Many
great ones
Would part with half their states, to have
the plan
And credit to beg in the first style.
Beggar’s
Bush.
Old Edie was stirring with the lark,
and his first inquiry was after Steenie and the pocket-book.
The young fisherman had been under the necessity of
attending his father before daybreak, to avail themselves
of the tide, but he had promised that, immediately
on his return, the pocket-book, with all its contents,
carefully wrapped up in a piece of sail-cloth, should
be delivered by him to Ringan Aikwood, for Dousterswivel,
the owner.
The matron had prepared the morning
meal for the family, and, shouldering her basket of
fish, tramped sturdily away towards Fairport.
The children were idling round the door, for the day
was fair and sun-shiney. The ancient grandame,
again seated on her wicker-chair by the fire, had
resumed her eternal spindle, wholly unmoved by the
yelling and screaming of the children, and the scolding
of the mother, which had preceded the dispersion of
the family. Edie had arranged his various bags,
and was bound for the renewal of his wandering life,
but first advanced with due courtesy to take his leave
of the ancient crone.
“Gude day to ye, cummer, and
mony ane o’ them. I will be back about the
fore-end o’har’st, and I trust to find
ye baith haill and fere.”
“Pray that ye may find me in
my quiet grave,” said the old woman, in a hollow
and sepulchral voice, but without the agitation of
a single feature.
“Ye’re auld, cummer, and
sae am I mysell; but we maun abide His will
we’ll no be forgotten in His good time.”
“Nor our deeds neither,”
said the crone: “what’s dune in the
body maun be answered in the spirit.”
“I wot that’s true; and
I may weel tak the tale hame to mysell, that hae led
a misruled and roving life. But ye were aye a
canny wife. We’re a’ frail but
ye canna hae sae muckle to bow ye down.”
“Less than I might have had but
mair, O far mair, than wad sink the stoutest brig
e’er sailed out o’ Fairport harbour! Didna
somebody say yestreen at least sae it is
borne in on my mind, but auld folk hae weak fancies did
not somebody say that Joscelind, Countess of Glenallan,
was departed frae life?”
“They said the truth whaever
said it,” answered old Edie; “she was
buried yestreen by torch-light at St. Ruth’s,
and I, like a fule, gat a gliff wi’ seeing the
lights and the riders.”
“It was their fashion since
the days of the Great Earl that was killed at Harlaw; they
did it to show scorn that they should die and be buried
like other mortals; the wives o’ the house of
Glenallan wailed nae wail for the husband, nor the
sister for the brother. But is she e’en
ca’d to the lang account?”
“As sure,” answered Edie, “as we
maun a’ abide it.”
“Then I’ll unlade my mind, come o’t
what will.”
This she spoke with more alacrity
than usually attended her expressions, and accompanied
her words with an attitude of the hand, as if throwing
something from her. She then raised up her form,
once tall, and still retaining the appearance of having
been so, though bent with age and rheumatism, and
stood before the beggar like a mummy animated by some
wandering spirit into a temporary resurrection.
Her light-blue eyes wandered to and fro, as if she
occasionally forgot and again remembered the purpose
for which her long and withered hand was searching
among the miscellaneous contents of an ample old-fashioned
pocket. At length she pulled out a small chip-box,
and opening it, took out a handsome ring, in which
was set a braid of hair, composed of two different
colours, black and light brown, twined together, encircled
with brilliants of considerable value.
“Gudeman,” she said to
Ochiltree, “as ye wad e’er deserve mercy,
ye maun gang my errand to the house of Glenallan,
and ask for the Earl.”
“The Earl of Glenallan, cummer!
où, he winna see ony o’ the gentles o’
the country, and what likelihood is there that he wad
see the like o’ an auld gaberlunzie?”
“Gang your ways and try; and
tell him that Elspeth o’ the Craigburnfoot he’ll
mind me best by that name maun see him or
she be relieved frae her lang pilgrimage, and
that she sends him that ring in token of the business
she wad speak o’.”
Ochiltree looked on the ring with
some admiration of its apparent value, and then carefully
replacing it in the box, and wrapping it in an old
ragged handkerchief, he deposited the token in his
bosom.
“Weel, gudewife,” he said,
“I’se do your bidding, or it’s no
be my fault. But surely there was never sic a
braw propine as this sent to a yerl by an auld fishwife,
and through the hands of a gaberlunzie beggar.”
With this reflection, Edie took up
his pike-staff, put on his broad-brimmed bonnet, and
set forth upon his pilgrimage. The old woman
remained for some time standing in a fixed posture,
her eyes directed to the door through which her ambassador
had departed. The appearance of excitation, which
the conversation had occasioned, gradually left her
features; she sank down upon her accustomed seat, and
resumed her mechanical labour of the distaff and spindle,
with her wonted air of apathy.
Edie Ochiltree meanwhile advanced
on his journey. The distance to Glenallan was
ten miles, a march which the old soldier accomplished
in about four hours. With the curiosity belonging
to his idle trade and animated character, he tortured
himself the whole way to consider what could be the
meaning of this mysterious errand with which he was
entrusted, or what connection the proud, wealthy, and
powerful Earl of Glenallan could have with the crimes
or penitence of an old doting woman, whose rank in
life did not greatly exceed that of her messenger.
He endeavoured to call to memory all that he had ever
known or heard of the Glenallan family, yet, having
done so, remained altogether unable to form a conjecture
on the subject. He knew that the whole extensive
estate of this ancient and powerful family had descended
to the Countess, lately deceased, who inherited, in
a most remarkable degree, the stern, fierce, and unbending
character which had distinguished the house of Glenallan
since they first figured in Scottish annals. Like
the rest of her ancestors, she adhered zealously to
the Roman Catholic faith, and was married to an English
gentleman of the same communion, and of large fortune,
who did not survive their union two years. The
Countess was, therefore, left an early widow, with
the uncontrolled management of the large estates of
her two sons. The elder, Lord Geraldin, who was
to succeed to the title and fortune of Glenallan, was
totally dependent on his mother during her life.
The second, when he came of age, assumed the name
and arms of his father, and took possession of his
estate, according to the provisions of the Countess’s
marriage-settlement. After this period, he chiefly
resided in England, and paid very few and brief visits
to his mother and brother; and these at length were
altogether dispensed with, in consequence of his becoming
a convert to the reformed religion.
But even before this mortal offence
was given to its mistress, his residence at Glenallan
offered few inducements to a gay young man like Edward
Geraldin Neville, though its gloom and seclusion seemed
to suit the retired and melancholy habits of his elder
brother. Lord Geraldin, in the outset of life,
had been a young man of accomplishment and hopes.
Those who knew him upon his travels entertained the
highest expectations of his future career. But
such fair dawns are often strangely overcast.
The young nobleman returned to Scotland, and after
living about a year in his mother’s society
at Glenallan House, he seemed to have adopted all
the stern gloom and melancholy of her character.
Excluded from politics by the incapacities attached
to those of his religion, and from all lighter avocationas
by choice, Lord Geraldin led a life of the strictest
retirement. His ordinary society was composed
of the clergyman of his communion, who occasionally
visited his mansion; and very rarely, upon stated
occasions of high festival, one or two families who
still professed the Catholic religion were formally
entertained at Glenallan House. But this was
all; their heretic neighbours knew nothing of the
family whatever; and even the Catholics saw little
more than the sumptuous entertainment and solemn parade
which was exhibited on those formal occasions, from
which all returned without knowing whether most to
wonder at the stern and stately demeanour of the Countess,
or the deep and gloomy dejection which never ceased
for a moment to cloud the features of her son.
The late event had put him in possession of his fortune
and title, and the neighbourhood had already begun
to conjecture whether gaiety would revive with independence,
when those who had some occasional acquaintance with
the interior of the family spread abroad a report,
that the Earl’s constitution was undermined by
religious austerities, and that in all probability
he would soon follow his mother to the grave.
This event was the more probable, as his brother had
died of a lingering complaint, which, in the latter
years of his life, had affected at once his frame
and his spirits; so that heralds and genealogists
were already looking back into their records to discover
the heir of this ill-fated family, and lawyers were
talking with gleesome anticipation, of the probability
of a “great Glenallan cause.”
As Edie Ochiltree approached the front
of Glenallan House, an ancient building of great
extent, the most modern part of which had been designed
by the celebrated Inigo Jones, he began to consider
in what way he should be most likely to gain access
for delivery of his message; and, after much consideration,
resolved to send the token to the Earl by one of the
domestics.
[Supposed to represent Glammis Castle,
in Forfarshire, with which the Author was well acquainted.]
With this purpose he stopped at a
cottage, where he obtained the means of making up
the ring in a sealed packet like a petition, addressed,
Forr his hounor the Yerl of Glenllan These.
But being aware that missives delivered at the doors
of great houses by such persons as himself, do not
always make their way according to address, Edie determined,
like an old soldier, to reconnoitre the ground before
he made his final attack. As he approached the
porter’s lodge, he discovered, by the number
of poor ranked before it, some of them being indigent
persons in the vicinity, and others itinerants of his
own begging profession, that there was
about to be a general dole or distribution of charity.
“A good turn,” said Edie
to himself, “never goes unrewarded I’ll
maybe get a good awmous that I wad hae missed but
for trotting on this auld wife’s errand.”
Accordingly, he ranked up with the
rest of this ragged regiment, assuming a station as
near the front as possible, a distinction
due, as he conceived, to his blue gown and badge,
no less than to his years and experience; but he soon
found there was another principle of precedence in
this assembly, to which he had not adverted.
“Are ye a triple man, friend,
that ye press forward sae bauldly? I’m
thinking no, for there’s nae Catholics wear that
badge.”
“Na, na, I am no a Roman,” said
Edie.
“Then shank yoursell awa to
the double folk, or single folk, that’s the
Episcopals or Presbyterians yonder: it’s
a shame to see a heretic hae sic a lang white
beard, that would do credit to a hermit.”
Ochiltree, thus rejected from the
society of the Catholic mendicants, or those who called
themselves such, went to station himself with the
paupers of the communion of the church of England,
to whom the noble donor allotted a double portion
of his charity. But never was a poor occasional
conformist more roughly rejected by a High-church
congregation, even when that matter was furiously agitated
in the days of good Queen Anne.
“See to him wi’ his badge!”
they said; “he hears ane o’
the king’s Presbyterian chaplains sough out
a sermon on the morning of every birth-day, and now
he would pass himsell for ane o’ the Episcopal
church! Na, na! we’ll
take care o’ that.”
Edie, thus rejected by Rome and Prelacy,
was fain to shelter himself from the laughter of his
brethren among the thin group of Presbyterians, who
had either disdained to disguise their religious opinions
for the sake of an augmented dole, or perhaps knew
they could not attempt the imposition without a certainty
of detection.
The same degree of precedence was
observed in the mode of distributing the charity,
which consisted in bread, beef, and a piece of money,
to each individual of all the three classes.
The almoner, an ecclesiastic of grave appearance and
demeanour, superintended in person the accommodation
of the Catholic mendicants, asking a question or two
of each as he delivered the charity, and recommending
to their prayers the soul of Joscelind, late Countess
of Glenallan, mother of their benefactor. The
porter, distinguished by his long staff headed with
silver, and by the black gown tufted with lace of the
same colour, which he had assumed upon the general
mourning in the family, overlooked the distribution
of the dole among the prelatists. The less-favoured
kirk-folk were committed to the charge of an aged domestic.
As this last discussed some disputed
point with the porter, his name, as it chanced to
be occasionally mentioned, and then his features, struck
Ochiltree, and awakened recollections of former times.
The rest of the assembly were now retiring, when the
domestic, again approaching the place where Edie still
lingered, said, in a strong Aberdeenshire accent,
“Fat is the auld feel-body deeing, that he canna
gang avay, now that he’s gotten baith meat and
siller?”
“Francis Macraw,” answered
Edie Ochiltree, “d’ye no mind Fontenoy,
and keep thegither front and rear?’”
“Ohon! ohon!” cried Francie,
with a true north-country yell of recognition, “naebody
could hae said that word but my auld front-rank man,
Edie Ochiltree! But I’m sorry to see ye
in sic a peer state, man.”
“No sae ill aff as ye may think,
Francis. But I’m laith to leave this place
without a crack wi’ you, and I kenna when I may
see you again, for your folk dinna mak Protestants
welcome, and that’s ae reason that I hae never
been here before.”
“Fusht, fusht,” said Francie,
“let that flee stick i’ the wa’ when
the dirt’s dry it will rub out; and
come you awa wi’ me, and I’ll gie ye something
better thau that beef bane, man.”
Having then spoke a confidential word
with the porter (probably to request his connivance),
and having waited until the almoner had returned into
the house with slow and solemn steps, Francie Macraw
introduced his old comrade into the court of Glenallan
House, the gloomy gateway of which was surmounted
by a huge scutcheon, in which the herald and undertaker
had mingled, as usual, the emblems of human pride and
of human nothingness, the Countess’s
hereditary coat-of-arms, with all its numerous quarterings,
disposed in a lozenge, and surrounded by the separate
shields of her paternal and maternal ancestry, intermingled
with scythes, hour glasses, skulls, and other symbols
of that mortality which levels all distinctions.
Conducting his friend as speedily as possible along
the large paved court, Macraw led the way through a
side-door to a small apartment near the servants’
hall, which, in virtue of his personal attendance
upon the Earl of Glenallan, he was entitled to call
his own. To produce cold meat of various kinds,
strong beer, and even a glass of spirits, was no difficulty
to a person of Francis’s importance, who had
not lost, in his sense of conscious dignity, the keen
northern prudence which recommended a good understanding
with the butler. Our mendicant envoy drank ale,
and talked over old stories with his comrade, until,
no other topic of conversation occurring, he resolved
to take up the theme of his embassy, which had for
some time escaped his memory.
“He had a petition to present
to the Earl,” he said; for he judged
it prudent to say nothing of the ring, not knowing,
as he afterwards observed, how far the manners of
a single soldier might have been corrupted by service
in a great house.
A single soldier means, in Scotch, a private soldier.
“Hout, tout, man,” said
Francie, “the Earl will look at nae petitions
but I can gie’t to the almoner.”
“But it relates to some secret,
that maybe my lord wad like best to see’t himsell.”
“I’m jeedging that’s
the very reason that the almoner will be for seeing
it the first and foremost.”
“But I hae come a’ this
way on purpose to deliver it, Francis, and ye really
maun help me at a pinch.”
“Neer speed then if I dinna,”
answered the Aberdeenshire man: “let them
be as cankered as they like, they can but turn me awa,
and I was just thinking to ask my discharge, and gang
down to end my days at Inverurie.”
With this doughty resolution of serving
his friend at all ventures, since none was to be encountered
which could much inconvenience himself, Francie Macraw
left the apartment. It was long before he returned,
and when he did, his manner indicated wonder and agitation.
“I am nae seer gin ye be Edie
Ochiltree o’ Carrick’s company in the
Forty-twa, or gin ye be the deil in his likeness!”
“And what makes ye speak in
that gait?” demanded the astonished mendicant.
“Because my lord has been in
sic a distress and surpreese as I neer saw a man in
my life. But he’ll see you I
got that job cookit. He was like a man awa frae
himsell for mony minutes, and I thought he wad hae
swarv’t a’thegither, and fan
he cam to himsell, he asked fae brought the packet and
fat trow ye I said?”
“An auld soger,” says
Edie “that does likeliest at a gentle’s
door; at a farmer’s it’s best to say ye’re
an auld tinkler, if ye need ony quarters, for maybe
the gudewife will hae something to souther.”
“But I said neer ane o’
the twa,” answered Francis; “my lord cares
as little about the tane as the tother for
he’s best to them that can souther up our sins.
Sae I e’en said the bit paper was brought by
an auld man wi’ a long fite beard he
might be a capeechin freer for fat I ken’d,
for he was dressed like an auld palmer. Sae ye’ll
be sent up for fanever he can find mettle to face
ye.”
“I wish I was weel through this
business,” thought Edie to himself; “mony
folk surmise that the Earl’s no very right in
the judgment, and wha can say how far he may be offended
wi’ me for taking upon me sae muckle?”
But there was now no room for retreat a
bell sounded from a distant part of the mansion, and
Macraw said, with a smothered accent, as if already
in his master’s presence, “That’s
my lord’s bell! follow me, and step
lightly and cannily, Edie.”
Edie followed his guide, who seemed
to tread as if afraid of being overheard, through
a long passage, and up a back stair, which admitted
them into the family apartments. They were ample
and extensive, furnished at such cost as showed the
ancient importance and splendour of the family.
But all the ornaments were in the taste of a former
and distant period, and one would have almost supposed
himself traversing the halls of a Scottish nobleman
before the union of the crowns. The late Countess,
partly from a haughty contempt of the times in which
she lived, partly from her sense of family pride, had
not permitted the furniture to be altered or modernized
during her residence at Glenallan House. The
most magnificent part of the decorations was a valuable
collection of pictures by the best masters, whose massive
frames were somewhat tarnished by time. In this
particular also the gloomy taste of the family seemed
to predominate. There were some fine family portraits
by Vandyke and other masters of eminence; but the collection
was richest in the Saints and Martyrdoms of Domenichino,
Velasquez, and Murillo, and other subjects of the
same kind, which had been selected in preference to
landscapes or historical pieces. The manner in
which these awful, and sometimes disgusting, subjects
were represented, harmonized with the gloomy state
of the apartments, a circumstance which
was not altogether lost on the old man, as he traversed
them under the guidance of his quondam fellow-soldier.
He was about to express some sentiment of this kind,
but Francie imposed silence on him by signs, and opening
a door at the end of the long picture-gallery, ushered
him into a small antechamber hung with black.
Here they found the almoner, with his ear turned to
a door opposite that by which they entered, in the
attitude of one who listens with attention, but is
at the same time afraid of being detected in the act.
The old domestic and churchman started
when they perceived each other. But the almoner
first recovered his recollection, and advancing towards
Macraw, said, under his breath, but with an authoritative
tone, “How dare you approach the Earl’s
apartment without knocking? and who is this stranger,
or what has he to do here? Retire to the
gallery, and wait for me there.”
“It’s impossible just
now to attend your reverence,” answered Macraw,
raising his voice so as to be heard in the next room,
being conscious that the priest would not maintain
the altercation within hearing of his patron, “the
Earl’s bell has rung.”
He had scarce uttered the words, when
it was rung again with greater violence than before;
and the ecclesiastic, perceiving further expostulation
impossible, lifted his finger at Macraw, with a menacing
attitude, as he left the apartment.
“I tell’d ye sae,”
said the Aberdeen man in a whisper to Edie, and then
proceeded to open the door near which they had observed
the chaplain stationed.