This
ring.
This little ring, with necromantic
force,
Has raised the ghost of pleasure to
my fears,
Conjured the sense of honour and of
love
Into such shapes, they fright me from
myself.
The
Fatal Marriage.
The ancient forms of mourning were
observed in Glenallan House, notwithstanding the obduracy
with which the members of the family were popularly
supposed to refuse to the dead the usual tribute of
lamentation. It was remarked, that when she received
the fatal letter announcing the death of her second,
and, as was once believed, her favourite son, the
hand of the Countess did not shake, nor her eyelid
twinkle, any more than upon perusal of a letter of
ordinary business. Heaven only knows whether
the suppression of maternal sorrow, which her pride
commanded, might not have some effect in hastening
her own death. It was at least generally supposed
that the apoplectic stroke, which so soon afterwards
terminated her existence, was, as it were, the vengeance
of outraged Nature for the restraint to which her feelings
had been subjected. But although Lady Glenallan
forebore the usual external signs of grief, she had
caused many of the apartments, amongst others her own
and that of the Earl, to be hung with the exterior
trappings of woe.
The Earl of Glenallan was therefore
seated in an apartment hung with black cloth, which
waved in dusky folds along its lofty walls. A
screen, also covered with black baize, placed towards
the high and narrow window, intercepted much of the
broken light which found its way through the stained
glass, that represented, with such skill as the fourteenth
century possessed, the life and sorrows of the prophet
Jeremiah. The table at which the Earl was seated
was lighted with two lamps wrought in silver, shedding
that unpleasant and doubtful light which arises from
the mingling of artificial lustre with that of general
daylight. The same table displayed a silver crucifix,
and one or two clasped parchment books. A large
picture, exquisitely painted by Spagnoletto, represented
the martyrdom of St. Stephen, and was the only ornament
of the apartment.
The inhabitant and lord of this disconsolate
chamber was a man not past the prime of life, yet
so broken down with disease and mental misery, so
gaunt and ghastly, that he appeared but a wreck of
manhood; and when he hastily arose and advanced towards
his visitor, the exertion seemed almost to overpower
his emaciated frame. As they met in the midst
of the apartment, the contrast they exhibited was
very striking. The hale cheek, firm step, erect
stature, and undaunted presence and bearing of the
old mendicant, indicated patience and content in the
extremity of age, and in the lowest condition to which
humanity can sink; while the sunken eye, pallid cheek,
and tottering form of the nobleman with whom he was
confronted, showed how little wealth, power, and even
the advantages of youth, have to do with that which
gives repose to the mind, and firmness to the frame.
The Earl met the old man in the middle
of the room, and having commanded his attendant to
withdraw into the gallery, and suffer no one to enter
the antechamber till he rung the bell, awaited, with
hurried yet fearful impatience, until he heard first
the door of his apartment, and then that of the antechamber,
shut and fastened by the spring-bolt. When he
was satisfied with this security against being overheard,
Lord Glenallan came close up to the mendicant, whom
he probably mistook for some person of a religious
order in disguise, and said, in a hasty yet faltering
tone, “In the name of all our religion holds
most holy, tell me, reverend father, what am I to
expect from a communication opened by a token connected
with such horrible recollections?”
The old man, appalled by a manner
so different from what he had expected from the proud
and powerful nobleman, was at a loss how to answer,
and in what manner to undeceive him. “Tell
me,” continued the Earl, in a tone of increasing
trepidation and agony “tell me, do
you come to say that all that has been done to expiate
guilt so horrible, has been too little and too trivial
for the offence, and to point out new and more efficacious
modes of severe penance? I will not blench
from it, father let me suffer the pains
of my crime here in the body, rather than hereafter
in the spirit!”
Edie had now recollection enough to
perceive, that if he did not interrupt the frankness
of Lord Glenallan’s admissions, he was likely
to become the confidant of more than might be safe
for him to know. He therefore uttered with a
hasty and trembling voice “Your lordship’s
honour is mistaken I am not of your persuasion,
nor a clergyman, but, with all reverence, only puir
Edie Ochiltree, the king’s bedesman and your
honour’s.”
This explanation he accompanied by
a profound bow after his manner, and then, drawing
himself up erect, rested his arm on his staff, threw
back his long white hair, and fixed his eyes upon
the Earl, as he waited for an answer.
“And you are not then,”
said Lord Glenallan, after a pause of surprise
“You are not then a Catholic priest?”
“God forbid!” said Edie,
forgetting in his confusion to whom he was speaking;
“I am only the king’s bedesman and your
honour’s, as I said before.”
The Earl turned hastily away, and
paced the room twice or thrice, as if to recover the
effects of his mistake, and then, coming close up to
the mendicant, he demanded, in a stern and commanding
tone, what he meant by intruding himself on his privacy,
and from whence he had got the ring which he had thought
proper to send him. Edie, a man of much spirit,
was less daunted at this mode of interrogation than
he had been confused by the tone of confidence in
which the Earl had opened their conversation.
To the reiterated question from whom he had obtained
the ring, he answered composedly, “From one
who was better known to the Earl than to him.”
“Better known to me, fellow?”
said Lord Glenallan: “what is your meaning? explain
yourself instantly, or you shall experience the consequence
of breaking in upon the hours of family distress.”
“It was auld Elspeth Mucklebackit
that sent me here,” said the beggar, “in
order to say”
“You dote, old man!” said
the Earl; “I never heard the name but
this dreadful token reminds me”
“I mind now, my lord,”
said Ochiltree, “she tauld me your lordship would
be mair familiar wi’ her, if I ca’d her
Elspeth o’ the Craigburnfoot she
had that name when she lived on your honour’s
land, that is, your honour’s worshipful mother’s
that was then Grace be wi’ her!”
“Ay,” said the appalled
nobleman, as his countenance sunk, and his cheek assumed
a hue yet more cadaverous; “that name is indeed
written in the most tragic page of a deplorable history.
But what can she desire of me? Is she dead or
living?”
“Living, my lord; and entreats
to see your lordship before she dies, for she has
something to communicate that hangs upon her very soul,
and she says she canna flit in peace until she sees
you.”
“Not until she sees me! what
can that mean? But she is doting with age and
infirmity. I tell thee, friend, I called at her
cottage myself, not a twelvemonth since, from a report
that she was in distress, and she did not even know
my face or voice.”
“If your honour wad permit me,”
said Edie, to whom the length of the conference restored
a part of his professional audacity and native talkativeness “if
your honour wad but permit me, I wad say, under correction
of your lordship’s better judgment, that auld
Elspeth’s like some of the ancient ruined strengths
and castles that ane sees amang the hills. There
are mony parts of her mind that appear, as I may say,
laid waste and decayed, but then there’s parts
that look the steever, and the stronger, and the grander,
because they are rising just like to fragments amaong
the ruins o’ the rest. She’s an awful
woman.”
“She always was so,” said
the Earl, almost unconsciously echoing the observation
of the mendicant; “she always was different from
other women likest perhaps to her who is
now no more, in her temper and turn of mind. She
wishes to see me, then?”
“Before she dies,” said
Edie, “she earnestly entreats that pleasure.”
“It will be a pleasure to neither
of us,” said the Earl, sternly, “yet she
shall be gratified. She lives, I think, on the
sea-shore to the southward of Fairport?”
“Just between Monkbarns and
Knockwinnock Castle, but nearer to Monkbarns.
Your lordship’s honour will ken the laird and
Sir Arthur, doubtless?”
A stare, as if he did not comprehend
the question, was Lord Glenallan’s answer.
Edie saw his mind was elsewhere, and did not venture
to repeat a query which was so little germain to the
matter.
“Are you a Catholic, old man?” demanded
the Earl.
“No, my lord,” said Ochiltree
stoutly; for the remembrance of the unequal division
of the dole rose in his mind at the moment; “I
thank Heaven I am a good Protestant.”
“He who can conscientiously
call himself good, has indeed reason to thank Heaven,
be his form of Christianity what it will But
who is he that shall dare to do so!”
“Not I,” said Edie; “I
trust to beware of the sin of presumption.”
“What was your trade in your youth?” continued
the Earl.
“A soldier, my lord; and mony
a sair day’s kemping I’ve seen. I
was to have been made a sergeant, but”
“A soldier! then you have slain
and burnt, and sacked and spoiled?”
“I winna say,” replied
Edie, “that I have been better than my neighbours; it’s
a rough trade war’s sweet to them
that never tried it.”
“And you are now old and miserable,
asking from precarious charity the food which in your
youth you tore from the hand of the poor peasant?”
“I am a beggar, it is true,
my lord; but I am nae just sae miserable neither.
For my sins, I hae had grace to repent of them, if
I might say sae, and to lay them where they may be
better borne than by me; and for my food, naebody
grudges an auld man a bit and a drink Sae
I live as I can, and am contented to die when I am
ca’d upon.”
“And thus, then, with little
to look back upon that is pleasant or praiseworthy
in your past life with less to look forward
to on this side of eternity, you are contented to
drag out the rest of your existence? Go, begone!
and in your age and poverty and weariness, never envy
the lord of such a mansion as this, either in his sleeping
or waking moments Here is something for
thee.”
The Earl put into the old man’s
hand five or six guineas. Edie would perhaps
have stated his scruples, as upon other occasions,
to the amount of the benefaction, but the tone of
Lord Glenallan was too absolute to admit of either
answer or dispute. The Earl then called his servant “See
this old man safe from the castle let no
one ask him any questions and you, friend,
begone, and forget the road that leads to my house.”
“That would be difficult for
me,” said Edie, looking at the gold which he
still held in his hand, “that would be e’en
difficult, since your honour has gien me such gade
cause to remember it.”
Lord Glenallan stared, as hardly comprehending
the old man’s boldness in daring to bandy words
with him, and, with his hand, made him another signal
of departure, which the mendicant instantly obeyed.