have neglected) how very desirable
it is that no word of it should reach my daughter.
Reflections on the dead, Mr. Mackellar, are doubly
painful.”
Anger glowed in my heart; and I could
have told my lord to his face how little he had to
do, bolstering up the image of the dead in Mrs. Henry’s
heart, and how much better he were employed to shatter
that false idol; for by this time I saw very well
how the land lay between my patron and his wife.
My pen is clear enough to tell a plain
tale; but to render the effect of an infinity of small
things, not one great enough in itself to be narrated;
and to translate the story of looks, and the message
of voices when they are saying no great matter; and
to put in half a page the essence of near eighteen
months this is what I despair to accomplish.
The fault, to be very blunt, lay all in Mrs. Henry.
She felt it a merit to have consented to the marriage,
and she took it like a martyrdom; in which my old
lord, whether he knew it or not, fomented her.
She made a merit, besides, of her constancy to the
dead, though its name, to a nicer conscience, should
have seemed rather disloyalty to the living; and here
also my lord gave her his countenance. I suppose
he was glad to talk of his loss, and ashamed to dwell
on it with Mr. Henry. Certainly, at least, he
made a little coterie apart in that family of three,
and it was the husband who was shut out. It seems
it was an old custom when the family were alone in
Durrisdeer, that my lord should take his wine to the
chimney-side, and Miss Alison, instead of withdrawing,
should bring a stool to his knee, and chatter to him
privately; and after she had become my patron’s
wife the same manner of doing was continued. It
should have been pleasant to behold this ancient gentleman
so loving with his daughter, but I was too much a
partisan of Mr. Henry’s to be anything but wroth
at his exclusion. Many’s the time I have
seen him make an obvious resolve, quit the table,
and go and join himself to his wife and my Lord Durrisdeer;
and on their part, they were never backward to make
him welcome, turned to him smilingly as to an intruding
child, and took him into their talk with an effort
so ill-concealed that he was soon back again beside
me at the table, whence (so great is the hall of Durrisdeer)
we could but hear the murmur of voices at the chimney.
There he would sit and watch, and I along with him;
and sometimes by my lord’s head sorrowfully
shaken, or his hand laid on Mrs. Henry’s head,
or hers upon his knee as if in consolation, or sometimes
by an exchange of tearful looks, we would draw our
conclusion that the talk had gone to the old subject
and the shadow of the dead was in the hall.
I have hours when I blame Mr. Henry
for taking all too patiently; yet we are to remember
he was married in pity, and accepted his wife upon
that term. And, indeed, he had small encouragement
to make a stand. Once, I remember, he announced
he had found a man to replace the pane of the stained
window, which, as it was he that managed all the business,
was a thing clearly within his attributions.
But to the Master’s fanciers that pane was like
a relic; and on the first word of any change the blood
flew to Mrs. Henry’s face.
“I wonder at you!” she cried.
“I wonder at myself,”
says Mr. Henry, with more of bitterness than I had
ever heard him to express.
Thereupon my old lord stepped in with
his smooth talk, so that before the meal was at an
end all seemed forgotten; only that, after dinner,
when the pair had withdrawn as usual to the chimney-side,
we could see her weeping with her head upon his knee.
Mr. Henry kept up the talk with me upon some topic
of the estates he could speak of little
else but business, and was never the best of company;
but he kept it up that day with more continuity, his
eye straying ever and again to the chimney, and his
voice changing to another key, but without check of
delivery. The pane, however, was not replaced;
and I believe he counted it a great defeat.
Whether he was stout enough or no,
God knows he was kind enough. Mrs. Henry had
a manner of condescension with him, such as (in a wife)
would have pricked my vanity into an ulcer; he took
it like a favour. She held him at the staff’s
end; forgot and then remembered and unbent to him,
as we do to children; burthened him with cold kindness;
reproved him with a change of colour and a bitten
lip, like one shamed by his disgrace: ordered
him with a look of the eye when she was off her guard;
when she was on the watch, pleaded with him for the
most natural attentions, as though they were unheard-of
favours. And to all this he replied with the
most unwearied service; loving, as folk say, the very
ground she trod on, and carrying that love in his
eyes as bright as a lamp. When Miss Katharine
was to be born, nothing would serve but he must stay
in the room behind the head of the bed. There
he sat, as white (they tell me) as a sheet, and the
sweat dropping from his brow; and the handkerchief
he had in his hand was crushed into a little ball no
bigger than a musket-bullet. Nor could he bear
the sight of Miss Katharine for many a day; indeed,
I doubt if he was ever what he should have been to
my young lady; for the which want of natural feeling
he was loudly blamed.
Such was the state of this family
down to the 7th April 1749, when there befell the
first of that series of events which were to break
so many hearts and lose so many lives.
On that day I was sitting in my room
a little before supper, when John Paul burst open
the door with no civility of knocking, and told me
there was one below that wished to speak with the
steward; sneering at the name of my office.
I asked what manner of man, and what
his name was; and this disclosed the cause of John’s
ill-humour; for it appeared the visitor refused to
name himself except to me, a sore affront to the major-domo’s
consequence.
“Well,” said I, smiling
a little, “I will see what he wants.”
I found in the entrance-hall a big
man, very plainly habited, and wrapped in a sea-cloak,
like one new landed, as indeed he was. Not far
off Macconochie was standing, with his tongue out of
his mouth and his hand upon his chin, like a dull
fellow thinking hard, and the stranger, who had brought
his cloak about his face, appeared uneasy. He
had no sooner seen me coming than he went to meet
me with an effusive manner.
“My dear man,” said he,
“a thousand apologies for disturbing you, but
I’m in the most awkward position. And there’s
a son of a ramrod there that I should know the looks
of, and more, betoken, I believe that he knows mine.
Being in this family, sir, and in a place of some
responsibility (which was the cause I took the liberty
to send for you), you are doubtless of the honest
party?”
“You may be sure at least,”
says I, “that all of that party are quite safe
in Durrisdeer.”
“My dear man, it is my very
thought,” says he. “You see, I have
just been set on shore here by a very honest man,
whose name I cannot remember, and who is to stand
off and on for me till morning, at some danger to
himself; and, to be clear with you, I am a little concerned
lest it should be at some to me. I have saved
my life so often, Mr. , I forget
your name, which is a very good one that,
faith, I would be very loth to lose it after all.
And the son of a ramrod, whom I believe I saw before
Carlisle....”
“O, sir,” said I, “you
can trust Macconochie until to-morrow.”
“Well, and it’s a delight
to hear you say so,” says the stranger.
“The truth is, that my name is not a very suitable
one in this country of Scotland. With a gentleman
like you, my dear man, I would have no concealments
of course; and by your leave I’ll just breathe
it in your ear. They call me Francis Burke Colonel
Francis Burke; and I am here, at a most damnable risk
to myself, to see your masters if you’ll
excuse me, my good man, for giving them the name,
for I’m sure it’s a circumstance I would
never have guessed from your appearance. And if
you would just be so very obliging as to take my name
to them, you might say that I come bearing letters
which I am sure they will be very rejoiced to have
the reading of.”
Colonel Francis Burke was one of the
Prince’s Irishmen, that did his cause such an
infinity of hurt, and were so much distasted of the
Scots at the time of the rebellion; and it came at
once into my mind how the Master of Ballantrae had
astonished all men by going with that party. In
the same moment a strong foreboding of the truth possessed
my soul.
“If you will step in here,”
said I, opening a chamber door, “I will let
my lord know.”
“And I am sure it’s very
good of you, Mr. What’s-your-name,” says
the Colonel.
Up to the hall I went, slow-footed.
There they were, all three my old lord
in his place, Mrs. Henry at work by the window, Mr.
Henry (as was much his custom) pacing the low end.
In the midst was the table laid for supper. I
told them briefly what I had to say. My old lord
lay back in his seat. Mrs. Henry sprang up standing
with a mechanical motion, and she and her husband
stared at each other’s eyes across the room;
it was the strangest, challenging look these two exchanged,
and as they looked, the colour faded in their faces.
Then Mr. Henry turned to me; not to speak, only to
sign with his finger; but that was enough, and I went
down again for the Colonel.
When we returned, these three were
in much the same position I had left them in; I believe
no word had passed.
“My Lord Durrisdeer, no doubt?”
says the Colonel, bowing, and my lord bowed in answer.
“And this,” continues the Colonel, “should
be the Master of Ballantrae?”
“I have never taken that name,”
said Mr. Henry; “but I am Henry Durie, at your
service.”
Then the Colonel turns to Mrs. Henry,
bowing with his hat upon his heart and the most killing
airs of gallantry. “There can be no mistake
about so fine a figure of a lady,” says he.
“I address the seductive Miss Alison, of whom
I have so often heard?”
Once more husband and wife exchanged a look.
“I am Mrs. Henry Durie,”
said she; “but before my marriage my name was
Alison Graeme.”
Then my lord spoke up. “I
am an old man, Colonel Burke,” said he, “and
a frail one. It will be mercy on your part to
be expeditious. Do you bring me news of ”
he hesitated, and then the words broke from him with
a singular change of voice “my son?”
“My dear lord, I will be round
with you like a soldier,” said the Colonel.
“I do.”
My lord held out a wavering hand;
he seemed to wave a signal, but whether it was to
give him time or to speak on, was more than we could
guess. At length he got out the one word, “Good?”
“Why, the very best in the creation!”
cries the Colonel. “For my good friend
and admired comrade is at this hour in the fine city
of Paris, and as like as not, if I know anything of
his habits, he will be drawing in his chair to a piece
of dinner. Bedad, I believe the lady’s
fainting.”
Mrs. Henry was indeed the colour of
death, and drooped against the window-frame.
But when Mr. Henry made a movement as if to run to
her, she straightened with a sort of shiver.
“I am well,” she said, with her white
lips.
Mr. Henry stopped, and his face had
a strong twitch of anger. The next moment he
had turned to the Colonel. “You must not
blame yourself,” says he, “for this effect
on Mrs. Durie. It is only natural; we were all
brought up like brother and sister.”
Mrs. Henry looked at her husband with
something like relief, or even gratitude. In
my way of thinking, that speech was the first step
he made in her good graces.
“You must try to forgive me,
Mrs. Durie, for indeed and I am just an Irish savage,”
said the Colonel; “and I deserve to be shot,
for not breaking the matter more artistically to a
lady. But here are the Master’s own
letters; one for each of the three of you; and to be
sure (if I know anything of my friend’s genius)
he will tell his own story with a better grace.”
He brought the three letters forth
as he spoke, arranged them by their superscriptions,
presented the first to my lord, who took it greedily,
and advanced towards Mrs. Henry holding out the second.
But the lady waved it back. “To
my husband,” says she, with a choked voice.
The Colonel was a quick man, but at
this he was somewhat nonplussed. “To be
sure!” says he; “how very dull of me!
To be sure!” But he still held the letter.
At last Mr. Henry reached forth his
hand, and there was nothing to be done but give it
up. Mr. Henry took the letters (both hers and
his own), and looked upon their outside, with his
brows knit hard, as if he were thinking. He had
surprised me all through by his excellent behaviour:
but he was to excel himself now.
“Let me give you a hand to your
room,” said he to his wife. “This
has come something of the suddenest; and, at any rate,
you will wish to read your letter by yourself.”
Again she looked upon him with the
same thought of wonder; but he gave her no time, coming
straight to where she stood. “It will be
better so, believe me,” said he; “and
Colonel Burke is too considerate not to excuse you.”
And with that he took her hand by the fingers, and
led her from the hall.
Mrs. Henry returned no more that night;
and when Mr. Henry went to visit her next morning,
as I heard long afterwards, she gave him the letter
again, still unopened.
“O, read it and be done!” he had cried.
“Spare me that,” said she.
And by these two speeches, to my way
of thinking, each undid a great part of what they
had previously done well. But the letter, sure
enough, came into my hands, and by me was burned,
unopened.
To be very exact as to the adventures
of the Master after Culloden, I wrote not long ago
to Colonel Burke, now a Chevalier of the Order of St.
Louis, begging him for some notes in writing, since
I could scarce depend upon my memory at so great an
interval. To confess the truth, I have been somewhat
embarrassed by his response; for he sent me the complete
memoirs of his life, touching only in places on the
Master; running to a much greater length than my whole
story, and not everywhere (as it seems to me) designed
for edification. He begged in his letter, dated
from Ettenheim, that I would find a publisher for the
whole, after I had made what use of it I required;
and I think I shall best answer my own purpose and
fulfil his wishes by giving certain parts of it in
full. In this way my readers will have a detailed,
and, I believe, a very genuine account of some essential
matters; and if any publisher should take a fancy
to the Chevalier’s manner of narration, he knows
where to apply for the rest, of which there is plenty
at his service. I put in my first extract here,
so that it may stand in the place of what the Chevalier
told us over our wine in the hall of Durrisdeer; but
you are to suppose it was not the brutal fact, but
a very varnished version that he offered to my lord.