Coming events cast their
shadows before. Campbell.
At an early hour in the morning the
guests of the castle sprung from their repose; and,
after a moment’s private conversation with his
attendants, Lord Menteith addressed the soldier, who
was seated in a corner burnishing his corslet with
rot-stone and chamois-leather, while he hummed the
old song in honour of the victorious Gustavus Adolphus:
When cannons are roaring,
and bullets are flying,
The lad that would have
honour, boys, must never fear dying.
“Captain Dalgetty,” said
Lord Menteith, “the time is come that we must
part, or become comrades in service.”
“Not before breakfast, I hope?” said Captain
Dalgetty.
“I should have thought,”
replied his lordship, “that your garrison was
victualled for three days at least.”
“I have still some stowage left
for beef and bannocks,” said the Captain; “and
I never miss a favourable opportunity of renewing my
supplies.”
“But,” said Lord Menteith,
“no judicious commander allows either flags
of truce or neutrals to remain in his camp longer than
is prudent; and therefore we must know your mind exactly,
according to which you shall either have a safe-conduct
to depart in peace, or be welcome to remain with us.”
“Truly,” said the Captain,
“that being the case, I will not attempt to
protract the capitulation by a counterfeited parley,
(a thing excellently practised by Sir James Ramsay
at the siege of Hannau, in the year of God 1636,)
but I will frankly own, that if I like your pay as
well as your provant and your company, I care not how
soon I take the oath to your colours.”
“Our pay,” said Lord Menteith,
“must at present be small, since it is paid
out of the common stock raised by the few amongst us
who can command some funds As major and
adjutant, I dare not promise Captain Dalgetty more
than half a dollar a-day.”
“The devil take all halves and
quarters!” said the Captain; “were it in
my option, I could no more consent to the halving of
that dollar, than the woman in the Judgment of Solomon
to the disseverment of the child of her bowels.”
“The parallel will scarce hold,
Captain Dalgetty, for I think you would rather consent
to the dividing of the dollar, than give it up entire
to your competitor. However, in the way of arrears,
I may promise you the other half-dollar at the end
of the campaign.”
“Ah! these arrearages!”
said Captain Dalgetty, “that are always promised,
and always go for nothing! Spain, Austria, and
Sweden, all sing one song. Oh! long life to the
Hoganmogans! if they were no officers of soldiers,
they were good paymasters. And yet, my lord,
if I could but be made certiorate that my natural
hereditament of Drumthwacket had fallen into possession
of any of these loons of Covenanters, who could be,
in the event of our success, conveniently made a traitor
of, I have so much value for that fertile and pleasant
spot, that I would e’en take on with you for
the campaign.”
“I can resolve Captain Dalgetty’s
question,” said Sibbald, Lord Menteith’s
second attendant; “for if his estate of Drumthwacket
be, as I conceive, the long waste moor so called,
that lies five miles south of Aberdeen, I can tell
him it was lately purchased by Elias Strachan, as
rank a rebel as ever swore the Covenant.”
“The crop-eared hound!”
said Captain Dalgetty, in a rage; “What the
devil gave him the assurance to purchase the inheritance
of a family of four hundred years standing? CYNTHIUS
AUREM VELLET, as we used to say at Mareschal-College;
that is to say, I will pull him out of my father’s
house by the ears. And so, my Lord Menteith, I
am yours, hand and sword, body and soul, till death
do us part, or to the end of the next campaign, whichever
event shall first come to pass.”
“And I,” said the young
nobleman, “rivet the bargain with a month’s
pay in advance.”
“That is more than necessary,”
said Dalgetty, pocketing the money however. “But
now I must go down, look after my war-saddle and abuilziements,
and see that Gustavus has his morning, and tell him
we have taken new service.”
“There goes your precious recruit,”
said Lord Menteith to Anderson, as the Captain left
the room; “I fear we shall have little credit
of him.”
“He is a man of the times, however,”
said Anderson; “and without such we should hardly
be able to carry on our enterprise.”
“Let us go down,” answered
Lord Menteith, “and see how our muster is likely
to thrive, for I hear a good deal of bustle in the
castle.”
When they entered the hall, the domestics
keeping modestly in the background, morning greetings
passed between Lord Menteith, Angus M’Aulay,
and his English guests, while Allan, occupying the
same settle which he had filled the preceding evening,
paid no attention whatever to any one. Old Donald
hastily rushed into the apartment. “A message
from Vich Alister More; [The patronymic of MacDonell
of Glengarry.] he is coming up in the evening.”
“With how many attendants?” said M’Aulay.
“Some five-and-twenty or thirty,” said
Donald, “his ordinary retinue.”
“Shake down plenty of straw in the great barn,”
said the Laird.
Another servant here stumbled hastily
in, announcing the expected approach of Sir Hector
M’Lean, “who is arriving with a large following.”
“Put them in the malt-kiln,”
said M’Aulay; “and keep the breadth of
the middenstead between them and the M’Donalds;
they are but unfriends to each other.”
Donald now re-entered, his visage
considerably lengthened “The tell’s
i’ the folk,” he said; “the haill
Hielands are asteer, I think. Evan Dhu, of Lochiel,
will be here in an hour, with Lord kens how many gillies.”
“Into the great barn with them
beside the M’Donalds,” said the Laird.
More and more chiefs were announced,
the least of whom would have accounted it derogatory
to his dignity to stir without a retinue of six or
seven persons. To every new annunciation, Angus
M’Aulay answered by naming some place of accommodation, the
stables, the loft, the cow-house, the sheds, every
domestic office, were destined for the night to some
hospitable purpose or other. At length the arrival
of M’Dougal of Lorn, after all his means of
accommodation were exhausted, reduced him to some
perplexity. “What the devil is to be done,
Donald?” said he; “the great barn would
hold fifty more, if they would lie heads and thraws;
but there would be drawn dirks amang them which should
lie upper-most, and so we should have bloody puddings
before morning!”
“What needs all this?”
said Allan, starting up, and coming forward with the
stern abruptness of his usual manner; “are the
Gael to-day of softer flesh or whiter blood than their
fathers were? Knock the head out of a cask of
usquebae; let that be their night-gear their
plaids their bed-clothes the blue sky their
canopy, and the heather their couch. Come
a thousand more, and they would not quarrel on the
broad heath for want of room!”
“Allan is right,” said
his brother; “it is very odd how Allan, who,
between ourselves,” said he to Musgrave, “is
a little wowf, [wowf, i.e. crazed.] seems
at times to have more sense than us all put together.
Observe him now.”
“Yes,” continued Allan,
fixing his eyes with a ghastly stare upon the opposite
side of the hall, “they may well begin as they
are to end; many a man will sleep this night upon
the heath, that when the Martinmas wind shalt blow
shall lie there stark enough, and reck little of cold
or lack of covering.”
“Do not forespeak us, brother,”
said Angus; “that is not lucky.”
“And what luck is it then that
you expect?” said Allan; and straining his eyes
until they almost started from their sockets, he fell
with a convulsive shudder into the arms of Donald
and his brother, who, knowing the nature of his fits,
had come near to prevent his fall. They seated
him upon a bench, and supported him until he came to
himself, and was about to speak.
“For God’s sake, Allan,”
said his brother, who knew the impression his mystical
words were likely to make on many of the guests, “say
nothing to discourage us.”
“Am I he who discourages you?”
said Allan; “let every man face his world as
I shall face mine. That which must come, will
come; and we shall stride gallantly over many a field
of victory, ere we reach yon fatal slaughter-place,
or tread yon sable scaffolds.”
“What slaughter-place? what
scaffolds?” exclaimed several voices; for Allan’s
renown as a seer was generally established in the Highlands.
“You will know that but too
soon,” answered Allan. “Speak to me
no more, I am weary of your questions.”
He then pressed his hand against his brow, rested
his elbow upon his knee, and sunk into a deep reverie.
“Send for Annot Lyle, and the
harp,” said Angus, in a whisper, to his servant;
“and let those gentlemen follow me who do not
fear a Highland breakfast.”
All accompanied their hospitable landlord
excepting only Lord Menteith, who lingered in one
of the deep embrasures formed by the windows of
the hall. Annot Lyle shortly after glided into
the room, not ill described by Lord Menteith as being
the lightest and most fairy figure that ever trode
the turf by moonlight. Her stature, considerably
less than the ordinary size of women, gave her the
appearance of extreme youth, insomuch, that although
she was near eighteen, she might have passed for four
years younger. Her figure, hands, and feet, were
formed upon a model of exquisite symmetry with the
size and lightness of her person, so that Titania
herself could scarce have found a more fitting representative.
Her hair was a dark shade of the colour usually termed
flaxen, whose clustering ringlets suited admirably
with her fair complexion, and with the playful, yet
simple, expression of her features. When we add
to these charms, that Annot, in her orphan state,
seemed the gayest and happiest of maidens, the reader
must allow us to claim for her the interest of almost
all who looked on her. In fact, it was impossible
to find a more universal favourite, and she often
came among the rude inhabitants of the castle, as Allan
himself, in a poetical mood, expressed it, “like
a sunbeam on a sullen sea,” communicating to
all others the cheerfulness that filled her own mind.
Annot, such as we have described her,
smiled and blushed, when, on entering the apartment,
Lord Menteith came from his place of retirement, and
kindly wished her good-morning.
“And good-morning to you, my
lord,” returned she, extending her hand to her
friend; “we have seldom seen you of late at the
castle, and now I fear it is with no peaceful purpose.”
“At least, let me not interrupt
your harmony, Annot,” said Lord Menteith, “though
my arrival may breed discord elsewhere. My cousin
Allan needs the assistance of your voice and music.”
“My preserver,” said Annot
Lyle, “has a right to my poor exertions; and
you, too, my lord, you, too, are my preserver,
and were the most active to save a life that is worthless
enough, unless it can benefit my protectors.”
So saying, she sate down at a little
distance upon the bench on which Allan M’Aulay
was placed, and tuning her clairshach, a small harp,
about thirty inches in height, she accompanied it
with her voice. The air was an ancient Gaelic
melody, and the words, which were supposed to be very
old, were in the same language; but we subjoin a translation
of them, by Secundus Macpherson, Esq. of Glenforgen,
which, although submitted to the fetters of English
rhythm, we trust will be found nearly as genuine as
the version of Ossian by his celebrated namesake.
“Birds of omen
dark and foul,
Night-crow, raven, bat,
and owl,
Leave the sick man to
his dream
All night long he heard
your scream
Haste to cave and ruin’d
tower,
Ivy, tod, or dingled
bower,
There to wink and mope,
for, hark!
In the mid air sings
the lark.
“Hie to moorish
gills and rocks,
Prowling wolf and wily
fox,
Hie you fast, nor turn
your view,
Though the lamb bleats
to the ewe.
Couch your trains, and
speed your flight,
Safety parts with parting
night;
And on distant echo
borne,
Comes the hunter’s
early horn.
“The moon’s
wan crescent scarcely gleams,
Ghost-like she fades
in morning beams;
Hie hence each peevish
imp and fay,
That scare the pilgrim
on his way:
Quench, kelpy! quench,
in bog and fen,
Thy torch that cheats
benighted men;
Thy dance is o’er,
thy reign is done,
For Benyieglo hath seen
the sun.
“Wild thoughts,
that, sinful, dark, and deep,
O’erpower the
passive mind in sleep,
Pass from the slumberer’s
soul away,
Like night-mists from
the brow of day:
Foul hag, whose blasted
visage grim
Smothers the pulse,
unnerves the limb,
Spur thy dark palfrey,
and begone!
Thou darest not
face the godlike sun.”
As the strain proceeded, Allan M’Aulay
gradually gave signs of recovering his presence of
mind, and attention to the objects around him.
The deep-knit furrows of his brow relaxed and smoothed
themselves; and the rest of his features, which had
seemed contorted with internal agony, relapsed into
a more natural state. When he raised his head
and sat upright, his countenance, though still deeply
melancholy, was divested of its wildness and ferocity;
and in its composed state, although by no means handsome,
the expression of his features was striking, manly,
and even noble. His thick, brown eyebrows, which
had hitherto been drawn close together, were now slightly
separated, as in the natural state; and his grey eyes,
which had rolled and flashed from under them with
an unnatural and portentous gleam, now recovered a
steady and determined expression.
“Thank God!” he said,
after sitting silent for about a minute, until the
very last sounds of the harp had ceased to vibrate,
“my soul is no longer darkened the
mist hath passed from my spirit.”
“You owe thanks, cousin Allan,”
said Lord Menteith, coming forward, “to Annot
Lyle, as well as to heaven, for this happy change in
your melancholy mood.”
“My noble cousin Menteith,”
said Allan, rising and greeting him very respectfully,
as well as kindly, “has known my unhappy circumstances
so long, that his goodness will require no excuse
for my being thus late in bidding him welcome to the
castle.”
“We are too old acquaintances,
Allan,” said Lord Menteith, “and too good
friends, to stand on the ceremonial of outward greeting;
but half the Highlands will be here to-day, and you
know, with our mountain Chiefs, ceremony must not
be neglected. What will you give little Annot
for making you fit company to meet Evan Dhu, and I
know not how many bonnets and feathers?”
“What will he give me?”
said Annot, smiling; “nothing less, I hope, than
the best ribbon at the Fair of Doune.”
“The Fair of Doune, Annot?”
said Allan sadly; “there will be bloody work
before that day, and I may never see it; but you have
well reminded me of what I have long intended to do.”
Having said this, he left the room.
“Should he talk long in this
manner,” said Lord Menteith, “you must
keep your harp in tune, my dear Annot.”
“I hope not,” said Annot,
anxiously; “this fit has been a long one, and
probably will not soon return. It is fearful to
see a mind, naturally generous and affectionate, afflicted
by this constitutional malady.”
As she spoke in a low and confidential
tone, Lord Menteith naturally drew close, and stooped
forward, that he might the better catch the sense
of what she said. When Allan suddenly entered
the apartment, they as naturally drew back from each
other with a manner expressive of consciousness, as
if surprised in a conversation which they wished to
keep secret from him. This did not escape Allan’s
observation; he stopt short at the door of the apartment his
brows were contracted his eyes rolled;
but it was only the paroxysm of a moment. He passed
his broad sinewy hand across his brow, as if to obliterate
these signs of emotion, and advanced towards Annot,
holding in his hand a very small box made of oakwood,
curiously inlaid. “I take you to witness,”
he said, “cousin Menteith, that I give this
box and its contents to Annot Lyle. It contains
a few ornaments that belonged to my poor mother of
trifling value, you may guess, for the wife of a Highland
laird has seldom a rich jewel-casket.”
“But these ornaments,”
said Annot Lyle, gently and timidly refusing the box,
“belong to the family I cannot accept ”
“They belong to me alone, Annot,”
said Allan, interrupting her; “they were my
mother’s dying bequest. They are all I can
call my own, except my plaid and my claymore.
Take them, therefore they are to me valueless
trinkets and keep them for my sake should
I never return from these wars.”
So saying, he opened the case, and
presented it to Annot. “If,” said
he, “they are of any value, dispose of them
for your own support, when this house has been consumed
with hostile fire, and can no longer afford you protection.
But keep one ring in memory of Allan, who has done,
to requite your kindness, if not all he wished, at
least all he could.”
Annot Lyle endeavoured in vain to
restrain the gathering tears, when she said, “One
ring, Allan, I will accept from you as a memorial of
your goodness to a poor orphan, but do not press me
to take more; for I cannot, and will not, accept a
gift of such disproportioned value.”
“Make your choice, then,”
said Allan; “your delicacy may be well founded;
the others will assume a shape in which they may be
more useful to you.”
“Think not of it,” said
Annot, choosing from the contents of the casket a
ring, apparently the most trifling in value which it
contained; “keep them for your own, or your
brother’s bride. But, good heavens!”
she said, interrupting herself, and looking at the
ring, “what is this that I have chosen?”
Allan hastened to look upon it, with
eyes of gloomy apprehension; it bore, in enamel, a
death’s head above two crossed daggers.
When Allan recognised the device, he uttered a sigh
so deep, that she dropped the ring from her hand,
which rolled upon the floor. Lord Menteith picked
it up, and returned it to the terrified Annot.
“I take God to witness,”
said Allan, in a solemn tone, “that your hand,
young lord, and not mine, has again delivered to her
this ill-omened gift. It was the mourning ring
worn by my mother in memorial of her murdered brother.”
“I fear no omens,” said
Annot, smiling through her tears; “and nothing
coming through the hands of my two patrons,”
so she was wont to call Lord Menteith and Allan, “can
bring bad luck to the poor orphan.”
She put the ring on her finger, and,
turning to her harp, sung, to a lively air, the following
verses of one of the fashionable songs of the period,
which had found its way, marked as it was with the
quaint hyperbolical taste of King Charles’s
time, from some court masque to the wilds of Perthshire:
“Gaze not upon
the stars, fond sage,
In them no influence
lies;
To read the fate of
youth or age,
Look on my Helen’s
eyes.
“Yet, rash astrologer,
refrain!
Too dearly would be
won
The prescience of another’s
pain,
If purchased by thine
own.”
“She is right, Allan,”
said Lord Menteith; “and this end of an old song
is worth all we shall gain by our attempt to look into
futurity.”
“She is wrong, my lord,”
said Allan, sternly, “though you, who treat
with lightness the warnings I have given you, may not
live to see the event of the omen. laugh
not so scornfully,” he added, interrupting himself
“or rather laugh on as loud and as long as you
will; your term of laughter will find a pause ere
long.”
“I care not for your visions,
Allan,” said Lord Menteith; “however short
my span of life, the eye of no Highland seer can see
its termination.”
“For heaven’s sake,”
said Annot Lyle, interrupting him, “you know
his nature, and how little he can endure ”
“Fear me not,” said Allan,
interrupting her, “my mind is now
constant and calm. But for you, young lord,”
said he, turning to Lord Menteith, “my eye has
sought you through fields of battle, where Highlanders
and Lowlanders lay strewed as thick as ever the rooks
sat on those ancient trees,” pointing to a rookery
which was seen from the window “my
eye sought you, but your corpse was not there my
eye sought you among a train of unresisting and disarmed
captives, drawn up within the bounding walls of an
ancient and rugged fortress; flash after
flash platoon after platoon the
hostile shot fell amongst them, They dropped like
the dry leaves in autumn, but you were not among their
ranks; scaffolds were prepared blocks
were arranged, saw-dust was spread the priest
was ready with his book, the headsman with his axe but
there, too, mine eye found you not.”
“The gibbet, then, I suppose,
must be my doom?” said Lord Menteith. “Yet
I wish they had spared me the halter, were it but for
the dignity of the peerage.”
He spoke this scornfully, yet not
without a sort of curiosity, and a wish to receive
an answer; for the desire of prying into futurity
frequently has some influence even on the minds of
those who disavow all belief in the possibility of
such predictions.
“Your rank, my lord, will suffer
no dishonour in your person, or by the manner of your
death. Three times have I seen a Highlander plant
his dirk in your bosom and such will be
your fate.”
“I wish you would describe him
to me,” said Lord Menteith, “and I shall
save him the trouble of fulfilling your prophecy, if
his plaid be passible to sword or pistol.”
“Your weapons,” said Allan,
“would avail you little; nor can I give you
the information you desire. The face of the vision
has been ever averted from me.”
“So be it then,” said
Lord Menteith, “and let it rest in the uncertainty
in which your augury has placed it. I shall dine
not the less merrily among plaids, and dirks, and
kilts to-day.”
“It may be so,” said Allan;
“and, it may be, you do well to enjoy these
moments, which to me are poisoned by auguries of future
evil. But I,” he continued “I
repeat to you, that this weapon that is,
such a weapon as this,” touching the hilt of
the dirk which he wore, “carries your fate.”
“In the meanwhile,” said Lord Menteith,
“you, Allan, have frightened the blood from
the cheeks of Annot Lyle let us leave this
discourse, my friend, and go to see what we both understand, the
progress of our military preparations.”
They joined Angus M’Aulay and
his English guests, and, in the military discussions
which immediately took place, Allan showed a clearness
of mind, strength of judgment, and precision of thought,
totally inconsistent with the mystical light in which
his character has been hitherto exhibited.