The
Lord Abbot had a soul
Subtile and quick, and searching as
the fire;
By magic stairs he went as deep as
hell,
And if in devils’ possession
gold be kept,
He brought some sure from thence ’tis
hid in caves,
Known, save to me, to none.
The Wonder of a
Kingdome.
Lovel almost mechanically followed
the beggar, who led the way with a hasty and steady
pace, through bush and bramble, avoiding the beaten
path, and often turning to listen whether there were
any sounds of pursuit behind them. They sometimes
descended into the very bed of the torrent, sometimes
kept a narrow and precarious path, that the sheep
(which, with the sluttish negligence towards property
of that sort universal in Scotland, were allowed to
stray in the copse) had made along the very verge
of its overhanging banks. From time to time Lovel
had a glance of the path which he had traversed the
day before in company with Sir Arthur, the Antiquary,
and the young ladies. Dejected, embarrassed,
and occupied by a thousand inquiétudes, as he
then was, what would he now have given to regain the
sense of innocence which alone can counter-balance
a thousand evils! “Yet, then,” such
was his hasty and involuntary reflection, “even
then, guiltless and valued by all around me, I thought
myself unhappy. What am I now, with this young
man’s blood upon my hands? the feeling
of pride which urged me to the deed has now deserted
me, as the actual fiend himself is said to do those
whom he has tempted to guilt.” Even his
affection for Miss Wardour sunk for the time before
the first pangs of remorse, and he thought he could
have encountered every agony of slighted love to have
had the conscious freedom from blood-guiltiness which
he possessed in the morning.
These painful reflections were not
interrupted by any conversation on the part of his
guide, who threaded the thicket before him, now holding
back the sprays to make his path easy, now exhorting
him to make haste, now muttering to himself, after
the custom of solitary and neglected old age, words
which might have escaped Lovel’s ear even had
he listened to them, or which, apprehended and retained,
were too isolated to convey any connected meaning, a
habit which may be often observed among people of
the old man’s age and calling.
At length, as Lovel, exhausted by
his late indisposition, the harrowing feelings by
which he was agitated, and the exertion necessary to
keep up with his guide in a path so rugged, began
to flag and fall behind, two or three very precarious
steps placed him on the front of a precipice overhung
with brushwood and copse. Here a cave, as narrow
in its entrance as a fox-earth, was indicated by a
small fissure in the rock, screened by the boughs
of an aged oak, which, anchored by its thick and twisted
roots in the upper part of the cleft, flung its branches
almost straight outward from the cliff, concealing
it effectually from all observation. It might
indeed have escaped the attention even of those who
had stood at its very opening, so uninviting was the
portal at which the beggar entered. But within,
the cavern was higher and more roomy, cut into two
separate branches, which, intersecting each other at
right angles, formed an emblem of the cross, and indicated
the abode of an anchoret of former times. There
are many caves of the same kind in different parts
of Scotland. I need only instance those of Gorton,
near Rosslyn, in a scene well known to the admirers
of romantic nature.
The light within the eave was a dusky
twilight at the entrance, which failed altogether
in the inner recesses. “Few folks ken o’
this place,” said the old man; “to the
best o’my knowledge, there’s just twa living
by mysell, and that’s Jingling Jock and the Lang
Linker. I have had mony a thought, that when
I fand mysell auld and forfairn, and no able to
enjoy God’s blessed air ony länger, I wad
drag mysell here wi’ a pickle ait-meal; and
see, there’s a bit bonny dropping well that popples
that self-same gate simmer and winter; and
I wad e’en streek mysell out here, and abide
my removal, like an auld dog that trails its useless
ugsome carcass into some bush or bracken no to gie
living things a scunner wi’ the sight o’t
when it’s dead Ay, and then, when
the dogs barked at the lone farm-stead, the gudewife
wad cry, Whisht, stirra, that’ll be auld Edie,’
and the bits o’ weans wad up, puir things, and
toddle to the door to pu’ in the auld Blue-Gown
that mends a’ their bonny-dies But
there wad be nae mair word o’ Edie, I trow.”
He then led Lovel, who followed him
unresistingly, into one of the interior branches of
the cave. “Here,” he said, “is
a bit turnpike-stair that gaes up to the auld kirk
abune. Some folks say this place was howkit out
by the monks lang syne to hide their treasure
in, and some said that they used to bring things into
the abbey this gate by night, that they durstna sae
weel hae brought in by the main port and in open day And
some said that ane o’ them turned a saint (or
aiblins wad hae had folk think sae), and settled him
down in this Saint Ruth’s cell, as the auld
folks aye ca’d it, and garr’d big the stair,
that he might gang up to the kirk when they were at
the divine service. The Laird o’ Monkbarns
wad hae a hantle to say about it, as he has about maist
things, if he ken’d only about the place.
But whether it was made for man’s devices or
God’s service, I have seen ower muckle sin done
in it in my day, and far ower muckle have I been partaker
of ay, even here in this dark cove.
Mony a gudewife’s been wondering what for the
red cock didna craw her up in the morning, when he’s
been roasting, puir fallow, in this dark hole And,
ohon! I wish that and the like o’ that had
been the warst o’t! Whiles they wad hae
heard the din we were making in the very bowels o’
the earth, when Sanders Aikwood, that was forester
in thae days, the father o’ Ringan that now
is, was gaun daundering about the wood at e’en,
to see after the Laird’s game and whiles he wad
hae seen a glance o’ the light frae the door
o’ the cave, flaughtering against the hazels
on the other bank; and then siccan stories
as Sanders had about the worricows and gyre-carlins
that haunted about the auld wa’s at e’en,
and the lights that he had seen, and the cries that
he had heard, when there was nae mortal e’e
open but his ain; and eh! as he wad thrum them ower
and ower to the like o’ me ayont the ingle at
e’en, and as I wad gie the auld silly carle
grane for grane, and tale for tale, though I ken’d
muckle better about it than ever he did. Ay, ay they
were daft days thae; but they were a’
vanity, and waur, and it’s fitting
that they wha hae led a light and evil life, and abused
charity when they were young, suld aiblins come to
lack it when they are auld.”
While Ochiltree was thus recounting
the exploits and tricks of his earlier life, with
a tone in which glee and compunction alternately predominated,
his unfortunate auditor had sat down upon the hermit’s
seat, hewn out of the solid rock, and abandoned himself
to that lassitude, both of mind and body, which generally
follows a course of events that have agitated both,
The effect of his late indisposition, which had much
weakened his system, contributed to this lethargic
despondency. “The puir bairn!” said
auld Edie, “an he sleeps in this damp hole,
he’ll maybe wauken nae mair, or catch some sair
disease. It’s no the same to him as to
the like o’ us, that can sleep ony gate an ânes
our wames are fu’. Sit up, Maister
Lovel, lad! After à’s come and gane,
I dare say the captain-lad will do weel eneugh and,
after a’, ye are no the first that has had this
misfortune. I hae seen mony a man killed, and
helped to kill them mysell, though there was nae quarrel
between us and if it isna wrang to
kill folk we have nae quarrel wi’, just because
they wear another sort of a cockade, and speak a foreign
language, I canna see but a man may have excuse for
killing his ain mortal foe, that comes armed to the
fair field to kill him. I dinna say it’s
right God forbid or that it isna
sinfu’ to take away what ye canna restore, and
that’s the breath of man, whilk is in his nostrils;
but I say it is a sin to be forgiven if it’s
repented of. Sinfu’ men are we a’;
but if ye wad believe an auld grey sinner that has
seen the evil o’ his ways, there is as much
promise atween the twa boards o’ the Testament
as wad save the warst o’ us, could we but think
sae.”
With such scraps of comfort and of
divinity as he possessed, the mendicant thus continued
to solicit and compel the attention of Lovel, until
the twilight began to fade into night. “Now,”
said Ochiltree, “I will carry ye to a mair convenient
place, where I hae sat mony a time to hear the howlit
crying out of the ivy tod, and to see the moonlight
come through the auld windows o’ the ruins.
There can be naebody come here after this time o’
night; and if they hae made ony search, thae blackguard
shirra’-officers and constables, it will hae
been ower lang syne. Öd, they are as
great cowards as ither folk, wi’ a’ their
warrants and king’s keys I hae gien
some o’ them a gliff in my day, when they were
coming rather ower near me But, lauded be
grace for it! they canna stir me now for ony waur
than an auld man and a beggar, and my badge is a gude
protection; and then Miss Isabella Wardour is a tower
o’ strength, ye ken” (Lovel
sighed) “Aweel, dinna be cast down bowls
may a’ row right yet gie the lassie
time to ken her mind. She’s the wale o’
the country for beauty, and a gude friend o’
mine I gang by the bridewell as safe as
by the kirk on a Sabbath deil ony o’
them daur hurt a hair o’ auld Edie’s head
now; I keep the crown o’ the causey when I gae
to the borough, and rub shouthers wi’ a bailie
wi’ as little concern as an he were a brock.”
The king’s keys are, in law
phrase, the crow-bars and hammers used to force doors
and locks, in execution of the king’s warrant.
While the mendicant spoke thus, he
was busied in removing a few loose stones in one angle
of the eave, which obscured the entrance of the staircase
of which he had spoken, and led the way into it, followed
by Lovel in passive silence.
“The air’s free eneugh,”
said the old man; “the monks took care o’
that, for they werena a lang-breathed generation,
I reckon; they hae contrived queer tirlie-wirlie holes,
that gang out to the open air, and keep the stair
as caller as a kail-blade.”
Lovel accordingly found the staircase
well aired, and, though narrow, it was neither ruinous
nor long, but speedily admitted them into a narrow
gallery contrived to run within the side wall of the
chancel, from which it received air and light through
apertures ingeniously hidden amid the florid ornaments
of the Gothic architecture.
“This secret passage ance
gaed round great part o’ the biggin,” said
the beggar, “and through the wa’ o’
the place I’ve heard Monkbarns ca’
the Refractory” [meaning probably Refectory],
“and so awa to the Prior’s ain house.
It’s like he could use it to listen what the
monks were saying at meal-time, and then
he might come ben here and see that
they were busy skreighing awa wi’ the psalms
doun below there; and then, when he saw a’ was
right and tight, he might step awa and fetch in a bonnie
lass at the cove yonder for they were queer
hands the monks, unless mony lees is made on them.
But our folk were at great pains lang syne to
big up the passage in some parts, and pu’
it down in others, for fear o’ some uncanny
body getting into it, and finding their way down to
the cove: it wad hae been a fashious job that by
my certie, some o’ our necks wad hae been ewking.”
They now came to a place where the
gallery was enlarged into a small circle, sufficient
to contain a stone seat. A niche, constructed
exactly before it, projected forward into the chancel,
and as its sides were latticed, as it were, with perforated
stone-work, it commanded a full view of the chancel
in every direction, and was probably constructed, as
Edie intimated, to be a convenient watch-tower, from
which the superior priest, himself unseen, might watch
the behaviour of his monks, and ascertain, by personal
inspection, their punctual attendance upon those rites
of devotion which his rank exempted him from sharing
with them. As this niche made one of a regular
series which stretched along the wall of the chancel,
and in no respect differed from the rest when seen
from below, the secret station, screened as it was
by the stone figure of St. Michael and the dragon,
and the open tracery around the niche, was completely
hid from observation. The private passage, confined
to its pristine breadth, had originally continued
beyond this seat; but the jealous precautions of the
vagabonds who frequented the cave of St. Ruth had
caused them to build it carefully up with hewn stones
from the ruin.
“We shall be better here,”
said Edie, seating himself on the stone bench, and
stretching the lappet of his blue gown upon the spot,
when he motioned Lovel to sit down beside him “we
shall be better here than doun below; the air’s
free and mild, and the savour of the wallflowers, and
siccan shrubs as grow on thae ruined wa’s, is
far mair refreshing than the damp smell doun below
yonder. They smell sweetest by night-time thae
flowers, and they’re maist aye seen about rained
buildings. Now, Maister Lovel, can ony o’
you scholars gie a gude reason for that?”
Lovel replied in the negative.
“I am thinking,” resumed
the beggar, “that they’ll be, like mony
folk’s gude gifts, that often seem maist gracious
in adversity or maybe it’s a parable,
to teach us no to slight them that are in the darkness
of sin and the decay of tribulation, since God sends
odours to refresh the mirkest hour, and flowers and
pleasant bushes to clothe the ruined buildings.
And now I wad like a wise man to tell me whether Heaven
is maist pleased wi’ the sight we are looking
upon thae pleasant and quiet lang
streaks o’ moonlight that are lying sae still
on the floor o’ this auld kirk, and glancing
through the great pillars and stanchions o’ the
carved windows, and just dancing like on the leaves
o’ the dark ivy as the breath o’ wind
shakes it I wonder whether this is mair
pleasing to Heaven than when it was lighted up wi’
lamps, and candles nae doubt, and roughies, and wi’
the mirth and the frankincent that they speak of in
the Holy Scripture, and wi’ organs assuredly,
and men and women singers, and sackbuts, and dulcimers,
and a’ instruments o’ music I
wonder if that was acceptable, or whether it is of
these grand parafle o’ ceremonies that holy
writ says, It is an abomination to me.
Links, or torches.
I am thinking, Maister Lovel, if twa
puir contrite spirits like yours and mine fand
grace to make our petition”
Here Lovel laid his hand eagerly on
the mendicant’s arm, saying, “Hush!
I heard some one speak.”
“I am dull o’ hearing,”
answered Edie, in a whisper, “but we’re
surely safe here where was the sound?”
Lovel pointed to the door of the chancel,
which, highly ornamented, occupied the west end of
the building, surmounted by the carved window, which
let in a flood of moonlight over it.
“They can be nane o’ our
folk,” said Edie in the same low and cautious
tone; “there’s but twa o’ them kens
o’ the place, and they’re mony a mile
off, if they are still bound on their weary pilgrimage.
I’ll never think it’s the officers here
at this time o’ night. I am nae believer
in auld wives’ stories about ghaists, though
this is gey like a place for them But mortal,
or of the other world, here they come! twa
men and a light.”
And in very truth, while the mendicant
spoke, two human figures darkened with their shadows
the entrance of the chancel which had before
opened to the moon-lit meadow beyond, and the small
lantern which one of them displayed, glimmered pale
in the clear and strong beams of the moon, as the
evening star does among the lights of the departing
day. The first and most obvious idea was, that,
despite the asseverations of Edie Ochiltree, the persons
who approached the ruins at an hour so uncommon must
be the officers of justice in quest of Lovel.
But no part of their conduct confirmed the suspicion.
A touch and a whisper from the old man warned Lovel
that his best course was to remain quiet, and watch
their motions from their present place of concealment.
Should anything appear to render retreat necessary,
they had behind them the private stair-case and cavern,
by means of which they could escape into the wood long
before any danger of close pursuit. They kept
themselves, therefore, as still as possible, and observed
with eager and anxious curiosity every accent and
motion of these nocturnal wanderers.
After conversing together some time
in whispers, the two figures advanced into the middle
of the chancel; and a voice, which Lovel at once recognised,
from its tone and dialect, to be that of Dousterswivel,
pronounced in a louder but still a smothered tone,
“Indeed, mine goot sir, dere cannot be one finer
hour nor season for dis great purpose. You
shall see, mine goot sir, dat it is all one bibble-babble
dat Mr. Oldenbuck says, and dat he knows no more of
what he speaks than one little child. Mine soul!
he expects to get as rich as one Jew for his poor
dirty one hundred pounds, which I care no more about,
by mine honest wort, than I care for an hundred stivers.
But to you, my most munificent and reverend patron,
I will show all de secrets dat art can show ay,
de secret of de great Pymander.”
“That other ane,” whispered
Edie, “maun be, according to a’ likelihood,
Sir Arthur Wardour I ken naebody but himsell
wad come here at this time at e’en wi’
that German blackguard; ane wad think he’s
bewitched him he gars him e’en
trow that chalk is cheese. Let’s see what
they can be doing.”
This interruption, and the low tone
in which Sir Arthur spoke, made Lovel lose all Sir
Arthur’s answer to the adept, excepting the last
three emphatic words, “Very great expense;”
to which Dousterswivel at once replied “Expenses! to
be sure dere must be de great expenses.
You do not expect to reap before you do sow de seed:
de expense is de seed de riches and de
mine of goot metal, and now de great big chests of
plate, they are de crop vary goot crop too,
on mine wort. Now, Sir Arthur, you have sowed
this night one little seed of ten guineas like one
pinch of snuff, or so big; and if you do not reap de
great harvest dat is, de great harvest
for de little pinch of seed, for it must be proportions,
you must know then never call one honest
man, Herman Dousterswivel. Now you see, mine
patron for I will not conceal mine secret
from you at all you see this little plate
of silver; you know de moon measureth de whole zodiack
in de space of twenty-eight day every shild
knows dat. Well, I take a silver plate when she
is in her fifteenth mansion, which mansion is in de
head of Libra, and I engrave upon one side de worts,
[Shedbarschemoth Schartachan] dat is, de
Emblems of de Intelligence of de moon and
I make this picture like a flying serpent with a turkey-cock’s
head vary well. Then upon this side
I make de table of de moon, which is a square of nine,
multiplied into itself, with eighty-one numbers on
every side, and diameter nine dere it is
done very proper. Now I will make dis avail
me at de change of every quarter-moon dat I shall
find by de same proportions of expenses I lay out
in de suffumigations, as nine, to de product of nine
multiplied into itself But I shall find
no more to-night as maybe two or dree times nine,
because dere is a thwarting power in de house of ascendency.”
“But, Dousterswivel,”
said the simple Baronet, “does not this look
like magic? I am a true though unworthy
son of the Episcopal church, and I will have nothing
to do with the foul fiend.”
“Bah! bah! not a
bit magic in it at all not a bit It
is all founded on de planetary influence, and de sympathy
and force of numbers. I will show you much finer
dan dis. I do not say dere is not de
spirit in it, because of de suffumigation; but, if
you are not afraid, he shall not be invisible.”
“I have no curiosity to see
him at all,” said the Baronet, whose courage
seemed, from a certain quaver in his accent, to have
taken a fit of the ague.
“Dat is great pity,” said
Dousterswivel; “I should have liked to show
you de spirit dat guard dis treasure like one
fierce watchdog but I know how to manage
him; you would not care to see him?”
“Not at all,” answered
the Baronet, in a tone of feigned indifference; “I
think we have but little time.”
“You shall pardon me, my patron;
it is not yet twelve, and twelve precise is just our
planetary hours; and I could show you de spirit vary
well, in de meanwhile, just for pleasure. You
see I would draw a pentagon within a circle, which
is no trouble at all, and make my suffumigation within
it, and dere we would be like in one strong castle,
and you would hold de sword while I did say de needful
worts. Den you should see de solid wall open
like de gate of ane city, and den let me
see ay, you should see first one stag pursued
by three black greyhounds, and they should pull him
down as they do at de elector’s great hunting-match;
and den one ugly, little, nasty black negro should
appear and take de stag from them and paf all
should be gone; den you should hear horns winded dat
all de ruins should ring mine wort, they
should play fine hunting piece, as goot as him you
call’d Fischer with his oboi; vary well den
comes one herald, as we call Ernhold, winding his
horn and den come de great Peolphan, called
de mighty Hunter of de North, mounted on hims black
steed. But you would not care to see all this?"
Note F. Witchcraft.
“Why, I am not afraid,”
answered the poor Baronet, “if that
is does anything any great mischiefs,
happen on such occasions?”
“Bah! mischiefs? no! sometimes
if de circle be no quite just, or de beholder be de
frightened coward, and not hold de sword firm and
straight towards him, de Great Hunter will take his
advantage, and drag him exorcist out of de circle
and throttle him. Dat does happens.”
“Well then, Dousterswivel, with
every confidence in my courage and your skill, we
will dispense with this apparition, and go on to the
business of the night.”
“With all mine heart it
is just one thing to me and now it is de
time hold you de sword till I kindle de
little what you call chip.”
Dousterswivel accordingly set fire
to a little pile of chips, touched and prepared with
some bituminous substance to make them burn fiercely;
and when the flame was at the highest, and lightened,
with its shortlived glare, all the ruins around, the
German flung in a handful of perfumes which produced
a strong and pungent odour. The exorcist and his
pupil both were so much affected as to cough and sneeze
heartily; and, as the vapour floated around the pillars
of the building, and penetrated every crevice, it
produced the same effect on the beggar and Lovel.
“Was that an echo?” said
the Baronet, astonished at the sternutation which
resounded from above; “or” drawing
close to the adept, “can it be the spirit you
talked of, ridiculing our attempt upon his hidden
treasures?”
“N n no,”
muttered the German, who began to partake of his pupil’s
terrors, “I hope not.”
Here a violent of sneezing, which
the mendicant was unable to suppress, and which could
not be considered by any means as the dying fall of
an echo, accompanied by a grunting half-smothered
cough, confounded the two treasure-seekers. “Lord
have mercy on us!” said the Baronet.
“Alle guten Geistern loben
den Herrn!” ejaculated the terrified adept.
“I was begun to think,” he continued, after
a moment’s silence, “that this would be
de bestermost done in de day-light we was
bestermost to go away just now.”
“You juggling villain!”
said the Baronet, in whom these expressions awakened
a suspicion that overcame his terrors, connected as
it was with the sense of desperation arising from
the apprehension of impending ruin “you
juggling mountebank! this is some legerdemain trick
of yours to get off from the performance of your promise,
as you have so often done before. But, before
Heaven! I will this night know what I have trusted
to when I suffered you to fool me on to my ruin!
Go on, then come fairy, come fiend, you
shall show me that treasure, or confess yourself a
knave and an impostor, or, by the faith of a desperate
and ruined man, I’ll send you where you shall
see spirits enough.”
The treasure-finder, trembling between
his terror for the supernatural beings by whom he
supposed himself to be surrounded, and for his life,
which seemed to be at the mercy of a desperate man,
could only bring out, “Mine patron, this is
not the allerbestmost usage. Consider, mine honoured
sir, that de spirits”
Here Edie, who began to enter into
the humour of the scene, uttered an extraordinary
howl, being an exaltation and a prolongation of the
most deplorable whine in which he was accustomed to
solicit charity.
Dousterswivel flung himself on his
knees “Dear Sir Arthurs, let us go,
or let me go!”
“No, you cheating scoundrel!”
said the knight, unsheathing the sword which he had
brought for the purposes of the exorcism, “that
shift shall not serve you Monkbarns warned
me long since of your juggling pranks I
will see this treasure before you leave this place,
or I will have you confess yourself an impostor, or,
by Heaven, I’ll run this sword through you,
though all the spirits of the dead should rise around
us!”
“For de lofe
of Heaven be patient, mine honoured patron, and you
shall hafe all de treasure as I knows of yes,
you shall indeed But do not speak about
de spirits it makes dem angry.”
Edie Ochiltree here prepared himself
to throw in another groan, but was restrained by Lovel,
who began to take a more serious interest, as he observed
the earnest and almost desperate demeanour of Sir Arthur.
Dousterswivel, having at once before his eyes the fear
of the foul fiend, and the violence of Sir Arthur,
played his part of a conjuror extremely ill, hesitating
to assume the degree of confidence necessary to deceive
the latter, lest it should give offence to the invisible
cause of his alarm. However, after rolling his
eyes, muttering and sputtering German exorcisms, with
contortions of his face and person, rather flowing
from the impulse of terror than of meditated fraud,
he at length proceeded to a corner of the building
where a flat stone lay upon the ground, bearing upon
its surface the effigy of an armed warrior in a recumbent
posture carved in bas-relief. He muttered to Sir
Arthur, “Mine patrons, it is here Got
save us all!”
Sir Arthur, who, after the first moment
of his superstitious fear was over, seemed to have
bent up all his faculties to the pitch of resolution
necessary to carry on the adventure, lent the adept
his assistance to turn over the stone, which, by means
of a lever that the adept had provided, their joint
force with difficulty effected. No supernatural
light burst forth from below to indicate the subterranean
treasury, nor was there any apparition of spirits,
earthly or infernal. But when Dousterswivel had,
with great trepidation, struck a few strokes with
a mattock, and as hastily thrown out a shovelful or
two of earth (for they came provided with the tools
necessary for digging), something was heard to ring
like the sound of a falling piece of metal, and Dousterswivel,
hastily catching up the substance which produced it,
and which his shovel had thrown out along with the
earth, exclaimed, “On mine dear wort, mine
patrons, dis is all it is indeed; I
mean all we can do to-night;” and
he gazed round him with a cowering and fearful glance,
as if to see from what corner the avenger of his imposture
was to start forth.
“Let me see it,” said
Sir Arthur; and then repeated, still more sternly,
“I will be satisfied I will judge
by mine own eyes.” He accordingly held
the object to the light of the lantern. It was
a small case, or casket, for Lovel could
not at the distance exactly discern its shape, which,
from the Baronet’s exclamation as he opened it,
he concluded was filled with coin. “Ay,”
said the Baronet, “this is being indeed in good
luck! and if it omens proportional success upon a larger
venture, the venture shall be made. That six
hundred of Goldieword’s, added to the other
incumbent claims, must have been ruin indeed.
If you think we can parry it by repeating this experiment suppose
when the moon next changes, I will hazard
the necessary advance, come by it how I may.”
“Oh, mine good patrons, do not
speak about all dat,” said Dousterswivel, “as
just now, but help me to put de shtone to de rights,
and let us begone our own ways.” And accordingly,
so soon as the stone was replaced, he hurried Sir
Arthur, who was now resigned once more to his guidance,
away from a spot, where the German’s guilty conscience
and superstitious fears represented goblins as lurking
behind each pillar with the purpose of punishing his
treachery.
“Saw onybody e’er the
like o’ that!” said Edie, when they had
disappeared like shadows through the gate by which
they had entered “saw ony creature
living e’er the like o’ that! But
what can we do for that puir doited deevil of a knight-baronet?
Öd, he showed muckle mair spunk, too, than I
thought had been in him I thought he wad
hae sent cauld iron through the vagabond Sir
Arthur wasna half sae bauld at Bessie’s-apron
yon night but then, his blood was up even
now, and that makes an unco difference. I hae
seen mony a man wad hae felled another an anger him,
that wadna muckle hae liked a clink against Crummies-horn
yon time. But what’s to be done?”
“I suppose,” said Lovel,
“his faith in this fellow is entirely restored
by this deception, which, unquestionably, he had arranged
beforehand.”
“What! the siller? Ay,
ay trust him for that they that
hide ken best where to find. He wants to wile
him out o’ his last guinea, and then escape
to his ain country, the land-louper. I wad
likeit weel just to hae come in at the clipping-time,
and gien him a lounder wi’ my pike-staff; he
wad hae taen it for a bennison frae some o’ the
auld dead abbots. But it’s best no to be
rash; sticking disna gang by strength, but by the
guiding o’ the gally. I’se be upsides
wi’ him ae day.”
“What if you should inform Mr. Oldbuck?”
said Lovel.
“Ou, I dinna ken Monkbarns
and Sir Arthur are like, and yet they’re no
like neither. Monkbarns has whiles influence wi’
him, and whiles Sir Arthur cares as little about him
as about the like o’ me. Monkbarns is no
that ower wise himsell, in some things; he
wad believe a bodle to be an auld Roman coin, as he
ca’s it, or a ditch to be a camp, upon ony leasing
that idle folk made about it. I hae garr’d
him trow mony a queer tale mysell, gude forgie me.
But wi’ a’ that, he has unco little sympathy
wi’ ither folks; and he’s snell and dure
eneugh in casting up their nonsense to them, as if
he had nane o’ his ain. He’ll listen
the hale day, an yell tell him about tales o’
Wallace, and Blind Harry, and Davie Lindsay; but ye
maunna speak to him about ghaists or fairies, or spirits
walking the earth, or the like o’ that; he
had amaist flung auld Caxon out o’ the window
(and he might just as weel hae flung awa his best
wig after him), for threeping he had seen a ghaist
at the humlock-knowe. Now, if he was taking it
up in this way, he wad set up the tother’s birse,
and maybe do mair ill nor gude he’s
done that twice or thrice about thae mine-warks; ye
wad thought Sir Arthur had a pleasure in gaun on wi’
them the deeper, the mair he was warned against it
by Monkbarns.”
“What say you then,” said
Lovel, “to letting Miss Wardour know the circumstance?”
“Ou, puir thing, how could she
stop her father doing his pleasure? and,
besides, what wad it help? There’s a sough
in the country about that six hundred pounds, and
there’s a writer chield in Edinburgh has been
driving the spur-rowels o’ the law up to the
head into Sir Arthur’s sides to gar him pay
it, and if he canna, he maun gang to jail or flee
the country. He’s like a desperate man,
and just catches at this chance as a’ he has
left, to escape utter perdition; so what signifies
plaguing the puir lassie about what canna be helped?
And besides, to say the truth, I wadna like to tell
the secret o’ this place. It’s unco
convenient, ye see yoursell, to hae a hiding-hole o’
âne’s ain; and though I be out o’
the line o’ needing ane e’en now, and trust
in the power o’ grace that I’ll neer do
onything to need ane again, yet naebody kens what
temptation ane may be gien ower to and,
to be brief, I downa bide the thought of anybody kennin
about the place; they say, keep a thing
seven year, an’ yell aye find a use for’t and
maybe I may need the cove, either for mysell, or for
some ither body.”
This argument, in which Edie Ochiltree,
notwithstanding his scraps of morality and of divinity,
seemed to take, perhaps from old habit, a personal
interest, could not be handsomely controverted by Lovel,
who was at that moment reaping the benefit of the
secret of which the old man appeared to be so jealous.
This incident, however, was of great
service to Lovel, as diverting his mind from the unhappy
occurrence of the evening, and considerably rousing
the energies which had been stupefied by the first
view of his calamity. He reflected that it by
no means necessarily followed that a dangerous wound
must be a fatal one that he had been hurried
from the spot even before the surgeon had expressed
any opinion of Captain M’Intyre’s situation and
that he had duties on earth to perform, even should
the very worst be true, which, if they could not restore
his peace of mind or sense of innocence, would furnish
a motive for enduring existence, and at the same time
render it a course of active benevolence. Such
were Lovel’s feelings, when the hour arrived
when, according to Edie’s calculation who,
by some train or process of his own in observing the
heavenly bodies, stood independent of the assistance
of a watch or time-keeper it was fitting
they should leave their hiding-place, and betake themselves
to the seashore, in order to meet Lieutenant Taffril’s
boat according to appointment.
They retreated by the same passage
which had admitted them to the prior’s secret
seat of observation, and when they issued from the
grotto into the wood, the birds which began to chirp,
and even to sing, announced that the dawn was advanced.
This was confirmed by the light and amber clouds that
appeared over the sea, as soon as their exit from
the copse permitted them to view the horizon. Morning,
said to be friendly to the muses, has probably obtained
this character from its effect upon the fancy and
feelings of mankind. Even to those who, like
Lovel, have spent a sleepless and anxious night, the
breeze of the dawn brings strength and quickening
both of mind and body. It was, therefore, with
renewed health and vigour that Lovel, guided by the
trusty mendicant, brushed away the dew as he traversed
the downs which divided the Den of St. Ruth, as the
woods surrounding the ruins were popularly called,
from the sea-shore.
The first level beam of the sun, as
his brilliant disk began to emerge from the ocean,
shot full upon the little gun-brig which was lying-to
in the offing close to the shore the boat
was already waiting, Taffril himself, with his naval
cloak wrapped about him, seated in the stern.
He jumped ashore when he saw the mendicant and Lovel
approach, and, shaking the latter heartily by the
hand, begged him not to be cast down. “M’Intyre’s
wound,” he said, “was doubtful, but far
from desperate.” His attention had got
Lovel’s baggage privately sent on board the
brig; “and,” he said, “he trusted
that, if Lovel chose to stay with the vessel, the
penalty of a short cruise would be the only disagreeable
consequence of his rencontre. As for himself,
his time and motions were a good deal at his own disposal,
he said, excepting the necessary obligation of remaining
on his station.”
“We will talk of our farther
motions,” said Lovel, “as we go on board.”
Then turning to Edie, he endeavoured
to put money into his hand. “I think,”
said Edie, as he tendered it back again, “the
hale folk here have either gane daft, or they hae
made a vow to rain my trade, as they say ower muckle
water drowns the miller. I hae had mair gowd offered
me within this twa or three weeks than I ever saw
in my life afore. Keep the siller, lad yell
hae need o’t, I’se warrant ye, and I hae
nane my claes is nae great things, and I get a blue
gown every year, and as mony siller groats as the
king, God bless him, is years auld you and
I serve the same master, ye ken, Captain Taffril;
there’s rigging provided for and
my meat and drink I get for the asking in my rounds,
or, at an orra time, I can gang a day without it,
for I make it a rule never to pay for nane; so
that a’ the siller I need is just to buy tobacco
and sneeshin, and maybe a dram at a time in a cauld
day, though I am nae dram-drinker to be a gaberlunzie; sae
take back your gowd, and just gie me a lily-white
shilling.”
Upon these whims, which he imagined
intimately connected with the honour of his vagabond
profession, Edie was flint and adamant, not to be moved
by rhetoric or entreaty; and therefore Lovel was under
the necessity of again pocketing his intended bounty,
and taking a friendly leave of the mendicant by shaking
him by the hand, and assuring him of his cordial gratitude
for the very important services which he had rendered
him, recommending, at the same time, secrecy as to
what they had that night witnessed. “Ye
needna doubt that,” said Ochiltree; “I
never tell’d tales out o’ yon cove in
my life, though mony a queer thing I hae seen in’t.”
The boat now put off. The old
man remained looking after it as it made rapidly towards
the brig under the impulse of six stout rowers, and
Lovel beheld him again wave his blue bonnet as a token
of farewell ere he turned from his fixed posture,
and began to move slowly along the sands as if resuming
his customary perambulations.