Not to be conquered by these headlong
days,
But to stand free: to keep the mind
at brood
On life’s deep meaning, nature’s
altitude
Of loveliness, and time’s mysterious
ways;
At every thought and deed to clear the
haze
Out of our eyes, considering only this,
What man, what life, what love, what beauty
is,
This is to live and win the final praise.
-ABCHIBALD
LAMPMAN.
Upon his return home, Scotty went
out behind the house to work off some of his superfluous
mirth upon the woodpile. He had flung aside his
coat and was swinging his axe vigorously, when, with
the quickness of the rural eye which always spies
an approaching figure, he noticed a man turn in from
the highway and walk briskly up the snowy lane.
The boy gave a low whistle; his face grew dark with
anger. It was the new master! He had found
out the condition of the school then, and had come
to report to his grandparents. McAllister at
his worst was better than this fellow, for McAllister
was no sneak. But even in his anger, he chuckled
mischievously when he considered what an exhibition
Monteith would surely make of himself if he attempted
to lodge complaints with Big Malcolm against his grandson.
But instead of turning up the path
to the door, the new master followed the track that
led round the house under the Silver Maple.
At first Scotty was of a mind to dodge
round the woodpile and escape; but he was too late;
Monteith had already caught sight of him; so he waited,
sullen and defiant.
The new master lost no time in making his errand known.
“I came to offer an apology,
Ralph Stanwell,” he said gravely, “for
what I said concerning your name. I found out
my mistake only this afternoon.”
Scotty’s defiant air changed
to one of amazement; his eyes fell, he felt suddenly
ashamed.
“I hope you will accept an explanation,
though it does not at all atone for what I said,”
continued the schoolmaster earnestly. “I
am truly ashamed of myself for making such a stupid
blunder.”
Scotty squirmed in embarrassment.
He had never in his life witnessed any such dignified
reparation of a wrong, and in contrast, his own late
conduct looked childish and almost barbarous.
“Oh, it will not matter, whatever,”
he stammered abruptly, and in a manner much more ungracious
than his feelings warranted.
“But it does matter very much.
It was no way for one man to speak to another.”
Scotty experienced a glow of mingled
pride and shame; the new master considered him a man
then, and he had not played the man’s part!
“But, you see,” continued Monteith, “I
felt so sure. It was your Highland accent, and
your-your general MacDonald appearance that
to my ignorance made your statement unbelievable.”
The schoolmaster had unwittingly struck the right
chord.
Scotty smiled shyly but amicably.
“Oh, it will be jist nothing,” he said
generously.
“Won’t you shake hands,
then, and let me feel I am quite forgiven?”
But Scotty did not put out his hand;
he stood shifting from one foot to the other, looking
down at the heap of chips.
“But-I-would you not be
knowing?” he faltered.
“Knowing what?”
“That we-that I would be making the
schoolhouse worse than ever?”
There was a sudden light in Monteith’s
eyes that would have surely convinced Scotty, had
he seen it, of the new master’s ability to smile.
“Well, perhaps that will help
to even things up a little,” he said brightly.
“Come, are you willing to call it quits?”
Scotty put out his big hand swiftly,
and felt it caught in a strong bony grip. And
as their hands met Monteith’s stern face suddenly
broke out into an unexpected smile, a smile so brilliant
and kindly that the boy felt it illuminate his whole
being, and from that moment he was the new master’s
friend.
“And now,” said the man,
suddenly becoming grave again, “will you tell
me how you come to have two names? How does a
Highland Scot like you happen to have such a name
as Stanwell?”
Scotty gasped; was he going to ignore
the whitewashing altogether?
“It would be my father’s,”
he answered simply, “but I would always be living
here with my grandfather, and I was always called MacDonald.”
“Ralph Stanwell, Ralph Stanwell,”
repeated the schoolmaster ruminatingly, “I’ve
heard that name before. Why, yes; I wonder if
you are any relation to the Captain Ralph Stanwell
I once met in Toronto. The name is not common.”
“My father died there, and my
mother, too,” was the answer.
The new master stared. “Surely,
surely,” he was saying, half to himself, “it
couldn’t be possible; but his wife’s name
was MacDonald too! And Herbert always said the
child died!”
Under the man’s steady gaze
Scotty fidgeted with his axe in combined amazement
and embarrassment.
“Was your father’s second name Everett?”
“Yes, and that will be mine, too.”
The new master stared harder.
“Well, well, well,” he muttered, “I
wonder if he knows!”
The boy stood lost in a wild speculation.
By some queer trick of memory he was back once more
in Store Thompson’s shop, a little curly-headed
fellow, and felt a man’s kind, playful hand upon
his curls; and at the sound of his name saw a smiling
face grow suddenly grave with amazement, fear and
defiance chasing one another across it. How was
it that, all through his life, his English name seemed
always to produce consternation?
Monteith shook himself as though awakening from a
dream.
“I beg your pardon,” he
said hastily, “your name called up some old
memories. And now, I must be going.”
He held out his hand again. “Good-bye,
and I thank you for your generosity.”
“But-but you will
not be leaving without your supper!” cried Scotty
aghast.
“Thank you, but your grandparents
are not expecting me, and -”
Scotty stared. “But what
difference would that be making?” he asked artlessly.
“It will be all the better.” The
new master smiled again at the unconscious hospitality
of the remark, and this time accepted the invitation.
Scotty instantly flung aside his axe, and led the
way around to the door.
Monteith had already learned to expect
a warm greeting from the inhabitants of the Oro Highlands,
but he had yet to experience a true Scottish-Canadian
welcome, and was almost overwhelmed by the one he
received in the old house under the Silver Maple.
Big Malcolm met him at the door and
made him welcome in a manner that somehow made the
guest feel that the old man owned the whole township
of Oro and was laying it at his feet. Mrs. MacDonald
drew him up to the fire, bewailing the long cold walk
he had had, and pulling off his overcoat, calling
all the while for Scotty to run and put more wood in
the stove that she might make a fresh cup of tea.
Hamish came hurrying up from the barn to shake the
guest’s hand and make him welcome yet again,
and even Sport, Bruce’s successor, leaped round
him, barking joyously, as though he understood that
the arrival of a visitor was the best possible thing
that could happen.
Then, there was Old Farquhar, still
cackling incoherent Gaelic from the chimney corner.
Before the visitor had got the snow swept from his
feet the old man inquired if he had read Ossian’s
poems, and finding him in the depths of ignorance
regarding that great bard, turned his back upon him
in disgust, and for the remainder of the afternoon
snored grumpily.
The hostess explained apologetically,
as she brought the new master a steaming cup of tea,
that indeed poor Farquhar was the nice, kind body,
but he had had the toothache all last night and would
be terrible set on Ossian.
Mrs. MacDonald was growing too old
for the household cares devolving upon her, and Scotty
being her chief help, the housekeeping did not at
all compare with what Monteith was accustomed to in
his boarding place at Store Thompson’s.
But he was conscious of no lack in the dingy old
house. He recognised the inherent refinement
of Mrs. MacDonald’s nature, and bowed to it;
he knew Big Malcolm for a gentleman the moment he
spoke; and he saw, too, something of the mystic in
Hamish. For in later years there had grown an
expression in Hamish’s kind brown eyes which
the schoolmaster understood-the look of
a soul that has longed to soar, but has been kept
down by narrow limitations.
Then the supper was spread upon the
table, and it was all the visitor could desire; porridge
in brown bowls, smoking and fragrant, sweet white
bread, and bannocks with plenty of maple syrup.
And afterwards, when the supper was cleared away,
and Scotty and Hamish had finished the milking, they
all gathered about the stove, which now stood in front
of the old discarded fireplace. First the schoolmaster
had to tell of his life and lineage, during which
recital he proved his Scottish blood to everyone’s
satisfaction. There did not seem to be much
to tell of his past doings, though in response to the
simple, kindly questionings, he gave it all.
He had been born in Scotland and was quite alone
in Canada, except for Captain Herbert, who was an old
friend, and whose wife had been a distant relative.
He had studied law for some years, but his health
had failed before his course was completed.
Then he had knocked about the world a good deal, and
had come north at Captain Herbert’s advice to
see if the Oro air would not do him good.
“Indeed, and it will that!”
Big Malcolm declared heartily. “Jist you
eat plenty o’ pork and oatmeal porridge and you’ll
be a new man in no time. Hoots, when we would
be coming here first folk would never be sick like
now-a-days; and indeed it wasn’t often a man
died except a tree would be falling on him, whatever.”
“Those must have been fine times,”
said the schoolmaster smilingly; and thereupon his
host and hostess launched into long tales of the old
days, when the forest came up to the door, and of those
older and happier days in the homeland across the
sea.
Big Malcolm and his wife lived much
in the past now, and, when the guest displayed a kindly
interest in their history, they opened their hearts
even to speak of Callum, their light-hearted, bright
Callum, whose end had been so untimely. The
schoolmaster heard also the manner of his death; how
it had brought the great preacher, and how in the
double grave in the Glen by the river one of the Fighting
MacDonalds, at least, had buried all his feuds.
And they told him, too, of their only daughter, the
beautiful little Margaret, who had been Scotty’s
mother. Monteith asked many questions concerning
her, and Scotty listened eagerly, but his new friend
offered no explanation of his interest.
When it was time to depart, Big Malcolm
was for insisting that he should spend the night with
them; but when he declared that he must return to
the Glen, or Mrs. Thompson would be worried, his hostess
seized the teapot again, and another supper was spread
out, of which the guest had perforce to partake before
leaving.
That finished, Big Malcolm reverently
laid aside his bonnet, and Scotty brought him the
old yellow-leaved Bible. The old man read the
103d Psalm in a triumphant tone that showed he had
passed all his temptations and trials, and now in
a serene old age his soul blessed the Lord for His
guidance.
And then they sang a Psalm, Old Farquhar
coming out from his corner to join them. They
sang it in English, in deference to the guest’s
lack of Gaelic, and the brown rafters rang to the
solemn old Scottish tune in harmony with the beautiful
words:
“Oh, taste and see that God is good:
Who trusts in Him is bless’d!”
And listening, the man of the world
experienced a vague sensation of something like regretful
envy. Had he not, in his broader life, missed
some uplifting joy, some great blessing in which these
old people rejoiced?
While Monteith was taking a lingering
farewell and promising a speedy return, Scotty went
to a corner and lit the lantern, and in spite of the
schoolmaster’s protests, insisted upon accompanying
him for a mile to show him the short road across the
swamp.
The two walked side by side along
the snowy path, the lantern flashing fitfully amongst
the bare branches and dark boles of the trees.
Monteith chatted away pleasantly, but Scotty answered
only in monosyllables. He was employed in making
desperate efforts to bring about some allusion to
the condition of the schoolhouse. But the new
master seemed to have totally forgotten school affairs,
and when they came to the end of the forest path and
stood upon the Glenoro road, saying good-night, this
strange man had not in the smallest way recurred to
the shameful subject. Scotty was in despair.
“It would be a fool’s trick we were doing!”
he burst forth, as Monteith held out his hand in farewell,
“if we could jist be having another day -”
He stopped overcome.
The new master did not seem to need
an explanation of this apparently irrelevant speech.
“Could you fix it all up in one day?”
he inquired in a business-like manner.
“Oh, yes!” Scotty gasped eagerly, “easy.”
“All right, we’ll take
to-morrow; I’ll come over and help you.
Good-night!”
And he turned away, leaving his pupil
standing in the middle of the road amazed and humbled.
Number Nine learned during the following
week that for some inexplicable reason the MacDonalds,
whose hand had hitherto been against every other man’s
hand, were on the side of the new master, and that
anyone who gave him trouble was courting dire calamities
at the hands of Big Malcolm’s Scot. As
a direct result the fiat went forth that Dan Murphy,
and consequently all his generation, also approved
of the new rule. Subsequently the Tenth announced
its neutrality; and from that time the new era, which
had arisen at the building of the church in the social
world of the Oro valley, dawned in the schoolhouse
too, and the land had rest from war.
To no one did the new dispensation
bring greater things than to Scotty. Ever since
the days when all knowledge and wisdom could be extracted,
by persistent questionings, from Hamish, he had experienced
an unslakable thirst for books. He had been
much more fortunate in finding reading material than
his uncle had been, for Captain Herbert’s library
was always at Scotty’s disposal. Every
summer and winter Isabel came to Kirsty’s laden
with books, and what feasts she and Scotty had reading
under the boughs of the Silver Maple or before Kirsty’s
fire! Dickens, Scott, Thackeray, Macaulay-they
devoured them all; and once, by mistake, she had brought
some books by a wonderful man named Carlyle, which
she declared were dreadfully stupid, but which Scotty
found strangely fascinating, though somewhat beyond
his understanding.
But Isabel had been away at school
for more than a year now, and though she wrote Scotty
voluminous letters, which he answered at shamefully
long intervals, and only when Kirsty’s reproaches
goaded him to the effort, she had almost entirely
passed out of his life.
So when there had been no more books
to read he had turned his restless energies into less
profitable channels. But now, here were not only
books of all kinds, but a man ready and willing to
interpret them. Scotty heard no more of the sentence
of expulsion, and with the energy that characterised
everything he did, he plunged headlong into a course
of study far beyond any public school curriculum.
Monteith was first amazed, then delighted, and lastly
found he had to set himself severe tasks to keep sufficiently
ahead of his pupil.
And in return for his pains Scotty
gave an allegiance to his master that had in it something
of homage. Not the gay, reckless Callum was
his hero now, but this quiet, self-controlled gentleman.
Unconsciously the boy copied him in every particular,
and unquestioningly adopted his opinions. Monteith
had seen the world, had lived in cities, and even
in that magic land, “the old country,”
and surely he should be an authority. Scotty
early learned that the new master despised the tavern,
not quite in the way Store Thompson and the minister
and his grandfather did, as a force of evil, but in
lofty scorn of its lowness.
In consequence the boy was never found
hanging about its doors any more. And though
the teacher said nothing about his religious views,
the pupil soon learned and adopted them too.
Monteith treated all creeds with a good-natured tolerance.
The Bible, he declared, was a grand piece of literature,
and he liked to go to church because Mr. Cameron’s
sermons gave him some intellectual stimulus.
Religion he characterised chiefly as an emotion.
A man needed only common sense to show him how to
live, he declared. Scotty felt that this was
the creed for him; he had come under Monteith’s
control at a period when he was in revolt against
all earlier restraint and rejoiced in the feeling of
independence which the new belief brought.
The two soon became fast friends in
their common pursuit of learning. When the second
winter came, and Scotty had become too old for school,
he and Monteith studied together in the long evenings,
and each month of companionship served to deepen their
friendship. But in spite of their intimacy the
boy never elicited any explanation of his friend’s
strange behaviour when he first realised that Scotty’s
name was Stanwell. Monteith was always careful
to call him Ralph, but he forebore from any allusion
to the subject; and as the days went happily on the
matter dropped from the boy’s thoughts.