But this poor farce
has neither truth nor art
To please the fancy
or to touch the heart
Dark but not awful dismal
but yet mean,
With anxious bustle
moves the cumbrous scene,
Presents no objects
tender or profound,
But spreads its cold
unmeaning gloom around
Parish
Register
‘Your majesty,’ said Mannering,
laughing, ’has solemnised your abdication by
an act of mercy and charity. That fellow will
scarce think of going to law.’
‘O, you are quite wrong,’
said the experienced lawyer. ’The only
difference is, I have lost my client and my fee.
He’ll never rest till he finds somebody to encourage
him to commit the folly he has predetermined.
No! no! I have only shown you another weakness
of my character: I always speak truth of a Saturday
night.’
‘And sometimes through the week,
I should think,’ said Mannering, continuing
the same tone.
’Why, yes; as far as my vocation
will permit. I am, as Hamlet says, indifferent
honest, when my clients and their solicitors do not
make me the medium of conveying their double-distilled
lies to the bench. But oportet vivere!
it is a sad thing. And now to our business.
I am glad my old friend Mac-Morlan has sent you to
me; he is an active, honest, and intelligent man,
long sheriff-substitute of the county of under
me, and still holds the office. He knows I have
a regard for that unfortunate family of Ellangowan,
and for poor Lucy. I have not seen her since she
was twelve years old, and she was then a sweet pretty
girl, under the management of a very silly father.
But my interest in her is of an early date. I
was called upon, Mr. Mannering, being then sheriff
of that county, to investigate the particulars of
a murder which had been committed near Ellangowan
the day on which this poor child was born; and which,
by a strange combination that I was unhappily not able
to trace, involved the death or abstraction of her
only brother, a boy of about five years old.
No, Colonel, I shall never forget the misery of the
house of Ellangowan that morning! the father half-distracted the
mother dead in premature travail the helpless
infant, with scarce any one to attend it, coming wawling
and crying into this miserable world at such a moment
of unutterable misery. We lawyers are not of iron,
sir, or of brass, any more than you soldiers are of
steel. We are conversant with the crimes and
distresses of civil society, as you are with those
that occur in a state of war, and to do our duty in
either case a little apathy is perhaps necessary.
But the devil take a soldier whose heart can be as
hard as his sword, and his dam catch the lawyer who
bronzes his bosom instead of his forehead! But
come, I am losing my Saturday at e’en. Will
you have the kindness to trust me with these papers
which relate to Miss Bertram’s business? and
stay to-morrow you’ll take a bachelor’s
dinner with an old lawyer, I insist upon
it at three precisely, and come an hour
sooner. The old lady is to be buried on Monday;
it is the orphan’s cause, and we’ll borrow
an hour from the Sunday to talk over this business,
although I fear nothing can be done if she has altered
her settlement, unless perhaps it occurs within the
sixty days, and then, if Miss Bertram can show that
she possesses the character of heir-at-law, why But,
hark! my lièges are impatient of their interregnum.
I do not invite you to rejoin us, Colonel; it would
be a trespass on your complaisance, unless you had
begun the day with us, and gradually glided on from
wisdom to mirth, and from mirth to-to-to extravagance.
Good-night. Harry, go home with Mr. Mannering
to his lodging. Colonel, I expect you at a little
past two to-morrow.’
The Colonel returned to his inn, equally
surprised at the childish frolics in which he had
found his learned counsellor engaged, at the candour
and sound sense which he had in a moment summoned up
to meet the exigencies of his profession, and at the
tone of feeling which he displayed when he spoke of
the friendless orphan.
In the morning, while the Colonel
and his most quiet and silent of all retainers, Dominie
Sampson, were finishing the breakfast which Barnes
had made and poured out, after the Dominie had scalded
himself in the attempt, Mr. Pleydell was suddenly
ushered in. A nicely dressed bob-wig, upon every
hair of which a zealous and careful barber had bestowed
its proper allowance of powder; a well-brushed black
suit, with very clean shoes and gold buckles and stock-buckle;
a manner rather reserved and formal than intrusive,
but withal showing only the formality of manner, by
no means that of awkwardness; a countenance, the expressive
and somewhat comic features of which were in complete
repose all showed a being perfectly different
from the choice spirit of the evening before.
A glance of shrewd and piercing fire in his eye was
the only marked expression which recalled the man
of ‘Saturday at e’en.’
‘I am come,’ said he,
with a very polite address, ’to use my regal
authority in your behalf in spirituals as well as temporals;
can I accompany you to the Presbyterian kirk,
or Episcopal meeting-house? Tros Tyriusve, a
lawyer, you know, is of both religions, or rather I
should say of both forms; or can I assist
in passing the fore-noon otherwise? You’ll
excuse my old-fashioned importunity, I was born in
a time when a Scotchman was thought inhospitable if
he left a guest alone a moment, except when he slept;
but I trust you will tell me at once if I intrude.’
‘Not at all, my dear sir,’
answered Colonel Mannering. ’I am delighted
to put myself under your pilotage. I should wish
much to hear some of your Scottish preachers whose
talents have done such honour to your country your
Blair, your Robertson, or your Henry; and I embrace
your kind offer with all my heart. Only,’
drawing the lawyer a little aside, and turning his
eye towards Sampson, ’my worthy friend there
in the reverie is a little helpless and abstracted,
and my servant, Barnes, who is his pilot in ordinary,
cannot well assist him here, especially as he has
expressed his determination of going to some of your
darker and more remote places of worship.’
The lawyer’s eye glanced at
Dominie Sampson. ’A curiosity worth preserving;
and I’ll find you a fit custodier. Here
you, sir (to the waiter), go to Luckie Finlayson’s
in the Cowgate for Miles Macfin the cadie, he’ll
be there about this time, and tell him I wish to speak
to him.’
The person wanted soon arrived.
’I will commit your friend to this man’s
charge,’ said Pleydell; ’he’ll attend
him, or conduct him, wherever he chooses to go, with
a happy indifference as to kirk or market, meeting
or court of justice, or any other place whatever;
and bring him safe home at whatever hour you appoint;
so that Mr. Barnes there may be left to the freedom
of his own will.’
This was easily arranged, and the
Colonel committed the Dominie to the charge of this
man while they should remain in Edinburgh.
’And now, sir, if you please,
we shall go to the Grey-friars church, to hear our
historian of Scotland, of the Continent, and of America.’
They were disappointed: he did
not preach that morning. ‘Never mind,’
said the Counsellor, ’have a moment’s patience
and we shall do very well.’
The colleague of Dr. Robertson ascended
the pulpit. His external appearance was not prepossessing.
A remarkably fair complexion, strangely contrasted
with a black wig without a grain of powder; a narrow
chest and a stooping posture; hands which, placed
like props on either side of the pulpit, seemed necessary
rather to support the person than to assist the gesticulation
of the preacher; no gown, not even that of Geneva,
a tumbled band, and a gesture which seemed scarce
voluntary, were the first circumstances which struck
a stranger. ‘The preacher seems a very
ungainly person,’ whispered Mannering to his
new friend.
’Never fear, he’s the
son of an excellent Scottish lawyer; he’ll
show blood, I’ll warrant him.’
The learned Counsellor predicted truly.
A lecture was delivered, fraught with new, striking,
and entertaining views of Scripture history, a sermon
in which the Calvinism of the Kirk of Scotland was
ably supported, yet made the basis of a sound system
of practical morals, which should neither shelter
the sinner under the cloak of speculative faith or
of peculiarity of opinion, nor leave him loose to
the waves of unbelief and schism. Something there
was of an antiquated turn of argument and metaphor,
but it only served to give zest and peculiarity to
the style of elocution. The sermon was not read:
a scrap of paper containing the heads of the discourse
was occasionally referred to, and the enunciation,
which at first seemed imperfect and embarrassed, became,
as the preacher warmed in his progress, animated and
distinct; and although the discourse could not be
quoted as a correct specimen of pulpit eloquence, yet
Mannering had seldom heard so much learning, metaphysical
acuteness, and energy of argument brought into the
service of Christianity.
‘Such,’ he said, going
out of the church, ’must have been the preachers
to whose unfearing minds, and acute though sometimes
rudely exercised talents, we owe the Reformation.’
‘And yet that reverend gentleman,’
said Pleydell, ’whom I love for his father’s
sake and his own, has nothing of the sour or pharisaical
pride which has been imputed to some of the early
fathers of the Calvinistic Kirk of Scotland.
His colleague and he differ, and head different parties
in the kirk, about particular points of church discipline;
but without for a moment losing personal regard or
respect for each other, or suffering malignity to
interfere in an opposition steady, constant, and apparently
conscientious on both sides.’
‘And you, Mr. Pleydell, what
do you think of their points of difference?’
’Why, I hope, Colonel, a plain
man may go to heaven without thinking about them at
all; besides, inter nos, I am a member of
the suffering and Episcopal Church of Scotland the
shadow of a shade now, and fortunately so; but I love
to pray where my fathers prayed before me, without
thinking worse of the Presbyterian forms because they
do not affect me with the same associations.’
And with this remark they parted until dinner-time.
From the awkward access to the lawyer’s
mansion, Mannering was induced to form very moderate
expectations of the entertainment which he was to
receive. The approach looked even more dismal
by daylight than on the preceding evening. The
houses on each side of the lane were so close that
the neighbours might have shaken hands with each other
from the different sides, and occasionally the space
between was traversed by wooden galleries, and thus
entirely closed up. The stair, the scale-stair,
was not well cleaned; and on entering the house Mannering
was struck with the narrowness and meanness of the
wainscotted passage. But the library, into which
he was shown by an elderly, respectable-looking man-servant,
was a complete contrast to these unpromising appearances.
It was a well-proportioned room, hung with a portrait
or two of Scottish characters of eminence, by Jamieson,
the Caledonian Vandyke, and surrounded with books,
the best editions of the best authors, and in particular
an admirable collection of classics.
‘These,’ said Pleydell,
’are my tools of trade. A lawyer without
history or literature is a mechanic, a mere working
mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he
may venture to call himself an architect.’
But Mannering was chiefly delighted
with the view from the windows, which commanded that
incomparable prospect of the ground between Edinburgh
and the sea the Firth of Forth, with its
islands, the embayment which is terminated by the
Law of North Berwick, and the varied shores of Fife
to the northward, indenting with a hilly outline the
clear blue horizon.
When Mr. Pleydell had sufficiently
enjoyed the surprise of his guest, he called his attention
to Miss Bertram’s affairs. ‘I was
in hopes,’ he said, ’though but faint,
to have discovered some means of ascertaining her
indefeasible right to this property of Singleside;
but my researches have been in vain. The old
lady was certainly absolute fiar, and might dispose
of it in full right of property. All that we have
to hope is, that the devil may not have tempted her
to alter this very proper settlement. You must
attend the old girl’s funeral to-morrow, to which
you will receive an invitation, for I have acquainted
her agent with your being here on Miss Bertram’s
part; and I will meet you afterwards at the house
she inhabited, and be present to see fair play at the
opening of the settlement. The old cat had a
little girl, the orphan of some relation, who lived
with her as a kind of slavish companion. I hope
she has had the conscience to make her independent,
in consideration of the peine forte et
dure to which she subjected her during her lifetime.’
Three gentlemen now appeared, and
were introduced to the stranger. They were men
of good sense, gaiety, and general information, so
that the day passed very pleasantly over; and Colonel
Mannering assisted, about eight o’clock at night,
in discussing the landlord’s bottle, which was,
of course, a magnum. Upon his return to the inn
he found a card inviting him to the funeral of Miss
Margaret Bertram, late of Singleside, which was to
proceed from her own house to the place of interment
in the Greyfriars churchyard at one o’clock
afternoon.
At the appointed hour Mannering went
to a small house in the suburbs to the southward of
the city, where he found the place of mourning indicated,
as usual in Scotland, by two rueful figures with long
black cloaks, white crapes and hat-bands, holding
in their hands poles, adorned with melancholy streamers
of the same description. By two other mutes,
who, from their visages, seemed suffering under
the pressure of some strange calamity, he was ushered
into the dining-parlour of the defunct, where the
company were assembled for the funeral.
In Scotland the custom, now disused
in England, of inviting the relations of the deceased
to the interment is universally retained. On many
occasions this has a singular and striking effect,
but it degenerates into mere empty form and grimace
in cases where the defunct has had the misfortune
to live unbeloved and die unlamented. The English
service for the dead, one of the most beautiful and
impressive parts of the ritual of the church, would
have in such cases the effect of fixing the attention,
and uniting the thoughts and feelings of the audience
present in an exercise of devotion so peculiarly adapted
to such an occasion. But according to the Scottish
custom, if there be not real feeling among the assistants,
there is nothing to supply the deficiency, and exalt
or rouse the attention; so that a sense of tedious
form, and almost hypocritical restraint, is too apt
to pervade the company assembled for the mournful
solemnity. Mrs. Margaret Bertram was unluckily
one of those whose good qualities had attached no
general friendship. She had no near relations
who might have mourned from natural affection, and
therefore her funeral exhibited merely the exterior
trappings of sorrow.
Mannering, therefore, stood among
this lugubrious company of cousins in the third, fourth,
fifth, and sixth degree, composing his countenance
to the decent solemnity of all who were around him,
and looking as much concerned on Mrs. Margaret Bertram’s
account as if the deceased lady of Singleside had
been his own sister or mother. After a deep and
awful pause, the company began to talk aside, under
their breaths, however, and as if in the chamber of
a dying person.
‘Our poor friend,’ said
one grave gentleman, scarcely opening his mouth, for
fear of deranging the necessary solemnity of his features,
and sliding his whisper from between his lips, which
were as little unclosed as possible ’our
poor friend has died well to pass in the world.’
‘Nae doubt,’ answered
the person addressed, with half-closed eyes; ’poor
Mrs. Margaret was aye careful of the gear.’
‘Any news to-day, Colonel Mannering?’
said one of the gentlemen whom he had dined with the
day before, but in a tone which might, for its impressive
gravity, have communicated the death of his whole generation.
‘Nothing particular, I believe,
sir,’ said Mannering, in the cadence which was,
he observed, appropriated to the house of mourning.
‘I understand,’ continued
the first speaker, emphatically, and with the air
of one who is well informed ’I understand
there is a settlement.’
‘And what does little Jenny Gibson get?’
‘A hundred, and the auld repeater.’
‘That’s but sma’
gear, puir thing; she had a sair time o’t with
the auld leddy. But it’s ill waiting for
dead folk’s shoon.’
‘I am afraid,’ said the
politician, who was close by Mannering, ’we have
not done with your old friend Tippoo Sahib yet, I doubt
he’ll give the Company more plague; and I am
told, but you’ll know for certain, that East
India Stock is not rising.’
‘I trust it will, sir, soon.’
‘Mrs. Margaret,’ said
another person, mingling in the conversation, ’had
some India bonds. I know that, for I drew the
interest for her; it would be desirable now for the
trustees and legatees to have the Colonel’s
advice about the time and mode of converting them into
money. For my part I think but there’s
Mr. Mortcloke to tell us they are gaun to lift.’
Mr. Mortcloke the undertaker did accordingly,
with a visage of professional length and most grievous
solemnity, distribute among the pall-bearers little
cards, assigning their respective situations in attendance
upon the coffin. As this precedence is supposed
to be regulated by propinquity to the defunct, the
undertaker, however skilful a master of these lugubrious
ceremonies, did not escape giving some offence.
To be related to Mrs. Bertram was to be of kin to the
lands of Singleside, and was a propinquity of which
each relative present at that moment was particularly
jealous. Some murmurs there were on the occasion,
and our friend Dinmont gave more open offence, being
unable either to repress his discontent or to utter
it in the key properly modulated to the solemnity.
‘I think ye might hae at least gi’en me
a leg o’ her to carry,’ he exclaimed,
in a voice considerably louder than propriety admitted.
‘God! an it hadna been for the rigs o’
land, I would hae gotten her a’ to carry mysell,
for as mony gentles as are here.’
A score of frowning and reproving
brows were bent upon the unappalled yeoman, who, having
given vent to his displeasure, stalked sturdily downstairs
with the rest of the company, totally disregarding
the censures of those whom his remarks had scandalised.
And then the funeral pomp set forth;
saulies with their batons and gumphions of tarnished
white crape, in honour of the well-preserved maiden
fame of Mrs. Margaret Bertram. Six starved horses,
themselves the very emblems of mortality, well cloaked
and plumed, lugging along the hearse with its dismal
emblazonry, crept in slow state towards the place
of interment, preceded by Jamie Duff, an idiot, who,
with weepers and cravat made of white paper, attended
on every funeral, and followed by six mourning coaches,
filled with the company. Many of these now gave
more free loose to their tongues, and discussed with
unrestrained earnestness the amount of the succession,
and the probability of its destination. The principal
expectants, however, kept a prudent silence, indeed
ashamed to express hopes which might prove fallacious;
and the agent or man of business, who alone knew exactly
how matters stood, maintained a countenance of mysterious
importance, as if determined to preserve the full
interest of anxiety and suspense.
At length they arrived at the churchyard
gates, and from thence, amid the gaping of two or
three dozen of idle women with infants in their arms,
and accompanied by some twenty children, who ran gambolling
and screaming alongside of the sable procession, they
finally arrived at the burial-place of the Singleside
family. This was a square enclosure in the Greyfriars
churchyard, guarded on one side by a veteran angel
without a nose, and having only one wing, who had
the merit of having maintained his post for a century,
while his comrade cherub, who had stood sentinel on
the corresponding pedestal, lay a broken trunk among
the hemlock, burdock, and nettles which grew in gigantic
luxuriance around the walls of the mausoleum.
A moss-grown and broken inscription informed the reader
that in the year 1650 Captain Andrew Bertram, first
of Singleside, descended of the very ancient and honourable
house of Ellangowan, had caused this monument to be
erected for himself and his descendants. A reasonable
number of scythes and hour-glasses, and death’s
heads and cross-bones, garnished the following sprig
of sepulchral poetry to the memory of the founder
of the mausoleum:
Nathaniel’s heart, Bezaleel’s
hand If ever any had, These boldly do I say had he,
Who lieth in this bed.
Here, then, amid the deep black fat
loam into which her ancestors were now resolved, they
deposited the body of Mrs. Margaret Bertram; and, like
soldiers returning from a military funeral, the nearest
relations who might be interested in the settlements
of the lady urged the dog-cattle of the hackney coaches
to all the speed of which they were capable, in order
to put an end to farther suspense on that interesting
topic.