Is all the counsel that
we two have shared,
The sisters’ vows, the hours
that we have spent
When we have chid the hasty-footed
time
For parting us Oh! and
is all forgot?
Midsummer
Night’s Dream.
We have been a long while in conducting
Butler to the door of the cottage at St. Leonard’s;
yet the space which we have occupied in the preceding
narrative does not exceed in length that which he actually
spent on Salisbury Crags on the morning which succeeded
the execution done upon Porteous by the rioters.
For this delay he had his own motives. He wished
to collect his thoughts, strangely agitated as they
were, first by the melancholy news of Effie Deans’s
situation, and afterwards by the frightful scene which
he had witnessed. In the situation also in which
he stood with respect to Jeanie and her father, some
ceremony, at least some choice of fitting time and
season, was necessary to wait upon them. Eight
in the morning was then the ordinary hour for breakfast,
and he resolved that it should arrive before he made
his appearance in their cottage.
Never did hours pass so heavily.
Butler shifted his place and enlarged his circle to
while away the time, and heard the huge bell of St.
Giles’s toll each successive hour in swelling
tones, which were instantly attested by those of the
other steeples in succession. He had heard seven
struck in this manner, when he began to think he might
venture to approach nearer to St. Leonard’s,
from which he was still a mile distant. Accordingly
he descended from his lofty station as low as the bottom
of the valley, which divides Salisbury Crags from
those small rocks which take their name from Saint
Leonard. It is, as many of my readers may know,
a deep, wild, grassy valley, scattered with huge rocks
and fragments which have descended from the cliffs
and steep ascent to the east.
This sequestered dell, as well as
other places of the open pasturage of the King’s
Park, was, about this time, often the resort of the
gallants of the time who had affairs of honour to
discuss with the sword. Duels were then very
common in Scotland, for the gentry were at once idle,
haughty, fierce, divided by faction, and addicted to
intemperance, so that there lacked neither provocation,
nor inclination to resent it when given; and the sword,
which was part of every gentleman’s dress, was
the only weapon used for the decision of such differences.
When, therefore, Butler observed a young man, skulking,
apparently to avoid observation, among the scattered
rocks at some distance from the footpath, he was naturally
led to suppose that he had sought this lonely spot
upon that evil errand. He was so strongly impressed
with this, that, notwithstanding his own distress
of mind, he could not, according to his sense of duty
as a clergyman, pass this person without speaking to
him. There are times, thought he to himself,
when the slightest interference may avert a great
calamity when a word spoken in season may
do more for prevention than the eloquence of Tully
could do for remedying evil And for my
own griefs, be they as they may, I shall feel them
the lighter, if they divert me not from the prosecution
of my duty.
Thus thinking and feeling, he quitted
the ordinary path, and advanced nearer the object
he had noticed. The man at first directed his
course towards the hill, in order, as it appeared,
to avoid him; but when he saw that Butler seemed disposed
to follow him, he adjusted his hat fiercely, turned
round, and came forward, as if to meet and defy scrutiny.
Butler had an opportunity of accurately
studying his features as they advanced slowly to meet
each other. The stranger seemed about twenty-five
years old. His dress was of a kind which could
hardly be said to indicate his rank with certainty,
for it was such as young gentlemen sometimes wore
while on active exercise in the morning, and which,
therefore, was imitated by those of the inferior ranks,
as young clerks and tradesmen, because its cheapness
rendered it attainable, while it approached more nearly
to the apparel of youths of fashion than any other
which the manners of the times permitted them to wear.
If his air and manner could be trusted, however, this
person seemed rather to be dressed under than above
his rank; for his carriage was bold and somewhat supercilious,
his step easy and free, his manner daring and unconstrained.
His stature was of the middle size, or rather above
it, his limbs well-proportioned, yet not so strong
as to infer the reproach of clumsiness. His features
were uncommonly handsome, and all about him would
have been interesting and prepossessing but for that
indescribable expression which habitual dissipation
gives to the countenance, joined with a certain audacity
in look and manner, of that kind which is often assumed
as a mask for confusion and apprehension.
Butler and the stranger met surveyed
each other when, as the latter, slightly
touching his hat, was about to pass by him, Butler,
while he returned the salutation, observed, “A
fine morning, sir You are on the hill early.”
“I have business here,”
said the young man, in a tone meant to repress farther
inquiry.
“I do not doubt it, sir,”
said Butler. “I trust you will forgive my
hoping that it is of a lawful kind?”
“Sir,” said the other,
with marked surprise, “I never forgive impertinence,
nor can I conceive what title you have to hope anything
about what no way concerns you.”
“I am a soldier, sir,”
said Butler, “and have a charge to arrest evil-doers
in the name of my Master.”
“A soldier!” said the
young man, stepping back, and fiercely laying his
hand on his sword “A soldier, and
arrest me! Did you reckon what your life was
worth, before you took the commission upon you?”
“You mistake me, sir,”
said Butler, gravely; “neither my warfare nor
my warrant are of this world. I am a preacher
of the gospel, and have power, in my Master’s
name, to command the peace upon earth and good-will
towards men, which was proclaimed with the gospel.”
“A minister!” said the
stranger, carelessly, and with an expression approaching
to scorn. “I know the gentlemen of your
cloth in Scotland claim a strange right of intermeddling
with men’s private affairs. But I have
been abroad, and know better than to be priest-ridden.”
“Sir, if it be true that any
of my cloth, or, it might be more decently said, of
my calling, interfere with men’s private affairs,
for the gratification either of idle curiosity, or
for worse motives, you cannot have learned a better
lesson abroad than to contemn such practices.
But in my Master’s work, I am called to be busy
in season and out of season; and, conscious as I am
of a pure motive, it were better for me to incur your
contempt for speaking, than the correction of my own
conscience for being silent.”
“In the name of the devil!”
said the young man impatiently, “say what you
have to say, then; though whom you take me for, or
what earthly concern you have with me, a stranger
to you, or with my actions and motives, of which you
can know nothing, I cannot conjecture for an instant.”
“You are about,” said
Butler, “to violate one of your country’s
wisest laws you are about, which is much
more dreadful, to violate a law, which God himself
has implanted within our nature, and written as it
were, in the table of our hearts, to which every thrill
of our nerves is responsive.”
“And what is the law you speak
of?” said the stranger, in a hollow and somewhat
disturbed accent.
“Thou shalt do no murder,”
said Butler, with a deep and solemn voice.
The young man visibly started, and
looked considerably appalled. Butler perceived
he had made a favourable impression, and resolved to
follow it up. “Think,” he said, “young
man,” laying his hand kindly upon the stranger’s
shoulder, “what an awful alternative you voluntarily
choose for yourself, to kill or be killed. Think
what it is to rush uncalled into the presence of an
offended Deity, your heart fermenting with evil passions,
your hand hot from the steel you had been urging, with
your best skill and malice, against the breast of
a fellow-creature. Or, suppose yourself the scarce
less wretched survivor, with the guilt of Cain, the
first murderer, in your heart, with the stamp upon
your brow that stamp which struck all who
gazed on him with unutterable horror, and by which
the murderer is made manifest to all who look upon
him. Think!”
The stranger gradually withdrew himself
from under the hand of his monitor; and, pulling his
hat over his brows, thus interrupted him. “Your
meaning, sir, I dare say, is excellent, but you are
throwing your advice away. I am not in this place
with violent intentions against any one. I may
be bad enough you priests say all men are
so but I am here for the purpose of saving
life, not of taking it away. If you wish to spend
your time rather in doing a good action than in talking
about you know not what, I will give you an opportunity.
Do you see yonder crag to the right, over which appears
the chimney of a lone house? Go thither, inquire
for one Jeanie Deans, the daughter of the goodman;
let her know that he she wots of remained here from
daybreak till this hour, expecting to see her, and
that he can abide no longer. Tell her, she must
meet me at the Hunter’s Bog to-night, as the
moon rises behind St. Anthony’s Hill, or that
she will make a desperate man of me.”
“Who or what are you,”
replied Butler, exceedingly and most unpleasantly
surprised, “who charge me with such an errand?”
“I am the devil!” answered
the young man hastily.
Butler stepped instinctively back,
and commanded himself internally to Heaven; for, though
a wise and strong-minded man, he was neither wiser
nor more strong-minded than those of his age and education,
with whom, to disbelieve witchcraft or spectres, was
held an undeniable proof of atheism.
The stranger went on without observing
his emotion. “Yes! call me Apollyon, Abaddon,
whatever name you shall choose, as a clergyman acquainted
with the upper and lower circles of spiritual denomination,
to call me by, you shall not find an appellation more
odious to him that bears it, than is mine own.”
This sentence was spoken with the
bitterness of self-upbraiding, and a contortion of
visage absolutely demoniacal. Butler, though a
man brave by principle, if not by constitution, was
overawed; for intensity of mental distress has in
it a sort of sublimity which repels and overawes all
men, but especially those of kind and sympathetic
dispositions. The stranger turned abruptly from
Butler as he spoke, but instantly returned, and, coming
up to him closely and boldly, said, in a fierce, determined
tone, “I have told you who and what I am who
and what are you? What is your name?”
“Butler,” answered the
person to whom this abrupt question was addressed,
surprised into answering it by the sudden and fierce
manner of the querist “Reuben Butler,
a preacher of the gospel.”
At this answer, the stranger again
plucked more deep over his brows the hat which he
had thrown back in his former agitation. “Butler!”
he repeated “the assistant of the
schoolmaster at Liberton?”
“The same,” answered Butler composedly.
The stranger covered his face with
his hand, as if on sudden reflection, and then turned
away, but stopped when he had walked a few paces; and
seeing Butler follow him with his eyes, called out
in a stern yet suppressed tone, just as if he had
exactly calculated that his accents should not be
heard a yard beyond the spot on which Butler stood.
“Go your way, and do mine errand. Do not
look after me. I will neither descend through
the bowels of these rocks, nor vanish in a flash of
fire; and yet the eye that seeks to trace my motions
shall have reason to curse it was ever shrouded by
eyelid or eyelash. Begone, and look not behind
you. Tell Jeanie Deans, that when the moon rises
I shall expect to meet her at Nicol Muschat’s
Cairn, beneath Saint Anthony’s Chapel.”
As he uttered these words, he turned
and took the road against the hill, with a haste that
seemed as peremptory as his tone of authority.
Dreading he knew not what of additional
misery to a lot which seemed little capable of receiving
augmentation, and desperate at the idea that any living
man should dare to send so extraordinary a request,
couched in terms so imperious, to the half-betrothed
object of his early and only affection, Butler strode
hastily towards the cottage, in order to ascertain
how far this daring and rude gallant was actually entitled
to press on Jeanie Deans a request, which no prudent,
and scarce any modest young woman, was likely to comply
with.
Butler was by nature neither jealous
nor superstitious; yet the feelings which lead to
those moods of the mind were rooted in his heart, as
a portion derived from the common stock of humanity.
It was maddening to think that a profligate gallant,
such as the manner and tone of the stranger evinced
him to be, should have it in his power to command forth
his future bride and plighted true love, at a place
so improper, and an hour so unseasonable. Yet
the tone in which the stranger spoke had nothing of
the soft half-breathed voice proper to the seducer
who solicits an assignation; it was bold, fierce,
and imperative, and had less of love in it than of
menace and intimidation.
The suggestions of superstition seemed
more plausible, had Butler’s mind been very
accessible to them. Was this indeed the Roaring
Lion, who goeth about seeking whom he may devour?
This was a question which pressed itself on Butler’s
mind with an earnestness that cannot be conceived by
those who live in the present day. The fiery eye,
the abrupt demeanour, the occasionally harsh, yet
studiously subdued tone of voice, the features,
handsome, but now clouded with pride, now disturbed
by suspicion, now inflamed with passion those
dark hazel eyes which he sometimes shaded with his
cap, as if he were averse to have them seen while
they were occupied with keenly observing the motions
and bearing of others those eyes that were
now turbid with melancholy, now gleaming with scorn,
and now sparkling with fury was it the passions
of a mere mortal they expressed, or the emotions of
a fiend, who seeks, and seeks in vain, to conceal
his fiendish designs under the borrowed mask of manly
beauty? The whole partook of the mien, language,
and port of the ruined archangel; and, imperfectly
as we have been able to describe it, the effect of
the interview upon Butler’s nerves, shaken as
they were at the time by the horrors of the preceding
night, were greater than his understanding warranted,
or his pride cared to submit to. The very place
where he had met this singular person was desecrated,
as it were, and unhallowed, owing to many violent
deaths, both in duels and by suicide, which had in
former times taken place there; and the place which
he had named as a rendezvous at so late an hour, was
held in general to be accursed, from a frightful and
cruel murder which had been there committed by the
wretch from whom the place took its name, upon the
person of his own wife.
Note G. Muschat’s Cairn.
It was in such places, according to
the belief of that period (when the laws against witchcraft
were still in fresh observance, and had even lately
been acted upon), that evil spirits had power to make
themselves visible to human eyes, and to practise
upon the feelings and senses of mankind. Suspicions,
founded on such circumstances, rushed on Butler’s
mind, unprepared as it was by any previous course of
reasoning, to deny that which all of his time, country,
and profession believed; but common sense rejected
these vain ideas as inconsistent, if not with possibility,
at least with the general rules by which the universe
is governed, a deviation from which, as
Butler well argued with himself, ought not to be admitted
as probable, upon any but the plainest and most incontrovertible
evidence. An earthly lover, however, or a young
man, who, from whatever cause, had the right of exercising
such summary and unceremonious authority over the
object of his long-settled, and apparently sincerely
returned affection, was an object scarce less appalling
to his mind, than those which superstition suggested.
His limbs exhausted with fatigue,
his mind harassed with anxiety, and with painful doubts
and recollections, Butler dragged himself up the ascent
from the valley to St. Leonard’s Crags, and presented
himself at the door of Deans’s habitation, with
feelings much akin to the miserable reflections and
fears of its inhabitants.