No more shalt thou behold
thy sister’s face;
Thou hast already had her last embrace.
Elegy on Mrs. Anne Killigrew.
This second surprise had been accomplished
for Jeanie Deans by the rod of the same benevolent
enchanter, whose power had transplanted her father
from the Crags of St. Leonard’s to the banks
of the Gare Loch. The Duke of Argyle
was not a person to forget the hereditary debt of gratitude,
which had been bequeathed to him by his grandfather,
in favour of the grandson of old Bible Butler.
He had internally resolved to provide for Reuben Butler
in this kirk of Knocktarlitie, of which the incumbent
had just departed this life. Accordingly, his
agent received the necessary instructions for that
purpose, under the qualifying condition always, that
the learning and character of Mr. Butler should be
found proper for the charge. Upon inquiry, these
were found as highly satisfactory as had been reported
in the case of David Deans himself.
By this preferment, the Duke of Argyle
more essentially benefited his friend and protegee,
Jeanie, than he himself was aware of, since he contributed
to remove objections in her father’s mind to
the match, which he had no idea had been in existence.
We have already noticed that Deans
had something of a prejudice against Butler, which
was, perhaps, in some degree owing to his possessing
a sort of consciousness that the poor usher looked
with eyes of affection upon his eldest daughter.
This, in David’s eyes, was a sin of presumption,
even although it should not be followed by any overt
act, or actual proposal. But the lively interest
which Butler had displayed in his distresses, since
Jeanie set forth on her London expedition, and which,
therefore, he ascribed to personal respect for himself
individually, had greatly softened the feelings of
irritability with which David had sometimes regarded
him. And, while he was in this good disposition
towards Butler, another incident took place which had
great influence on the old man’s mind.
So soon as the shock of Effie’s second elopement
was over, it was Deans’s early care to collect
and refund to the Laird of Dumbiedikes the money which
he had lent for Effie’s trial, and for Jeanie’s
travelling expenses. The Laird, the pony, the
cocked hat, and the tabacco-pipe, had not been
seen at St. Leonard’s Crags for many a day;
so that, in order to pay this debt, David was under
the necessity of repairing in person to the mansion
of Dumbiedikes.
He found it in a state of unexpected
bustle. There were workmen pulling down some
of the old hangings, and replacing them with others,
altering, repairing, scrubbing, painting, and white-washing.
There was no knowing the old house, which had been
so long the mansion of sloth and silence. The
Laird himself seemed in some confusion, and his reception,
though kind, lacked something of the reverential cordiality,
with which he used to greet David Deans. There
was a change also, David did not very well know of
what nature, about the exterior of this landed proprietor an
improvement in the shape of his garments, a spruceness
in the air with which they were put on, that were
both novelties. Even the old hat looked smarter;
the cock had been newly pointed, the lace had been
refreshed, and instead of slouching backward or forward
on the Laird’s head, as it happened to be thrown
on, it was adjusted with a knowing inclination over
one eye.
David Deans opened his business, and
told down the cash. Dumbiedikes steadily inclined
his ear to the one, and counted the other with great
accuracy, interrupting David, while he was talking
of the redemption of the captivity of Judah, to ask
him whether he did not think one or two of the guineas
looked rather light. When he was satisfied on
this point, had pocketed his money, and had signed
a receipt, he addressed David with some little hesitation, “Jeanie
wad be writing ye something, gudeman?”
“About the siller?” replied David “Nae
doubt, she did.”
“And did she say nae mair about me?” asked
the Laird.
“Nae mair but kind and Christian
wishes what suld she hae said?” replied
David, fully expecting that the Laird’s long
courtship (if his dangling after Jeanie deserves so
active a name) was now coming to a point. And
so indeed it was, but not to that point which he wished
or expected.
“Aweel, she kens her ain mind
best, gudeman. I hae made a clean house o’
Jenny Balchristie, and her niece. They were a
bad pack steal’d meat and mault,
and loot the carters magg the coals I’m
to be married the morn, and kirkit on Sunday.”
Whatever David felt, he was too proud
and too steady-minded to show any unpleasant surprise
in his countenance and manner.
“I wuss ye happy, sir, through
Him that gies happiness marriage is an
honourable state.”
“And I am wedding into an honourable
house, David the Laird of Lickpelf’s
youngest daughter she sits next us in the
kirk, and that’s the way I came to think on’t.”
There was no more to be said but again
to wish the Laird joy, to taste a cup of his liquor,
and to walk back again to St. Leonard’s, musing
on the mutability of human affairs and human resolutions.
The expectation that one day or other Jeanie would
be Lady Dumbiedikes, had, in spite of himself, kept
a more absolute possession of David’s mind than
he himself was aware of. At least, it had hitherto
seemed a union at all times within his daughter’s
reach, whenever she might choose to give her silent
lover any degree of encouragement, and now it was vanished
for ever. David returned, therefore, in no very
gracious humour for so good a man. He was angry
with Jeanie for not having encouraged the Laird he
was angry with the Laird for requiring encouragement and
he was angry with himself for being angry at all on
the occasion.
On his return he found the gentleman
who managed the Duke of Argyle’s affairs was
desirous of seeing him, with a view to completing the
arrangement between them. Thus, after a brief
repose, he was obliged to set off anew for Edinburgh,
so that old May Hettly declared, “That a’
this was to end with the master just walking himself
aff his feet.”
When the business respecting the farm
had been talked over and arranged, the professional
gentleman acquainted David Deans, in answer to his
inquiries concerning the state of public worship, that
it was the pleasure of the Duke to put an excellent
young clergyman, called Reuben Butler, into the parish,
which was to be his future residence.
“Reuben Butler!” exclaimed
David “Reuben Butler, the usher at
Liberton?”
“The very same,” said
the Duke’s commissioner; “his Grace has
heard an excellent character of him, and has some
hereditary obligations to him besides few
ministers will be so comfortable as I am directed to
make Mr. Butler.”
“Obligations? The
Duke? Obligations to Reuben Butler Reuben
Butler a placed minister of the Kirk of Scotland?”
exclaimed David, in interminable astonishment, for
somehow he had been led by the bad success which Butler
had hitherto met with in all his undertakings, to consider
him as one of those step-sons of Fortune, whom she
treats with unceasing rigour, and ends with disinheriting
altogether.
There is, perhaps, no time at which
we are disposed to think so highly of a friend, as
when we find him standing higher than we expected in
the esteem of others. When assured of the reality
of Butler’s change of prospects, David expressed
his great satisfaction at his success in life, which,
he observed, was entirely owing to himself (David).
“I advised his puir grand-mother, who was but
a silly woman, to breed him up to the ministry; and
I prophesied that, with a blessing on his endeavours,
he would become a polished shaft in the temple.
He may be something ower proud o’ his carnal
learning, but a gude lad, and has the root of the
matter as ministers gang now, where yell
find ane better, ye’ll find ten waur, than Reuben
Butler.”
He took leave of the man of business,
and walked homeward, forgetting his weariness in the
various speculations to which this wonderful piece
of intelligence gave rise. Honest David had now,
like other great men, to go to work to reconcile his
speculative principles with existing circumstances;
and, like other great men, when they set seriously
about that task, he was tolerably successful.
Ought Reuben Butler in conscience
to accept of this preferment in the Kirk of Scotland,
subject as David at present thought that establishment
was to the Erastian encroachments of the civil power?
This was the leading question, and he considered it
carefully. “The Kirk of Scotland was shorn
of its beams, and deprived of its full artillery and
banners of authority; but still it contained zealous
and fructifying pastors, attentive congregations,
and, with all her spots and blemishes, the like of
this Kirk was nowhere else to be seen upon earth.”
David’s doubts had been too
many and too critical to permit him ever unequivocally
to unite himself with any of the dissenters, who upon
various accounts absolutely seceded from the national
church. He had often joined in communion with
such of the established clergy as approached nearest
to the old Presbyterian model and principles of 1640.
And although there were many things to be amended in
that system, yet he remembered that he, David Deans,
had himself ever been an humble pleader for the good
old cause in a legal way, but without rushing into
right-hand excesses, divisions and separations.
But, as an enemy to separation, he might join the
right-hand of fellowship with a minister of the Kirk
of Scotland in its present model. Ergo, Reuben
Butler might take possession of the parish of Knocktarlitie,
without forfeiting his friendship or favour Q.
E. D. But, secondly, came the trying point of lay-patronage,
which David Deans had ever maintained to be a coming
in by the window, and over the wall, a cheating and
starving the souls of a whole parish, for the purpose
of clothing the back and filling the belly of the
incumbent.
This presentation, therefore, from
the Duke of Argyle, whatever was the worth and high
character of that nobleman, was a limb of the brazen
image, a portion of the evil thing, and with no kind
of consistency could David bend his mind to favour
such a transaction. But if the parishioners themselves
joined in a general call to Reuben Butler to be their
pastor, it did not seem quite so evident that the
existence of this unhappy presentation was a reason
for his refusing them the comforts of his doctrine.
If the Presbytery admitted him to the kirk, in virtue
rather of that act of patronage than of the general
call of the congregation, that might be their error,
and David allowed it was a heavy one. But if Reuben
Butler accepted of the cure as tendered to him by those
whom he was called to teach, and who had expressed
themselves desirous to learn, David, after considering
and reconsidering the matter, came, through the great
virtue of if, to be of opinion that he might safely
so act in that matter.
There remained a third stumbling-block the
oaths to Government exacted from the established clergymen,
in which they acknowledge an Erastian king and parliament,
and homologate the incorporating Union between England
and Scotland, through which the latter kingdom had
become part and portion of the former, wherein Prelacy,
the sister of Popery, had made fast her throne, and
elevated the horns of her mitre. These were symptoms
of defection which had often made David cry out, “My
bowels my bowels! I am pained
at the very heart!” And he remembered that a
godly Bow-head matron had been carried out of the
Tolbooth church in a swoon, beyond the reach of brandy
and burnt feathers, merely on hearing these fearful
words, “It is enacted by the Lords spiritual
and temporal,” pronounced from a Scottish pulpit,
in the proem to the Porteous Proclamation. These
oaths were, therefore, a deep compliance and dire
abomination a sin and a snare, and a danger
and a defection. But this shibboleth was not
always exacted. Ministers had respect to their
own tender consciences, and those of their brethren;
and it was not till a later period that the reins
of discipline were taken up tight by the General Assemblies
and Presbyteries. The peacemaking particle came
again to David’s assistance. If an incumbent
was not called upon to make such compliances, and
if he got a right entry into the church without
intrusion, and by orderly appointment, why, upon the
whole, David Deans came to be of opinion, that the
said incumbent might lawfully enjoy the spirituality
and temporality of the cure of souls at Knocktarlitie,
with stipend, manse, glebe, and all thereunto appertaining.
The best and most upright-minded men
are so strongly influenced by existing circumstances,
that it would be somewhat cruel to inquire too nearly
what weight parental affection gave to these ingenious
trains of reasoning. Let David Deans’s
situation be considered. He was just deprived
of one daughter, and his eldest, to whom he owed so
much, was cut off, by the sudden resolution of Dumbiedikes,
from the high hope which David had entertained, that
she might one day be mistress of that fair lordship.
Just while this disappointment was bearing heavy on
his spirits, Butler comes before his imagination no
longer the half-starved threadbare usher, but fat
and sleek and fair, the beneficed minister of Knocktarlitie,
beloved by his congregation exemplary in
his life powerful in his doctrine doing
the duty of the kirk as never Highland minister did
before turning sinners as a colley
dog turns sheep a favourite of the Duke
of Argyle, and drawing a stipend of eight hundred
punds Scots, and four chalders of victual. Here
was a match, making up in David’s mind, in a
tenfold degree, the disappointment in the case of
Dumbiedikes, in so far as the goodman of St. Leonard’s
held a powerful minister in much greater admiration
than a mere landed proprietor. It did not occur
to him, as an additional reason in favour of the match,
that Jeanie might herself have some choice in the matter;
for the idea of consulting her feelings never once
entered into the honest man’s head, any more
than the possibility that her inclination might perhaps
differ from his own.
The result of his meditations was,
that he was called upon to take the management of
the whole affair into his own hand, and give, if it
should be found possible without sinful compliance,
or backsliding, or defection of any kind, a worthy
pastor to the kirk of Knocktarlitie. Accordingly,
by the intervention of the honest dealer in butter-milk
who dwelt in Liberton, David summoned to his presence
Reuben Butler. Even from this worthy messenger
he was unable to conceal certain swelling emotions
of dignity, insomuch, that, when the carter had communicated
his message to the usher, he added, that “Certainly
the Gudeman of St. Leonard’s had some grand
news to tell him, for he was as uplifted as a midden-cock
upon pattens.”
Butler, it may readily be conceived,
immediately obeyed the summons. He was a plain
character, in which worth and good sense and simplicity
were the principal ingredients; but love, on this
occasion, gave him a certain degree of address.
He had received an intimation of the favour designed
him by the Duke of Argyle, with what feelings those
only can conceive who have experienced a sudden prospect
of being raised to independence and respect from penury
and toil. He resolved, however, that the old man
should retain all the consequence of being, in his
own opinion, the first to communicate the important
intelligence. At the same time, he also determined
that in the expected conference he would permit David
Deans to expatiate at length upon the proposal, in
all its bearings, without irritating him either by
interruption or contradiction. This last was the
most prudent plan he could have adopted; because, although
there were many doubts which David Deans could himself
clear up to his own satisfaction, yet he might have
been by no means disposed to accept the solution of
any other person; and to engage him in an argument
would have been certain to confirm him at once and
for ever in the opinion which Butler chanced to impugn.
He received his friend with an appearance
of important gravity, which real misfortune had long
compelled him to lay aside, and which belonged to
those days of awful authority in which he predominated
over Widow Butler, and dictated the mode of cultivating
the crofts of Beersheba. He made known to Reuben,
with great prolixity, the prospect of his changing
his present residence for the charge of the Duke of
Argyle’s stock-farm in Dumbartonshire, and enumerated
the various advantages of the situation with obvious
self-congratulation; but assured the patient hearer,
that nothing had so much moved him to acceptance,
as the sense that, by his skill in bestial, he could
render the most important services to his Grace the
Duke of Argyle, to whom, “in the late unhappy
circumstance” (here a tear dimmed the sparkle
of pride in the old man’s eye), “he had
been sae muckle obliged.”
“To put a rude Hielandman into
sic a charge,” he continued, “what could
be expected but that he suld be sic a chiefest herdsman,
as wicked Doeg the Edomite? whereas, while this grey
head is to the fore, not a clute o’ them but
sall be as weel cared for as if they were the fatted
kine of Pharaoh. And now, Reuben, lad,
seeing we maun remove our tent to a strange country,
ye will be casting a dolefu’ look after us, and
thinking with whom ye are to hold counsel anent your
government in thae slippery and backsliding times;
and nae doubt remembering, that the auld man, David
Deans, was made the instrument to bring you out of
the mire of schism and heresy, wherein your father’s
house delighted to wallow; aften also, nae doubt,
when ye are pressed wi’ ensnaring trials and
tentations and heart-plagues, you, that are like
a recruit that is marching for the first time to the
touk of drum, will miss the auld, bauld, and experienced
veteran soldier that has felt the brunt of mony a foul
day, and heard the bullets whistle as aften as he
has hairs left on his auld pow.”
It is very possible that Butler might
internally be of opinion, that the reflection on his
ancestor’s peculiar tenets might have been spared,
or that he might be presumptuous enough even to think,
that, at his years, and with his own lights, he might
be able to hold his course without the pilotage of
honest David. But he only replied, by expressing
his regret, that anything should separate him from
an ancient, tried, and affectionate friend.
“But how can it be helped, man?”
said David, twisting his features into a sort of smile “How
can we help it? I trow, ye canna tell me
that Ye maun leave that to ither folk to
the Duke of Argyle and me, Reuben. It’s
a gude thing to hae friends in this warld how
muckle better to hae an interest beyond it!”
And David, whose piety, though not
always quite rational, was as sincere as it was habitual
and fervent, looked reverentially upward and paused.
Mr. Butler intimated the pleasure with which he would
receive his friend’s advice on a subject so
important, and David resumed.
“What think ye now, Reuben,
of a kirk a regular kirk under the present
establishment? Were sic offered to ye, wad
ye be free to accept it, and under whilk provisions? I
am speaking but by way of query.”
Butler replied, “That if such
a prospect were held out to him, he would probably
first consult whether he was likely to be useful to
the parish he should be called to; and if there appeared
a fair prospect of his proving so, his friend must
be aware, that in every other point of view, it would
be highly advantageous for him.”
“Right, Reuben, very right,
lad,” answered the monitor, “your ain
conscience is the first thing to be satisfied for
how sall he teach others that has himself sae ill
learned the Scriptures, as to grip for the lucre of
foul earthly preferment, sic as gear and manse, money
and victual, that which is not his in a spiritual
sense or wha makes his kirk a stalking-horse,
from behind which he may tak aim at his stipend?
But I look for better things of you and
specially ye maun be minded not to act altogether
on your ain judgment, for therethrough comes sair
mistakes, backslidings and defections, on the left
and on the right. If there were sic a day of
trial put to you, Reuben, you, who are a young lad,
although it may be ye are gifted wi’ the carnal
tongues, and those whilk were spoken at Rome, whilk
is now the seat of the scarlet abomination, and by
the Greeks, to whom the Gospel was as foolishness,
yet nae-the-less ye may be entreated by your weel-wisher
to take the counsel of those prudent and resolved
and weather-withstanding professors, wha hae kend
what it was to lurk on banks and in mosses, in bogs
and in caverns, and to risk the peril of the head rather
than renounce the honesty of the heart.”
Butler replied, “That certainly,
possessing such a friend as he hoped and trusted he
had in the goodman himself, who had seen so many changes
in the preceding century, he should be much to blame
if he did not avail himself of his experience and
friendly counsel.”
“Eneugh said eneugh
said, Reuben,” said David Deans, with internal
exultation; “and say that ye were in the predicament
whereof I hae spoken, of a surety I would deem it
my duty to gang to the root o’ the matter, and
lay bare to you the ulcers and imposthumes, and the
sores and the leprosies, of this our time, crying
aloud and sparing not.”
David Deans was now in his element.
He commenced his examination of the doctrines and
belief of the Christian Church with the very Culdees,
from whom he passed to John Knox, from
John Knox to the recusants in James the Sixth’s
time Bruce, Black, Blair, Livingstone, from
them to the brief, and at length triumphant period
of the Presbyterian Church’s splendour, until
it was overrun by the English Independents. Then
followed the dismal times of prelacy, the indulgences,
seven in number, with all their shades and bearings,
until he arrived at the reign of King James the Second,
in which he himself had been, in his own mind, neither
an obscure actor nor an obscure sufferer. Then
was Butler doomed to hear the most detailed and annotated
edition of what he had so often heard before, David
Deans’s confinement, namely, in the iron cage
in the Canongate Tolbooth, and the cause thereof.
We should be very unjust to our friend
David Deans, if we should “pretermit” to
use his own expression a narrative which
he held essential to his fame. A drunken trooper
of the Royal Guards, Francis Gordon by name, had chased
five or six of the skulking Whigs, among whom was
our friend David; and after he had compelled them to
stand, and was in the act of brawling with them, one
of their number fired a pocket-pistol, and shot him
dead. David used to sneer and shake his head
when any one asked him whether he had been the
instrument of removing this wicked persecutor from
the face of the earth. In fact the merit of the
deed lay between him and his friend, Patrick Walker,
the pedlar, whose words he was so fond of quoting.
Neither of them cared directly to claim the merit
of silencing Mr. Francis Gordon of the Life-Guards,
there being some wild cousins of his about Edinburgh,
who might have been even yet addicted to revenge,
but yet neither of them chose to disown or yield to
the other the merit of this active defence of their
religious rights. David said, that if he had
fired a pistol then, it was what he never did after
or before. And as for Mr. Patrick Walker, he has
left it upon record, that his great surprise was,
that so small a pistol could kill so big a man.
These are the words of that venerable biographer, whose
trade had not taught him by experience, that an inch
was as good as an ell. “He,” (Francis
Gordon) “got a shot in his head out of a pocket-pistol,
rather fit for diverting a boy than killing such a
furious, mad, brisk man, which notwithstanding killed
him dead!"
Note S. Death of Francis Gordon.
Upon the extensive foundation which
the history of the kirk afforded, during its short-lived
triumph and long tribulation, David, with length of
breath and of narrative, which would have astounded
any one but a lover of his daughter, proceeded to
lay down his own rules for guiding the conscience
of his friend, as an aspirant to serve in the ministry.
Upon this subject, the good man went through such a
variety of nice and casuistical problems, supposed
so many extreme cases, made the distinctions so critical
and nice betwixt the right hand and the left hand betwixt
compliance and defection holding back and
stepping aside slipping and stumbling snares
and errors that at length, after having
limited the path of truth to a mathematical line, he
was brought to the broad admission, that each man’s
conscience, after he had gained a certain view of
the difficult navigation which he was to encounter,
would be the best guide for his pilotage. He stated
the examples and arguments for and against the acceptance
of a kirk on the present revolution model, with much
more impartiality to Butler than he had been able
to place them before his own view. And he concluded,
that his young friend ought to think upon these things,
and be guided by the voice of his own conscience,
whether he could take such an awful trust as the charge
of souls without doing injury to his own internal conviction
of what is right or wrong.
When David had finished his very long
harangue, which was only interrupted by monosyllables,
or little more, on the part of Butler, the orator
himself was greatly astonished to find that the conclusion,
at which he very naturally wished to arrive, seemed
much less decisively attained than when he had argued
the case in his own mind.
In this particular, David’s
current of thinking and speaking only illustrated
the very important and general proposition, concerning
the excellence of the publicity of debate. For,
under the influence of any partial feeling, it is
certain, that most men can more easily reconcile themselves
to any favourite measure, when agitating it in their
own mind, than when obliged to expose its merits to
a third party, when the necessity of seeming impartial
procures for the opposite arguments a much more fair
statement than that which he affords it in tacit meditation.
Having finished what he had to say, David thought himself
obliged to be more explicit in point of fact, and
to explain that this was no hypothetical case, but
one on which (by his own influence and that of the
Duke of Argyle) Reuben Butler would soon be called
to decide.
It was even with something like apprehension
that David Deans heard Butler announce, in return
to this communication, that he would take that night
to consider on what he had said with such kind intentions,
and return him an answer the next morning. The
feelings of the father mastered David on this occasion.
He pressed Butler to spend the evening with him He
produced, most unusual at his meals, one, nay, two
bottles of aged strong ale. He spoke of
his daughter of her merits her
housewifery her thrift her affection.
He led Butler so decidedly up to a declaration of
his feelings towards Jeanie, that, before nightfall,
it was distinctly understood she was to be the bride
of Reuben Butler; and if they thought it indelicate
to abridge the period of deliberation which Reuben
had stipulated, it seemed to be sufficiently understood
betwixt them, that there was a strong probability
of his becoming minister of Knocktarlitie, providing
the congregation were as willing to accept of him,
as the Duke to grant him the presentation. The
matter of the oaths, they agreed, it was time enough
to dispute about, whenever the shibboleth should be
tendered.
Many arrangements were adopted that
evening, which were afterwards ripened by correspondence
with the Duke of Argyle’s man of business, who
intrusted Deans and Butler with the benevolent wish
of his principal, that they should all meet with Jeanie,
on her return from England, at the Duke’s hunting-lodge
in Roseneath.
This retrospect, so far as the placid
loves of Jeanie Deans and Reuben Butler are concerned,
forms a full explanation of the preceding narrative
up to their meeting on the island, as already mentioned.