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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67226 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67226)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The King's Own Borderers, Volume I (of
-3), by James Grant
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The King's Own Borderers, Volume I (of 3)
- A Military Romance
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: January 22, 2022 [eBook #67226]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS,
-VOLUME I (OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.
-
- A Military Romance.
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT,
-
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "SECOND TO NONE," "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE YELLOW FRIGATE,"
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
-
- "Memories fast are thronging o'er me,
- Of the grand old fields of Spain;
- How he faced the charge of Junot,
- And the fight where Moore was slain.
- Oh the years of weary waiting
- For the glorious chance he sought,
- For the slowly ripened harvest
- That life's latest autumn brought."
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS,
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL.
-
- 1865.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-In the following volumes I have endeavoured to delineate the career
-of a soldier--and of a character that has not as yet, I think,
-figured in the pages of our military novelists--a Gentleman
-Volunteer, serving with a line regiment in time of war, according to
-a custom which survived even the memorable battles of the Peninsula.
-
-As the scene of his adventures (some of which are not quite
-fictitious), I have chosen the expedition under the gallant and
-ill-fated Sir John Moore, as it has scarcely, if ever, been made the
-theme of a military romance.
-
-No history of the 25th Foot is in existence; hence, as the brief
-outline of its early career in the first volume is substantially
-correct, it may prove of interest to some readers.
-
-I may add that the 94th regiment mentioned occasionally, is the old
-94th or "Scots Brigade," which came from the service of the States
-General, and was disbanded after Waterloo.
-
-The corps at present bearing the same number in the Army List was
-also, however, raised in Scotland, but in December, 1823; and on that
-occasion the green standard of the old brigade of gallant memory was
-borne through the streets, from the castle of Edinburgh, by a soldier
-of the Black Watch.
-
- 26, DANUBE STREET,
- EDINBURGH.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- OF
- THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. LADY WINIFRED
- II. THE PARTAN CRAIG
- III. THE CASTLE OF ROHALLION
- IV. THE CHILD OF THE SEA
- V. THE PAST
- VI. LORD ROHALLION
- VII. OUR STORY PROGRESSES
- VIII. QUENTIN'S CHILDHOOD
- IX. THE QUARTERMASTER'S SNUGGERY
- X. FLORA WARRENDER
- XI. LOVE, AND MATTERS PERTAINING THERETO
- XII. A LAST KISS
- XIII. COSMO THE MASTER
- XIV. AN ABRUPT PROPOSAL
- XV. THE BLOW
- XVI. EXPOSTULATION
- XVII. FORTH INTO THE WORLD
- XVIII. UNAVAILING REGRET
- XIX. AN OLD SOLDIER'S STORY
- XX. THE WAYFARER
- XXI. THE VAULT OF KILHENZIE
- XXII. THE QUEEN ANNE'S HEAD
- XXIII. NEW FRIENDS
- XXIV. THE YOUNG VOLUNTEER
- XXV. THE PRUSSIAN GRENADIER
- XXVI. COLCHESTER BARRACKS
- XXVII. THE LOST LETTER
-
-
-
-
-THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS,
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-LADY WINIFRED.
-
- "Thick, thick--no sight remains the while,
- From the farthest Orkney isle,
- No sight to seahorse or to seer,
- But of a little pallid sail,
- That seems as if 'twould struggle near,
- And then as if its pinion pale
- Gave up the battle to the gale."
- LEIGH HUNT.
-
-
-On the afternoon of a lowering day in the November of 1798, a
-square-rigged vessel--a brig of some three hundred and fifty
-tons--was seen in the offing, about twelve miles distant from the
-bluff, rocky headland of Rohallion, on the western coast of Carrick,
-beating hard against a head-wind and sea, that were set dead in
-shore; and, as a long and treacherous reef, locally known as the
-Partan Craig (_Anglicè_, Crab-rock), lies off the headland, many
-fears were loudly expressed by on-lookers, that if she failed to gain
-even better sea room, ere night-fall, the gale, the waves, and the
-current might prove too much for her in the end, and the half-sunken
-reef would finish the catastrophe.
-
-Over the craig the angry breakers of the Firth of Clyde were seen to
-boil and whiten, and the ridgy reef seemed to rise, at times, like a
-hungry row of shark's teeth, black, sharp, and shining.
-
-With royal yards on deck, with topsails lowered upon the caps, her
-fore and maincourses close-hauled, with a double reef in each, the
-stranger was seen to lie alternately on the port and starboard tack,
-braced so close to the wind's eye as a square-rigged craft dared be;
-but still she made but little way to seaward.
-
-From Rohallion there were two persons who watched her struggles with
-deep interest.
-
-"The turn of the tide will strengthen the current, my lady, and bring
-her close to the craig, after all," said one.
-
-"Under God's favour, John Girvan, I hope not!" was the fervent
-response.
-
-"There is an eddy between the craig and the coves of Rohallion as
-strong as the whirlpool of Corryvreckan itself."
-
-"Yes, John; I have seen more than one poor boat, with its crew,
-perish there, in the herring season."
-
-"Look, look, my lady! There is another vessel--a brig, I take her to
-be--running right into the Firth before the wind."
-
-The speakers were Winifred Lady Rohallion and her husband's bailie or
-factor, who stood together at a window of the castle of Rohallion,
-which crowns the summit of the headland before mentioned, and from
-whence, as it is a hundred and fifty feet in height, and rises almost
-sheer from the water, a spacious view can be obtained of the noble
-Firth of Clyde, there expanding into a vast ocean, though apparently
-almost landlocked by the grassy hills and dales of Cunninghame, the
-princely Isle of Bute (the cradle of the House of Stuart), the blue
-and rocky peaks of Arran, the grey ridges of Kintyre; and far away,
-like a blue stripe that bounds the Scottish sea, the dim and distant
-shores of Ireland.
-
-A few heavy rain-drops, precursors of a torrent, plashed on the
-window-panes, and with a swiftness almost tropical, great masses of
-cloud came rolling across the darkening sky. Under their lower
-edges, lurid streaks between the hill-tops marked the approach of
-sunset, and thunder began to grumble overhead, as it came from the
-splintered peaks of Arran, to die away among the woody highlands of
-Carrick.
-
-Aware that when the tide turned there would be a tremendous swell,
-with a sea that would roll far inshore, the fishermen in the little
-bay near the castled rock were all busily at work, drawing their
-brown-tarred and sharp-prowed boats far up on the beach, for there
-was a moaning in the sea and rising wind that foretold a tempestuous
-night: thus, they as well as the inhabitants of Rohallion Castle were
-at a loss to understand why the strange brig, instead of running
-right up the firth in search of safe anchorage under some of the high
-land, strove to beat to windward.
-
-The conclusion therefore come to was, that she was French, or that
-her crew were ignorant of the river navigation; there were no pilots
-then, so far down the firth, and when the fishermen spoke among
-themselves of running down to her assistance or guidance, they
-muttered of French gun-brigs, of letters of marque, and
-privateers--shrugged their shoulders, and stood pipe in mouth under
-the lee of the little rocky pier to watch the event.
-
-At the drawing-room windows of the more modern portion of the old
-stronghold of Rohallion, the lady of that name, and her bailie, stood
-watching the ship, by the dim light of the darkening afternoon.
-
-Lady Winifred was a woman of a style, or rather of a school, that has
-passed away for ever out of Scotland.
-
-Tall and stately, but gentle, homely, and motherly withal, her quaint
-formality was tempered by an old-fashioned politeness, that put all
-at their ease.
-
-Now though verging on her fiftieth year, she was still very handsome,
-albeit where dimples once laughed, the wrinkles were appearing now.
-She had been an Edinburgh belle in those days when the tone of
-society there was very stately and aristocratic; when the city was
-the winter resort of the solid rank and real talent of the land; when
-it was a small and spirited capital instead of a huge "deserted
-village," abandoned to the soothing influences of the church, the
-law, Sabbatarianism, and the east wind.
-
-Her lofty carriage and old-fashioned courtesy reminded one of what is
-described of the ladies of Queen Anne's time; she possessed a
-singular sweetness in her smile, and every motion, even of her
-smooth, white hands, though perfectly natural, seemed studies of
-artistic grace. Her eyes were dark and keen; her features straight
-and noble; her complexion brilliantly fair. Though powder had been
-wisely discarded by Her Majesty, the Queen Consort, and the six
-Princesses, their doing so was no rule for Lady Rohallion, who was
-somewhat of a potentate in Carrick, and still wore her hair in that
-singular half-dishevelled fashion, full and flowing, as we may see it
-depicted in Sir Joshua's famous portrait of her, which is to be hung
-on the walls of the Scottish National Gallery, when cleared of some
-of their local rubbish.
-
-Thus, the white powder which she retained in profusion, formed a
-singular but not unpleasing contrast to her black eyebrows, black
-eyes, and long dark lashes--silky fringes, from which, some
-five-and-twenty years before, she had shot more than one perriwigged
-sub, who had come unscathed from the dangers of Bunker's-hill and
-Brandywine.
-
-On the present occasion, her visitor, who bore the somewhat
-unaristocratic name of Mr. John Girvan, or, at times, Girvanmains,
-was a short, thickset, weatherbeaten man about sixty years of age,
-and in whom any one could have discerned at a glance the old soldier,
-by the erect way in which he carried his head. He wore an old
-military wig that had once been white, but was quite unpowdered now
-and was bleached yellow; and he had a jolly good-humoured face,
-rendered so red by exposure to the weather and by imbibing
-whisky-toddy, that, as he once said himself, "it might blow up a
-gunpowder magazine, if he came within a mile of it."
-
-He had been the Quartermaster of Lord Rohallion's regiment, the 25th
-Foot, and after long service with it in America and elsewhere, had
-settled down on his colonel's estates in the capacity of
-land-steward, ground-baillie, and general factotum, and in this
-capacity had snug apartments assigned to him in a part of the old
-castle.
-
-"While looking at yonder ship, my lady, you forget the letters I have
-brought you from Maybole," said he, producing a leathern pouch having
-the Rohallion arms stamped in brass on the outside; "the
-riding-postman, with the mailbags, arrived just as I was leaving the
-Kirkwynd Tavern. Waes me! what a changed place that is now. Many a
-crown bowl of punch have poor Robbie Burns and I birled there!"
-
-"True, John, the letters; unlock the bag, and let me see what the
-news is from Maybole."
-
-This ancient burgh-of-barony was the little capital of the old
-bailiewick of Carrick.
-
-Opening the pouch, Girvan tumbled on the table a number of letters
-and newspapers, such as the Edinburgh "Courant" and "Chronicle,"
-which then were about a quarter of the size of the journals of the
-present day, and were printed on very grey paper, in such very brown
-ink, that they had quite a mediæval aspect.
-
-The first letter Lady Winifred opened was from her chief friend and
-gossip, the Countess of Eglinton, with whom she had been at school,
-when she was simply Winifred Maxwell, and when the Countess was
-Eleanora Hamilton, of Bourtreehill. Her letter was somewhat
-sorrowful in its tenor:--
-
-"I wish you would visit me, my dear friend," it ran; "Eglinton Castle
-is so dull now, so very _triste_! My good lord the earl (whom God
-preserve!) has been appointed Colonel of the Argyle Fencibles, one of
-the many kilted regiments now being raised, lest we are invaded by
-the French and their vile Corsican usurper; so he hath left me. My
-second boy, Roger, too, hath sailed lieutenant of a man-o'-war, and
-sorely do I opine that never mair shall my old hand stroke his golden
-curls again--my own brave bairn! (Her forebodings were sadly
-verified when, soon after, this favourite son died of fever at
-Jamaica.) I send you Mrs. Anne Radcliffe's novel, 'The Mysteries of
-Udolpho,' in five volumes, which I am sure will enchant you. I send
-you also the last book of the fashions, which I received by the
-London mail three weeks ago. Carriage robes are to have long
-sleeves, and the jockey bonnets are trimmed with green feathers;
-white satin mantles, trimmed with swansdown, of the _exile style_,
-are considered the most elegant wraps for the opera. You will see by
-the papers that our brave Lord Nelson hath been created Duke of
-Bronte, but returns from Naples with the odious woman Lady Hamilton.
-Tell Bailie Girvan ('Quartermaster,' I think he prefers,) that I
-thank him for the hawslock-wool* he sent to Eglinton; my girls and I
-are spinning it with our own hands. Also I thank your sweet self for
-the lace mittens you knitted for me on Hallow-e'en. Your little
-friend--it may soon be ward--Miss Flora Warrender, is now with us,
-and seems to grow lovelier and livelier every day. I have Madame
-Rossignal, an _emigré_, the fashionable mistress of dancing, from
-Fyfe's Close, Edinburgh, with me just now, teaching my girls; but for
-a child of eight years, the little Warrender excels them both. Her
-father goes abroad in command of his regiment, and her poor mother is
-almost brokenhearted."
-
-
-* The finest wool, being the locks that grow on the throat.
-
-
-"If she is lonely at Eglinton, with her daughters the Ladies Jane and
-Lilias, how much more must I be, whose husband is absent, and whose
-only son is with the army!" exclaimed Lady Winifred.
-
-"A letter from Rohallion himself!" said the old Quartermaster in an
-excited tone, handing to the lady a missive which bore her husband's
-seal and coronet.
-
-"From him, and I read it _last_!" said she reproachfully, as she
-opened it.
-
-It was dated from White's Coffee-house, in London, whither he had
-gone as a representative peer, and it contained only some news of the
-period, such as comments on Lord Castlereagh's or Mr. Pitt's speeches
-about the Irish Union; ("which is to be carried by English gold and
-guile, like our own," said the Quartermaster, parenthetically;) the
-hopes he had of getting command of a brigade in Sir Ralph
-Abercrombie's proposed Egyptian expedition; he related that their son
-Cosmo, the master of Rohallion, then serving with the Guards, was
-well, and stood high in favour with the Prince of Wales.
-
-"A doubtful compliment, if all tales be true," commented Lady
-Winifred.
-
-"If Rohallion goes on service, I'll never stay at home behind him,"
-exclaimed old Girvan; "it would ill become me."
-
-"_All_ the Highland regiments in Great Britain, second battalions as
-well as first, are under orders for immediate foreign service,"
-continued his lordship's letter; "this looks like work, Winny dear,
-does it not?"
-
-He added that Parliament was to be prorogued in a day or two, and
-that he would return by sea in one of the Leith smacks, which were
-then large and heavy passenger cutters, of some two hundred tons or
-so; they were all armed with carronades, and as their crews were
-secured from the pressgangs, they manfully fought their own way,
-without convoy, with the old Scots flag at their mast-head.
-
-"He comes home by sea," said Lady Rohallion aloud, glancing nervously
-at the offing, where the coast of Ireland had disappeared, and where
-the clouds were gathering black and rapidly.
-
-"By sea!" repeated Girvan.
-
-"Now, the Lord forfend, at this season of the year!"
-
-"And when so many French and Spanish privateers infest the seas, led
-by fellows who, in daring, surpass even Commodore Fall or Paul
-Jones," exclaimed Girvan.
-
-As if to echo or confirm their fears, a booming sound pealed from a
-distance over the sea.
-
-"What noise is that?" asked Lady Rohallion, starting up, while her
-pale cheek grew paler still.
-
-"A gun--a cannon shot to seaward!" exclaimed the old soldier,
-pricking up his ears, while his eyes sparkled on recognising the once
-too familiar sound.
-
-"'Tis that vessel in distress," said Lady Rohallion, as they hurried
-once more to the windows which overlooked the sea. "Away to the
-clachan, John; get all our people together, and have the boats
-launched."
-
-"That will be impossible with such a heavy sea coming rolling in, my
-lady--clean impossible!" replied the other, as he threw up a window
-and levelled a telescope at the vessel, while the wild blast against
-which she was struggling made the damask curtains stream like
-banners, and frizzed up, like a mop, the Quartermaster's old yellow
-wig.
-
-"What do you see, John? Speak, Girvanmains!"
-
-"There go her colours; but I can't make them out."
-
-"Twenty guineas a man to all who will aid her!" exclaimed Lady
-Rohallion, taking a key from her gold chatelaine, and hurrying to a
-buhl escritoire, while gun after gun pealed from a distance over the
-stormy sea; but they came from two vessels, one of which was hidden
-in a bank of dusky vapour.
-
-The lady grasped the old Quartermaster's arm, and her white hands
-trembled nervously as she exclaimed in a whisper--
-
-"Oh, my God, John Girvan! what if Rohallion should be on board of
-her, with a foe on one hand and a lee shore on the other?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE PARTAN CRAIG.
-
- "Prone on the midnight surge with panting breath,
- They cry for aid, and long contend with death;
- High o'er their heads the rolling billows sweep,
- And down they sink in everlasting sleep.
- Bereft of power to help, their comrades see
- The wretched victims die beneath the lee!"
- FALCONER'S _Shipwreck_.
-
-
-Inspired by fears, perhaps, similar to those of his lady, the
-Quartermaster made no immediate reply, but continued to watch with
-deep interest, and somewhat of a professional eye, the red flashes
-which broke from the bosom of that gloomy bank of cloud, which seemed
-to rest upon the surface of the water, about six miles distant.
-
-The wind was still blowing a gale from the seaward. Through the
-fast-flying masses of black and torn vapour, the setting sun, for a
-few minutes, shed a lurid glare--it almost seemed a baleful glow
-along the crested waves, reddening their frothy tops, and lighting
-up, as if with crimson flames, the wet canvas of the brig; but lo! at
-the same instant, there shot out of the vapour, and into the ruddy
-sheen of the stormy sunset, another square-rigged craft, a brig of
-larger size, whose guns were fired with man-o'-war-like precision and
-rapidity.
-
-The first vessel, the same which for so many hours had been working
-close-hauled in long tacks to beat off the lee shore, now
-relinquished the attempt, and, squaring her yards, hoisting her
-topsails from the cap, stood straight towards Rohallion, her crew
-evidently expecting some military protection from the castle on the
-rock, or deeming it better to run bump ashore, with all its risks,
-than be taken by the enemy.
-
-The fugitive was snow-rigged, a merchant brig apparently by her deep
-bends, bluff bows, and somewhat clumsy top and hamper; the British
-colours were displayed at her gaff peak. The other was a smart
-gun-brig or privateer with the tricolour of France floating at her
-gaff, and a long whiplike pennant streaming ahead of her, as she
-fired her bow chasers. Twice luffing round, she let fly some of her
-broadside guns, and once she discharged a large pivot cannon from
-amidships, in her efforts to cripple the fugitive. But as both
-vessels were plunging heavily in a tempestuous sea, the shot only
-passed through the fore and main courses of the merchantman, and were
-seen to ricochet along the waves' tops ahead, ere they sunk amid tiny
-waterspouts to the bottom. Thus the violence of the gale rendered
-the cannonading of the Frenchman nearly futile.
-
-Neglected, or ill-protected at times by warship and batteries, as the
-whole Scottish coast was during the war against France, such episodes
-as this were of frequent occurrence. There was no cruiser in the
-vicinity, so the flight and pursuit in the offing went on
-interrupted, notwithstanding the fury of the gale, which was
-increasing every moment.
-
-Although our fleets successfully blockaded the great military ports
-of France, in the beginning of the war, her privateers infested all
-the broad and narrow seas, and frequently made dashes inshore. Only
-seventeen years before the period of our story, the _Fearnought_, of
-Dunkirk, cannonaded Arbroath with red-hot shot; and much, about the
-same time, the notorious renegade Paul Jones kept all the Scottish
-seaboard in alarm with his fleet.
-
-Now the wild blast that tore round the sea-beaten cliff on which the
-castle stood, increased in fury; the waves grew whiter as the lurid
-sun went down, enveloped in clouds; the sky grew darker and the guns
-flashed redder, as they broke through the murky atmosphere, while
-their reports were brought by the wind, sharply and distinctly, to
-the ears of those who so anxiously looked on.
-
-"Oh, if Rohallion should be there!" exclaimed Lady Winifred, wringing
-her hands again and again.
-
-"This will never do!" exclaimed the old Quartermaster, wrathfully; "a
-Frenchman in the very mouth o' the Clyde and dinging a Scottish ship
-in that fashion! I must fire a gun, and get the volunteers to man
-the battery."
-
-Suddenly the sails of the merchantman were seen to shiver, and she
-seemed in danger of losing her masts, for a shot had carried away her
-rudder, and consequently she became unmanageable!
-
-Both vessels were now so near the land, that the Frenchman probably
-became alarmed for his own safety; so changing his course, he braced
-his yards sharp up, and beating to windward, speedily disappeared
-into the gloom from which he had so suddenly emerged, and was seen no
-more; but the unfortunate victim of his hostility drifted fast away
-before the wind, partly broadside on, towards that lee and rocky
-shore.
-
-"She will be foul o' the Partan Craig, so sure as my name is John
-Girvan!" exclaimed the Quartermaster.
-
-"There is death in the air, Girvanmains," added Lady Rohallion, in a
-low voice that was full of deep emotion; "I heard the moan of the sea
-and wind--the deep sough of coming trouble--in the coves below the
-house this morning, and I never knew the omen fail--oh, look
-there--_all is over!_" she exclaimed with a shudder, as the drifting
-vessel struck with a crash, they seemed to hear, on the long white
-ridge of the Partan Craig.
-
-For a moment her masts were seen to sway from port to starboard, then
-away they went to leeward, a mass of entangled ruin, rigging, yards,
-and sails, as she became a complete wreck bulged upon the reef, with
-the roaring sea making tremendous breaches over her, washing boats,
-booms, bulwarks, and everything from her deck; and thus she lay,
-helpless and abandoned to the elemental war, within a mile of the
-shore.
-
-By the naked eye, but more particularly by means of a telescope, the
-crew could be seen making frantic signals to those on shore, or
-lashing themselves to the timber heads and the stumps of the masts;
-and near her bows there was a man bearing in his arms a child, whom
-he sought to shield from the waves that every moment swept over the
-whole ship.
-
-"A father and his child," exclaimed Lady Rohallion, in deep
-commiseration; "oh, my God, the poor things will perish! I will give
-a hundred guineas to have them saved."
-
-"The national debt wouldn't do it," replied the old quartermaster,
-grimly, with something in his throat between a sob and a sigh.
-
-In those days there were no lifeboats, no rocket apparatus to succour
-the shipwrecked, and in such a wild night of storm and tempest--for
-now the chill November eve had deepened into night--the hardy
-fishermen, who alone could have ventured forth to aid the drowning
-crew, thought and spoke of their wives and little ones, whose bread
-depended on their exertions and on the safety of their clinker-built
-boats, now drawn high and dry upon the beach; and thus compelled by
-prudence to remain inactive, they remained with their weather-beaten
-faces turned stolidly seaward to watch the helpless wreck.
-
-That those who were thereon did not despair of succour from the shore
-was evident, for on the stump of their mainmast the red glaring light
-of a tar-barrel was soon seen burning to indicate where they were,
-for as the darkness increased, even the snow-white foam that boiled
-over the Partan Craig became invisible.
-
-Then the fishermen's wives wrung their hands, and exclaimed in
-chorus--
-
-"The puir man wi' his bairn--oh the puir man wi' his bairn! God save
-and sain them!"
-
-Flaring steadily like a great torch, the light of the blazing barrel
-shed a weird gloom upon the wreck, and defied for a time even the
-seas that swept her to extinguish it, while the heartrending cries of
-the poor fellows who were lashed to the timber-heads and belaying
-pins, were brought to the listeners' ears, from time to time, on the
-stormy gusts of wind.
-
-To add to the wildness of the scene, the sea-lairds, disturbed, in
-their eyries among the rocks by the cries, the recent firing, and the
-blazing barrel now came forth, and the spotted guillemot (or
-sea-turtle), the red-throated northern douker, the ravenous gull, and
-the wild screaming mews went swooping about in flocks on the blast.
-
-A loud and despairing cry that was echoed by all on shore arose from
-the wreck, as the fire-barrel was extinguished by one tremendous
-breaker; and now local knowledge alone could indicate the place where
-the bulged ship was perishing amid the gloom. Soon after this, the
-cries for succour ceased, and as large pieces of timber, planking,
-bulwarks, spars and masts were dashed upon the pier and rocks by the
-furious sea, it was rightly conjectured that she had gone to pieces,
-and that all was at an end now, with her and her crew.
-
-Accompanied by the village dominie, Symon Skaill, a party of
-fishermen, farm labourers and servants from the castle, Mr. John
-Girvan, with a shawl tied over his hat and yellow wig, searched the
-whole beach around the little bay that was overshadowed and sheltered
-by the castle-rock, and the coves or caverns that yawned in it,
-hoping that some poor wretch might be cast ashore with life enough
-remaining to tell the story of his ship; but they searched long and
-vainly. Pieces of wreck, cordage, torn sails, broken spars and
-blocks alone were left by the reflux of the waves, and the flaring of
-the searchers' torches on the gusty wind, as seen from the Castle of
-Rohallion, made them seem like wandering spirits, or something
-certainly uncanny and weird to the eyes of Lady Winifred.
-
-So the night wore on, the storm continued unabated; heavily the rain
-began to lash the sea-beat rocks and castle walls; louder than ever
-roared the wind in the caves below, and more fiercely boiled the
-breakers over the Partan Craig, as if the warring elements were
-rejoicing in their strength, and in the destruction they had achieved.
-
-Wet, wearied, breathless, and longing particularly for a glass of
-that steaming whisky-toddy, which they knew awaited them in the
-castle, the dominie and the quartermaster, whose flambeaux were both
-nearly burned out, just as they were about to ascend a narrow path
-that wound upward from the beach, heard simultaneously a sound like a
-wild gasping sob--a half-stifled cry of despair and exhaustion--from
-the seaward. Shouting lustily for assistance, they gathered some of
-the stragglers, and by the united glare of their torches, upheld at
-arm's length, they beheld a sight that roused their tenderest
-sympathies.
-
-Struggling with that wild sea, whose waves were still rolling
-inshore, about twenty feet from where the spectators stood, a man's
-head could be seen amid the white surf, bobbing like a fisher's
-float, as he swam, combating nobly with the waves, but with one hand
-and arm only; the other hand and arm sustained a child, who seemed
-already dead or partially drowned.
-
-"Oh, weelawa, it was na for nocht that the sealghs were yowling on
-the Partan Craig yestreen!" cried Elsie Irvine, a stout and comely
-matron; but from that haunt the seals have long since been scared by
-the river steamers.
-
-"Oh, the bairn--save the bairn--the puir wee lammie--the puir wee
-doo!" chorussed the women, whose maternal instincts were keenly
-excited, and led by Elsie's husband, several men rushed into the
-water, grasping each other hand-in-hand to stem alike the flow and
-backwash of the waves; but paralysed now by past exhaustion and by
-the extreme cold of the sea and atmosphere, the poor man, who was
-clad in a light green frock, laced with gold, could do no more to
-save either himself or his burden; and thus lay floating passively on
-the surface, drawn deep into the black trough one moment, and tossed
-upon the white froth of a wave-summit the next, but always far beyond
-the reach of those who sought to rescue him and his boy, and wild and
-ghastly seemed his face, when, at times, it could be seen by the
-light of the upheld torches.
-
-Uttering a short, sharp cry of exhaustion and despair, he suddenly
-seemed to stand, or rise erect in the water; then he cast the child
-towards the beach, threw up his hands as if human nature could endure
-no more, and sank--sank within twenty feet of where the spectators
-stood.
-
-Irvine, the fisherman, cleverly caught hold of the child, which a
-wave fortunately threw towards him, and the little fellow, senseless,
-cold and breathless, was borne away in the plump, sturdy arms of his
-wife, to be stripped, put in a warm bed, and restored, if possible,
-to heat and animation.
-
-Great exertions were meanwhile made, but made in vain, to rescue the
-body of his father, for it was never doubted that such was his
-relationship by those who witnessed his severe struggles, his love,
-and his despair.
-
-The storm was passing away; wet, weary, and very much "out of sorts"
-by their unwonted exertions, the quartermaster and the village
-dominie, a thickset, sturdy old fellow, clad in rusty black, with a
-tie perriwig and square buckled shoes, a very wrinkled and somewhat
-careworn face, arrived at the Castle to make their report to Lady
-Rohallion, who had anxiously awaited the events of the night.
-
-With that love of the marvellous and the morbid peculiar to their
-class, her servants had every few minutes brought intelligence of the
-number of corpses, gashed and mangled, which strewed the beach; of
-treasures and rich stuffs which came ashore from the wreck, and so
-forth; but, by reading her letters and other occupations, she had
-striven to wean herself from thinking too much of the terrors that
-reigned without, though every gust of wind that howled round the old
-tower brought to mind the bulged ship, and made her sigh for the
-absence of her husband and son, both far away from her; and now
-starting up, she listened to the narrative of Dominie Skail and his
-gossip, Mr. Girvan.
-
-"Ugh!" concluded the latter; "I've never had such a soaking since I
-tumbled into the Weser, in heavy marching order, the night before
-Minden; and drowned I should have been, but for the ready hand of
-Rohallion."
-
-"But this child you speak of--where is it?" asked Lady Winifred.
-
-"Wi' auld Elsie Irvine, down by the coves, my lady," replied the
-dominie, with one of his most respectful bows.
-
-"The poor little thing is alive, then?"
-
-"Yes--alive, warm, and sleeping cosily in Elsie's breast by this
-time--cosily as ever bairn o' her ain did."
-
-"Bring this child to me in the morning, dominie--you will see to it?"
-
-"Yes, my lady."
-
-"A boy, you say it is?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And what is he like, John Girvan?
-
-"Just like other bairns, my lady."
-
-"How?"
-
-"With yellow hair and a nose above his chin," replied the
-quartermaster, wiping the water out of his neck and wig.
-
-"A bonnie golden-haired bairnie as ever you saw, Lady Rohallion,"
-replied the dominie, with a glistening eye, for he had a kinder heart
-for children than the old bachelor Girvan; "and he minded me much of
-your ladyship's son, the master, when about the same size or age."
-
-"And this poor child is the sole survivor of the wreck?"
-
-"So far as we can learn, the sole--the only one!"
-
-"Heaven help us! this is very sad!" exclaimed the lady, while her
-eyes filled with tears. "Many a mother will have a sore heart after
-this storm, and more than one widow may weep for a husband drowned."
-
-"Ay, madam, in warring wi' the elements, we feel ourselves what the
-Epicureans of old dreamed they were--scarcely the creation of a
-benevolent Being, so helpless and infirm is man when opposed to them."
-
-"Bother the Epicureans, whoever they were; wring the water out of
-your wig, dominie," said the quartermaster.
-
-"Any bodies that come ashore must be noted, examined, and buried with
-due reverence."
-
-"Yes, my lady," replied the dominie; "we'll have to see the minister
-and the sheriff anent this matter."
-
-"Dominie, the butler will attend to you and Mr. Girvan. You are
-quite wet, so lose no time in getting your clothes changed; and bring
-me in the morning this little waif of the ocean, whom I quite long to
-see. Until we discover his parentage, he shall be my peculiar care."
-
-"That shall I do, my lady, joyfully," replied the dominie, bowing
-very low; "and that you will be unto him all that the daughter of
-Pharosh was to the little waif she found in the ark of bulrushes, I
-doubt not."
-
-"Now, dominie," said the quartermaster, testily, "grog first--Exodus
-after."
-
-"I have the honour to wish your ladyship a very good night; and we
-shall drink to your health a glass for every letter of your name,
-like the Romans of old, as we find in Tibullus and Martial," said the
-solemn dominie, retiring and making three profound bows in reply to
-Lady Rohallion's stately courtesy.
-
-"Good night, dominie. You, Girvanmains, will tell me the last news
-in the morning."
-
-The old quartermaster made his most respectful military obeisance as
-he withdrew, on receiving this patronymic; for though he had begun
-life in the ranks of the 25th, or old Edinburgh regiment, like every
-Scot he had a pedigree, and claimed a descent from the Girvans of
-Girvanmains and Dalmorton, an old Ayrshire stock, who were always
-adherents of the Crawfords of Rohallion, either for good or for evil,
-especially in their feuds with the Kennedies of Colzean; and thus he
-was disposed to be more than usually suave, when the lady addressed
-him as "Girvanmains," or more kindly and simply as "John Girvan," a
-familiarity which won entirely the heart of the worthy old soldier,
-for he had followed her husband to many a battle and siege, and,
-under his eye and orders, had expended many a thousand round of John
-Bull's ball ammunition in the Seven Years' war and in the fruitless
-strife with our colonists in America.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE CASTLE OF ROHALLION.
-
- "Hast them seen that lordly castle,
- That castle by the sea?
- Golden and red above it,
- The clouds float gorgeously;
- And fain it would stoop downward,
- To the mirrored wave below,
- And fain it would soar upward,
- In the evening's crimson glow."--LONGFELLOW.
-
-
-The baronial fortalice in which our story has opened stands, as we
-have stated, upon a cliff, at least one hundred and fifty feet in
-height above the ocean, or where the estuary of the Clyde widens
-thereunto, on the Carrick shore; but since 1798 it has undergone many
-alterations, not perhaps for the better.
-
-In that year it consisted of the old Scottish Keep, built in the
-reign of James I. by Sir Ranulph Crawford, of Rohallion, his
-ambassador, first to Henry VI. of England, and afterwards to Charles
-VII. of France, for which services he was created Keeper of the Royal
-Palace of Carrick. Adjoining this grim tower, with its grated
-windows, machicolated ramparts, and corner tourelles, was the more
-modern mansion built in the time of James VI., by Hugh, third Lord
-Rohallion, who slew the gipsy king in single combat at the Cairns of
-Blackhinney. It had crowstepped gables, dormer windows, gabletted
-and carved with dates, crests, and quaint monograms, and many a huge
-chimney, conical turret, and creaking vane, added to its picturesque
-appearance. To this was added a wing in the time of Queen Anne,
-somewhat unsightly in its details, yet the general aspect of the
-whole edifice was bold and pleasing, chastened or toned down as it
-was by time and the elements.
-
-On one side it overlooked the Firth, then opening to a stormy sea,
-with the ruins of Turnberry in the distance--the crumbling walls
-wherein the conqueror of the proud Plantagenet first saw the light,
-and learned "to shake his Carrick spear." On the other, its windows
-opened to the most fertile portion of the bailiewick--wooded heights
-that looked on the banks and braes of the Doon, where the scenery
-wakened a flood of historical or legendary memories; where every
-broomy knowe and grassy hill, every coppice and rushy glen, grey
-lichened rock and stony corrie, were consecrated by some old song or
-stirring tale of love or local war--the fierce old feudal wars of the
-Kennedies, the Crawfords, and the grim iron Barons of Auchindrane;
-and, more than all, it was the birthplace, the home of Robert Bruce
-and of Robert Burns--the one the warrior, and the other the bard of
-the people. From the windows of Rohallion could be seen the very
-uplands, where, but a few years before, the latter had ploughed and
-sown, and where, as he tells us in his filial love of his native
-soil, when he saw
-
- "The rough burr-thistle spreading wide,
- Among the bearded bear;
- I turned the weeding-hook aside,
- And spared the emblem dear!"
-
-The scenery from whence he drew his inspiration looked down on the
-old tower of Rohallion, which contained on its first floor the
-stone-paved hall, that had witnessed many a bridal feast and
-Christmas festival, held in the rough old joyous times, when Scotland
-was true to herself, and ere sour Judaical Sabbatarianism came upon
-her, to make religion a curse and a cloak for the deepest hypocrisy;
-and ere her preachers sought "to merit heaven, by making earth a
-hell."
-
-It presented the unusual feature (in a baronial edifice) of a groined
-roof, having at least six elaborately carved Gothic bosses, where the
-ribs that sprang from beautiful corbels placed between the windows
-intersected each other. On the frieze of the high-arched fireplace
-was a shield _gules_, with a fess _ermine_, the old arms of the
-Crawfords, Lords of Crawford, in Clydesdale (a family ancient as the
-days of William the Lyon), from whom the peers of Rohallion--whose
-patent was signed by James IV. on the night before Flodden--took
-their bearings and motto, _Endure Furth!_ Though, certainly, it was
-but little they were ever disposed to endure with patience, if
-displeased with either king or commoner.
-
-Stags' skulls, antlers, a few old barred helmets, dinted corslets,
-rusty swords and pikes, decorated this great stone apartment. Its
-furniture was massive and ancient, but seldom used now, so there the
-busy spiders spun their webs all undisturbed, across the grated
-windows, and the moss grew in winter on the carved jambs of the great
-fireplace, within which, according to tradition, for ages before
-these days of unbelief, the little red brownie of Rohallion was wont
-to come o' nights when all were abed, and warm himself by the
-smouldering _grieshoch_.
-
-Lady Rohallion preferred the more modern rooms of Queen Anne's reign,
-where the buhl and marqueterie furniture was more to her taste.
-
-There, the double drawing-room with its yellow damask curtains,
-high-backed chairs and couches, its old bandy-legged tabourettes,
-slender gueridon work-tables; its old-fashioned piano, with perhaps
-"H.R.H. the Duke of York's Grand March" on the music-frame; its
-Delft-lined fireplace and basket-grate set on a square block of
-stone, a spinning-wheel on one side, and cosy elbow-chair, brilliant
-with brass nails, on the other, was the beau-ideal of comfort,
-especially on a tempestuous night, such as the last we have
-described; nor was it destitute of splendour, for its lofty panelled
-walls exhibited some fine pictures. There were some gems by Greuze,
-of golden-haired boys and fair full-bosomed women in brilliant
-colours; one or two ruddily-tinted saints by Murillo; one or two dark
-Titians, and darker Vandykes representing Italian nobles of
-cut-throat aspect, in gilt armour, with trunk breeches and high
-ruffs. Then there were also some of the Scottish school; the Lord
-Rohallion (who opposed the surrender of Charles I. to the English) by
-Jameson; his son, a vehement opposer of the Union, attired in a huge
-wig and collarless red coat, by Aikman; and the father of the present
-lord, by Allan Ramsay, son of the poet.
-
-This Lord in 1708 left his country in disgust, swearing that "she was
-only fit for the Presbyterian slaves who sold her;" and for several
-years he solaced himself at the head of a Muscovite regiment against
-the Turks on the banks of the Danube--as the Scots whigs had it,
-"learning to eat raw horse and forget God's kirk, among barbarians in
-red breeks."
-
-Near the castle, and forming indeed a portion of it, was a platform,
-facing the little sandy bay, where the fishing boats were beached,
-and thereon were mounted twelve iron twenty-four pounders, part of
-the spoil of _La Bonne Citoyenne_, a French privateer, which was cast
-away on the Parian Craig; and there, as the old lord and
-representative peer (whose wife is awaiting him) still retained his
-military instincts, being a retired general officer, he had all the
-able-bodied men of his tenantry drilled to the use of sponge and
-rammer as artillerymen, for rumours of invasion were rife; gunboats
-were being built at Boulogne, and those who then looked across the
-Straits of Dover, could see the white tents of the Armée
-d'Angleterre, under the Irish soldier of fortune, Kilmaine, covering
-all the hostile shore of France. So all Britain was bristling with
-bayonets; from Cape Wrath to the Land's End in Cornwall, every man
-who could handle a musket was a volunteer, if not otherwise enrolled
-in the line, militia, or Fencibles.
-
-On this battery the flag was hoisted and a salute loyally and
-joyously fired every 4th of June, in honour of His Majesty George
-III., by the Rohallion volunteers; and there with loud hurrahs they
-drank confusion to France and to his enemies, Tom Paine, the Pope,
-and the Devil, and very frequently in the best French brandy, which
-somehow found its way quite as often as our good Farintosh or
-Campbelton whisky, duty free, into the sea coves beneath the castle
-rock.
-
-These twelve twenty-four pounders protected the approach to the bay
-on one side, and to the gate of the castle on the other--the haunted
-gate of Rohallion, as it was named, from the circumstance that there
-the old village dominie, Symon Skaill, when going home one morning
-(night he affirmed it to be) in midsummer, after topering with Mr.
-John Girvan, saw a very startling sight. Clearly defined in the calm
-still twilight of the morning, there stood by the gate the tall and
-handsome figure of John, Master of Rohallion, who was known to be
-then serving with the Foot Guards under Cornwallis, in America. He
-wore his scarlet regimentals, his brigadier wig, his long straight
-sword, and little three-cocked hat; but his face was pale, distorted
-by agony, and blood was flowing from a wound in his left temple.
-
-Ere the affrighted dominie could speak, the figure--the
-_wraith_--melted into the twilight, and not a trace of it remained by
-the arched gate, where the birds were twittering about in the early
-morning. A note was made of this singular vision, and it was found
-that at that hour, the Master of Rohallion had been shot through the
-head, when leading on his company of the Guards at the attack on Long
-Island.
-
-Such, in 1798, was the old Scottish mansion of Rohallion, the
-residence of Reynold, sixth Lord of that ilk, which, by the events of
-the last night's storm, has become the starting-place, or, as the
-quartermaster might phrase it, the _point d'appui_, of our story.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE CHILD OF THE SEA.
-
- "'Tis gone--the storm has past,
- 'Twas but a bitter hail shower, and the sun
- Laughs out again within the tranquil blue.
- Henceforth, Firmilian, thou art safe with me."
- AYTOUN.
-
-
-To the eyes of those who surveyed the beach beneath the castle walls
-next morning, a lamentable spectacle was displayed. The wreck upon
-the Partan Craig had been completely torn to pieces by the fury of
-the waves, and now shattered masts and yards, blocks and rigging,
-casks, bales, planks and other pieces of worn and frayed timber were
-left high and dry among the shells and shingle by the receding tide,
-or were dashed into smaller fragments by the surf that beat against
-the castle rock.
-
-Several dead bodies were also cast ashore, sodden with the brine, and
-partly covered with sand; and, though all had been but a short time
-in the water, some were sadly mutilated by having been dashed
-repeatedly against the sharp and abutting rocks of Rohallion, by the
-furious sea last night.
-
-All looked placid and calm, and by the position of their limbs,
-nearly all seemed to have been drowned in the act of swimming. By a
-portion of the sternboard that came on shore, the vessel's name
-appeared to have been the _Louise_; but of what port, or from where,
-remained unknown, for, save the little child, there remained no
-tongue or record to tell the story of that doomed ship, or the
-dreadful secrets of that eventful night.
-
-The mutterings of the fishermen and the lamentations of the women of
-the little hamlet, were loud and impressive, as they rambled along
-the beach, drawing the dead aside to remain in a boat-shed till that
-great local authority, the parish minister, arrived. Everything that
-came drifting ashore from the wreck was drawn far up the sand, lest
-the returning tide should wash it off again.
-
-There were no Lloyds' agents or other officials in the neighbourhood
-of Rohallion, so each man made a lawful prize of whatever he could
-lay hands upon and convey to his cottage. The people at work close
-by relinquished plough and harrow, and harnessed their horses to the
-masts and booms for conveyance through the fields. Others brought
-carts to carry off the plunder; and thus, long before midday, not a
-trace remained of the shattered ship, save the pale dead men, who lay
-side by side under an old sail in the boat-shed; but for many a night
-after this, Elsie Irvine and others averred that they could see the
-pale blue corpse-lichts dancing on the sea about the Partan Craig, to
-indicate where other men lay drowned, uncoffined, and unprayed for.
-
-Among other bodies discovered on the beach next morning was that of a
-man in whom, by his costume--a light green frock, laced with
-gold--all recognised the father, or supposed father, of the little
-boy he had striven so bravely to save, and whom all had seen perish
-by the light of their torches.
-
-The poor man was lying among the seaweed, stark and stiff, and half
-covered with sand, within a few yards of the cottage where his little
-boy, all unconscious of his loss, of the past and of the future, lay
-peacefully asleep in Elsie Irvine's bed.
-
-And now the quartermaster and Dominie Skaill, who had given his
-schoolboys a holiday, in honour of the excitement and the event,
-arrived at the scene of operations, with Lady Rohallion's orders that
-the child should be brought to her.
-
-Old John Girvan looked at the corpse attentively.
-
-"This poor fellow has been a soldier," said he; "I can perceive that,
-by a glance. Lift him gently into the shed, lads, though it's all
-one to him how he's handled now!"
-
-The corpse seemed to be that of a tall, well-formed, and fine-looking
-dark-complexioned man, in the prime of life; his dark brown hair,
-from which the white powder had all been washed away, was already
-becoming grizzled, and was neatly tied in a queue by a blue silk
-ribbon. In the breast-pocket of his coat, there were found a purse
-containing a few French coins of the Republic, but of small value,
-and a plated metal case, in which were some papers uninjured by the
-water. On the third finger of his left hand was a signet ring on
-which the name "Josephine" was engraved; so with these relics (while
-the body was placed with the rest in the boat-shed) John Girvan and
-the dominie, accompanied by Elsie, bearing the child, repaired to the
-presence of Lady Rohallion, who received them all in her little
-breakfast-parlour, the deeply embayed and arched windows of which
-showed that it had been the bower-chamber of her predecessors, in the
-feudal days of the old castle.
-
-"Come away, Elsie, and show me your darling prize!" she exclaimed, as
-she hurried forward and held out her hand to the fisherman's wife,
-for there was a singular combination of friendly and old-fashioned
-grace in all she did.
-
-"There is no a bonnier bairn, my leddy, nor a better, in a' the three
-Bailiwicks o' Kyle, Carrick, and Cunninghame," said Elsie, curtsying
-deeply, as she presented the child.
-
-"Yes, madam," added the dominie; "the bairn is as perfect an Absalom
-as even the Book of Samuel describeth."
-
-"But I dinna understand a word he says," resumed Elsie; "hear ye
-that, madam?"
-
-"Ma mère, ma mère!" sobbed the child, a very beautiful dark-eyed, but
-golden-haired and red-cheeked little boy of some seven or eight years
-of age, as he looked from face to face in wonder and alarm.
-
-"Faith! 'tis a little Frenchman," said the dominie.
-
-"A Frenchman!" exclaimed Elsie, placing the child somewhat
-precipitately on Lady Rohallion's knee, and retiring a pace or two.
-"I thocht sae, by his queer jargon of broken English, wi' a
-smattering o' Scots words too; but French folk speak nae Christian
-tongue. Maybe the bairn's a spy--a son, wha kens, o' Robespierre or
-Bonaparte himsel!"
-
-"Elsie, how can you run on thus?"
-
-"Ah, mon père--mon père!" said the child, sobbing.
-
-"Hear till him again, my leddy," exclaimed Elsie; "the bairn can
-speak French--that cowes a'!"
-
-"He cries for his father--poor child--poor child!" said Lady
-Rohallion, whose eyes filled with tears.
-
-"Father--yes, madame; my father--where is he?" said the boy, opening
-his fine large eyes wider with an expression of anxiety and fear, and
-speaking in a lisping but strongly foreign accent; "take me to
-him--take me to him, madame, if you please."
-
-"The bairn speaks English well enough," said the dominie; "he'll hae
-had a French tutor, or some sic haverel, to teach him to play the
-fiddle, I warrant, and to quote Voltaire, Rousseau, and Helvetius,
-when he grows older."
-
-"What is your name, my dear little boy?" asked Lady Rohallion,
-caressingly; but she had to repeat the question thrice, and in
-different modes, before the child, who eyed her with evident
-distrust, replied, timidly:
-
-"Quentin Kennedy, madame."
-
-"Kennedy!" exclaimed all.
-
-"A gude auld Ayrshire name, ever since the days of Malcolm the
-Maiden!" said the quartermaster, striking his staff on the floor.
-
-"Rohallion's mother was a Kennedy," said the lady, a tender smile
-spreading over her face as she surveyed the orphan, "so the bairn
-could not have fallen into better hands than ours."
-
-"Indubitably not, my lady," chimed in the dominie; "nor could he find
-a sibber friend."
-
-"And your father, my dear child--your father?" urged Lady Rohallion.
-
-"My father--oh, my father is drowned! He went down into the sea with
-the big ship. Oh, ma mère! ma mère!" cried the little boy, in a
-sudden passion of grief, and seeking to escape from them, as the
-terrors of the past night, with a conviction of his present isolation
-and loneliness, seemed to come fully upon him.
-
-"And your mamma, my little love?" asked the lady, endearingly.
-
-"She is far away in France."
-
-"Where--in what town?"
-
-"Hélas, madame, I do not know."
-
-He sobbed bitterly, and Lady Rohallion wept as she kissed and
-fondled, and strove to reassure him by those caresses which none but
-one who has been a mother can bestow; but sometimes he repelled her
-with his plump little hands, while his dark eyes would sparkle and
-dilate with surprise and alarm. Then he would ask for his father
-again and again, for the child knew neither what death or drowning
-meant; and it was in vain they told him that his father had perished
-in the sea. He could not understand them, and to have shown the
-child the poor pale, sodden corpse that lay in the boat-shed on the
-shore would have been a useless cruelty that must have added to his
-grief and terror.
-
-Lady Rohallion, pointing upward as he sat on her knee, told him that
-his father was in heaven, and that in time he would meet him there;
-for, of such as he was, poor orphan, was the kingdom of heaven made;
-but in heaven or in the sea was all one for a time to little Quentin
-Kennedy, who wept bitterly, and noisily too, till he grew weary, or
-became consoled, by the winning ways of his gentle protectress, for
-of course the poor child knew not the nature of his awful loss and
-bereavement.
-
-While the boy, already temporarily forgetful of his griefs, was
-stretched on the soft, warm hearth-rug before the fire that blazed in
-the parlour grate, and occupied himself with the gambols of a wiry
-Skye-terrier, John Girvan handed to Lady Rohallion the relics he had
-found on the drowned man.
-
-"A ring!" said she; "this is painfully interesting; and it has an
-inscription."
-
-"Yes, madame, it is like the _annuli_ worn by the legionary tribunes
-in the Punic war," added Dominie Skaill, who never lost an
-opportunity of "airing" his classics.
-
-"It bears a crest; that speaks of gentle birth," said Lady Rohallion,
-who had a great veneration for that fortuitous circumstance. "And
-there is a name, _Josephine_."
-
-"Mamma--ma mère!" exclaimed the child, starting and looking up at
-the, no doubt, familiar sound.
-
-"His mother's name, I am sure; poor little fellow, he has heard his
-father call her so," said Lady Rohallion, as she opened the plated
-case and drew forth the documents it contained. One was on
-parchment, the other two were letters.
-
-"A military commission--Girvanmains, look here!"
-
-It was the commission of Quentin Kennedy, _gentilhomme Ecossais_, to
-be captain in the Royal Regiment of Scots, in the service of His Most
-Christian Majesty, and was signed by the unfortunate Louis XVI., as
-the date showed, in the year before his execution.
-
-"So this poor drowned man has eaten his bread by tuck of drum!"
-exclaimed the old quartermaster, with a kindling eye, as he stooped
-to caress the orphan's golden curls. "Puir fellow--puir fellow! He
-has been a commissioned officer like myself, so I'll e'en turn out
-the Rohallion Volunteers, and he shall be borne to his grave as
-becomes a soldier, with muffled drums and arms reversed--eh, dominie?"
-
-"Yes, and the spoils of war shall be cast on the pile, as we read in
-the eleventh book of the Æneid; and they shall march like the
-Thebans, striking their weapons one on another, to the sound of the
-trumpet--eh, quartermaster?"
-
-"I'd batoon the first lout I caught doing aught so unsteady or so
-unsoldierlike," was the indignant response.
-
-"But how came this Scotsman to be serving the French King," asked the
-dominie; "as such was he not a renegade soldier, such as the Romans
-were wont to stab and leave unburied, as we find in Tacitus?"
-
-"He had been in the foreign brigades, the Scottish and Irish,"
-replied the lady. "One of these letters is from Monsieur the Comte
-d'Artois, and it praises the courage of the Scottish Captain Kennedy,
-of the Regiment de Berwick, in the campaigns upon the Meuse and
-Rhine. The other letter is from his poor wife, and is subscribed
-Josephine. Ah me, how sad! the name that is on the ring."
-
-They spoke in low tones, as if loth to disturb the child, who was
-still playing with the terrier.
-
-"What says it, my lady?" asked the dominie, "for though well versed
-in the dead languages, praised be Providence and the auld pedagogy of
-Glasgow, I know little of the living--French especially, the language
-of Voltaire, Diderot, and Helvetius--of democrats, levellers,
-revolutionists, and the slaves of the Corsican tyrant."
-
-"The letter has no date, dominie," replied the lady, smiling at this
-outburst; "the cover also is wanting, but it runs thus."
-
-Standing one on each side of her chair, each with a hand at his ear
-to listen, the two old men heard her translate with ease the
-following letter:
-
-
-"MY OWN DEAR, DEAR QUENTIN,--
-
-"This is the last letter you will receive in France from your own
-Fifine. The next I shall address to you, as you may direct, to
-Scotland. Ah, mon Dieu! how sad--how terrible to think that we are
-to be separated, and at such a time! But madame my mother's illness
-pleads for me with all, and more than all with you, Quentin. You, as
-a Scotsman and royalist officer, and our poor child, for the very
-blood it inherits from his mother, would be welcome victims to the
-shambles of the great Republic; for the first Consul B. and Citizen
-M. his secretary of state, would not spare even a child at this
-crisis, lest it should grow into an aristocrat and an enemy.* Every
-hour the hatred of Britain grows stronger here, and the mode in which
-we treat the prisoners taken in Flanders and elsewhere, makes my
-blood alternately glow and freeze, Frenchwoman though I am! But I
-have not forgotten the Place de la Grève, or the horrors of that day,
-when my father's blood moistened the sawdust of a scaffold, just
-wetted by the blood of Marie Antoinette.
-
-
-* The initials no doubt refer to Bonaparte and the secretary Hugues
-Bernard Maret, who assisted so vigorously in the 18th Brumaire.
-
-
-"Enough of this, however, dear Quentin; 'tis safer to speak than to
-write of such things, though this letter goes by a safe and sure
-hand, our dear friend, the Abbé Lebrun, for in this land of spies the
-post is perilous. Destroy it, however, the moment you receive it,
-for we know not what mischief it might do us all, though the ship by
-which you sail, goes, you say, under cartel, and by the rules of war
-can neither be attacked nor taken.
-
-"Rumour says that Monsieur Charles Philippe, the Comte d'Artois, is
-now with his suite at Holyrood, the old home of those Scottish kings
-with whom his fathers were allied; and that the ancient Garde du
-Corps Ecossais is to be re-established for him there. I pray God it
-may be so, as in that case, dearest, Monsieur will not forget you and
-your services on the Rhine and elsewhere, and your steady adherence
-to his family in those days of anarchy, impiety, and sin.
-
-"Kiss our little cherub for me. I am in despair when I think of him,
-though he is safer with you than with me, in our dreadful France--no
-longer the land of beauty and gaiety, but of the bayonet and
-guillotine. He must be our hostage and peace-offering to your
-family, and I doubt not that his innocent smiles and golden curls may
-soften their hearts towards us both. La Mère de Dieu take you both
-into her blessed keeping and hasten our reunion. Till then, and for
-ever after, I am your own affectionate little wife,
-
-"FIFINE."
-
-
-This letter, we have said, was undated, but the postscript led Lady
-Rohallion to suppose it came from a remote part of France. It ran
-thus:
-
-
-"Your own petted Fifine sends you a hundred kisses for every mile
-this has to travel; as many more to little Quentin, as they wont add
-a franc to the weight in the pocket of M. l'Abbé."
-
-
-So ended this letter, so sad in its love and its tenor, under the
-circumstances. With that of the Comte d'Artois, the commission,
-purse, and ring, Lady Rohallion carefully put it past in her antique
-buhl escritoire, for her husband's inspection on his return; and, on
-leaving the castle, the old quartermaster kept his word.
-
-True to his inbred military instincts and impulses, he had the
-Rohallion company of Volunteers duly paraded, in their cocked hats,
-short swallow-tailed red coats, white leggings, and long black
-gaiters; and, with arms reversed, they bore the dead soldier of
-fortune, shoulder-high, from the old castle-gate, where the scarlet
-family standard, with its fess _ermine_, hung half-hoisted on the
-battery.
-
-Mournfully from the leafless copse that clothed the steep sides of
-the narrow glen in which the old kirk stood, did the muffled drums
-re-echo, while the sweet low wail of the fifes sent up the sad notes
-of the dead march--"The Land o' the Leal."
-
-At one of the drawing-room windows, Lady Rohallion sat, with the
-child upon her knee--little Quentin Kennedy, our hero, for such he
-is; and her motherly heart was full, and her kindly tears fell fast
-on his golden hair, when three sharp volleys that rung in the clear
-cold air above a yawning grave, and the pale blue distant smoke that
-she could see wreathing in the November sunshine, announced the last
-scene of this little tragedy--that the poor drowned wanderer, the
-Scottish soldier of fortune, who adhered to King Louis in his
-downfall, had found a last home in his native earth; and that,
-_perhaps_, all his secrets, his sorrows, and the story of his life
-were buried with him.
-
-Then with a burst of sympathy and womanly tenderness, she pressed her
-lips to the soft cheek of the child, whose eyes dilated with inquiry
-and wonder, as he heard those farewell volleys that rung in the
-distant air, but little knew that they were fired above his father's
-closing grave!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE PAST.
-
- "Still shall unthinking man substantial deem
- The forms that flit through life's deceitful dream,
- Till at some stroke of Fate, the vision flies,
- And sad realities in prospect rise;
- And from Elysian slumbers rudely torn,
- The startled soul awakes, to think and mourn."
- BEATTIE'S _Elegy_, 1758.
-
-
-Such is the buoyant thoughtlessness of childhood, that a few days
-sufficed to console, to soothe, and to reconcile the poor boy to his
-new friends and his new habitation. The kindness, tenderness, and
-attention of Lady Rohallion did much, if not all, to achieve this;
-and doubtless she would have succeeded very well in the same way with
-an older personage than little Quentin Kennedy, for she fully
-possessed, together with great amiability and sweetness of
-disposition, those requisites which Sir William Temple affirmed to be
-the three great ingredients of pleasant conversation, viz., good
-sense, good humour, and wit.
-
-Secluded and retiring in her habits, simple and old-fashioned in her
-tastes, she preferred residing quietly among her husband's tenantry
-at Rohallion, to figuring, as had been her wont, in the great world
-of fashion, such as it was to be found in the London of old King
-George's days, or in the smaller circle of the Scottish metropolis;
-and even when parliamentary business compelled Lord Rohallion to
-proceed southward, he could scarcely prevail upon her to accompany
-him, for travelling was not then the swift and easy process we find
-it _now_, in these days of steam and railways.
-
-Thus the advent of her little protégé was quite a boon to her, and
-while rapidly learning to love the child, who had a thousand winning
-and endearing ways, she relinquished all idea of attempting to
-discover his mother till the return of her husband, though the notion
-was scarcely conceived, when it was abandoned as simply impossible,
-from the want of a distinct clue as to her residence, and the
-existence of the bitter and revengeful war that had been waged
-between France and Britain for five years now, ever since the siege
-of Toulon. Consequently there seemed nothing for it, as
-Quartermaster Girvan said, but to make a good Scotsman of the little
-Frenchman, (if French, indeed, he was)--and the dominie failed not to
-quote Cicero, "anent the _adoptio_ of the Romans."
-
-So Lady Rohallion learned to love the child, and the child to love
-her with a regard that was quite filial; and his pretty prattle in
-broken English was her chief solace and amusement after the hours of
-attendance and _surveillance_ she daily bestowed, like a good
-housewife and chatelaine of old, upon her household and her husband's
-tenantry; for there was not "a fishwife's bairn" in the hamlet below
-could be pilled or powdered for the measles or hooping-cough, without
-a due consultation being first held with my lady in the castle.
-
-Sensation novels were then unknown, and Walter Scott was still in
-futurity, save as a translator of German ballads. Our respectable
-old friends, "Tom Jones," "Roderick Random," and "Peregrine Pickle,"
-were still in the flush of their fame; but Lady Rohallion preferred
-the works of Mr. Richardson, and deemed the sorrows of Clarissa
-Harlowe, and of Fielding's "Amelia," to be sorrows indeed.
-
-Being Winifred Maxwell of the gallant but attainted House of
-Nithsdale, her Jacobite sympathies were keen and intense; thus, ten
-years before the date of our story she suffered a real grief, and had
-worn a suit of the deepest black, on tidings coming from Maybole that
-Prince Charles Edward, with whom her mother had flirted in Holyrood,
-and for whom her uncles had shed their blood on the fatal field of
-Culloden--that the Bonnie Prince Charlie of so many stirring
-memories, so many Scottish songs, and so many faithful hearts, an
-old, soured, and disappointed man, had been gathered to his fathers,
-and was lying cold and dead in his tomb, beneath the dome of St.
-Peter.
-
-Though she had somewhat strong ideas on the subject of keeping up
-"the old spirit of the Crawfords of Rohallion," a good deal of which,
-we are sorry to say, meant looking down on their neighbours: and
-though she had an intense estimation for people of "that ilk," and
-for coats, quarterings, and family claims, and that kind of blood
-which the Scots designated as _gude_, and the Spaniards as _blue_,
-she was weak enough, as Lady Eglinton phrased it, to treasure
-immensely a copy of very flattering verses, addressed to her in her
-beauty and girlhood, by a certain democratic Ayrshire ploughman,
-named Mr. Robert Burns, for whose memory she had a very great regard.
-
-She was full of the proud and fiery ideas of a past and manly age,
-for she was old enough to remember when the beaus and bloods of
-Edinburgh in their periwigs and square-skirted coats of silk or
-velvet, squired her and Eleanora Eglinton up the old Assembly Close,
-with links flaring and swords flashing round their sedans, swearing,
-with such large oaths as were then fashionable, to whip through the
-lungs any scurvy fellow who loitered an instant in their way.
-
-But the first years of the present century saw a new world closing
-round her, and innovations coming fast, though the old language in
-which our laws are written yet lingered in the pulpit and at the bar.
-
-To her aristocratic ideas, and to those of her friends, it seemed as
-if the malign influence of the French revolution tainted the very
-air, especially in Scotland, where, by the tendency of their
-education and religion, the people are naturally democratic in
-spirit; and it was pretty apparent, that the decapitation of Robert
-Watt at Edinburgh, and the persecution of "citizen Muir" and his
-compatriots by the Government, in no way cooled the real ardour of
-the Friends of the People.
-
-To Lady Winifred, it appeared also, that while, on one hand, the
-humbler classes were less genuinely affectionate and less deferential
-to the upper, on the other, they were less kindly and less courteous
-to each other. Everything seemed to be done in a hurry too, though
-the mail-coaches carrying four inside, usually took a week or more in
-rumbling between Edinburgh and London, with the varieties of an
-occasional break-down when fording a river, or receiving the contents
-of a robber's blunderbuss in a lonely part of the way.
-
-Holidays were kept in a hearty old fashion, and there was no sour
-Sabbatarianism to excite the wrath of the liberal-minded Scots, and
-the wonder and derision of their English neighbours. There were
-democrats and demagogues in every village, it is true; but
-patriotism, and a genuine British spirit rendered their revilings
-innocuous and all but useless.
-
-Where now the dun deer rove in the desert glens, the Highland Clans
-existed in all their hardihood and numerical strength, to fill by
-thousands the ranks of our kilted regiments. The flags of "Duncan,
-Nelson, Keppel, Howe, and Jervis" were sweeping the sea. Beacons
-studded all the hills, and every village cross was the muster-place
-of volunteer corps; and there are yet those alive who remember the
-great night of the _false alarm_ when it was supposed the French had
-landed, when the bale-fire on Hume castle sent its blaze upon the
-midnight sky; when the alarm-drum, the long roll which a soldier
-never forgets, was beat in town and hamlet, and all Scotland stood to
-arms: and when the brave Liddesdale yeomanry swam the Liddle, then in
-full and roaring flood, every trooper riding with his sword in his
-teeth, as if to show that the old spirit yet lived upon the Borders,
-unchanged as in those days when the Lords Marchers blew their
-trumpets before the gates of Berwick or Carlisle.
-
-And as it came to pass, it was in those stirring times of war and
-tumult--times not now very remote, good reader--that our little hero
-found a home in the old manor of Rohallion.
-
-His mother sorrowed for him in sunny France beyond the sea, where she
-may never see him more, or know that he survived the wreck in which
-her husband perished; and now daily another received his morning
-kiss, and watched his footsteps and gambols; and nightly hushed him
-to sleep, smoothed the coverlet, caressed his ruddy cheeks and golden
-hair; yet that poor bereaved mother was never absent from the
-thoughts of good Lady Rohallion, who had now taken her place.
-
-Of his many kisses and caresses, she felt that she was robbing that
-poor unknown, the affectionate "Fifine" of the dead man's letter; but
-how to find her, how to restore him, stultified and rendered every
-way impossible as all such attempts must be, by the war now waged by
-every sea and shore between the two countries?
-
-Though little Quentin, we grieve to say, was gradually forgetting his
-own mother and learning to love his adopted one, there were times
-when, natheless all Lady Rohallion's sweetness and tenderness, he
-felt that there was something lacking--something he missed; he knew
-not what, unless it were that he longed
-
- "For the touch of a vanished hand,
- And the sound of a voice that is still."
-
-A fortnight had passed away since the letter of Lord Rohallion had
-been brought by John Girvan from Maybole, and still there were no
-further tidings of his return; so the lady became sad and anxious,
-for she trembled at the idea of his returning by sea.
-
-On one of the first nights of December, when the wind was moaning
-about the old walls of the castle, and the angry hiss of the sea was
-heard on the rocks below, she sat alone, by Quentin's little bed. He
-had just dropped asleep.
-
-He occupied the same cot in which her own son Cosmo, Master of
-Rohallion, had been wont to sleep when a child about the same age.
-It was prettily gilt and surmounted by a coronet; the curtains were
-drawn apart, and by the subdued light of a night-lamp, she could see
-the pure profile and rosy cheeks of the boy, as he reposed on a soft
-white pillow, in the calm sleep of childhood.
-
-She could almost imagine that her son Cosmo, the tall captain of the
-Guards, was again a child and sleeping there, or that she was a young
-wife again and not an old woman, and so, as thoughts that came
-unbidden poured fast upon her, she began to recal the years that had
-rolled away.
-
-Then out of the thronging memories of the past, there arose a vision
-of a fair-haired and handsome young man--one who loved her well
-before Rohallion came--his younger brother; and with this image came
-the memory of many a happy ramble long, long ago, in the green summer
-woods of pleasant Nithsdale, when the sunshine was declining on the
-heights of Queensberry, or casting shadows on the plains of Closeburn
-or the grassy pastoral uplands through which the blue stream winds to
-meet the Solway--and where the voices of the mavis, the merle, and
-the cushat-dove were heard in every coppice.
-
-She thought of those sunset meetings, and of one who was wont to sit
-beside her then for hours, lost in love and happiness. Lady
-Rohallion loved her husband well and dearly; but there were times
-when conscience upbraided her, and she pitied the memory of that
-younger brother whom she had deceived and deluded, and whom, like a
-thoughtless young coquette, she had permitted--it might be, lured--to
-love her.
-
-In fancy she traced out what her path--a less splendid one,
-assuredly--might have been, had Rohallion not won her heart, and most
-unwittingly broken his brother's, for so the people said. And thus,
-while "speculating on a future which was already a _past_," the
-handsome, the gallant, and earnest young Ranulph Crawford, the lover
-of her girlhood, rose before her in fancy, and her eyes grew moist as
-she thought of his fatal end, for he died, a self-made exile, an
-obscure soldier of fortune, in defence of the Tuileries, and the
-public papers had recorded the story of his fall--not in the flowery
-language of the present, but in the cold brevity of that time--"as
-one Captain Crawford, a Scot, whose zeal outran his discretion, who
-in charging the populace, was wounded, taken, and beheaded by them."
-
-"Clarissa Harlowe" had fallen from her hand, and the mimic sorrows of
-the novel were forgotten in the real griefs of Lady Winifred's waking
-dream. From these, however, she was roused by the clatter of a
-horse's hoofs at the haunted gate beside the gun-battery, and almost
-immediately after a servant announced the glad tidings,
-
-"My Lady Rohallion, his lordship has arrived!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-LORD ROHALLION.
-
- "She gazed--she reddened like a rose--
- Syne pale as ony lily;
- She sank within my arms and cried,
- 'Art thou my ain dear Willie?'
- 'By Him who made yon sun and sky,
- By whom true love's regarded,
- I am the man!' and thus may still
- True lovers be rewarded."--BURNS.
-
-
-Hastening to the drawing-room, she immediately found herself in the
-arms of her husband, who was throwing off his drab-coloured
-riding-coat, with its heavy cape, his small triangular Nivernois hat,
-boot-tops, and whip, to his favourite valet and constant attendant,
-old Jack Andrews.
-
-Rohallion kissed his wife's hand and then her forehead, for he had
-not outlived either affection or respect, though verging on his
-fifty-fifth year; and he had all that gentleness of bearing and true
-politeness which the Scottish gentlemen of the old school, prior to,
-and long after the Union, acquired from our ancient allies, the
-French.
-
-"And you returned from London----"
-
-"By sea, Winny--by sea," said Rohallion, "After all my entreaties!"
-
-"Zounds! Winny, I can't abide the mail, and am too old to post it
-now, as my old friend Monboddo used to do yearly, to kiss the king's
-hand; and so preferred the 'Lord Nelson' smack, from London to Leith,
-armed with twelve carronades, and sailing without convoy."
-
-"And the voyage was pleasant?"
-
-"A head-wind, a fourteen days' run, and an exchange of shots with a
-French privateer off Flamborough Head. At Edinburgh I took the stage
-to Ayr, and from thence Andrews and I jogged quietly home on
-horseback."
-
-Still a handsome man, though portly in person, as became his years,
-Reynold Crawford, Lord Rohallion, had features that were alike noble
-in character and striking in expression. The broad, square forehead
-indicated intelligence and candour, his mouth, good humour; and the
-form of his closely shaved chin, spoke of decision and perseverance.
-His nose was perhaps too large, but his eyes were dark grey, gentle
-and soft, usually, in expression. He wore his own hair, which was
-still thick and wavy, powdered white as a cauliflower, and tied with
-a broad ribbon, having a double bow at the back.
-
-He still adhered to the frilled shirt, and had a large pearl brooch
-in the breast thereof; his long waistcoat was of scarlet cloth, edged
-with silver; his coat of bright blue broadcloth, with large, flat
-steel buttons, had a high rolling collar, small cape, and enormous
-lapels. Hessian boots, with tassels of gold and spurs of steel, and
-tight buff pantaloons for riding, showed to advantage his stout, well
-turned limbs, and completed his costume. He had a ruddy complexion,
-a hearty laughing manner, and a jolly brusquerie about him that
-smacked more of the soldier or the agriculturist than the peer of the
-realm.
-
-"And now, Rohallion, tell me about our Cosmo--how is he looking?"
-
-"Twice as well as ever I did at the same age, and that is saying
-something--eh, Winny? Why he is the pattern man of the Household
-Brigade, but a strange boy withal. Duty about the Court has
-increased that cold hauteur which always marked his character. I
-don't know where the deuce he picked it up--not from you or me,
-Winny. But the butler says that an early supper is served----"
-
-"Yes, dearest--in my little parlour."
-
-"Egad! the snuggest billet in the house, and I can assure you that I
-am as well appetised as ever I used to be when a hungry ensign in
-Germany. Permit me, madam," said he, drawing her hand caressingly
-upon his arm; "and now tell me, how do you like the mode in which my
-hair is queued?"
-
-"Why, Reynold?"
-
-"'Tis a new fashion taught to Jack Andrews by old Hugh Hewson, of St.
-Martin-in-the-Fields--the Scotch hairdresser--you have heard of him,
-of course?"
-
-"The original of Dr. Smollett's Hugh Strap--who has not?" said she,
-laughing; "well, his dressing is very smart! I see now, Andrews, his
-lordship looks quite a beau!"
-
-"I _was_--or had the reputation of being so, when first I wore that
-gorget at Minden, a boy of fifteen or thereabouts; and before I saw
-you, Winny, dear."
-
-"I have a surprise for you----"
-
-"Supper first, Winny, egad! I don't like surprises; we had enough of
-them in Holland, and they were not at all to our taste. Eh, Jack
-Andrews--do you remember our night march for Valenciennes?" he asked,
-turning to his old valet, who grinned an assent as he deposited a
-pair of silver-mounted holster pistols in a mahogany case. To
-Rohallion this veteran, Jack Andrews, was all that Corporal Trim was
-to Uncle Toby (both of whom, according to Sterne, had served in the
-25th Foot, then known as Leven's Regiment), a servant, and at times
-friend and companion, and perpetual resort or reference on military
-matters. Long and hard service together, community of sentiment on
-most matters, combined the sympathy of camaraderie with the steady
-faith of a Scottish servitor of the old school in Andrews, who was a
-sour-featured, thin, and erect old fellow, in a powdered wig (though,
-by the Act of 1795, hair powder cost a guinea per head), with a
-pigtail, and the family livery, grey faced with scarlet; and somehow
-on old Jack it always looked like a uniform.
-
-Attended by this valet, both well mounted, and having holster pistols
-at their saddles, he had ridden from Ayr, through Maybole, and was
-now ready for supper, braced by the keen December blast, and feeling
-happy and jovial to find himself once more at home from London,
-which, so far as travelling and the ideas of the time are concerned,
-was then nearly as distant from the Scottish capital as Moscow is
-to-day; and a perfect picture they formed, that gentle, high-bred,
-and loving old couple in powdered hair, seated at supper, with their
-antique equipage, conversing in the plain old Scottish accent, which
-was still used, with a Doric word here and there, by the Scottish
-aristocracy.
-
-"Andrews and I would have been here an hour earlier," said his
-lordship, slicing down a daintily-roasted capon, "but the old piper
-of Maybole, in the burgh livery, would play before us all the way
-through the town and two miles beyond it, according to use and
-wont--a glass of wine, Andrews--but Pate is growing old, Winny, now;
-he fairly broke down in playing 'Lord Lennox March,' so I think we
-must add something to his piper's-croft and cow's-mailing. They
-scarcely keep the poor fellow, when meal, malt, and everything are at
-such prices. I had, moreover, to inspect the Maybole volunteers. I
-say, Andrews, did you see how they shouldered arms?"
-
-"Ay, my lord; knocking all their fore-and-aft cocked hats off, as
-they canted their firelocks from right to left," replied the valet,
-with a grim smile.
-
-"Then we had to see an effigy of Tom Paine burned in front of the
-Tolbooth, with a copy of the 'Rights of Man,' while we drank
-Confusion to the French, the Friends of the People, the National
-Convention, and Charles Fox. So you see, Winny, my time was fully
-occupied."
-
-The wax lights in the silver candelabra and crystal girandoles, and
-the fire that blazed in the polished brass grate, diffused a warm and
-ruddy glow through the cosy old-fashioned parlour, with its pink
-damask chairs and curtains; and speedily the old general dismissed
-his supper and glass of dry sherry.
-
-Then, Andrews, as if according to use and wont, without requiring to
-be told, removed the decanters, and placed before his master the
-"three elements," whisky, hot water, and sugar, and Rohallion, with
-ladle and jug, proceeded to make a jorum of hot steaming toddy.
-
-"Now, Andrews, my man," said he, "make a browst like this for
-yourself in the butler's pantry, and then turn in; neither you nor I
-are so young as we have been, and you've had a long journey to-day.
-Good night. I require nothing more."
-
-Andrews gave a military salute, wheeled round, as if on a pivot, so
-that his pigtail described a horizontal circle, and withdrew.
-
-"Now, what is the surprise you have for me, Winny?" asked Rohallion,
-as he filled her ladyship's glass, a long one, with a white worm in
-its stem.
-
-"Tell me first the news from London."
-
-"Well, gudewife Winny, nobody speaks of anything but this expedition
-to Egypt, and the expected surrender of Malta. Then if all goes
-right, ere long General Abercrombie will have about 15,000 men with
-him in the Bay of Marmorice."
-
-"I am so glad our Cosmo did not think of going on foreign service."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Can you ask me, Reynold--our only son?"
-
-"I had been ten times under fire before I was half his age. He was
-most anxious to go, and I wished him too; but, as the staff
-appointments were all filled up, and his battalion of the Guards will
-soon be detailed for service, I thought it a pity that the boy should
-lose his regimental rank."
-
-"Cosmo will be twenty-five on his next birth-day," said Lady
-Rohallion, thoughtfully, a remark probably suggested by the term
-"boy;" "our only son, Rohallion; we must indeed be careful of him."
-
-"Careful of a strapping Guardsman like Cosmo!"
-
-"There are times--when--when----"
-
-"What, Winny?"
-
-"I regret his having gone into the army at all."
-
-"Odds my heart! then he would be the first Crawford of Rohallion that
-ever was out of it. His battalion may soon go to Ireland; the people
-there are more than ever discontented with the proposed union, and
-hope that the First Consul, the upstart Bonaparte, may enable them to
-cut a better figure than they and their allies under Humbert did at
-Ballnamuck last summer. I don't think the Horse Guards used me well
-in refusing me a brigade for service; so I don't return to London for
-some time, having paired off with our friend Eglinton, who is to put
-himself at the head of his Fencibles."
-
-"Oh, I am so happy to hear this!" exclaimed Lady Winifred, clasping
-her plump white hands, the rings on which sparkled through her black
-lace mittens.
-
-"Despite all I could urge, my old comrade, Jack Warrender of Ardgour,
-goes to Egypt in command of the Corsican Rangers."
-
-"So Lady Eglinton wrote to me."
-
-"And if he is knocked on the head,--which God forbid!--his daughter,
-Flora, will be long under trust, so her estate will be a fair one;
-and now, Winny, when I add that Mr. Fox and the Opposition are having
-their hair dressed _à la Brutus_, in imitation of the Parisian
-rabble, you have all my news."
-
-"And now for mine," said she, with a delightful smile.
-
-"Your surprise?"
-
-"Yes--but you must come with me."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"To the nursery."
-
-"That which was once the nursery, you mean."
-
-"And which has become so _again_," she replied, laughing at his
-bewilderment.
-
-Passing her arm through his, she led him to the sleeping-room, which
-adjoined their own, and desired him to look into Cosmo's little cot.
-Rohallion did so, and great indeed was his surprise to find a
-beautiful little boy, whose hair, all golden and curly, and whose
-form of face, rich bloom, and long dark eyelashes, powerfully
-reminded him of what Cosmo had been at the same age, when sleeping in
-the same chamber and in the same cot.
-
-"Zounds, Winifred, what in the world does this mean?" said he, with a
-droll expression twinkling in his dark grey eyes; "whose little
-fellow is this? Not _ours_, certainly; you can't have been stealing
-a march on me now-a-days."
-
-"'Tis a long story and a sad one; but return with me to the parlour,
-and I shall tell you all about it," she replied, while selecting the
-key of her escritoire from the huge, housewife-like bunch that
-glittered at her _chatelaine_.
-
-"Egad, then I'll brew another jug of punch the while; and now, Winny,
-I am all attention."
-
-She related all that the reader knows: the storm on that gloomy
-November night; the attack made by the armed Frenchman, and the
-consequent flight of the British ship; her wreck on the Partan Craig
-and the loss of the crew, with the recovery of the child from a state
-of insensibility, and the burial of his father, by the ground bailie,
-John Girvan.
-
-"My worthy old quartermaster did right--'twas like my good comrade!"
-said Lord Rohallion, while his eyes glistened; "I can imagine I see
-him marching up the glen at the head of the funeral party, erect as
-ever he marched under fire--a trifle more, maybe. The old Borderer
-did just what I should have done myself!"
-
-Lady Winifred now laid before her husband the ring, the purse with
-its few franc pieces, and the papers of the drowned stranger, and all
-of these he examined with interest and commiseration, for he was a
-kind, generous, and warm-hearted man.
-
-"This is sad--very sad, indeed!" he muttered.
-
-"By the handwriting, Rohallion, and by the crest on the ring----"
-
-"A lily, stalked and leaved, rising from a coronet."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, Winny?"
-
-"I should say they must have been people of figure and fashion--of
-good quality, at least."
-
-"An old fashioned phrase that, and going out now, like our fathers'
-swords and our mothers' hoops; call them aristocrats--eh, Winny?"
-
-"Undoubtedly, and under suspicion, too, by the tenor of the poor
-lady's letter."
-
-"'Josephine,'" said he, reading the inscription upon the ring; "why,
-that is the name of the widow Beauharnais, who three or four years
-ago married the First Consul to escape the guillotine! You must
-preserve these relics with care, Winny; and as for the poor bairn,
-Rohallion must be his home till we find his mother, a task very
-unlikely to be accomplished, if ever at all, in these times, when
-France is at war with all the world, and her scaffolds are drenched
-daily with the blood of women, children, and priests, as well as of
-brave and loyal gentlemen. But into no better hands than ours,
-Winny, could this poor waif of misfortune have fallen. He is the
-child of a faithful royalist soldier, too--we must always remember
-that."
-
-Like his worthy wife, Lord Rohallion inherited with his blood a
-strong dash of Jacobitism, thus his sympathies were all with the
-humbled royalty of France.
-
-The worthy old Defender of the Faith, who muddled away his time at
-Windsor, and his son, the "first gentleman" in Europe, who spent his
-days and nights less reputably in his Pavilion at
-Brighton--Thackeray's man of waistcoats, wigs, and uniforms--had
-perhaps no truer servant than Major-General Reynold Lord Rohallion,
-K.C.B., &c. Yet among the "Stuart Papers," which, in 1807, found
-their way into the royal archives, there was discovered a
-correspondence between a certain peer whose initial was R. and "His
-Majesty Henry II. of Scotland and IX. of England," which rather
-excited the surprise of the ministry and privy council; but like the
-same secret correspondence of many other nobles of both kingdoms, it
-was deemed only wise and charitable to commit it to oblivion, for the
-grave had closed over the good old Cardinal Duke of York--the last of
-the Stuarts--and few knew why, for a year and a day, the hilt of
-Rohallion's sword was covered by a band of crape.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-OUR STORY PROGRESSES.
-
- "Here he dwelt in state and bounty,
- Lord of Burleigh fair and free;
- Not a lord in all the county,
- Is so great a lord as he."--TENNYSON.
-
-
-Kind old Rohallion was deeply interested in and attracted by the
-little boy, who had many winning and endearing ways about him; and he
-particularly excelled in a bright and captivating smile, that was
-joyous in its perfect innocence.
-
-He seated him on his knee at the breakfast-table n the library, and
-strove, by all the art he was master of, to draw from him some clue,
-as to the part of France in which his mother resided, but save a
-knowledge of his own name, Quentin's recollections were few prior to
-the terror he had experienced on the wreck. All beyond that seemed
-vague, and his reminiscences were an odd jumble of a large town with
-a cathedral where his mamma took him to hear Abbé Lebrun preach or
-say mass--good M. l'Abbé Lebrun, who always gave him _bon-bons_, and
-wore such large spectacles. Then there was a river with boats, a
-bridge and a great mountain with a windmill, where he used to go with
-his nurse when she visited the miller.
-
-Then, there was a Chanoinesse who gave him painted toys; there were
-some wicked soldiers, who burned a street and dragged away all the
-people to die, and of these same soldiers he had a peculiar dread and
-aversion. But whether they were ugly toys, or actors in some scene
-the child had witnessed, Rohallion could not tell; he supposed the
-affair referred to was some grim reality incident to the late
-revolution. He could gather nothing more that afforded a clue; and
-now as these memories were wakened in him, the faces of others came
-with them; tears filled the child's fine dark eyes, and he entreated
-piteously to have his mother brought to him and his nurse Nanette, or
-have his father brought to him out of the sea; and thus perceiving
-that nothing of certainty or value could be gleaned from him, his
-protectors tacitly agreed to let the subject drop.
-
-Breakfast was just over when Andrews announced Quartermaster Girvan
-and Dominie Skaill, two individuals, who are perhaps bores in their
-way, but are nevertheless necessary to us in the course of this
-narrative.
-
-They had heard of his lordship's arrival, and had "come to pay their
-dutiful reverence," for something of the old feudal sentiment
-lingered yet in Carrick, and a journey to Calcutta is a mere joke or
-pleasure trip now, when compared with how the Scots of 1798 viewed
-one to London, few prudent people attempting it without previously
-making a will, and settling all their earthly affairs.
-
-"Welcome, Girvan, and welcome, dominie," said Rohallion, shaking each
-by the hand cordially; "I am glad to be at home again among you."
-
-"Yea," replied the dominie, while rubbing one hand over the other,
-and smiling blandly, as perhaps his scholars seldom saw him smile;
-"your lordship has come back like Cincinnatus after the defeat of the
-Volci and the Æqui, to plough turnips and plant gude kail on haugh
-and rig--so welcome hame to Carrick, my lord."
-
-The dominie had on his Sunday coat, with its huge flapped pockets;
-his best three-cornered hat, bound with black braid, was under his
-arm, and his square shoe-buckles shone like silver.
-
-"And our little Frenchman has become quite a friend with your
-lordship, I see," said Girvan, patting the child on the head.
-
-"Quite--a splendid little fellow he is!"
-
-"But call him not a Frenchman," said the dominie, "when he bears the
-gude auld Carrick name of Kennedy."
-
-"Aye, dominie; it used to find an echo hereabout, in the old trooping
-and tramping times," replied Girvan.
-
-"And has so still," added Rohallion, laughing; "for I am half a
-Kennedy, and often have I heard my mother sing--
-
- "'Twixt Wigton and the town of Ayr,
- Portpatrick and the Cruives of Cree,
- Nae man may hope in peace to bide,
- Unless he court Saint Kennedie."
-
-
-"Like the Maxwells in Nithsdale, the Kennedies had all their own way
-here in those days," said Lady Winifred, as she drew off her lace
-mittens, and prepared to adjust her ivory-mounted spinning-wheel.
-
-"But to return to the present time, tell me, John Girvan, did that
-French ship actually come within range of our gun-battery?"
-
-"Yes, my lord--or nearly so."
-
-"And what were you about, John, to stand with your hands in your
-pockets at such a time? Egad, 'twas not like an old 25th man?"
-
-The quartermaster reddened.
-
-"There was a tremendous gale from the seaward," said Lady Rohallion,
-coming to his assistance; "a storm--a tempest----"
-
-"And she came only within a mile of the Partan Craig, where the
-unfortunate merchantman was in sore peril--a foe on one side, a lee
-shore on the other--eh, dominie?"
-
- "'_Here_ Scylla bellows from her dire abodes,
- Tremendous port--abhorred by men and gods,
- And there Charybdis,'
-
-as old Homer hath it," replied the dominie, promptly.
-
-"Even had the battery been manned, my lord, I am doubtful--I am
-doubtful if these old twenty-four pounders would pitch shot so far;
-and she scarcely appeared, before she hauled her wind and disappeared
-into the mist," said Girvan, giving his old yellow wig an angry twist.
-
-"Some of these small craft are growing very saucy," said Lord
-Rohallion, to change the subject, which he saw was distasteful to his
-old comrade. "It was only the other day that a lieutenant with
-fourteen men from one of our gun-brigs landed on the coast of France
-to distribute royalist manifestoes of the Comte d'Artois, dated from
-Holyrood, but he and his men were taken by a party of dragoons who
-surrounded an auberge in which they were imprudently drinking. They
-were instantly hanged as spies, by order of General Monnet, and the
-bodies are to be seen on fifteen gibbets, a mile apart, along the
-coast between Boulogne and Cape Grisnez."
-
-"Poor men! How horrible!" exclaimed Lady Winifred.
-
-"Such barbarities were not committed in our time, my lord, except
-among the Indians."
-
-"Quartermaster--but we are getting old fellows now," said Rohallion,
-with something between a laugh and a sigh. "We have often stopped
-the march of the French with fixed bayonets, but we can't arrest the
-march of time."
-
-"Aye, aye, my lord," said the old soldier, warming, and answering a
-friendly smile from old Jack Andrews, who was removing the breakfast
-equipage; "but, when at Minden, and while the French gun brigade was
-bowling through the six British regiments that stood there in
-division, we little thought that we would live to drink our grog in
-Rohallion, forty years after, hale carles, and hearty ones, too."
-
-"If we ever _thought_ at all, Girvan, which is not likely; reflection
-troubles a young soldier seldom, and, egad! we were beardless boys
-then."
-
-"And those who were boys like ourselves then, and those who were
-grey-haired grenadiers of Fontenoy and Culloden--who had no need to
-powder their white hair--were alike mowed down together, and lay like
-herrings in a landing net," said Girvan, sadly.
-
-"It was a day on which the ripe fruit and the blossom were gathered
-together," said Lady Rohallion, as her wheel revolved rapidly, and
-little Quentin sat at her feet to watch it.
-
-"Your ladyship's speech savoureth of poetry," said the dominie,
-bowing; "it is even as my old friend Burns--puir Robbie Burns--would
-have expressed himself."
-
-"It is ten years since the Scots Horse Guards were amalgamated with
-the new Life Guard Regiments," said Rohallion, commencing a familiar
-topic.
-
-"Just twelve years this summer, my lord," replied Girvan.
-
-"And though moving slowly up the list of generals, Girvan, I have not
-had a regiment since."
-
-"Among the Romans----" began the dominie.
-
-"A regiment! it is a brigade you should have," interrupted the
-quartermaster, ruthlessly.
-
-"Among the Romans," began the dominie again, when Lord Rohallion, who
-was full of his grievance (was there ever an old soldier without
-one?) spoke with something of irritation.
-
-"I have actually been refused a brigade for service, though senior to
-more favoured officers; but a time may come when Government may be
-glad to avail themselves of my services, though I am afraid, John,
-that I'm getting owre auld in the horn, as the drovers say..
-Besides, they think that we old fellows of Minden and Bunker's Hill
-are as much out of date as the snap-muskets and matchlocks of King
-William's time. And zounds, man! there are not wanting in the Lower
-House certain disloyal spirits, termed financial reformers, who
-grudge the old soldier the day's pittance which he has won by blood
-and sweat, and by wasting the flower of his days among the swamps of
-the Helder, the fevers of the West Indies, and elsewhere."
-
-"The devil take all fevers and reformers together--amen," said the
-quartermaster; "but I believe this intended Egyptian business will be
-only a flash in the pan when compared with what _we_ have seen."
-
-"Among the Romans the soldiery at first received no _stipendium_,"
-said the dominie, raising his voice and speaking very fast, lest he
-should be interrupted; "but every man served at his own proper
-charges."
-
-"That would suit our modern whigs to a hair, dominie," said Lord
-Rohallion, laughing.
-
-"Yea, even to the vinegar which he mixed with spring water as his
-daily drink, did he furnish all, in the early days of the Roman army."
-
-"Vinegar grog!" exclaimed the quartermaster with disgust; "Heaven be
-thanked I was not born a Roman. Such beggarly tipple would never
-have suited the 25th. And now, my lord, when you are at leisure, I
-wish to shew you a new farmsteading I have erected at the Cairns of
-Blackhinney, and also how bravely the young trees are thriving in the
-oakwood shaw."
-
-"Glad to hear the latter, Girvan, for I agree with my worthy friend,
-Admiral Collingwood, that every British proprietor should plant as
-many oak trees as he can, to keep up our navy. 'I wish everybody,'
-said he, in one of his letters, 'thought on this subject as I do,
-they would not walk through their farms without a pocketful of acorns
-to drop in the hedges, and let them take their chance,' and so keep
-up the future wooden walls of old England."
-
-Neither Rohallion nor the gallant old Admiral could foresee the days,
-when those famous "wooden walls," would be represented by screw
-propellers, armour clads, cupola ships, and steam rams!
-
-Rohallion assumed his walking cane and Nivernois hat, to which he
-still adhered, though it had been long out of fashion, and had the
-flaps fastened up to its shallow crown by hooks and eyes; and, bowing
-ceremoniously, left the dominie to confer with the lady concerning
-the course of study on which little Quentin Kennedy was soon to
-enter, while he issued forth with his old comrade the factor to look
-over the estate.
-
-Close by the haunted gate lay a fine old beech, on which a cavalier
-Lord of Rohallion hanged as a traitor one of his vassals whom he
-discovered serving as a soldier in an English regiment. It now lay
-prostrate, for the storm had torn it up by the roots.
-
-"Have this removed as soon as possible, Girvan," said the old lord;
-"for, ugh! I never see a fallen tree, but I think of that devilish
-abattis we fell into at Saratoga, when the Yankees would have made an
-end of me, had it not been for Jack Andrews and others of the 25th."
-
-"Aye, my lord, and some of the 17th Light Dragoons too--under
-Corporal O' Lavery--you remember him?"
-
-"Who could ever forget him that served there--who could ever forget
-him or his story?" exclaimed the old general flourishing his
-silver-headed cane; "not I, certainly. It was he who was entrusted
-by my Lord Rawdon as a military courier (_estafette_, the French term
-it), to bring me an important despatch concerning the movements of
-the regiment, and this despatch the Yankees were determined I should
-not receive, for spies had informed them of the bearer and his route,
-so the way was beset by riflemen. The soldier who accompanied him
-fell mortally wounded; O'Lavery was riddled by bullets too, yet he
-rode manfully on, until from loss of blood he fell from his saddle.
-Then Girvan, resolved that the important paper which he bore should
-never fall into the hands of the Yankees, he crumpled it up and
-thrust it into one _of his wounds_. I discovered it, when next
-morning we came upon him dying in the bush, and he had just life
-sufficient left to point to the fatal place where Rawdon's letter was
-concealed.* As one of our greatest orators said, when Martius
-Curtius to sacrifice himself for his country leaped into the gulf of
-the forum, he had all Rome for his spectators; but the poor Irish
-corporal was alone in the midst of a desert--I quote at random,
-quartermaster. And yet, after all the brave deeds and service of
-those days to refuse me this brigade for service--zounds! it was too
-bad--too bad!"
-
-But Rohallion survived his disappointment, and the two following
-years glided peacefully away, at his old castle in Carrick.
-
-
-* "The surgeon declared the wound itself not to be mortal; but
-rendered so by the insertion of the despatch. Corporal O'Lavery was
-a native of the county of Down, where a monument, the gratitude of
-his countryman and commander Lord Rawdon, records his
-fame."--_Records of the 17th Lancers_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-QUENTIN'S CHILDHOOD.
-
- "Ah, happy time! ah, happy time!
- The days of mirth and dream;
- When years ring out their merry chime,
- And hope and gladness gleam.
- Then how we drink the storied page,
- In boyhood's happy home:
- The marvels of the wondrous age
- Of old Imperial Rome."--_All the Year Round_.
-
-
-The New Year's day of 1801 passed over at Rohallion amid feasting and
-revelling, for in the good old fashion the worthy lord, as his
-fathers had done before him, entertained all his people in the great
-hall of the tower. There the trophies were hung with green holly and
-scarlet berries; there the Yule log still smouldered on the hearth,
-and there he shook the powder from his hair, while footing it merrily
-with the wives and daughters of the fishers and cottars, while old
-Girvan hobbled away in his brigadier wig, the dominie screwing up his
-fiddle to discourse sweet music with the piper of Maybole, while as
-an interlude came the drums and fifes of the Rohallion Volunteers, to
-make the old castle ring to the cheering sounds of "Lady Jean o'
-Rohallion's Rant;" and this hearty homeliness, together with a free
-distribution of gifts on "auld handsel Monday," made the lord and
-lady of the manor adored by their tenantry. On that day there was
-something for every one: to the dominie a snuff-mull, which he
-received with many bows, reminding the donor how "Tacitus affirmed
-that Tiberius prohibited the bestowal of new year gifts, which was a
-great saving of expense to the knights and senators," To the
-quartermaster a gilt-bound "Army List," to keep him in reading and
-reference for the ensuing year; to Elsie at the coves a lace-curchie,
-and to little Quentin a gallant rocking-horse. So all danced the new
-year in hand-in-hand, to the old song,--
-
- "Now Yule has come and Yule has gane,
- And we hae feasted weel!
- Sae Jock maun to his flail again,
- And Jenny to her wheel."
-
-
-In the ensuing spring, when fresh flowers and budding leaves came "to
-deck the dead season's bier;" when the aroma of fertility, warmth,
-and verdure came from the sunny upland slopes, and the mountain
-burns, as they bore brown leaves along, seemed to brawl louder over
-their stony beds towards the Firth of Clyde; when greener tints
-spread over the pastoral hills and glens about Rohallion; when the
-sky, long chilled by the frost of the past winter, had a richer tone
-and colour; when the air was warm and pleasant as it fanned the
-new-turned sods--when this sweet season came, we say, the old Lord
-had ceased to lament having been refused a brigade in the expedition
-to Egypt.
-
-By that time he had heard of the fall of his old friend and brother
-officer, the gallant Sir Ralph Abercrombie, and how war and disease
-had thinned the ranks of his army. He sorrowed for this: but his old
-spirit blazed up anew when he heard of how the 28th or
-Gloucestershire Slashers, in the Temple of the Sun, faced their rear
-rank about when surrounded, and defended themselves like a double
-wall of fire; how the Gordon Highlanders, at the bayonet's point,
-carried the cannon of the foe at the Tower of Mandora; how the Black
-Watch destroyed the boasted Invincibles, and won their scarlet
-plumes; and how the shrill pipes of the Highland Brigade rang in
-fierce defiance along the embattled heights of Nicopolis!
-
-One name in the list of casualties made him start.
-
-It was that of his old friend and neighbour, Colonel John Warrender
-of Ardgour, who fell, sword in hand, when leading the Corsican
-Rangers to a victorious bayonet charge against the 61st Demi-brigade.
-
-"Oh, what a heart-stroke this is for his poor wife, Winny!" he
-exclaimed.
-
-"And Flora--poor little Flora, their daughter," added Lady Rohallion,
-with her eyes full of tears.
-
-"She is too young to know fully the calamity that has befallen her.
-Order the carriage, Andrews; we'll drive up the glen to Ardgour in an
-hour after this."
-
-"Poor Mrs. Warrender!--she did so love her husband, and had sore
-misgivings that they were parting for the last time."
-
-"A sad morning this will be for her, indeed!" said Lord Rohallion,
-laying the gazette upon the breakfast-table and gazing into the
-clear, bright fire, full of thought, as the battle of Alexandria
-seemed to come in fancy before his practised eye.
-
-"Now Rohallion, bethink you, if circumstances had been reversed,"
-said she, laying a hand caressingly on his neck, "and if she had been
-reading your name in that paper, what my feelings would have been."
-
-"The carriage would be ordered at Ardgour instead of Rohallion," said
-the old Lord, with an affectionate smile; "they may need me yet--but
-egad! I am now, perhaps, better pleased that the brigade was refused
-me. Warrender gone--poor Jack! and Abercrombie, too--I knew him when
-in command of the 69th."
-
-"He died on board the flagship, my lord," said Andrews, who, in
-virtue of his years and peculiar position, ventured to gratify his
-irrepressible curiosity, by taking up the paper, to skim it at his
-master's back; "they landed and formed line in the water, bayonets
-fixed and colours flying," he continued, with a nervous voice and
-kindling eye; "28th and 42nd--Foot Guards and Royal Scots--I think I
-see them all--whoop! d--n it--why weren't _we_ there?--I beg pardon,
-my lady," he added, in some confusion, as he proceeded in haste to
-remove the breakfast equipage, stumping vigorously on his left
-leg--in which he received a bullet at Saratoga--as he hurried away to
-order the carriage for the proposed visit of condolence, to which we
-need not invite the reader.
-
-The treaty of Amiens which followed soon after the Egyptian campaign
-brought about a peace for fourteen months, and during that time, Lord
-Rohallion wrote repeatedly to our Ambassador at Paris concerning the
-little protégé who had now found a home in Carrick; but at a period
-when all the powers of Europe were only, as it were, taking breath
-and gathering strength for a greater and more deadly contest, such a
-trivial matter as the fate of a shipwrecked boy could gain but little
-attention. His lordship's letters remained unanswered, and by the
-18th of May, 1803, Britain and France again drew the sword, which was
-never to be sheathed save on the plains of Waterloo.
-
-Time had made little Quentin as thoroughly at home in the castle and
-with the family of Rohallion, as if he had been born there.
-
-The absence of her son with the Guards (Carlton House and the
-Pavilion at Brighton were decidedly more amusing than that old castle
-by the sea), created a void in Lady Rohallion's heart; so the strange
-child came just in time to fill it, and she loved him tenderly and
-fondly. The old Lord was never weary of chatting and playing with
-Quentin; and he was the especial pet and occasionally tormentor of
-the quartermaster, grey-haired Jack Andrews, and of old Dominie
-Skaill, who had been long since inducted to the honourable post of
-tutor, and as such, after his scholastic duties were over, he daily
-visited the castle, in which a room was set apart for study.
-
-The following years saw Quentin Kennedy growing up into a fine and
-manly boy, bold in spirit and frank in nature; yet he retained even
-after his tenth year much of the chubby bloom, the rosy cheeks, the
-plump white skin, and the golden curls of his infancy.
-
-Lady Rohallion and her visitors thought him a perfect Cupid; but her
-husband and the quartermaster--particularly the latter--vowed he was
-a regular imp, who always broke his tobacco-pipes, tied explosives to
-the end of his pigtail, and played him a hundred other tricks, the
-result of Jack Andrews' secret education.
-
-The dominie often shook his bag-wig solemnly, for the boy's ways were
-at times very erratic and required reprehension; but his constant
-friend and adherent was Lady Rohallion, who, when beholding his
-beauty, his gambols, and grace, or when listening to his prattle, and
-watching all his waggish little ways, could never think but with a
-sigh of the widowed and unknown mother whom all these would have
-gladdened, and who was, perhaps, still sorrowing for the child who
-had forgotten her and transferred his filial love and faith to a
-stranger--if, indeed, the royalist sympathies of that unfortunate
-mother had not been long since expiated under the guillotine.
-
-Quentin's only annoyance existed when the Master of Rohallion, then a
-captain in the Guards, came home on leave, which, sooth to say, the
-Honourable Cosmo Crawford did as seldom as possible, the gaieties of
-London, club-life, the opera, and the atmosphere which surrounded the
-Prince of Wales, proving greater attractions than any to be found
-among the Highlands of Carrick. On these occasions, the boy felt
-sensibly how secondary a place he bore in the affections of the lady,
-and clung more to his friend the quartermaster.
-
-In addition to a cold and chilling stateliness of manner, the
-Master--a handsome and gallant soldier, however--disliked children
-generally, and half-grown boys in particular; thus if he ever spoke
-to Quentin, it was merely to quiz him as a young Frenchman (a
-nationality which the boy angrily repudiated), to call him a
-frog-eater, or little Boney, a name which, through some childish
-memory of the past, always roused his anger.
-
-The Master was not popular in Carrick; on his home visits, the piper
-of Maybole never ventured to play before _him_ as before his father;
-no mendicant held forth his hand in hope of charity when he passed
-the kirk-stile on Sunday; the tenantry never gathered to welcome him
-back, and he had been heard to speak of a recently deceased prince as
-"the late Pretender," a horrible heresy in the house of Rohallion,
-and almost a solecism in Scottish society yet.
-
-But our young friend was always relieved of his presence when the
-shooting season was over, when the summer drills of the Guards began,
-or when urgent letters from great but unknown friends required his
-return to London; and whither he departed with baggage enough for a
-regiment, and his English valet, whose finery, foppery, and town airs
-always excited the risible faculties of Lord Rohallion, and the grim
-contempt of the cynical veteran, Jack Andrews.
-
-Though bright and intelligent, Quentin was too erratic to be an
-industrious or plodding scholar; thus his Euclid and Cornelius Nepos,
-&c., were frequently left to themselves, that he might act the
-"truant," and have a day's fly-fishing in the Girvan or the winding
-Doon: or a ramble with his friend the gamekeeper through the
-preserves, where the deer came out of the fir woods to steal the
-dominie's turnips, and where the dark plover and the golden pheasant
-lurked among the sombre whin or feathery bracken bushes.
-
-Then the "Life of Valentine and Orson," with the achievements of
-gallant Jack, the foe of all giants, together with similar ancient
-lore, in which the ex-quartermaster indulged him (generally about the
-time when his poor half-pay became due) together with the pungent
-military yarns of Jack Andrews, always proved sad opponents to the
-ponderous classics of Dominie Skaill; and, as Quentin grew older,
-Cornelius Nepos, Tacitus, Æschylus, and others, were alike neglected,
-and frequently neither entreaties or threats would substitute them
-for the pages of Smollett and Fielding--the Dickens and Thackeray of
-the preceding age.
-
-Then the dominie would grow wrathful; but all without avail, for the
-boy was droll and loveable in his ways, and as the old Lord said,
-"would wind them all round his little finger." Thus in the
-oddly-assorted society of that sequestered castle he picked up a
-strange smattering of knowledge on many subjects.
-
-Sometimes he was present when Lord Rohallion and John Girvan had long
-consultations concerning farming and stock management, arable and
-pastoral; planting belts of pine for sheltering corn and deer;
-draining bogs and swamps; embanking or reclaiming; thatching
-farm-towns anew, and so forth--consultations which always ended in a
-jorum of hot toddy, and a reference to the war and chances of
-invasion, which naturally led to a mental parade of his majesty's
-25th Foot, and old personal reminiscences, varying from the days of
-Minden down to Saratoga, Bunker's Hill, and Brandywine, with Corporal
-O'Lavery of the 17th, and Lord Rawdon's famous despatch. _Then_
-agriculture and its patron, the Baronet of Ulbter, were voted a
-double bore, and everything gave place to "shop" and pipeclay.
-
-At other times Quentin was present when curious arguments ensued over
-a pipe and glass of grog between his preceptor and the ruddy-visaged
-quartermaster, who was wont to treat the ancients and their modes of
-warfare with supreme contempt. Thus, if he extolled Brown Bess and
-her bayonet, which the French could never withstand, Dominie Skaill
-brought the Parthians into the field, and told him how at close
-quarters with the Roman Legion they were broken; but how the troops
-of Crassus broke those same legions in turn, by the dexterity with
-which they used their bows, never failing to wind up with a reference
-to the Caledonian warriors who routed the Romans in the days of old,
-and the schiltrons or massed spearmen of Wight Wallace in later
-times, for the dominie had all the history of Harry the Minstrel by
-heart, and like the quartermaster, his patriotism had been no way
-lessened by many a jovial night spent with their friend Burns in his
-old farm-house of Lochlea or Mossgiel.
-
-Thus Quentin's mind became gradually imbued by quaint ideas, and
-filled with a curious mixture of military, legendary, and historic
-lore. The very air he breathed was full of patriotism, for he was in
-the land of Burns--in Carrick, the ancient lordship of the kingly
-Bruces; and many a story the dominie told him of the time when the
-Earls of Cassilis, the Lords of Rohallion, the Lairds of Blairquhan,
-and other noblesse of Carrick, had their town mansions in Maybole;
-when love was made through barred helmets, and when there were
-hunting, and hosting and foraying; when castles were stormed and
-granges burned; when the Black Vault of Dunure saw Danish blood
-stream from its gutters after Largs was won; and the Abbot of
-Corseregal roasting on an iron grille ten years after the
-Reformation. But the story that Quentin loved best was of the Gipsy
-King who lured away the fair Countess of Cassilis, and of the long
-years of captivity she spent in the grim old tower of Maybole, where,
-to this day, we may see the likenesses of herself and her rash lover,
-carved in stone upon the upper oriel.
-
-Many a day they spent together, this patient dominie and his playful
-pupil, wandering among the ruins of the Castle of Kilhenzie, in
-feudal times a stronghold of the Kennedies, and there for hours they
-were wont to sit, under the aged and giant tree which still stands
-near its southern wall--a tree twenty-two feet in girth, and so vast
-that it covers nearly the eighth of an acre.
-
-"On that tree many a bold reiver, gipsy loon, and landlouping
-Southron has been hung in his boots by the auld Kennedies o'
-Kilhenzie," the dominie would say; "they were a dour, stern, and
-warlike stock, boasting themselves to be kean-na-tigh, or, as the
-name bears, 'head of the race,' and who can say, Quentin, but you may
-be their lineal descendant, and if every head wears its ain bonnet,
-be Laird of Kilhenzie yet? yea, restored to your proper estate after
-all your wanderings, even as Telemachus was, who in childhood was
-also saved miraculously from the sea."
-
-Then the boy would look up to the ivy-covered masses of the crumbling
-wall, with its gaping windows, through which the gleds and
-hoodie-crows were flying, and feel strange throbbings and emotions
-wakened in his heart by the dominie's words; and there he often came
-alone to loiter, and think and dream over what his friend had said,
-till his musings took a tangible form, and ultimately, in all his
-day-dreams, he came to identify the old castle with _himself_--he
-knew not why.
-
-When Quentin was brought first to Rohallion, he was wont to pray to
-his "blessed Mother who was in heaven," and to lisp the name of "la
-Mère de Dieu" with great reverence, to the utter scandal and
-bewilderment of Dominie Skaill, who smelt the old leaven of Prelacy
-and Popery strong in this, for he believed only in the Kirk of
-Scotland as by law established, confirmed by the Revolution
-Settlement and Treaty of Union (though sadly outraged by the
-restoration of patronage in 1712); and such language, he averred, was
-rank hanging matter in an adult!
-
-Quentin's dark eyes were wont to sparkle and flash on hearing these
-rebukes, or France abused, as she was pretty sure to be, daily, by
-every one in those days; but after a time all these emotions and
-ideas gave place to local influences, and he settled down into a
-quiet little Scottish schoolboy, though, as we have said, somewhat of
-a truant withal.
-
-His mind sobered and changed even as his clustering golden curls grew
-into dark and shining chestnut though dreamlike memories would still
-steal upon his mind--memories that came he knew not whence.
-
-Once when the dominie pointed to a Vandyke that hung in the great
-hall, representing Lady Jean of Rohallion, and told him that "she was
-an evil-minded woman, who persecuted the saints of God in her time;
-and that the cross at her girdle was the hammer of Beelzebub, and an
-emblem of her damnable apostasy from the pure and covenanted Kirk of
-Scotland," the boy's eyes would assume their gleam, and then a pure,
-soft smile, as he said that "his mother in France wore just such a
-cross as that, and that he would love the picture for her sake."
-
-Then Dominie Skaill would groan in spirit over "the bad bluid" that
-boiled in a heart so young and tender, and stamping up and down the
-hall in his square-toed shoes, would openly express his fears that
-"the bairn was a veritable young Claverhouse!"
-
-On other occasions, and they were many, when Quentin was alone, and
-gazing on the sea that frothed so white about the Partan Craig, out
-of the perplexing mists of memory came the dream-like incidents of
-the wreck on that gloomy November night; his loving father's pale and
-despairing face, when the ship went down and left them all struggling
-amid the cold waves of a dark and stormy sea; and with these memories
-came others beyond that time, softer and dearer, like the
-recollections of a prior existence.
-
-There was the cathedral, with its lights and music at mass; the
-bridge, the river, and the windmill; how surely he should know them
-all again! And so pondering and dreaming thus, he would lie for
-hours on the sunny bank that sloped southward from the cliff of
-Rohallion, while the blue Firth of Clyde that chafed upon the rocks
-below, came faintly and dreamily to his ear.
-
-Thus his vision was turned inward, though his eyes were perhaps fixed
-on the blue ether overhead, where the sea mews were revolving and the
-great eagle soaring aloft; or on the distant tower and Tolbooth of
-Maybole that stood clear and dark against the sunset-flush--the wavy
-undulations of the Carrick hills: the blue peaks of Arran that rose
-afar off, or the nearer coast of Cunninghame, chequered by golden
-light on violet coloured shadow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE QUARTERMASTER'S SNUGGERY.
-
-"Ambition is dead within me: but there is some satisfaction in a
-queen's commission, with half-pay at the end of it."--_Once a Week_.
-
-
-Quentin Kennedy loved the venerable dominie, but was undoubtedly
-bored by his pedantry, and to escape it, once actually disappeared
-for three entire days, to the utter dismay of the whole household at
-Rohallion, when it was naturally supposed that he had been kidnapped
-by gipsies, or carried off by the smugglers, who frequented the coves
-in the rocks when the nights were dark and gusty; that he had been
-carried off by the pressgang from Ayr, or had fallen over the cliffs
-when bird-nesting, until Elsie Irvine arrived at the castle, in tears
-and tribulation, to announce that he had cunningly secreted himself
-in the "saut-backet" of her husband's clinker-built boat, and gone
-with the little fleet from the adjacent bay to the herring fishery.
-
-When Lady Winifred's old friend and school companion, Eleonora
-Hamilton (then Countess of Eglinton) visited the castle with her two
-unmarried daughters, the Ladies Lilias and Mary--which she did once
-yearly--it was always a happy time for Quentin; for then he had two
-little companions with whom to romp and swing in the old terraced
-gardens; for whom to gather birds' eggs and butterflies in the old
-woods of Rohallion, and before whom he could exhibit his boyish skill
-in shooting at the butts, or hooking a brown trout in the Girvan or
-the Doon; but of the two, his chief friend and playmate was the
-fair-haired, blue-eyed, and softly-voiced little Lady Mary, with whom
-he generally opened the dance at the annual kirn, or harvest-home,
-which Lord Rohallion always gave to the field-labourers in the great
-barn of the home-farm, and on these occasions, the brightest ribbons
-that Maybole could produce, together with the dominie's violin and
-Pate's pipes, were in full requisition.
-
-On a November night, about four years after the boy's arrival at
-Rohallion, his two friends, the dominie and ex-quartermaster, were
-seated in the latter's apartment discussing, which they did very
-frequently, the boy's pranks and progress, with a pipe of tobacco and
-a jug of hot toddy at the same time.
-
-John Girvan's "snuggery," as he termed it, was in a square tower at
-an angle of the barbican wall of the old castle. The loopholes for
-defence by arrows or arquebusses yet remained under the window-sills,
-to enfilade all approach to the gate-way. They had been made with
-special reference to the English and the Kennedies of Kilhenzie; but
-there was a chance now that "the French might come by the same road."
-
-The chamber was small, but very cosy, papered with a queer old
-pattern over the wainscoting; the walls were of vast strength, the
-windows arched, the fire-place deep, and lined with shining Delft
-squares of the Puritan times, representing bulbous-shaped Dutch
-skaters, and the instructive old Scriptural story of Susannah and the
-Elders.
-
-The dark oak floor was minus a carpet, for the quartermaster had been
-long enough under canvas and in barracks to despise such a luxury.
-
-Over the mantelpiece was a gaudily-coloured print of the Marquis of
-Cornwallis in full uniform, with a huge wig and cocked hat, New York
-and a hecatomb of slaughtered Yankees in the distance. Under this
-work of art hung the quartermaster's old regimental sword, with its
-spring shell, his crimson sash and gilt gorget, graven with a
-thistle, and the (to him) magic number "25"--his household _lares_,
-as the dominie called them.
-
-Bound with iron, an old baggage-trunk, that had been over half the
-habitable globe, bore the same number and regiment.
-
-Pipes, whips, and spurs and boot-tops, dog-eared Army Lists and empty
-bottles, littered all the mantelshelf and window-bunkers, and with
-some very wheezy-looking old chairs made up the appurtenances of the
-room, through which the fire shed a blaze so cheerful, that the
-dominie had no desire, when he heard the wind moaning through the
-battlements above, to face the blast which howled down the lonely
-glen that lay beyond the haunted gate.
-
-A broiled poor man o' mutton and fried trout from the Girvan smoked
-on the table beside the toddy jugs, and all within looked cheery, as
-these two oddly-assorted friends, who had scarcely an idea in common,
-sat down to supper.
-
-"Aye, dominie, it is a dreich night!" said the quartermaster, filling
-his pipe; "but your jug is empty, brew again; and now wi' a' your
-book-learning, can you tell me the name o' the man who invented this
-same whisky?"
-
-"Many a night in Mossgiel, wi' Burns, we've drank to his memory,
-whoever he was," replied the dominie; "but odds my heart! John
-Girvan, I have scarcely got the better o' the fright that brat o' a
-laddie gave us, when he disappeared and ran off to the herring
-fishery."
-
-The quartermaster laid down his pipe gravely, for he and the dominie
-had a perpetual disagreement about how Quentin was to be educated.
-The former laboured hard to teach him the use of fire-arms (Brown
-Bess in particular), to box, and to handle the pistol and broadsword,
-saying, that without such knowledge he would never be a man; while
-the poor dominie laboured still harder to infuse in his nature a love
-for literature and the arts of peace, and though compelled to console
-himself for Quentin's rapid progress in those of war, by some musty
-quotation concerning the Actian games which were instituted in honour
-of the victory over Marc Antony, he could not resist asking,
-
-"To what end do you teach the laddie all this military nonsense--this
-use of sword and musket, John?"
-
-"For drill and discipline, dominie--drill and discipline."
-
-"Both excellent things in their way, quartermaster; the Romans, who
-conquered all the world----"
-
-"South of Forth and Clyde--haud ye there, dominie!"
-
-"Well, they conquered by the force of their discipline, and as that
-declined, so did their power; but to what profitable end, I say,
-teach the bairn all these havers about wars, battles, and
-bombshelling? Do you wish to make of him a tearing, swearing,
-tramping dragoon, such as we read of in the days of that atrocious
-Claverhouse?"
-
-"Not at all, dominie."
-
-"Then," asked Skaill, angrily, "what would ye make of him?"
-
-"A man, where you would make him a Molly."
-
-The dominie shook his head, and as he did so the bag of his wig shook
-pendulously behind him.
-
-"John Girvan, bairns should be taught early to delight, not in arts
-which conduce to the destruction of human life, but in such as lead
-to charity, mercy, benevolence, and humanity."
-
-"Quite right, dominie, and for utterly ignoring all these, I know a
-man of peace who had his lugs cropped off his head."
-
-"Cropped?"
-
-"Shaven clean off his head by a knife."
-
-"Barbarous! barbarous!"
-
-"But just, dominie--strictly just. Did you ever hear how our 28th,
-or North Gloucestershire, came to be called _the Slashers_?"
-
-"Sooth to say, John, I never heard o' them at all."
-
-"Well, pass the bottle, and I care na if I tell you. A company of
-ours was quartered with them in a town on the Canadian frontier. It
-was during the winter of '79, when the atmosphere was so cold that
-the hoar-frost on our sentries' greatcoats made them look for a' the
-world like figures round a bridecake; stiff half-and-half grog froze
-before you could drink it; the bugles froze with the buglers' breath;
-flesh came off if you touched a swordblade or musket barrel, and the
-air was full of glittering particles. We had to saw our ration beef
-in slices, and half roast our loaves before we could cut them. Men
-were found dead in the snow every day--stiff and frozen; in fact,
-there was no way of keeping ourselves warm, do what we might. I
-don't know how many degrees it was _below_ the freezing point, but
-the cold was awful, and it seemed as if the mercury was frozen too!
-
-"Amid the severity of that Canadian winter, the mayor of the town, a
-democratic and discontented ruffian, refused billets to the soldiers'
-wives, and the poor women and helpless children of the 28th nearly
-all perished in the streets; in the mornings they were found frozen
-like statues, or half-buried among the snow; but severely was the
-mayor punished, for one day as he sat at dinner the table was
-suddenly surrounded by a party of savages, in war-paint, with hunting
-shirts, fur cloaks, moccassins, and wampum belts. They whooped,
-yelled, brandished their tomahawks, and then dragging the mayor from
-the table, sliced off both his ears. After this they at once
-disappeared, and it was not known for some days that these pretended
-savages were soldiers of the 28th whose wives had perished through
-his inhumanity. It was for this that we first called them
-'slashers,' a title which their bravery in the war fully confirmed."
-
-"The wretch was rightly served," said the dominie; "and truly did our
-old friend Rob write of 'man's inhumanity to man making countless
-thousands mourn.'"
-
-"Aye, dominie, that poem is as gude as any sermon that ever was
-written!" exclaimed the quartermaster.
-
-"But to return to Quentin, it is wi' such barbarous stories as that
-you have told me you fill the bairn's head, John, at an age when his
-mind should be impressed wi' ideas of charity and mercy. How noble
-it was of the great Constantine, to employ his son, as soon as he
-could write, in signing pardons and granting boons. Under favour,
-John, the pen is a nobler instrument than the sword."
-
-"Then how about Wight Wallace and the Bruce of Carrick, dominie, eh?
-Had they never learned to handle aught but a goosequill, where would
-our auld mother Scotland have been to-day; so shut pans, ye auld
-gomeril, and brew your toddy."
-
-The dominie chuckled and said,
-
-"I have worn a red coat mysel', quartermaster, for when Thurot was
-off the west coast, I was a year in the volunteers under the Earl o'
-Glencairn."
-
-"The best year of your life, dominie!"
-
-"I had a sword, a musket and a bayonet. 'Thrice is he armed who hath
-his quarrel just.'"
-
-"And how did you feel when you saw the beacons blazing on the Carrick
-hills, and heard the drums dinging before you, on the night o' the
-_false alarm_?" asked the old soldier with a sly smile.
-
-"I shouted like Julian when sent to war, 'Oh Plato! Plato! what a
-task for a philosopher.'"
-
-"The deevil you did!" exclaimed Girvan, puffing vigorously; "and what
-then?"
-
-"Glencairn fined me twenty merks Scots, for speaking in the ranks."
-
-"Fined--I'd have flogged you at the drumhead wi' the
-cat-o'-nine-tails."
-
-"The Romans used a vine sapling, as we find in Juvenal, and----"
-
-"Bother those Romans, whoever they were, if they really ever existed
-at all! You are ever and aye stuffing Quentin wi' these Romans and
-their sayings and doings."
-
-"Indubitably, and I would that I could teach him all that was ever
-known to the seven wise men o' Greece."
-
-"And who were they?"
-
-"Bias, Pittacus, Solon, Chilo, Periander, Cleobulus, and Thales,"
-replied the dominie with singular volubility; "all men who flourished
-before the Christian era."
-
-"Powder and pipeclay! Egad, I'm glad they don't flourish now. Their
-names sound just like those of a regiment of niggers we had at the
-siege of Boston. Pardon, dominie,--but I must have my joke. I wish
-I could teach Quentin something of fortification," he added
-thoughtfully, as he watched the pale smoke from his pipe curling up
-towards the ceiling.
-
-"It is an art almost coeval wi' man," responded the other approvingly.
-
-"True," rejoined the quartermaster; "for did not Cain build a city
-with a wall round it on Mount Libuan, and call it after his son
-Enoch?"
-
-"Right, quartermaster, right!" said the pedant, rubbing his hands
-with pleasure. "Yea, and the Babylonians, after the waters of the
-flood, built them cities, and wi' strong ramparts encompassed them
-about; but I hope, if I live, to hear Quentin Kennedy expound on all
-that and more, in the pulpit of Rohallion kirk."
-
-"What!" roared the quartermaster, in a tone that made the dominie
-start back; "make a minister of him?"
-
-"Yea, John Girvan; and wherefore not?"
-
-"He has about as much vocation for the kirk as I have. Would you
-have him drag out his life like a drone in a Scotch country manse,
-when a' the warld is up and stirring? Quentin is a penniless lad wi'
-a proud spirit, so he must e'en follow the drum, as his father
-followed it before him."
-
-"His father before him, say ye? Some puir fellow, the son o' an
-outlawed Jacobite, doubtless. I dinna think, quartermaster, that
-_he_ made much o' the trade o' war; a trade that is clean against
-scripture in every respect."
-
-"Dominie, did not Richard Cameron, who fell bravely, battling for the
-right, at Airs Moss, only a hundred and twenty years ago, know every
-cut of his good broadsword, as well as the texts of his Bible? A
-man's hands should always be ready to keep his head; thus, whatever
-may be before him, I have taught Quentin to fence and to shoot."
-
-"No harm, perhaps, in either, for I remember me," replied the
-inveterate quoter, "that Bishop Latimer says of himself 'my poor
-father was as diligent to teach me to shoot, as to learn any other
-thing.' But anent Quentin Kennedy, you and I will never be able to
-agree, John, so----"
-
-"We'll e'en leave the lad's future to himself, dominie. I think he
-has some right to be consulted, and, odds heart! he is but a bairn
-yet; a bairn, though, that can handle his pistol as well as my other
-pupil, the Master Cosmo."
-
-"Fie, fie, John Girvan! and a most sinfu' use has the Master made o'
-his skill."
-
-"He has paraded a good many bucks and bullies by daylight; but what
-would you have an officer to do? If insulted, he must challenge; if
-challenged, he must go out, or quit the service and society too."
-
-The dominie shook his head solemnly in deprecation of such
-sentiments, and said--
-
-"I fear me muckle the Master will meet wi' his match some day, and a
-black one it will be for the house o' Rohallion; but now for my
-_deoch an doruis_. Pass the dram bottle. Ugh! the road down the
-glen will be eerie to-night, and I can never forget that awfu'
-morning, John, when I saw the wraith of Cosmo's uncle, standing at
-the castle-gate, in his wig, cocked hat, and red coat, silent and
-grim, even as the ghost of Cæsar, on the night before Philippi."
-
-"Wi' a' the whisky you had under your belt, I wonder you didna see
-_twa_ o' them."
-
-"Jest not--jest not," said the dominie, with, we are sorry to say,
-half-tipsy solemnity, as he drained his _deoch_ to the last drop,
-tied a large yellow bandanna over his three-cornered hat and under
-his chin, assumed his walking-staff, and prepared to depart. "I hope
-the servant-lass will air the night-cap that she puts wi' the Bible
-at my bedside every night."
-
-The quartermaster laughed slily, as he knew that the cap referred to
-was a stoup of strong ale, which, in the old Scottish fashion, the
-dominie's servant always placed with the Bible on a stool near his
-bed.
-
-The poor dominie's potations mounted to his head as he began to move,
-and, striking his cane emphatically as he stepped away, he sung, in
-somewhat uncertain tones:--
-
- "My kimmer and I lay down to sleep,
- Wi' twa pint stoups at our bed's feet:
- And aye when we wakened we drank them dry,
- Sae what think ye o' my kimmer and I?
- Toddling butt and toddling ben,
- When round as a neep ye come toddling hame!"
-
-And so he departed in the dark, in a mood that neither brownie nor
-bogle could scare.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-FLORA WARRENDER.
-
- "Lovely floweret, lovely floweret,
- Oh! what thoughts your beauties move--
- When I pressed thee to my bosom,
- Little did I know of love.
- In Castile I never entered--
- From Leon too, I withdrew,
- Where I was in early boyhood,
- And of love I nothing knew."
- _Poetry of Spain_.
-
-
-So without change, the joyous and dreamy period of Quentin's boyhood
-glided rapidly away, in studies, amusements, and occasionally
-mischief, such as throwing kail-castocks down the dominie's _lum_,
-and blowing tam-o'-reekies* through his keyhole, until about his
-seventeenth year, when the Castle of Rohallion became the home of
-another inmate.
-
-
-* Lighted tow blown through a cabbage-stock.
-
-
-Mrs. Warrender of Ardgour, widow of Lord Rohallion's old friend and
-companion-in-arms, Colonel John Warrender, who, as we have related,
-fell at the head of the Corsican Rangers in the Egyptian expedition,
-died in London, bequeathing to the care, tuition, and trust of Lady
-Winifred her only daughter, in charge of whom Lady Eglinton arrived
-from England in the summer of 1806, accompanied by her two unmarried
-daughters, Lilias and Mary, now growing up into tall and handsome
-young women, with whom Quentin could scarcely venture to romp and
-race as in former days.
-
-It was evening when an outrider, as a sort of avant-courier, arrived
-from Maybole to announce that the Countess was coming with her
-charge; so Lady Rohallion assumed her black silk capuchin, her
-husband his cane and jaunty old-fashioned triangular Nivernois (to
-which he rigidly adhered, despite the almost general adoption of the
-present form of round hat), and summoning Quentin, who was busy among
-the firearms in the gun-room, they set forth for a stroll along the
-avenue to meet their friends.
-
-"Poor Jack Warrender!" said Lord Rohallion, musingly; "I wonder
-whether his girl resembles him?"
-
-"I should think not," replied Lady Winifred, smiling, as her
-recollections of the late Colonel's personal appearance were not
-flattering.
-
-"I have not seen the child for four or five years."
-
-"Flora will be past sixteen now. She had her mother's forehead, and
-soft, dovelike eyes; the Colonel was a stern and rough-featured man."
-
-"But a good-hearted fellow, Winny, as ever cracked a joke or a
-bottle. I saw him first as a jolly ensign, carrying the union colour
-of his regiment, at Saratoga, and, egad, my dear, that wasn't
-yesterday."
-
-"Flora's mother died of a broken heart."
-
-"She was always delicate," said Lord Rohallion.
-
-"Ah, like most men, you don't believe in that kind of death; but she
-never recovered the shock of her husband's fall in Egypt, and thus,
-after five years' constant ailing and pining, she has passed away to
-her place of rest."
-
-"Poor woman!"
-
-"What is the difference of age between Flora and our Cosmo?"
-
-"A suggestive question."
-
-"How?"
-
-"Never mind, my lord."
-
-"Some sixteen years or more, I think. You should remember best,
-Winny, their ages."
-
-After this they walked on in silence, the lady, already match-making
-and scheming out certain matters with reference to the young heiress
-of Ardgour, had her mind bent on futurity; while the old lord's
-thoughts were with the past, full of other days and other scenes,
-when youth and hope went hand in hand--days, which, in the wars of
-Napoleon, were being fast forgotten by the world at large.
-
-The evening was beautiful; the air was still and calm, though at
-times a breeze stirred gently the foliage of the sycamores of that
-stately avenue which led from the haunted gate to the ancient highway
-from Maybole--trees which had cast their shadows on many a generation
-of the Crawfords of Rohallion, who had gambolled along that avenue in
-infancy, and tottered down it in age; and since the days of King
-James VI. they had seen many a son of the house go forth with his
-sword and return no more, for many of them have fallen in domestic
-feuds and foreign wars.
-
-On the uplands the golden grain was waving, but there was no sound in
-the air save the voice of the corncrake in the fields, the hum of the
-summer bee, the plaintive notes of the cushat-dove among the foliage
-of the oak-wood shaw, or the flash of the bull-trout in the linn that
-bubbled on one side of the avenue, and disappeared under a quaint
-arch, on each side of which stood two moss-grown lions sejant, the
-armorial supporters which the family of Rohallion inherited from Sir
-Raynold Crawford, high sheriff of Ayrshire, the uncle of Sir William
-Wallace of Elderslie.
-
-Quentin, who had been in advance with a couple of barking terriers,
-now came running back, waving his hat, to announce that Lady
-Eglinton's carriage was coming bowling along the dusty road; and just
-as he spoke it wheeled into the echoing avenue, where the horses'
-hoofs crashed among the gravel.
-
-The driver, who was seated on a splendid hammercloth (with the
-dragons, _vert_, vomiting fire) reined up on perceiving Lord and Lady
-Rohallion, and the servants at once threw down the steps as their
-mistress desired to alight.
-
-Assisted by her host, she stepped down, a stately woman of a noble
-presence, considerably older than her friend, Winifred Maxwell, being
-past her sixtieth year, but still bent on being young despite
-wrinkles and other little indications of "the enemy." She wore the
-then fashionable little bonnet of green and blue, or union velvet, as
-it was named, in honour of Ireland, a large chequered Burdett
-kerchief over her neck and shoulders, and her whole person was
-redolent of hair powder and perfume, as her black satin robe swept
-over the gravel.
-
-Her two daughters sprang forth after her, accompanied by the new
-visitor, (of whom more anon,) all three handsome and lady-like young
-girls, faultless in symmetry, delicacy, and refinement, and all
-possessed of considerable beauty, and looking happy, blooming, and
-smiling, in their Leghorn gipsy hats, which were wreathed with
-flowers.
-
-"Welcome, my dear Lady Eglinton," said Rohallion, bowing like an
-old-fashioned courtier of Versailles or Holyrood, as he planted his
-little Nivernois under his left arm, and gave his right hand to the
-Countess to lead her up the avenue; "unlike your humble servant,
-egad, madam, you grow younger every day--and then your travelling
-costume--I vow it is charming."
-
-"My lord," said the old lady, smiling, "you are still quite a
-Lothario, and as complimentary as ever. My girls at least have the
-latest London fashions, but I prefer the bonnet of 1801, as being
-more becoming my style--perhaps I should say, my years."
-
-We question whether this amiable lady and her daughters in "the
-latest London fashion," would have been in the mode now, as their
-narrow skirts made them exactly resemble the figures we see in the
-little Noah's ark.
-
-"And this is Flora Warrender," said Lord Rohallion (after the usual
-greetings were over), kissing the girl's hand and forehead with
-kindness and regard; "welcome here, child, for the sake of your
-father. Many a day Jack Warrender and I have been under fire
-together, and often we have shared our grog and our biscuit--long
-before you saw the light, Flora."
-
-Her fine eyes filled as the old Lord spoke, and a beautiful
-expression passed over her soft, fair face. She was in second
-mourning--muslin with black spots; and her gipsy hat with its crape
-bows gave her a very picturesque look. She had sandalled shoes on
-her feet, that, like her hands, were small and very finely shaped.
-Her ear-rings and bracelets were of brown Tunbridge wood, then the
-simple fashion when not in full dress.
-
-"We have brought a sweet companion for you, Quentin," said Lady Mary,
-laughing, as she presented both her hands to her young friend; "won't
-she be quite a little wife for you?"
-
-"Mary!" said her mamma, in an admonitory tone.
-
-"Of course, mamma, you know I am much too old for Quentin."
-
-"Too tall, at least, to talk nonsense," replied Lady Eglinton, whose
-ideas of deportment belonged to the last century, and whose
-old-fashioned stateliness always abashed Quentin, who blushed like a
-great schoolboy as he was, and played nervously with his little hat.
-
-"What, mamma!" persisted Mary, "mayn't I still flirt with Quentin?"
-
-But her mother, who, with all her kindness of heart, had always
-doubts about the wisdom of lavishing so much attention on a strange
-child (whose future and antecedents were alike obscure), as the
-Rohallion family bestowed on poor Quentin Kennedy, turned away to
-speak with her host and hostess, leaving the young people to
-themselves, while the carriage, with its double imperial, was driven
-round to the stable court.
-
-"I hope you have had a pleasant journey from the South?" said Lady
-Rohallion.
-
-"We had a break-down at York, and I was sorely tired when we reached
-Edinburgh. There I was somewhat recompensed by hearing Kemble in
-Macbeth, and Mrs. Kemble sing the new fashionable ballad, 'The Blue
-Bells of Scotland,' at the conclusion of the piece; but the
-candle-snuffers neglected our box so much, that, before the farce, we
-were driven to the card assembly in the new room in George-street,
-where, for a dull little town, there was a pretty genteel assemblage;
-though the dresses of the women were five years behind London, I was
-glad to see hair-powder still worn in such profusion."
-
-"Since the Union," said Lady Rohallion, "Edinburgh has been a city of
-the dead, and very different from what our grandmothers described it."
-
-"A veritable village, where one meets none above the rank of mere
-professional men, struggling hard, poor fellows, to keep up
-appearances."
-
-"But at the assembly, mamma, there was _one_ person of position,"
-said Lady Jane.
-
-"True, child--the young Earl of Aboyne, whose name was unfortunately
-associated with that of the late unhappy Queen of France, Marie
-Antoinette."
-
-"Ah, yes," said Rohallion, laughing, "I remember that the Polignacs
-spoke maliciously of her dancing _Ecossaises_ with him at the balls
-of Madame d'Ossun."
-
-"We went with him to Corri's Concerts, which are led by Signor
-Stablini, and also to see the storming of Seringapatam, opposite the
-New College, 'the wonder of the English metropolis, for the last
-twelve months,' as the papers have it. I have brought your ladyship
-the 'Last Minstrel,' the new poem of that clever gentleman, Mr.
-Walter Scott, which has just appeared; Mr. Constable's shop at the
-Cross was quite besieged by inquirers for it; and for your lordship I
-have the Gazettes detailing the captures of Martinique and
-Guadaloupe."
-
-"I thank you--they will be a rare treat for me and for old John
-Girvan, who enjoys the reversion of all my military literature."
-
-"At Edinburgh we had quite a chapter of accidents. One of Lord
-Eglinton's favourite horses came in dead lame at the Leith Races;
-then my abigail left me abruptly, having gained a prize of two
-thousand guineas in the State lottery, and with it an offer of
-marriage from a dissenting minister. A wheel came off the carriage
-just as we were descending that steep old thoroughfare named the West
-Bow, and by this accident all our new bonnets from the Gallery of
-Fashion in the High-street were destroyed: it also caused a fracas
-between our poor coachman and a lieutenant of the City Guard, who,
-with his silver epaulettes on, and all the airs of office, was
-drumming a woman out of town. The fracas caused a three days'
-detention, as one of the bailies, a democratic grocer, threatened to
-send our coachman on board the pressing-tender at Leith for
-contumacy; but ultimately and happily, the name of Lord Eglinton
-terrified the saucy patch into complaisance. Then we heard of
-footpads infesting the Lanark-road, but fortunately we had the escort
-of some of the Scots Greys who were conveying French prisoners to the
-West Country, so we reached Maybole without any untoward accident."
-
-While the Countess was rehearsing the adventures of her journey, Lord
-Rohallion, partly oblivious of her and of her daughters, had been
-absorbed by Flora, in whose soft features he sought in vain for the
-stern eyebrows, the high nose and cheekbones of her father the
-colonel.
-
-Lady Rohallion glanced at their ward, from time to time, with mingled
-satisfaction and interest, as she had certain views regarding her,
-and these were nothing less than a marriage, a few years hence,
-between her and Cosmo, the Master, an idea which had strengthened
-every day she looked towards Ardgour, the well-wooded heights of
-which were visible from the windows of Rohallion.
-
-"But man proposes, and God disposes," says the proverb. How these
-views were realized, we shall come in time to see.
-
-All unaware of the plots forming against her in the busy brain of her
-mother's friend, Flora had already drawn near Quentin, and, surveying
-him with something of wonder and interest in her fine eyes, she said--
-
-"So you are the little boy of whom I have heard so much in the
-letters of Lady Rohallion to mamma?"
-
-"I am Quentin Kennedy, Miss Warrender."
-
-"Who was rescued from that horrible wreck?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You are not so _very_ little, though."
-
-"I am taller than _you_," replied our young friend, in a tone of
-pique.
-
-"But I look the eldest."
-
-"We are much of an age; I heard Lady Rohallion say so."
-
-"I think I shall like you."
-
-"I am sure that I shall like you very much!" responded Quentin,
-blushing in spite of himself.
-
-"You know that we are to be companions, and learn our studies
-together?"
-
-"And such delightful walks we shall have in this old avenue," said
-she, looking up at the grand old sycamores, between which the golden
-sunset fell in flakes of warm light.
-
-Thus the boy and girl were friends at once.
-
-About five was then the fashionable dinner-hour: thus, as Lady
-Eglinton had arrived later, a few friends and neighbours came to sup
-at Rohallion.
-
-The conversation all ran on rents, agriculture, and politics;
-high-toryism had full sway. Thus Napoleon, the Corsican tyrant--who
-was averred to have copied Alexander in Egypt, Cæsar in Italy, and
-Charlemagne in France, no bad example surely--together with Sir
-Francis Burdett, and the atrocious opposition party, were very
-liberally devoted to the infernal gods.
-
-The younger ladies idled over the piano, in the old-fashioned yellow
-damask drawing-room. The faithless Quentin, apparently quite
-oblivious of the presence of his former friend, Lady Mary, was quite
-fascinated by the new visitor, whom he had innumerable matters to
-tell and to show.
-
-The worthy Lord smiled benignantly as he watched them, and, while
-taking a pinch of the Prince's mixture from the gold-enamelled box,
-which had been presented to him by H.R.H. the Duke of York, he
-remarked to an old friend, who, in powder, wide cuffs, pigtail, and
-knee-breeches, seemed the counterpart of himself, that "truly we
-lived in rapid and wonderful times."
-
-Poor Lord Rohallion! he could little foresee the time when posterity
-would be flying over Europe at the rate of sixty miles an hour, and
-when, instead of powdering his cherished pigtail, he might have it
-cut by machinery--the Victorian age of Crystal Palaces, crinoline,
-and chloroform--of spirit-rapping, wordy patriotism, and paper
-collars.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-LOVE, AND MATTERS PERTAINING THERETO.
-
- "They would sit and sigh,
- And look upon each other and conceive
- Not what they ailed; yet something did they ail,
- And yet were well--and yet they were not well;
- And what was their disease they could not tell."
-
-
-According to a recent novelist, "the happiest portions of existence
-are the most difficult to chronicle." As we approach that period of
-Quentin's career, which was indeed his happiest, we experience
-something of this difficulty; and having much concerning his
-adventures to relate, must glance briefly at the gradual change from
-boyhood into youth--from youth to manhood, almost prematurely, for,
-by the course of events, misfortunes came early; and somewhat
-abruptly was Quentin thrust forth into the great battle of life.
-
-But we anticipate.
-
-At that happy time, when he had neither thought nor care--no past to
-regret, and no future to dread, Flora Warrender and Quentin were in
-the bloom of their youth. The girl was already highly accomplished;
-but Dominie Skaill, when acting as tutor to the lad, strove to imbue
-_her_ with some love for classical lore, and he bored her accordingly.
-
-In winter especially, the old castle was dull and visitors were few.
-The old quartermaster talked to her of Minden and Saratoga; of
-proceeding for leagues upon leagues in heavy marching order up to the
-neck in snow; of scalp-hunting Choctaws and Cherokees, tomahawks and
-war-paint. The parish minister, fearing that she had become "tainted
-with Episcopacy during her sojourn in the English metropolis," dosed
-her with such gloomy theology as can be found nowhere out of
-Scotland, mingled with local gossip, which often took the form of
-scandal; the dominie prosed away "anent" the Romans, or of chemical
-action, the laws of gravitation, the dogmas of Antichrist, and the
-dreadful views of society taken by the Corsican usurper and his
-blood-smeared Frenchmen, till the young heiress felt her head spin.
-Lord Rohallion, whose ideas were chiefly military, and Lady Winifred,
-whose thoughts ran chiefly on housewifery and acting doctor to all
-the children on the estate, were not very amusing either, so she
-turned with joy and pleasure to her new friend Quentin Kennedy, who
-was ever ready for a gallop into the country, a ramble in the woods,
-or a romp in the garden.
-
-Long and many were the confidences between them, for both were
-orphans, and they had thus many emotions in common.
-
-He told her in detail what she had already heard, and what all in the
-Bailiewicks of Carrick, Kyle, and Cunninghame knew, the story of his
-being saved from the wreck of an unknown ship, whose whole crew
-perished, and that his father, who had been a Scottish officer in the
-service of Monsieur, was drowned with them; that now, he could barely
-shadow out his thin spare figure, and pale and anxious face, it
-seemed so long since then; that save the Crawfords of Rohallion, he
-had no friends on earth that he knew of, and that he was to become a
-soldier, he believed--at least his good friend Mr. Girvan always said
-so, and that it was his own wish.
-
-"A soldier!" repeated Flora; "my poor papa was one, and those horrid
-French killed him. Oh that I were a man, to join with you in a life
-of such peril and adventure! But Lady Rohallion says I am to be a
-soldier's wife," she added, smiling, and burying her pretty nostrils
-in a thick moss rose.
-
-"To be married?"
-
-"Yes; she says that the Master of Rohallion is to marry me, whenever
-he returns home."
-
-"And do you love him, Flora?"
-
-"I don't know," she replied, blushing as red as the rose in her hand,
-and casting down her dark eyelashes.
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because, Quentin, I never saw him."
-
-"Not even at Ardgour?"
-
-"No, nor in London, for when my dear mamma was there, the Master was
-always at Windsor or Brighton with the Guards."
-
-"Then why are you to marry him?" persisted Quentin.
-
-"Because I am told that it will be very convenient for all parties,
-as the lands of Rohallion and those of Ardgour march together for
-miles over hill and glen," replied Flora, using the Scottish phrase
-for "adjoin."
-
-Then she would tell him, with all the kindness and friendship of Lady
-Rohallion, how sorely she missed the extreme tenderness and
-gentleness of her own dear mother, and how that beloved parent sunk
-like a bruised reed, nor ever rallied since the terrible morning when
-news came to Ardgour that her father had fallen in battle under
-Abercrombie, and his general's letter and the Duke of York's too,
-alike failed to afford the consolation they expressed.
-
-There was no love-making in confidences such as these; but both were
-young; the lad was handsome, sturdy, and impetuous. Flora was
-winning in manner and delicately beautiful, with soft dove-like dark
-eyes of violet-grey, and lashes that were almost black like her hair;
-and such intercourse, if it was pleasant and delightful, was perilous
-work, and apt to lead to the development of a friendship that
-certainly would not be platonic.
-
-When climbing the beetling cliffs that overhung the waves, the
-sea-pinks and wild flowers that grew in such dangerous places, were
-always culled, and the rare birds'-eggs, that lay in the cliffs and
-crannies, were gathered by Quentin for Flora.
-
-His whole desire and study were Flora Warrender and the anticipation
-of her every want and wish. Many of his sports, the trout pools in
-the Girvan, the fishing boats in the bay, the otter holes by the
-Doon, the covers where the golden pheasant lurked among the green and
-feathery fern, were neglected now for places nearer home--for the
-sycamore avenue, the terraced garden, the yew-hedge labyrinth, for
-wherever Flora was to be found, he was not far off.
-
-Her soft and modulated voice was full of music, it had a chord in it
-that vibrated in his heart, so the lad sighed for her and knew not
-why.
-
-Could it be otherwise when they were always together? They admired
-and sketched the same scenery--the cliffs of Rohallion and the gaping
-caverns below, where the sea boomed like thunder when the tide was
-coming in; the ruins of Kilhenzie; the old kirk in the wooded glen,
-where the golden broom and blue harebells grew; the long and stately
-avenue of sycamores, and the Lollard's linn that poured in white foam
-under its ancient bridge. When Flora drew, he was always there to
-marvel at the cunning of the lovely little hand that transferred all
-to paper so freely and so rapidly. They repeated the same poetry;
-they conned the same tasks, loved the same lights and shadows on glen
-and mountain, sea and shore; they had the same objects and haunts,
-and so they grew dear to each other, far dearer than either knew or
-suspected.
-
-In those days, our young ladies, when singing, neither attempted to
-foist bad German or worse Italian on their listeners; neither did
-they dare to excel in opera, or run out into "artistic agonies," Like
-her mother before her, Flora contented herself with her native songs,
-which she sung with great sweetness (thanks to Corri's tuition), and
-Quentin was always at hand by the harp or piano to turn over the
-music, as all well-bred young men have done, since time immemorial.
-
-How swiftly flew those days of peace and joy in that old castle by
-the sea, when each was all the world to the other! And is it
-strange, that situated as they were, a deep and innocent love should
-steal into their young hearts?
-
-The old tenantry, particularly Elsie Irvine, who always considered
-Quentin her own peculiar pet; the quartermaster and the dominie
-blessed them in their hearts, and called them "man and wife," which
-made them blush furiously; but nothing of this kind was ever said in
-the hearing of Lady Rohallion, for they had early learned intuitively
-that such jests would displease her; though those worthy souls could
-never gather why, until a period of our story yet to come.
-
-Their friendship and regard grew with their years, and they never had
-a quarrel. The dominie likened them to Pyramus and Thisbe, and
-quoted largely from Ovid; but they were much more like their
-prototypes, Paul and Virginia.
-
-Lord and Lady Rohallion seemed to forget that the time was coming
-rapidly when Quentin would cease to be a boy, and Flora a girl. Had
-they thought of this, much misery might have been spared to all; but
-though many around them saw their progress, and marvelled where it
-would all end, the worthy old couple saw nothing to alter in the
-matter.
-
-Two years more gave a manliness to the beauty, form, and character of
-Quentin Kennedy, while Flora, even when on the verge of womanhood,
-never lost the sweet and childlike sensibility of expression, which
-was the chief characteristic of her fair and delicate face.
-
-In all this pleasant intercourse they had never known the true
-character, or the actual depth of their attachment for each other,
-until one day when Quentin was verging on eighteen.
-
-They had been wandering in the leafy summer woods, far beyond the
-Girvan, which was in full flood, as rain had been falling heavily for
-some days previous. Fed by a thousand runnels from the Carrick
-hills, there was a _spate_ (_Scottice_, torrent) in the stream, and
-at a part of it, about a mile distant from the castle of Rohallion,
-they heard old Jack Andrews tolling the dinner-bell, an ancient
-copper utensil which hung on the north gavel of the keep, where, in
-the days of old, it had frequently been rung for a less peaceful
-purpose than to announce that the soup was ready, or the sirloin done
-to a turn.
-
-To make the circuit necessary to cross by the rustic bridge at the
-Kelpie's-pool (where, as all in Carrick know, a belated wayfarer was
-drowned by the river fiend) would have kept them too late, so Quentin
-took Flora in his arms to bear her through the stream, at a ford
-which was well known to him, and when the water was about four feet
-in depth.
-
-"Dear Quentin, you will never be able to carry me," said Flora,
-laughing heartily at the arrangement; "I am sure that I am much too
-heavy."
-
-"Not for me, Flora--come, let us try."
-
-"Should you fall?"
-
-"Well, Flora?"
-
-"You will be swept away and drowned."
-
-"I care not if you are safe," said he, gallantly; and, like a brave
-lad, he felt what he said.
-
-"But I would be drowned too, you rash boy," said she, with a charming
-smile.
-
-"Then a ballad would be made about us, like so many lovers we have
-heard of and read about. Perhaps the Kelpie would be blamed for the
-whole catastrophe," replied Quentin, laughing, as lie clasped her
-tightly in his arms. He was confident and bold, and the kind of
-training he underwent at the hands of our military friend, Mr. John
-Girvan, the gamekeeper, and others, made him hardy and strong beyond
-his years, yet he felt his fair Flora a heavier weight than he had
-quite reckoned on.
-
-His high spirit gave him strength, however, and bearing her high upon
-his breast and shoulder, with her skirts gathered tightly round her,
-he boldly entered the rushing stream.
-
-Then for the first time, when he felt her soft warm arm and delicate
-hand clasping his neck, half fearfully and half caressingly; when her
-cheek was close to his; when her breath mingled with his own, and her
-thick dark hair swept over his face, a strange and joyous thrill ran
-through him--a new and giddy emotion took possession of his heart.
-
-Mysterious longings, aspirations, and hopes glowed within him, and in
-mid-stream, even when the foaming water swept past with stones and
-clay, and roots of aged trees, Quentin did what he had never done
-before, he pressed his lips--and his soul seemed on them--again and
-again to those of Flora Warrender, and he murmured he knew not what
-in her ear, and she did not repel him.
-
-Her excitement, perhaps, was too great; but we suspect that she was
-partly frightened and partly pleased. He landed her safely on the
-opposite bank, and again the castle-bell was heard waking the echoes
-of the woods.
-
-The Girvan was passed now, and to speak metaphorically, that classic
-stream, the Rubicon, too!
-
-They had divined the great secret of their hearts, and, hand in hand,
-in happy but thoughtful silence--Quentin, however, seeming the most
-abashed--they returned to Rohallion, both powerfully agitated by the
-new and sudden turn their affection seemed to have taken.
-
-When their eyes met, their pulses quickened, and their colour came
-and went.
-
-From that hour a change came over them; they were more reserved, less
-frank, apparently, and, outwardly, less joyous. In the presence of
-Flora, Quentin grew timid, and he became more earnestly, but quietly,
-assiduous to her than before.
-
-Each, in absence, thought more of the other's image or idea; and each
-weighed the words, and treasured the stolen smiles and tender tones
-of the other.
-
-_They were lovers now!_
-
-It was the voice of nature that spoke in their hearts. Flora had
-long loved her young companion without exactly knowing it. The
-episode of the river had brought the passion to a culminating point,
-and the veil was raised now. She saw his position and her own; and,
-while experiencing all a young girl's pride and rapture in the
-assurance that she has a lover, a strange sense of trouble came with
-her new emotion of joy.
-
-As for Quentin, he slept but little that night; yet it was not his
-wetting in the river that kept him awake. He felt himself a new
-being--he trod on air! He rehearsed to himself again and again the
-adventure of the flooded stream, and went to sleep at last, with the
-memory of Flora's kisses on his lips, and murmuring the conviction
-which brought such delight to his young heart--
-
-"She loves me! Dear, dear Flora loves me!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-A LAST KISS.
-
- "Yes; open your heart! be glad,
- Glad as the linnet on the tree:
- Laugh, laugh away--and merrily
- Drive away every dream that's sad.
- Who sadness takes for joy is mad--
- And mournful thought
- Will come unsought."
-
-
-After the climax recorded in our last chapter, events succeeded each
-other with great rapidity at the castle of Rohallion.
-
-At that period of our story, Flora Warrender had attained her full
-stature--the middle height. In form, she was round, firm, and well
-developed--plump, to speak plainly--yet she was both symmetrical and
-graceful. Her eyes, we have said, were a kind of violet grey, clear,
-dark and exquisitely soft. Long lashes, and the remarkable form of
-her white lids, doubtless gave them this expression. Her forehead
-was low and broad, rather than high; her smile won all, and there was
-a charming air of delicacy and refinement in her manner, over all her
-person, and in all she said or did. The form of her hand and foot
-alone sufficed to indicate her station, family and nurture.
-
-"There is a mysterious character, heightened, indeed, by fancy and
-passion, but not without foundation in reality and observation, which
-lovers have ever imputed to the object of their affections," says
-Charles Lamb; and viewed through this most favourable medium, to the
-mind of Quentin Kennedy, young and ardent as he was, Flora Warrender,
-in all the bloom of her beauty and girlhood, seemed indeed something
-"exceeding nature."
-
-Thus it was with a heart filled with painful anticipations of coming
-trouble, that he heard Lord Rohallion, one morning at breakfast, when
-Jack Andrews emptied the contents of the letter-bag before him,
-exclaim,--
-
-"A letter from Cosmo! It is for you, Winny--the careless young dog,
-he has not written here for six months--not even to thank me for
-paying that precious gambling debt of his, lost among those popinjays
-of the 10th Hussars. Then there was that devilish scrape with the
-French dancer, whom he took down to Brighton with Uxbridge's son,
-Paget of the 7th, and that set----"
-
-"Hush--remember Flora!" whispered Lady Rohallion.
-
-"And the duel, too," persisted the old lord; "pah! in my time we
-didn't fight about such trumpery ware as French dancers. But what
-says Cosmo?"
-
-"He comes home by the next mail," replied Lady Rohallion, a bright
-and motherly smile spreading like sunshine over her face; "how I
-shall rejoice to see him--the dear boy!"
-
-"A _dear_ boy, indeed!" said his lordship; "his Guards' life has cost
-me ten thousand guineas, if it has cost me a sixpence, Winny."
-
-"Cosmo is coming," said Lady Rohallion, pointedly; "do you hear,
-Flora?"
-
-"Yes, madam," replied Flora, colouring, and casting a furtive glance
-at Quentin, who appeared to be solely occupied with his coffee and
-kippered salmon.
-
-"Cosmo writes that he has succeeded, by a death-vacancy, to the
-majority of his battalion of the Guards, which, of course, gives him
-the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the army."
-
-"As captain he has enjoyed that for some years."
-
-"He has therefore applied for the command of a line regiment."
-
-"That will be simple enough, as so many second battalions are being
-raised just now for this projected expedition to Spain."
-
-"The Duke of York has promised that his wish shall be gratified, and
-he has obtained a few months' leave, to come down here and see us--to
-have, as he says, a shot at the birds and a day's fly-fishing with
-John Girvan, in the Doon, before he returns to active service."
-
-"And we shall see him, then----"
-
-"In three days--three days at furthest, Flora," she added, with a
-glance at Miss Warrender.
-
-"Bravo! you shall see something like a soldier, Flora, when Cosmo
-returns--something like what I was, about the time of Saratoga; eh,
-Jack Andrews?"
-
-"Yes, my lord," responded Andrews, "coming to attention," as well as
-a man might with a hissing tea-urn in his hand.
-
-"Send up the housekeeper, Andrews," said Lady Rohallion, "we must
-have the Master's rooms put in order, and also one for his valet; for
-I suppose he comes here with him."
-
-"If so fine a knight of the shoulder-knot can tolerate Rohallion,"
-said his lordship, laughing.
-
-"Come with me, Flora; I know, child, how glad you will be to assist
-me," added Lady Winifred taking Miss Warrender's hand, and leading
-her away, while Quentin, whose heart beat painfully, appeared to be
-busy with a newspaper. It detailed how forty thousand Frenchmen were
-being foiled before Zaragoza's walls of mud, yet it seemed all a maze
-to poor Quentin, and he saw not how Flora's rich colour deepened as
-she withdrew.
-
-The Master was coming to Rohallion!
-
-Quentin remembered that gentleman's cold and haughty manner, and the
-half-concealed dislike which he ever manifested towards himself. He
-remembered what Flora had more than once told him two years ago of
-Lady Rohallion's intentions or hopes regarding her, and his heart
-grew sick with apprehension of a rival so formidable. He thought
-perhaps Cosmo might have formed an attachment elsewhere; but that
-would not prevent him from making love to Flora, were it only to kill
-time; and in her lover's eyes, she seemed so beautiful, that the
-Master would certainly find it impossible to oppose the desire of his
-mother; and Quentin dreaded her yielding; to the united influence of
-the family, and the advantages a suitor of such rank, experience and
-position could offer.
-
-He saw it all, and considered Flora lost to him!
-
-Pride made him silent on the subject, and Flora, who with female
-acuteness divined what was passing in his mind, deemed it unnecessary
-or unwise to speak of it. She pitied Quentin, for she soon perceived
-how pale and miserable he looked; while he misconstrued her reserve
-and became fretful, even petulant with her.
-
-As if to add to his trouble, with that obtuseness of intellect (shall
-we call it petty malice?) peculiar to their order, some of those same
-persons, who long ago were wont to annoy Flora and make Quentin
-blush, by jestingly calling them "man and wife," now taunted him with
-his too probable loss on the arrival of the Master, a boy's love
-being almost deemed, beyond any other, a legitimate subject for
-banter.
-
-These stinging remarks made Quentin's heart swell with pride and
-jealousy, doubt and alarm, for now he heard the matter referred to
-daily in the course of conversation.
-
-"So, my dear lady," he heard the parish minister say, when paying his
-periodical visit, "local rumour says that the Master is coming home
-to obtain a final answer from a certain young lady, before rejoining
-the army."
-
-Lady Rohallion merely bowed and smiled, as much as to say that local
-rumour was right.
-
-"They have an old man's blessing," he added blandly, as he departed
-on his barrel-bellied Galloway cob, and thought of an augmented
-stipend in futurity.
-
-"The Master's coming home to enter for the heiress, and have a shy at
-the grouse and ptarmigan," the gamekeeper said, while cleaning the
-arms in the gunroom.
-
-"He'll walk the course--won't he, Mr. Quentin?" added the groom,
-while preparing the stables for more horses.
-
-"To carry the fortress, and leave you to march off with the honours
-of war," said the quartermaster at one time.
-
-"A braw day will it be for Rohallion!" remarked the dominie at
-another. "There shall be dancing and feasting, scattering of nuts as
-we find in Pliny, with shooting of cannon, and shouts of _Io Hymen
-Hymenæe_!"
-
-"My puir Quentin," said Elsie Irvine, while, pondering on such
-rumours, he wandered moodily enough "by the sad sea wave," "so you're
-gaun to lose your wee wifie at last?"
-
-Thus every one seemed to discuss the affair openly and laughingly,
-and their remarks and mock condolences, were as so many pins,
-needles, daggers, what you will, in the poor lad's heart, so that his
-doubts and fears became a veritable torture.
-
-So great was the bustle of preparation in the castle, that the
-evening of the third day--the day so dreaded by Quentin--drew nigh
-without him obtaining a suitable opportunity of conversing with
-Flora; for so much did Lady Rohallion occupy that young lady's time,
-that he scarcely met her, save at meals, or in the presence of
-others. But on this evening he suddenly saw her walking before him
-in the avenue, and hastening forward, he joined her in silence.
-
-Flora seemed weary, but rosy and smiling. Quentin was nervously
-excited, but pale and unhappy in expression. Neither spoke, as they
-walked slowly forward, and he did not take her hand, nor did she take
-his arm, according to their usual custom, and the omission stung
-Quentin most. Frankness seemed at an end between them, as if three
-days had changed alike their nature and the relation that existed
-between them.
-
-Flora looked very beautiful and piquante in her gipsy hat wreathed
-with roses, with her hair dark and wavy floating over her shoulders,
-while a blush mantled from time to time in her soft cheek, and her
-dark liquid eyes stole furtive glances from under their long lashes
-at her young lover, fond glances of pity mingled with coquetry, but
-all unseen by him, for Quentin's gaze was fixed on vacancy.
-
-At length they reached the lower end of the avenue near the Lollard's
-Linn, where there still stands a sombre thicket of very ancient thorn
-trees, that were coeval, perhaps, with the first tower of Rohallion.
-
-According to local tradition, this place was haunted by a
-spectre-hound, which no one could attempt to face or trace with
-safety, even if they had the courage to attempt it. Its form, that
-of a great, lean, lanky staghound, black as jet, was usually visible
-on clear nights, gazing wistfully at the moon; and in storms of wind
-and rain, its melancholy baying would be heard to mingle with the
-blast that swept through the ancient sycamores. It molested none;
-but if assailed, it became terrible, swelling up to nearly double its
-usual size, with back and tail erect like those of a pole-cat, its
-jaws red as blood, and its eyes shooting fire.
-
-Those who saw the dog-fiend in this state became idiots, and sickened
-or died soon after. Tradition went farther, and asserted that the
-spectre-hound was nothing else than the spirit of Lady Jean of
-Rohallion (whose grim portrait by Vandyke, with a hawk on her wrist
-and a gold cross at her girdle, hung in the ancient hall), a
-high-flying cavalier dame, by whose order, after the battle of
-Kilsythe, several fugitive Covenanters had been shot down in cold
-blood, and buried in that thicket, where her unquiet soul was
-condemned to guard their remains in this canine form until the day of
-doom.
-
-At all events, the old thorn trees where the spectre was wont to
-appear, looked particularly gloomy on this evening, and as the lovers
-passed near it, Flora drew closer to Quentin, and then she perceived
-that his eyes were full of tears.
-
-"Quentin--Quentin dear!" she exclaimed in a tone of earnest question
-and expostulation. It was the first time, almost, that she had
-addressed him since Cosmo's letter came, and now her voice thrilled
-through him. He threw his left arm round her, and clasping her right
-hand within his own, pressed it to his heart, which beat
-tumultuously, and while the long avenue seemed whirling round them,
-he said,--
-
-"So Lady Rohallion has made up her mind that--that--you shall marry
-the Master, Flora?"
-
-"So it is the fear of this that distresses you?"
-
-Pride sealed Quentin's lips.
-
-"My poor Quentin," resumed Flora, looking tenderly and innocently
-into his eyes, "you love me very much, don't you?"
-
-"Love you--love you, Flora!" he stammered.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I love you better than my life!" he exclaimed passionately.
-
-"Well," said she, with a beautiful smile and a gaiety of manner that
-he did not quite relish; "I will never marry any man but he whom I
-choose myself--certainly not he who is chosen by others."
-
-"Darling Flora!"
-
-"There--there--_stop_--and perhaps, Quentin, I mayn't marry _you_.
-'Tis said people change when they grow older, and we are very young,
-you know; but Quentin, dear, I love you very, very much, be assured
-of that."
-
-Her head dropped on his shoulder, and he kissed her passionately--the
-LAST time he was ever to do so in the old avenue of Rohallion.
-
-At that moment the clatter of hoofs was heard, and ere they could
-part or regain their composure, two horsemen, one in advance of the
-other, both riding fast, with brown leather saddle bags and long
-holsters--the first in a fashionable riding-coat with a cape, the
-latter in livery, and both in top-boots and spotless white breeches,
-passed up the avenue at a hand-gallop.
-
-Both had seen our lovers near the thorn thicket, and the first
-horseman, whom Quentin's heart rightly foreboded to be the dreaded
-Master of Rohallion, turned in his saddle, and said something to his
-groom, indicating the pair with his whip. They both looked back and
-laughed immoderately, as they dashed through the ivy-clad arch of the
-haunted gate.
-
-Separating in haste and confusion, Quentin and Flora hurried away to
-calm their excitement and seek the drawing-room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-COSMO THE MASTER.
-
- "Why make I friendships with the great,
- When I no favour seek?
- Or follow girls seven hours in eight--
- I need but once a week?
- Luxurious lobster night's farewell,
- For sober studious days!
- And Burlington's delicious meal,
- For salads, tarts, and peas."--POPE.
-
-
-The first rider was indeed the Master of Rohallion, who had arrived
-with a punctuality that was more military than personal, as the
-Honourable Cosmo Crawford was somewhat erratic, and, as the Guards
-Club said significantly, "nocturnal," in his habits; and here it may
-be well to inform the English reader, that his haughty title of
-MASTER he obtained in right of his father being a Scottish baron, the
-custom being older than the reign of James IV.
-
-In ancient times, the heirs apparent of Scottish nobles were not
-discriminated according to their father's rank by the titles of
-marquis, viscount, earl, or lord, but were simply styled as the
-Masters of Marischal, Glencairn, Glammis, Lindesay, Rohallion, and so
-forth, a custom existing in Scotland to the present day, in most
-houses, under ducal rank.
-
-Cosmo Crawford was tall and strongly built, but handsome and
-graceful, with a cold and stately manner, that sometimes degenerated
-into banter, but seldom perfect suavity, and he had a somewhat cruel
-and sinister grey eye. The pupils of the latter feature had a
-peculiarity worth noticing. They possessed the power of shrinking
-and dilating like those of a cat. His hair was curly and worn in the
-Prince Regent's profusion, but without powder, that being already
-considered almost Gothic, or decidedly behind the age, the curls on
-one side being so arranged as to conceal a very palpable sword-cut.
-Like that of his valet, to whom he flung his riding-whip, hat, and
-coat, his garments were all of the latest Bond Street cut, and he
-lounged towards the yellow-damask drawing-room as coolly and
-leisurely as if he had only left it two hours instead of two years
-ago, according but a cold stare to the warm smile and respectful
-salute of poor old Jack Andrews, who, throwing open the door,
-announced,
-
-"The Master, my Lord!"
-
-"Welcome home, boy--God bless you!" shouted the hearty old lord,
-springing towards him; but Lady Rohallion anticipated him, and
-received Cosmo in her arms first.
-
-"Dear mother, glad to see you," said he, kissing her forehead;
-"father, how well, how jolly and hale you look!"
-
-"Hale," repeated the white-haired peer; "don't like to be called
-hale, it smacks, Cosmo, of breaking up; looking well, only for one's
-years, and so forth."
-
-"And my Lady Rohallion," said Cosmo, kissing his mother's hand, "what
-shall I say of you?
-
- "'With curious arts dim charms revive,
- And triumph in the bloom of fifty-five.'"
-
-
-"Arts, you rogue," said his father; "it's no art, but the pure breeze
-from our Carrick hills and from the Firth of Clyde, with perhaps
-earlier hours at night and in the morning than you keep in London."
-
-"Well, I am sorry my compliments displease you both," said he,
-laughing; "I am unfortunate, but pray be merciful; I have bade adieu
-to the Guards, to London, and all its glories to rusticate among you
-for a time. So, so, here comes Miss Warrender of Ardgour, I presume,
-and Quentin Kennedy; I saw you both in the avenue, I think," added
-Cosmo, the pupils of his pale eyes shrinking as he concentrated his
-gaze and knit his dark brows, which nearly ipet in one, over a
-straight and handsome nose. "Flora, you are charming! May I----"
-
-The kiss he bluntly gave her seemed to burn a hole in Quentin's
-heart, for it may readily be supposed that he saluted the lovely
-young girl with much more _empressement_ than he did the worthy lady
-his mother. Flora blushed scarlet, and glanced at Quentin
-imploringly, as much as to say, "don't be angry, dearest--you see
-that I cannot help this;" but he felt only rage to see the little
-cherry-lip, which his own had so lately touched in tremulous love and
-reverence, roughly and eagerly saluted by this _brusque_ and _blasé_
-guardsman. Rapid though Flora's glance was, the latter detected it.
-
-"And this is Quentin?" said he, surveying him through his eyeglass,
-with a deepening knit in his dark brows, and a smile on his haughty
-lips; "what a great hulking fellow he has become! Begad, he is tall
-enough for a rear-rank grenadier; and why is he not set to do
-something, instead of idling about here, and no doubt playing the
-devil with the preserves?"
-
-There was some sense in the question, but coming from such a quarter,
-and the tone in which, it was spoken, cut Quentin to the quick.
-
-"He is barely done with his studies," urged Lord Rohallion, coming to
-his favourite's rescue.
-
-"Before I was his age, I had mounted my first guard at St. James's
-Palace."
-
-"And I mine on the banks of the Weser," said his father.
-
-Quentin looked steadily at the cold, keen face of the Master, who was
-not yet six-and-thirty--but his Guards' life made him look much
-older; thus, to a lad of Quentin's years, those of the Master seemed
-quite patriarchal; a time came, however, when he thought otherwise,
-and removed the patriarchal period of life a few years further off.
-
-"Well, Cosmo, talking of age," said Lord Rohallion, slapping his tall
-son on the back, "to be lieutenant-colonel of a line regiment at
-six-and-thirty, with the Cross of the Bath, for doubtless you will
-get it----"
-
-"Of course, father, of course--one thing follows the other--well?"
-
-"Is being decidedly lucky," said Lady Winifred, closing his
-lordship's sentence, and glancing at Flora, to see what she thought
-of it.
-
-"With the prospect of a long war before him, too."
-
-"Yes, father, and I hope that the luck in store will belie the
-prophecy of my old foster-mother, Elsie Irvine, at the Coves, who
-used to allege, that when I _first_ left your room, mother, a puling
-and new-born brat, I was carried _down_ a stair instead of up, a
-certain token that I should never rise in the world. I have often
-made the Prince Regent, Paget, and other fellows laugh at that story;
-yet I have always had a fair run of success in everything I
-undertake."
-
-"Which should make you in future avoid all affairs at Chalk Farm, and
-so forth; you have had three men out there in three years, Cosmo."
-
-"And winged them all. My dear lord, don't talk. Some small sword
-affairs of yours, when Leicester fields was the fashionable place,
-are still remembered in London."
-
-"Yes--I ran two friends of Mr. Wilkes fairly through the body there
-one morning, for permitting themselves to indulge in national
-reflections, and would do so again if the same cause were given me:
-but, zounds! what else could we do in those days of the 'North
-Briton?' By-the-bye, is this new movement about the stuff called gas
-spreading in London?"
-
-"Yes; I wish you had been there on the 28th of January, 1807, and
-seen Pall-Mall actually lighted with it--by a man named Winsor, the
-Cockney call him a mad man for thinking of such a scheme!"
-
-"Did you pass through Edinburgh?"
-
-"I was obliged to do so, my lord, unfortunately."
-
-"Did you make any stay there?"
-
-"Stay! I should think not--only long enough to dine with some jolly
-fellows of the Cinque Ports Dragoons, at the new barrack, built some
-fifteen years ago at Piershill--"
-
-"Once Colonel Piers' place--Piers, of the old Scotch 17th--Aberdour's
-Light Dragoons."
-
-"Exactly, and then to get a relay of post-horses at Ramsay's stables.
-But as for staying in Edinburgh, egad! it would be intolerable to me,
-with its would-be dandies and its freckled women, whose faces have
-that sweet expression imparted by the soothing influences of
-Presbyterianism and the east wind; and then its one street, or only
-half a street to promenade in, who the devil would stay there that
-could stay out of it? Why, not even the rhyming ganger who hailed it
-as 'Edina, Scotia's darling seat.'"
-
-As his son concluded with a loud laugh, Lord Rohallion shook his
-powdered head, for he could not endorse this unpatriotic depreciation
-of the Scottish metropolis, and poor Lady Winifred sighed as she
-glanced at a black silhouette by Miers, presented to her by the bard
-of Coila, with a copy of his verses in her honour; and then
-remembering the fancied glories of the Old Assembly Close, as she and
-her friend, Lady Eglinton, had seen them in their girlhood, she said:
-
-"In my time, Cosmo, Edinburgh was wont to be gay enough."
-
-"A sad gaiety. Thank God, mother, the Guards can never be quartered
-in so dull a provincial town."
-
-"Its dulness is the effect of the Union, which removed court,
-council, parliament, revenue, and everything," said Lord Rohallion.
-
-"I thought most people had ceased to consider that a grievance," said
-his son, laughing again; "but I think that if Edinburgh has been dull
-since 1707, it must have been truly diabolical before it."
-
-"Cosmo," said his mother, reproachfully, "I know not what some of
-your ancestors who fought at Flodden and Pinkey would have thought of
-you."
-
-"The more fools they to fight at such places."
-
-"Not so," said the old lord rising, with some asperity in his tone;
-"God rest all who ever fought or died for Scotland and her kings; and
-I must tell you, Cosmo, that you will never be the better or the
-truer Briton for being a bad or false Scotsman!"
-
-The Master gave another of his sinister laughs; and, finding that the
-conversation had suddenly taken an uncomfortable turn, his father
-said with a smile--
-
-"I was about to express a hope, Cosmo, that with the rank of
-lieutenant-colonel, you mean to settle at last, and become quiet."
-
-"What, my lord--have I been drawing too heavily upon you and old John
-Girvan of late?"
-
-"I mean, that pranks which passed well enough in a subaltern, won't
-do in one who looks to the command of a regiment."
-
-"Pelting the rabble with rotten eggs at Epsom, and so forth, you
-mean? No; in my days a sub, after pulling off half the knockers in
-Piccadilly, breaking all the oil lamps in Pall Mall, getting up a cry
-of fire in the Hay market, and bringing out the engines to pump on
-the rascally mob; having, at least, one set-to with the rough and
-muscular democrats of the watch, would finish off by a champagne
-supper somewhere, and thus bring to a close a reputable London day,
-which, in our corps, usually begins after evening parade. Ah, my
-lord, you slow fellows of the King's Own Borderers knew nothing of
-such pranks, with your long pigtails, your funny regimentals, and
-Kevenhüller hats."
-
-"The reason, perhaps, we cocked those same hats so bravely on many a
-field," retorted his father. "In my days the army was the school of
-good-breeding, sir--but here's Jack Andrews announcing tea and
-devilled grouse in the inner drawing-room."
-
-"Cosmo, give your arm to Flora, if Quentin can spare her," said Lady
-Rohallion, smiling. "They are great friends and companions."
-
-"Oh--ah--indeed," said the Master, sarcastically, as he gave Flora
-Warrender his arm. "I think I saw them exchanging strong marks of
-their mutual goodwill as I rode up the avenue."
-
-Quentin grew scarlet, and Flora painfully pale at this remark, which
-stung her deeply, and roused her indignation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-AN ABRUPT PROPOSAL.
-
- "Wherefore dwell so sad and lonely,
- By the desolate sea-shore;
- With the melancholy surges
- Beating at your cottage door?
- You shall dwell beside the castle,
- Shadowed by our ancient trees!
- And your life shall pass on gently,
- Cared for and in rest and ease."
-
-
-For two days after his arrival the Master strove to engross as much
-of Flora's time as she would yield, or as he could spare from the
-study of his betting-book, the pages of the "Sporting Magazine,"
-playing billiards right hand against the left, quizzing the dominie,
-who paid him a ceremonious visit, and in relating to the
-quartermaster certain military "crammers" about the alterations and
-improvements in the service since his time, some of which were
-astounding enough to make the old fellow's pigtail stand on end, with
-wonder and dismay, lest the said service was going to the deuce, or
-further.
-
-Quentin he seldom favoured with more notice than a cool and insolent
-survey through his eyeglass.
-
-There were times when the Honourable Cosmo was moody, ennuyéed, and
-irritable, and none knew why or wherefore; but he had frequent
-recourse to Mr. Spillsby, the butler, for brandy and rare dry old
-sherry; and he smoked a great many cigars, which were a source of
-marvel to all who saw them, tobacco, in that form, being almost
-unknown in England, till the close of the Peninsular War.
-
-It was not ambition, or a desire to see active service that made the
-haughty and somewhat _blasé_ Master propose to leave the household
-troops and begin the sliding scale from the Guards to the line; nor
-was it any desire to settle in life that made him enter at once and
-so readily into his mother's old and favourite scheme of a marriage
-between him and their ward, the heiress of Ardgour.
-
-While he could not be insensible to the fresh budding beauty of Flora
-Warrender, the conviction that he had impaired his finances,
-anticipated his heritage, and had calculated to a nicety the value of
-all the oak, pine, and larch woods upon the estate--that each and all
-were numbered and known to certain hook-nosed, long-bearded, and
-dirty children of Judah in London--all, even to the venerable lines
-of sycamores in the long avenue, the pride of his father's
-heart--trees that for centuries had cast their shadows on his
-ancestors in youth, in prime, and age. While this conviction, we
-say, filled him with as much shame, sorrow, and repentance as he
-could feel, with it came the knowledge that Flora's fortune, which
-had accumulated during her minority, and, indeed, ever since her
-father's fall in Egypt, would afford him a most seasonable escape
-from shipwreck on several rocks which he saw ahead.
-
-"Hah!" said Cosmo, as he tossed away the end of his cigar, "some one
-says truly--don't know who the devil he is--that if we could look
-into each other's breasts, there would be no such thing as envy in
-the world. Egad! I'll enter for the country heiress."
-
-He roused himself and resolved to make the effort, all the more
-willingly, that to a half, or wholly _blasé_ guardsman like himself,
-long used to the glittering banquets, the late orgies, and startling
-scenes of Carlton House and the Pavilion at Brighton, the bloom,
-beauty, and country freshness of Flora Warrender, were indeed
-charming.
-
-Flora, instinctively, and in a feminine spirit of pride and
-opposition to Lady Rohallion's plots and plans, kept somewhat
-studiously out of the Master's way--a somewhat difficult task, even
-in a mansion so spacious and rambling as the old castle; but on the
-evening of the second day after his arrival, from the stone
-balustraded terrace of the antique Scoto-French garden where he was
-smoking, Cosmo saw her light muslin dress fluttering among the narrow
-green alleys of the old and carefully clipped yew labyrinth, and then
-he hastened to join her, to the infinite mortification and chagrin of
-Quentin Kennedy, who had not seen her for the entire day; and who,
-just as he was approaching the garden, found himself anticipated, so
-he at once retired, leaving the field in possession of the enemy.
-
-An older or more experienced lover would have joined them, and thus,
-perhaps, might have marred the plans of the Master, who, to do
-justice to his coolness and courage, lost no time in opening the
-trenches.
-
-Midsummer was past now; the foliage of the tall sycamores, of the
-oakwood shaw, and other copses of Rohallion, though leafy and green,
-were crisped and dry; in the haughs or low-lying meadows, the mower
-had already relinquished his scythe; the green corn rigs were
-yellowing on the upland slopes "that beaked foment the sun;" next
-month they would be golden, brown and ready for the sickle; on bush
-and spray the blackbird sang cheerily, and the plover's note came
-shrilly out of the green and waving fern.
-
-The sun was setting, and the screech of the white owl would ere long
-be heard, as he blinked and looked forth for the moon from the ivied
-windows of Kilhenzie. The white smokes of the hamlet on the shore of
-the little bay, passing up among the trees, curled into the clear air
-and melted over the ocean. The flowers that whilome had endured the
-scorch of the noonday sun, were drooping now, as if pining for the
-coming dew; and the stately peacocks sat listlessly, with their broad
-tails, argus-eyed, upon the balustrades of the garden terrace.
-
-Inspired by the beauty of the evening, lulled by the summer hum of
-insect life among the flowers, and all unaware that her lover, with
-his gun on his shoulder and wrath in his young heart, was plunging
-pitilessly through some one's corn, Flora was musing or dreaming, as
-only a young girl dreams or muses, on what fate had in store for her
-now, with this new inmate of her present home. Mr. Walter Scott's
-new poem "Marmion" had fallen from her hand, which was ungloved, and
-so, pure in whiteness and delicacy, was half hidden among her dark
-and wavy hair, as she reclined with her elbow upon the arm of a
-moss-grown seat, which yet bears the date, 1590, with the Rohallion
-arms and coronet, upon a hanging shield. The fingers of her left
-hand were playing unconsciously with the strings of her gipsy hat,
-which lay upon the gravel at her feet; and as the Master approached
-her, the young lady seemed the perfection of bloom and beauty, as she
-sat enshrined in the glory of the sunset that streamed along the
-alley of the labyrinth.
-
-His costume was very accurate, for the gentleman and the tradesman
-did not then, as now, dress exactly alike, and wear exactly the same
-stuffs; and certainly Cosmo was looking his best, as he seated
-himself by her side and very deliberately took possession of her left
-hand, saying in a voice which he meant to be, and which had often
-enough proved elsewhere to be, very seductive.--
-
-"I fear, my dear Miss Warrender, that this gloomy old barrack is not
-a place for you to vegetate in."
-
-"How so, sir?" she asked, while regarding him with a quiet smile.
-
-"It too evidently influences your naturally joyous temperament; and
-pardon me, you look _triste_."
-
-"Oh, no--your mother is quite one to me, and I love Rohallion very
-much."
-
-"Then as for Ardgour, I think it gloomier still."
-
-"Some parts of Ardgour--the vaults, I believe--are said to be coeval
-with the Bruce's castle of Turnberry; at least so the dominie told
-me. Mamma so loved it; and for her sake, I love it too."
-
-"Very proper, and very pretty; but the world of fashion--a brilliant
-world, of which you know nothing--should be your sphere, my dear Miss
-Warrender. London, Brighton, the Prince's balls at Carlton House,
-the parks, the theatre, the opera! You must come forth from your
-shell, my dear Flora, like--like--like (he thought of Venus rising
-from the sea, but the simile was not apt)--for you know it is absurd,
-positively absurd, that you should be buried alive in this horrid
-old-fashioned Scotch place, among rocks and rooks, ivy and ghost
-stories. Egad! were the house mine, I'd blow it up, and build one
-more suitable to the present time and its requirements."
-
-"What! would you really uproot this fine old place of so many
-historic memories?"
-
-"To the last stone! What the devil--pardon me--do old memories
-matter now, my dear girl? _En avant!_ we should look forward--never
-back."
-
-"I am sorry that your sentiments are so prosaic," said Flora, coldly.
-
-"I trust that my mother has not filled your dear little head with her
-usual nonsense about Scotch patriotism, the defunct Pretender, the
-unlucky Union, and so forth--eh? I always said that the verses
-addressed to her by her rhyming friend Burns, the democratic gauger,
-turned her head; and this new man, Scott, with his Marmions and
-Minstrels, bids fair to make the disease chronic. You have no idea,
-Miss Warrender, how we laugh at all such stuff in London. Patriotism
-indeed! It doesn't pay, so Scotchmen don't adopt it, and they are
-wise. All patriotism _not_ English is purely provincialism, and any
-man holding other opinions in Parliament would be as much out of
-place as a crusader or a cavalier. But to return to what I was
-saying. I should like to show you the great world that lies beyond
-the Craigs of Kyle and the rocky hills of Carrick--to take you back
-again to London."
-
-"London is to me full of sad memories."
-
-"Sad--the deuce--how?"
-
-"For there my dear mother died," said Flora, lowering her voice and
-withdrawing her hand, while her eyes and her heart filled with
-emotion.
-
-After a pause:
-
-"I love you, dear Flora," said Cosmo, again taking possession of her
-hand, and placing his lips close to her shrinking ear. "Our marriage
-is the dearest wish of my mother's heart, as it was of yours--and,
-may I add, that it is the dearest hope of mine?"
-
-This was coming to the point with a vengeance!
-
-Instead of being mightily flattered or overcome, as he not
-unnaturally expected, Flora, without withdrawing her hand, as if its
-retention mattered little, turned half round, and said, with a quiet,
-cairn smile:
-
-"Remember how little I have known you, sir, save through your
-parents, my guardians."
-
-"True; the duties of honour at Court, and--ah, ah!--my profession,
-Flora, called me elsewhere; but you don't refuse me, eh? My dear
-girl--the deuce!--you surely can't mean that?"
-
-Flora grew pale and hesitated, for with all her love for Lady
-Rohallion, she had a kind of awe of her, and Cosmo was eyeing her
-coldly and steadily through his glass.
-
-"Nay, speak, Flora," said he, with, perhaps, more irritation than
-tenderness in his tone. "I have, perhaps, not much personally to
-recommend me to a young girl's eye, and this wound, which I got at
-the Helder, when assisting to compel those Dutch devils to hoist the
-colours of the Prince of Orange--a sabre-cut across the face--has not
-improved me; but speak out, Flora Warrender; notwithstanding the ties
-between us, you refuse me?"
-
-"This proposal possesses all the abruptness of a scene in a drama."
-
-"Well, what is life but an absurd drama? 'All the world's a stage,
-and the men and women merely players.'"
-
-"Well, I am not inclined to play the part you wish."
-
-"You refuse me?" he reiterated, his eyes the while assuming their
-wicked and louring expression.
-
-"I do, Cosmo Crawford," she replied, trembling very much, but
-speaking, nevertheless, firmly; "I do once and for ever refuse you."
-
-Young and inexperienced though the girl was, the abrupt and
-systematic proposal of the Master rather insulted than flattered her.
-
-"No _tie_," she added, "save a fancied one made by Lady Rohallion,
-ever bound us; so there are no pledges to return, no bonds, nor--I
-can't help laughing--hearts to break."
-
-"And this desire to--to--" he stammered.
-
-"It was your mother's idea alone."
-
-"Say not so, Miss Warrender, it is mine also. Though I know that my
-good mother, because she jilted some fellow in her youth--my father's
-younger brother, I believe--thinks she makes atonement to the gods,
-or whoever rule these little matters of love and marriage, by making
-as many miserable matches, and marrying right off as many persons as
-she can."
-
-"Miserable matches! So she conceived one for us. You are very
-encouraging and complimentary to say so just after your offer to me."
-
-"Pardon me; but consider, my dear Flora," he resumed, while rallying
-a little, though sorely provoked to find himself confused and baffled
-by a country girl, of whose rejection he felt actually ashamed to
-tell his own mother, "are you not labouring under some deuced
-misconception in giving this very decided, and, I must say, very
-extraordinary refusal?"
-
-"How?"
-
-"Is it not, that to the affection and rank I proffer, you prefer the
-absurd love of a silly upstart, who shall go hence as he came hither,
-no one knows or cares how--a waif cast on the shore like a piece of
-dead seaweed, or the drowned renegade his father--a creature whose
-past affords no hope of a brilliant future! Speak, girl," he
-exclaimed, while almost savagely he grasped her wrist; "is it this
-that prevails with you, in opposition to the wishes of your dead
-mother and the whole family of Rohallion?"
-
-"What if it is, sir?" asked Flora, haughtily, for his categorical
-manner offended her deeply.
-
-"What if it is!" he repeated with louring brow.
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Then the cool admission ill becomes Flora Warrender of Ardgour,
-whose forefathers bear so high a place in the annals of their
-country!"
-
-"Oh, but they were mere provincials, and their bravery or patriotism
-are unworthy the regard of such a citizen of the world as the Master
-of Rohallion," said Flora.
-
-He sullenly threw her hand from him; but she did not retire, being
-loth that his family, especially the old Lord, whom she dearly loved
-and respected, should know of this scene; and loth, too, that it
-should end in this unseemly fashion.
-
-"Cursed be my mother's doting folly!" thought he, while his pale eyes
-alternately shrunk and dilated; "so--so, nothing but an heiress will
-suit our foundling, our 'Tom Jones,' for a charmer--it's vastly
-amusing. Confound it, a little more of this presumption will make me
-wring the brat's head off!"
-
-While his cool insolence piqued Flora, her decided rejection roused
-all his wrath and pride; he thought of his pecuniary interest, too,
-so both sat silent for a time.
-
-"Well, begad! this passes my comprehension!" he exclaimed at length,
-as he buttoned his accurately fitting straw-coloured kid gloves.
-
-"To what do you refer, friend Cosmo?" asked Flora, looking at him
-almost spitefully.
-
-"To this whole matter. Do you know, my fair friend, that you are
-perhaps the first young lady of your age that, in all my experience,
-ever took a fancy to a hobbledehoy lad in preference to a man; so
-while you reconsider the offer, you will perhaps permit me?" He
-bowed, and conceiving her consent given, proceeded to light a pipe,
-by the then very elaborate process of a small flint, steel and
-matches in a little silver tinder-box, on the lid of which his coat
-of arms was engraved. "And so you studied together, I presume, under
-that absurd Dominie Skaill, with the knee-breeches and huge
-shoe-buckles (like a heavy father at Old Drury), keen grey eyes, and
-Scotch cheekbones one might hang one's hat on, eh?"
-
-"Yes," replied Flora, tying the ribbons of her gipsy hat under her
-dimpled chin with an angry jerk.
-
-"And you learned Latin, Coptic, and Sanscrit together, I suppose," he
-continued in his cool sneering tone; "and to conjugate the verb _to
-love_, in all."
-
-"Exactly so, and in Greek, Chaldaic, and Chinese, and ever so many
-more languages, so that we became very perfect in grammar," replied
-she, smiling wickedly, while the grim Master's cat-like eyes filled
-with a very baleful green light; yet he had not the sense to see that
-his operations were conducted on a wrong plan before such a fortress
-as the fair lady of Ardgour.
-
-"Come, Miss Warrender, whatever we do, hang it, don't let us quarrel,
-and so make fools of ourselves."
-
-"I have not the least intention of quarrelling, and trust that you
-have none."
-
-"Then allow me to kiss you once, and we shall become better friends,
-I promise you."
-
-"Kiss _me_!" exclaimed Flora, starting.
-
-"Yes--why not--what does a little kiss signify?"
-
-"So little that you shall never have one from me, were it to save
-your life," said Flora, with a burst of laughter.
-
-"Perhaps your fair cheek has become sacred since that beggarly little
-rival of mine saluted it? It is a capital joke, is it not?"
-
-"Perhaps," said Flora, reddening, and rising to withdraw; "and what
-then?"
-
-"If so, I would say you were as great an idiot as my old grandmother
-Grizel Kennedy, of Kilhenzie, was."
-
-"Respectful to her and polite to me! And she----"
-
-"After Prince Charles Edward kissed her at the Holyrood ball, she
-never permitted the lips of mortal man--not even those of my worthy
-grandfather Cosmo, Lord Rohallion, K.T., and so forth, to salute her,
-lest the charm of the royal kiss should be broken; and their married
-life extended over some forty years and more."
-
-At this apocryphal story, which has been told of more old ladies in
-Scotland than Grizel of Rohallion, Flora laughed heartily, as well
-she might; and her merriment made the Master excessively provoked.
-
-"We are, I hope, at least friends?" said he, presenting his hand with
-great but grim suavity.
-
-"Oh yes, Cosmo, the best of friends--do excuse my laughing so; but
-nothing more, remember, nothing more," she replied, and withdrawing
-her hand, which he attempted to kiss, she darted through the
-labyrinth towards the house, leaving "Marmion" forgotten on the
-gravel behind her.
-
-"By Jove! to be baffled, laughed at, and by a chick like this!"
-muttered Cosmo with an oath which we care not to record, as he gave
-the volume a kick, and strode angrily away, full of bitter and dark
-thoughts, and inspired with rage at a rivalry which, in truth, he was
-ashamed to acknowledge, even to himself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE BLOW.
-
- "Take comfort: he no more shall see my face;
- Lysander and myself will fly this place.
- Before the time I did Lysander see,
- Seemed Athens as a paradise to me:
- Oh, then, what graces in my love do dwell,
- That he hath turned a heaven unto a hell!"
- _Midsummer Night's Dream._
-
-
-A very dark idea crossed the Master's mind, and then another, darker
-still!
-
-A few guineas judiciously bestowed among the smugglers, who, when the
-nights were dark and gusty, frequented the coves near the castle (and
-when some person or persons unknown hung a lantern over the rocks to
-guide their steerage through a narrow cleft in the Partan Craig),
-might for ever rid him of Quentin Kennedy. They could land him on
-the sands of Dunkirk or Boulogne, or, or--what?
-
-Oh, no! he thrust away the next idea as too horrid, though _such_
-things had been done of old in Carrick by the lawless lairds of
-Auchindrane, and to denounce them, in one terrible instance, had not
-the sea given up its dead?
-
-He thought of despatching a line to the lieutenant commanding the
-pressgang at Ayr, by whose agency poor Quentin might be shipped off
-for seven years' sea service in the East or West Indies, but dread of
-exposure, and the outcry consequent thereto, made him relinquish such
-kidnapping ideas of revenge, though they were practical enough in the
-days when George III. was king.
-
-Revolving these thoughts, with brows knit and his stealthy eyes fixed
-on the ground, Cosmo quitted the garden and entered the avenue, where
-the evening shadows under the sycamore trees were gloomy and dark;
-and there as he strode forward, with a quick and impatient step, he
-stumbled roughly against some one, who, like himself, seemed lost in
-reverie.
-
-"Quentin Kennedy!" he exclaimed in a hoarse voice, as this collision
-brought all his readily excited fury to the culminating point;
-"confound it, fellow, is this you?"
-
-"I beg pardon, sir--I did not see you--I was lost in thought,"
-replied Quentin.
-
-"Lost in thought, were you?" repeated Cosmo, in his most insulting
-tone; "you were loitering near the labyrinth in the garden?" he added
-with almost fierce suspicion.
-
-"I was down in the oakwood shaw, two miles off."
-
-"Hah--indeed! and what have you been doing with that gun??
-
-"Sir!" stammered Quentin, his natural indignation rising as he
-perceived the other's resolute intention of insulting him.
-
-"I say, what the deuce have you, or such as you, to do with that gun,
-and on these grounds?"
-
-Quentin drew back, haughtily, in growing anger and surprise, and
-fearing that the Master was mad or intoxicated, and that he was about
-to make an assault, he very naturally brought the fowling-piece to
-the position of charging.
-
-"What, you scoundrel! would you charge me breast high?" cried the
-Master, choking with rage; "would you shoot me as the poacher
-Campbell shot Lord Eglinton on his own lands, here in Ayrshire too?
-I'll teach you to know your proper place, you scurvy young dog!"
-
-With these injurious words, and before even Quentin, who was
-completely astounded by the wantonness of the whole affair, could be
-aware of his purpose, Cosmo rushed upon him, wrenched the gun away,
-and clubbing it, dealt the poor lad a terrible blow on the head with
-the heavy iron butt, stretching him senseless on the grass. Then
-uttering a heavy malediction, the fierce Master, still boiling with
-unappeased rage, passed through the ivied-gateway and entered the
-mansion. Having the fowling-piece in his hand, force of habit led
-him towards the gun-room, where he proceeded to draw the charge, for
-it was still loaded, and to leave it for the under-game-keeper to
-clean.
-
-Perceiving that there was blood on the lock and also on his
-straw-coloured kid gloves, he carefully wiped the former, and threw
-the latter into a stove. Regret he had none for the atrocity just
-committed; but he disliked the appearance of blood, it looked ugly,
-he thought--dangerous, and deuced ugly.
-
-"Egad, I hope I haven't killed the young rascal!" he muttered; "how
-the deuce am I to explain the affair to the old people?--they will be
-certain to blame me."
-
-Stepping from the gun-room into the library, which adjoined it, he
-was suddenly met by Lady Rohallion, who gave him an affectionate
-glance, which suddenly turned to one of anxiety, as she surveyed him
-by the last light of the sunset, that streamed through a
-deeply-embayed window. With an assumed smile and some commonplace
-remark, he was about to pass on, shame and mortification compelling
-the concealment of what he had done, when she laid her hands on his
-arm, and said tenderly,
-
-"Dearest Cosmo, what has happened--you look extremely pale?"
-
-"Do I, mother--pale, eh?"
-
-"Yes, and quite ruffled too," she added.
-
-"Well, perhaps so--your friend Flora is the cause."
-
-"Flora Warrender?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Explain, Cosmo, explain?" she asked with evident uneasiness.
-
-"I had a long conversation with her in the garden, and it was
-decidedly more animated than amatory in the end."
-
-"You quarrelled?"
-
-"Not at all--I proposed," he replied, with a strange smile.
-
-"And were accepted?"
-
-"The reverse."
-
-"Rejected--you--_my_ son, rejected?"
-
-"Finally so--or for the present shall we say?" replied Cosmo,
-lighting a pipe by the old and elaborate process, to conceal his
-agitation. "A wilful little jade she is as ever I knew. Evidently
-has no fancy for me, or for increasing the number of his Majesty's
-lieges under canvas, or for seeing the world in a baggage-waggon, as
-a lady attached to a regiment of the line."
-
-The courtly old lady gazed at her son almost mournfully; for this
-mocking brusquerie, acquired in the Pavilion of the Prince Regent,
-but ill accorded with her old-fashioned ideas of gentle bearing.
-
-"You have been wrong, Cosmo," said she gravely; "you have been too
-hasty--too abrupt."
-
-"Now, faith, do you think so, really?"
-
-"It was absurd to propose for any girl, especially a young lady of
-family and fortune, after a two days' acquaintance."
-
-"Egad, my most respected mamma, in London, I've known a score of
-women of the first fashion, who would have eloped with me for better
-or worse, and taken post horses for Gretna, on a two hours'
-acquaintance."
-
-"Oh, Cosmo!"
-
-"So I am wrong, you think, my lady mother?"
-
-"Decidedly; but I trust that time will put all right. I do not
-despair."
-
-"Neither do I, be assured," said he, with one of his strange smiles.
-
-"The silly girl, of course, felt flattered by your offer?"
-
-"Not at all--one might think such matters were of daily occurrence
-with her."
-
-"Did she make no consideration of our family and its antiquity?" she
-asked, bridling up.
-
-"My dear mother, it seems to be of very little importance to Flora
-Warrender whether the said family flourished at the court of old King
-Cole, from whose grave Kyle takes its name, or at that of his Majesty
-of the Cannibal Islands; at all events, she won't have me. Confound
-it!" he exclaimed, as if talking to himself; "to think that I, almost
-the pattern man of the Household Brigade--chosen by many a proud
-peeress to squire her through the crush of the opera; by the fighting
-men of the corps as their second in every affair of honour; by the
-Prince Regent to arrange his déjeuners, afternoon receptions, and
-crack suppers; I, the star of Fops' Alley--deemed the best stroke at
-billiards in London--the best hand on a tiller at Cowes, or to pull
-the bow-oar to Richmond; chosen to ride the most vicious brutes at
-Epsom and Melton, and who can hit a guinea at twenty yards with a
-saw-handle and a hair-trigger--that I, I say, should be outflanked by
-a country booby passes my comprehension, unless, as in old King
-James's days, there be witchcraft again in the Bailiwick of Carrick!
-To be jockeyed by a country lout and a lass of eighteen--deucedly
-disgusting! Thank heaven! this can never be known in town, or how
-would the lady-killing Cosmo be roasted! I think I hear Paget of the
-Hussars, and the rest of our set laughing over it; and, by Jove, they
-would laugh too, until I had one or two of them out at Chalk Farm for
-a morning appetiser."
-
-"How this little rebuff nettles you! Take courage, Cosmo," said his
-mother, almost laughing at his angry and odd enumeration of his many
-good qualities.
-
-"Well, I have changed my mind many times; so do women, and so may
-Flora. This is a boy's love; she will tire of his idea, and then is
-my time to cut in and win in a canter. You, my dear mother, yourself
-once loved, before my father proposed----"
-
-"Stay," said Lady Rohallion, interrupting, with sudden agitation, and
-hastening angrily to change the unwelcome topic; "a sudden light
-breaks upon me! Cosmo, on the night you arrived, it seemed to me you
-spoke very oddly of Flora Warrender and Quentin Kennedy."
-
-"How--about something in the avenue, was it?"
-
-"Yes; that you had seen them exchanging marks of their mutual good
-will, or words to that effect."
-
-"Exactly so, my Lady Rohallion," said Cosmo, slowly emitting the
-smoke of his pipe.
-
-"What did you mean, Cosmo?" she demanded, with increasing asperity.
-
-"Much more than I said, mother."
-
-"That you saw Quentin kissing Flora?"
-
-"Or Flora kissing Quentin, my dear lady mother, I don't think it
-makes much difference," said he, with an angry laugh, while she
-almost trembled with indignation; "but what do you think of your
-amiable ward and your protégé--a lively young fellow, isn't he?"
-
-"I ought to have been prepared for this," said Lady Rohallion;
-"indeed, Eleonora Eglinton forewarned me that something of this kind
-might happen. A separation by school, college, or something else,
-should have been made whenever Flora came here. I must consult
-Rohallion, and have such arrangements made for Quentin as shall
-prevent his interference with the views we have so long cherished for
-our only son. The foolish girl--the presumptuous boy--to be actually
-kissing her!"
-
-"Shameful, isn't it?" said Cosmo, who had been despatched somewhat
-precipitately into the Guards for making love to his mother's maids.
-
-"Such vagaries must be controlled and punished."
-
-"He should have been gazetted a year ago to a West India Regiment, or
-one of the eight Hottentot Battalions at the Cape; they are quite
-good enough for such as he; or send him still-hunting with a line
-regiment into Ireland, where slugs from behind a hedge may send him
-to the devil before his time."
-
-"Oh fie, Cosmo, you are cruel and unjust;" but she added bitterly as
-pride of birth, her only failing or weakness, got the mastery for the
-moment; "no unknown waif, no nameless person like this youth Kennedy
-shall come between my son, the Master of Rohallion, and our long
-cherished purpose--no, assuredly! Andrews," she added, raising her
-voice, as the thin, spare military valet passed through the library,
-"desire Miss Warrender to speak with me in the yellow drawing-room,
-before the bell rings for supper."
-
-Then leaving her son, Lady Rohallion swept out of the library to have
-a solemn interview with her ward.
-
-The last flush of sunset had died away, and one by one the stars were
-shining out.
-
-The night wore on, and nothing was seen or heard of Quentin. Indeed,
-save the Master, as yet no one missed him: but as he did not appear
-when the supper-bell clanged in the belfry of the old keep, Cosmo,
-with several unpleasant misgivings in his mind, hastened unseen into
-the avenue, down the long vista of which the waning moon shed a broad
-and pallid flood of radiance, ere, in clouds that betokened a rough
-night, it sunk beyond the wooded heights of Ardgour.
-
-Cosmo went to the place where so savagely he had struck the poor lad
-down; but Quentin was gone; the grass where he had lain was bruised,
-and on the gravel was a pool of blood about a foot in diameter--blood
-that must have flowed from the wound in his head; but other trace of
-him there was none!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-EXPOSTULATION.
-
- "Pledged till thou reach the verge of womanhood,
- And shalt become thy own sufficient stay!
- Too late I feel, sweet orphan! was the day
- For steadfast hope the contrast to fulfil;
- Yet still my blessing hover o'er thee still."
- WORDSWORTH.
-
-
-Lady Rohallion had so frequently spoken to Flora Warrender on the
-subject of the proposed or expected marriage with Cosmo, that she had
-little diffidence generally in approaching the subject; but now there
-was a new and unexpected feature in the matter--a lover, a
-rival--thus she felt aware that the adoption of some tact became
-requisite.
-
-What the good lady could hope to achieve, where her enterprising son
-had failed in person, it is difficult to imagine; nevertheless, she
-resolved to remonstrate with Flora.
-
-"She is too young to judge for herself, and must therefore let others
-judge for her," said she, half aloud.
-
-"You wished to see me, madam," said Flora, entering with an air of
-annoyance, only half concealed by a smile, as she correctly feared
-this formal summons had reference to the recent scene in the garden.
-
-Seating Flora beside her on a sofa, she took her by the hand, and
-while considering what to say, played caressingly with her dark wavy
-hair, and said something in praise of her beauty, so the girl's heart
-foreboded what was coming next.
-
-"You are rich, dear Flora," said Lady Rohallion, insinuatingly, "but
-most, perhaps, in beauty."
-
-"I am often told so, especially by you," replied Flora, laughing.
-
-"An heiress, too."
-
-"But what of it, madam?" she asked, gravely.
-
-"You know, dear Flora, that money is the key to a thousand
-pleasures--it is alike the object of the avaricious, and the ambition
-of the poor."
-
-"True, Lady Rohallion," replied Flora, smiling again; "but, as we say
-in Scotland, a tocherless lass, though she may have a long pedigree,
-may have a pleasure that no heiress can ever enjoy."
-
-"Indeed?"
-
-"Yes; the most flattering and glorious conviction!"
-
-"Pray tell me?"
-
-"She can prove to her heart's content that she is loved for herself,
-and herself alone. Poverty makes all equal----"
-
-"True; but so does wealth," interrupted Lady Rohallion, annoyed by
-her own mismanagement in the beginning. "You are rich, but my son is
-also rich, and he loves you, Flora, well, truly, and devotedly."
-
-"And have two days sufficed to summon all this truth and devotion?"
-
-"Flora, Flora, you are well aware that it has been an old purpose and
-hope, between your parents and his, to unite or cement their old
-hereditary friendship by a stronger tie, and that this intended
-marriage has been an object of solicitude to all----"
-
-"Save to those most interested in it--myself especially."
-
-"Do not say so, my dear child--the match is most suitable."
-
-A gesture of annoyance escaped Flora, but Lady Rohallion resumed:
-
-"Our families have known each other so long; it has been a friendship
-of three generations--Cosmo and you suit each other so admirably; and
-then the Ardgour lands run the whole length of the Bailiwick with our
-own."
-
-"The most convincing argument of all," replied Flora, in a tone which
-made Lady Rohallion colour deeply, and the secret annoyance of both
-was gradually rising to a height, though each strove to conceal it.
-
-"Consider our family, Flora!" exclaimed Lady Winifred, haughtily;
-"look at that gilded vane on yonder turret. It bears a date--1400;
-in that year, Sir Ranulph, first baron of Rohallion, was made
-Hereditary Admiral of the Firth of Clyde, from Glasgow Bridge to
-Ailsa Craig, by the Regent Duke of Albany. We are not people of
-yesterday!"
-
-Flora failed to perceive what this aqueous office had to do with her
-or her affairs.
-
-"In three years," she began. "I shall cease to be your ward----"
-
-"Three, by your father's will, Flora."
-
-"So do not let us embitter those three remaining years, my dear
-madam, by this project, a constant recurrence to which serves but to
-excite and pique by the attempt to control me."
-
-"I trust, my dear but wilful Flora, that we have not been unjust
-stewards in the execution of the trust your worthy parents bequeathed
-to us, and if the hope of a nearer and dearer connexion----"
-
-"Your son, the Master, is a brave and noble gentleman, I grant you,"
-interrupted Flora, with quiet energy; "but save in name, we have been
-almost strangers to each other, and he is so many years my senior,
-that when we last met he treated me quite as a little girl--a child!
-Our tastes, habits, manners, and temper are all dissimilar; ah,
-madam, pardon me, but I never could love him!"
-
-"Never love Cosmo--_my_ Cosmo?" said Lady Rohallion, with indignant
-surprise.
-
-"Never as a husband, though dearly as a friend."
-
-"Fancy, all! You would love him with all a true wife's devotion ere
-long. In girls of your age, love always comes after marriage, it is
-unnecessary before it. You little know how dear and loveable he is,
-and how gallant too! What wrote Sir Ralph Abercrombie to the Duke of
-York concerning him, after that affair at the Helder? 'The bravery
-of the Honourable Captain Crawford, of the 3rd Guards, in the action
-of the 27th instant, forms one of the most brilliant episodes of the
-war in Holland!'"
-
-Flora gave an almost imperceptible shrug of her white shoulders, for
-praises of Cosmo's valour at the Helder had been a daily story of the
-old lady for some time past. Slight though the shrug and the smile
-that accompanied it, Lady Rohallion detected them, and her eyes
-sparkled brightly with anger. She arose with ineffable hauteur, and
-shook out her flounces, as a swan ruffles its pinions, to their
-fullest extent.
-
-"Miss Warrender," said she, with her hands folded before her, and her
-powdered head borne very erect indeed, "is it possible that this
-strange opposition alike to the earnest wishes of the living and of
-the dead, arises from a cause which I have hitherto disdained to
-approach or allude to--as a species of midsummer madness--a love for
-the luckless lad to whom for so many years we have extended the hand
-of protection, Quentin Kennedy?"
-
-At the name which concluded this formal exordium, a deep blush
-suffused the delicate neck of Flora; but, as her back was to the
-lighted candles, the questioner did not perceive it, though
-scrutinising her keenly.
-
-"And why, madam, may I not love poor Quentin, if I choose?" asked the
-wilful Flora, bluntly.
-
-"Because he is, as you justly named him, _poor_," replied the other,
-with calm asperity.
-
-"But I am rich," urged Flora, laughing through all her annoyance,
-with an irresistible desire to pique Lady Rohallion.
-
-"He is nameless."
-
-"How know we that, madam? Kennedy is as good a name as Warrender."
-
-"True, when borne by an Earl of Cassilis, by a Laird of Colzean, of
-Kilhenzie, or Dunure; but not by every landless waif who bears the
-name of the clan or family. God knoweth how in my heart I dearly
-love that boy; yet this fancy of yours passes all bounds of reason,
-and all my expectations, in its absurdity. I have destined you for
-my son, Cosmo, and none other shall have you!" she added, almost
-imperiously.
-
-"Destined," said Flora, with mingled laughter and chagrin, "because
-the march-dyke of Rohallion is also the march-dyke of Ardgour."
-
-"Nay, nay, think not so unworthily of us; we need to covet nothing
-and to court none; but destined you are, because it was your dear
-mother's dying wish."
-
-"To make me miserable?"
-
-"To make you happy, foolish girl; dare you speak of misery with _my_
-son?"
-
-"So you would actually have me to marry a man I don't like, and
-scarcely ever saw? It is a common sacrifice in the great world, I am
-aware; but my sphere has been rather small----"
-
-"You would not marry a boy, surely?"
-
-"I may at least love him," replied Flora, simply; "and I have no wish
-to marry at all--just now, at least."
-
-"This is the very stuff of which your novels are made!" exclaimed
-Lady Rohallion, crimsoning with passion, and raising her voice in a
-manner quite unusual to her. "Mercy on me! I wonder why I have
-never detected Quentin at your feet, on his knees before you, for
-that I believe is the true and most approved mode; but we know
-nothing of him, he may be base-born for aught that we can tell, and
-Lord Rohallion shall learn that Quentin Kennedy--a brat, a very
-beggar's brat--shall never come between our own son and his success;
-and so, young lady, your humble servant!"
-
-And inflamed by genuine passion, Lady Rohallion, as she uttered this
-unpleasant speech, (which, to do her justice, was scarcely uttered
-ere repented for,) in a loud and imperious tone, swept away with a
-haughty bow, in all her amplitude of black satin, and with that
-hauteur of bearing which made the Scottish gentlewomen of her day so
-stately and imposing.
-
-Her words, the fiery glance of anger she darted at Flora, and the
-tenor of the expostulation proved too much for the temper or the
-nerves of that young lady, who on being left to herself, burst into a
-passion of tears.
-
-But a hand was laid on the lock of the door, as if some one was about
-to enter; and fearing it might be the Master, she started up and
-escaped by another door to her own apartment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-FORTH INTO THE WORLD.
-
- "This nicht is my departing nicht,
- For here nae langer I maun stay;
- There's neither friend or foe o' mine,
- But wishes me away.
- What I hae dune through lack o' wit,
- I never, never can reca';
- I hope you're a' my friends as yet--
- Gude nicht, and joy be wi' ye a'."
- _Johnnie Armstrong's Good Night._
-
-
-The knock-down blow given to Quentin by the butt-end of the clubbed
-fowling-piece, beside inflicting a severe wound which bled profusely,
-stunned him completely for a time, and in this condition he was found
-by the quartermaster, who was returning from having a jug of punch
-and a quiet rubber with our quaint friend the dominie at his little
-thatched cottage in the village.
-
-Great were the alarm and concern of the kind-hearted veteran when he
-found his young friend and favourite in a condition so pitiable. He
-raised him, tied a handkerchief over his wound to stanch the
-bleeding; then gradually as consciousness returned, Quentin
-remembered all that had occurred, and told Girvan of his meeting with
-the Master--the unmerited and unexpected insolence of the latter, his
-sudden assault, and that was all he knew.
-
-The disquiet of the ex-quartermaster was greatly increased on hearing
-of a _fracas_ so unseemly and so dangerous, and he knew in a moment
-that it contained _more_ elements of discord than Quentin admitted or
-perhaps knew; though he was ignorant of the Master's abrupt proposal,
-the garden-scene, and of the subsequent expostulation, which was in
-progress at that moment, and which we have detailed in the preceding
-chapter.
-
-"I can't blame you, my boy," said the old soldier, half communing
-with himself, and shaking his head till his pigtail swung like a
-pendulum; "I can't blame ye," he repeated, as he gave Quentin his
-arm, and together they walked slowly towards the castle; "ye are
-young--the temptation is great, though I hae long since forgotten all
-of such matters, save that love-making tendeth to mischief."
-
-"Quartermaster," stammered Quentin, "I don't understand, what----"
-
-"But I do! The devilment first began in Father Adam's garden, and it
-will go on so long as the world wags."
-
-Quentin coloured deeply, and his heart leaped with mingled rage and
-exultation--rage at the Master for the injury he had done him, and
-exultation for its cause--jealousy, by which he was assured that
-Flora loved him, despite all the attention and the greater
-attractions of the _blasé_ guardsman.
-
-But what was to be done now?
-
-To remain longer under the same roof with the Master of Rohallion was
-impossible; but whither was he to go? The quartermaster, without
-adverting further to what he too well knew to be the secret spring or
-moving cause of a quarrel so sudden and unbecoming in its details,
-hurried Quentin to his secluded little quarters, "the snuggery,"
-already described as existing in a tower of the castle. There he
-gave him a glass of sherry and water as a reviver; sponged and
-cleansed, with ready and kindly hands, his face and hair from the
-clotted blood which disfigured them, applied with soldierlike
-promptitude a piece of court-plaster to the cut, and brushed a lock
-or so gently over to conceal it.
-
-That Lady Rohallion must be informed of the encounter and have it
-explained away, if possible; that the Master should be urged to
-apologise to Quentin (a very improbable hope); and that they should
-be made to shake hands and commit the affair to oblivion, was the
-mode in which the worthy ground-bailie proposed to solder up this
-untoward affair. Quentin was long inexorable, and with the fury of
-youth vowed to have some mysterious and terrible revenge; but
-gradually the inexpediency, the impropriety, and impossibility of
-obtaining reparation by the strong hand dawned upon him, and he
-consented to leave the matter in the hands of Girvan--to have it
-explained gently to Lady Rohallion, and leave her to be the mediator
-between them.
-
-On being informed by Jack Andrews that she was in the yellow
-drawing-room, and as there was still an hour to spare before the
-supper bell rang, they proceeded thither to have an interview with
-her.
-
-While passing through the outer drawing-room, which was quaintly
-furnished with _marqueterie_ cabinets, tables, and bookcases, with
-chairs and _fauteuils_ of Queen Anne's time, they heard voices in the
-inner apartment, and one of them was Lady Rohallion's, pitched in a
-louder key than was her wont, so they paused, unfortunately, only to
-hear the LAST words of her conversation with Flora--words which fell
-like molten lead on the ears and in the heart of the listener, whom
-they most concerned.
-
-"--We know nothing of him--he may be base-born for aught that we can
-tell, and Lord Rohallion shall learn that Quentin Kennedy--a brat, a
-very beggar's brat--shall never come between our own son and his
-success--and so, young lady, your humble servant!"
-
-These bitter, bitter words--words such as he had never heard from
-_her_ lips before, made Quentin reel as if stunned, so that with the
-effect they produced upon him, added to that of the recent blow, he
-would have fallen had not the quartermaster caught him in his arms,
-and held him up, surveying him the while with a kind and father-like
-expression of solicitude and bewilderment in his old and weather-worn
-visage.
-
-Rousing himself, with his teeth set and his eyes flashing, he made
-three efforts to turn the door handle and enter the room.
-
-It was _his_ hand that Flora had heard upon the lock when she started
-from the sofa and fled to her own apartment in a passion of tears, so
-that when he entered the inner drawing-room it was empty, and thus
-Quentin knew not--though his heart foreboded--to whom the injurious
-words of Lady Rohallion had been addressed; but their tenor decided
-him at once in a preconceived intention of leaving, and for ever, the
-only home he had now in the world, and almost the only one of which
-he had any distinct memory.
-
-"This is no longer a place for me, John Girvan, and so sure as God
-sees and hears me, I shall leave it this very night!" he exclaimed,
-as with his eyes flashing and full of tears, and his heart now filled
-only by new, and hitherto unknown emotions of sorrow, bitterness, and
-mortification (unknown to him at least) he walked to and fro upon the
-gun-battery, where the 24-pounders of _La Bonne Citoyenne_ faced the
-waves of the Firth, on which the last rays of a waning moon were
-shining coldly and palely, especially on the ridge of foam that
-boiled for ever over the Partan Craig.
-
-"And whither would ye go, Quentin?" asked Girvan, who felt in his
-honest heart an intense commiseration for the lonely lad, knowing
-that were he to remain after the insult he had received, and the
-words he had heard, it would argue a poverty of spirit he would be
-loth to find in Quentin; "whither would ye go?"
-
-"Away to France, to seek my mother."
-
-"Impossible--it's hostile ground, and once on it you would be made a
-prisoner by the authorities, and shut up in Bitche, Verdun, or
-Brisgau, if they did not hang you as a spy, or send you to serve as a
-private soldier in the _Corps Etranger_. You must think of another
-scheme, less rash and romantic."
-
-"I know of none."
-
-"In all the wide world, Quentin," said Girvan, with his nether lip
-quivering, "ye have no home but this."
-
-"_This!_" repeated Quentin, grinding his teeth.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well--I care not; I will go anywhere from it--the farther away the
-better!" (And Flora? suggested his heart.)
-
-In vain the quartermaster urged him to do nothing rashly, and to
-await the return of Lord Rohallion, who had ridden over to Eglinton
-castle, to visit his old friend and American comrade, Earl Hugh, who
-had just returned from London; but pride and passion, with a
-conviction that the mother's unwonted bitterness was only a
-supplement to the son's insulting conduct, seemed to dissolve all the
-ties that had bound Quentin to Rohallion and its family.
-
-These emotions of anger had full swing in his heart. What Lady
-Rohallion had said, the old Lord must, he argued, have heard
-repeatedly, and may often have thought; and so, forth--forth to seek
-his bread elsewhere, he would go before the clocks struck midnight.
-
-Mentally he vowed and resolved, that the first hour of another
-morning should see him far in search of a new home.
-
-Deluding good John Girvan by some excuse, he slipped to his own room
-and packed a few necessaries in a small portmanteau, feeling, while
-he did so, a sense of mortification that they were the gifts of those
-whom, in justice to himself, he was compelled to leave. His watch, a
-ring, a breast-pin, and other trinkets given to him by Lady
-Rohallion, he laid upon his dressing-table, leaving them in token
-that he took with him nothing but what was absolutely necessary.
-
-The time was an hour and a-half from midnight. Unheeding he had
-heard the supper-bell clanged long ago, and cared not what any
-one--Flora excepted--thought of his absence now. Opening a window,
-he looked forth upon the night. The moon had waned, and the
-atmosphere was thick and gusty--yea, nearly as stormy and as wild as
-on that night when he had been washed ashore on the sand of the bay
-below Rohallion.
-
-Putting his purse in his pocket--it contained but a half-guinea, he
-gave a last glance at his bed-room--to leave it with all its familiar
-features cost him a pang; there were some of Lady Rohallion's
-needlework, and sketches by Flora, books lent him by the dominie,
-gloves and foils that had borne the dint of many a bout between him
-and John Girvan; quaint shells given to him by Elsie Irvine, and many
-little trophies of his shooting expeditions with the gamekeeper, and
-so forth. He quitted the room with a sigh, and slipping downstairs
-reached the hall-door unseen by any of the household.
-
-"And now a long farewell to Rohallion!" he exclaimed, as he reached
-the ivied arch of the haunted gate.
-
-"Not so fast, Quentin," said a voice, and the rough hand of the
-worthy quartermaster grasped his.
-
-"John Girvan," said Quentin, with emotion.
-
-"I thought it would come to this. So you are really about to take
-French leave of us--to levant in the night, and without beat of drum?"
-
-"Yes,"
-
-"To go out into the wide world?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I knew it would be thus, for I knew your spirit, Quentin, and so
-have been keeping guard here at the gate."
-
-"Guard--for what purpose? To stop me?"
-
-"No."
-
-"What then?"
-
-"To aid and help ye, Quentin, laddie," said Girvan, placing a heavy
-purse in his hand. "I have saved something here, forty guineas or
-so, off my half-pay, take them and use them cautiously, wi' an auld
-man's blessing--an auld soldier's, if you like it better."
-
-"Girvan--John Girvan," said Quentin, with a very troubled voice; "I
-cannot--I cannot----"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Deprive you of what I may never be able to repay."
-
-"Ye must and ye shall take the money, or I'll fling it into the
-Lollard's Linn!" said the other, impetuously. "It was I who laid
-your father's head in the grave, laddie, in the auld kirkyard yonder
-in the glen, and ill would it become auld John Girvan, of the 25th,
-to let his son go forth to seek his fortune in this cold hard world,
-portionless and penniless, while there was a shot in the locker--a
-lad I love, too!"
-
-"But the repayment, John Girvan, the repayment."
-
-"Heed not that--it will come time enough; and if it never comes I'll
-never miss it; but ye'll write to me from the next burgh-town, won't
-ye, Quentin, laddie?"
-
-"I shall, John--I shall," replied Quentin, now so softened that he
-sobbed with his face on the old man's shoulder.
-
-"God bless ye, my bairn--God bless ye!"
-
-"And you, John."
-
-"You'll think o' me sometimes."
-
-"Oh, could I ever forget?"
-
-"Sorely will _she_ repent this at my lord's homecoming," said Girvan,
-bitterly.
-
-"My father was an ill-starred wanderer, and perished miserably, poor
-man! What right have I to hope for, or to look for, a better fate
-than he? My mother, too..... Do they see me now, and know of all
-this? .... And Flora--dear Flora, whom I shall see no more!"
-
-"Take a dram ere you go, laddie, for the night is dark and eerie,"
-said Girvan, producing a flask from his pocket; "'a spur in the head
-is weel worth twa on the heels,' says an auld Scots proverb."
-
-"You will bid the dominie good-bye for me."
-
-"That shall I, laddie--that shall I."
-
-"And tell--tell _her_, that I have gone forth to seek my fortune,
-and--and----"
-
-His voice failed him, so he slung his little portmanteau on his
-shoulder, and wrung the hand of his kind friend for the last time.
-Hurrying away, he disappeared in the darkness, and, as he did so, a
-sound that followed on the wind made him pause, but for an instant.
-
-It was the old quartermaster sobbing like a child.
-
-* * * *
-
-So, thus went Quentin Kennedy forth into the world.
-
-"Few words," says a charming writer, "are more easily spoken than _He
-went forth to seek his fortune_; and what a whole world lies within
-the narrow compass! a world of high-hearted hopes and doubting fear;
-of noble ambition to be won and glorious paths to be trod, mingled
-with tender thoughts of home and those who made it such. What
-sustaining courage must be his who dares this course, and braves that
-terrible conflict--the toughest that ever man fought--between his own
-bright colouring of life, and the stern reality of the world. How
-many hopes has he to abandon--how many illusions to give up. How
-often is his faith to be falsified and his trustfulness betrayed;
-and, worst of all, what a fatal change do these trials impress upon
-himself--how different is he from what he had been."
-
-Bitterness tinged the spirit of Quentin Kennedy with an impression of
-fatalism, and he marched mournfully, doggedly on.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-UNAVAILING REGRET.
-
- "Ay waken oh!
- Waken and wearie;
- Sleep I canna get
- For thinking o' my dearie.
- When I sleep I dream,
- And when I wake I'm eerie;
- Rest I canna get,
- For thinking o' my dearie."
- _Old Scots Song._
-
-
-When, three days after these events, Lord Rohallion returned home
-from his visit to Eglinton and to his brave old comrade--the "Sodger
-Hugh" of Burns' poem--he found the members of his household in a
-considerable state of consternation and excitement. This was
-consequent to the sudden and mysterious disappearance of his
-favourite, Quentin Kennedy; but gradually the whole story came out in
-all its details, even to the crushing observation, so unfortunately
-and unintentionally overheard by the lad and the quartermaster in the
-outer drawing-room.
-
-Lord Rohallion was very indignant with his son for making an attack
-so unprovoked as the affair in the avenue, which, to do him justice,
-the Master described truly enough. He was seriously angry with Lady
-Winifred for speaking so ungenerously of his young favourite, and
-with the quartermaster too, for permitting, even aiding him in the
-means of flight.
-
-Now, three days had elapsed and no tidings had been heard of him; but
-there were no railroads or steamers in those days, or other means of
-locomotion than the occasional stage-coaches and carriers' waggons,
-so the family supposed that he could not be very far off.
-
-The Master was sullen, resenting all this interest as an insult to
-himself, so he spent the whole day abroad in search of grouse and
-ptarmigan, and had even ordered his valet to pack up and prepare for
-returning to London, an order which that powdered gentleman of the
-aiguillette heard with extreme satisfaction, "the hair of Hayrshire
-by no means agreeing with his constitution," while the "red hands and
-big beetle-crushers of the women were by no means to his taste."
-
-It was evident to Cosmo that Flora entertained a horror of him; and
-now that her anger had fully subsided and emotions of alarm replaced
-it, Lady Rohallion mourned for the poor lad, repenting of the past,
-and trembling for the unknown future.
-
-"A plague on your planning and match-making, Winny," said her
-husband, as they sat together on the old stone seat in the garden,
-late on the third evening after Quentin had disappeared; "I never
-knew any good come of that sort of thing."
-
-"You know, Reynold, how long this proposed marriage has been a
-favourite scheme of ourselves and the Warrenders," she urged, gently.
-
-"But you were--pardon me, Winny, dear--too officious or energetic;
-and Cosmo has been most reprehensibly rash!"
-
-"Ah, don't say so!"
-
-"I must! Had you left the girl to herself, this romantic fancy for
-her early playmate had soon been forgotten, or merged in a woman's
-love for Cosmo, and his proposal had been accepted, as I hope it yet
-shall be. Women change, don't they, sometimes?" he added, with a sly
-twinkle in his eyes.
-
-"Yes; but there must be reasons," said she, hesitatingly.
-
-"Of course--of course."
-
-"From the hints that Cosmo gave of what he had seen or overheard, I
-deemed it right to interfere."
-
-"An error, I think; couldn't you let the young folks alone? Heaven
-knows, many a girl I kissed, in my first red coat and epaulettes,"
-said Rohallion, while knocking the gravel about with his
-silver-headed cane.
-
-"But Cosmo does so love that girl."
-
-"Love her?" said Rohallion, laughing.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then it must be after some odd fashion of his own."
-
-"How, my lord?"
-
-"Why, zounds! Cosmo has passed unscathed through the perils of too
-many London seasons to be bird-limed by a country belle like Flora,
-beautiful though she be. She is not the style of girl that passes
-muster with the Household Brigade, I fear."
-
-"Flora Warrender?"
-
-"I mean that she is too genuine--too unsophisticated--in fact, I
-don't know what I mean,--somewhat of a character, if you will; and
-then, Quentin--poor Quentin----"
-
-"Poor dear boy! pray don't upbraid me more, Reynold," she urged with
-tears.
-
-"I do not mean to do so, Winny."
-
-"I remember him only as the sweet little prattling child, saved from
-the wreck on that wild and stormy night; and I love him dearly, as if
-he were our own; he was full of affection and gentleness!" she
-continued, covering her face with her handkerchief.
-
-"And yet you trampled on him, Winny," said Lord Rohallion, taking a
-pinch of Prince's mixture with great energy, and making his
-hair-powder fly about like a floury halo, "trampled upon him as if he
-had been a beggar's cur--he a soldier's son!"
-
-"Oh, Reynold, upbraidings again!"
-
-"It wasn't like you, Winny, dear--it wasn't like you."
-
-"My deep interest in Cosmo's welfare, provocation at Quentin, and the
-extreme wilfulness of Flora, all served to bewilder me. I own that I
-was wrong and not quite myself; but the dear bairn is gone, Reynold,
-gone from our roof-tree, and sorrow avails not."
-
-"He was so good, so gentle, of so sweet a disposition," said Lord
-Rohallion, musingly; "always doing kind offices for everybody. Egad!
-I've seen him carrying horse-buckets for the old groom in the
-stable-court, because the man was feeble and ailing; but here come
-the dominie and John Girvan--perhaps they have news. Good evening,
-dominie. Any tidings of the deserter, Girvan?"
-
-The kind-hearted dominie, who since Quentin's disappearance had been
-as restless as if his galligaskins had been lined with Lieutenant
-James's horse-blister, shook his head mournfully, while lifting his
-old-fashioned three-cornered hat, and bowing thrice to the lady, who
-presented him with her lace-mittened hand.
-
-"I have just been telling Lady Rohallion that I thought she was
-unnecessarily severe, and I regret very much, Girvan, that Quentin
-overheard those casual words in the drawing-room--words lightly
-spoken, and not meant for him to hear."
-
-"Poor lad! as for his falling in love with Miss Warrender, it was
-quite natural," said the quartermaster; "how could you expect aught
-else, my lady?"
-
-"True--true," replied Lady Winifred, with an air of extreme annoyance
-at having private family matters openly canvassed by dependents; but
-the affair had gone beyond their own control now; "propinquity is
-frequently fatal."
-
-"Prop--what? I dinna quite comprehend, my lady; but this I know,
-that if a winsome young pair are left for ever together----"
-
-"That is exactly what I mean, Girvanmains," interrupted the lady,
-with cold dignity.
-
-"Well--it is pretty much like leaving a lighted match near gunpowder;
-there will be a blow-up sometime when least expected."
-
-"May you not be all wrong in your views of this matter?" said Lord
-Rohallion, who somewhat shared his wife's feeling of annoyance; "I
-must question Miss Warrender herself; I feel assured that she will
-conceal nothing from me."
-
-"Not even that she allowed this sprightly young fellow to kiss her in
-the avenue, eh?" said the sneering voice of the Master, who appeared
-suddenly at the back of the stone chair, which he had approached
-unseen, and whereon he lounged with a twig in his mouth, and a
-Newmarket hat knowingly depressed very much over his right eye. "It
-was very pretty and becoming, wasn't it, dominie? ha! ha!"
-
-"Cosmo!" exclaimed his mother, with positive anger.
-
-"_Osculatio_--a kissing-match--eh, dominie?"
-
-"There may be no harm in a kiss, my good sir," said the pedant,
-gravely, for though mightily shocked, as became the precentor of
-Rohallion kirk, on hearing of such undue familiarity, he felt himself
-bound to defend his young pupil and friend.
-
-"No harm, you think?"
-
-"Indubitably not."
-
-"A rare old put it is! But what do such little favours lead to?"
-
-"They may lead to reconciliation, as when the king kissed Absalom; or
-be the token of welcome, as when Moses kissed his father-in-law; or
-they may indicate homage, as we find in the book of Esther."
-
-"And what about the kiss of Judas, dominie, when on such matters?"
-continued the sneering Cosmo.
-
-"That I leave you, sir, to discover; but that there may be nothing
-wrong in the act itself, I can refer you to Genesis, Hosea, and all
-the sacred writings, which abound in solemn salutes by the lip, so
-that the kiss of Quentin may have been a pure and sinless one."
-
-The dominie gave the fore-cock of his hat a twist with his hand, as
-if he had settled the matter, while Lord Rohallion, notwithstanding
-his annoyance, could not but join his son in a hearty laugh at the
-serious earnestness of the defence.
-
-"You will have a vigorous search made for Quentin Kennedy," said he;
-"despatch messengers in every direction, John Girvan; spare neither
-trouble nor money, but bring the young rogue back to us."
-
-"That shall I do blithely, my lord," replied the quartermaster, as he
-and the dominie made their bows and retired, while Cosmo curled his
-thin lips; and after a pause, uttered one of his harsh and unpleasant
-mocking laughs.
-
-"The Master has the eyebrows of a wicked man, or I am no
-physiognomist--grieved am I to say so, dominie," whispered Girvan, as
-they walked away together.
-
-"Ye are right, John, the _intercilium_ is covered with hair, whilk I
-like not, though Petronius and Ovid call such eyebrows the chief
-charm of the other sex;
-
-"'Ye fill by art your eyebrows' vacant space,'
-
-saith the latter. It is an auld--auld notion that beetle-brows
-indicate an evil temper--a crafty and fierce spirit; and of a verity,
-the Master Cosmo hath both."
-
-"Who the deuce could have anticipated such a blow-up as this?"
-
-"About a woman! Pah! women," said the dominie, cynically, "according
-to a German philosopher, are only like works carved of fine ivory:
-nothing is whiter or smoother, and nothing sooner turns _yellow_."
-
-"Are ye sure he was not a Roman philosopher?" asked the
-quartermaster, drily.
-
-"I am: yet Petronius and Ovid both say----"
-
-"Bother them both, dominie! leave Greek roots and Latin verbs alone,
-_now_ that the poor boy is gone--God bless and watch over him! I
-know he'll ever have a warm corner in his heart for us both, and
-that, go wherever he may, he'll neither forget you nor the poor old
-quartermaster; but now to have a glass of grog, and then to set about
-this search that my lord has ordered--a search which I know right
-well will prove a bootless one."
-
-A vigorous pursuit and inquiry along all the highways were now
-instituted. Girvan, the dominie, the gardener, gamekeepers, grooms,
-Jack Andrews, Irvin the fisherman, the running footman, the parish
-minister on his puffy Galloway cob, and even Spillsby, the portly and
-unwieldy butler, were all despatched in various directions to the
-neighbouring farms, mansion sand villages, without avail.
-
-John Legat, usually known in the Bailiwick as _Lang Leggie_, the
-running footman (for one of those officials still lingered in the
-old-fashioned household of Rohallion), scoured all Kyle and
-Cunninghame, with hard boiled eggs and sherry in the silver bulb that
-topped his long cane, scarcely pausing to imbibe these, his
-sustenance when on duty; and though he returned thrice to the castle,
-he was despatched like a liveried Mercury, thrice again, but without
-hearing tidings of the missing one.
-
-Since the last Duke of Queensberry ("old Q.") who died in 1810, Lord
-Rohallion was perhaps the last Scottish peer who retained such an old
-state appendage as a running footman.
-
-Long did they all, save the sullen Master, hope, and even flatter
-themselves, that the wanderer would return; but days became weeks,
-and no trace could be discovered and no tidings were heard of him
-anywhere.
-
-An armed lugger that did not display her colours, but was very
-foreign in her build and in the rake of her masts, had been seen
-standing off and on near Rohallion Head. About midnight she was
-close in shore, steering clear of the Partan Craig, and burning a
-blue light. By sunrise she was far off at sea: could he have gone
-with _her_?
-
-There had been a numerous and somewhat lawless body of gipsies
-encamped near the oakwood shaw on the night of his disappearance, for
-the ashes of their night-fires had been found, together with
-well-picked bones and broken bottles, the usual _débris_ of their
-suppers _al fresco_; but there were other traces more alarming:
-several large pools of blood, which showed that there had been a
-fight--perhaps murder--committed among them. These wanderers had
-departed by sunrise, and passed beyond the craigs of Kyle, where all
-traces of them were lost. The quartermaster thought of the money he
-had given Quentin, and trembled lest the gold had only ensured his
-destruction, till the dominie reassured him by remembering that there
-were more Kennedies than Faas among those gipsies, and the former
-would be sure to protect him for the sake of his name.
-
-On that night, too, the pressgang from Ayr had been more than ten
-miles inland, in search of certain seamen who had sought refuge as
-farm labourers; so this knowledge was another source of fear, as
-there was a great demand for men, and the officers were not very
-particular.
-
-There had been a recruiting party beating up for various regiments in
-the Bailiwick of Cunninghame, and it had been at Maybole on the night
-after Quentin fled. The party had marched, no one could say whether
-for Edinburgh or Glasgow. Could Quentin have enlisted?
-
-The night was a dark and stormy one; could he have lost his way and
-perished in the Doon or the Girvan, both of which were swollen by
-recent rains? This was barely possible, as he knew the country so
-well.
-
-There were no electric wires to telegraph by, no rural police to
-apply to, and no penny dailies to advertise in. People travelled
-still by an armed stage or the carrier's waggon, just as their
-great-grandfathers did in the days of Queen Anne. Twanging his horn
-as he went or came, the Riding Post was still, as in Cowper's _Task_,
-
- "----the herald of a noisy world,
- With spattered boots, strapped waist, and frozen locks,
- News from all nations lumbering at his back."
-
-Posts came and went from the capital of the Bailiwick, but there were
-no tidings of Quentin, so the Master of Rohallion laughed in secret
-at all the exertions, doubts, and fears of those around him.
-
-Every alarming idea was naturally suggested. The quartermaster's
-early instincts made him think most frequently of the recruiting
-party; but he grieved at the idea of the friendless and homeless lad,
-so delicately nurtured and gently bred, enduring all he had himself
-endured--the hardships and privations of a private soldier's life;
-while the kind-hearted dominie actually shed tears behind his huge
-horn barnacles at the bare thought of such a thing, and mourned for
-all his wasted classic lore.
-
-Aware that she had been in some measure the primary cause of
-Quentin's expulsion from Rohallion, Flora Warrender had rather a
-difficult part to play now. To conceal entirely that she mourned for
-him would be to act a part which she disdained; but when she spoke
-with sorrow or anxiety, she excited the sarcasms of Cosmo, and even a
-little pique in Lady Winifred, who more than once said to her, almost
-with asperity, "Flora, you should have known your own position, and
-made Quentin remember his; then all these unseemly events had never
-taken place."
-
-"How, madam?"
-
-"You should at once have put an end to his mooning and tomfoolery.
-Do you hear me?"
-
-"Yes, madam," sighed Flora, who seemed to be intent on a book, though
-she held it upside down.
-
-"How cool--how composed you are!"
-
-"Less so, perhaps, than I seem," replied Flora, who felt that tears
-were suffusing her eyes.
-
-"Young ladies took these matters very differently in my time: but
-since this revolution in France, manners are strangely altered.
-(Here we may mention that the epoch referred to was now superseding
-the Union in Lady Rohallion'a mind.) Tears!" she continued; "I am
-glad to see them, at least for your own sake."
-
-"They are _not_ for my own sake, Lady Rohallion, but for the sake of
-poor Quentin, who has fallen under the displeasure of you all, and
-who, through my unwitting means, has--has--become----"
-
-"What?"
-
-"Homeless, friendless, and alone! Oh, it must be so sad to be alone
-in the world--all alone!"
-
-Lady Winifred lowered her eyes, and her irritation passed rapidly
-away.
-
-She had somewhat changed since that stormy night on which we first
-introduced her to the reader, and had altered, as people do with
-increasing years, so as to be at times--shall we say it?--almost
-selfish in much that related to her own immediate hearth and
-household, and more especially in all that concerned the still more
-selfish Cosmo, on whom she doted, and in whom she could see no
-imperfection. Yet she could not but reproach herself bitterly when
-thinking of Quentin Kennedy, and the harsh, cutting words he had
-overheard.
-
-Then as his smiling, loving, and handsome face came vividly in memory
-before her, she would ask of herself, "Is it thus, Winifred
-Rohallion, you have treated the strange orphan, the helpless child
-once, the mere lad now, who was cast by fate, misfortune, and the
-waves of that bleak November sea, years ago, at your door and at your
-mercy? Was it generous to cast forth upon the cold world the
-friendless, poor, and penniless youth, who loves you--ay, even as
-your own son never loved you? And what answer is to be given if, at
-some future day, his mother, who may be living yet, should come
-hither and demand him of you--you who stung and galled his proud
-spirit by taunts, upbraiding and unmerited reproach?" And so she
-would whisper and think what she dared not say aloud; though "perhaps
-the lowest of our whispers may reach eternity, for it is not very far
-from any of us, after all."
-
-By the past memories of her early life--by those of _one_ whose face
-came at times unbidden before her, and by the pleasant days of
-_their_ youth in pastoral Nithsdale--by those evenings when the
-sunset glowed so redly on the green summits of Monswald and Criffel,
-while the Nith brawled joyously over its pebbled bed, and the white
-hawthorn cast its fragrance and its blossoms on the soft west
-wind--by all these, it might be asked, had she no compassion for the
-young love she was seeking to mar and crush?
-
-She had alike compunction and compassion; but in this instance she
-deemed it the mere love of a boy for a girl, and not quite such as
-Rohallion's brother, Ranulph Crawford, had for her some
-seven-and-thirty years before.
-
-Seven-and-thirty! a long vista they were to look back through now;
-but the events of her youth seemed clearer at times than those of her
-middle age, and as we grow older they always are so in dreams.
-
-Quentin would soon forget the affair, she was assured, and
-self-interest and love for her own son blinded her to the rest--to
-all but a sorrow for the lost youth, and a craving to know his fate,
-where he was now, and with whom.
-
-Thus many a night after his disappearance her heart upbraided her
-keenly; and many a lonely hour, unseen by others, she wept and
-prayed--prayed for the welfare and safety of the unknown lad she
-might never see or hear of more, for as a mother she had been to him,
-and he had been ever tender, loving, and kind as a son to her--much
-more than ever the Master had been in the days of his infancy and
-boyhood, for he was always cold, cruel, and headstrong; and now
-Quentin's place was vacant among them, as completely as if he was in
-the grave.
-
-And Flora Warrender, though mentioned last, her sorrow was not the
-least. How lonely and how tiresome the old castle seemed to her now!
-All their favourite walks--the long, shady avenue by the foaming
-Lollard's Linn; the grand old garden with its aged yew hedges; the
-kelpies' haunted pool, where first she learned that he loved her, and
-felt his kiss upon her cheek; the ivied ruins of Kilhenzie, and every
-old trysting-place, seemed deserted now indeed.
-
-She had no companion now in her rambles to touch up her sketches, to
-compare notes with in reading, to hover lovingly by her side at the
-piano, and so forth: thus Flora's "occupation" seemed, like the
-warlike Moor's, to be gone indeed!
-
-The sunny August mornings came, but there came not with them Quentin,
-to meet her fresh and ruddy from a gallop along the shore, with a
-dewy bouquet from the garden, or with a basket of speckled trout from
-the river.
-
-Slowly passed each lingering day, and evening followed; but there was
-no one to ramble with now by starlight in the terraced garden--to
-linger with by the sounding sea that surged upon the shore below and
-foamed upon the distant rock, or to share all her thoughts, and
-anticipate every wish.
-
-She hoped he would return when his money was spent and when his
-passion cooled, or his love for her obtained the mastery. So did
-Lady Rohallion and the old lord--that honest, worthy country
-gentleman and gallant peer--never doubted it; but the quicker-seeing
-quartermaster did; so day followed day until they began to count the
-weeks, and still there came no news of the lost Quentin Kennedy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-AN OLD SOLDIER'S STORY.
-
- "If he was of Leven's," said the lieutenant.
- "I told him your honour was."
- "Then," said he, "I served three campaigns with him in
- Flanders."--_Tristram Shandy_.
-
-
-A last glance at his old friends before we go in pursuit of Quentin.
-
-"I fear me," said the quartermaster, shaking his old yellow wig,
-which still survived, and letting a long stream of tobacco smoke
-escape from his mouth, as he and the dominie lingered over their
-toddy-jugs one evening in "the snuggery," "I fear me much that the
-Master's London debts and liabilities are more than his father,
-worthy man, reckons on, and that Rohallion, wood and haugh, hill and
-glen, main and farm-town, will all be made ducks and drakes of within
-a week after the old Lord is carried through the haunted gate and up
-the kirk loan yonder."
-
-"Wae is me that I should hear this," said the dominie, sadly.
-
-"I speak in confidence, dominie," said the quartermaster, laying his
-"yard of clay" lightly on the other's arm, and lowering his voice.
-
-"Of course--of course. But how different hath the Master's life been
-from his father's! Wasting his patrimony among London bucks and
-bullies--among parasites and flatterers, even as Timon of Athens
-wasted his substance, till he was driven to seek sustenance by
-digging for the poorest roots of the earth."
-
-"Our old Lord has ever acted wisely, dominie; when not on active
-service, he has ever been resident on his ain auld patrimonial
-property--wisely so, I say, for it beseems not that the great names
-of the land should die out of the memory of those who inhabit it;
-d--n all absentees, say I!"
-
-And as the quartermaster buried his red nose in his toddy-jug, the
-concluding anathema became an indistinct mumble.
-
-"Bankruptcy and disgrace are before the Master, I fear," he resumed
-with a sigh, as he snuffed the long candles, which were placed in
-square-footed holders of carved mahogany, mounted with silver rings
-on the stems; "war may save him for a time, but only if he leaves the
-Guards."
-
-"War, say ye?"
-
-"Yes--for if he owed sums that surpassed the national debt, his
-creditors could never touch him while under orders for foreign
-service."
-
-"But at his home-coming?"
-
-"Ay, there's the rub, dominie. A fine story it would be to have the
-Master of Rohallion--he, the heir of a line that never was
-disgraced--ever stainless and true--arrested by a dog of a
-bailiff--arrested, perhaps, at the head of his regiment, it might be
-after fighting the battles of his country! Zounds, dominie, it would
-be enough to make all the old oaks in Rohallion wood drop their
-leaves and die, as if a curse had come upon the land! It would break
-his father's heart, and, much as I love the family, I would rather
-that Cosmo was killed in action, than that he had to endure such
-disgrace, or that after facing the French, as I know he will do
-bravely (for there never came a coward of the Crawford line), he had
-to flee ignobly to Holyrood, and become an abbey laird, that he might
-snap his fingers at the laws of both Scotland and England, until,
-perhaps, he got the lands of Ardgour."
-
-The dominie was truly grieved to hear such things, for he had all the
-old Scottish patriarchal love of the family, under whom his
-forefathers--stout men-at-arms in their time, had been trusted
-dependents, through long dark ages of war and tumult; so he drew a
-long sigh, took a deep draught from his toddy jug, and asked in a low
-voice--
-
-"If aught were to happen unto the Master, how would the title go?"
-
-"I scarcely ken, dominie; by the death of Ranulph Crawford in a
-foreign land, it would probably fall to some far-awa cousin, after
-the lands had been frittered among disputants in the Court of
-Session, and the auld patent that King James signed on a kettle-drum
-head, had been hacked to rags by a Committee of Privileges. Confound
-the law, say I, wi' a' my heart! However, the old Lord, Heaven bless
-him! is a hale man and strong yet, so let us not anticipate evils,
-which are sufficient for their own day."
-
-"Four weeks--a whole month to-night, John, since we last saw
-Quentin," said the dominie, to change the subject.
-
-"Poor Quentin!"
-
-"As a bairn how bonnie he was--yea, beautiful as Absalom!"
-
-The quartermaster sighed with impatience, it might be with a little
-air of disappointment, as he pushed his toddy-jug aside, and
-proceeded energetically to refill the bowl of his pipe. Why, thought
-he, has Quentin never written to me, according to his promise?
-
-It was September now. The bearded grain that had been yellowing on
-the long corn-rigs of Rohallion was already gathered in; the
-harvest-kirn or home had been held in the great barn of the Home
-Farm, and the tawny stubbles gave the bared land a sterile aspect,
-till they disappeared as the plough turned up the shining furrows,
-where the black ravens flapped their wings, and the hoodie-crows
-sought for worms. The leaves were becoming brown and yellow as
-sienna tints spread over the copsewood, and the sound of the axe was
-heard at times, for now the husbandman looked forward to the closing
-year, and remembered the rhyming injunction:--
-
- "Ere winter preventeth, while weather is good,
- For galling of pasture get home with thy wood;
- And carry out gravel to fill up a hole,
- Both timber and furzen, the turf and the coal."
-
-
-"Four weeks--ay, it is September now," said the quartermaster.
-
-"And I fear me the lad will return no more."
-
-"Say not so, dominie; he may come upon us when we least expect him."
-
-"It may be, for, of a verity, life is full of strange coincidences."
-
-"Strange, indeed! I have told you many a soldier's yarn, dominie;
-but did you ever hear of the strange meeting I had with an old man of
-the clan Donald?"
-
-"Where--in the Highlands?"
-
-"No, in America."
-
-The dominie shook his head as a negative.
-
-"Then fill your pipe, brew your toddy, draw your chair nearer the
-fire, and I'll tell you about it.
-
-"Ye see, dominie, it was in the winter of '75, when Rohallion was
-lieutenant in the Light Company, and I but a corporal, that, with a
-detachment of ours, we joined Major Preston and Captain--afterwards
-the unfortunate Major--André in the stockaded fort of St. John, on
-the Richelieu River, in Lower Canada. In the fort were seven hundred
-rank and file, chiefly of the Cameronians and the 7th or Royal
-Fusiliers, and our orders were to defend the place to the last!
-
-"We were soon attacked with great vigour by the American General
-Montgomery, at the head of Lord knows how many rebellious Yankees and
-yelling Indian devils; but like brave men we defended ourselves till
-the whole place was unroofed and riddled by shot and shell--defended
-ourselves, amid the snows of severe winter, on half-rations, and what
-was worse, on half-grog, till our ammunition was expended. Then, but
-not till _then_, we were compelled to surrender, and give up our
-arms, baggage, and everything to the foe.
-
-"Disheartened by defeat, and denuded of everything but our
-regimentals, we were marched up the lakes by Ticonderoga. As I had
-no desire for remaining a prisoner during a war, the end of which
-none could foresee, and not being an officer, having no parole to
-break, I resolved to escape on the first available opportunity, and
-did so very simply, on the night-march along the borders of Lake
-George. There was a halt, during which I contrived to creep unseen
-into a thick furzy bush, and there I remained, scarcely daring to
-breathe, till the prisoners fell into their ranks an hour before
-daybreak, and surrounded by their escort of triumphant Yankees and
-Indians in their war paint, proceeded on their sad and heartless
-journey into the interior.
-
-"After the poor fellows had departed and all was still, while the
-ashes of the watch-fires smouldered and reddened in every breath of
-wind that passed over the snowy waste--and keen and biting blasts
-they were, I can tell ye, dominie--I slipped out of my friendly bush,
-stealthily as a snake might have done, and crawled away on my hands
-and knees from the vicinity of the deserted halting-place, for I
-dreaded to encounter some straggler of the escort, and still more did
-I dread some rambling Indian, who would have swooped down upon me
-with his scalping knife, and I had not the slightest ambition to see
-my natural wig added to the other grizzly trophies on a warrior's
-hunting shirt.
-
-"Arms I had none, and was scarcely clothed. I was hungry, weary,
-and, on finding myself alone, I began to reflect whether I had acted
-wisely in escaping to face individually the perils that awaited me,
-for my tattered red coat marked me as an enemy, and in the stern
-frost of an American winter, you may believe, it was not to be
-discarded or cast aside without a substitute. Such a garb increased
-my perils, and we all know what it cost poor Major André, of the
-Cameronians, when caught in his uniform within the American lines.
-
-"The cold seemed to freeze my faculties, and vaguely endeavouring to
-retrace the way we had come, I hoped by some chance, and by the care
-of Providence, to reach the junction of the Sorrel or the Richelieu
-with the St. Lawrence, for there I knew that Colonel Maclean was
-posted with the royal regiment of Scottish Emigrants, but concerning
-how far I was from thence, and how I was to reach it, I knew no more
-than of what the man in the moon may be about at this moment.
-
-"Vainly I toiled on till day dawned fully on the vast extent of
-snow-covered country. Then I found myself among the high and wooded
-hills that look down upon the bosom of the Hudson. Far in the
-distance lay Fort St. John which we had so long defended, and which
-had the Stars and Stripes where the Union Jack waved before. On the
-other hand, Lake George, a sheet of snow-covered ice, with all its
-isles, lay like a map at my feet, far down below.
-
-"Cold, cold, ice, frost, snow, a biting wind everywhere! I sighed
-and shuddered with misery, and longed for any other garment than my
-fatal red coat, that I might approach a house or homestead, and crave
-a morsel of food, and permission, for a minute, to warm myself by the
-kitchen fire, but to make the attempt was too rash, and, though my
-prospects were not cheering, I had no desire to court a rifle-shot
-from some loophole or upper window.
-
-"As I stumbled on by the skirts of a fir copse, which somewhat
-sheltered me from the biting north wind, and while the drowsy
-numbness of exhaustion was stealing over me, I heard a loud and
-sonorous voice commanding me to 'stop.' I turned and saw a man
-approaching me.
-
-"His form was powerful and athletic, apparently, rather than tall,
-and he seemed about fifty years of age or more; very brown and
-weather-beaten in visage, and his hair was white as the snow around
-us. He had on a thick fur cap, the warm earlaps of which were tied
-under his chin; and over a yellow Indian hunting-shirt he wore a
-seaman's pea-jacket, with two rows of large white horn buttons in
-front. It was girt by a belt of untanned leather, in which were
-stuck a hunting-knife, a pair of brass-mounted pistols, and a rusty
-basket-hilted Highland broadsword. He was evidently one of the
-insurgents--'Mr. Washington's rebels,' as we named them. He carried
-a long rifle, and wore a pair of large deer-skin boots, that came
-well over his sturdy thighs, and were strapped to his waist-belt.
-His whole appearance and bearing indicated a state of bodily
-strength, hardihood, confidence, and warmth, all of which, at that
-particular moment, I greatly envied. With his right hand on the
-hammer and his left on the barrel of his rifle, as if about to cock
-it, he said, in a voice that was both sharp and deep in tone--
-
-"'Stand, Englishman, if you would not be shot down, as many a time I
-have seen your countrymen shoot others, in cold blood.'
-
-"'I don't think even death could make my blood colder than it is
-already,' said I, with chattering teeth; 'but you accuse us unjustly
-of outrage.'
-
-"'Do I?' said he, with a fierce sneer; 'by your doings at Lexington,
-I don't think the Redcoats are much changed since I saw them in
-Lochaber.'
-
-"'I am not an Englishman,' said I, glancing at the sword in his
-girdle.
-
-"'Then, what the devil _are_ you?' he asked, sharply.
-
-"'I am a Scotsman, as I rather think you are,' I added, for he had a
-Skye-terrier look about the face that indicated a West Highlander.
-
-"'Indeed,' said he, in an altered tone, placing the butt of his rifle
-on the ground, greatly to my satisfaction and general ease of mind;
-'you are one of the force that defended Fort St. John, under Major
-Preston and Captain André?'
-
-"'Yes.'
-
-"'And how, then, are you here?'
-
-"'I was a prisoner, but escaped; and so great is my misery, that I
-beg of you to make me a prisoner again, if you are in the American
-interest.'
-
-"'By your yellow facings, you are not one of the King's Fusiliers.'
-
-"'I am a 25th man,' said I.
-
-"'A 25th man?' he repeated, coming nearer, and looking hastily about
-to see if we were observed, but all around the vast landscape seemed
-desolate and tenantless; 'I will screen and save you if I can, for
-the sake of the old country neither of us may ever see again; but,
-more than all, for the sake of the _number_ on your buttons. Here,
-taste this first, and then follow me.'
-
-"He drew a leather hunting-bottle from the pocket of his rough
-pea-jacket, and gave me a good dram of Jamaica rum, but for which, I
-am sure, I should have died there, for the cold was fast overpowering
-me.
-
-"'So you are a 25th man?' said he, surveying me with considerable
-interest; 'well, for that reason, if it were for nothing else, I
-shall befriend you. Come this way.'
-
-"I was too cold--too intensely miserable--to question his meaning,
-but accompanied him through the wood, by a narrow path where the snow
-lay deep, and where, in some places, it had fallen in such a manner
-over the broad, horizontal and interlaced branches of the pine trees
-as to form quite a covered passage, where the atmosphere felt
-mild--even warm, compared with the temperature elsewhere. After a
-time, we reached an open plateau, on the slope of the hills that look
-towards Lake George, where we found his hut, a comfortable and warm
-little dwelling, sheltered by stupendous pines, and built entirely of
-fir logs, dressed and squared by the hatchet, and pegged each down
-into the other through holes bored by an auger. It had a stone
-chimney, within which a smouldering fire soon shot up into a ruddy
-blaze as he cast a heap of crackling fir cones on it, and then added
-some dry birch billets, that roared and sputtered cheerily, and threw
-showers of sparks all over us.
-
-"He gave me some food, broiled venison, hard biscuits, and a good can
-of Jamaica grog; and he also gave me that which I needed sorely--warm
-clothing, in the shape of an old frieze coat, lined with martin
-skins, in lieu of my poor, faded and tattered regimentals, which, for
-security's sake, we cast into the fire and burned.
-
-"Three days I remained with the trapper or hunter, for such he seemed
-to be, and on the fourth, after having carefully reconnoitred all the
-neighbourhood, he announced his intention of conducting me to Colonel
-Maclean's outposts upon the Richelieu; and being now thoroughly
-refreshed, I was glad to hear the tidings.
-
-"'I shall never forget your kindness to me,' said I; 'and I value it
-all the more, because you are one of those who are in arms against
-the king.'
-
-"'It is maybe not the first time I have been so,' said he, with a
-deep smile puckering all his eyelids.
-
-"'And you saved my life simply because I was a 25th man?'
-
-"'Yes--because one of your regiment--it was Lord Leven's--no, Lord
-Semple's then--saved mine, at a harder pinch, some thirty years ago,'
-said he, gravely, as he marched on before me through the snow, with
-his long rifle sloped on his shoulder.
-
-"'You have been a soldier, then?'
-
-"'Like yourself, Lowlander, for I know you are southland bred by your
-tongue.'
-
-"'In what regiment?' I asked.
-
-"'In the clan regiment of Macdonald of Keppoch. Rest him, God!' he
-exclaimed, taking off his cap and looking upward, while his keen grey
-eyes glistened, it might be in the frosty wind, under his bushy
-eyebrows.
-
-"'When was this--and where?'
-
-"Can you be so dull as not to guess? It was in the ever-memorable
-and ever-glorious campaign under His Royal Highness the Prince of
-Wales, whom heaven long preserve! It was in 1746, just thirty years
-ago. Look at these scars,' he added, showing me several sword wounds
-that were visible among his thick white hair. 'I got these at
-Culloden, from Bland's dragoons, when fighting for Scotland and King
-James VIII.'
-
-"'You must be an old man?' said I.
-
-"'Old,' he exclaimed; 'I am barely fifty--young enough to fight and
-ripe enough to die for my new home, this land of America, to which I
-was banished as a slave with many more of my clan and kindred.' He
-was now warming with his subject and the recollections of the past.
-'There is,' he resumed, 'a pass in the hills here that reminds me of
-my native glen in Croy. Often I go there and sit on the 16th April,
-as the fatal day comes round, when outnumbered, three to one, by
-British and Hanoverians, the Highland swordsmen went down like grass
-on Culloden moor, before the withering fire of grape and musketry!
-Then the river that flows into Lake George seems the Nairn--the water
-of Alders; yonder open moorland seems the plain of Drummossie, and
-the distant farm among the pine-trees passes for Culloden House.
-Afar off in the distance the bastions of Ticonderoga become those of
-Fort George, that jut into the Moray Firth, and yonder wooded
-mountain, as yet without a name, seems to me like wild Dun-daviot;
-and then as with the eyes of a seer, it all comes before me again,
-that April day, with its terrible memories! Then,' he continued,
-with flashing eyes, as he pointed across the plain, 'then I seem to
-see the white battle-smoke rolling over the purple heather, and the
-far extended lines of the hell-doomed Cumberland reaching from
-Bland's scarlet horse on the right to the false Lord Ancrum's blue
-dragoons upon the left--these long and steady lines of infantry,
-Barrel's, Munro's, the Fusiliers, the Royals, and all the rest, in
-grim array, three ranks deep, the colours waving in the centre, the
-bayonets glittering in the sun. On the other,' his voice failed him,
-and almost with a sob, he continued, 'on the _other_ hand, I see the
-handsome Prince, the idol of all our hearts, on his white horse, half
-shimmering through the smoke and morning mist, and then the loyal
-clans in all their tartans, with target and claymore: Murray on the
-right, and Perth on the left, in the centre Athol, Lochiel, Appin,
-Cluny, and Lovat, Keppoch, Glengarry, and others with wild Lord Lewis
-and old Glenbucket in the rear! Then once again from yonder pine
-forest I seem to hear the war-pipes playing the onset, and a thrill
-passes over me. I feel my sword in my hand"--he dashed down his
-rifle and drew his claymore--'I draw down my bonnet; I hear the wild
-cheer, the battle cry of _Righ Hamish gu bragh!_ pass along the line,
-as with heads stooped and targets up, we burst like a thunderbolt
-through the first line of charged bayonets! In a moment it is
-dispersed and overborne--it is all dirk and claymore, cutting, hewing
-and stabbing. On yet, on--and whoop! we break through the second
-line; on yet, through the _third_, and the day may be our own! Its
-fire is deadly and concentrated; I am beside the aged and
-white-haired Keppoch, my chief--all our people have fallen back in
-dismay before the fire of musketry and the treachery of the
-Campbells, who turned our flank. Keppoch waves his bonnet; again I
-hear him cry My God! my God! have the children of my tribe forsaken
-me? Again the bullets seem, to pierce me, and we fall to the earth
-together--and so the wild vision passes away!'
-
-"While pouring forth all this, the Highland exile seemed like one
-possessed, and in his powerful imagination, I have no doubt that
-while speaking, the present snow-clad landscape passed away, and in
-fancy he saw the moor and battle of Culloden all spreading like a
-bloody panorama before him. Until he sheathed his sword I was not
-without uneasiness lest he might fill up the measure of his wrath by
-cutting and carving on me.
-
-"'At last it was all over,' he resumed quietly and sadly; 'and then
-came the butchery of the wounded by platoon firing and the
-desecration of the dead. Sorely wounded and faint with loss of
-blood, I found myself on the skirt of the field near the wall which
-the Campbells had broken down to enable the light dragoons to turn
-our right flank.
-
-"'Weary with the battle of the past day, a soldier was leaning
-against the wall, screwing a fresh flint into the lock of his musket.
-On seeing me move, he mercifully gave me a mouthful of water from his
-wooden canteen, and bound up my head with a shred torn from my plaid.
-I then begged him to help me a little way out of the field, as I was
-the sole support of an aged mother, and must live if possible. The
-good fellow said it was as much as his life was worth, were it known
-that he had spared mine; but as he, too, had an old mother in the
-lowlands far away, for her sake he would run the risk of assisting me.
-
-"'The morning was yet dark and we were unseen. He half carried, half
-dragged me for more than a mile, till we reached a thicket where I
-was in safety from the parties who were butchering the wounded. Some
-of these burned my mother's hut and bayonetted her on the threshold.
-
-"'I offered the soldier the tassels of my sporran or the silver
-buttons of my waistcoat as a reward, but he proudly refused them. I
-then pressed upon him my snuff-mull, on the lid of which my initials
-were engraved----'
-
-"'And he took it?' said I, eagerly.
-
-"'He did, but with reluctance; and then I asked his name, that I
-might remember it in my gratitude----'
-
-"'And he told you that he was John Girvan of Semple's Foot--the
-25th,' said I.
-
-"'Yes--yes; but how know _you_ that?'
-
-"'Because that friendly soldier was _my father_. He served against
-the Prince at Culloden (_four_ Scotch regiments did so that day), and
-often have I heard him tell the story of how the mull came into his
-possession, and of the brave Highlander who adhered to old Keppoch
-when all the clans fell back before the mingled shock of horse and
-foot in front and flank!'
-
-"'Your father!--that brave man your father? I thank God who has thus
-enabled me to repay to you the good deed done to me on that dark
-morning on Culloden Moor,' said the Highlander with deep emotion, as
-he shook my hand with great warmth.
-
-"'Here is the mull,' said I, producing it, 'and you are welcome to a
-pinch from it again.'
-
-"'It is indeed like an old friend's face,' said he, looking with
-interest at his initials, D. McD., graven on the silver top. 'I made
-and mounted it, in my mother's hut in Croy. Woe is me! How many
-changes have I seen since that day thirty years ago, when last I held
-it in my hand? And your father, soldier--I hope that brave and good
-man yet lives?'
-
-"'Alas! no,' said I, sadly; 'he entered the Royals fifteen years
-after Culloden, and volunteered, as a serjeant, with the forlorn
-hope, at the storming of the Moro Castle. He fell in the breach, and
-the mull was found in his havresack by the men who buried him there.'
-
-"The Highlander took off his cap and muttered a prayer, crossing
-himself the while very devoutly.
-
-"'But for him,' said he, 'instead of being a lonely trapper here by
-the shore of Lake George, the heather bells of thirty summers had
-bloomed and withered over my grave on the fatal moor of Culloden; but
-God's blessed will be done.'
-
-"After this unexpected meeting with one of whom I had so often heard
-my worthy father speak when I was but a bairn, we became quite as old
-friends, and parted with regret when we reached the outposts of the
-Royal Scottish Emigrants, close to which he guided me, and then took
-his departure to join General Montgomery, who deemed Donald Macdonald
-the chief of his marksmen.
-
-"I never heard of him more; and as for the snuff-mull, I was robbed
-of it by some Germans, who cut the knapsack off my back as I lay
-wounded in the skirmish at Stoney Point, in the State of New York, in
-1776; but this chance meeting with its original proprietor, shows us,
-dominie, what unexpected things come to pass in the world. Life, as
-I said, is full of strange coincidences, and we may meet with Quentin
-Kennedy or hear sure tidings of him, when least expected."
-
-"I pray Heaven it may be so," sighed the dominie, over his empty
-toddy-jug, as he tied an ample yellow bandanna over his old
-three-cornered hat, and under his chin; and then assuming his cane,
-prepared to depart.
-
-"Jack Andrews has brought your pony round to the private door; take
-care o' the Lollard's Linn, for the night is dark; and now for the
-_deoch_--the stirrup-cup."
-
-"Whilk the Romans ever drank in honour of Mercury, as I do now--that
-he may bestow a sound night's sleep," said the dominie, smacking his
-lips as the dram went down.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE WAYFARER.
-
- "On, on! through the wind and rain,
- With the blinding tears and burning vein!
- When the toil is o'er and the pain is past,
- What recks it all if we sleep at last."
- _All the Year Round._
-
-
-When we last saw him, we said that Quentin was going forth into the
-world to seek his fortune, though, perhaps, his chief idea or emotion
-was to get as far away as possible from the vicinity of Rohallion,
-its haughty lady, and the cold and crafty Master. As he passed
-through the ivied archway, he dashed aside the tears that his
-farewell with the old quartermaster had summoned.
-
-"How often," thought he, "have I read in novels and romances, in
-dramas and story-books, of the heroes doing _this_--setting out on
-the vague and hopeful errand that was to lead to fame and fortune;
-but how little I ever expected to experience the stern reality, or
-believe that it would be my own fate! And now the hour has come--oh,
-it seems so strange now-a-days!"
-
-Passing down the avenue, the stately trees of which were tossing
-their branches wildly in the gathering blast, he issued upon the
-highway, and proceeded along it without caring, and perhaps without
-considering, whether he went to the right or to the left.
-
-Intense was the loneliness, and bitter the irritation of mind in
-which he pursued his aimless way, by the old and narrow road, which
-was bordered by ancient hedgerows where brambles and Gueldre-roses
-were growing wild and untrimmed, and where the wind was howling now
-among the old beech-trees, as an occasional drop of rather warm rain
-that fell on his face, or plashed in the dust under foot, gave
-warning for a rough and comfortless night for a belated wayfarer.
-
-Again and again he looked back to the picturesque, turreted, and
-varied outline of Rohallion, and saw its many lighted windows, one
-which he knew well, in the crowstepped gable of the western wing. It
-was the sleeping-place of Flora Warrender.
-
-She would be there now--her head resting on her pillow, perhaps,
-sleepless and weeping for him, no doubt, and for the probable results
-of a quarrel, the end of which she could not foresee--weeping for the
-young heart that loved her so truly, so he flattered himself; and in
-the morning she would find that his room was tenantless, his bed
-unslept in, and that he was gone--gone no-one knew whither!
-
-Hope had scarcely yet risen in Quentin's breast; he felt but the
-stern and crushing knowledge that he was leaving his only home where
-all had loved, and where he truly loved all save one, to launch out
-upon an unknown world, and to begin a career that was as friendless
-as it was shadowy.
-
-He had no defined plan, where to proceed, or what to essay. He
-naturally thought of the army; but, as he had ever anticipated a
-commission, he shrunk from enlisting, and thereby depriving himself
-of all liberty of action, and perhaps of forfeiting for ever the
-place which he felt himself, by birth and education, entitled to take
-in society.
-
-Of business or the mode of attaining a profession, he was as ignorant
-as of the contents of the Koran, the Talmud, the Shasters, or the
-books of Brahma; and had he dropped from the moon, or sprung out of
-the turf, he could not have felt more lonely, friendless, and
-isolated in the world.
-
-He was now passing the old ruined church, with its low and crumbling
-boundary-wall that encloses the graveyard, where, long ago, his
-drowned father had been reverently laid by the Rohallion Volunteers
-and the worthy old quartermaster.
-
-How well Quentin knew the spot amid the solemn obscurity! he could
-see it from the time-worn foot-stile where he lingered for a moment.
-_He_ was lying beside the ancient east window, near the Rohallion
-aisle, where dead Crawfords of ages past, even those who had fallen
-in their armour at Flodden and Pinkey, Sark and Arkinholme, were
-buried. No stone marked the spot; but now the rough-bearded thistle,
-the long green nettle, the broad-leaved dock, and the sweetbriar,
-mingled mournfully over the humble last home of the poor dead
-wanderer.
-
-Quentin felt his heart very full at that moment.
-
-Did the father _see_ his son to-night? Was he looking upon him from
-some mysterious bourne among the stars? Did he know the tumult, the
-sorrow, and the half-despair that were mingling in his breast?
-
-Quentin almost asked these questions aloud, as, with a mind deeply
-agitated by conflicting thoughts, the poor fellow journeyed on.
-
-A strong regard for the home he had left (of any _other_ he had no
-memory now save a vague and indistinct dream), with painful doubts
-lest he had been ungracious, ungrateful, or unkind to any there,
-beset him, after the soft revulsion of feeling excited by the solemn
-aspect of the midnight churchyard.
-
-Then came dim foreshadowings, the anxious hopes--a boy's certainty of
-future fame and distinction; but how, where, and in what path?
-
-His romance-reading with Flora and the yarns of the quartermaster had
-filled his mind with much false enthusiasm and many odd fancies. He
-had misty recollections of heroes expelled or deserting from home
-under circumstances pretty similar to his own, who had flung
-themselves over awful precipices, when their bones were picked white
-(a doubly unpleasant idea) by the Alpine eagles or bears of the Black
-Forest: or who had thrown themselves upon their swords, or drowned
-themselves (the Lollard's Linn was pouring not far off; but the night
-was decidedly _cold_), yet none of these modes of exit, suited his
-purpose so well as walking manfully on, and imagining, with a species
-of grim satisfaction, the surmises and so forth at Rohallion, when
-the supper-bell rang and he did not appear; when Jack Andrews, with
-military punctuality, closed the old feudal fortress for the night,
-and still he was not to be found; and then the next day, with its
-increased excitement, was a thought that quite cheered him!
-
-But there was Flora--sweet Flora Warrender, with all her winning
-little ways; and her image came upbraidingly before him despite the
-smarting of the wound given him by the Master, and the deeper sting
-of Lady Rohallion's words.
-
-As glittering fancies rose like soap-bubbles in the sunshine; as the
-_Châteaux en Espagne_ rose too, and faded away into mud-hovels and
-even prisons, love and affection drew his thoughts _back_ and seemed
-to centre his hopes in and about Rohallion. Flora's face, the memory
-of past years of love and kindness experienced from Lady Winifred,
-and from the old Lord, melted his heart, or filled it with regard and
-gratitude towards them, and he felt that, go where he might,
-Rohallion could never be forgotten. A verse of Burns that occurred
-to him, seemed but to embody his own ideas and emotions--
-
- "The monarch may forget his crown,
- That on his head an hour hath been;
- The bridegroom may forget the bride,
- Was made his wedded wife yestreen;
- The mother may forget her child,
- That smiles so sweetly on her knee;
- _But I'll remember thee, Glencairn,
- And all that thou hast done for me._"
-
-
-From an eminence above the oakwood shaw, he turned to take his last
-view of the old dwelling-place; but he could only see its lights
-twinkling like distant stars, for the night was obscure and murky;
-the clouds were rolling in great masses; the wind came in fierce and
-fitful gusts from the Firth of Clyde, while the rain began to descend
-steadily.
-
-Bodily discomfort soon recalled all his emotions of hate and anger at
-the Master, and with eyes that flashed in the dark, he turned his
-back, almost resentfully, on the old castle, and resumed his aimless
-journey.
-
-"There is sometimes," says a writer, "a stronger sense of unhappiness
-attached to what is called being hardly used by the world, than by a
-direct and palpable misfortune, for though the sufferer may not be
-able even in his own heart to set out with clearness one single count
-in the indictment, yet a _general_ sense of hard treatment,
-unfairness, and so forth, brings with it a great depression and
-feeling of desolation."
-
-"Why was I orphaned in youth?" thought Quentin, bitterly, as this
-sense of unfairness and depression came over him; "why was I cast on
-the bounty, the mercy, of strangers? Why did I love Flora--why do we
-love each other so vainly, and why are we to be hopelessly separated?"
-
-All these questions remained unanswered; but the blinding rain was
-now coming down in sheets, and he felt the necessity of seeking
-shelter without delay.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE VAULT OF KILHENZIE.
-
- "Through gloomy paths unknown,
- Paths which untrodden be,
- From rock to rock I go
- Along the dashing sea.
- And seek from busy woe,
- With hurrying steps to flee;
- But know, fair lady! know,
- All this I bear for thee!"
- _Ancient Poetry of Spain._
-
-
-On passing the long thicket or copse, known as the oakwood shaw, a
-number of fires burning on the heath beyond, and sheltered by the
-oaks from the west wind, at once indicated to Quentin that a gipsy
-camp was there. Indeed, he could see their figures flitting darkly
-to and fro around the red fires, on which they were heaping wood that
-smoked and sputtered in the wind and rain. He could also see the
-little tents or wigwams which were simply formed by half circular
-hoops stuck in the earth, and covered by canvas or tarpaulin.
-
-Their miserable ponies were picquetted on the open heath, where, with
-drooping ears and comfortless aspect, they cropped the scanty herbage
-or chewed the whin bushes. Aware that these people were to be
-sedulously avoided, and that he must neither risk the loss of his
-portmanteau, or the money so generously lent him by the
-quartermaster, he clutched his walking-cane, turned hastily aside,
-and passing up a lane between hedge-rows, proceeded towards a
-farm-house, the occupants of which he feared might know him; but he
-was resolved to risk recognition, for the weather was becoming
-pitiless, and he had no alternative.
-
-A watchdog barked furiously and madly, straining on his chain and
-standing on his hind-legs, open-mouthed, as Quentin approached the
-house, which was involved in darkness and silence.
-
-The rain was dashing on the closed windows, washing the bleak walls
-and gorging the spouts and gutters, as he handled vigorously and
-impatiently a large brass knocker, with which the front door was
-furnished. After the third or fourth summons, a window was opened in
-the upper story, and by the light within the room Quentin could
-perceive the face and figure of the irate farmer, Gibbie Crossgrane,
-in a white nightcap and armed with a gun or musket, for Gibbie was
-one of the Rohallion volunteers.
-
-"Wha are ye, and what do ye seek at this time o' night?" he demanded.
-
-"Shelter----" Quentin began.
-
-"Shelter!" shouted the other; "my certie! do ye take this for a
-change-house, or an ale-wife's, that ye rap sae loud and lang?"
-
-"I have lost my way, Mr. Crossgrane----"
-
-"Then ye are the mair fule! But be off," he added, cocking his
-piece; "I warrant ye are nae better than ye should be. This is the
-third time I hae been roused out o' my warm bed this blessed night by
-yon cursed tinkler bodies, that hae been fechting and roost-robbing
-about Kilhenzie a' day, so be off, carle, I say, or aiblins I'll
-shoot ye like a hoodiecraw, ye vagrant limmer."
-
-With these threatening words, which showed that he was determined to
-consider his visitor one of the gipsies, he slapped the butt of his
-gun significantly, and sharply closed the window ere poor Quentin
-could explain or reply.
-
-"Churlish wretch!" he sighed, as he turned away, and revenged himself
-by hurling a huge stone at the yelling watch-dog, which, like a cowed
-bully, instantly plunged into his kennel, where he snapped and
-snarled in spite and anger.
-
-Aware of the futility of making any further attempt in this quarter,
-Quentin returned to the high road, when, passing the ruins of
-Kilhenzie, he conceived the idea of taking shelter in one of the
-remaining vaults, wherein he knew that Farmer Crossgrane was wont to
-store straw and hay for his cattle.
-
-Though the memory of John the Master's wraith, the spectre-hound of
-the holly thicket, and other dark stories somewhat impressed him at
-this hour, and awed him as he approached the ruined walls, he
-hastened to avail himself of their shelter, quickening his pace to a
-run as he passed the giant tree of Kilhenzie, on the branches of
-which, the quartermaster and dominie averred, so many men had taken
-their leave of a setting sun.
-
-He went straight to an arched vault which he knew well, as it opened
-off the grass-grown barbican, and finding it, as he expected, full of
-dry straw, he burrowed among it for warmth, and placing his
-portmanteau under his head, strove to avoid all thoughts of the
-gloomy ruin in which he had a shelter, and to sleep, if possible,
-till dawn of day.
-
-The old stronghold was a familiar place, endeared to him by the
-memory of many an evening ramble with Flora Warrender, with whom he
-had explored every turret, nook, and corner of it; and with the
-dominie, too, whose old legends of the fiery Kennedies of
-Kilhenzie--with whom he always loved to connect his pupil--were alike
-strange and stirring.
-
-"Ah, if I should indeed prove to be the Laird of Kilhenzie--I who
-lurk here like a beggar to-night!" said Quentin, and then the quaint
-figure of his tutor the dominie, with his long ribbed galligaskins
-drawn over the knees of his corduroy breeches, came vividly before
-him.
-
-He thought of the stately Lady Eglinton, who had always ridiculed
-this ideal descent, and of her daughters, but chiefly his old
-playmate, the gentle Lady Mary, and wondered whether they would mourn
-when they heard of what had befallen him. But Quentin was fated
-never to see the fair Montgomerys more; for Lady Mary died in her
-youth, and Lady Lilias died far away in Switzerland, where she was
-interred in the same grave with her husband.
-
-It was now, after his recent rude repulse at the farmhouse, that he
-felt himself indeed a wanderer and an outcast!
-
-Wet and weary, he shuddered with cold; the loss of blood he had
-suffered rendered him weak and drowsy, and but for the brandy so
-thoughtfully given him by old John Girvan, he could not have
-proceeded so far on his aimless journey.
-
-He strove hard, with his nervous excitement, to sleep, and to find in
-oblivion a temporary release from thoughts of the happy days of past
-companionship and of love-making--days that would return no
-more--moments of delight and joy never to be lived over again!
-Flora's voice, as low and sweet as ever Annie Laurie's was; her clear
-and smiling eyes, her ringing laugh, so silvery and joyous, were all
-vividly haunting him, with the memory of that dear and--as it
-proved--_last_ kiss in the ancient avenue.
-
-All these were to be foregone now, it too probably seemed for ever,
-and Cosmo, with his thousand chances, had the field to himself, nor
-would he fail to use them.
-
-Despite his strong and almost filial love for Lord and Lady
-Rohallion, Quentin felt in his heart that he hated the cold and
-haughty Master as the primary cause of all his misery, and the memory
-of the degrading blow, so ruthlessly dealt by his hand, burned like a
-plague-spot on his soul, if we may use such a simile.
-
-Gradually, however, sleep stole upon him, but not repose, for he had
-strange shuddering fits, nervous startings, and perpetual dreams of
-vague and horrible things, which he could neither understand nor
-realize.
-
-Once he sprang up with a half-stifled cry, having imagined that the
-hand of a strange man had clutched his throat! So vivid was this
-idea, that some minutes elapsed before he fully recovered his
-self-possession.
-
-"The wound on my head and the consequent loss of blood cause these
-unusual visions," thought he, not unnaturally. "Oh, that I could but
-sleep--sleep soundly, and forget everything for a little time!"
-
-The rain and the wind had ceased now, and he heard only the cawing of
-the rooks in the echoing ruin. He could see the morning star shining
-with diamond-like brilliance, but coldly and palely through a
-loophole of the vault, and with a sigh of impatience for the coming
-day he was composing himself once more to sleep, when suddenly his
-hand came in contact with the fingers of another, protruding from the
-straw near him--the straw on which he was lying!
-
-His first emotion was terror at being there with some person unknown,
-without other weapon than a walking-cane.
-
-His next thought was flight from this silent companion, whom he
-addressed thrice without receiving other reply than the echo of his
-own voice reverberating in the vault.
-
-It had been no dream; a hand must indeed have been on his throat--a
-hand that if he stirred or breathed might clutch him again; but whose
-hand?
-
-Prepared to make a most desperate resistance, he listened, but heard
-only the beating of his heart, and the drip, drip, dripping of
-moisture from the ivy leaves without, or the occasional rustle of the
-straw within the vault. Fearfully he put forth his hand to search
-again, for a streak of dim light was glimmering through a loophole,
-and again his hand came in contact with the other. Cold, rigid,
-motionless, it was, he knew, with a thrill of horror, the hand of a
-corpse!
-
-With an irrepressible and shuddering cry, Quentin sprang up, and as
-he did so he could now see, half-hidden amid the straw on which he
-had slept, and literally beneath him, the dead body of a man--the
-features white, pale, and pinched; the hands half-upraised, as if he
-had died in the act of resistance or in agony. A bunch of wooden
-ladles, porridge spurtles, and horn spoons that lay near, all covered
-with blood, showed that he was a gipsy, who had been slain in one of
-the scuffles which were of frequent occurrence between adverse tribes
-of those lawless wanderers, and that he had been concealed in the
-vault of Kilhenzie, or had crawled there to die. Quentin conceived
-the former to be the most probable cause for the body being there.
-
-All that the foregoing paragraph has embraced Quentin's eye and mind
-took in with the rapidity of a flash of lightning, and snatching his
-portmanteau, he sprang out of the vault, rushed down the slope on
-which the old castle stands, and shivering with disgust, affright,
-and the cold air of the damp morning, found himself again on the
-highway that led to Maybole.
-
-The birds were singing and twittering merrily in the green hedgerows
-and among the dew-dripping trees, as the August day came in. Already
-the roads were almost dry, and as a blue-bonneted ploughboy passed
-with a pair of huge Clydesdale horses afield, whistling gaily,
-Quentin shrunk behind a hedge, for his clothes, damped by the rain
-over-night, were nowise improved in aspect by the bed he had
-selected; and now on examining them, he perceived to his dismay and
-repugnance that they exhibited several spots of blood, and his hands
-wore the same sanguine hue. Whether these ominous marks had come
-from his own veins or from those of the corpse near which he had so
-unpleasantly lain, Quentin knew not, but in great haste he sought a
-runnel that gurgled by the wayside, and there with the aid of a
-handkerchief he removed the stains with as much dispatch and care as
-if they had been veritable signs of guilt and shame.
-
-We have said that blood gouts had been found in the gipsy bivouac,
-and Farmer Crossgrane had mentioned incidentally that the vagrants
-had been fighting. They were notorious for the free and reckless use
-of their knives and daggers, so doubtless, the body lying in
-Kilhenzie was the result of a recent affray. Quentin now discovered
-that he had lost his walking-cane, and that in his flight from the
-ruin he had left it in the vault beside the dead man. He regretted
-this, as the cane was a present from Lord Rohallion, and had his
-initials graven on its silver head; but he could not overcome his
-repugnance sufficiently to face again his ghastly bedfellow, or to
-return, and so hastened from the vicinity of the old castle.
-
-He had not, however, proceeded two miles or so, before the alarming
-idea occurred to him, that this cane, if found beside the dead man,
-might serve to implicate him in the affair; and through the medium of
-his active fancy he saw a long train of circumstantial evidence
-adduced against him, and in his ruin, disgrace, it might be death, a
-triumph given to Cosmo Crawford which even he could not exult in.
-
-These terrible reflections gave the additional impulse of fear to
-urge him on.
-
-The morning was sunny, breezy, and lovely; the sky a pure deep blue,
-and without a cloud; the light white mists were rising from the shady
-glens and haughs where the wimpling burns ran through the leafy copse
-or under the long yellow broom, when from an eminence Quentin took
-his last farewell of scenery that was endeared to him by all his
-recollections of childhood and youth, and heavy, heavy grew his heart
-as he did so. He could see the glorious Firth of Clyde opening in
-the distance, and all the bold and beautiful shore of Carrick
-stretching from the high Black Vault of Dunure away towards the bluff
-and castle of Rohallion.
-
-Dunduff and Carrick's brown hill had mist yet resting on their
-summits, and afar off, paling away to greyish blue, was Ailsa Craig,
-rising like a cloud from the water--the white canvas of many a ship,
-homeward-bound or outward-bound, merchantman, privateer and
-letter-of-marque, like sea birds floating on the bosom of the
-widening river. On the other side he saw the rich undulations that
-look down on the vast and fertile plains of Kyle and Cunninghame, and
-in the middle distance Maybole, amid the golden morning haze, the
-quaint little capital of Carrick, with its baronial tower and
-Tolbooth spire.
-
-There he considered himself as certain of being recognised by some of
-the vintners, ostlers, or by Pate, the town piper, for the place had
-been a favourite turning point with him and Flora Warrender in their
-evening rides; and he also knew that if he were _not_ recognised, the
-smallness of his portmanteau suggested that the estimate which might
-be formed of him by Boniface, by waiters and others, would not be
-very high.
-
-He therefore resolved to avoid that ancient Burgh-of-Barony
-altogether, and the carrier for Ayr coming up at that moment, he
-struck a bargain with him for conveyance thither. Remembering how
-Roderick Random and other great men had travelled by this humble mode
-of locomotion, he gladly took his seat by the side of the driver, a
-lively and cheerful fellow, who knew all the cottars and girls on the
-road, and who whistled or sang incessantly varying marches, rants,
-and reels, with Burns' songs, every one of which he knew by
-heart--and he knew Burns too, having, as he boasted, "flitted the
-poet from Irvine to Mossgiel in '84--just four-and-twenty years
-sinsyne."
-
-He blithely shared his humble breakfast of sour milk in a luggie,
-barley meal bannock and Dunlop cheese, with our hero, whose spirits
-seemed to rise as the morning sun soared into the cloudless sky, and
-he seemed to feel now the necessity of ceasing to mope, of becoming
-the maker of his own fate, the arbiter of his own destiny, and he
-determined, if possible, to "wrestle with the dark angel of adversity
-till she brightened and blessed him."
-
-When left to himself, however, lulled by the monotonous rumble of the
-waggon wheels, he lay back among the carrier's bales, and gave
-himself up to day-dreams and his old trade of airy castle-building.
-
-He had forty guineas in his pocket, he was sound wind and limb, and
-had all the world before him!
-
-All tinted in rosy and golden colours, he saw the future scenes in
-which he was to figure--kings being at times but accessories and
-"supers" of the grouping. He held imaginary conversations with the
-great, the noble, and the wealthy; he was the hero of a hundred
-achievements, but whether on land, on sea, or in the air, he had not
-as yet the most remote idea; but they all tended to one point, for
-his fancies, ambitions, and hopes seemed, not unnaturally, to revolve
-in an orbit, of which Flora Warrender and Lady Rohallion--for he
-dearly loved her too--were the combined centre of attraction.
-
-Full of himself and of the little world of fancy he was weaving, he
-cared not where he went or how the time passed, for he was just at
-that delightful and buoyant period of life when novels and tales of
-adventure fill the mind with sentiments and imageries that seem quite
-_realities_; thus, he felt assured that like some of the countless
-heroes, whose career he had studied at times in history but much
-oftener in fiction, he was destined for a very remarkable and
-brilliant future.
-
-Travelling in the corner of a carrier's waggon, after sharing the
-proprietor's sour milk and home-baked bannocks, did not look very
-like it; but was not this simply _the beginning of the end?_
-
-When again they met, how much would he have to tell Flora, commencing
-with the very first night of his departure, and that horrible
-adventure in the vault of Kilhenzie.
-
-But how if she married the Master, with his sneering smile and
-cat-like eyes?
-
-This fear chilled him certainly; but he felt trustful. Hope inspires
-fresh love as love inspires hope, for they must grow and flourish
-together; and so on and on he dreamed, until a sudden jolt of the
-waggon roughly roused him, and he found that it was just crossing
-"the auld brig o' Ayr," the four strong and lofty arches of which
-first spanned the stream when Alexander II. was king.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE QUEEN ANNE'S HEAD.
-
-"Well, suppose life be a desert? There are halting-places and
-shades, and refreshing waters; let us profit by them for to-day. We
-know that we must march on when to-morrow comes, and tramp on our
-destiny onward."--THACKERAY.
-
-
-Having amply satisfied the worthy carrier, Quentin quitted the
-waggon, and proceeded through the bustling, but then narrow, unpaved,
-and ill-lighted streets of Ayr, towards one of the principal inns,
-the Queen Anne's Head, the only ONe in the town with which he was
-familiar, as Lord Rohallion's carriage occasionally stopped there.
-It was a large, rambling, old-fashioned house, with a galleried
-court, ample stabling, low ceiled rooms; with dark oak panels, heavy
-dormant beams, and stone fire-places; wooden balconies projecting
-over stone piazzas, tall gables, and turret-like turnpike stairs; and
-a mouldered escutcheon over the entrance door showed that in palmier
-days it had been the town mansion of some steel-coated lesser baron.
-
-Hotels were still unknown in the three bailiwicks of Carrick, Kyle,
-and Cunninghame; thus in the yard behind the Queen Anne's Head, the
-stage coach, his majesty's mail (whose scarlet-coated guard bore
-pistols, and a blunderbuss that might have frightened Bonaparte), the
-carrier's waggon, the farmer's gig, and the lumbering, old-fashioned
-coaches of my Lord Rohallion, or the Earls of Cassilis and Eglinton,
-with their wooden springs and stately hammercloths, might all be seen
-standing side by side. Though war rendered the continent a sealed
-book to the English, Sir Walter Scott's poems and novels had not as
-yet opened up all Scotland to the tourists of Europe and Cockneydom.
-The kingdom of the Jameses could not be "done" then as now, by Brown,
-Jones, and Robinson, with knapsack on back (with Black's Guide and
-Bradshaw's Table, tartan peg-tops and paper collars), in a fortnight
-by rail and steam; hence a traveller on foot, and portmanteau in
-hand, was apt to be considered in the rural districts as an English
-pedlar or worse. Indeed, Scotland and England were then very little
-changed from what they had been in the days of William and Mary, and
-but for worthy old James Watt they might have been so _still_.
-
-"I'll be extravagant--I'll have a jovial dinner and a glass of wine,"
-thought Quentin, who, though pale and weary, had the appetite of a
-young hawk, notwithstanding all his doubts and troubles. "Which
-way?" he inquired of a surly-looking waiter, who stood at the inn
-door, with a towel over his arm; but this official, instead of
-replying, very leisurely surveyed Quentin from head to foot, and then
-glanced superciliously at his portmanteau.
-
-His wetting over night, his repose among the straw, and the
-subsequent journey among the carrier's bales and butter firkins had
-not improved his external appearance. Quentin felt aware of this,
-and reiterated angrily.
-
-"Which way--did you not hear me?"
-
-"You've taen the wrang gate, my friend, I'm thinking," replied the
-waiter, shaking his head.
-
-"Wrong way! What do you mean, fellow?"
-
-"Nae mair a fellow than yoursel'," said the waiter, saucily. "The
-'Blue Bell,' doon the next wynd, or the 'Souter Johnnie,' opposite
-the Tolbooth, will better suit ye than the 'Anne's Head.' They are
-famous resorts for packmen and dustifute bodies."
-
-"I mean to remain where I am. Show me to a bedroom, and order dinner
-for me in the dining-room," said Quentin, flushing up with sudden
-passion. "The best in the house, and lose no time!"
-
-"Some military gentlemen are in the best chamber," urged the waiter,
-whom this manner did not fail to impress, as he lingered with his
-hand on the lock of a door.
-
-"If the devil himself were there, what is it to me? Do as I order,
-or I will kick you into the street!"
-
-The waiter, who, as tourists and idle travellers were then unknown in
-Ayr, was utterly at a loss to make out the character of this new
-guest, bowed and ushered him into a bedroom, after which, he hastened
-away, no doubt to report upon the dubious kind of occupant, who had
-almost forced his way into No. 20.
-
-Though the contents of Quentin's portmanteau were limited, he
-speedily made such an improvement in his toilet, that when he came
-forth he received a very gracious bow from Boniface, who had been
-hovering about the corridor on the watch; and he was ushered into the
-principal dining-room of the establishment, a long and rather
-low-roofed apartment, having several massive tables and oval-backed
-old-fashioned chairs, a gigantic sideboard, within the brass rail of
-which stood three upright knife and spoon cases, several plated
-tankards, salvers, and branch candlesticks of quaint and antique form.
-
-The room was decorated with prints of Nelson's victories, the Siege
-of Gibraltar, the Battle of Alexandria, and other recent glories of
-our arms by sea and land; while over the mantel-piece was one of
-Gillray's gaudily-coloured political caricatures, which were then so
-much in vogue--for he was the H.B. and _Punch_ of the Regency.
-
-Two officers in undress uniform, with blue facings (their swords,
-sashes, and caps lying on the table beside them) were lounging over
-some brandy and water, and laughing at Gillray's, not over-delicate
-print, while Quentin retired to a remote corner of the room, and
-smarting under the waiter's impertinence, now felt more lonely and
-depressed than he had done since leaving home. He could remember
-that his last reception in that very house had been so different,
-when, in Lady Rohallion's carriage, he and Flora Warrender had driven
-up to the door and ordered luncheon.
-
-One of the military guests was a tall, weather-beaten, soldier-like
-man, about thirty-five years of age, a lieutenant apparently by the
-bullion of his epaulettes; the other was slender, fair-haired, and
-rather plainly featured, and proved to be the ensign of his
-recruiting party, which was then beating up at Ayr. As the churlish
-waiter passed them after putting some wine before Quentin, the
-lieutenant asked, in a low voice--
-
-"What is _he_?"
-
-"Who, sir?"
-
-"That young fellow in the corner."
-
-"Too proud for a recruit--an officer, I think," said the waiter, with
-a grin.
-
-"A sheriff's officer?--that boy, do you mean?"
-
-"No, sir--in the army," whispered the waiter, with a still more
-impertinent grin, and retired before Quentin could hurl the decanter
-at his head, which he felt very much inclined to do.
-
-He was seriously offended, but affected to look out of the window,
-while the two subalterns, turning their backs on him, resumed their
-conversation as if he had not been present.
-
-"And so, Pimple," said the senior, "when you proposed for the
-Bailie's daughter you were deep in love--"
-
-"Yes--very."
-
-"And in debt and drink, too?"
-
-"I was in love, I tell you," said the ensign, angrily.
-
-"For the _twenty-fifth_ time, eh?"
-
-"Not exactly, Monkton; but you are aware that fathers have flinty
-hearts, and seldom see with--with--"
-
-"With what--out with it, old fellow.",
-
-"Their charming daughters' eyes," sighed the ensign.
-
-"True, or I should have been seen to advantage long ago. But an
-ensign under orders for foreign service is not the most eligible of
-sons-in-law."
-
-"True--but in _my_ ease, at least," continued the ensign, who was
-quite serious, while his senior officer was purple with suppressed
-laughter, "in my case, as a young gentleman possessed of moderate
-fortune, moderate accomplishments----"
-
-"And moderate virtue--eh, Pimple?"
-
-"You are very impertinent, Monkton," remonstrated the other,
-upbraidingly.
-
-"But truthful, my dear boy, very truthful," said the quizzing
-lieutenant, for half the conversation was mere "barrack-room chaff,"
-to use a phrase then unknown; "and if old Squaretoes----"
-
-"Who do you mean?"
-
-"Mean? why this rich old flax-spinner, the father of your fair one.
-If he should come down handsomely, we fellows of the 25th would
-consider you quite as our factor--eh, Pimple?"
-
-On hearing this number, which was so familiar to his ear, Quentin
-Kennedy turned to observe the speakers more particularly, when a
-third officer, a very handsome man, about forty years of age, with a
-nut-brown cheek, a rollicking blue eye, and a hearty laugh, a square,
-well-built form, clad in full regimentals, scarlet-faced and lapelled
-with green and gold to the waist, and wearing large loose epaulettes,
-burst into the room, noisily and without ceremony. As he did so, he
-threw his arms round a very pretty chambermaid, who was tripping past
-with something from the sideboard, and kissing the girl, who was half
-pleased and half scared, he shouted in a tragi-comic manner, a
-passage from the _Merchant's Wife_, a now forgotten play:--
-
- "Woman thou stol'st my heart--just now thou stol'st it,
- A cannon-bullet might have kissed my lips
- And left me as much life!"
-
-
-"If the sour-visaged landlord catches you kissing any of his
-squaws"----suggested the lieutenant.
-
-"It is a custom we learned in the Dutch service," replied the new
-comer, laughingly.
-
-"Have you got the route for to-morrow, Warriston?" asked the
-lieutenant.
-
-"All right," said the other, flourishing an oblong official paper;
-"it was brought by an orderly dragoon--here it is. His majesty's
-will and pleasure, &c., to civil (query, uncivil) magistrates and
-others and so forth, to provide billets for the noisy, carriages for
-the drunken, and handcuffs for the disorderly, of three officers,
-three sergeants, and seventy rank and file, proceeding by Muirkirk
-and Kirknewton to Edinburgh--a seventy miles' march."
-
-"Ugh!" groaned the lieutenant.
-
-"So, Pimple, your love affair must be off like ourselves, by beat of
-drum to-morrow."
-
-The ensign heaved a kind of mock sigh, and raised his white eyebrows.
-
-"Now, waiter, quick with dinner--the best in larder and cellar," said
-the captain to that churlish attendant, who laid a knife and fork for
-Quentin at the extreme end of the long table.
-
-"Who is the solitary or exclusive person that is to be carved for
-there, half a mile off?" asked the captain.
-
-The waiter glanced towards Quentin.
-
-"Nonsense," said the Captain of the 94th, "lay his cover with
-ours--absurd to dine alone at the end of this devilish long table.
-You'll join us, eh?"
-
-"With pleasure," said Quentin, bowing.
-
-"A glass of wine with you. What are you drinking?"
-
-"Sherry."
-
-They filled their glasses, bowed, and drank, after which Quentin came
-forward and joined them.
-
-"I'm Dick Warriston, 94th. My friends, Mr. Monkton and Mr. Boyle,
-25th."
-
-"Mr. Kennedy," said Quentin, introducing himself, with a heightened
-colour.
-
-Quentin soon learned from their conversation that the captain had
-been recruiting for the 94th, and the other two officers for the
-25th, in Ayrshire, with considerable success; that they had obtained
-a sufficient number of men, and were under orders to march for the
-head-quarters of their respective corps by daybreak on the morrow.
-He also heard, incidentally, some of the little secrets of
-recruiting, and the tricks played by knowing sergeants to trepan men
-into paying smart-money, and so forth; that the lieutenant had been
-"rowed" with a threat of being summoned to head-quarters for
-enlisting men beneath the proper height, his sergeant having supplied
-them with false heels, five feet seven being the minimum for "the
-Borderers;" and next, that he had narrowly escaped a court-martial
-for sending some half-dozen O'Neils and O'Donnels (all Irish) to the
-regiment, as MacNeils and MacDonnels from the Western Isles.
-
-The three officers, in their jollity, thoughtlessness, laughter, and
-general lightness of heart, formed a strong contrast to poor
-Quentin's dejection of spirit. He envied them, and asked of himself
-why was he not happy and merry too--why was he not one of them?
-
-Richard Warriston, the senior, had begun life as a subaltern in
-General Sir Ralph Dundas's Regiment of the Scots-Dutch, as they were
-named--the famous old Scots brigade of six battalions, which served
-their High Mightinesses the States of Holland from the days of James
-VI. to those of the French Revolution--in all the bloody wars of two
-centuries, bearing themselves with honour and never losing a
-standard, though they had captured many from every army in Europe.
-They volunteered, as the 94th Foot, into the British service about
-the end of the last century, and came back to Scotland clad in the
-old Dutch yellow uniform; hence Warriston's stories and memories were
-all of Holland and Flanders, Prussia and Austria, and many a strange
-anecdote he had to tell at times.
-
-Desirous of showing the suspicious landlord and impertinent waiter
-how _other_ persons viewed him, Quentin ordered another bottle of
-wine.
-
-"The deuce!" he heard the captain whisper to Monkton; "we can't
-permit this mere boy to treat us to wine."
-
-"_Two_ bottles, and be sharp, waiter," said Quentin, whose pride the
-well-meaning officer had piqued.
-
-"He is a regular trump," said Monkton, adjusting his napkin.
-
-"A gentleman--a phrase I prefer," added Warriston in the same
-undertone, as he proceeded to slice down a gallant capon; for he
-could perceive at once, by Quentin's bearing at the dinner-table--the
-truest and best test--that he knew all its etiquette and had been
-used to good society. As the wine circulated and reserve thawed (not
-that there was much of it, certainly, in the present quartet) Quentin
-asked Monkton if he remembered an officer named Girvan in his corps.
-
-"Girvan--Girvan--remember him?--yes; an old quartermaster--rose from
-the ranks, didn't he?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"He left us on a half-pay commission in the year I joined, during
-Lord Rohallion's lieutenant-colonelcy. (By-the-bye, his lordship
-lives somewhere hereabout; should leave our cards for him, but have
-no time.) Girvan was a queer old fellow, who always wore a yellow
-wig--do you know him?"
-
-"Intimately. I have known him from my childhood," said Quentin, his
-eyes sparkling and heart swelling with pleasure, that he could speak
-of some one at home.
-
-"Any relation of yours?" asked Monkton; and so weak is human nature
-that Quentin blushed that any one should think he was so, and then
-blushed deeper still that he was ashamed of his true and sterling old
-friend.
-
-"Perhaps he is your father?" suggested the ensign, mischievously.
-
-"Sir, I said my name is Kennedy; my father was a captain of the Scots
-Brigade in the French service."
-
-"Ah--indeed!" said Warriston, becoming suddenly interested; "is he
-still alive?"
-
-"Alas, sir, no!"
-
-"Killed in action, likely?"
-
-"He was drowned at sea, after an engagement with a French ship off
-the mouth of the Clyde."
-
-"And where have you come from, that you travel thus alone?"
-
-"I cannot say."
-
-"Then where are you going to?" asked the ensign.
-
-"I don't know," replied Quentin, sadly.
-
-"Can't say and don't know!" said the captain of the Scots Brigade;
-"then my advice would be to stay where you are."
-
-"That is not possible."
-
-"You are an odd fellow--quite an enigma," said Monkton, laughing.
-
-"Perhaps I am," replied poor Quentin, with a sickly smile.
-
-"Do you know, my young friend, that I have been observing you closely
-for some time (pardon me saying so), but with something of friendly
-interest, and I perceive an air of dejection about you that shows
-there is something wrong--a screw loose somewhere," said Captain
-Warriston, kindly.
-
-"Wrong?" repeated Quentin, flushing, and in doubt how to take the
-remark.
-
-"Yes; I have seen so much of the world that I can read a man's face
-like an open book."
-
-"And the reading of mine----"
-
-"Is satisfactory; but there is something in your eyes that tells me
-you are in a scrape somehow--at home, perhaps?"
-
-"Home!" exclaimed Quentin, in a voice that trembled, for the wine was
-affecting him; "I have _none_!"
-
-The three officers glanced at each other, and the fair-haired
-ensign's white eyebrows went up rather superciliously.
-
-"I find that I must talk with you, my young friend," said
-Warriston--"will you have a cigar?" he added, offering his case after
-the cloth was removed.
-
-"Thank you--no; I am not a smoker."
-
-In fact, Quentin had never seen the soothing "weed" in such a form,
-until his foe, the Master, came to Rohallion.
-
-"Waiter, bring candles--another bottle, and then be off; these
-decanters are empty--fill again; le Roi est mort--vive le Roi!"
-
-"In short, Mr. Kennedy, you have run from college or home, I fear,"
-said Monkton; "what have you been about--making love to some of your
-lady-mother's maids, and got into a double scrape, or what? See how
-he flushes--there has been some love in the case, at least."
-
-"Were you never in love?" asked Quentin, who certainly did redden,
-but with annoyance.
-
-"Who--I--me?--what the devil--in love!" and the bulky lieutenant lay
-back in his chair and fairly laughed himself crimson, either at the
-idea or the simplicity of the question. "I have long since learned
-that there is nothing so variable in the world as woman's temper."
-
-"The Horse Guards excepted," said Warriston; "the great nobs there
-never know their own minds for three days consecutively; witness all
-the vacillation about who is to command the Spanish expedition."
-
-"Then, Mr. Pimple," began Quentin, "have you ever----"
-
-"Mr. Kennedy," said the ensign, angrily, "I'll have you to know, sir,
-that my name is Boyle--Ensign Patrick Boyle, at your service."
-
-"So it is," said the lieutenant, choking with laughter, on perceiving
-that Quentin looked quite bewildered; "but we call him Pimple at the
-mess for being only five feet and an inch or so. He is not big
-enough to be a Boyle, though he is one of a tall Ayrshire stock. Is
-not it so, Pat, old boy? Perhaps you are some relation of the famous
-chemist?"
-
-"Which--who?"
-
-"I mean Robert Boyle was seventh son of the Earl of Cork, and became
-_father_ of chemistry. Now, don't think of calling me out, Pat, for,
-'pon my soul, I won't go. The 25th couldn't do without us. You must
-know, Warriston, that Pimple was in the Royals before he joined us;
-but he had always a fancy for the Borderers. You used to pass
-yourself, in mufti, as a 25th man; didn't you, Pimple?--long before
-you had the honour to admire that blessed number on your own
-buttons--eh?"
-
-Though hearty, hospitable, and jovial, to Quentin it seemed that
-Monkton had an irrepressible desire to quiz the ensign, even to
-rudeness, and the latter took it all good-naturedly enough till the
-fumes of the wine mounted into his head.
-
-"But, to return to what we were talking of," said Warriston,
-earnestly and kindly. "Can I advise you in any way, my friend? Are
-you already a prodigal, who has neither a herd of promising pigs, nor
-the husks wherewith to feed them?"
-
-"Excuse me entering much into my own affairs. My father, I have told
-you, is dead. I have no mother--no friends--to counsel me," he
-continued, in a tremulous voice, "and I know not whether to join the
-service or drown myself in the nearest river."
-
-"The Ayr is not very deep," said Monkton, despite a deprecatory
-glance from his senior; "why don't you say hang yourself?"
-
-"Well, then, or hang myself," said Quentin, bitterly.
-
-"And the alternative is joining the service?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You pay his Majesty and his uniform a high compliment," said
-Warriston, with a hearty laugh, in which Quentin, seeing the
-ungraciousness of his remark, was fain to join; "but as for entering
-the ranks, you must not think of that. Why not do as I did, and many
-better men have done--join some regiment of Cavalry or Infantry, as a
-gentleman volunteer?"
-
-A new light seemed to break upon Quentin with these words--a new hope
-and spirit flashed up in his heart.
-
-"How, sir," he asked, "how, sir? Explain to me, pray."
-
-"Zounds, man! it is very simple. A letter of recommendation to the
-officer commanding any regiment now under orders for the seat of war,
-a few pounds in your pocket to pay your way till under canvas or
-before the enemy, are all that is necessary."
-
-"Thanks to a dear friend, I have money enough and to spare; but the
-letter----"
-
-"We have too many volunteers already with both battalions of the
-Scots Brigade," said Warriston, reflectively.
-
-"But you can give him a letter to our commanding officer," interposed
-Monkton.
-
-"Why not give him one yourself, Dick?"
-
-"Old Middleton would never believe in any person who was warmly
-recommended for the first vacant commission by such a fellow as I."
-
-"Egad, you are perhaps right," said Warriston, laughing; "get me ink
-and paper, Pimple----"
-
-"Boyle," said the ensign, sullenly.
-
-"Beg pardon, Boyle, I mean--thanks. Here goes for all the virtues
-that were ever recorded on a rich man's tombstone." With great
-readiness Captain Warriston wrote a letter of introduction and
-recommendation for Quentin to the officer commanding the 25th Foot,
-in which he gave him as many good qualities as the sheet of paper
-could contain, and wrote of him as warmly as if he had known him from
-boyhood. It was unanimously approved of by all present--by none more
-than Quentin himself, and after it was duly scaled, he pocketed it as
-carefully as ever Gil Blas did his patent of nobility.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-NEW FRIENDS.
-
- "Why unite to banish care?
- Let him come our joys to share;
- Doubly blest our cup shall flow
- When it soothes a brother's woe;
- 'Twas for this the powers divine
- Crowned our board with generous wine."
- TANNAHILL.
-
-
-"The first skirmish, perhaps, and the first general action certainly,
-will see you an officer; you shall be one yet, my boy, and a gallant
-one, I hope," said Warriston, shaking Quentin's hand.
-
-The weird sisters' prophecy was not more grateful to the ears of the
-Scottish usurper than these words were to Quentin Kennedy; but he
-asked,--
-
-"If I should be disabled before appointment?"
-
-"Ah, the devil! don't think of that; you would get only a private
-soldier's pension."
-
-"That is not very encouraging."
-
-"'Tis better for the volunteer to be shot outright than merely
-mutilated. But remember, that many of our best officers have joined
-the army as simple volunteers. There was Lord Heathfield, the
-gallant defender of Gibraltar, began life as a volunteer with the
-23rd at Edinburgh; and one of our Highland regiments, the 71st, I
-think, had as many as fifteen such cadets serving in its ranks during
-the American war, and splendid officers they have all become. I did
-not serve in America, for our corps was then in the Dutch service.
-The Prussian army under old Frederick was the Paradise of such
-volunteers, and I know one instance in which a soldier of my father's
-regiment was made a general in one year, by Frederick's mere caprice."
-
-"A general!" exclaimed Monkton, who was somewhat soured by the
-slowness of his promotion.
-
-"It was at the battle before Prague, and while my father, John
-Warriston of that ilk, then a very young man, commanded the senior
-battalion of the Prussian Foot Guards, that Marshal Daun forced
-Frederick to raise the siege and retire. As the Prussians fell back,
-their left wing became confused by the fury of the Austrian advance.
-Frederick's aides-de-camp were all killed, and he was compelled to
-gallop about, giving his own orders, accompanied by a single orderly,
-Strutzki, the old Putkammer Hussar, in whose arms he died thirty
-years after. The ground was rough and his horse was weary, so it
-stumbled suddenly and threw him at a place where the field was
-covered by the killed and wounded of my father's battalion, which was
-then retreating, but in good order. As Frederick gathered himself
-up, a soldier who lay near him wounded, exclaimed,--
-
-"'Sire, sire, get a brigade of guns into position on yonder eminence,
-or it is all up with your left wing!'
-
-"'How so, fellow?' asked the king, whose temper was no way improved
-by his tumble.
-
-"'Because there is an ambuscade in the valley beyond it.'
-
-"'I have twice tried to make a stand, comrade.'
-
-"'Try a third time, Father Frederick.'
-
-"'Why?'
-
-"'A third chance is ever the lucky one.'
-
-"'Good; I'll throw forward the Putkammer Hussars, and let the brigade
-of Seydlitz support them.'
-
-"'But try the effect of a few round shot in the defile,' persisted
-the wounded man. 'A devil of a day this for us, Father Frederick!
-Macchiavelli, in his 'Art of War,' declares the invention of
-gun-powder a mere matter of smoke, not to be deemed of the smallest
-importance. Ach, Gott! I wish he was here before Prague with this
-Austrian bullet in the calf of his leg.'
-
-"'What, my friend, you are a reader as well as a soldier?'
-
-"'Yes, sire, I have had the honour to read all the works of your
-majesty.'
-
-"'A man of sense!" said Frederick, taking a pinch of rappee; 'your
-name?'
-
-"'Peter Schreutzer, of Colonel Warriston's battalion of the Guards.'
-
-"Frederick drew from one of his fingers a ring of small value (he was
-not a man given to trinkets or adornment), and gave it to the
-soldier, saying:
-
-"'If you escape this field of Prague, bring this ring to me yourself,
-comrade Peter.'
-
-"Mounting his horse, he galloped after his retreating army, and
-overtaking a few pieces of artillery he posted them on the height
-indicated by Schreutzer, and opened fire on the wooded defile--a
-measure which dislodged a great ambuscade of Marshal Daun's infantry,
-and saved from destruction the Prussian left wing, the retreat of
-which was nobly covered by the Warriston battalion.
-
-"Three months after this, when Frederick was seated in his tent,
-surrounded by his staff and dictating orders, a private of the Guards
-limped in, supported by a stick, and kneeling presented him with a
-ring.
-
-"'Ach, Gott, what is this?' said Frederick; 'Oho, 'tis my student of
-Macchiavelli; well, comrade, I followed your advice and saved my left
-wing.'
-
-"'Thank God, who inspired me with the idea!' said Schreutzer.
-
-"'For that day's work I name you a captain in the Line,' exclaimed
-the king.
-
-"At Rosbach, where in the same year Frederick defeated the French,
-Peter gained his majority in the morning and his lieutenant-colonelcy
-in the evening. Then came the affair of Dresden, where the advice
-given by him at a council of war was so sound and skilful that he was
-appointed major-general. What think you of that, my young
-volunteer--in one year to have the private's shoulder-knot replaced
-by the aiguilette of a general officer?"
-
-"It was talent, but strangely favoured by kingly caprice," said
-Monkton.
-
-"Schreutzer succeeded my father in command of the Guards, when he
-fell under Frederick's displeasure and quitted the Prussian service
-in disgust. Remind me on the march to-morrow to tell you how that
-came about, for it is rather a good story."
-
-"And now to bed," said Monkton, who had imbibed a considerable
-quantity of wine; "at last we may put our 'beating orders' in the
-fire, for march is the word!"
-
-"What are they?" asked Quentin.
-
-"Warrants to raise men by beat of drum," explained the captain,
-politely. "They are originally signed by the royal hand, but copies
-are taken from them, and signed by the secretary of state for war,
-and without them no officer can beat a recruiting drum anywhere. You
-have raised nearly a hundred men here, Dick, and must have made
-something of it."
-
-"Much need," grumbled the lieutenant, making ineffectual attempts to
-buckle on his sword, as if he was going to bed with it. "I am Dick
-Monkton, of Monkton in Lothian, of course; but in name only, for
-those paternal acres are so covered by original sin in the shape of
-mortgages that never a penny comes to me; so I am compelled to live
-and be jolly on six shillings and sixpence per diem, less the
-infernal income-tax; and being a fellow of a generous disposition, I
-am always losing my heart and my money among the fair sex."
-
-"Good night, Mr. Kennedy," said Captain Warriston; "if you are still
-in the same mood of mind to-morrow, you may turn my letter to some
-account. The drum will beat at daybreak."
-
-"Put your pride in a knapsack or wherever else it can be conveniently
-carried, my boy," said Monkton, making a fearful lurch over a chair;
-"volunteer and come with us to fight Nap and his Frenchmen." Then he
-began to sing, tipsily:
-
- "'Since some have from ditches
- And coarse leather breeches
- Been raised to be rulers and wallowed in riches,
- Prythee, Dame Fortune, come down from thy wheel;
- For if the gipsies don't lie
- I shall be a general at least ere I die!'
-
-
-"Ah, damme, but we are not in the Prussian service, like that old
-cock, Peter Shooter, or what's his name?"
-
-Monkton was becoming seriously tipsy, so Quentin, on receiving a
-warning glance from Captain Warriston, took his candle and retired to
-No. 20 for the night, feeling sensibly that he had imbibed more wine
-than he was wont to do after supper at Rohallion.
-
-He could not sleep, however, till the night was far advanced, and the
-knowledge that drum was to beat by daybreak kept him nervously
-wakeful, lest he might not hear it, and perhaps be left behind. The
-drum was to beat, and _for him_! There was a strange charm in the
-idea: it seemed to realize somewhat of his old day-dreams and
-romantic aspirations. Already he felt himself a soldier, and bound
-for service and adventure! How much would he have to relate when he
-wrote to the good old quartermaster, announcing that he was off to
-join the army, and _his own_ old corps, the 25th, whose memory he so
-treasured, though his name, alas! was long since forgotten in its
-ranks.
-
-And there was Flora--dear, loving, gentle Flora. When was he to
-write to her, and through what channel? Ah, if he could calculate on
-promotion like that of Peter Schreutzer! He had only been absent
-from Flora a night and a day, just four-and-twenty hours, and already
-weeks seemed to have elapsed, (what would months--what would years
-seem?) while the arrival of Cosmo and long prior events seemed to
-have happened but yesterday. Under these circumstances, severance
-frequently causes the same inverted ideas of time, that a sudden
-death or other great calamity occasion.
-
-At the moment Quentin was dozing off to sleep, and to dream of past
-pleasures or of future triumphs (the ensign being long since in deep
-slumber on a sofa), he heard his two new friends parting in the
-corridor after having had one bottle more.
-
-"I say, Warriston, old boy, see me to my door, and just shove me
-in--there's a good fellow--here it is--thanks," stammered Monkton;
-"may you not have been rash in giving such a fi--fi--fiery old Turk
-as Middleton of ours, a letter for--for--damme, a perfect
-stranger--perfect stranger?"
-
-"Not at all," he heard Warriston reply; "the lad has a bearing I
-like, and on his own good and unerring conduct as a gentleman and
-volunteer must depend his chances of ever wearing these honourable
-badges on his shoulders. (He shook his large gold epaulettes as he
-spoke.) One o'clock--in three hours the drum will beat! I hope we
-shall have a fine day; last night the rain fell as if old Noah had
-hove up his anchor again. Good-night, Monkton--sleep if you can."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE YOUNG VOLUNTEER.
-
- "When I was an infant, gossips would say
- I'd when older be a soldier;
- Rattles and toys I'd throw them away,
- Unless a gun or sabre.
- When a younker up I grew,
- I saw one day a grand review,
- Colours flying set me dying,
- To embark in a life so new.
- Roll drums merrily--march away!"
- _Old Song._
-
-
-Quentin had been asleep--to him it seemed but five minutes, though
-two hours had elapsed--when he started as if he had received an
-electric shock. The warning drum was being beaten loudly and sharply
-under his window, and soon after followed the long roll, whose
-summons admits of no delay, even to the most weary soldier.
-
-Half asleep and half refreshed, he sprang from bed; grey daylight was
-stealing faintly in, and all Ayr seemed yet a-bed, the shutters
-closed, the chimneys smokeless. The morning mist was curling in
-masses along the slopes of the uplands; the summits of the town
-steeples and the gothic tower of St. John were reddened by the first
-rays of the sun that was yet below the horizon, and the little
-drummer boy, as he paced slowly to and fro, in heavy marching order,
-with a black glazed knapsack strapped on his back, and a white canvas
-havresack slung crosswise over his pipeclayed sword-belt, seemed to
-be the only person abroad in the streets as yet.
-
-"Rouse!" cried a voice, which Quentin knew to be that of Captain
-Warriston, who knocked sharply on the room door; "pack your traps,
-Kennedy, as quickly us you can. My man will put your portmanteau on
-the baggage-cart. A cup of hot coffee awaits you in the dining-room.
-Never march with an empty stomach, unless you can't help it."
-
-While dressing hurriedly, Quentin heard the worthy captain rousing
-his lieutenant, which seemed a process of some difficulty, and
-productive of considerable banter and vociferation. As for the
-ensign, he had never undressed or been in bed, so he was already
-awake, and accoutred with sword, sash, and gorget, and looked very
-pale and miserable as he swallowed his hot coffee in the twilight of
-the wainscoted dining-room.
-
-The early morning air was chilly, and Quentin, but half awake, felt
-his teeth chattering as he issued into the street. The reflection
-flashed on his mind that it was not yet too late to retrace his
-steps, and alter his intentions. But why do so? asked reason. What
-other course was open to him? On this morning, with his new friends
-and patrons--particularly Warriston, for whom he had conceived a
-great friendship--he felt his position was very different from what
-it was yesterday, when, without views, objects, or a defined future,
-he awoke among Gibbie Crossgrane's straw in the vault of Kilhenzie.
-
-Already the soldiers of the recruiting-parties, with their various
-recruits, were falling in. There were three sergeants, three
-corporals, three privates, three drummers, and three fifers of the
-25th, the 90th (Lord Lynedoch's Greybreeks), and the 94th, with
-fifty-five recruits, all sturdy rustics, with cockades of tricoloured
-ribbon streaming from their bonnets, for that most hideous of
-headdresses, the round hat, was almost unknown then among the
-peasantry of Scotland.
-
-All seemed sleepy, heavy-eyed, and were yawning drowsily, as they
-shouldered against each other, and shuffled awkwardly while forming
-line and answering to their names, which were called over by
-Monkton's sergeant, a portly old halberdier, named Norman Calder.
-
-"Now then, Master William Monkton, are we to march, without you, or
-must I detail a fatigue party to tumble you out of bed?" cried
-Warriston, angrily, in the hall of the inn. "There goes the last
-roll of the drum, and all are present but you!"
-
-"Ugh!" said the lieutenant, as he came forth adjusting his
-regimentals in the street, tying his sash, and buckling his
-sword-belt, and certainly not looking the better for his potations
-overnight; "as Scott of Amwell says, 'I hate that drum's discordant
-sound'--'pon my soul, I do! Such a restless dog you are, Warriston!
-Two hours hence would have done just as well for you, and immensely
-better for all, than this. Half-past four, A.M.--damme!" he added,
-glancing up at a church-dial which was glittering in the rising sun;
-"this is a most unearthly proceeding, and likely to be the death of
-poor Pimple. Good morning, Kennedy, my young volunteer; how do you
-like this kind of work?"
-
-Quentin felt bound to say that he enjoyed it very much.
-
-"Bah! after being two hours in bed, having to tumble up in this
-fashion, is just as pleasant as having to go out with a dead shot in
-the honeymoon, or in the morning on which you have made an
-assignation with a pretty girl on your way home; or having a bill
-returned on your hands; a horse lamed when the starting-bell rings,
-or when you are about to ride a steeple-chase, or lead a charge; or
-any other thing that annoys you, by jingo!"
-
-As Quentin had never experienced any of the five grievances
-enumerated by Monkton, he could only laugh, and ask--
-
-"Then what about 'the lark at Heaven's gate'--has his voice no
-charms?"
-
-"I'd rather hear his morning reveille when going home to my quarters."
-
-The scene had now become very animated. The soldiers, fifteen in
-number, were all in heavy marching order, with only their side-arms,
-however, and were all sturdy, weatherbeaten fellows, with whom
-Quentin found himself rather an object of interest, as he had given
-Sergeant Calder a couple of guineas to enable them all to drink his
-health.
-
-Many of the townspeople were crowding round to see them depart; and
-many a repentant recruit now bade a last farewell to sobbing parents,
-to brother, or sister, or sweetheart, all deploring the step which
-they deemed would lead him to ruin and death, for there were no
-marshal's batons to be found in the knapsacks of the 25th or 94th, as
-in those of "the Corsican Tyrant," whose name was as that of a bogle
-for nurses to scare their children with.
-
-While Warriston, an indefatigable officer, bustled about, getting the
-motley party into something like military order, and detailed a
-corporal and three men to take charge of the impressed cart which was
-to carry their baggage, with some of the soldiers' wives and
-children, his lieutenant lounged at the door of the Queen Anne's
-Head, smoking a pipe, with his shako very much over one of his wicked
-eyes, as he joked and bantered those about him.
-
-"Come, landlord," said he to the sulky Boniface, who made his
-appearance with a red Kilmarnock nightcap on his head; "give us a
-farewell smile, do, there's a good fellow; I'll take a kiss from your
-wife, too, on credit (I'm her debtor a long way already), and you may
-put both in the bill when next we halt here. Gad, Kennedy, these
-people hate the sight of a billet-order as the devil hates holy
-water. Those who grudge the British soldier a night's lodging should
-have a trial of a few Cossacks or Austrians; but it all comes of the
-levellers, the opposition, and the democrats, damme! So Pimple, my
-boy, have a dram--you have had your run of flirtation with the
-flax-dresser's daughter, and yet have got off without having to
-propose for the passée heiress, or go out about sunrise with the
-incensed parent."
-
-"Yes," replied the ensign, playing with the tassels of his sash, and
-assuming a would-be gallant air; "close run, though--once thought I
-was nearly in for it."
-
-"Ah, you're safe now; but what says the couplet?"
-
-"What couplet? I don't know."
-
-"It says that to you, my friend,
-
- "From wedlock's noose thus once by fate exempt,
- The next may prove, alas! a noose of hemp!"
-
-
-The ensign was about to make an angry retort, when Warriston gave the
-command,
-
-"Threes right--quick march! come, come, move off, gentlemen." The
-sharp drums and shrill fifes struck up merrily in the echoing streets
-(it was the unvarying 'Girl I left behind me'); a lusty cheer from
-the departing recruits was loudly responded to by the people around
-and from those at many a window. Others followed, loud, long, and
-hearty, and catching the spirit of enthusiasm from those about him,
-Quentin felt every pulse throb, every nerve and fibre quicken, as his
-heart became light and joyous, and as Warriston drew his arm through
-his own, and falling into the rear of the party, they departed from
-the inn.
-
-How different were Quentin's emotions now, when compared to the sense
-of dejection and desolation, with which, portmanteau in hand, he had
-entered that ancient caravanserai yesterday!
-
-"Now for your first day's march, Kennedy," said the captain; "never
-mind the _past_--it is gone for ever, and is useless now."
-
-"Unless it afford me some hint to guide me for the future."
-
-"Right," said the captain; "faith! boy, I like your spirit and
-reflective turn."
-
-The cheers of the people and the rattle of the drums, as the party
-marched over the new bridge of Ayr, defied every attempt at
-conversation. All viewed the departing band with interest, for, ere
-long, they would be all sent to the seat of war, and be before the
-enemy; and of those blue-bonneted recruits who were leaving the banks
-and braes of Ayr, and old Coila's hills and glens, few or none might
-ever return. But there was then a high spirit in all the British
-Isles.
-
-The long dread of invasion from France, political and religious
-rancour, with years of continued victory by sea and land--the glories
-and the fall of Nelson and Abercrombie, the brilliant but terrible
-career of Napoleon following close on the atrocities of the French
-Revolution--all conspired to fill honest Mr. Bull's heart with a
-furore for military fame; he ceased to smoke the pipe of peace, and
-the worthy man's funny red coat and warlike pigtail were never off.
-Gillray's coloured caricatures of French soldiers in cocked hats and
-long blue coats, and of their "Corsican tyrant," in every ridiculous
-and degrading situation that art could conceive or malevolence
-inspire, filled every print-shop; and the press, such as it was,
-groaned alternately under puffs of self-glorification and scurrilous
-abuse of France and its emperor, with a systematic expression of true
-British contempt for anything foreign and continental. Thus the
-whole country swarmed with troops of every arm, and all Britain was a
-species of garrison, from London to Lerwick, and from Banff to
-Bristol.
-
-They had been some hours on the march before Quentin thought of
-obtaining a very requisite piece of information--to wit, their
-destination, when he was informed by Captain Warriston that the three
-recruiting parties were to embark at Leith on board an armed smack or
-letter-of-marque, for Colchester barracks in England, where the three
-Scottish regiments were stationed.
-
-"After I travel so far," said Quentin, "I do sincerely hope the
-commanding officer will approve of me."
-
-"Rest assured that he will," replied Warriston, confidently; "he is a
-plain, sometimes rough old soldier, but he knows me well."
-
-"Who is colonel of the regiment?"
-
-"Lieutenant-General Lord Elphinstone is our colonel," said Monkton;
-"and our lieutenant-colonel being aged--an old Minden officer,
-indeed--has permission to sell out. Jack Middleton, the major, is in
-command at present, and as he is too poor to purchase, he is
-revenging himself upon the regiment."
-
-"How?" asked Quentin, with surprise.
-
-"Though our corps is a crack one (what corps is not so in its own
-estimation?) he harangues us daily on the bad discipline and disorder
-in which his predecessor has left us; so all have gone to school
-again, from the oldest captain down to the youngest fifer."
-
-"Indeed," said the bewildered volunteer; "that is very hard!"
-
-"So it is, damme! but old fellows who smelt powder against Washington
-at Brandywine, and under the Duke in Holland, at Alkmaar and
-Egmont-op-Zee, are now at the goose-step and pacing-stick; and woe to
-the private who fails to have the barrel and lock of his musket
-bright as silver, and his pouch bottled to perfection, so that he
-might shave or dress his pigtail in it. We have punishment parades,
-extra drills, kit-inspections, drums beating, bugles sounding all
-day, and often check-rolls thrice in the night, and orderlies flying
-all over the barracks like madmen, and all because old Jack Middleton
-has not enough of tin to purchase the lieutenant-colonelcy. There is
-little Pimple--by Jove! he'll not be in Colchester a week before the
-major frightens him into the measles."
-
-"Who is to succeed the lieutenant-colonel?" asked Warriston, who
-laughed at the subaltern's angry description of the state of matters
-at headquarters.
-
-"The Horse Guards, those Fates who sit on high over the British
-soldier, alone know. Some good kind of fellow, I hope, before I
-rejoin; for rather than serve under old Middleton (excuse me,
-Warriston, as he is a friend of yours) I'd send in my papers--go
-recruiting for the 2nd West India at Sierra Leone, or join that fine
-body of men, the York Rangers!"
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"A condemned corps, named for the good duke; but whose officers,
-damme, sleep at night with loaded pistols under their pillows, for
-fear of their own men."
-
-"This is not very cheering for you, Kennedy," said Warriston,
-laughing heartily; "but you must not mind all Monkton says."
-
-"No matter; I have given my word, and go I shall."
-
-It was evident that Monkton was a little soured, for he alternately
-vowed himself tired of the service and then an enthusiast for it, and
-his corps in particular; but he was rather blue-devilled this
-morning, and uncheered by the blue sunny sky and golden cornfields,
-the songs of the birds and mild morning breeze, he swore at the long
-dusty road and grumbled at the slowness of his promotion, and that by
-circumstances beyond his control, after fifteen years' service and
-having seen much fighting, he was only a lieutenant still; "but you
-will learn, ere long, Kennedy," he added, "that the lieutenants are
-the salt of the service, and do all the actual work. Middleton will
-judge of you, not from others, but from yourself alone. The
-battalion will likely go abroad under his orders; a month more may
-see us before the enemy, and you in possession of your epaulettes, if
-some poor sub--say Pimple here--is knocked on the head."
-
-"Thank you," said Boyle; "why not suggest yourself--one sub is the
-same as another."
-
-"Not all--not at all; it would be no use. They never hit me
-seriously in Flanders or Denmark, and they won't do it in Spain or
-North Holland."
-
-"My old friend Middleton must have changed sorely to have become the
-Tartar and martinet you describe him," said Warriston; "if so, he
-would have suited old Frederick of Prussia to a hair."
-
-"You told us to remind you of a story which was worth telling."
-
-"About Frederick and my father?"
-
-"Exactly," said Quentin.
-
-"And how he and I came to be in the Dutch service. Well, the story
-has something droll in it, and though some may have heard the affair,
-as it found its way into the newspapers, I shall give you the version
-which I gave to Mr. Thomas Holcroft, when he was preparing that very
-light and most readable work on the Life, Times, and Works of the
-Great Frederick, in thirteen huge royal octavo volumes."
-
-"Then it is to be found there?"
-
-"On the contrary, he omitted it, not considering it quite a feather
-in his hero's cap."
-
-"And the story----"
-
-"Occurred in this way."
-
-But the story with which Warriston beguiled a few miles of the
-morning march deserves, perhaps, a chapter to itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE PRUSSIAN GRENADIER.
-
- "There was a criminal in a cart
- A-going to be hanged;
- Respite to him was granted,
- And cart and crowd did stand,
- To know if he would marry a wife
- Or rather choose to die;
- ''Tother's the worst, drive on the cart,'
- The criminal did reply."--_Old Ballad._
-
-
-You have all heard I presume (the captain began), of the singular
-predilection which the late King of Prussia had for tall swinging
-grenadiers, how he raked all Germany and Pomerania to procure them,
-and had them formed into corps and companies, sparing nothing in
-their equipment to add to their vast stature and warlike
-aspect--giving them the highest of heels to their boots, the tallest
-bearskin caps, and the longest and largest feathers that could be
-worn with safety to the neck and vertebral column. Those
-cross-belted Goliaths were quite a passion with him, and the first
-battalion of his Foot Guards, which my worthy father had the honour
-to command, was, no doubt, the most gigantic regiment in the Prussian
-army, perhaps in Europe; and to see its twelve companies of giants
-marching past in review order, and in open column, on that little
-meadow near Halle, which, from the time of the old Dessauer,* has
-been the training ground of the Prussian infantry, was truly a sight
-to marvel at and remember.
-
-
-* Prince Leopold, of Anhalt Dessau, born there in 1676, the bravest
-of three generations who held the highest rank in the Prussian
-army.--_General Seydlitz's Life_.
-
-
-The Battalion Von Warriston was, to Frederick the Great, his pet
-band--the flower and pattern corps of his carefully-trained and
-well-developed army!
-
-Now it chanced that one day, about the year 1780, he had been riding
-in the environs of Berlin, attended only by Strutzki, his old
-Putkammer orderly, with the gunpowder-spotted visage. As he pottered
-along on his old shambling horse, with a pair of large spectacles on
-his nose--the royal nose, I mean--one eye was fixed on his bridle and
-the other on Herr Doctor Johann Georg Zimmerman's then famous but
-dreary work on Solitude, with his flap pockets stuffed with letters
-from Voltaire and Hume, general orders, proof-sheets of plays, and
-other rubbish, he suddenly saw something in the opinions of the Herr
-Doctor which displeased him, and jotting off a note on the subject,
-he despatched it by Strutzki.
-
-Then resuming his meditations he rode on alone into the fields,
-smoking a pipe which had belonged to his old and faithful comrade,
-Seydlitz, and which he had picked up on the field of Rosbach, when
-that general gave his usual signal for the Hussars to charge by
-flinging his pipe into the air.
-
-In a lonely place he came suddenly upon a peasant girl who possessed
-remarkable beauty, but that which he greatly preferred, astonishing
-stature. She was fully six feet, and so splendidly proportioned that
-Frederick reined up his horse and slung his pipe at his button-hole
-to observe her, which he could do for some time unobserved, as she
-was busy twining creepers and flowers over the front paling of a
-cottage named the Wild Katze, a wayside tavern.
-
-"Bey'm Henker!" thought he, "could I but get you married to one of my
-grenadiers, my long-legged Fraulein, what sons you might have! What
-recruits--what a progeny of giant children to recruit the next
-generation of my guards!"
-
-The tall girl now perceived the king observing her, and curtseyed and
-laughed, for she had no idea of his rank. His horse furniture was
-shabby, and his own appearance was far from being stately or
-imposing. He stooped about the shoulders, and had a snuffy drop at
-the end of his nose. Over his uniform and decorations he wore a
-greasy old military surtout-coat of blue cloth, lined with white
-merino, its buttons, sleeves, and all of the plainest kind; an old
-battered cocked-hat, with what had once been a white feather binding
-the edge of it, and its rim being perforated by musket-shot; a pair
-of common dragoon pistols in holsters without flaps, and a pair of
-rusty spurs on long jack-boots that had never been blackened since
-they left the maker's hands, though they were greased by Strutzki
-every morning.
-
-"What is your name, my handsome fraulein?" he inquired, while lifting
-his hat.
-
-"Gretchen Viborg," replied the tall beauty.
-
-"Are you married?" he asked with increasing suavity.
-
-"No, mein herr."
-
-"But anxious to be, doubtless," said Frederick, perpetrating a wink.
-
-Then the girl, supposing that this funny old man was about to make
-some proposal to her, burst into a fit of laughter, in which the king
-good-humouredly joined, and then asked,
-
-"How old are you?"
-
-"Nearly twenty, mein herr."
-
-"Good. Are you the keeper of the Wilde Katze?"
-
-"No--my father is."
-
-"Would you like to earn easily a rix-dollar?"
-
-"That will I do readily, mein herr," said the girl, coming briskly
-forward, for a rix-dollar was then about the value of four of our
-guineas.
-
-"Then you must deliver a note for me?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"In the city."
-
-"And to whom, mein herr?
-
-"To the Colonel von Warriston at the palace near the Wiesse Saal.
-
-The girl, little suspecting what was in store for her, curtseyed and
-signified her readiness, while the king, drawing forth his tablets,
-and using his holster for a desk, wrote to my father in this manner:--
-
-
-"MY DEAR COLONEL VON WARRISTON,
-
-"On receipt of this order, you are to marry _the tallest_ of your
-grenadiers to the bearer thereof, taking particular care to have the
-ceremony performed in your own presence; and for the execution of
-this, I hold you responsible.
-
-"FRIEDRICH."
-
-"P.S.--If he refuse, to Spandau with him, until further orders."
-
-
-"Can you read, fraulein?" asked he, while folding this remarkable
-order.
-
-"No, mein herr."
-
-"Good; then there is the less use for a seal, which I have not here."
-He placed the note and the rix-dollar in the large fair hand of the
-girl, and added, "I have noted this place--the Wilde Katze in my
-tablets, and I trust to your honesty and fidelity, Gretchen, in
-delivering my note without delay, as the matter is of great
-consequence to me, and may not prove unpleasant to yourself." And
-giving her a look that somehow impressed her, he put spurs to his old
-charger, and shambled off.
-
-As ignorant of the contents of the letter as of the exalted rank of
-its writer, Gretchen Viborg was hurrying along the road towards
-Berlin, when she suddenly remembered that she had to keep an
-appointment with her lover, a remarkably jealous little fellow, who
-had a mill on the Spree--an assignation which the delivery of this
-note would completely mar! While pausing to consider this dilemma,
-honesty impelling her forward, and love or fear staying her steps,
-she met an old crone who was employed by her at the Wilde Katze, to
-till the ground, carry wood and do other out-door work; and supposing
-it was all one _who_ delivered the note, provided that it safely
-reached its destination, she offered her a ducat to bear it to the
-palace near the White Hall.
-
-Now this old crone could read; she scanned the note, saw the whole
-bearings of the case, and knew who the writer was in an instant. She
-grinned a horrible grin of intense satisfaction, undertook the
-mission, and already beheld in prospect her victim--the tallest
-grenadier!
-
-This cunning hag was past fifty years of age, and one of her legs was
-shorter than the other leg at least by half an inch; she stooped in
-gait and was not much more than four feet high, and was remarkably
-hideous, even for a continental woman, her face being a mass of
-wrinkles, her pointed chin covered with wiry sprouts of grey hair,
-while her teeth were reduced to a few yellow fangs; thus, great was
-my father's astonishment, when he perused the note which she gave him
-faithfully at the palace-gate, just as he was mounting his charger to
-join the evening parade of his boasted battalion of the Guards.
-
-He was too familiar with the handwriting of the great Frederick to
-doubt for a moment the authenticity of the note; but he could by no
-means reconcile its singular contents with the extreme years and
-appalling aspect of the old witch who brought it, and he surveyed
-them alternately for some time, in utter bewilderment, till the
-"P.S." about Spandau, that formidable state prison in Brandenburg,
-made him dread a trip there in person, if the king's orders were
-trifled with or delayed; so turning with repugnance from the woman,
-who continued to grin and drop endless curtsies by his side, he
-summoned the sergeant-major.
-
-"Who is the tallest of our grenadiers?" he asked.
-
-"Otto Vogelwiede," replied the sergeant, with a profound salute.
-
-"How tall is he?"
-
-"Six feet, eight inches and a quarter."
-
-"Is he on parade with his company?"
-
-"No, Herr Colonel--on duty."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"With the guard at the Zeug-haus." (This was the arsenal on the
-narrow bridge over the Spree.)
-
-"Have him relieved by the next file for duty, and brought here
-immediately."
-
-Private Vogelwiede, a sturdy Silesian campaigner, who had been
-wounded at Cunnersdorf, and had served under my father in all the
-great battles of the Seven Years' War, soon appeared at the palace,
-with a mingled expression of surprise and alarm on his large visage,
-supposing that some misdemeanour was to be alleged against him; but
-this soon changed into downright horror, when my father, with a
-manner oddly indicative of half comicality and entire commiseration,
-read the king's peremptory order, and pointed to the blooming bride.
-
-"Sturm und Gewitter!" swore the luckless grenadier in great wrath;
-"do you mean to say, Herr Colonel, that I am to marry this old bag of
-bones--this very shrivling?"
-
-"My poor Vogelwiede, it is marry, or march to Spandau."
-
-"Ach Gott, what an old vampire it is!" said Vogelwiede, shuddering.
-
-"I am utterly bewildered, comrade," said my father.
-
-"In mercy to me, Herr Colonel, tell me _what_ I have done that I am
-to be punished thus?"
-
-"I can't say, my poor fellow, that I understand the affair in any
-way; but we all know our father Frederick, and that the dose, however
-nauseous, must be swallowed. You must either be chained to her, or
-to a thirty-six pound shot in Spandau--a companion you will not get
-rid of, even by day."
-
-"Der teufel! der teufel!" groaned the grenadier, who was actually
-perspiring with the idea of the whole affair, while the old woman,
-with her grey hairs, yellow fangs, and grimy wrinkles, grinned like
-some gnome sent by the Ruberzahl, or a witch from the Blocksberg; and
-to him it seemed as the sentence of death when my father said,--
-
-"Send for the chaplain of the brigade, and desire him to bring his
-prayer-book and surplice."
-
-"Oh, Colonel, remember Cunnersdorf, and how when a boy I held
-Velt-marshal Keith dying in my arms at Hochkirchen--I was his
-favourite orderly," urged poor Vogelwiede, melted almost to tears;
-but it was espouse or Spandau, and he was married in the military
-chapel, to his own intense misery, to the utter bewilderment of his
-comrades, who knew not what to make of the affair, and to the
-exulting joy of the hideous old crone.
-
-Six months after, Frederick returned from the reviews at Halle to
-Berlin, and desired my father to bring before him the couple who had
-been married by his orders.
-
-"Ach Gott!" he exclaimed, on seeing the grinning hag and the
-miserable grenadier, who already looked grey and worn; "what the
-devil is this you have done, Herr Colonel?"
-
-"I obeyed your majesty's singular command," replied my father,
-haughtily.
-
-"Is this the woman to whom you have married Otto Vogelwiede, the
-premier grenadier of my Guards?"
-
-"'Tis the woman who bore your majesty's somewhat peremptory order, as
-all the corps can testify."
-
-"Der teufel! she is no more to compare to the one who received it,
-than a cup of Dresden dima is to a bowl of Bunzlau clay! But I shall
-find her out yet, and married she shall be to the next tallest man in
-the battalion, so sure as Heaven hears me! and as for you,
-Colonel--dummer teufel--as for you----"
-
-"No more dummer teufel (blockhead) than yourself, Frederick of
-Prussia," exclaimed my father, furiously. "This to me? Have you
-forgotten my services, and that day at Amoneburg, when side by side
-we built up breastworks of the fallen dead, and fired over them?"
-
-"I have not Herr Colonel; but potztausend!--"
-
-"Remember that I am the well-born Warriston von Warriston, which in
-plain Scottish means _of that ilk_, and I shall not be sworn at even
-by a king of Prussia."
-
-Frederick danced with rage in his old jackboots, and dashed his
-Rosbach pipe upon the floor, exclaiming--
-
-"Out of my sight, sir! Begone to your Bergschotten.* I have done
-with you!"
-
-
-* Scots Highlanders; this is a true anecdote of Frederick's caprice.
-
-
-Whether Gretchen Viborg was married to the next tallest grenadier, or
-to the miller on the Spree, I know not, for that very day my father
-doffed the uniform of which he was so proud--the trappings of the 1st
-Guards--the same uniform in which Frederick was buried six years
-after at Potsdam, and resigned his commission, in which he was
-succeeded by Peter Schreutzer, the king's new favourite. Entering
-the service of the States General, he was made Colonel-in-Chief of
-their Scots Brigade, then consisting of six battalions, in one of
-which I obtained a cadetship; so you may perceive the strange chain
-of events by which--because Gretchen Viborg had to meet her miller,
-and her note found another bearer--I ultimately find myself a captain
-in His Britannic Majesty's 94th Foot, and in the service of my native
-country."
-
-We shall have other marches of more importance to detail than the
-first essay of our young volunteer, who, though cheered from time to
-time by the merry music of the drums and fifes (which, in fact, are
-more inspiring and martial than any brass band can ever be), found
-the route weary enough by the pre-macadamite roads of those days,
-which were somewhat like the dry beds of mountain burns. So marching
-was rough and weary work, yet Quentin never flinched, as they
-proceeded by the dark, heathy, and solitary hills of the
-Muirkirk-of-Kyle, by Carnwath, where a party of the Gordon
-Highlanders, under Logan of that ilk, joined them, and by Kirknewton,
-where, from an eminence over which the roadway wound, he saw, for the
-first time, the wooded expanse of the beautiful Lothians, with the
-swelling outline of Arthur's Seat, the blue Firth, widening to a sea,
-the fertile hills of Fife, the lordly Ochil mountains, and those of
-thirteen counties, stretching far away even to the distant
-Lammermuirs, and in the middle distance, grey, dim, and smoky, the
-"Queen of the North, upon her hilly throne."
-
-Then the soldiers hailed her with a cheer and a roll on the drums,
-announcing that there ended their last day's march.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-COLCHESTER BARRACKS.
-
- "Hail, sweet recruiting service, pleasing toil,
- Ball-room campaigns, tea-parties, dice and Hoyle!
- Ye days when dangling was my only duty,
- Envied by cits, caressed by every beauty;
- Envied by cits, so scared by every glance,
- Shot at their daughters, going down the dance."
- _Military Magazine_, 1812.
-
-
-Faithful to his promise, before embarking, Quentin Kennedy wrote from
-Edinburgh to his friend the old quartermaster, informing him of the
-step he had taken, of the lucky chance that had turned up for him in
-the Queen Anne's Head at Ayr, and that he was off to join the army as
-a simple volunteer; but being resolved to owe all to himself and to
-his own spirit, courage, and energy, and to prevent his old friend,
-Lord Rohallion, from doing anything, strange to say, he did not
-mention what regiment of the line he had chosen, though he knew well
-that the mystical No. 25 would have made the hearts of the veteran
-general and the quartermaster leap within them, while poor old Jack
-Andrews would be certain to get helplessly groggy in honour of the
-occasion.
-
-He sent no messages or memories to any one, for the letter was
-indited amid the hurly-burly of Poolers gay and then well-known
-military coffee-house in Princess-street, nearly opposite the North
-Bridge; and Captain Warriston, who was standing fully accoutred with
-a group of other officers of various Scottish regiments, all talking,
-laughing, and smoking, urged him "to be sharp," as they had not a
-moment to lose before the mail started, and that the smack, _Lord
-Nelson_, had her topsail loose; so he sent no remembrance to his dear
-Flora Warrender, though he sealed his letter with a sigh, and his
-soul seemed to go with it to her.
-
-Sailing in an armed Leith ship, without convoy, Captain Warriston's
-detachments of recruits, after beating against a head wind for two
-weeks, but without encountering a storm, a gale, or an enemy's ship
-of Avar, made the coast of Essex, landed at Harwich, and marched to
-Colchester Barracks, where each subaltern reported himself to his
-commanding officer, and handed over his detachment of recruits,
-doubtless glad to be rid of them.
-
-How often were the last scene with Flora, those last words and those
-last kisses, under the old sycamores in the avenue, rehearsed over
-and over again.
-
-"Ah," thought he, "could I but persuade myself that she will not
-entirely forget me; that some tender recollections, some soft memory
-of the poor lonely and friendless lad, who loved her so well, will
-remain in her heart, now that I am far away--gone she knows not
-where, but gone for ever! For ever!--then what will love or memory
-avail me?"
-
-The novelty of his situation, the sudden and remarkable change of
-scene, the short sea voyage, the crowded and somewhat noisy barracks
-of Colchester, then filled with troops, preparing by hourly training,
-prior to their departure for the seat of war; squads undergoing
-manual, platoon, and pacing-stick drill, others worked up in
-companies, battalions, and brigades, the general bustle and
-light-heartedness of all around him; the new occupation, new faces
-and new episodes, all so different from his former monotonous life in
-that old castle by the Firth of Clyde--a life that seemed like a
-dream now--soon weaned Quentin from his sadder thoughts, and he was
-startled to find that, after a time, instead of brooding over Flora's
-image and idea perpetually, he could only think of her occasionally,
-and ere long, that he began to take an interest in the crowds of
-ladies who came to view the evening parades, to promenade with the
-officers who were not on duty, and to hear the bands play. "Love
-sickness, according to our revised medical code, is nothing more than
-a disarranged digestion," says a writer; so, in this year of the
-world--five thousand and odd, according to Genesis, and Heaven knows
-how many more according to geology--no one dies of love, and, in the
-jovial barracks of Colchester, our friend Quentin showed no signs of
-the malady.
-
-But we are anticipating.
-
-The battalion of the 25th, or the King's Own Borderers, to which he
-was attached, occupied a portion of the stately and spacious
-barracks, which were built for the accommodation often thousand
-infantry, and had a fine park of artillery attached to them. These
-have all been since pulled down by an absurd spirit of mistaken
-economy, so that there are barely quarters for a single regiment in
-the town.
-
-On the day after his arrival, anxious to create a good impression, he
-made a most careful toilet, and with a throbbing heart was introduced
-by Monkton to the officer commanding, the irritable Major Middleton,
-of whom he had heard so much, and to whom he presented the letter of
-introduction and recommendation given by his good friend Captain
-Warriston, who unfortunately was compelled to be absent elsewhere.
-
-The major was a fine-looking old man, who had entered the service
-from the militia somewhat late in life, and hence the extreme
-slowness of his promotion, for he was now near his sixtieth year. He
-had a clear, keen, and bright blue eye; a suave, but grave and
-decided manner, with a deep and authoritative tone of voice. He
-still wore his thin hair queued, though after being reduced to seven
-inches in length, by the general order of 1804, by another order in
-1808, the entire army was shorn of those appendages.
-
-Fearing a mutiny, or something like it, the obnoxious mandate was
-countermanded the next day, but, Ichabod! the glory had departed.
-The regimental barbers had done their fatal work, and not a pigtail
-remained in the service, from the Life Guards to the Shetland
-Volunteers, save among a few privileged men of the old school, who
-stuck to it in defiance alike of taste and authority, and one of
-these was Major Middleton, who now appeared in full uniform, with his
-snow-white shirt-frill peeping through his gorget,--a badge retained
-till 1830--and a spotless white waistcoat covering the comely paunch,
-while his queue, seven inches long, with its black silk rosette,
-wagged gracefully at the back of his fine old head, which was
-powdered by time to a whiteness his servant could never achieve with
-the puff.
-
-He cordially shook hands with Quentin and with Monkton, and welcoming
-the latter back to head-quarters, bowed them to chairs with great
-formality, his sword and pigtail going up and down like pump-handles
-the while, and then with his sturdy back planted against the
-chimney-piece, he proceeded to read over the letter of Warriston,
-Quentin in the meantime undergoing the pleasant process of being
-occasionally eyed askance with those clear, keen eyes--and a steady
-glance they had--the glance of one who had often been face to face
-with death and danger, in the East Indies and the West, in America,
-and wherever conquests were to be added to Britain's growing empire.
-
-"My old friend Warriston recommends you highly, Mr. Kennedy--very
-highly indeed," said the major, as he folded the letters and again
-shook Quentin by the hand; "but I hope that the step you are taking
-has the full concurrence of all who are interested in your welfare?"
-
-With a heightened colour, Quentin begged the worthy major to be
-assured that it had.
-
-"I need not tell you, my young friend, that no ordinary bravery is
-required of the gentleman volunteer, for something more dashing than
-mere service in the ranks is necessary to win the notice of those in
-authority and to obtain a commission in His Majesty's service. I
-trust, therefore, that you have weighed well and examined your mind,
-and are assured that you possess the qualifications necessary for the
-profession--I may well say, the perilous career--on which you are
-about to enter."
-
-"Qualifications, sir?" stammered Quentin, who was somewhat oppressed
-by the major's exordium, and began to think of Dominie Skaill's Greek
-and Latin roots.
-
-"Yes; for the task before you requires a daring spirit, and a most
-stoical indifference to privation, to suffering, and to death, as you
-will have to bear a voluntary part in every dangerous or arduous
-enterprise, on every desperate duty; and have to volunteer for every
-forlorn hope and reckless adventure."
-
-"I have weighed well, major, and I shall shrink from nothing! I long
-only for the opportunity of showing that I shall be--shall be what my
-father was before me," said Quentin, with flashing eyes and quivering
-lips, while he felt that these were not the kind of men to boast
-before.
-
-The old major regarded the lad attentively, and said--
-
-"Give me your hand again; I like your spirit, and hope ere long to
-wet your commission and welcome you as a brother officer. I enforce
-the strictest obedience, and some term me severe, yet I hope you will
-like me; for, if pleased with you, your future prospects shall be my
-peculiar care."
-
-"I thank you, sir," said Quentin, with a very full heart.
-
-"I like to regard the regiment as one large family; and when we
-consider the manifold clangers we dare, and the sufferings we endure
-together, all soldiers--officers and men alike--more than any other
-human community, have reasons for strong mutual attachment, and for
-feeling themselves indeed brothers. There are some of the
-brotherhood, however, over whom I have, at times, to keep a tight
-hand--yourself, for instance--Dick Monkton, eh!"
-
-"True, major, the adjutant has come to me in his harness more than
-once for my sword; but like a good fellow, you always sent it back
-again," said Monkton, laughing.
-
-"Two remarks of the great General Monk should always be borne in mind
-by those who enter the service," said the major, who seemed a
-well-read and intelligent officer; "and in youth I learned them by
-rote, and so have never forgotten them since. 'War, the profession
-of a soldier, is that of all others which, as it conferreth most
-honour upon a man who therein acquitteth himself well, so it draweth
-the greatest infamy upon one who demeaneth himself ill; for _one_
-fault committed can _never_ be repaired, and _one_ hour causeth the
-loss of that reputation which hath been thirty years acquiring!'
-Elsewhere he says, 'A soldier must be always ready to confront
-extremity of danger by extremity of valour, and overtop fury with a
-higher resolution. A soldier ought to fear nothing but _God and
-Dishonour_, and the officer who commands should feel for him as a
-parent does for his child!' And now, to become more matter of fact,
-Monkton will tell you, Mr. Kennedy, all about a volunteer's outfit;
-the plainer, and the less there is of it, the better."
-
-"Thanks, sir; you are most thoughtful."
-
-"You shall have to carry the arms and accoutrements of a private, and
-a knapsack too, perhaps, under some circumstances, till luck turns up
-a commission for you. In all respects you will be treated as a
-gentleman; but doing the duty and yielding the implicit obedience of
-a private soldier. Do you understand me?"
-
-"Perfectly, sir," replied Quentin, cheerfully.
-
-"As for the knapsack," said Monkton, "its weight matters little if
-your heart be light, my friend."
-
-Quentin smiled, as if he meant to confront fortune boldly, and the
-future too.
-
-"We are now under orders to hold ourselves in readiness for foreign
-service, and a fortnight at farthest will see the regiment on board
-ship."
-
-"For where?" asked Monkton.
-
-"The continent of Europe."
-
-Quentin was glad to hear this, as he knew that his funds would not
-last him long in Colchester, and if reduced to his volunteer pay of
-one shilling per diem, current coin of this realm, what would become
-of him then?
-
-"You shall dine with me at the mess to-day as my guest, Mr. Kennedy,"
-said the major, "and I shall have the pleasure of introducing you to
-the corps."
-
-"And as my guest to-morrow, Quentin," said Monkton; "it is the last
-time we shall have our legs under its blessed mahogany, as it is to
-be broken up."
-
-"What--the table?"
-
-"No, the mess. Adieu till the drum beats, major."
-
-With Monkton, Quentin quitted Middleton's quarters, extremely
-well-pleased with his interview, convinced that the lieutenant must
-have quizzed him about the major's alleged severity, and now with
-satisfaction feeling himself in some manner a member of the corps and
-of the service, a part or portion of the 25th Foot.
-
-His uniform, a plain scarlet coatee, faced, lapelled and buttoned
-like that of an officer, with two little swallow-tails nine inches
-long (then the regulation), though destitute of lace or epaulettes,
-with his other requisites, made a sad hole in his little exchequer;
-and, as he sat in his room that night, and counted over the fifteen
-that remained of the good quartermaster's guineas, he felt something
-like a miser, and trembled for the future.
-
-However, fifteen guineas were more than a subaltern's pay for a
-month; he was only to be two weeks in barracks, and when once in
-camp, a small sum with rations would go a long way. He had a
-subaltern's quarters assigned him, with an officer's allowance of
-coal, candle, and barrack furniture--to wit: one hard wood table; two
-ditto chairs, of the Windsor pattern; an elegant coal-box, like a
-black iron trough, bearing the royal arms, and the huge enigmatical
-letters B.O., of which he could make nothing; a pair of bellows,
-fire-irons, fender, and an iron candlestick, unique in form and
-colour.
-
-These, with a pallet, formed his principal household gear, and for
-two at least of the remaining fourteen days, he would have the luxury
-of the festive mess, the perfection of a dinner table; and
-thereafter, as he had been told, it would be broken up, its rich old
-plate and appurtenances consigned to iron-bound chests, and left
-behind in the barrack stores, and many who dined therewith might
-never meet around that jolly table more, for war and peril were
-before them, and the dust would be gathering on the forgotten mess
-chests, as the grass would be sprouting on the graves of the slain.
-
-But little thought "The Borderers" of that--for the soldier, luckily
-for himself, is seldom of a very reflective turn--when the orderly
-drum and fife struck up "The Roast Beef" in front of the mess-house
-to announce that dinner was being served; and there Quentin hurried,
-in company with the major and Monkton.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE LOST LETTER.
-
- "And when they talk of him, they shake their heads,
- And whisper one another in the ear:
- And he that speaks doth grip the hearer's wrist,
- Whilst he that hears makes fearful action,
- With wrinkled brows, with nods, with rolling eyes."
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-As Quentin's heart foreboded, the Master of Rohallion made the best
-use of his time with Flora Warrender; but without much avail. Late
-events had engendered in her breast a spirit of obstinacy and
-antagonism to his proposals, together with a desire for freedom of
-thought and liberty of action that proved very damaging to the cause
-of Cosmo, and in a fit of spleen he departed for a week or two, to
-visit Earl Hugh at Eglinton; for though by no means a marrying man,
-the Honourable Cosmo, as we have stated, conceived that, in the
-present state of his finances, he might get through the
-world,--"battle the watch," as he phrased it,--pretty well, if he
-obtained the lands of Ardgour, the accumulated rents of which had
-been so long under trust, and would prove to him a very lucky
-accession, even though encumbered by Flora Warrender as a wife or
-appendage. But on obtaining the command of a regiment of the line,
-with all the perquisites which then attended that appointment, he did
-not despair of ultimately getting rid of his _bêtes noires_, the
-children of Judah.
-
-Thus his cold hauteur and nonchalance on one hand, and Lady
-Rohallion's steady resolve on the other to bend her to their will,
-together with sorrow for Quentin, whom she viewed as a victim,
-rendered Flora Warrender inexorable in her opposition, and, as Lord
-Rohallion said, their own mismanagement still continued to spoil the
-whole affair.
-
-After an absence of some days Cosmo returned, and resolved to make a
-last effort with Flora, and thought to pique her by praises of the
-fair daughters of Earl Hugh, the Ladies Jane, Lilias, and Mary; but
-this artifice was so shallow that she merely laughed when she heard
-him, while poor simple Lady Rohallion feared that his heart had
-really been affected in another quarter.
-
-"And so you really admire Lady Lilias Montgomery, our old friend's
-daughter?" she asked, as they sat in the bay window of the old yellow
-drawing-room.
-
-"I always did so," replied the Master; "there is certainly an
-exquisite air of refinement about the girl, and she has a splendid
-seat on horseback."
-
-"Her air is peculiar to all the Montgomerys; I remember me well of
-Earl Alexander, who was shot by the villain Mungo Campbell, and he
-had the air of a prince! But what do you think of Lady Lilias?"
-
-"Think?" pondered Cosmo, dreamily, as he lay back in a satin
-fauteuil, and gazed on the far-stretching landscape that was steeped
-in sunny haze.
-
-"Yes," said his mother, anxiously.
-
-"I think she has _not_ the lands and rental of Ardgour, or their
-equivalent."
-
-"Cosmo, Cosmo," said Lady Rohallion, with asperity, "I would have you
-to love Flora for herself, and herself only."
-
-"My dear mother, you old-fashioned folks in Carrick here are sadly
-behind the age; but I am booked for foreign service, and a wife would
-only prove a serious encumbrance after all."
-
-"Flora Warrender may change, or, what would be better, she may know
-her own mind before, or long before, you come back."
-
-"Perhaps," sneered Cosmo; "love of change or change of love effects
-miracles in the female heart at times. Till _then_, we must content
-ourselves with drawing stakes, while I march off, not exactly with
-the honours of war, but with the band playing 'the girl I left behind
-me'--very consoling it is no doubt, damme!"
-
-"Do you really love that girl, Cosmo?" asked the old lady, looking up
-from a mysterious piece of needlework, with which she always believed
-herself to be busy, and mistaking Cosmo's wounded self-esteem for a
-softer sentiment.
-
-"Love her--yes, of course I do--that is, well enough, perhaps, to
-marry her, as marriage goes now-a-days; but" (and here he spoke with
-concentrated passion) "I hate the beggar's brat who has come between
-her and me!"
-
-"Oh, Cosmo, don't say so, I implore you?" said Lady Rohallion,
-sighing bitterly; "after all the past, and with the doubt and mystery
-that overhang his future, I cannot bear to hear our lost Quentin
-spoken of thus."
-
-"Poor chick--our lost darling!" said Cosmo; "but after seventeen
-years spent in the Household Brigade, to be out-manoeuvred by a
-country Dolly such as Flora and a fellow like this Quentin of yours,
-is simply and decidedly absurd!" he added, with fierce grimace, while
-his father, who entered at that moment and overheard him, laughed
-heartily at his chagrin.
-
-And now about this time John Legate, the tall spindle-shanked running
-footman, brought, among other letters from Maybole, one for the
-Master, endorsed "on His Majesty's Service," and another for Mr. John
-Girvan, so worn, frayed, and covered with postage-marks, that the
-good man was quite puzzled by its appearance, and thrice wiped his
-spectacles to decipher all the names and dates, until the dominie,
-who was seated by him, beside a friendly jug of toddy, suggested that
-candles should be procured, as the twilight was deepening into night,
-and the interior of the missive would resolve all their doubts and
-expectations.
-
-It was opened, and proved to be from Quentin Kennedy--from Quentin,
-and dated at Poole's Military Coffeehouse, Edinburgh, more than a
-month back! He had addressed it simply to the castle of Rohallion,
-and it had gone by mail and stage over all Britain, until some chance
-hand, endorsing "try Ayrshire," sent it to its destination.
-
-"Awa soldiering as a volunteer! Wae is me, wae is me, but this is
-pitiful, exceedingly pitiful!" exclaimed the dominie, lifting up his
-hands and eyes; "think of my wasted latinity!"
-
-"Dominie, you are a gowk! I like the lad's spirit, and respect it,"
-said the quartermaster, whose eyes were so full that he could
-scarcely peruse the letter; "but he's ower young, he's far ower young
-for such hard work. I mind well of what I had to go through in my
-time in Germany and America."
-
-"Ower young, think ye?"
-
-"But he is hardy and manly."
-
-"According to Polybius, in his sixth book, the Romans could be
-soldiers, indeed, _had_ to be soldiers, in their seventeenth year."
-
-"Bother your Romans! fill your jug--a steaming brimmer, and drain it
-to Quentin's health and success, and his safety too."
-
-Then standing up erect, the quartermaster drained his jug at a
-draught, a process promptly followed by the dominie; but after what
-they had imbibed already, it had the effect of rapidly multiplying
-the lights and other objects, and also tended to make their utterance
-thick and indistinct.
-
-"I must away to my lord wi' this braw news," said Girvan; "the puir
-lad! he didna deceive me after all, but wrote when he had time. And
-this Captain Warriston who befriended Quentin--(God bless him, say
-I!)--befriended him, dominie, because he was a soldier's son. Ah,
-dominie, dominie!--that is the _freemasonry of the service_, which
-makes all in it brothers--the true spirit of camaraderie! Another
-jorum to the health of this captain, whoever he be."
-
-"Bring forth the _amphora_--the greybeard o' whisky; but John, John,"
-said the dominie, shaking his old wig sententiously, "what saith
-Habakkuk?"
-
-"How the deevil should I ken? and it is but little I care," added the
-irreverent quartermaster.
-
-"He saith, 'Woe unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, that
-putteth a bottle to him, and maketh him drunken,'" said the dominie,
-balancing himself by turns on each leg; and opening and shutting each
-eye alternately.
-
-"Drunken, you whaislin precentor?"
-
-"Yea, as thou, wicked quartermaster, hast made me, and when we are
-close on the hour 'o' night's black arch the keystone,' as puir Burns
-has it."
-
-"Never mind, dominie, the night is dark, and naebody will see you,"
-stammered Girvan; "stick your knees into the saddle--gie your powny
-the reins, and he'll take you straight home, as he usually does. But
-I must away to my lord with this news; and so good-night. Now,
-dominie, steady--eyes front if you can!--hat cocked forward, cockade
-over the left eye--queue dressed straight with the seam of the
-coat--head up, little finger of each hand on the seam of the
-breeches--left foot thrown well out--pike advanced--forward, march!
-and hip, hip, hurrah for Quentin the volunteer!"
-
-And arm in arm the two old topers quitted the "snuggery," the dominie
-to go home in care of his pony, and his entertainer to seek Lord and
-Lady Rohallion before they retired for the night.
-
-That sure tidings had come of Quentin's safety occasioned the noble
-and worthy couple sincere joy.
-
-"So, so," said the old Lord; "it is as I feared--the poor lad has
-joined the service."
-
-"As a volunteer," added Girvan, with great empressement.
-
-"As a poor, friendless volunteer, Winny; think of that, when one line
-from me to the Duke of York would give him an ensigncy. We have
-cruelly mismanaged this boy's prospects! I would that we knew the
-regiment he has joined; but, strange to say, he omits to mention it."
-
-In his joy and hurry, the quartermaster had never thought of the
-omission.
-
-"This officer, Warriston, whom he mentions, must be a right good
-fellow, and his name may be a clue. We shall search the Army List
-to-morrow, John; till then, good-night."
-
-Tidings that a letter had come from Quentin at last, spread through
-the castle like wild-fire, and it was the first news with which
-Flora's maid greeted her, when, an hour before the usual time, she
-tapped on her bedroom door, and, as the reader may imagine, the
-abigail was despatched at once to the quartermaster for a sight of
-the all-important letter, which she took care to read before it
-reached the hands of her impatient young mistress. Flora read it
-over twice or thrice, examining all the successive postmarks which
-indicated its devious wanderings. In the text there was no mention
-of her. She was disappointed at first, but after reflecting, she
-deemed that his silence was delicate and wise.
-
-There were great and genuine rejoicings in the servants'-hall, where
-the gamekeepers, grooms, the gardeners, Mr. Spillsby the butler, John
-the running-footman, the housemaids, and old Andrews, made such a
-clatter and noise that they kindled the somewhat ready wrath of the
-Master, who rang his bell furiously to "still the infernal hubbub,"
-as he lay a-bed reading his missive, which was not quite to his
-taste; and, as for the veteran Jack Andrews, he got most disreputably
-tipsy by imbibing a variety of drams to Quentin's health in Mr.
-Spillsby's pantry; and in short, the quartermaster's letter proved a
-nine days' wonder in Rohallion.
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
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-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The King's Own Borderers, Volume I (of 3)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A Military Romance</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 22, 2022 [eBook #67226]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS, VOLUME I (OF 3) ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- A Military Romance.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- AUTHOR OF<br />
- "SECOND TO NONE," "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE YELLOW FRIGATE,"<br />
- ETC. ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Memories fast are thronging o'er me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of the grand old fields of Spain;<br />
- How he faced the charge of Junot,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the fight where Moore was slain.<br />
- Oh the years of weary waiting<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For the glorious chance he sought,<br />
- For the slowly ripened harvest<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That life's latest autumn brought."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- IN THREE VOLUMES.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- VOL. I.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS,<br />
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL.<br />
-<br />
- 1865.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- LONDON:<br />
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,<br />
- COVENT GARDEN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the following volumes I have endeavoured to
-delineate the career of a soldier&mdash;and of a character
-that has not as yet, I think, figured in the pages
-of our military novelists&mdash;a Gentleman Volunteer,
-serving with a line regiment in time of war,
-according to a custom which survived even the
-memorable battles of the Peninsula.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the scene of his adventures (some of which
-are not quite fictitious), I have chosen the
-expedition under the gallant and ill-fated Sir John
-Moore, as it has scarcely, if ever, been made the
-theme of a military romance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No history of the 25th Foot is in existence;
-hence, as the brief outline of its early career in the
-first volume is substantially correct, it may prove
-of interest to some readers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I may add that the 94th regiment mentioned
-occasionally, is the old 94th or "Scots Brigade,"
-which came from the service of the States General,
-and was disbanded after Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The corps at present bearing the same number
-in the Army List was also, however, raised in
-Scotland, but in December, 1823; and on that
-occasion the green standard of the old brigade
-of gallant memory was borne through the streets,
-from the castle of Edinburgh, by a soldier of the
-Black Watch.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 26, DANUBE STREET,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;EDINBURGH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CONTENTS<br />
- OF<br />
- THE FIRST VOLUME.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAP.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- I. <a href="#chap01">LADY WINIFRED</a><br />
- II. <a href="#chap02">THE PARTAN CRAIG</a><br />
- III. <a href="#chap03">THE CASTLE OF ROHALLION</a><br />
- IV. <a href="#chap04">THE CHILD OF THE SEA</a><br />
- V. <a href="#chap05">THE PAST</a><br />
- VI. <a href="#chap06">LORD ROHALLION</a><br />
- VII. <a href="#chap07">OUR STORY PROGRESSES</a><br />
- VIII. <a href="#chap08">QUENTIN'S CHILDHOOD</a><br />
- IX. <a href="#chap09">THE QUARTERMASTER'S SNUGGERY</a><br />
- X. <a href="#chap10">FLORA WARRENDER</a><br />
- XI. <a href="#chap11">LOVE, AND MATTERS PERTAINING THERETO</a><br />
- XII. <a href="#chap12">A LAST KISS</a><br />
- XIII. <a href="#chap13">COSMO THE MASTER</a><br />
- XIV. <a href="#chap14">AN ABRUPT PROPOSAL</a><br />
- XV. <a href="#chap15">THE BLOW</a><br />
- XVI. <a href="#chap16">EXPOSTULATION</a><br />
- XVII. <a href="#chap17">FORTH INTO THE WORLD</a><br />
- XVIII. <a href="#chap18">UNAVAILING REGRET</a><br />
- XIX. <a href="#chap19">AN OLD SOLDIER'S STORY</a><br />
- XX. <a href="#chap20">THE WAYFARER</a><br />
- XXI. <a href="#chap21">THE VAULT OF KILHENZIE</a><br />
- XXII. <a href="#chap22">THE QUEEN ANNE'S HEAD</a><br />
- XXIII. <a href="#chap23">NEW FRIENDS</a><br />
- XXIV. <a href="#chap24">THE YOUNG VOLUNTEER</a><br />
- XXV. <a href="#chap25">THE PRUSSIAN GRENADIER</a><br />
- XXVI. <a href="#chap26">COLCHESTER BARRACKS</a><br />
- XXVII. <a href="#chap27">THE LOST LETTER</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS,
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-LADY WINIFRED.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Thick, thick&mdash;no sight remains the while,<br />
- From the farthest Orkney isle,<br />
- No sight to seahorse or to seer,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But of a little pallid sail,<br />
- That seems as if 'twould struggle near,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And then as if its pinion pale<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gave up the battle to the gale."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LEIGH HUNT.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-On the afternoon of a lowering day in the
-November of 1798, a square-rigged vessel&mdash;a brig of
-some three hundred and fifty tons&mdash;was seen in
-the offing, about twelve miles distant from the
-bluff, rocky headland of Rohallion, on the western
-coast of Carrick, beating hard against a
-head-wind and sea, that were set dead in shore; and,
-as a long and treacherous reef, locally known as
-the Partan Craig (<i>Anglicè</i>, Crab-rock), lies off the
-headland, many fears were loudly expressed by
-on-lookers, that if she failed to gain even better sea
-room, ere night-fall, the gale, the waves, and the
-current might prove too much for her in the end,
-and the half-sunken reef would finish the catastrophe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the craig the angry breakers of the Firth
-of Clyde were seen to boil and whiten, and the
-ridgy reef seemed to rise, at times, like a hungry
-row of shark's teeth, black, sharp, and shining.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With royal yards on deck, with topsails
-lowered upon the caps, her fore and maincourses
-close-hauled, with a double reef in each, the
-stranger was seen to lie alternately on the port
-and starboard tack, braced so close to the wind's
-eye as a square-rigged craft dared be; but still she
-made but little way to seaward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Rohallion there were two persons who
-watched her struggles with deep interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The turn of the tide will strengthen the
-current, my lady, and bring her close to the
-craig, after all," said one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Under God's favour, John Girvan, I hope
-not!" was the fervent response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is an eddy between the craig and the
-coves of Rohallion as strong as the whirlpool of
-Corryvreckan itself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, John; I have seen more than one poor
-boat, with its crew, perish there, in the herring
-season."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Look, look, my lady! There is another
-vessel&mdash;a brig, I take her to be&mdash;running right
-into the Firth before the wind."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The speakers were Winifred Lady Rohallion
-and her husband's bailie or factor, who stood
-together at a window of the castle of Rohallion,
-which crowns the summit of the headland before
-mentioned, and from whence, as it is a hundred
-and fifty feet in height, and rises almost sheer
-from the water, a spacious view can be obtained
-of the noble Firth of Clyde, there expanding into
-a vast ocean, though apparently almost landlocked
-by the grassy hills and dales of Cunninghame, the
-princely Isle of Bute (the cradle of the House
-of Stuart), the blue and rocky peaks of Arran,
-the grey ridges of Kintyre; and far away, like a
-blue stripe that bounds the Scottish sea, the dim
-and distant shores of Ireland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few heavy rain-drops, precursors of a torrent,
-plashed on the window-panes, and with a swiftness
-almost tropical, great masses of cloud came
-rolling across the darkening sky. Under their lower
-edges, lurid streaks between the hill-tops marked
-the approach of sunset, and thunder began to
-grumble overhead, as it came from the splintered
-peaks of Arran, to die away among the woody
-highlands of Carrick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Aware that when the tide turned there would
-be a tremendous swell, with a sea that would roll
-far inshore, the fishermen in the little bay near
-the castled rock were all busily at work, drawing
-their brown-tarred and sharp-prowed boats far up
-on the beach, for there was a moaning in the sea
-and rising wind that foretold a tempestuous night:
-thus, they as well as the inhabitants of Rohallion
-Castle were at a loss to understand why the
-strange brig, instead of running right up the firth
-in search of safe anchorage under some of the
-high land, strove to beat to windward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The conclusion therefore come to was, that she
-was French, or that her crew were ignorant of the
-river navigation; there were no pilots then, so
-far down the firth, and when the fishermen spoke
-among themselves of running down to her assistance
-or guidance, they muttered of French gun-brigs,
-of letters of marque, and privateers&mdash;shrugged
-their shoulders, and stood pipe in mouth
-under the lee of the little rocky pier to watch the
-event.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the drawing-room windows of the more
-modern portion of the old stronghold of Rohallion,
-the lady of that name, and her bailie, stood
-watching the ship, by the dim light of the
-darkening afternoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Winifred was a woman of a style, or rather
-of a school, that has passed away for ever out of
-Scotland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tall and stately, but gentle, homely, and
-motherly withal, her quaint formality was tempered
-by an old-fashioned politeness, that put all
-at their ease.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now though verging on her fiftieth year, she
-was still very handsome, albeit where dimples once
-laughed, the wrinkles were appearing now. She
-had been an Edinburgh belle in those days when
-the tone of society there was very stately and
-aristocratic; when the city was the winter resort
-of the solid rank and real talent of the land;
-when it was a small and spirited capital instead
-of a huge "deserted village," abandoned to the
-soothing influences of the church, the law,
-Sabbatarianism, and the east wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her lofty carriage and old-fashioned courtesy
-reminded one of what is described of the ladies
-of Queen Anne's time; she possessed a singular
-sweetness in her smile, and every motion, even of
-her smooth, white hands, though perfectly natural,
-seemed studies of artistic grace. Her eyes
-were dark and keen; her features straight and
-noble; her complexion brilliantly fair. Though
-powder had been wisely discarded by Her
-Majesty, the Queen Consort, and the six
-Princesses, their doing so was no rule for Lady
-Rohallion, who was somewhat of a potentate in
-Carrick, and still wore her hair in that singular
-half-dishevelled fashion, full and flowing, as we
-may see it depicted in Sir Joshua's famous
-portrait of her, which is to be hung on the walls
-of the Scottish National Gallery, when cleared of
-some of their local rubbish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, the white powder which she retained in
-profusion, formed a singular but not unpleasing
-contrast to her black eyebrows, black eyes, and
-long dark lashes&mdash;silky fringes, from which, some
-five-and-twenty years before, she had shot more
-than one perriwigged sub, who had come
-unscathed from the dangers of Bunker's-hill and
-Brandywine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the present occasion, her visitor, who bore
-the somewhat unaristocratic name of Mr. John
-Girvan, or, at times, Girvanmains, was a short,
-thickset, weatherbeaten man about sixty years of
-age, and in whom any one could have discerned at
-a glance the old soldier, by the erect way in
-which he carried his head. He wore an old
-military wig that had once been white, but was
-quite unpowdered now and was bleached yellow;
-and he had a jolly good-humoured face, rendered so
-red by exposure to the weather and by imbibing
-whisky-toddy, that, as he once said himself, "it
-might blow up a gunpowder magazine, if he came
-within a mile of it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been the Quartermaster of Lord
-Rohallion's regiment, the 25th Foot, and after
-long service with it in America and elsewhere,
-had settled down on his colonel's estates in the
-capacity of land-steward, ground-baillie, and
-general factotum, and in this capacity had snug
-apartments assigned to him in a part of the old
-castle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"While looking at yonder ship, my lady, you
-forget the letters I have brought you from
-Maybole," said he, producing a leathern pouch
-having the Rohallion arms stamped in brass on
-the outside; "the riding-postman, with the
-mailbags, arrived just as I was leaving the Kirkwynd
-Tavern. Waes me! what a changed place that
-is now. Many a crown bowl of punch have poor
-Robbie Burns and I birled there!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, John, the letters; unlock the bag, and
-let me see what the news is from Maybole."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This ancient burgh-of-barony was the little
-capital of the old bailiewick of Carrick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Opening the pouch, Girvan tumbled on the
-table a number of letters and newspapers, such
-as the Edinburgh "Courant" and "Chronicle,"
-which then were about a quarter of the size of the
-journals of the present day, and were printed on
-very grey paper, in such very brown ink, that
-they had quite a mediæval aspect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first letter Lady Winifred opened was
-from her chief friend and gossip, the Countess of
-Eglinton, with whom she had been at school,
-when she was simply Winifred Maxwell, and
-when the Countess was Eleanora Hamilton, of
-Bourtreehill. Her letter was somewhat sorrowful
-in its tenor:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wish you would visit me, my dear friend,"
-it ran; "Eglinton Castle is so dull now, so very
-<i>triste</i>! My good lord the earl (whom God
-preserve!) has been appointed Colonel of the Argyle
-Fencibles, one of the many kilted regiments now
-being raised, lest we are invaded by the French
-and their vile Corsican usurper; so he hath left
-me. My second boy, Roger, too, hath sailed
-lieutenant of a man-o'-war, and sorely do I opine
-that never mair shall my old hand stroke his
-golden curls again&mdash;my own brave bairn! (Her
-forebodings were sadly verified when, soon after,
-this favourite son died of fever at Jamaica.) I
-send you Mrs. Anne Radcliffe's novel, 'The
-Mysteries of Udolpho,' in five volumes, which I
-am sure will enchant you. I send you also the last
-book of the fashions, which I received by the
-London mail three weeks ago. Carriage robes
-are to have long sleeves, and the jockey bonnets
-are trimmed with green feathers; white satin
-mantles, trimmed with swansdown, of the <i>exile
-style</i>, are considered the most elegant wraps for
-the opera. You will see by the papers that our
-brave Lord Nelson hath been created Duke of
-Bronte, but returns from Naples with the odious
-woman Lady Hamilton. Tell Bailie Girvan
-('Quartermaster,' I think he prefers,) that I
-thank him for the hawslock-wool* he sent to
-Eglinton; my girls and I are spinning it with
-our own hands. Also I thank your sweet self
-for the lace mittens you knitted for me on
-Hallow-e'en. Your little friend&mdash;it may soon be
-ward&mdash;Miss Flora Warrender, is now with us, and
-seems to grow lovelier and livelier every day. I
-have Madame Rossignal, an <i>emigré</i>, the fashionable
-mistress of dancing, from Fyfe's Close, Edinburgh,
-with me just now, teaching my girls; but
-for a child of eight years, the little Warrender
-excels them both. Her father goes abroad in
-command of his regiment, and her poor mother is
-almost brokenhearted."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* The finest wool, being the locks that grow on the throat.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"If she is lonely at Eglinton, with her
-daughters the Ladies Jane and Lilias, how much
-more must I be, whose husband is absent, and
-whose only son is with the army!" exclaimed
-Lady Winifred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A letter from Rohallion himself!" said the
-old Quartermaster in an excited tone, handing to
-the lady a missive which bore her husband's seal
-and coronet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"From him, and I read it <i>last</i>!" said she
-reproachfully, as she opened it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was dated from White's Coffee-house, in
-London, whither he had gone as a representative
-peer, and it contained only some news of the
-period, such as comments on Lord Castlereagh's
-or Mr. Pitt's speeches about the Irish Union;
-("which is to be carried by English gold and
-guile, like our own," said the Quartermaster,
-parenthetically;) the hopes he had of getting command
-of a brigade in Sir Ralph Abercrombie's proposed
-Egyptian expedition; he related that their son
-Cosmo, the master of Rohallion, then serving
-with the Guards, was well, and stood high in
-favour with the Prince of Wales.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A doubtful compliment, if all tales be true,"
-commented Lady Winifred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If Rohallion goes on service, I'll never stay
-at home behind him," exclaimed old Girvan;
-"it would ill become me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>All</i> the Highland regiments in Great Britain,
-second battalions as well as first, are under
-orders for immediate foreign service," continued
-his lordship's letter; "this looks like work,
-Winny dear, does it not?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He added that Parliament was to be prorogued
-in a day or two, and that he would return by
-sea in one of the Leith smacks, which were then
-large and heavy passenger cutters, of some two
-hundred tons or so; they were all armed with
-carronades, and as their crews were secured from
-the pressgangs, they manfully fought their own
-way, without convoy, with the old Scots flag at
-their mast-head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He comes home by sea," said Lady Rohallion
-aloud, glancing nervously at the offing, where
-the coast of Ireland had disappeared, and where
-the clouds were gathering black and rapidly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By sea!" repeated Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, the Lord forfend, at this season of the
-year!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And when so many French and Spanish
-privateers infest the seas, led by fellows who, in
-daring, surpass even Commodore Fall or Paul
-Jones," exclaimed Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As if to echo or confirm their fears, a booming
-sound pealed from a distance over the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What noise is that?" asked Lady Rohallion,
-starting up, while her pale cheek grew paler
-still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A gun&mdash;a cannon shot to seaward!"
-exclaimed the old soldier, pricking up his ears,
-while his eyes sparkled on recognising the once
-too familiar sound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis that vessel in distress," said Lady
-Rohallion, as they hurried once more to the windows
-which overlooked the sea. "Away to the clachan,
-John; get all our people together, and have
-the boats launched."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That will be impossible with such a heavy
-sea coming rolling in, my lady&mdash;clean impossible!"
-replied the other, as he threw up a window and
-levelled a telescope at the vessel, while the wild
-blast against which she was struggling made the
-damask curtains stream like banners, and frizzed
-up, like a mop, the Quartermaster's old yellow
-wig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What do you see, John? Speak, Girvanmains!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There go her colours; but I can't make them
-out."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Twenty guineas a man to all who will aid
-her!" exclaimed Lady Rohallion, taking a key
-from her gold chatelaine, and hurrying to a buhl
-escritoire, while gun after gun pealed from a
-distance over the stormy sea; but they came from
-two vessels, one of which was hidden in a bank of
-dusky vapour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lady grasped the old Quartermaster's arm,
-and her white hands trembled nervously as she
-exclaimed in a whisper&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, my God, John Girvan! what if Rohallion
-should be on board of her, with a foe on one
-hand and a lee shore on the other?"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-THE PARTAN CRAIG.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Prone on the midnight surge with panting breath,<br />
- They cry for aid, and long contend with death;<br />
- High o'er their heads the rolling billows sweep,<br />
- And down they sink in everlasting sleep.<br />
- Bereft of power to help, their comrades see<br />
- The wretched victims die beneath the lee!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FALCONER'S <i>Shipwreck</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Inspired by fears, perhaps, similar to those of his
-lady, the Quartermaster made no immediate
-reply, but continued to watch with deep interest,
-and somewhat of a professional eye, the red
-flashes which broke from the bosom of that
-gloomy bank of cloud, which seemed to rest upon
-the surface of the water, about six miles distant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wind was still blowing a gale from the
-seaward. Through the fast-flying masses of black
-and torn vapour, the setting sun, for a few
-minutes, shed a lurid glare&mdash;it almost seemed a
-baleful glow along the crested waves, reddening
-their frothy tops, and lighting up, as if with
-crimson flames, the wet canvas of the brig; but
-lo! at the same instant, there shot out of the
-vapour, and into the ruddy sheen of the stormy
-sunset, another square-rigged craft, a brig of
-larger size, whose guns were fired with
-man-o'-war-like precision and rapidity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first vessel, the same which for so many hours
-had been working close-hauled in long tacks to
-beat off the lee shore, now relinquished the attempt,
-and, squaring her yards, hoisting her topsails
-from the cap, stood straight towards Rohallion,
-her crew evidently expecting some military
-protection from the castle on the rock, or deeming it
-better to run bump ashore, with all its risks,
-than be taken by the enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fugitive was snow-rigged, a merchant brig
-apparently by her deep bends, bluff bows, and
-somewhat clumsy top and hamper; the British
-colours were displayed at her gaff peak. The
-other was a smart gun-brig or privateer with the
-tricolour of France floating at her gaff, and a
-long whiplike pennant streaming ahead of her,
-as she fired her bow chasers. Twice luffing
-round, she let fly some of her broadside guns,
-and once she discharged a large pivot cannon from
-amidships, in her efforts to cripple the fugitive.
-But as both vessels were plunging heavily in
-a tempestuous sea, the shot only passed through
-the fore and main courses of the merchantman,
-and were seen to ricochet along the waves' tops
-ahead, ere they sunk amid tiny waterspouts to the
-bottom. Thus the violence of the gale rendered
-the cannonading of the Frenchman nearly futile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Neglected, or ill-protected at times by warship
-and batteries, as the whole Scottish coast
-was during the war against France, such episodes
-as this were of frequent occurrence. There was
-no cruiser in the vicinity, so the flight and
-pursuit in the offing went on interrupted,
-notwithstanding the fury of the gale, which was
-increasing every moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although our fleets successfully blockaded the
-great military ports of France, in the beginning
-of the war, her privateers infested all the broad
-and narrow seas, and frequently made dashes
-inshore. Only seventeen years before the period
-of our story, the <i>Fearnought</i>, of Dunkirk,
-cannonaded Arbroath with red-hot shot; and much,
-about the same time, the notorious renegade Paul
-Jones kept all the Scottish seaboard in alarm
-with his fleet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the wild blast that tore round the sea-beaten
-cliff on which the castle stood, increased in
-fury; the waves grew whiter as the lurid sun went
-down, enveloped in clouds; the sky grew darker
-and the guns flashed redder, as they broke
-through the murky atmosphere, while their
-reports were brought by the wind, sharply and
-distinctly, to the ears of those who so anxiously
-looked on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, if Rohallion should be there!" exclaimed
-Lady Winifred, wringing her hands again and
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This will never do!" exclaimed the old
-Quartermaster, wrathfully; "a Frenchman in
-the very mouth o' the Clyde and dinging a Scottish
-ship in that fashion! I must fire a gun, and
-get the volunteers to man the battery."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly the sails of the merchantman were
-seen to shiver, and she seemed in danger of losing
-her masts, for a shot had carried away her rudder,
-and consequently she became unmanageable!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both vessels were now so near the land, that
-the Frenchman probably became alarmed for his
-own safety; so changing his course, he braced
-his yards sharp up, and beating to windward,
-speedily disappeared into the gloom from which
-he had so suddenly emerged, and was seen no
-more; but the unfortunate victim of his hostility
-drifted fast away before the wind, partly broadside
-on, towards that lee and rocky shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She will be foul o' the Partan Craig, so sure
-as my name is John Girvan!" exclaimed the
-Quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is death in the air, Girvanmains,"
-added Lady Rohallion, in a low voice that was full
-of deep emotion; "I heard the moan of the sea
-and wind&mdash;the deep sough of coming trouble&mdash;in
-the coves below the house this morning, and I
-never knew the omen fail&mdash;oh, look there&mdash;<i>all is
-over!</i>" she exclaimed with a shudder, as the
-drifting vessel struck with a crash, they seemed to
-hear, on the long white ridge of the Partan Craig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment her masts were seen to sway
-from port to starboard, then away they went to
-leeward, a mass of entangled ruin, rigging, yards,
-and sails, as she became a complete wreck bulged
-upon the reef, with the roaring sea making
-tremendous breaches over her, washing boats, booms,
-bulwarks, and everything from her deck; and thus
-she lay, helpless and abandoned to the elemental
-war, within a mile of the shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the naked eye, but more particularly by
-means of a telescope, the crew could be seen
-making frantic signals to those on shore, or lashing
-themselves to the timber heads and the stumps of
-the masts; and near her bows there was a man
-bearing in his arms a child, whom he sought to
-shield from the waves that every moment swept
-over the whole ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A father and his child," exclaimed Lady
-Rohallion, in deep commiseration; "oh, my God,
-the poor things will perish! I will give a
-hundred guineas to have them saved."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The national debt wouldn't do it," replied
-the old quartermaster, grimly, with something in
-his throat between a sob and a sigh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In those days there were no lifeboats, no rocket
-apparatus to succour the shipwrecked, and in such
-a wild night of storm and tempest&mdash;for now the
-chill November eve had deepened into night&mdash;the
-hardy fishermen, who alone could have ventured
-forth to aid the drowning crew, thought and spoke
-of their wives and little ones, whose bread
-depended on their exertions and on the safety of
-their clinker-built boats, now drawn high and dry
-upon the beach; and thus compelled by prudence
-to remain inactive, they remained with their
-weather-beaten faces turned stolidly seaward to
-watch the helpless wreck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That those who were thereon did not despair
-of succour from the shore was evident, for on the
-stump of their mainmast the red glaring light of
-a tar-barrel was soon seen burning to indicate
-where they were, for as the darkness increased,
-even the snow-white foam that boiled over the
-Partan Craig became invisible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the fishermen's wives wrung their hands,
-and exclaimed in chorus&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The puir man wi' his bairn&mdash;oh the puir
-man wi' his bairn! God save and sain them!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flaring steadily like a great torch, the light of the
-blazing barrel shed a weird gloom upon the wreck,
-and defied for a time even the seas that swept
-her to extinguish it, while the heartrending cries
-of the poor fellows who were lashed to the
-timber-heads and belaying pins, were brought to the
-listeners' ears, from time to time, on the stormy
-gusts of wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To add to the wildness of the scene, the sea-lairds,
-disturbed, in their eyries among the rocks
-by the cries, the recent firing, and the blazing
-barrel now came forth, and the spotted guillemot
-(or sea-turtle), the red-throated northern douker,
-the ravenous gull, and the wild screaming mews
-went swooping about in flocks on the blast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A loud and despairing cry that was echoed by
-all on shore arose from the wreck, as the
-fire-barrel was extinguished by one tremendous
-breaker; and now local knowledge alone could
-indicate the place where the bulged ship was
-perishing amid the gloom. Soon after this, the cries
-for succour ceased, and as large pieces of timber,
-planking, bulwarks, spars and masts were dashed
-upon the pier and rocks by the furious sea, it was
-rightly conjectured that she had gone to pieces,
-and that all was at an end now, with her and
-her crew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Accompanied by the village dominie, Symon
-Skaill, a party of fishermen, farm labourers and
-servants from the castle, Mr. John Girvan, with
-a shawl tied over his hat and yellow wig, searched
-the whole beach around the little bay that was
-overshadowed and sheltered by the castle-rock, and
-the coves or caverns that yawned in it, hoping
-that some poor wretch might be cast ashore with
-life enough remaining to tell the story of his ship;
-but they searched long and vainly. Pieces of
-wreck, cordage, torn sails, broken spars and blocks
-alone were left by the reflux of the waves, and the
-flaring of the searchers' torches on the gusty wind,
-as seen from the Castle of Rohallion, made them
-seem like wandering spirits, or something
-certainly uncanny and weird to the eyes of Lady
-Winifred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the night wore on, the storm continued
-unabated; heavily the rain began to lash the
-sea-beat rocks and castle walls; louder than ever
-roared the wind in the caves below, and more
-fiercely boiled the breakers over the Partan Craig,
-as if the warring elements were rejoicing in their
-strength, and in the destruction they had achieved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wet, wearied, breathless, and longing particularly
-for a glass of that steaming whisky-toddy,
-which they knew awaited them in the castle, the
-dominie and the quartermaster, whose flambeaux
-were both nearly burned out, just as they were
-about to ascend a narrow path that wound
-upward from the beach, heard simultaneously a
-sound like a wild gasping sob&mdash;a half-stifled cry
-of despair and exhaustion&mdash;from the seaward.
-Shouting lustily for assistance, they gathered some
-of the stragglers, and by the united glare of their
-torches, upheld at arm's length, they beheld a
-sight that roused their tenderest sympathies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Struggling with that wild sea, whose waves
-were still rolling inshore, about twenty feet from
-where the spectators stood, a man's head could
-be seen amid the white surf, bobbing like a
-fisher's float, as he swam, combating nobly with
-the waves, but with one hand and arm only; the
-other hand and arm sustained a child, who seemed
-already dead or partially drowned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, weelawa, it was na for nocht that the
-sealghs were yowling on the Partan Craig
-yestreen!" cried Elsie Irvine, a stout and comely
-matron; but from that haunt the seals have long
-since been scared by the river steamers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, the bairn&mdash;save the bairn&mdash;the puir wee
-lammie&mdash;the puir wee doo!" chorussed the women,
-whose maternal instincts were keenly excited, and
-led by Elsie's husband, several men rushed into
-the water, grasping each other hand-in-hand to
-stem alike the flow and backwash of the waves;
-but paralysed now by past exhaustion and by the
-extreme cold of the sea and atmosphere, the poor
-man, who was clad in a light green frock, laced
-with gold, could do no more to save either himself
-or his burden; and thus lay floating passively
-on the surface, drawn deep into the black trough
-one moment, and tossed upon the white froth of
-a wave-summit the next, but always far beyond
-the reach of those who sought to rescue him and
-his boy, and wild and ghastly seemed his face,
-when, at times, it could be seen by the light of
-the upheld torches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Uttering a short, sharp cry of exhaustion and
-despair, he suddenly seemed to stand, or rise erect
-in the water; then he cast the child towards the
-beach, threw up his hands as if human nature
-could endure no more, and sank&mdash;sank within
-twenty feet of where the spectators stood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Irvine, the fisherman, cleverly caught hold of
-the child, which a wave fortunately threw towards
-him, and the little fellow, senseless, cold
-and breathless, was borne away in the plump,
-sturdy arms of his wife, to be stripped, put in a
-warm bed, and restored, if possible, to heat and
-animation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great exertions were meanwhile made, but
-made in vain, to rescue the body of his father,
-for it was never doubted that such was his
-relationship by those who witnessed his severe
-struggles, his love, and his despair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The storm was passing away; wet, weary, and
-very much "out of sorts" by their unwonted
-exertions, the quartermaster and the village
-dominie, a thickset, sturdy old fellow, clad in
-rusty black, with a tie perriwig and square buckled
-shoes, a very wrinkled and somewhat careworn
-face, arrived at the Castle to make their report to
-Lady Rohallion, who had anxiously awaited the
-events of the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that love of the marvellous and the
-morbid peculiar to their class, her servants had
-every few minutes brought intelligence of the
-number of corpses, gashed and mangled, which
-strewed the beach; of treasures and rich stuffs
-which came ashore from the wreck, and so forth;
-but, by reading her letters and other occupations,
-she had striven to wean herself from thinking too
-much of the terrors that reigned without, though
-every gust of wind that howled round the old
-tower brought to mind the bulged ship, and made
-her sigh for the absence of her husband and son,
-both far away from her; and now starting up,
-she listened to the narrative of Dominie Skail and
-his gossip, Mr. Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ugh!" concluded the latter; "I've never
-had such a soaking since I tumbled into the
-Weser, in heavy marching order, the night before
-Minden; and drowned I should have been, but
-for the ready hand of Rohallion."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But this child you speak of&mdash;where is it?"
-asked Lady Winifred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wi' auld Elsie Irvine, down by the coves,
-my lady," replied the dominie, with one of his
-most respectful bows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The poor little thing is alive, then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;alive, warm, and sleeping cosily in
-Elsie's breast by this time&mdash;cosily as ever bairn
-o' her ain did."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bring this child to me in the morning,
-dominie&mdash;you will see to it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, my lady."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A boy, you say it is?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what is he like, John Girvan?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Just like other bairns, my lady."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With yellow hair and a nose above his chin,"
-replied the quartermaster, wiping the water out
-of his neck and wig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A bonnie golden-haired bairnie as ever you
-saw, Lady Rohallion," replied the dominie, with a
-glistening eye, for he had a kinder heart for
-children than the old bachelor Girvan; "and he
-minded me much of your ladyship's son, the
-master, when about the same size or age."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this poor child is the sole survivor of
-the wreck?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So far as we can learn, the sole&mdash;the only
-one!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Heaven help us! this is very sad!" exclaimed
-the lady, while her eyes filled with tears.
-"Many a mother will have a sore heart after this
-storm, and more than one widow may weep for
-a husband drowned."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ay, madam, in warring wi' the elements,
-we feel ourselves what the Epicureans of old
-dreamed they were&mdash;scarcely the creation of a
-benevolent Being, so helpless and infirm is man
-when opposed to them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bother the Epicureans, whoever they were;
-wring the water out of your wig, dominie," said
-the quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Any bodies that come ashore must be noted,
-examined, and buried with due reverence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, my lady," replied the dominie; "we'll
-have to see the minister and the sheriff anent
-this matter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dominie, the butler will attend to you and
-Mr. Girvan. You are quite wet, so lose no
-time in getting your clothes changed; and bring
-me in the morning this little waif of the ocean,
-whom I quite long to see. Until we discover
-his parentage, he shall be my peculiar care."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That shall I do, my lady, joyfully," replied
-the dominie, bowing very low; "and that you
-will be unto him all that the daughter of Pharosh
-was to the little waif she found in the ark
-of bulrushes, I doubt not."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, dominie," said the quartermaster, testily,
-"grog first&mdash;Exodus after."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have the honour to wish your ladyship a
-very good night; and we shall drink to your
-health a glass for every letter of your name, like
-the Romans of old, as we find in Tibullus and
-Martial," said the solemn dominie, retiring and
-making three profound bows in reply to Lady
-Rohallion's stately courtesy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good night, dominie. You, Girvanmains,
-will tell me the last news in the morning."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old quartermaster made his most respectful
-military obeisance as he withdrew, on receiving
-this patronymic; for though he had begun life in
-the ranks of the 25th, or old Edinburgh regiment,
-like every Scot he had a pedigree, and claimed a
-descent from the Girvans of Girvanmains and
-Dalmorton, an old Ayrshire stock, who were
-always adherents of the Crawfords of Rohallion,
-either for good or for evil, especially in their feuds
-with the Kennedies of Colzean; and thus he was
-disposed to be more than usually suave, when the
-lady addressed him as "Girvanmains," or more
-kindly and simply as "John Girvan," a familiarity
-which won entirely the heart of the worthy old
-soldier, for he had followed her husband to many
-a battle and siege, and, under his eye and orders,
-had expended many a thousand round of John
-Bull's ball ammunition in the Seven Years' war
-and in the fruitless strife with our colonists in
-America.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-THE CASTLE OF ROHALLION.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Hast them seen that lordly castle,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That castle by the sea?<br />
- Golden and red above it,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The clouds float gorgeously;<br />
- And fain it would stoop downward,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the mirrored wave below,<br />
- And fain it would soar upward,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the evening's crimson glow."&mdash;LONGFELLOW.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The baronial fortalice in which our story has
-opened stands, as we have stated, upon a cliff, at
-least one hundred and fifty feet in height above the
-ocean, or where the estuary of the Clyde widens
-thereunto, on the Carrick shore; but since 1798
-it has undergone many alterations, not perhaps
-for the better.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In that year it consisted of the old Scottish
-Keep, built in the reign of James I. by Sir Ranulph
-Crawford, of Rohallion, his ambassador, first to
-Henry VI. of England, and afterwards to Charles
-VII. of France, for which services he was created
-Keeper of the Royal Palace of Carrick. Adjoining
-this grim tower, with its grated windows,
-machicolated ramparts, and corner tourelles, was
-the more modern mansion built in the time of
-James VI., by Hugh, third Lord Rohallion, who
-slew the gipsy king in single combat at the
-Cairns of Blackhinney. It had crowstepped
-gables, dormer windows, gabletted and carved
-with dates, crests, and quaint monograms, and
-many a huge chimney, conical turret, and creaking
-vane, added to its picturesque appearance.
-To this was added a wing in the time of Queen
-Anne, somewhat unsightly in its details, yet the
-general aspect of the whole edifice was bold and
-pleasing, chastened or toned down as it was by
-time and the elements.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On one side it overlooked the Firth, then
-opening to a stormy sea, with the ruins of
-Turnberry in the distance&mdash;the crumbling walls wherein
-the conqueror of the proud Plantagenet first saw
-the light, and learned "to shake his Carrick
-spear." On the other, its windows opened to
-the most fertile portion of the bailiewick&mdash;wooded
-heights that looked on the banks and braes of the
-Doon, where the scenery wakened a flood of
-historical or legendary memories; where every
-broomy knowe and grassy hill, every coppice
-and rushy glen, grey lichened rock and stony
-corrie, were consecrated by some old song or
-stirring tale of love or local war&mdash;the fierce old
-feudal wars of the Kennedies, the Crawfords, and
-the grim iron Barons of Auchindrane; and, more
-than all, it was the birthplace, the home of
-Robert Bruce and of Robert Burns&mdash;the one the
-warrior, and the other the bard of the people.
-From the windows of Rohallion could be seen the
-very uplands, where, but a few years before, the
-latter had ploughed and sown, and where, as he tells
-us in his filial love of his native soil, when he saw
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "The rough burr-thistle spreading wide,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Among the bearded bear;<br />
- I turned the weeding-hook aside,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And spared the emblem dear!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The scenery from whence he drew his inspiration
-looked down on the old tower of Rohallion, which
-contained on its first floor the stone-paved hall,
-that had witnessed many a bridal feast and Christmas
-festival, held in the rough old joyous times,
-when Scotland was true to herself, and ere sour
-Judaical Sabbatarianism came upon her, to make
-religion a curse and a cloak for the deepest
-hypocrisy; and ere her preachers sought "to merit
-heaven, by making earth a hell."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It presented the unusual feature (in a baronial
-edifice) of a groined roof, having at least six
-elaborately carved Gothic bosses, where the ribs
-that sprang from beautiful corbels placed between
-the windows intersected each other. On the
-frieze of the high-arched fireplace was a shield
-<i>gules</i>, with a fess <i>ermine</i>, the old arms of the
-Crawfords, Lords of Crawford, in Clydesdale (a
-family ancient as the days of William the Lyon),
-from whom the peers of Rohallion&mdash;whose patent
-was signed by James IV. on the night before
-Flodden&mdash;took their bearings and motto, <i>Endure
-Furth!</i> Though, certainly, it was but little they
-were ever disposed to endure with patience, if
-displeased with either king or commoner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stags' skulls, antlers, a few old barred helmets,
-dinted corslets, rusty swords and pikes, decorated
-this great stone apartment. Its furniture was
-massive and ancient, but seldom used now, so there
-the busy spiders spun their webs all undisturbed,
-across the grated windows, and the moss grew in
-winter on the carved jambs of the great fireplace,
-within which, according to tradition, for ages
-before these days of unbelief, the little red brownie
-of Rohallion was wont to come o' nights when
-all were abed, and warm himself by the
-smouldering <i>grieshoch</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion preferred the more modern
-rooms of Queen Anne's reign, where the buhl
-and marqueterie furniture was more to her taste.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There, the double drawing-room with its yellow
-damask curtains, high-backed chairs and couches,
-its old bandy-legged tabourettes, slender gueridon
-work-tables; its old-fashioned piano, with
-perhaps "H.R.H. the Duke of York's Grand March"
-on the music-frame; its Delft-lined fireplace and
-basket-grate set on a square block of stone, a
-spinning-wheel on one side, and cosy elbow-chair,
-brilliant with brass nails, on the other, was the
-beau-ideal of comfort, especially on a tempestuous
-night, such as the last we have described; nor
-was it destitute of splendour, for its lofty panelled
-walls exhibited some fine pictures. There were
-some gems by Greuze, of golden-haired boys and
-fair full-bosomed women in brilliant colours; one
-or two ruddily-tinted saints by Murillo; one or
-two dark Titians, and darker Vandykes representing
-Italian nobles of cut-throat aspect, in gilt
-armour, with trunk breeches and high ruffs. Then
-there were also some of the Scottish school; the
-Lord Rohallion (who opposed the surrender of
-Charles I. to the English) by Jameson; his son,
-a vehement opposer of the Union, attired in a
-huge wig and collarless red coat, by Aikman; and
-the father of the present lord, by Allan Ramsay,
-son of the poet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This Lord in 1708 left his country in disgust,
-swearing that "she was only fit for the
-Presbyterian slaves who sold her;" and for several
-years he solaced himself at the head of a Muscovite
-regiment against the Turks on the banks of
-the Danube&mdash;as the Scots whigs had it, "learning
-to eat raw horse and forget God's kirk, among
-barbarians in red breeks."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Near the castle, and forming indeed a portion
-of it, was a platform, facing the little sandy bay,
-where the fishing boats were beached, and thereon
-were mounted twelve iron twenty-four pounders,
-part of the spoil of <i>La Bonne Citoyenne</i>, a French
-privateer, which was cast away on the Parian
-Craig; and there, as the old lord and representative
-peer (whose wife is awaiting him) still
-retained his military instincts, being a retired
-general officer, he had all the able-bodied men of his
-tenantry drilled to the use of sponge and rammer
-as artillerymen, for rumours of invasion were
-rife; gunboats were being built at Boulogne,
-and those who then looked across the Straits
-of Dover, could see the white tents of the
-Armée d'Angleterre, under the Irish soldier
-of fortune, Kilmaine, covering all the hostile
-shore of France. So all Britain was bristling
-with bayonets; from Cape Wrath to the Land's
-End in Cornwall, every man who could handle a
-musket was a volunteer, if not otherwise enrolled
-in the line, militia, or Fencibles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this battery the flag was hoisted and a
-salute loyally and joyously fired every 4th of
-June, in honour of His Majesty George III.,
-by the Rohallion volunteers; and there with loud
-hurrahs they drank confusion to France and to his
-enemies, Tom Paine, the Pope, and the Devil, and
-very frequently in the best French brandy, which
-somehow found its way quite as often as our
-good Farintosh or Campbelton whisky, duty free,
-into the sea coves beneath the castle rock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These twelve twenty-four pounders protected
-the approach to the bay on one side, and to the
-gate of the castle on the other&mdash;the haunted
-gate of Rohallion, as it was named, from the
-circumstance that there the old village dominie,
-Symon Skaill, when going home one morning
-(night he affirmed it to be) in midsummer, after
-topering with Mr. John Girvan, saw a very
-startling sight. Clearly defined in the calm
-still twilight of the morning, there stood by the
-gate the tall and handsome figure of John,
-Master of Rohallion, who was known to be
-then serving with the Foot Guards under Cornwallis,
-in America. He wore his scarlet regimentals,
-his brigadier wig, his long straight sword,
-and little three-cocked hat; but his face was
-pale, distorted by agony, and blood was flowing
-from a wound in his left temple.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere the affrighted dominie could speak, the
-figure&mdash;the <i>wraith</i>&mdash;melted into the twilight, and
-not a trace of it remained by the arched gate,
-where the birds were twittering about in the early
-morning. A note was made of this singular
-vision, and it was found that at that hour, the
-Master of Rohallion had been shot through the
-head, when leading on his company of the Guards
-at the attack on Long Island.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such, in 1798, was the old Scottish mansion of
-Rohallion, the residence of Reynold, sixth Lord of
-that ilk, which, by the events of the last night's
-storm, has become the starting-place, or, as the
-quartermaster might phrase it, the <i>point d'appui</i>,
-of our story.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-THE CHILD OF THE SEA.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"'Tis gone&mdash;the storm has past,<br />
- 'Twas but a bitter hail shower, and the sun<br />
- Laughs out again within the tranquil blue.<br />
- Henceforth, Firmilian, thou art safe with me."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;AYTOUN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-To the eyes of those who surveyed the beach
-beneath the castle walls next morning, a lamentable
-spectacle was displayed. The wreck upon the
-Partan Craig had been completely torn to pieces
-by the fury of the waves, and now shattered
-masts and yards, blocks and rigging, casks, bales,
-planks and other pieces of worn and frayed timber
-were left high and dry among the shells and
-shingle by the receding tide, or were dashed into
-smaller fragments by the surf that beat against
-the castle rock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Several dead bodies were also cast ashore,
-sodden with the brine, and partly covered with
-sand; and, though all had been but a short time
-in the water, some were sadly mutilated by
-having been dashed repeatedly against the sharp
-and abutting rocks of Rohallion, by the furious
-sea last night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All looked placid and calm, and by the position
-of their limbs, nearly all seemed to have been
-drowned in the act of swimming. By a portion
-of the sternboard that came on shore, the vessel's
-name appeared to have been the <i>Louise</i>; but of
-what port, or from where, remained unknown,
-for, save the little child, there remained no tongue
-or record to tell the story of that doomed ship, or
-the dreadful secrets of that eventful night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The mutterings of the fishermen and the
-lamentations of the women of the little hamlet,
-were loud and impressive, as they rambled along
-the beach, drawing the dead aside to remain in a
-boat-shed till that great local authority, the parish
-minister, arrived. Everything that came drifting
-ashore from the wreck was drawn far up the sand,
-lest the returning tide should wash it off again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were no Lloyds' agents or other officials
-in the neighbourhood of Rohallion, so each man
-made a lawful prize of whatever he could lay
-hands upon and convey to his cottage. The
-people at work close by relinquished plough
-and harrow, and harnessed their horses to the
-masts and booms for conveyance through the
-fields. Others brought carts to carry off the
-plunder; and thus, long before midday, not a
-trace remained of the shattered ship, save the
-pale dead men, who lay side by side under an
-old sail in the boat-shed; but for many a night
-after this, Elsie Irvine and others averred that
-they could see the pale blue corpse-lichts dancing
-on the sea about the Partan Craig, to indicate
-where other men lay drowned, uncoffined, and
-unprayed for.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among other bodies discovered on the beach
-next morning was that of a man in whom, by
-his costume&mdash;a light green frock, laced with
-gold&mdash;all recognised the father, or supposed father,
-of the little boy he had striven so bravely to
-save, and whom all had seen perish by the light
-of their torches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor man was lying among the seaweed,
-stark and stiff, and half covered with sand, within
-a few yards of the cottage where his little boy,
-all unconscious of his loss, of the past and of the
-future, lay peacefully asleep in Elsie Irvine's
-bed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now the quartermaster and Dominie Skaill,
-who had given his schoolboys a holiday, in honour
-of the excitement and the event, arrived at the
-scene of operations, with Lady Rohallion's orders
-that the child should be brought to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Old John Girvan looked at the corpse attentively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This poor fellow has been a soldier," said he;
-"I can perceive that, by a glance. Lift him
-gently into the shed, lads, though it's all one to
-him how he's handled now!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The corpse seemed to be that of a tall, well-formed,
-and fine-looking dark-complexioned man,
-in the prime of life; his dark brown hair, from
-which the white powder had all been washed
-away, was already becoming grizzled, and was
-neatly tied in a queue by a blue silk ribbon.
-In the breast-pocket of his coat, there were found
-a purse containing a few French coins of the
-Republic, but of small value, and a plated metal
-case, in which were some papers uninjured by the
-water. On the third finger of his left hand was
-a signet ring on which the name "Josephine"
-was engraved; so with these relics (while the body
-was placed with the rest in the boat-shed) John
-Girvan and the dominie, accompanied by Elsie,
-bearing the child, repaired to the presence of Lady
-Rohallion, who received them all in her little
-breakfast-parlour, the deeply embayed and arched
-windows of which showed that it had been the
-bower-chamber of her predecessors, in the feudal
-days of the old castle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come away, Elsie, and show me your darling
-prize!" she exclaimed, as she hurried forward and
-held out her hand to the fisherman's wife, for
-there was a singular combination of friendly and
-old-fashioned grace in all she did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is no a bonnier bairn, my leddy, nor
-a better, in a' the three Bailiwicks o' Kyle,
-Carrick, and Cunninghame," said Elsie, curtsying
-deeply, as she presented the child.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madam," added the dominie; "the bairn
-is as perfect an Absalom as even the Book of
-Samuel describeth."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I dinna understand a word he says,"
-resumed Elsie; "hear ye that, madam?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ma mère, ma mère!" sobbed the child, a very
-beautiful dark-eyed, but golden-haired and
-red-cheeked little boy of some seven or eight years
-of age, as he looked from face to face in wonder
-and alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Faith! 'tis a little Frenchman," said the
-dominie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A Frenchman!" exclaimed Elsie, placing the
-child somewhat precipitately on Lady Rohallion's
-knee, and retiring a pace or two. "I thocht sae,
-by his queer jargon of broken English, wi' a
-smattering o' Scots words too; but French folk
-speak nae Christian tongue. Maybe the bairn's
-a spy&mdash;a son, wha kens, o' Robespierre or
-Bonaparte himsel!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Elsie, how can you run on thus?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, mon père&mdash;mon père!" said the child,
-sobbing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hear till him again, my leddy," exclaimed
-Elsie; "the bairn can speak French&mdash;that
-cowes a'!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He cries for his father&mdash;poor child&mdash;poor
-child!" said Lady Rohallion, whose eyes filled
-with tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Father&mdash;yes, madame; my father&mdash;where is
-he?" said the boy, opening his fine large eyes
-wider with an expression of anxiety and fear, and
-speaking in a lisping but strongly foreign accent;
-"take me to him&mdash;take me to him, madame, if
-you please."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The bairn speaks English well enough,"
-said the dominie; "he'll hae had a French
-tutor, or some sic haverel, to teach him to play
-the fiddle, I warrant, and to quote Voltaire,
-Rousseau, and Helvetius, when he grows older."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is your name, my dear little boy?"
-asked Lady Rohallion, caressingly; but she had
-to repeat the question thrice, and in different
-modes, before the child, who eyed her with
-evident distrust, replied, timidly:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quentin Kennedy, madame."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Kennedy!" exclaimed all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A gude auld Ayrshire name, ever since the
-days of Malcolm the Maiden!" said the
-quartermaster, striking his staff on the floor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rohallion's mother was a Kennedy," said the
-lady, a tender smile spreading over her face as
-she surveyed the orphan, "so the bairn could not
-have fallen into better hands than ours."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indubitably not, my lady," chimed in the
-dominie; "nor could he find a sibber friend."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And your father, my dear child&mdash;your
-father?" urged Lady Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My father&mdash;oh, my father is drowned! He
-went down into the sea with the big ship. Oh,
-ma mère! ma mère!" cried the little boy, in a
-sudden passion of grief, and seeking to escape
-from them, as the terrors of the past night, with
-a conviction of his present isolation and loneliness,
-seemed to come fully upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And your mamma, my little love?" asked
-the lady, endearingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is far away in France."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where&mdash;in what town?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hélas, madame, I do not know."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sobbed bitterly, and Lady Rohallion wept
-as she kissed and fondled, and strove to reassure
-him by those caresses which none but one who
-has been a mother can bestow; but sometimes he
-repelled her with his plump little hands, while
-his dark eyes would sparkle and dilate with
-surprise and alarm. Then he would ask for his
-father again and again, for the child knew neither
-what death or drowning meant; and it was in
-vain they told him that his father had perished in
-the sea. He could not understand them, and to
-have shown the child the poor pale, sodden corpse
-that lay in the boat-shed on the shore would
-have been a useless cruelty that must have added
-to his grief and terror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion, pointing upward as he sat on
-her knee, told him that his father was in heaven,
-and that in time he would meet him there; for,
-of such as he was, poor orphan, was the kingdom
-of heaven made; but in heaven or in the sea was
-all one for a time to little Quentin Kennedy, who
-wept bitterly, and noisily too, till he grew weary,
-or became consoled, by the winning ways of his
-gentle protectress, for of course the poor child knew
-not the nature of his awful loss and bereavement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While the boy, already temporarily forgetful of
-his griefs, was stretched on the soft, warm hearth-rug
-before the fire that blazed in the parlour grate,
-and occupied himself with the gambols of a wiry
-Skye-terrier, John Girvan handed to Lady Rohallion
-the relics he had found on the drowned man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A ring!" said she; "this is painfully
-interesting; and it has an inscription."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madame, it is like the <i>annuli</i> worn by
-the legionary tribunes in the Punic war," added
-Dominie Skaill, who never lost an opportunity of
-"airing" his classics.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It bears a crest; that speaks of gentle birth,"
-said Lady Rohallion, who had a great veneration
-for that fortuitous circumstance. "And there is
-a name, <i>Josephine</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mamma&mdash;ma mère!" exclaimed the child,
-starting and looking up at the, no doubt, familiar
-sound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His mother's name, I am sure; poor little
-fellow, he has heard his father call her so," said
-Lady Rohallion, as she opened the plated case
-and drew forth the documents it contained. One
-was on parchment, the other two were letters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A military commission&mdash;Girvanmains, look here!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the commission of Quentin Kennedy,
-<i>gentilhomme Ecossais</i>, to be captain in the Royal
-Regiment of Scots, in the service of His Most
-Christian Majesty, and was signed by the
-unfortunate Louis XVI., as the date showed, in the
-year before his execution.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So this poor drowned man has eaten his
-bread by tuck of drum!" exclaimed the old
-quartermaster, with a kindling eye, as he stooped
-to caress the orphan's golden curls. "Puir
-fellow&mdash;puir fellow! He has been a commissioned
-officer like myself, so I'll e'en turn out the
-Rohallion Volunteers, and he shall be borne to
-his grave as becomes a soldier, with muffled drums
-and arms reversed&mdash;eh, dominie?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, and the spoils of war shall be cast on
-the pile, as we read in the eleventh book of the
-Æneid; and they shall march like the Thebans,
-striking their weapons one on another, to the
-sound of the trumpet&mdash;eh, quartermaster?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'd batoon the first lout I caught doing aught
-so unsteady or so unsoldierlike," was the
-indignant response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But how came this Scotsman to be serving
-the French King," asked the dominie; "as such
-was he not a renegade soldier, such as the Romans
-were wont to stab and leave unburied, as we find
-in Tacitus?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He had been in the foreign brigades, the
-Scottish and Irish," replied the lady. "One of
-these letters is from Monsieur the Comte d'Artois,
-and it praises the courage of the Scottish Captain
-Kennedy, of the Regiment de Berwick, in the
-campaigns upon the Meuse and Rhine. The
-other letter is from his poor wife, and is
-subscribed Josephine. Ah me, how sad! the name
-that is on the ring."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They spoke in low tones, as if loth to disturb
-the child, who was still playing with the terrier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What says it, my lady?" asked the dominie,
-"for though well versed in the dead languages,
-praised be Providence and the auld pedagogy of
-Glasgow, I know little of the living&mdash;French
-especially, the language of Voltaire, Diderot, and
-Helvetius&mdash;of democrats, levellers, revolutionists,
-and the slaves of the Corsican tyrant."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The letter has no date, dominie," replied the
-lady, smiling at this outburst; "the cover also is
-wanting, but it runs thus."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Standing one on each side of her chair, each
-with a hand at his ear to listen, the two old men
-heard her translate with ease the following letter:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"MY OWN DEAR, DEAR QUENTIN,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is the last letter you will receive in
-France from your own Fifine. The next I shall
-address to you, as you may direct, to Scotland.
-Ah, mon Dieu! how sad&mdash;how terrible to think
-that we are to be separated, and at such a time!
-But madame my mother's illness pleads for me
-with all, and more than all with you, Quentin.
-You, as a Scotsman and royalist officer, and our
-poor child, for the very blood it inherits from his
-mother, would be welcome victims to the shambles
-of the great Republic; for the first Consul B. and
-Citizen M. his secretary of state, would not spare
-even a child at this crisis, lest it should grow into an
-aristocrat and an enemy.* Every hour the hatred
-of Britain grows stronger here, and the mode in
-which we treat the prisoners taken in Flanders and
-elsewhere, makes my blood alternately glow and
-freeze, Frenchwoman though I am! But I have
-not forgotten the Place de la Grève, or the horrors
-of that day, when my father's blood moistened the
-sawdust of a scaffold, just wetted by the blood of
-Marie Antoinette.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* The initials no doubt refer to Bonaparte and the secretary
-Hugues Bernard Maret, who assisted so vigorously in the
-18th Brumaire.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Enough of this, however, dear Quentin; 'tis
-safer to speak than to write of such things, though
-this letter goes by a safe and sure hand, our dear
-friend, the Abbé Lebrun, for in this land of spies
-the post is perilous. Destroy it, however, the
-moment you receive it, for we know not what
-mischief it might do us all, though the ship by which
-you sail, goes, you say, under cartel, and by the
-rules of war can neither be attacked nor taken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rumour says that Monsieur Charles Philippe,
-the Comte d'Artois, is now with his suite at
-Holyrood, the old home of those Scottish kings with
-whom his fathers were allied; and that the ancient
-Garde du Corps Ecossais is to be re-established
-for him there. I pray God it may be so, as in that
-case, dearest, Monsieur will not forget you and
-your services on the Rhine and elsewhere, and
-your steady adherence to his family in those days
-of anarchy, impiety, and sin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Kiss our little cherub for me. I am in
-despair when I think of him, though he is safer
-with you than with me, in our dreadful France&mdash;no
-longer the land of beauty and gaiety, but of the
-bayonet and guillotine. He must be our hostage
-and peace-offering to your family, and I doubt
-not that his innocent smiles and golden curls may
-soften their hearts towards us both. La Mère de
-Dieu take you both into her blessed keeping and
-hasten our reunion. Till then, and for ever after,
-I am your own affectionate little wife,
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"FIFINE."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-This letter, we have said, was undated, but the
-postscript led Lady Rohallion to suppose it came
-from a remote part of France. It ran thus:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Your own petted Fifine sends you a hundred
-kisses for every mile this has to travel; as many
-more to little Quentin, as they wont add a franc
-to the weight in the pocket of M. l'Abbé."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-So ended this letter, so sad in its love and its
-tenor, under the circumstances. With that of the
-Comte d'Artois, the commission, purse, and ring,
-Lady Rohallion carefully put it past in her
-antique buhl escritoire, for her husband's inspection
-on his return; and, on leaving the castle, the
-old quartermaster kept his word.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-True to his inbred military instincts and
-impulses, he had the Rohallion company of Volunteers
-duly paraded, in their cocked hats, short
-swallow-tailed red coats, white leggings, and long
-black gaiters; and, with arms reversed, they bore
-the dead soldier of fortune, shoulder-high, from
-the old castle-gate, where the scarlet family
-standard, with its fess <i>ermine</i>, hung half-hoisted
-on the battery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mournfully from the leafless copse that clothed
-the steep sides of the narrow glen in which the
-old kirk stood, did the muffled drums re-echo,
-while the sweet low wail of the fifes sent up the
-sad notes of the dead march&mdash;"The Land o' the
-Leal."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At one of the drawing-room windows, Lady
-Rohallion sat, with the child upon her knee&mdash;little
-Quentin Kennedy, our hero, for such he is;
-and her motherly heart was full, and her kindly
-tears fell fast on his golden hair, when three
-sharp volleys that rung in the clear cold air above
-a yawning grave, and the pale blue distant smoke
-that she could see wreathing in the November
-sunshine, announced the last scene of this little
-tragedy&mdash;that the poor drowned wanderer, the
-Scottish soldier of fortune, who adhered to King
-Louis in his downfall, had found a last home in
-his native earth; and that, <i>perhaps</i>, all his secrets,
-his sorrows, and the story of his life were buried
-with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then with a burst of sympathy and womanly
-tenderness, she pressed her lips to the soft cheek
-of the child, whose eyes dilated with inquiry and
-wonder, as he heard those farewell volleys that
-rung in the distant air, but little knew that they
-were fired above his father's closing grave!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-THE PAST.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Still shall unthinking man substantial deem<br />
- The forms that flit through life's deceitful dream,<br />
- Till at some stroke of Fate, the vision flies,<br />
- And sad realities in prospect rise;<br />
- And from Elysian slumbers rudely torn,<br />
- The startled soul awakes, to think and mourn."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;BEATTIE'S <i>Elegy</i>, 1758.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Such is the buoyant thoughtlessness of childhood,
-that a few days sufficed to console, to soothe, and
-to reconcile the poor boy to his new friends and
-his new habitation. The kindness, tenderness,
-and attention of Lady Rohallion did much, if
-not all, to achieve this; and doubtless she would
-have succeeded very well in the same way with
-an older personage than little Quentin Kennedy,
-for she fully possessed, together with great
-amiability and sweetness of disposition, those
-requisites which Sir William Temple affirmed to be
-the three great ingredients of pleasant conversation,
-viz., good sense, good humour, and wit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Secluded and retiring in her habits, simple and
-old-fashioned in her tastes, she preferred residing
-quietly among her husband's tenantry at Rohallion,
-to figuring, as had been her wont, in the
-great world of fashion, such as it was to be
-found in the London of old King George's days,
-or in the smaller circle of the Scottish metropolis;
-and even when parliamentary business compelled
-Lord Rohallion to proceed southward, he could
-scarcely prevail upon her to accompany him, for
-travelling was not then the swift and easy process
-we find it <i>now</i>, in these days of steam and railways.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the advent of her little protégé was quite
-a boon to her, and while rapidly learning to love
-the child, who had a thousand winning and endearing
-ways, she relinquished all idea of attempting
-to discover his mother till the return of her
-husband, though the notion was scarcely
-conceived, when it was abandoned as simply
-impossible, from the want of a distinct clue as to her
-residence, and the existence of the bitter and
-revengeful war that had been waged between
-France and Britain for five years now, ever
-since the siege of Toulon. Consequently there
-seemed nothing for it, as Quartermaster Girvan
-said, but to make a good Scotsman of the little
-Frenchman, (if French, indeed, he was)&mdash;and the
-dominie failed not to quote Cicero, "anent the
-<i>adoptio</i> of the Romans."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Lady Rohallion learned to love the child, and
-the child to love her with a regard that was quite
-filial; and his pretty prattle in broken English was
-her chief solace and amusement after the hours
-of attendance and <i>surveillance</i> she daily
-bestowed, like a good housewife and chatelaine of
-old, upon her household and her husband's
-tenantry; for there was not "a fishwife's bairn"
-in the hamlet below could be pilled or powdered for
-the measles or hooping-cough, without a due consultation
-being first held with my lady in the castle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sensation novels were then unknown, and
-Walter Scott was still in futurity, save as a
-translator of German ballads. Our respectable
-old friends, "Tom Jones," "Roderick Random,"
-and "Peregrine Pickle," were still in the flush of
-their fame; but Lady Rohallion preferred the
-works of Mr. Richardson, and deemed the
-sorrows of Clarissa Harlowe, and of Fielding's
-"Amelia," to be sorrows indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Being Winifred Maxwell of the gallant but
-attainted House of Nithsdale, her Jacobite
-sympathies were keen and intense; thus, ten
-years before the date of our story she suffered a
-real grief, and had worn a suit of the deepest
-black, on tidings coming from Maybole that
-Prince Charles Edward, with whom her mother
-had flirted in Holyrood, and for whom her uncles
-had shed their blood on the fatal field of Culloden&mdash;that
-the Bonnie Prince Charlie of so many stirring
-memories, so many Scottish songs, and so many faithful
-hearts, an old, soured, and disappointed man, had
-been gathered to his fathers, and was lying cold and
-dead in his tomb, beneath the dome of St. Peter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though she had somewhat strong ideas on the
-subject of keeping up "the old spirit of the
-Crawfords of Rohallion," a good deal of which, we are
-sorry to say, meant looking down on their neighbours:
-and though she had an intense estimation
-for people of "that ilk," and for coats, quarterings,
-and family claims, and that kind of blood
-which the Scots designated as <i>gude</i>, and the
-Spaniards as <i>blue</i>, she was weak enough, as Lady
-Eglinton phrased it, to treasure immensely a
-copy of very flattering verses, addressed to her in
-her beauty and girlhood, by a certain democratic
-Ayrshire ploughman, named Mr. Robert Burns,
-for whose memory she had a very great regard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was full of the proud and fiery ideas of a
-past and manly age, for she was old enough to
-remember when the beaus and bloods of Edinburgh
-in their periwigs and square-skirted coats of
-silk or velvet, squired her and Eleanora Eglinton
-up the old Assembly Close, with links flaring
-and swords flashing round their sedans, swearing,
-with such large oaths as were then fashionable, to
-whip through the lungs any scurvy fellow who
-loitered an instant in their way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the first years of the present century saw
-a new world closing round her, and innovations
-coming fast, though the old language in which
-our laws are written yet lingered in the pulpit
-and at the bar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To her aristocratic ideas, and to those of her
-friends, it seemed as if the malign influence of
-the French revolution tainted the very air,
-especially in Scotland, where, by the tendency of their
-education and religion, the people are naturally
-democratic in spirit; and it was pretty apparent,
-that the decapitation of Robert Watt at Edinburgh,
-and the persecution of "citizen Muir" and
-his compatriots by the Government, in no way
-cooled the real ardour of the Friends of the People.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Lady Winifred, it appeared also, that while,
-on one hand, the humbler classes were less
-genuinely affectionate and less deferential to the
-upper, on the other, they were less kindly and
-less courteous to each other. Everything seemed
-to be done in a hurry too, though the mail-coaches
-carrying four inside, usually took a week or more
-in rumbling between Edinburgh and London,
-with the varieties of an occasional break-down
-when fording a river, or receiving the contents of
-a robber's blunderbuss in a lonely part of the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holidays were kept in a hearty old fashion,
-and there was no sour Sabbatarianism to excite
-the wrath of the liberal-minded Scots, and the
-wonder and derision of their English neighbours.
-There were democrats and demagogues in every
-village, it is true; but patriotism, and a genuine
-British spirit rendered their revilings innocuous
-and all but useless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Where now the dun deer rove in the desert
-glens, the Highland Clans existed in all their
-hardihood and numerical strength, to fill by
-thousands the ranks of our kilted regiments. The
-flags of "Duncan, Nelson, Keppel, Howe, and
-Jervis" were sweeping the sea. Beacons studded
-all the hills, and every village cross was the
-muster-place of volunteer corps; and there are
-yet those alive who remember the great night of
-the <i>false alarm</i> when it was supposed the French
-had landed, when the bale-fire on Hume castle sent
-its blaze upon the midnight sky; when the alarm-drum,
-the long roll which a soldier never forgets,
-was beat in town and hamlet, and all Scotland
-stood to arms: and when the brave Liddesdale
-yeomanry swam the Liddle, then in full and
-roaring flood, every trooper riding with his sword
-in his teeth, as if to show that the old spirit yet
-lived upon the Borders, unchanged as in those
-days when the Lords Marchers blew their
-trumpets before the gates of Berwick or Carlisle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as it came to pass, it was in those
-stirring times of war and tumult&mdash;times not now
-very remote, good reader&mdash;that our little hero
-found a home in the old manor of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His mother sorrowed for him in sunny France
-beyond the sea, where she may never see him
-more, or know that he survived the wreck in which
-her husband perished; and now daily another
-received his morning kiss, and watched his footsteps
-and gambols; and nightly hushed him to sleep,
-smoothed the coverlet, caressed his ruddy cheeks
-and golden hair; yet that poor bereaved mother
-was never absent from the thoughts of good Lady
-Rohallion, who had now taken her place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of his many kisses and caresses, she felt that
-she was robbing that poor unknown, the affectionate
-"Fifine" of the dead man's letter; but how
-to find her, how to restore him, stultified and
-rendered every way impossible as all such
-attempts must be, by the war now waged by every
-sea and shore between the two countries?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though little Quentin, we grieve to say, was
-gradually forgetting his own mother and learning
-to love his adopted one, there were times when,
-natheless all Lady Rohallion's sweetness and
-tenderness, he felt that there was something
-lacking&mdash;something he missed; he knew not what,
-unless it were that he longed
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "For the touch of a vanished hand,<br />
- And the sound of a voice that is still."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-A fortnight had passed away since the letter of
-Lord Rohallion had been brought by John Girvan
-from Maybole, and still there were no further
-tidings of his return; so the lady became sad
-and anxious, for she trembled at the idea of his
-returning by sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On one of the first nights of December, when
-the wind was moaning about the old walls of the
-castle, and the angry hiss of the sea was heard
-on the rocks below, she sat alone, by Quentin's
-little bed. He had just dropped asleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He occupied the same cot in which her own
-son Cosmo, Master of Rohallion, had been wont
-to sleep when a child about the same age. It was
-prettily gilt and surmounted by a coronet; the
-curtains were drawn apart, and by the subdued
-light of a night-lamp, she could see the pure
-profile and rosy cheeks of the boy, as he reposed on a
-soft white pillow, in the calm sleep of childhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She could almost imagine that her son Cosmo,
-the tall captain of the Guards, was again a child
-and sleeping there, or that she was a young wife
-again and not an old woman, and so, as thoughts
-that came unbidden poured fast upon her, she
-began to recal the years that had rolled away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then out of the thronging memories of the
-past, there arose a vision of a fair-haired and
-handsome young man&mdash;one who loved her well
-before Rohallion came&mdash;his younger brother; and
-with this image came the memory of many a
-happy ramble long, long ago, in the green summer
-woods of pleasant Nithsdale, when the sunshine
-was declining on the heights of Queensberry, or
-casting shadows on the plains of Closeburn or
-the grassy pastoral uplands through which the
-blue stream winds to meet the Solway&mdash;and where
-the voices of the mavis, the merle, and the
-cushat-dove were heard in every coppice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She thought of those sunset meetings, and of
-one who was wont to sit beside her then for hours,
-lost in love and happiness. Lady Rohallion loved
-her husband well and dearly; but there were
-times when conscience upbraided her, and she
-pitied the memory of that younger brother whom
-she had deceived and deluded, and whom, like a
-thoughtless young coquette, she had permitted&mdash;it
-might be, lured&mdash;to love her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fancy she traced out what her path&mdash;a less
-splendid one, assuredly&mdash;might have been, had
-Rohallion not won her heart, and most unwittingly
-broken his brother's, for so the people said. And
-thus, while "speculating on a future which was
-already a <i>past</i>," the handsome, the gallant, and
-earnest young Ranulph Crawford, the lover of her
-girlhood, rose before her in fancy, and her eyes
-grew moist as she thought of his fatal end, for
-he died, a self-made exile, an obscure soldier of
-fortune, in defence of the Tuileries, and the
-public papers had recorded the story of his fall&mdash;not
-in the flowery language of the present, but
-in the cold brevity of that time&mdash;"as one Captain
-Crawford, a Scot, whose zeal outran his discretion,
-who in charging the populace, was wounded, taken,
-and beheaded by them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Clarissa Harlowe" had fallen from her hand,
-and the mimic sorrows of the novel were forgotten
-in the real griefs of Lady Winifred's waking
-dream. From these, however, she was roused by
-the clatter of a horse's hoofs at the haunted gate
-beside the gun-battery, and almost immediately
-after a servant announced the glad tidings,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My Lady Rohallion, his lordship has arrived!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-LORD ROHALLION.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "She gazed&mdash;she reddened like a rose&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Syne pale as ony lily;<br />
- She sank within my arms and cried,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'Art thou my ain dear Willie?'<br />
- 'By Him who made yon sun and sky,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By whom true love's regarded,<br />
- I am the man!' and thus may still<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;True lovers be rewarded."&mdash;BURNS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Hastening to the drawing-room, she immediately
-found herself in the arms of her husband, who
-was throwing off his drab-coloured riding-coat,
-with its heavy cape, his small triangular Nivernois
-hat, boot-tops, and whip, to his favourite valet
-and constant attendant, old Jack Andrews.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rohallion kissed his wife's hand and then her
-forehead, for he had not outlived either affection
-or respect, though verging on his fifty-fifth year;
-and he had all that gentleness of bearing and
-true politeness which the Scottish gentlemen of
-the old school, prior to, and long after the Union,
-acquired from our ancient allies, the French.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you returned from London&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By sea, Winny&mdash;by sea," said Rohallion,
-"After all my entreaties!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Zounds! Winny, I can't abide the mail, and
-am too old to post it now, as my old friend
-Monboddo used to do yearly, to kiss the king's
-hand; and so preferred the 'Lord Nelson' smack,
-from London to Leith, armed with twelve
-carronades, and sailing without convoy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the voyage was pleasant?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A head-wind, a fourteen days' run, and an
-exchange of shots with a French privateer off
-Flamborough Head. At Edinburgh I took the
-stage to Ayr, and from thence Andrews and I
-jogged quietly home on horseback."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still a handsome man, though portly in
-person, as became his years, Reynold Crawford,
-Lord Rohallion, had features that were alike
-noble in character and striking in expression.
-The broad, square forehead indicated intelligence
-and candour, his mouth, good humour; and the
-form of his closely shaved chin, spoke of decision
-and perseverance. His nose was perhaps too
-large, but his eyes were dark grey, gentle and
-soft, usually, in expression. He wore his own
-hair, which was still thick and wavy, powdered
-white as a cauliflower, and tied with a broad
-ribbon, having a double bow at the back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He still adhered to the frilled shirt, and had a
-large pearl brooch in the breast thereof; his long
-waistcoat was of scarlet cloth, edged with silver;
-his coat of bright blue broadcloth, with large, flat
-steel buttons, had a high rolling collar, small
-cape, and enormous lapels. Hessian boots, with
-tassels of gold and spurs of steel, and tight buff
-pantaloons for riding, showed to advantage his
-stout, well turned limbs, and completed his
-costume. He had a ruddy complexion, a hearty
-laughing manner, and a jolly brusquerie about
-him that smacked more of the soldier or the
-agriculturist than the peer of the realm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, Rohallion, tell me about our
-Cosmo&mdash;how is he looking?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Twice as well as ever I did at the same age,
-and that is saying something&mdash;eh, Winny? Why
-he is the pattern man of the Household Brigade,
-but a strange boy withal. Duty about the Court
-has increased that cold hauteur which always
-marked his character. I don't know where the
-deuce he picked it up&mdash;not from you or me,
-Winny. But the butler says that an early supper
-is served&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, dearest&mdash;in my little parlour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Egad! the snuggest billet in the house, and I
-can assure you that I am as well appetised as ever
-I used to be when a hungry ensign in Germany.
-Permit me, madam," said he, drawing her hand
-caressingly upon his arm; "and now tell me, how
-do you like the mode in which my hair is queued?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why, Reynold?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis a new fashion taught to Jack Andrews
-by old Hugh Hewson, of St. Martin-in-the-Fields&mdash;the
-Scotch hairdresser&mdash;you have heard
-of him, of course?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The original of Dr. Smollett's Hugh Strap&mdash;who
-has not?" said she, laughing; "well, his
-dressing is very smart! I see now, Andrews, his
-lordship looks quite a beau!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I <i>was</i>&mdash;or had the reputation of being so, when
-first I wore that gorget at Minden, a boy of fifteen
-or thereabouts; and before I saw you, Winny,
-dear."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have a surprise for you&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Supper first, Winny, egad! I don't like
-surprises; we had enough of them in Holland,
-and they were not at all to our taste. Eh,
-Jack Andrews&mdash;do you remember our night
-march for Valenciennes?" he asked, turning to
-his old valet, who grinned an assent as he
-deposited a pair of silver-mounted holster pistols
-in a mahogany case. To Rohallion this veteran,
-Jack Andrews, was all that Corporal Trim
-was to Uncle Toby (both of whom, according
-to Sterne, had served in the 25th Foot, then
-known as Leven's Regiment), a servant, and at
-times friend and companion, and perpetual resort
-or reference on military matters. Long and hard
-service together, community of sentiment on most
-matters, combined the sympathy of camaraderie
-with the steady faith of a Scottish servitor of the
-old school in Andrews, who was a sour-featured,
-thin, and erect old fellow, in a powdered wig
-(though, by the Act of 1795, hair powder cost a
-guinea per head), with a pigtail, and the family
-livery, grey faced with scarlet; and somehow on
-old Jack it always looked like a uniform.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Attended by this valet, both well mounted, and
-having holster pistols at their saddles, he had
-ridden from Ayr, through Maybole, and was now
-ready for supper, braced by the keen December
-blast, and feeling happy and jovial to find himself
-once more at home from London, which, so far as
-travelling and the ideas of the time are concerned,
-was then nearly as distant from the Scottish
-capital as Moscow is to-day; and a perfect picture
-they formed, that gentle, high-bred, and loving
-old couple in powdered hair, seated at supper, with
-their antique equipage, conversing in the plain old
-Scottish accent, which was still used, with a Doric
-word here and there, by the Scottish aristocracy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Andrews and I would have been here an
-hour earlier," said his lordship, slicing down a
-daintily-roasted capon, "but the old piper of Maybole,
-in the burgh livery, would play before us all
-the way through the town and two miles beyond
-it, according to use and wont&mdash;a glass of wine,
-Andrews&mdash;but Pate is growing old, Winny, now;
-he fairly broke down in playing 'Lord Lennox
-March,' so I think we must add something to his
-piper's-croft and cow's-mailing. They scarcely
-keep the poor fellow, when meal, malt, and everything
-are at such prices. I had, moreover, to inspect
-the Maybole volunteers. I say, Andrews, did
-you see how they shouldered arms?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ay, my lord; knocking all their fore-and-aft
-cocked hats off, as they canted their firelocks from
-right to left," replied the valet, with a grim smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then we had to see an effigy of Tom Paine
-burned in front of the Tolbooth, with a copy of
-the 'Rights of Man,' while we drank Confusion
-to the French, the Friends of the People,
-the National Convention, and Charles Fox.
-So you see, Winny, my time was fully occupied."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wax lights in the silver candelabra and
-crystal girandoles, and the fire that blazed in the
-polished brass grate, diffused a warm and ruddy
-glow through the cosy old-fashioned parlour, with
-its pink damask chairs and curtains; and speedily
-the old general dismissed his supper and glass of
-dry sherry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, Andrews, as if according to use and
-wont, without requiring to be told, removed the
-decanters, and placed before his master the "three
-elements," whisky, hot water, and sugar, and
-Rohallion, with ladle and jug, proceeded to make
-a jorum of hot steaming toddy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, Andrews, my man," said he, "make a
-browst like this for yourself in the butler's pantry,
-and then turn in; neither you nor I are so young
-as we have been, and you've had a long journey
-to-day. Good night. I require nothing more."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Andrews gave a military salute, wheeled round,
-as if on a pivot, so that his pigtail described a
-horizontal circle, and withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, what is the surprise you have for me,
-Winny?" asked Rohallion, as he filled her ladyship's
-glass, a long one, with a white worm in its
-stem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Tell me first the news from London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, gudewife Winny, nobody speaks of
-anything but this expedition to Egypt, and the
-expected surrender of Malta. Then if all goes
-right, ere long General Abercrombie will have
-about 15,000 men with him in the Bay of Marmorice."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am so glad our Cosmo did not think of
-going on foreign service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can you ask me, Reynold&mdash;our only son?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had been ten times under fire before I was
-half his age. He was most anxious to go, and I
-wished him too; but, as the staff appointments
-were all filled up, and his battalion of the Guards
-will soon be detailed for service, I thought it a
-pity that the boy should lose his regimental rank."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo will be twenty-five on his next
-birth-day," said Lady Rohallion, thoughtfully,
-a remark probably suggested by the term "boy;"
-"our only son, Rohallion; we must indeed be
-careful of him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Careful of a strapping Guardsman like Cosmo!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There are times&mdash;when&mdash;when&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What, Winny?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I regret his having gone into the army at all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Odds my heart! then he would be the first
-Crawford of Rohallion that ever was out of it.
-His battalion may soon go to Ireland; the people
-there are more than ever discontented with the
-proposed union, and hope that the First Consul,
-the upstart Bonaparte, may enable them to cut a
-better figure than they and their allies under
-Humbert did at Ballnamuck last summer. I
-don't think the Horse Guards used me well in
-refusing me a brigade for service; so I don't
-return to London for some time, having paired off
-with our friend Eglinton, who is to put himself
-at the head of his Fencibles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, I am so happy to hear this!" exclaimed
-Lady Winifred, clasping her plump white hands,
-the rings on which sparkled through her black
-lace mittens.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Despite all I could urge, my old comrade,
-Jack Warrender of Ardgour, goes to Egypt in
-command of the Corsican Rangers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So Lady Eglinton wrote to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And if he is knocked on the head,&mdash;which
-God forbid!&mdash;his daughter, Flora, will be long
-under trust, so her estate will be a fair one; and
-now, Winny, when I add that Mr. Fox and the
-Opposition are having their hair dressed <i>à la
-Brutus</i>, in imitation of the Parisian rabble, you
-have all my news."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now for mine," said she, with a delightful
-smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your surprise?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;but you must come with me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the nursery."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That which was once the nursery, you mean."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And which has become so <i>again</i>," she
-replied, laughing at his bewilderment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing her arm through his, she led him to
-the sleeping-room, which adjoined their own, and
-desired him to look into Cosmo's little cot.
-Rohallion did so, and great indeed was his surprise
-to find a beautiful little boy, whose hair, all golden
-and curly, and whose form of face, rich bloom, and
-long dark eyelashes, powerfully reminded him of
-what Cosmo had been at the same age, when sleeping
-in the same chamber and in the same cot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Zounds, Winifred, what in the world does
-this mean?" said he, with a droll expression
-twinkling in his dark grey eyes; "whose little
-fellow is this? Not <i>ours</i>, certainly; you can't
-have been stealing a march on me now-a-days."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis a long story and a sad one; but return
-with me to the parlour, and I shall tell you all
-about it," she replied, while selecting the key
-of her escritoire from the huge, housewife-like
-bunch that glittered at her <i>chatelaine</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Egad, then I'll brew another jug of punch
-the while; and now, Winny, I am all attention."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She related all that the reader knows: the
-storm on that gloomy November night; the attack
-made by the armed Frenchman, and the consequent
-flight of the British ship; her wreck on
-the Partan Craig and the loss of the crew, with
-the recovery of the child from a state of insensibility,
-and the burial of his father, by the ground
-bailie, John Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My worthy old quartermaster did right&mdash;'twas
-like my good comrade!" said Lord Rohallion,
-while his eyes glistened; "I can imagine I
-see him marching up the glen at the head of the
-funeral party, erect as ever he marched under
-fire&mdash;a trifle more, maybe. The old Borderer did
-just what I should have done myself!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Winifred now laid before her husband
-the ring, the purse with its few franc pieces, and
-the papers of the drowned stranger, and all of
-these he examined with interest and commiseration,
-for he was a kind, generous, and warm-hearted
-man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is sad&mdash;very sad, indeed!" he muttered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By the handwriting, Rohallion, and by the
-crest on the ring&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A lily, stalked and leaved, rising from a
-coronet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Winny?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should say they must have been people of
-figure and fashion&mdash;of good quality, at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An old fashioned phrase that, and going out
-now, like our fathers' swords and our mothers'
-hoops; call them aristocrats&mdash;eh, Winny?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Undoubtedly, and under suspicion, too, by
-the tenor of the poor lady's letter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Josephine,'" said he, reading the inscription
-upon the ring; "why, that is the name of
-the widow Beauharnais, who three or four years
-ago married the First Consul to escape the
-guillotine! You must preserve these relics with care,
-Winny; and as for the poor bairn, Rohallion
-must be his home till we find his mother, a task
-very unlikely to be accomplished, if ever at all,
-in these times, when France is at war with all
-the world, and her scaffolds are drenched daily
-with the blood of women, children, and priests,
-as well as of brave and loyal gentlemen. But
-into no better hands than ours, Winny, could
-this poor waif of misfortune have fallen. He
-is the child of a faithful royalist soldier, too&mdash;we
-must always remember that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like his worthy wife, Lord Rohallion inherited
-with his blood a strong dash of Jacobitism, thus
-his sympathies were all with the humbled royalty
-of France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The worthy old Defender of the Faith, who
-muddled away his time at Windsor, and his son,
-the "first gentleman" in Europe, who spent his
-days and nights less reputably in his Pavilion at
-Brighton&mdash;Thackeray's man of waistcoats, wigs,
-and uniforms&mdash;had perhaps no truer servant than
-Major-General Reynold Lord Rohallion, K.C.B.,
-&amp;c. Yet among the "Stuart Papers," which, in
-1807, found their way into the royal archives,
-there was discovered a correspondence between a
-certain peer whose initial was R. and "His
-Majesty Henry II. of Scotland and IX. of
-England," which rather excited the surprise of
-the ministry and privy council; but like the
-same secret correspondence of many other nobles
-of both kingdoms, it was deemed only wise and
-charitable to commit it to oblivion, for the grave
-had closed over the good old Cardinal Duke of
-York&mdash;the last of the Stuarts&mdash;and few knew
-why, for a year and a day, the hilt of Rohallion's
-sword was covered by a band of crape.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-OUR STORY PROGRESSES.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Here he dwelt in state and bounty,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lord of Burleigh fair and free;<br />
- Not a lord in all the county,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is so great a lord as he."&mdash;TENNYSON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Kind old Rohallion was deeply interested in and
-attracted by the little boy, who had many winning
-and endearing ways about him; and he particularly
-excelled in a bright and captivating smile,
-that was joyous in its perfect innocence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seated him on his knee at the breakfast-table
-n the library, and strove, by all the art he
-was master of, to draw from him some clue, as
-to the part of France in which his mother resided,
-but save a knowledge of his own name, Quentin's
-recollections were few prior to the terror he had
-experienced on the wreck. All beyond that
-seemed vague, and his reminiscences were an odd
-jumble of a large town with a cathedral where
-his mamma took him to hear Abbé Lebrun
-preach or say mass&mdash;good M. l'Abbé Lebrun, who
-always gave him <i>bon-bons</i>, and wore such large
-spectacles. Then there was a river with boats,
-a bridge and a great mountain with a windmill,
-where he used to go with his nurse when she
-visited the miller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, there was a Chanoinesse who gave him
-painted toys; there were some wicked soldiers,
-who burned a street and dragged away all the
-people to die, and of these same soldiers he had
-a peculiar dread and aversion. But whether they
-were ugly toys, or actors in some scene the child
-had witnessed, Rohallion could not tell; he
-supposed the affair referred to was some grim reality
-incident to the late revolution. He could gather
-nothing more that afforded a clue; and now as
-these memories were wakened in him, the faces of
-others came with them; tears filled the child's
-fine dark eyes, and he entreated piteously to have
-his mother brought to him and his nurse Nanette,
-or have his father brought to him out of the sea;
-and thus perceiving that nothing of certainty or
-value could be gleaned from him, his protectors
-tacitly agreed to let the subject drop.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Breakfast was just over when Andrews
-announced Quartermaster Girvan and Dominie
-Skaill, two individuals, who are perhaps bores in
-their way, but are nevertheless necessary to us in
-the course of this narrative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had heard of his lordship's arrival, and
-had "come to pay their dutiful reverence," for
-something of the old feudal sentiment lingered yet
-in Carrick, and a journey to Calcutta is a mere
-joke or pleasure trip now, when compared with
-how the Scots of 1798 viewed one to London,
-few prudent people attempting it without
-previously making a will, and settling all their
-earthly affairs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Welcome, Girvan, and welcome, dominie,"
-said Rohallion, shaking each by the hand
-cordially; "I am glad to be at home again among
-you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yea," replied the dominie, while rubbing one
-hand over the other, and smiling blandly, as
-perhaps his scholars seldom saw him smile;
-"your lordship has come back like Cincinnatus
-after the defeat of the Volci and the Æqui, to
-plough turnips and plant gude kail on haugh and
-rig&mdash;so welcome hame to Carrick, my lord."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie had on his Sunday coat, with its
-huge flapped pockets; his best three-cornered hat,
-bound with black braid, was under his arm, and
-his square shoe-buckles shone like silver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And our little Frenchman has become quite
-a friend with your lordship, I see," said Girvan,
-patting the child on the head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite&mdash;a splendid little fellow he is!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But call him not a Frenchman," said the
-dominie, "when he bears the gude auld Carrick
-name of Kennedy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, dominie; it used to find an echo hereabout,
-in the old trooping and tramping times,"
-replied Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And has so still," added Rohallion, laughing;
-"for I am half a Kennedy, and often have
-I heard my mother sing&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "'Twixt Wigton and the town of Ayr,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Portpatrick and the Cruives of Cree,<br />
- Nae man may hope in peace to bide,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unless he court Saint Kennedie."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Like the Maxwells in Nithsdale, the Kennedies
-had all their own way here in those days,"
-said Lady Winifred, as she drew off her lace
-mittens, and prepared to adjust her ivory-mounted
-spinning-wheel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But to return to the present time, tell me,
-John Girvan, did that French ship actually come
-within range of our gun-battery?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, my lord&mdash;or nearly so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what were you about, John, to stand
-with your hands in your pockets at such a time?
-Egad, 'twas not like an old 25th man?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster reddened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There was a tremendous gale from the seaward,"
-said Lady Rohallion, coming to his assistance;
-"a storm&mdash;a tempest&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And she came only within a mile of the
-Partan Craig, where the unfortunate merchantman
-was in sore peril&mdash;a foe on one side, a lee shore
-on the other&mdash;eh, dominie?"
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "'<i>Here</i> Scylla bellows from her dire abodes,<br />
- Tremendous port&mdash;abhorred by men and gods,<br />
- And there Charybdis,'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-as old Homer hath it," replied the dominie,
-promptly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Even had the battery been manned, my lord,
-I am doubtful&mdash;I am doubtful if these old twenty-four
-pounders would pitch shot so far; and she
-scarcely appeared, before she hauled her wind and
-disappeared into the mist," said Girvan, giving his
-old yellow wig an angry twist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some of these small craft are growing very
-saucy," said Lord Rohallion, to change the
-subject, which he saw was distasteful to his old
-comrade. "It was only the other day that a
-lieutenant with fourteen men from one of our
-gun-brigs landed on the coast of France to distribute
-royalist manifestoes of the Comte d'Artois, dated
-from Holyrood, but he and his men were taken
-by a party of dragoons who surrounded an
-auberge in which they were imprudently drinking.
-They were instantly hanged as spies, by
-order of General Monnet, and the bodies are to
-be seen on fifteen gibbets, a mile apart, along the
-coast between Boulogne and Cape Grisnez."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor men! How horrible!" exclaimed Lady
-Winifred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Such barbarities were not committed in our
-time, my lord, except among the Indians."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quartermaster&mdash;but we are getting old
-fellows now," said Rohallion, with something
-between a laugh and a sigh. "We have often
-stopped the march of the French with fixed
-bayonets, but we can't arrest the march of
-time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, aye, my lord," said the old soldier,
-warming, and answering a friendly smile from old
-Jack Andrews, who was removing the breakfast
-equipage; "but, when at Minden, and while the
-French gun brigade was bowling through the six
-British regiments that stood there in division, we
-little thought that we would live to drink our
-grog in Rohallion, forty years after, hale carles,
-and hearty ones, too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If we ever <i>thought</i> at all, Girvan, which is
-not likely; reflection troubles a young soldier
-seldom, and, egad! we were beardless boys then."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And those who were boys like ourselves
-then, and those who were grey-haired grenadiers
-of Fontenoy and Culloden&mdash;who had no need to
-powder their white hair&mdash;were alike mowed down
-together, and lay like herrings in a landing net,"
-said Girvan, sadly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a day on which the ripe fruit and the
-blossom were gathered together," said Lady
-Rohallion, as her wheel revolved rapidly, and
-little Quentin sat at her feet to watch it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your ladyship's speech savoureth of poetry,"
-said the dominie, bowing; "it is even as my old
-friend Burns&mdash;puir Robbie Burns&mdash;would have
-expressed himself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is ten years since the Scots Horse
-Guards were amalgamated with the new Life
-Guard Regiments," said Rohallion, commencing
-a familiar topic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Just twelve years this summer, my lord,"
-replied Girvan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And though moving slowly up the list of
-generals, Girvan, I have not had a regiment
-since."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Among the Romans&mdash;&mdash;" began the dominie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A regiment! it is a brigade you should have,"
-interrupted the quartermaster, ruthlessly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Among the Romans," began the dominie
-again, when Lord Rohallion, who was full of his
-grievance (was there ever an old soldier without
-one?) spoke with something of irritation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have actually been refused a brigade for
-service, though senior to more favoured officers;
-but a time may come when Government may be
-glad to avail themselves of my services, though I
-am afraid, John, that I'm getting owre auld in
-the horn, as the drovers say.. Besides, they
-think that we old fellows of Minden and Bunker's
-Hill are as much out of date as the snap-muskets
-and matchlocks of King William's time.
-And zounds, man! there are not wanting in the
-Lower House certain disloyal spirits, termed
-financial reformers, who grudge the old soldier
-the day's pittance which he has won by blood and
-sweat, and by wasting the flower of his days
-among the swamps of the Helder, the fevers of
-the West Indies, and elsewhere."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The devil take all fevers and reformers
-together&mdash;amen," said the quartermaster; "but I
-believe this intended Egyptian business will be
-only a flash in the pan when compared with what
-<i>we</i> have seen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Among the Romans the soldiery at first received
-no <i>stipendium</i>," said the dominie, raising
-his voice and speaking very fast, lest he should
-be interrupted; "but every man served at his
-own proper charges."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That would suit our modern whigs to a hair,
-dominie," said Lord Rohallion, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yea, even to the vinegar which he mixed
-with spring water as his daily drink, did he
-furnish all, in the early days of the Roman
-army."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Vinegar grog!" exclaimed the quartermaster
-with disgust; "Heaven be thanked I was not
-born a Roman. Such beggarly tipple would never
-have suited the 25th. And now, my lord, when
-you are at leisure, I wish to shew you a new
-farmsteading I have erected at the Cairns of
-Blackhinney, and also how bravely the young trees are
-thriving in the oakwood shaw."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Glad to hear the latter, Girvan, for I agree
-with my worthy friend, Admiral Collingwood, that
-every British proprietor should plant as many
-oak trees as he can, to keep up our navy. 'I
-wish everybody,' said he, in one of his letters,
-'thought on this subject as I do, they would not
-walk through their farms without a pocketful of
-acorns to drop in the hedges, and let them take
-their chance,' and so keep up the future wooden
-walls of old England."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Neither Rohallion nor the gallant old Admiral
-could foresee the days, when those famous "wooden
-walls," would be represented by screw propellers,
-armour clads, cupola ships, and steam rams!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rohallion assumed his walking cane and
-Nivernois hat, to which he still adhered, though it
-had been long out of fashion, and had the flaps
-fastened up to its shallow crown by hooks and
-eyes; and, bowing ceremoniously, left the dominie
-to confer with the lady concerning the course of
-study on which little Quentin Kennedy was soon
-to enter, while he issued forth with his old
-comrade the factor to look over the estate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Close by the haunted gate lay a fine old beech,
-on which a cavalier Lord of Rohallion hanged as
-a traitor one of his vassals whom he discovered
-serving as a soldier in an English regiment. It
-now lay prostrate, for the storm had torn it up
-by the roots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have this removed as soon as possible, Girvan,"
-said the old lord; "for, ugh! I never see a fallen
-tree, but I think of that devilish abattis we fell
-into at Saratoga, when the Yankees would have
-made an end of me, had it not been for Jack
-Andrews and others of the 25th."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, my lord, and some of the 17th Light
-Dragoons too&mdash;under Corporal O' Lavery&mdash;you
-remember him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who could ever forget him that served there&mdash;who
-could ever forget him or his story?" exclaimed
-the old general flourishing his silver-headed
-cane; "not I, certainly. It was he who
-was entrusted by my Lord Rawdon as a military
-courier (<i>estafette</i>, the French term it), to bring me
-an important despatch concerning the movements
-of the regiment, and this despatch the Yankees
-were determined I should not receive, for spies
-had informed them of the bearer and his route,
-so the way was beset by riflemen. The soldier
-who accompanied him fell mortally wounded;
-O'Lavery was riddled by bullets too, yet he rode
-manfully on, until from loss of blood he fell from
-his saddle. Then Girvan, resolved that the
-important paper which he bore should never fall into
-the hands of the Yankees, he crumpled it up and
-thrust it into one <i>of his wounds</i>. I discovered
-it, when next morning we came upon him dying
-in the bush, and he had just life sufficient left to
-point to the fatal place where Rawdon's letter
-was concealed.* As one of our greatest orators
-said, when Martius Curtius to sacrifice himself
-for his country leaped into the gulf of the forum,
-he had all Rome for his spectators; but the poor
-Irish corporal was alone in the midst of a
-desert&mdash;I quote at random, quartermaster. And yet,
-after all the brave deeds and service of those days
-to refuse me this brigade for service&mdash;zounds! it
-was too bad&mdash;too bad!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Rohallion survived his disappointment,
-and the two following years glided peacefully
-away, at his old castle in Carrick.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* "The surgeon declared the wound itself not to be mortal;
-but rendered so by the insertion of the despatch. Corporal
-O'Lavery was a native of the county of Down, where a
-monument, the gratitude of his countryman and commander Lord
-Rawdon, records his fame."&mdash;<i>Records of the 17th Lancers</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-QUENTIN'S CHILDHOOD.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Ah, happy time! ah, happy time!<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The days of mirth and dream;<br />
- When years ring out their merry chime,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And hope and gladness gleam.<br />
- Then how we drink the storied page,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In boyhood's happy home:<br />
- The marvels of the wondrous age<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of old Imperial Rome."&mdash;<i>All the Year Round</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The New Year's day of 1801 passed over at
-Rohallion amid feasting and revelling, for in the
-good old fashion the worthy lord, as his fathers
-had done before him, entertained all his people in
-the great hall of the tower. There the trophies
-were hung with green holly and scarlet berries;
-there the Yule log still smouldered on the hearth,
-and there he shook the powder from his hair,
-while footing it merrily with the wives and
-daughters of the fishers and cottars, while old
-Girvan hobbled away in his brigadier wig, the
-dominie screwing up his fiddle to discourse sweet
-music with the piper of Maybole, while as an
-interlude came the drums and fifes of the Rohallion
-Volunteers, to make the old castle ring to
-the cheering sounds of "Lady Jean o' Rohallion's
-Rant;" and this hearty homeliness, together
-with a free distribution of gifts on "auld
-handsel Monday," made the lord and lady of the
-manor adored by their tenantry. On that day
-there was something for every one: to the
-dominie a snuff-mull, which he received with
-many bows, reminding the donor how "Tacitus
-affirmed that Tiberius prohibited the bestowal of
-new year gifts, which was a great saving of
-expense to the knights and senators," To the
-quartermaster a gilt-bound "Army List," to
-keep him in reading and reference for the ensuing
-year; to Elsie at the coves a lace-curchie, and to
-little Quentin a gallant rocking-horse. So all
-danced the new year in hand-in-hand, to the old
-song,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Now Yule has come and Yule has gane,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And we hae feasted weel!<br />
- Sae Jock maun to his flail again,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Jenny to her wheel."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-In the ensuing spring, when fresh flowers and
-budding leaves came "to deck the dead season's
-bier;" when the aroma of fertility, warmth, and
-verdure came from the sunny upland slopes, and
-the mountain burns, as they bore brown leaves
-along, seemed to brawl louder over their stony
-beds towards the Firth of Clyde; when greener
-tints spread over the pastoral hills and glens about
-Rohallion; when the sky, long chilled by the
-frost of the past winter, had a richer tone and
-colour; when the air was warm and pleasant
-as it fanned the new-turned sods&mdash;when this
-sweet season came, we say, the old Lord had
-ceased to lament having been refused a brigade
-in the expedition to Egypt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By that time he had heard of the fall of his
-old friend and brother officer, the gallant Sir
-Ralph Abercrombie, and how war and disease
-had thinned the ranks of his army. He
-sorrowed for this: but his old spirit blazed up
-anew when he heard of how the 28th or
-Gloucestershire Slashers, in the Temple of the Sun,
-faced their rear rank about when surrounded,
-and defended themselves like a double wall of
-fire; how the Gordon Highlanders, at the
-bayonet's point, carried the cannon of the foe at the
-Tower of Mandora; how the Black Watch destroyed
-the boasted Invincibles, and won their
-scarlet plumes; and how the shrill pipes of the
-Highland Brigade rang in fierce defiance along
-the embattled heights of Nicopolis!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One name in the list of casualties made him start.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was that of his old friend and neighbour,
-Colonel John Warrender of Ardgour, who fell,
-sword in hand, when leading the Corsican
-Rangers to a victorious bayonet charge against the
-61st Demi-brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, what a heart-stroke this is for his poor
-wife, Winny!" he exclaimed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And Flora&mdash;poor little Flora, their daughter,"
-added Lady Rohallion, with her eyes full of
-tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is too young to know fully the calamity
-that has befallen her. Order the carriage,
-Andrews; we'll drive up the glen to Ardgour in an
-hour after this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Mrs. Warrender!&mdash;she did so love her
-husband, and had sore misgivings that they were
-parting for the last time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A sad morning this will be for her, indeed!"
-said Lord Rohallion, laying the gazette upon the
-breakfast-table and gazing into the clear, bright
-fire, full of thought, as the battle of Alexandria
-seemed to come in fancy before his practised eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now Rohallion, bethink you, if circumstances
-had been reversed," said she, laying a hand
-caressingly on his neck, "and if she had been reading
-your name in that paper, what my feelings would
-have been."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The carriage would be ordered at Ardgour
-instead of Rohallion," said the old Lord, with an
-affectionate smile; "they may need me yet&mdash;but
-egad! I am now, perhaps, better pleased that the
-brigade was refused me. Warrender gone&mdash;poor
-Jack! and Abercrombie, too&mdash;I knew him when
-in command of the 69th."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He died on board the flagship, my lord,"
-said Andrews, who, in virtue of his years and
-peculiar position, ventured to gratify his
-irrepressible curiosity, by taking up the paper, to skim it
-at his master's back; "they landed and formed
-line in the water, bayonets fixed and colours
-flying," he continued, with a nervous voice and
-kindling eye; "28th and 42nd&mdash;Foot Guards and
-Royal Scots&mdash;I think I see them all&mdash;whoop! d&mdash;n
-it&mdash;why weren't <i>we</i> there?&mdash;I beg pardon,
-my lady," he added, in some confusion, as he
-proceeded in haste to remove the breakfast
-equipage, stumping vigorously on his left leg&mdash;in
-which he received a bullet at Saratoga&mdash;as he
-hurried away to order the carriage for the
-proposed visit of condolence, to which we need not
-invite the reader.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The treaty of Amiens which followed soon
-after the Egyptian campaign brought about a
-peace for fourteen months, and during that time,
-Lord Rohallion wrote repeatedly to our Ambassador
-at Paris concerning the little protégé who
-had now found a home in Carrick; but at a
-period when all the powers of Europe were only,
-as it were, taking breath and gathering strength
-for a greater and more deadly contest, such a
-trivial matter as the fate of a shipwrecked boy
-could gain but little attention. His lordship's
-letters remained unanswered, and by the 18th of
-May, 1803, Britain and France again drew the
-sword, which was never to be sheathed save on
-the plains of Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Time had made little Quentin as thoroughly
-at home in the castle and with the family of
-Rohallion, as if he had been born there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The absence of her son with the Guards (Carlton
-House and the Pavilion at Brighton were
-decidedly more amusing than that old castle by the
-sea), created a void in Lady Rohallion's heart;
-so the strange child came just in time to fill it,
-and she loved him tenderly and fondly. The old
-Lord was never weary of chatting and playing with
-Quentin; and he was the especial pet and
-occasionally tormentor of the quartermaster,
-grey-haired Jack Andrews, and of old Dominie Skaill,
-who had been long since inducted to the honourable
-post of tutor, and as such, after his scholastic
-duties were over, he daily visited the castle,
-in which a room was set apart for study.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The following years saw Quentin Kennedy
-growing up into a fine and manly boy, bold in
-spirit and frank in nature; yet he retained even
-after his tenth year much of the chubby bloom,
-the rosy cheeks, the plump white skin, and the
-golden curls of his infancy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion and her visitors thought him
-a perfect Cupid; but her husband and the
-quartermaster&mdash;particularly the latter&mdash;vowed he was
-a regular imp, who always broke his tobacco-pipes,
-tied explosives to the end of his pigtail,
-and played him a hundred other tricks, the result
-of Jack Andrews' secret education.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie often shook his bag-wig solemnly,
-for the boy's ways were at times very erratic and
-required reprehension; but his constant friend and
-adherent was Lady Rohallion, who, when beholding
-his beauty, his gambols, and grace, or when listening
-to his prattle, and watching all his waggish
-little ways, could never think but with a sigh of
-the widowed and unknown mother whom all
-these would have gladdened, and who was, perhaps,
-still sorrowing for the child who had forgotten
-her and transferred his filial love and faith
-to a stranger&mdash;if, indeed, the royalist sympathies
-of that unfortunate mother had not been long
-since expiated under the guillotine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's only annoyance existed when the
-Master of Rohallion, then a captain in the Guards,
-came home on leave, which, sooth to say, the
-Honourable Cosmo Crawford did as seldom as
-possible, the gaieties of London, club-life, the
-opera, and the atmosphere which surrounded the
-Prince of Wales, proving greater attractions than
-any to be found among the Highlands of Carrick.
-On these occasions, the boy felt sensibly how
-secondary a place he bore in the affections of the
-lady, and clung more to his friend the quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In addition to a cold and chilling stateliness
-of manner, the Master&mdash;a handsome and gallant
-soldier, however&mdash;disliked children generally, and
-half-grown boys in particular; thus if he ever
-spoke to Quentin, it was merely to quiz him as a
-young Frenchman (a nationality which the boy
-angrily repudiated), to call him a frog-eater, or
-little Boney, a name which, through some childish
-memory of the past, always roused his anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master was not popular in Carrick; on
-his home visits, the piper of Maybole never
-ventured to play before <i>him</i> as before his father; no
-mendicant held forth his hand in hope of charity
-when he passed the kirk-stile on Sunday; the
-tenantry never gathered to welcome him back,
-and he had been heard to speak of a recently
-deceased prince as "the late Pretender," a horrible
-heresy in the house of Rohallion, and almost a
-solecism in Scottish society yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But our young friend was always relieved of
-his presence when the shooting season was over,
-when the summer drills of the Guards began, or
-when urgent letters from great but unknown
-friends required his return to London; and whither
-he departed with baggage enough for a regiment,
-and his English valet, whose finery, foppery, and
-town airs always excited the risible faculties of
-Lord Rohallion, and the grim contempt of the
-cynical veteran, Jack Andrews.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though bright and intelligent, Quentin was too
-erratic to be an industrious or plodding scholar;
-thus his Euclid and Cornelius Nepos, &amp;c., were
-frequently left to themselves, that he might act
-the "truant," and have a day's fly-fishing in the
-Girvan or the winding Doon: or a ramble with
-his friend the gamekeeper through the preserves,
-where the deer came out of the fir woods to steal
-the dominie's turnips, and where the dark plover
-and the golden pheasant lurked among the sombre
-whin or feathery bracken bushes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the "Life of Valentine and Orson," with
-the achievements of gallant Jack, the foe of all
-giants, together with similar ancient lore, in which
-the ex-quartermaster indulged him (generally about
-the time when his poor half-pay became due)
-together with the pungent military yarns of Jack
-Andrews, always proved sad opponents to the
-ponderous classics of Dominie Skaill; and, as
-Quentin grew older, Cornelius Nepos, Tacitus,
-Æschylus, and others, were alike neglected, and
-frequently neither entreaties or threats would
-substitute them for the pages of Smollett and
-Fielding&mdash;the Dickens and Thackeray of the
-preceding age.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the dominie would grow wrathful; but
-all without avail, for the boy was droll and
-loveable in his ways, and as the old Lord said, "would
-wind them all round his little finger." Thus in
-the oddly-assorted society of that sequestered
-castle he picked up a strange smattering of
-knowledge on many subjects.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sometimes he was present when Lord Rohallion
-and John Girvan had long consultations
-concerning farming and stock management, arable
-and pastoral; planting belts of pine for sheltering
-corn and deer; draining bogs and swamps;
-embanking or reclaiming; thatching farm-towns
-anew, and so forth&mdash;consultations which always
-ended in a jorum of hot toddy, and a reference to
-the war and chances of invasion, which naturally
-led to a mental parade of his majesty's 25th Foot,
-and old personal reminiscences, varying from the
-days of Minden down to Saratoga, Bunker's Hill,
-and Brandywine, with Corporal O'Lavery of the
-17th, and Lord Rawdon's famous despatch.
-<i>Then</i> agriculture and its patron, the Baronet of
-Ulbter, were voted a double bore, and everything
-gave place to "shop" and pipeclay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At other times Quentin was present when
-curious arguments ensued over a pipe and glass of
-grog between his preceptor and the ruddy-visaged
-quartermaster, who was wont to treat the
-ancients and their modes of warfare with supreme
-contempt. Thus, if he extolled Brown Bess and
-her bayonet, which the French could never
-withstand, Dominie Skaill brought the Parthians into
-the field, and told him how at close quarters with
-the Roman Legion they were broken; but how
-the troops of Crassus broke those same legions in
-turn, by the dexterity with which they used their
-bows, never failing to wind up with a reference
-to the Caledonian warriors who routed the
-Romans in the days of old, and the schiltrons or
-massed spearmen of Wight Wallace in later
-times, for the dominie had all the history of Harry
-the Minstrel by heart, and like the quartermaster,
-his patriotism had been no way lessened by many
-a jovial night spent with their friend Burns in his
-old farm-house of Lochlea or Mossgiel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus Quentin's mind became gradually imbued
-by quaint ideas, and filled with a curious
-mixture of military, legendary, and historic lore.
-The very air he breathed was full of patriotism,
-for he was in the land of Burns&mdash;in Carrick, the
-ancient lordship of the kingly Bruces; and many
-a story the dominie told him of the time when
-the Earls of Cassilis, the Lords of Rohallion, the
-Lairds of Blairquhan, and other noblesse of
-Carrick, had their town mansions in Maybole; when
-love was made through barred helmets, and when
-there were hunting, and hosting and foraying;
-when castles were stormed and granges burned;
-when the Black Vault of Dunure saw Danish
-blood stream from its gutters after Largs was
-won; and the Abbot of Corseregal roasting on an
-iron grille ten years after the Reformation. But
-the story that Quentin loved best was of the
-Gipsy King who lured away the fair Countess of
-Cassilis, and of the long years of captivity she
-spent in the grim old tower of Maybole, where,
-to this day, we may see the likenesses of herself
-and her rash lover, carved in stone upon the
-upper oriel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many a day they spent together, this patient
-dominie and his playful pupil, wandering among
-the ruins of the Castle of Kilhenzie, in feudal
-times a stronghold of the Kennedies, and there
-for hours they were wont to sit, under the aged
-and giant tree which still stands near its southern
-wall&mdash;a tree twenty-two feet in girth, and so vast
-that it covers nearly the eighth of an acre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On that tree many a bold reiver, gipsy loon,
-and landlouping Southron has been hung in his
-boots by the auld Kennedies o' Kilhenzie," the
-dominie would say; "they were a dour, stern,
-and warlike stock, boasting themselves to be
-kean-na-tigh, or, as the name bears, 'head of the
-race,' and who can say, Quentin, but you may be
-their lineal descendant, and if every head wears
-its ain bonnet, be Laird of Kilhenzie yet? yea,
-restored to your proper estate after all your
-wanderings, even as Telemachus was, who in
-childhood was also saved miraculously from the
-sea."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the boy would look up to the ivy-covered
-masses of the crumbling wall, with its gaping
-windows, through which the gleds and hoodie-crows
-were flying, and feel strange throbbings
-and emotions wakened in his heart by the dominie's
-words; and there he often came alone to loiter,
-and think and dream over what his friend had
-said, till his musings took a tangible form, and
-ultimately, in all his day-dreams, he came to
-identify the old castle with <i>himself</i>&mdash;he knew not
-why.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Quentin was brought first to Rohallion,
-he was wont to pray to his "blessed Mother who
-was in heaven," and to lisp the name of "la
-Mère de Dieu" with great reverence, to the utter
-scandal and bewilderment of Dominie Skaill, who
-smelt the old leaven of Prelacy and Popery strong
-in this, for he believed only in the Kirk of
-Scotland as by law established, confirmed by the
-Revolution Settlement and Treaty of Union
-(though sadly outraged by the restoration of
-patronage in 1712); and such language, he
-averred, was rank hanging matter in an adult!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's dark eyes were wont to sparkle and
-flash on hearing these rebukes, or France abused,
-as she was pretty sure to be, daily, by every one
-in those days; but after a time all these emotions
-and ideas gave place to local influences, and he
-settled down into a quiet little Scottish schoolboy,
-though, as we have said, somewhat of a truant
-withal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His mind sobered and changed even as his
-clustering golden curls grew into dark and
-shining chestnut though dreamlike memories would
-still steal upon his mind&mdash;memories that came he
-knew not whence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once when the dominie pointed to a Vandyke
-that hung in the great hall, representing Lady
-Jean of Rohallion, and told him that "she was
-an evil-minded woman, who persecuted the saints
-of God in her time; and that the cross at her
-girdle was the hammer of Beelzebub, and an
-emblem of her damnable apostasy from the pure
-and covenanted Kirk of Scotland," the boy's eyes
-would assume their gleam, and then a pure, soft
-smile, as he said that "his mother in France
-wore just such a cross as that, and that he would
-love the picture for her sake."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then Dominie Skaill would groan in spirit over
-"the bad bluid" that boiled in a heart so young
-and tender, and stamping up and down the hall
-in his square-toed shoes, would openly express his
-fears that "the bairn was a veritable young
-Claverhouse!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On other occasions, and they were many, when
-Quentin was alone, and gazing on the sea that
-frothed so white about the Partan Craig, out of
-the perplexing mists of memory came the
-dream-like incidents of the wreck on that gloomy
-November night; his loving father's pale and
-despairing face, when the ship went down and left
-them all struggling amid the cold waves of a dark
-and stormy sea; and with these memories came
-others beyond that time, softer and dearer, like
-the recollections of a prior existence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was the cathedral, with its lights and
-music at mass; the bridge, the river, and the
-windmill; how surely he should know them all
-again! And so pondering and dreaming thus, he
-would lie for hours on the sunny bank that sloped
-southward from the cliff of Rohallion, while the
-blue Firth of Clyde that chafed upon the rocks
-below, came faintly and dreamily to his ear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus his vision was turned inward, though
-his eyes were perhaps fixed on the blue ether
-overhead, where the sea mews were revolving and
-the great eagle soaring aloft; or on the distant
-tower and Tolbooth of Maybole that stood clear
-and dark against the sunset-flush&mdash;the wavy
-undulations of the Carrick hills: the blue peaks of
-Arran that rose afar off, or the nearer coast of
-Cunninghame, chequered by golden light on violet
-coloured shadow.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-THE QUARTERMASTER'S SNUGGERY.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-"Ambition is dead within me: but there is some satisfaction
-in a queen's commission, with half-pay at the end of
-it."&mdash;<i>Once a Week</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin Kennedy loved the venerable dominie,
-but was undoubtedly bored by his pedantry, and
-to escape it, once actually disappeared for three
-entire days, to the utter dismay of the whole
-household at Rohallion, when it was naturally
-supposed that he had been kidnapped by gipsies,
-or carried off by the smugglers, who frequented
-the coves in the rocks when the nights were dark
-and gusty; that he had been carried off by the
-pressgang from Ayr, or had fallen over the cliffs
-when bird-nesting, until Elsie Irvine arrived at
-the castle, in tears and tribulation, to announce
-that he had cunningly secreted himself in the
-"saut-backet" of her husband's clinker-built
-boat, and gone with the little fleet from the
-adjacent bay to the herring fishery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Lady Winifred's old friend and school
-companion, Eleonora Hamilton (then Countess of
-Eglinton) visited the castle with her two
-unmarried daughters, the Ladies Lilias and
-Mary&mdash;which she did once yearly&mdash;it was always a
-happy time for Quentin; for then he had two
-little companions with whom to romp and swing
-in the old terraced gardens; for whom to gather
-birds' eggs and butterflies in the old woods of
-Rohallion, and before whom he could exhibit his
-boyish skill in shooting at the butts, or hooking
-a brown trout in the Girvan or the Doon; but
-of the two, his chief friend and playmate was the
-fair-haired, blue-eyed, and softly-voiced little
-Lady Mary, with whom he generally opened the
-dance at the annual kirn, or harvest-home, which
-Lord Rohallion always gave to the field-labourers
-in the great barn of the home-farm, and on these
-occasions, the brightest ribbons that Maybole
-could produce, together with the dominie's violin
-and Pate's pipes, were in full requisition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On a November night, about four years after
-the boy's arrival at Rohallion, his two friends, the
-dominie and ex-quartermaster, were seated in the
-latter's apartment discussing, which they did very
-frequently, the boy's pranks and progress, with a
-pipe of tobacco and a jug of hot toddy at the
-same time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-John Girvan's "snuggery," as he termed it, was
-in a square tower at an angle of the barbican
-wall of the old castle. The loopholes for defence
-by arrows or arquebusses yet remained under the
-window-sills, to enfilade all approach to the
-gate-way. They had been made with special reference
-to the English and the Kennedies of Kilhenzie;
-but there was a chance now that "the French
-might come by the same road."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chamber was small, but very cosy, papered
-with a queer old pattern over the wainscoting;
-the walls were of vast strength, the windows
-arched, the fire-place deep, and lined with shining
-Delft squares of the Puritan times, representing
-bulbous-shaped Dutch skaters, and the instructive
-old Scriptural story of Susannah and the
-Elders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dark oak floor was minus a carpet, for
-the quartermaster had been long enough under
-canvas and in barracks to despise such a luxury.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the mantelpiece was a gaudily-coloured
-print of the Marquis of Cornwallis in full
-uniform, with a huge wig and cocked hat, New
-York and a hecatomb of slaughtered Yankees in
-the distance. Under this work of art hung the
-quartermaster's old regimental sword, with its
-spring shell, his crimson sash and gilt gorget,
-graven with a thistle, and the (to him) magic
-number "25"&mdash;his household <i>lares</i>, as the
-dominie called them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bound with iron, an old baggage-trunk, that
-had been over half the habitable globe, bore the
-same number and regiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pipes, whips, and spurs and boot-tops, dog-eared
-Army Lists and empty bottles, littered all the
-mantelshelf and window-bunkers, and with some
-very wheezy-looking old chairs made up the
-appurtenances of the room, through which the fire
-shed a blaze so cheerful, that the dominie had no
-desire, when he heard the wind moaning through
-the battlements above, to face the blast which
-howled down the lonely glen that lay beyond the
-haunted gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A broiled poor man o' mutton and fried trout
-from the Girvan smoked on the table beside the
-toddy jugs, and all within looked cheery, as these
-two oddly-assorted friends, who had scarcely an
-idea in common, sat down to supper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, dominie, it is a dreich night!" said the
-quartermaster, filling his pipe; "but your jug
-is empty, brew again; and now wi' a' your
-book-learning, can you tell me the name o' the man
-who invented this same whisky?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Many a night in Mossgiel, wi' Burns, we've
-drank to his memory, whoever he was," replied
-the dominie; "but odds my heart! John Girvan,
-I have scarcely got the better o' the fright that
-brat o' a laddie gave us, when he disappeared and
-ran off to the herring fishery."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster laid down his pipe gravely,
-for he and the dominie had a perpetual
-disagreement about how Quentin was to be educated.
-The former laboured hard to teach him the use of
-fire-arms (Brown Bess in particular), to box, and to
-handle the pistol and broadsword, saying, that
-without such knowledge he would never be a
-man; while the poor dominie laboured still
-harder to infuse in his nature a love for literature
-and the arts of peace, and though compelled to
-console himself for Quentin's rapid progress in
-those of war, by some musty quotation concerning
-the Actian games which were instituted in honour
-of the victory over Marc Antony, he could not
-resist asking,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To what end do you teach the laddie all this
-military nonsense&mdash;this use of sword and musket,
-John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For drill and discipline, dominie&mdash;drill and
-discipline."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Both excellent things in their way,
-quartermaster; the Romans, who conquered all the
-world&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"South of Forth and Clyde&mdash;haud ye there,
-dominie!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, they conquered by the force of their
-discipline, and as that declined, so did their
-power; but to what profitable end, I say, teach
-the bairn all these havers about wars, battles, and
-bombshelling? Do you wish to make of him a
-tearing, swearing, tramping dragoon, such as we
-read of in the days of that atrocious Claverhouse?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all, dominie."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then," asked Skaill, angrily, "what would
-ye make of him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A man, where you would make him a Molly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie shook his head, and as he did so
-the bag of his wig shook pendulously behind him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"John Girvan, bairns should be taught early
-to delight, not in arts which conduce to the
-destruction of human life, but in such as lead to
-charity, mercy, benevolence, and humanity."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite right, dominie, and for utterly ignoring
-all these, I know a man of peace who had his
-lugs cropped off his head."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cropped?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shaven clean off his head by a knife."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Barbarous! barbarous!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But just, dominie&mdash;strictly just. Did you
-ever hear how our 28th, or North Gloucestershire,
-came to be called <i>the Slashers</i>?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sooth to say, John, I never heard o' them
-at all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, pass the bottle, and I care na if I tell
-you. A company of ours was quartered with
-them in a town on the Canadian frontier. It
-was during the winter of '79, when the
-atmosphere was so cold that the hoar-frost on our
-sentries' greatcoats made them look for a' the
-world like figures round a bridecake; stiff
-half-and-half grog froze before you could drink it;
-the bugles froze with the buglers' breath; flesh
-came off if you touched a swordblade or musket
-barrel, and the air was full of glittering particles.
-We had to saw our ration beef in slices, and
-half roast our loaves before we could cut them.
-Men were found dead in the snow every day&mdash;stiff
-and frozen; in fact, there was no way of
-keeping ourselves warm, do what we might. I
-don't know how many degrees it was <i>below</i> the
-freezing point, but the cold was awful, and it
-seemed as if the mercury was frozen too!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Amid the severity of that Canadian winter,
-the mayor of the town, a democratic and
-discontented ruffian, refused billets to the soldiers'
-wives, and the poor women and helpless children
-of the 28th nearly all perished in the streets; in
-the mornings they were found frozen like statues,
-or half-buried among the snow; but severely
-was the mayor punished, for one day as he sat at
-dinner the table was suddenly surrounded by a
-party of savages, in war-paint, with hunting shirts,
-fur cloaks, moccassins, and wampum belts. They
-whooped, yelled, brandished their tomahawks, and
-then dragging the mayor from the table, sliced
-off both his ears. After this they at once
-disappeared, and it was not known for some days that
-these pretended savages were soldiers of the 28th
-whose wives had perished through his inhumanity.
-It was for this that we first called them 'slashers,'
-a title which their bravery in the war fully
-confirmed."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The wretch was rightly served," said the
-dominie; "and truly did our old friend Rob
-write of 'man's inhumanity to man making
-countless thousands mourn.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, dominie, that poem is as gude as any
-sermon that ever was written!" exclaimed the
-quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But to return to Quentin, it is wi' such
-barbarous stories as that you have told me you fill
-the bairn's head, John, at an age when his mind
-should be impressed wi' ideas of charity and mercy.
-How noble it was of the great Constantine, to
-employ his son, as soon as he could write, in signing
-pardons and granting boons. Under favour, John,
-the pen is a nobler instrument than the sword."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then how about Wight Wallace and the
-Bruce of Carrick, dominie, eh? Had they never
-learned to handle aught but a goosequill, where
-would our auld mother Scotland have been to-day;
-so shut pans, ye auld gomeril, and brew
-your toddy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie chuckled and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have worn a red coat mysel', quartermaster,
-for when Thurot was off the west coast, I was a year
-in the volunteers under the Earl o' Glencairn."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The best year of your life, dominie!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had a sword, a musket and a bayonet.
-'Thrice is he armed who hath his quarrel just.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And how did you feel when you saw the
-beacons blazing on the Carrick hills, and heard the
-drums dinging before you, on the night o' the <i>false
-alarm</i>?" asked the old soldier with a sly smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shouted like Julian when sent to war,
-'Oh Plato! Plato! what a task for a philosopher.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The deevil you did!" exclaimed Girvan, puffing
-vigorously; "and what then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Glencairn fined me twenty merks Scots, for
-speaking in the ranks."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fined&mdash;I'd have flogged you at the drumhead
-wi' the cat-o'-nine-tails."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Romans used a vine sapling, as we find
-in Juvenal, and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bother those Romans, whoever they were, if
-they really ever existed at all! You are ever
-and aye stuffing Quentin wi' these Romans and
-their sayings and doings."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indubitably, and I would that I could teach
-him all that was ever known to the seven wise
-men o' Greece."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And who were they?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bias, Pittacus, Solon, Chilo, Periander, Cleobulus,
-and Thales," replied the dominie with singular
-volubility; "all men who flourished before
-the Christian era."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Powder and pipeclay! Egad, I'm glad they
-don't flourish now. Their names sound just like
-those of a regiment of niggers we had at the
-siege of Boston. Pardon, dominie,&mdash;but I must
-have my joke. I wish I could teach Quentin
-something of fortification," he added thoughtfully,
-as he watched the pale smoke from his pipe
-curling up towards the ceiling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is an art almost coeval wi' man," responded
-the other approvingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True," rejoined the quartermaster; "for did
-not Cain build a city with a wall round it on
-Mount Libuan, and call it after his son Enoch?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right, quartermaster, right!" said the pedant,
-rubbing his hands with pleasure. "Yea, and the
-Babylonians, after the waters of the flood, built
-them cities, and wi' strong ramparts encompassed
-them about; but I hope, if I live, to hear Quentin
-Kennedy expound on all that and more, in the
-pulpit of Rohallion kirk."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What!" roared the quartermaster, in a tone
-that made the dominie start back; "make a
-minister of him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yea, John Girvan; and wherefore not?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has about as much vocation for the kirk
-as I have. Would you have him drag out his life
-like a drone in a Scotch country manse, when
-a' the warld is up and stirring? Quentin is a
-penniless lad wi' a proud spirit, so he must e'en follow
-the drum, as his father followed it before him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His father before him, say ye? Some puir
-fellow, the son o' an outlawed Jacobite, doubtless.
-I dinna think, quartermaster, that <i>he</i> made much
-o' the trade o' war; a trade that is clean against
-scripture in every respect."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dominie, did not Richard Cameron, who fell
-bravely, battling for the right, at Airs Moss, only
-a hundred and twenty years ago, know every cut
-of his good broadsword, as well as the texts of
-his Bible? A man's hands should always be
-ready to keep his head; thus, whatever may be
-before him, I have taught Quentin to fence and
-to shoot."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No harm, perhaps, in either, for I remember
-me," replied the inveterate quoter, "that Bishop
-Latimer says of himself 'my poor father was as
-diligent to teach me to shoot, as to learn any
-other thing.' But anent Quentin Kennedy, you
-and I will never be able to agree, John, so&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We'll e'en leave the lad's future to himself,
-dominie. I think he has some right to be
-consulted, and, odds heart! he is but a bairn yet; a
-bairn, though, that can handle his pistol as well as
-my other pupil, the Master Cosmo."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fie, fie, John Girvan! and a most sinfu' use
-has the Master made o' his skill."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has paraded a good many bucks and
-bullies by daylight; but what would you have an
-officer to do? If insulted, he must challenge; if
-challenged, he must go out, or quit the service
-and society too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie shook his head solemnly in
-deprecation of such sentiments, and said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I fear me muckle the Master will meet wi'
-his match some day, and a black one it will be for
-the house o' Rohallion; but now for my <i>deoch an
-doruis</i>. Pass the dram bottle. Ugh! the road
-down the glen will be eerie to-night, and I can
-never forget that awfu' morning, John, when I
-saw the wraith of Cosmo's uncle, standing at the
-castle-gate, in his wig, cocked hat, and red coat,
-silent and grim, even as the ghost of Cæsar, on
-the night before Philippi."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wi' a' the whisky you had under your belt,
-I wonder you didna see <i>twa</i> o' them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Jest not&mdash;jest not," said the dominie, with,
-we are sorry to say, half-tipsy solemnity, as he
-drained his <i>deoch</i> to the last drop, tied a large
-yellow bandanna over his three-cornered hat and
-under his chin, assumed his walking-staff, and
-prepared to depart. "I hope the servant-lass
-will air the night-cap that she puts wi' the Bible
-at my bedside every night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster laughed slily, as he knew
-that the cap referred to was a stoup of strong ale,
-which, in the old Scottish fashion, the dominie's
-servant always placed with the Bible on a stool
-near his bed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor dominie's potations mounted to his
-head as he began to move, and, striking his cane
-emphatically as he stepped away, he sung, in
-somewhat uncertain tones:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "My kimmer and I lay down to sleep,<br />
- Wi' twa pint stoups at our bed's feet:<br />
- And aye when we wakened we drank them dry,<br />
- Sae what think ye o' my kimmer and I?<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Toddling butt and toddling ben,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When round as a neep ye come toddling hame!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And so he departed in the dark, in a mood that
-neither brownie nor bogle could scare.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-FLORA WARRENDER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Lovely floweret, lovely floweret,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh! what thoughts your beauties move&mdash;<br />
- When I pressed thee to my bosom,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Little did I know of love.<br />
- In Castile I never entered&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From Leon too, I withdrew,<br />
- Where I was in early boyhood,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And of love I nothing knew."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Poetry of Spain</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-So without change, the joyous and dreamy period
-of Quentin's boyhood glided rapidly away, in
-studies, amusements, and occasionally mischief,
-such as throwing kail-castocks down the dominie's
-<i>lum</i>, and blowing tam-o'-reekies* through his
-keyhole, until about his seventeenth year, when the
-Castle of Rohallion became the home of another
-inmate.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-* Lighted tow blown through a cabbage-stock.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Warrender of Ardgour, widow of Lord
-Rohallion's old friend and companion-in-arms,
-Colonel John Warrender, who, as we have
-related, fell at the head of the Corsican Rangers
-in the Egyptian expedition, died in London,
-bequeathing to the care, tuition, and trust of
-Lady Winifred her only daughter, in charge of
-whom Lady Eglinton arrived from England in
-the summer of 1806, accompanied by her two
-unmarried daughters, Lilias and Mary, now
-growing up into tall and handsome young women,
-with whom Quentin could scarcely venture to
-romp and race as in former days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was evening when an outrider, as a sort of
-avant-courier, arrived from Maybole to announce
-that the Countess was coming with her charge;
-so Lady Rohallion assumed her black silk
-capuchin, her husband his cane and jaunty
-old-fashioned triangular Nivernois (to which he
-rigidly adhered, despite the almost general
-adoption of the present form of round hat), and
-summoning Quentin, who was busy among the firearms
-in the gun-room, they set forth for a stroll
-along the avenue to meet their friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Jack Warrender!" said Lord Rohallion,
-musingly; "I wonder whether his girl
-resembles him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should think not," replied Lady Winifred,
-smiling, as her recollections of the late Colonel's
-personal appearance were not flattering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have not seen the child for four or five years."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora will be past sixteen now. She had
-her mother's forehead, and soft, dovelike eyes;
-the Colonel was a stern and rough-featured
-man."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But a good-hearted fellow, Winny, as ever
-cracked a joke or a bottle. I saw him first as a
-jolly ensign, carrying the union colour of his
-regiment, at Saratoga, and, egad, my dear, that
-wasn't yesterday."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora's mother died of a broken heart."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She was always delicate," said Lord Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, like most men, you don't believe in that
-kind of death; but she never recovered the shock
-of her husband's fall in Egypt, and thus, after
-five years' constant ailing and pining, she has
-passed away to her place of rest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor woman!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is the difference of age between Flora
-and our Cosmo?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A suggestive question."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Never mind, my lord."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some sixteen years or more, I think. You
-should remember best, Winny, their ages."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After this they walked on in silence, the lady,
-already match-making and scheming out certain
-matters with reference to the young heiress of
-Ardgour, had her mind bent on futurity; while
-the old lord's thoughts were with the past, full
-of other days and other scenes, when youth
-and hope went hand in hand&mdash;days, which, in
-the wars of Napoleon, were being fast forgotten
-by the world at large.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evening was beautiful; the air was still
-and calm, though at times a breeze stirred gently
-the foliage of the sycamores of that stately avenue
-which led from the haunted gate to the ancient
-highway from Maybole&mdash;trees which had cast
-their shadows on many a generation of the
-Crawfords of Rohallion, who had gambolled along that
-avenue in infancy, and tottered down it in age;
-and since the days of King James VI. they had
-seen many a son of the house go forth with
-his sword and return no more, for many of
-them have fallen in domestic feuds and foreign
-wars.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the uplands the golden grain was waving,
-but there was no sound in the air save the voice
-of the corncrake in the fields, the hum of the
-summer bee, the plaintive notes of the cushat-dove
-among the foliage of the oak-wood shaw, or the
-flash of the bull-trout in the linn that bubbled
-on one side of the avenue, and disappeared under
-a quaint arch, on each side of which stood two
-moss-grown lions sejant, the armorial supporters
-which the family of Rohallion inherited from Sir
-Raynold Crawford, high sheriff of Ayrshire, the
-uncle of Sir William Wallace of Elderslie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin, who had been in advance with a couple
-of barking terriers, now came running back,
-waving his hat, to announce that Lady Eglinton's
-carriage was coming bowling along the dusty road;
-and just as he spoke it wheeled into the echoing
-avenue, where the horses' hoofs crashed among the
-gravel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The driver, who was seated on a splendid
-hammercloth (with the dragons, <i>vert</i>, vomiting fire)
-reined up on perceiving Lord and Lady Rohallion,
-and the servants at once threw down the steps as
-their mistress desired to alight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Assisted by her host, she stepped down, a
-stately woman of a noble presence, considerably
-older than her friend, Winifred Maxwell, being
-past her sixtieth year, but still bent on being
-young despite wrinkles and other little indications
-of "the enemy." She wore the then fashionable
-little bonnet of green and blue, or union velvet, as
-it was named, in honour of Ireland, a large
-chequered Burdett kerchief over her neck and
-shoulders, and her whole person was redolent of hair
-powder and perfume, as her black satin robe swept
-over the gravel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her two daughters sprang forth after her,
-accompanied by the new visitor, (of whom more
-anon,) all three handsome and lady-like young
-girls, faultless in symmetry, delicacy, and refinement,
-and all possessed of considerable beauty, and
-looking happy, blooming, and smiling, in their
-Leghorn gipsy hats, which were wreathed with
-flowers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Welcome, my dear Lady Eglinton," said
-Rohallion, bowing like an old-fashioned courtier
-of Versailles or Holyrood, as he planted his little
-Nivernois under his left arm, and gave his right
-hand to the Countess to lead her up the avenue;
-"unlike your humble servant, egad, madam, you
-grow younger every day&mdash;and then your
-travelling costume&mdash;I vow it is charming."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My lord," said the old lady, smiling, "you
-are still quite a Lothario, and as complimentary
-as ever. My girls at least have the latest London
-fashions, but I prefer the bonnet of 1801, as being
-more becoming my style&mdash;perhaps I should say,
-my years."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We question whether this amiable lady and her
-daughters in "the latest London fashion," would
-have been in the mode now, as their narrow
-skirts made them exactly resemble the figures we
-see in the little Noah's ark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this is Flora Warrender," said Lord
-Rohallion (after the usual greetings were over),
-kissing the girl's hand and forehead with kindness
-and regard; "welcome here, child, for the sake
-of your father. Many a day Jack Warrender
-and I have been under fire together, and often
-we have shared our grog and our biscuit&mdash;long
-before you saw the light, Flora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her fine eyes filled as the old Lord spoke, and
-a beautiful expression passed over her soft, fair
-face. She was in second mourning&mdash;muslin with
-black spots; and her gipsy hat with its crape
-bows gave her a very picturesque look. She
-had sandalled shoes on her feet, that, like her
-hands, were small and very finely shaped. Her
-ear-rings and bracelets were of brown Tunbridge
-wood, then the simple fashion when not in full
-dress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have brought a sweet companion for you,
-Quentin," said Lady Mary, laughing, as she
-presented both her hands to her young friend;
-"won't she be quite a little wife for you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mary!" said her mamma, in an admonitory tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course, mamma, you know I am much
-too old for Quentin."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Too tall, at least, to talk nonsense," replied
-Lady Eglinton, whose ideas of deportment belonged
-to the last century, and whose old-fashioned
-stateliness always abashed Quentin, who blushed
-like a great schoolboy as he was, and played
-nervously with his little hat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What, mamma!" persisted Mary, "mayn't I
-still flirt with Quentin?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But her mother, who, with all her kindness of
-heart, had always doubts about the wisdom of
-lavishing so much attention on a strange child
-(whose future and antecedents were alike
-obscure), as the Rohallion family bestowed on
-poor Quentin Kennedy, turned away to speak
-with her host and hostess, leaving the young
-people to themselves, while the carriage, with its
-double imperial, was driven round to the stable
-court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope you have had a pleasant journey from
-the South?" said Lady Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We had a break-down at York, and I was
-sorely tired when we reached Edinburgh. There
-I was somewhat recompensed by hearing Kemble
-in Macbeth, and Mrs. Kemble sing the new
-fashionable ballad, 'The Blue Bells of Scotland,'
-at the conclusion of the piece; but the
-candle-snuffers neglected our box so much, that, before
-the farce, we were driven to the card assembly
-in the new room in George-street, where, for a
-dull little town, there was a pretty genteel
-assemblage; though the dresses of the women were
-five years behind London, I was glad to see
-hair-powder still worn in such profusion."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Since the Union," said Lady Rohallion,
-"Edinburgh has been a city of the dead, and
-very different from what our grandmothers
-described it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A veritable village, where one meets none
-above the rank of mere professional men, struggling
-hard, poor fellows, to keep up appearances."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But at the assembly, mamma, there was <i>one</i>
-person of position," said Lady Jane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, child&mdash;the young Earl of Aboyne, whose
-name was unfortunately associated with that of
-the late unhappy Queen of France, Marie Antoinette."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, yes," said Rohallion, laughing, "I
-remember that the Polignacs spoke maliciously of
-her dancing <i>Ecossaises</i> with him at the balls of
-Madame d'Ossun."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We went with him to Corri's Concerts, which
-are led by Signor Stablini, and also to see the
-storming of Seringapatam, opposite the New College,
-'the wonder of the English metropolis, for
-the last twelve months,' as the papers have it. I
-have brought your ladyship the 'Last Minstrel,' the
-new poem of that clever gentleman, Mr. Walter
-Scott, which has just appeared; Mr. Constable's
-shop at the Cross was quite besieged by inquirers for
-it; and for your lordship I have the Gazettes
-detailing the captures of Martinique and Guadaloupe."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you&mdash;they will be a rare treat for
-me and for old John Girvan, who enjoys the
-reversion of all my military literature."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At Edinburgh we had quite a chapter of
-accidents. One of Lord Eglinton's favourite
-horses came in dead lame at the Leith Races;
-then my abigail left me abruptly, having gained
-a prize of two thousand guineas in the State
-lottery, and with it an offer of marriage from
-a dissenting minister. A wheel came off the
-carriage just as we were descending that steep
-old thoroughfare named the West Bow, and by
-this accident all our new bonnets from the Gallery
-of Fashion in the High-street were destroyed:
-it also caused a fracas between our poor coachman
-and a lieutenant of the City Guard, who, with
-his silver epaulettes on, and all the airs of office,
-was drumming a woman out of town. The
-fracas caused a three days' detention, as one of the
-bailies, a democratic grocer, threatened to send
-our coachman on board the pressing-tender at
-Leith for contumacy; but ultimately and happily,
-the name of Lord Eglinton terrified the saucy
-patch into complaisance. Then we heard of
-footpads infesting the Lanark-road, but fortunately
-we had the escort of some of the Scots Greys
-who were conveying French prisoners to the
-West Country, so we reached Maybole without
-any untoward accident."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While the Countess was rehearsing the adventures
-of her journey, Lord Rohallion, partly
-oblivious of her and of her daughters, had been
-absorbed by Flora, in whose soft features he sought
-in vain for the stern eyebrows, the high nose and
-cheekbones of her father the colonel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion glanced at their ward, from
-time to time, with mingled satisfaction and
-interest, as she had certain views regarding her,
-and these were nothing less than a marriage, a
-few years hence, between her and Cosmo, the
-Master, an idea which had strengthened every day
-she looked towards Ardgour, the well-wooded
-heights of which were visible from the windows of
-Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But man proposes, and God disposes," says
-the proverb. How these views were realized, we
-shall come in time to see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All unaware of the plots forming against her
-in the busy brain of her mother's friend, Flora
-had already drawn near Quentin, and, surveying
-him with something of wonder and interest in her
-fine eyes, she said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So you are the little boy of whom I have
-heard so much in the letters of Lady Rohallion
-to mamma?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am Quentin Kennedy, Miss Warrender."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who was rescued from that horrible wreck?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are not so <i>very</i> little, though."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am taller than <i>you</i>," replied our young
-friend, in a tone of pique.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I look the eldest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are much of an age; I heard Lady
-Rohallion say so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I think I shall like you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am sure that I shall like you very much!"
-responded Quentin, blushing in spite of himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know that we are to be companions, and
-learn our studies together?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And such delightful walks we shall have in
-this old avenue," said she, looking up at the grand
-old sycamores, between which the golden sunset
-fell in flakes of warm light.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the boy and girl were friends at once.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About five was then the fashionable dinner-hour:
-thus, as Lady Eglinton had arrived later, a few
-friends and neighbours came to sup at Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The conversation all ran on rents, agriculture,
-and politics; high-toryism had full sway. Thus
-Napoleon, the Corsican tyrant&mdash;who was averred
-to have copied Alexander in Egypt, Cæsar in
-Italy, and Charlemagne in France, no bad example
-surely&mdash;together with Sir Francis Burdett, and
-the atrocious opposition party, were very liberally
-devoted to the infernal gods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The younger ladies idled over the piano, in the
-old-fashioned yellow damask drawing-room. The
-faithless Quentin, apparently quite oblivious of the
-presence of his former friend, Lady Mary, was
-quite fascinated by the new visitor, whom he had
-innumerable matters to tell and to show.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The worthy Lord smiled benignantly as he
-watched them, and, while taking a pinch of the
-Prince's mixture from the gold-enamelled box,
-which had been presented to him by H.R.H. the
-Duke of York, he remarked to an old friend, who,
-in powder, wide cuffs, pigtail, and knee-breeches,
-seemed the counterpart of himself, that "truly we
-lived in rapid and wonderful times."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Lord Rohallion! he could little foresee the
-time when posterity would be flying over Europe
-at the rate of sixty miles an hour, and when,
-instead of powdering his cherished pigtail, he might
-have it cut by machinery&mdash;the Victorian age of
-Crystal Palaces, crinoline, and chloroform&mdash;of
-spirit-rapping, wordy patriotism, and paper collars.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-LOVE, AND MATTERS PERTAINING THERETO.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"They would sit and sigh,<br />
- And look upon each other and conceive<br />
- Not what they ailed; yet something did they ail,<br />
- And yet were well&mdash;and yet they were not well;<br />
- And what was their disease they could not tell."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-According to a recent novelist, "the happiest
-portions of existence are the most difficult to
-chronicle." As we approach that period of
-Quentin's career, which was indeed his happiest,
-we experience something of this difficulty; and
-having much concerning his adventures to relate,
-must glance briefly at the gradual change from
-boyhood into youth&mdash;from youth to manhood,
-almost prematurely, for, by the course of events,
-misfortunes came early; and somewhat abruptly
-was Quentin thrust forth into the great battle of
-life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But we anticipate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that happy time, when he had neither
-thought nor care&mdash;no past to regret, and no future
-to dread, Flora Warrender and Quentin were in
-the bloom of their youth. The girl was already
-highly accomplished; but Dominie Skaill, when
-acting as tutor to the lad, strove to imbue <i>her</i>
-with some love for classical lore, and he bored
-her accordingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In winter especially, the old castle was dull
-and visitors were few. The old quartermaster
-talked to her of Minden and Saratoga; of
-proceeding for leagues upon leagues in heavy
-marching order up to the neck in snow; of
-scalp-hunting Choctaws and Cherokees, tomahawks and
-war-paint. The parish minister, fearing that she
-had become "tainted with Episcopacy during her
-sojourn in the English metropolis," dosed her
-with such gloomy theology as can be found
-nowhere out of Scotland, mingled with local gossip,
-which often took the form of scandal; the dominie
-prosed away "anent" the Romans, or of chemical
-action, the laws of gravitation, the dogmas of
-Antichrist, and the dreadful views of society taken
-by the Corsican usurper and his blood-smeared
-Frenchmen, till the young heiress felt her head
-spin. Lord Rohallion, whose ideas were chiefly
-military, and Lady Winifred, whose thoughts ran
-chiefly on housewifery and acting doctor to all the
-children on the estate, were not very amusing
-either, so she turned with joy and pleasure to her
-new friend Quentin Kennedy, who was ever ready
-for a gallop into the country, a ramble in the
-woods, or a romp in the garden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long and many were the confidences between
-them, for both were orphans, and they had thus
-many emotions in common.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He told her in detail what she had already
-heard, and what all in the Bailiewicks of Carrick,
-Kyle, and Cunninghame knew, the story of his
-being saved from the wreck of an unknown ship,
-whose whole crew perished, and that his father,
-who had been a Scottish officer in the service of
-Monsieur, was drowned with them; that now, he
-could barely shadow out his thin spare figure, and
-pale and anxious face, it seemed so long since
-then; that save the Crawfords of Rohallion, he
-had no friends on earth that he knew of, and that
-he was to become a soldier, he believed&mdash;at least
-his good friend Mr. Girvan always said so, and
-that it was his own wish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A soldier!" repeated Flora; "my poor papa
-was one, and those horrid French killed him. Oh
-that I were a man, to join with you in a life of
-such peril and adventure! But Lady Rohallion
-says I am to be a soldier's wife," she added,
-smiling, and burying her pretty nostrils in a thick
-moss rose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To be married?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; she says that the Master of Rohallion
-is to marry me, whenever he returns home."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And do you love him, Flora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know," she replied, blushing as red
-as the rose in her hand, and casting down her
-dark eyelashes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because, Quentin, I never saw him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not even at Ardgour?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, nor in London, for when my dear mamma
-was there, the Master was always at Windsor or
-Brighton with the Guards."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then why are you to marry him?" persisted
-Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because I am told that it will be very
-convenient for all parties, as the lands of Rohallion
-and those of Ardgour march together for miles
-over hill and glen," replied Flora, using the
-Scottish phrase for "adjoin."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then she would tell him, with all the kindness
-and friendship of Lady Rohallion, how sorely she
-missed the extreme tenderness and gentleness of
-her own dear mother, and how that beloved parent
-sunk like a bruised reed, nor ever rallied since
-the terrible morning when news came to Ardgour
-that her father had fallen in battle under
-Abercrombie, and his general's letter and the Duke of
-York's too, alike failed to afford the consolation
-they expressed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no love-making in confidences such
-as these; but both were young; the lad was
-handsome, sturdy, and impetuous. Flora was
-winning in manner and delicately beautiful, with
-soft dove-like dark eyes of violet-grey, and lashes
-that were almost black like her hair; and such
-intercourse, if it was pleasant and delightful, was
-perilous work, and apt to lead to the development
-of a friendship that certainly would not be platonic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When climbing the beetling cliffs that overhung
-the waves, the sea-pinks and wild flowers that
-grew in such dangerous places, were always culled,
-and the rare birds'-eggs, that lay in the cliffs and
-crannies, were gathered by Quentin for Flora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His whole desire and study were Flora Warrender
-and the anticipation of her every want and
-wish. Many of his sports, the trout pools in the
-Girvan, the fishing boats in the bay, the otter
-holes by the Doon, the covers where the golden
-pheasant lurked among the green and feathery
-fern, were neglected now for places nearer home&mdash;for
-the sycamore avenue, the terraced garden, the
-yew-hedge labyrinth, for wherever Flora was to be
-found, he was not far off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her soft and modulated voice was full of music,
-it had a chord in it that vibrated in his heart, so
-the lad sighed for her and knew not why.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Could it be otherwise when they were always
-together? They admired and sketched the same
-scenery&mdash;the cliffs of Rohallion and the gaping
-caverns below, where the sea boomed like thunder
-when the tide was coming in; the ruins of Kilhenzie;
-the old kirk in the wooded glen, where the
-golden broom and blue harebells grew; the long
-and stately avenue of sycamores, and the Lollard's
-linn that poured in white foam under its ancient
-bridge. When Flora drew, he was always there to
-marvel at the cunning of the lovely little hand
-that transferred all to paper so freely and so rapidly.
-They repeated the same poetry; they conned the
-same tasks, loved the same lights and shadows on
-glen and mountain, sea and shore; they had the
-same objects and haunts, and so they grew dear to
-each other, far dearer than either knew or suspected.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In those days, our young ladies, when singing,
-neither attempted to foist bad German or worse
-Italian on their listeners; neither did they dare
-to excel in opera, or run out into "artistic
-agonies," Like her mother before her, Flora
-contented herself with her native songs, which
-she sung with great sweetness (thanks to Corri's
-tuition), and Quentin was always at hand by the
-harp or piano to turn over the music, as all
-well-bred young men have done, since time immemorial.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How swiftly flew those days of peace and joy
-in that old castle by the sea, when each was all
-the world to the other! And is it strange, that
-situated as they were, a deep and innocent love
-should steal into their young hearts?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old tenantry, particularly Elsie Irvine, who
-always considered Quentin her own peculiar pet;
-the quartermaster and the dominie blessed them
-in their hearts, and called them "man and wife,"
-which made them blush furiously; but nothing
-of this kind was ever said in the hearing of Lady
-Rohallion, for they had early learned intuitively
-that such jests would displease her; though those
-worthy souls could never gather why, until a period
-of our story yet to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their friendship and regard grew with their
-years, and they never had a quarrel. The dominie
-likened them to Pyramus and Thisbe, and quoted
-largely from Ovid; but they were much more like
-their prototypes, Paul and Virginia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord and Lady Rohallion seemed to forget
-that the time was coming rapidly when Quentin
-would cease to be a boy, and Flora a girl. Had
-they thought of this, much misery might have
-been spared to all; but though many around them
-saw their progress, and marvelled where it would
-all end, the worthy old couple saw nothing to alter
-in the matter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two years more gave a manliness to the beauty,
-form, and character of Quentin Kennedy, while
-Flora, even when on the verge of womanhood,
-never lost the sweet and childlike sensibility of
-expression, which was the chief characteristic of
-her fair and delicate face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In all this pleasant intercourse they had never
-known the true character, or the actual depth of
-their attachment for each other, until one day
-when Quentin was verging on eighteen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had been wandering in the leafy summer
-woods, far beyond the Girvan, which was in full
-flood, as rain had been falling heavily for some
-days previous. Fed by a thousand runnels from
-the Carrick hills, there was a <i>spate</i> (<i>Scottice</i>,
-torrent) in the stream, and at a part of it, about a
-mile distant from the castle of Rohallion, they
-heard old Jack Andrews tolling the dinner-bell,
-an ancient copper utensil which hung on the north
-gavel of the keep, where, in the days of old, it
-had frequently been rung for a less peaceful
-purpose than to announce that the soup was ready,
-or the sirloin done to a turn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To make the circuit necessary to cross by the
-rustic bridge at the Kelpie's-pool (where, as all in
-Carrick know, a belated wayfarer was drowned by
-the river fiend) would have kept them too late, so
-Quentin took Flora in his arms to bear her through
-the stream, at a ford which was well known to
-him, and when the water was about four feet in
-depth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dear Quentin, you will never be able to
-carry me," said Flora, laughing heartily at the
-arrangement; "I am sure that I am much too
-heavy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not for me, Flora&mdash;come, let us try."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Should you fall?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Flora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will be swept away and drowned."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I care not if you are safe," said he, gallantly;
-and, like a brave lad, he felt what he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I would be drowned too, you rash boy,"
-said she, with a charming smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then a ballad would be made about us, like
-so many lovers we have heard of and read about.
-Perhaps the Kelpie would be blamed for the whole
-catastrophe," replied Quentin, laughing, as lie
-clasped her tightly in his arms. He was
-confident and bold, and the kind of training he
-underwent at the hands of our military friend,
-Mr. John Girvan, the gamekeeper, and others, made
-him hardy and strong beyond his years, yet he
-felt his fair Flora a heavier weight than he had
-quite reckoned on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His high spirit gave him strength, however,
-and bearing her high upon his breast and shoulder,
-with her skirts gathered tightly round her, he
-boldly entered the rushing stream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then for the first time, when he felt her soft
-warm arm and delicate hand clasping his neck,
-half fearfully and half caressingly; when her
-cheek was close to his; when her breath mingled
-with his own, and her thick dark hair swept over
-his face, a strange and joyous thrill ran through
-him&mdash;a new and giddy emotion took possession of
-his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mysterious longings, aspirations, and hopes
-glowed within him, and in mid-stream, even when
-the foaming water swept past with stones and
-clay, and roots of aged trees, Quentin did what
-he had never done before, he pressed his lips&mdash;and
-his soul seemed on them&mdash;again and again
-to those of Flora Warrender, and he murmured he
-knew not what in her ear, and she did not repel him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her excitement, perhaps, was too great; but
-we suspect that she was partly frightened and
-partly pleased. He landed her safely on the
-opposite bank, and again the castle-bell was heard
-waking the echoes of the woods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Girvan was passed now, and to speak
-metaphorically, that classic stream, the Rubicon, too!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had divined the great secret of their
-hearts, and, hand in hand, in happy but thoughtful
-silence&mdash;Quentin, however, seeming the most
-abashed&mdash;they returned to Rohallion, both powerfully
-agitated by the new and sudden turn their
-affection seemed to have taken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When their eyes met, their pulses quickened,
-and their colour came and went.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From that hour a change came over them;
-they were more reserved, less frank, apparently,
-and, outwardly, less joyous. In the presence of
-Flora, Quentin grew timid, and he became more
-earnestly, but quietly, assiduous to her than
-before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each, in absence, thought more of the other's
-image or idea; and each weighed the words, and
-treasured the stolen smiles and tender tones of
-the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>They were lovers now!</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the voice of nature that spoke in their
-hearts. Flora had long loved her young
-companion without exactly knowing it. The episode
-of the river had brought the passion to a culminating
-point, and the veil was raised now. She
-saw his position and her own; and, while
-experiencing all a young girl's pride and rapture in
-the assurance that she has a lover, a strange
-sense of trouble came with her new emotion of
-joy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for Quentin, he slept but little that night;
-yet it was not his wetting in the river that kept
-him awake. He felt himself a new being&mdash;he trod on
-air! He rehearsed to himself again and again the
-adventure of the flooded stream, and went to sleep
-at last, with the memory of Flora's kisses on his
-lips, and murmuring the conviction which brought
-such delight to his young heart&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She loves me! Dear, dear Flora loves me!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-A LAST KISS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Yes; open your heart! be glad,<br />
- Glad as the linnet on the tree:<br />
- Laugh, laugh away&mdash;and merrily<br />
- Drive away every dream that's sad.<br />
- Who sadness takes for joy is mad&mdash;<br />
- And mournful thought<br />
- Will come unsought."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-After the climax recorded in our last chapter,
-events succeeded each other with great rapidity at
-the castle of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that period of our story, Flora Warrender
-had attained her full stature&mdash;the middle
-height. In form, she was round, firm, and
-well developed&mdash;plump, to speak plainly&mdash;yet
-she was both symmetrical and graceful. Her
-eyes, we have said, were a kind of violet
-grey, clear, dark and exquisitely soft. Long
-lashes, and the remarkable form of her white lids,
-doubtless gave them this expression. Her
-forehead was low and broad, rather than high; her
-smile won all, and there was a charming air of
-delicacy and refinement in her manner, over all
-her person, and in all she said or did. The form of
-her hand and foot alone sufficed to indicate her
-station, family and nurture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is a mysterious character, heightened,
-indeed, by fancy and passion, but not without
-foundation in reality and observation, which lovers
-have ever imputed to the object of their
-affections," says Charles Lamb; and viewed through
-this most favourable medium, to the mind of
-Quentin Kennedy, young and ardent as he was,
-Flora Warrender, in all the bloom of her beauty
-and girlhood, seemed indeed something "exceeding
-nature."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus it was with a heart filled with painful
-anticipations of coming trouble, that he heard
-Lord Rohallion, one morning at breakfast, when
-Jack Andrews emptied the contents of the
-letter-bag before him, exclaim,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A letter from Cosmo! It is for you, Winny&mdash;the
-careless young dog, he has not written
-here for six months&mdash;not even to thank me for
-paying that precious gambling debt of his, lost
-among those popinjays of the 10th Hussars.
-Then there was that devilish scrape with the
-French dancer, whom he took down to Brighton
-with Uxbridge's son, Paget of the 7th, and that
-set&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hush&mdash;remember Flora!" whispered Lady Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the duel, too," persisted the old lord;
-"pah! in my time we didn't fight about such
-trumpery ware as French dancers. But what
-says Cosmo?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He comes home by the next mail," replied
-Lady Rohallion, a bright and motherly smile
-spreading like sunshine over her face; "how I
-shall rejoice to see him&mdash;the dear boy!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A <i>dear</i> boy, indeed!" said his lordship; "his
-Guards' life has cost me ten thousand guineas, if
-it has cost me a sixpence, Winny."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo is coming," said Lady Rohallion,
-pointedly; "do you hear, Flora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madam," replied Flora, colouring, and
-casting a furtive glance at Quentin, who appeared
-to be solely occupied with his coffee and kippered
-salmon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo writes that he has succeeded, by a
-death-vacancy, to the majority of his battalion of
-the Guards, which, of course, gives him the rank
-of Lieutenant-Colonel in the army."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As captain he has enjoyed that for some
-years."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has therefore applied for the command
-of a line regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That will be simple enough, as so many
-second battalions are being raised just now for
-this projected expedition to Spain."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Duke of York has promised that his
-wish shall be gratified, and he has obtained a few
-months' leave, to come down here and see us&mdash;to
-have, as he says, a shot at the birds and a day's
-fly-fishing with John Girvan, in the Doon, before
-he returns to active service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And we shall see him, then&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In three days&mdash;three days at furthest, Flora,"
-she added, with a glance at Miss Warrender.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bravo! you shall see something like a soldier,
-Flora, when Cosmo returns&mdash;something like what
-I was, about the time of Saratoga; eh, Jack
-Andrews?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, my lord," responded Andrews, "coming
-to attention," as well as a man might with a
-hissing tea-urn in his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Send up the housekeeper, Andrews," said
-Lady Rohallion, "we must have the Master's
-rooms put in order, and also one for his valet;
-for I suppose he comes here with him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If so fine a knight of the shoulder-knot can
-tolerate Rohallion," said his lordship, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come with me, Flora; I know, child, how
-glad you will be to assist me," added Lady
-Winifred taking Miss Warrender's hand, and
-leading her away, while Quentin, whose heart beat
-painfully, appeared to be busy with a newspaper.
-It detailed how forty thousand Frenchmen were
-being foiled before Zaragoza's walls of mud, yet it
-seemed all a maze to poor Quentin, and he saw not
-how Flora's rich colour deepened as she withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master was coming to Rohallion!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin remembered that gentleman's cold and
-haughty manner, and the half-concealed dislike
-which he ever manifested towards himself. He
-remembered what Flora had more than once told
-him two years ago of Lady Rohallion's intentions
-or hopes regarding her, and his heart grew sick
-with apprehension of a rival so formidable. He
-thought perhaps Cosmo might have formed an
-attachment elsewhere; but that would not prevent
-him from making love to Flora, were it only
-to kill time; and in her lover's eyes, she seemed
-so beautiful, that the Master would certainly find
-it impossible to oppose the desire of his mother;
-and Quentin dreaded her yielding; to the united
-influence of the family, and the advantages a
-suitor of such rank, experience and position could
-offer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He saw it all, and considered Flora lost to him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pride made him silent on the subject, and
-Flora, who with female acuteness divined what
-was passing in his mind, deemed it unnecessary
-or unwise to speak of it. She pitied Quentin, for
-she soon perceived how pale and miserable he
-looked; while he misconstrued her reserve and
-became fretful, even petulant with her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As if to add to his trouble, with that obtuseness
-of intellect (shall we call it petty malice?)
-peculiar to their order, some of those same
-persons, who long ago were wont to annoy Flora
-and make Quentin blush, by jestingly calling
-them "man and wife," now taunted him with his
-too probable loss on the arrival of the Master, a
-boy's love being almost deemed, beyond any
-other, a legitimate subject for banter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These stinging remarks made Quentin's heart
-swell with pride and jealousy, doubt and alarm,
-for now he heard the matter referred to daily in
-the course of conversation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So, my dear lady," he heard the parish minister
-say, when paying his periodical visit, "local
-rumour says that the Master is coming home to
-obtain a final answer from a certain young lady,
-before rejoining the army."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion merely bowed and smiled, as
-much as to say that local rumour was right.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They have an old man's blessing," he added
-blandly, as he departed on his barrel-bellied
-Galloway cob, and thought of an augmented stipend
-in futurity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Master's coming home to enter for the
-heiress, and have a shy at the grouse and
-ptarmigan," the gamekeeper said, while cleaning the
-arms in the gunroom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He'll walk the course&mdash;won't he, Mr. Quentin?"
-added the groom, while preparing the stables
-for more horses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To carry the fortress, and leave you to march
-off with the honours of war," said the
-quartermaster at one time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A braw day will it be for Rohallion!"
-remarked the dominie at another. "There shall
-be dancing and feasting, scattering of nuts as
-we find in Pliny, with shooting of cannon, and
-shouts of <i>Io Hymen Hymenæe</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My puir Quentin," said Elsie Irvine, while,
-pondering on such rumours, he wandered moodily
-enough "by the sad sea wave," "so you're gaun
-to lose your wee wifie at last?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus every one seemed to discuss the affair
-openly and laughingly, and their remarks and mock
-condolences, were as so many pins, needles, daggers,
-what you will, in the poor lad's heart, so that
-his doubts and fears became a veritable torture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So great was the bustle of preparation in the
-castle, that the evening of the third day&mdash;the day
-so dreaded by Quentin&mdash;drew nigh without him
-obtaining a suitable opportunity of conversing
-with Flora; for so much did Lady Rohallion
-occupy that young lady's time, that he scarcely
-met her, save at meals, or in the presence of
-others. But on this evening he suddenly saw
-her walking before him in the avenue, and
-hastening forward, he joined her in silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora seemed weary, but rosy and smiling.
-Quentin was nervously excited, but pale and
-unhappy in expression. Neither spoke, as they
-walked slowly forward, and he did not take her
-hand, nor did she take his arm, according to their
-usual custom, and the omission stung Quentin
-most. Frankness seemed at an end between
-them, as if three days had changed alike their
-nature and the relation that existed between
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora looked very beautiful and piquante in
-her gipsy hat wreathed with roses, with her hair
-dark and wavy floating over her shoulders, while
-a blush mantled from time to time in her soft
-cheek, and her dark liquid eyes stole furtive
-glances from under their long lashes at her young
-lover, fond glances of pity mingled with coquetry,
-but all unseen by him, for Quentin's gaze was
-fixed on vacancy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At length they reached the lower end of the
-avenue near the Lollard's Linn, where there still
-stands a sombre thicket of very ancient thorn
-trees, that were coeval, perhaps, with the first
-tower of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-According to local tradition, this place was
-haunted by a spectre-hound, which no one could
-attempt to face or trace with safety, even if they
-had the courage to attempt it. Its form, that of
-a great, lean, lanky staghound, black as jet, was
-usually visible on clear nights, gazing wistfully at
-the moon; and in storms of wind and rain, its
-melancholy baying would be heard to mingle with
-the blast that swept through the ancient
-sycamores. It molested none; but if assailed, it
-became terrible, swelling up to nearly double its
-usual size, with back and tail erect like those of a
-pole-cat, its jaws red as blood, and its eyes
-shooting fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those who saw the dog-fiend in this state
-became idiots, and sickened or died soon after.
-Tradition went farther, and asserted that the
-spectre-hound was nothing else than the spirit of
-Lady Jean of Rohallion (whose grim portrait by
-Vandyke, with a hawk on her wrist and a gold
-cross at her girdle, hung in the ancient hall), a
-high-flying cavalier dame, by whose order, after
-the battle of Kilsythe, several fugitive
-Covenanters had been shot down in cold blood, and
-buried in that thicket, where her unquiet soul
-was condemned to guard their remains in this
-canine form until the day of doom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At all events, the old thorn trees where the
-spectre was wont to appear, looked particularly
-gloomy on this evening, and as the lovers passed
-near it, Flora drew closer to Quentin, and then
-she perceived that his eyes were full of tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quentin&mdash;Quentin dear!" she exclaimed in
-a tone of earnest question and expostulation. It
-was the first time, almost, that she had addressed
-him since Cosmo's letter came, and now her voice
-thrilled through him. He threw his left arm
-round her, and clasping her right hand within his
-own, pressed it to his heart, which beat tumultuously,
-and while the long avenue seemed whirling
-round them, he said,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So Lady Rohallion has made up her mind
-that&mdash;that&mdash;you shall marry the Master, Flora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So it is the fear of this that distresses you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pride sealed Quentin's lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor Quentin," resumed Flora, looking
-tenderly and innocently into his eyes, "you love
-me very much, don't you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Love you&mdash;love you, Flora!" he stammered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I love you better than my life!" he
-exclaimed passionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well," said she, with a beautiful smile and
-a gaiety of manner that he did not quite relish;
-"I will never marry any man but he whom I
-choose myself&mdash;certainly not he who is chosen by
-others."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Darling Flora!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There&mdash;there&mdash;<i>stop</i>&mdash;and perhaps, Quentin, I
-mayn't marry <i>you</i>. 'Tis said people change when
-they grow older, and we are very young, you
-know; but Quentin, dear, I love you very, very
-much, be assured of that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her head dropped on his shoulder, and he
-kissed her passionately&mdash;the LAST time he was
-ever to do so in the old avenue of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment the clatter of hoofs was
-heard, and ere they could part or regain their
-composure, two horsemen, one in advance of the
-other, both riding fast, with brown leather saddle
-bags and long holsters&mdash;the first in a fashionable
-riding-coat with a cape, the latter in livery, and
-both in top-boots and spotless white breeches,
-passed up the avenue at a hand-gallop.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both had seen our lovers near the thorn
-thicket, and the first horseman, whom Quentin's
-heart rightly foreboded to be the dreaded Master
-of Rohallion, turned in his saddle, and said
-something to his groom, indicating the pair with his
-whip. They both looked back and laughed
-immoderately, as they dashed through the ivy-clad
-arch of the haunted gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Separating in haste and confusion, Quentin
-and Flora hurried away to calm their excitement
-and seek the drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-COSMO THE MASTER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Why make I friendships with the great,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When I no favour seek?<br />
- Or follow girls seven hours in eight&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I need but once a week?<br />
- Luxurious lobster night's farewell,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For sober studious days!<br />
- And Burlington's delicious meal,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For salads, tarts, and peas."&mdash;POPE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The first rider was indeed the Master of Rohallion,
-who had arrived with a punctuality that
-was more military than personal, as the Honourable
-Cosmo Crawford was somewhat erratic, and,
-as the Guards Club said significantly, "nocturnal,"
-in his habits; and here it may be well to inform
-the English reader, that his haughty title of
-MASTER he obtained in right of his father being a
-Scottish baron, the custom being older than the
-reign of James IV.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In ancient times, the heirs apparent of Scottish
-nobles were not discriminated according to
-their father's rank by the titles of marquis,
-viscount, earl, or lord, but were simply styled
-as the Masters of Marischal, Glencairn, Glammis,
-Lindesay, Rohallion, and so forth, a custom
-existing in Scotland to the present day, in most
-houses, under ducal rank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo Crawford was tall and strongly built,
-but handsome and graceful, with a cold and
-stately manner, that sometimes degenerated into
-banter, but seldom perfect suavity, and he had
-a somewhat cruel and sinister grey eye. The
-pupils of the latter feature had a peculiarity
-worth noticing. They possessed the power of
-shrinking and dilating like those of a cat. His
-hair was curly and worn in the Prince Regent's
-profusion, but without powder, that being already
-considered almost Gothic, or decidedly behind
-the age, the curls on one side being so arranged
-as to conceal a very palpable sword-cut. Like
-that of his valet, to whom he flung his riding-whip,
-hat, and coat, his garments were all of the
-latest Bond Street cut, and he lounged towards
-the yellow-damask drawing-room as coolly and
-leisurely as if he had only left it two hours
-instead of two years ago, according but a cold
-stare to the warm smile and respectful salute of
-poor old Jack Andrews, who, throwing open the
-door, announced,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Master, my Lord!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Welcome home, boy&mdash;God bless you!"
-shouted the hearty old lord, springing towards
-him; but Lady Rohallion anticipated him, and
-received Cosmo in her arms first.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dear mother, glad to see you," said he, kissing
-her forehead; "father, how well, how jolly
-and hale you look!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hale," repeated the white-haired peer;
-"don't like to be called hale, it smacks, Cosmo,
-of breaking up; looking well, only for one's years,
-and so forth."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And my Lady Rohallion," said Cosmo, kissing
-his mother's hand, "what shall I say of you?
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "'With curious arts dim charms revive,<br />
- And triumph in the bloom of fifty-five.'"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Arts, you rogue," said his father; "it's no
-art, but the pure breeze from our Carrick hills
-and from the Firth of Clyde, with perhaps earlier
-hours at night and in the morning than you
-keep in London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, I am sorry my compliments displease
-you both," said he, laughing; "I am unfortunate,
-but pray be merciful; I have bade adieu to the
-Guards, to London, and all its glories to rusticate
-among you for a time. So, so, here comes Miss
-Warrender of Ardgour, I presume, and Quentin
-Kennedy; I saw you both in the avenue, I think,"
-added Cosmo, the pupils of his pale eyes shrinking
-as he concentrated his gaze and knit his dark
-brows, which nearly ipet in one, over a straight
-and handsome nose. "Flora, you are charming!
-May I&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The kiss he bluntly gave her seemed to burn
-a hole in Quentin's heart, for it may readily be
-supposed that he saluted the lovely young girl
-with much more <i>empressement</i> than he did the
-worthy lady his mother. Flora blushed scarlet,
-and glanced at Quentin imploringly, as much as
-to say, "don't be angry, dearest&mdash;you see that I
-cannot help this;" but he felt only rage to see the
-little cherry-lip, which his own had so lately
-touched in tremulous love and reverence, roughly
-and eagerly saluted by this <i>brusque</i> and <i>blasé</i>
-guardsman. Rapid though Flora's glance was,
-the latter detected it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this is Quentin?" said he, surveying him
-through his eyeglass, with a deepening knit in
-his dark brows, and a smile on his haughty lips;
-"what a great hulking fellow he has become!
-Begad, he is tall enough for a rear-rank grenadier;
-and why is he not set to do something, instead
-of idling about here, and no doubt playing the
-devil with the preserves?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was some sense in the question, but
-coming from such a quarter, and the tone in
-which, it was spoken, cut Quentin to the quick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is barely done with his studies," urged
-Lord Rohallion, coming to his favourite's rescue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before I was his age, I had mounted my
-first guard at St. James's Palace."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And I mine on the banks of the Weser,"
-said his father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin looked steadily at the cold, keen face
-of the Master, who was not yet six-and-thirty&mdash;but
-his Guards' life made him look much older;
-thus, to a lad of Quentin's years, those of the
-Master seemed quite patriarchal; a time came,
-however, when he thought otherwise, and removed
-the patriarchal period of life a few years further off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Cosmo, talking of age," said Lord
-Rohallion, slapping his tall son on the back, "to
-be lieutenant-colonel of a line regiment at
-six-and-thirty, with the Cross of the Bath, for
-doubtless you will get it&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course, father, of course&mdash;one thing follows
-the other&mdash;well?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is being decidedly lucky," said Lady Winifred,
-closing his lordship's sentence, and glancing at
-Flora, to see what she thought of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With the prospect of a long war before him, too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, father, and I hope that the luck in store
-will belie the prophecy of my old foster-mother,
-Elsie Irvine, at the Coves, who used to allege,
-that when I <i>first</i> left your room, mother, a puling
-and new-born brat, I was carried <i>down</i> a stair
-instead of up, a certain token that I should never
-rise in the world. I have often made the Prince
-Regent, Paget, and other fellows laugh at that
-story; yet I have always had a fair run of
-success in everything I undertake."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which should make you in future avoid all
-affairs at Chalk Farm, and so forth; you have
-had three men out there in three years, Cosmo."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And winged them all. My dear lord, don't
-talk. Some small sword affairs of yours, when
-Leicester fields was the fashionable place, are still
-remembered in London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;I ran two friends of Mr. Wilkes fairly
-through the body there one morning, for permitting
-themselves to indulge in national reflections,
-and would do so again if the same cause were
-given me: but, zounds! what else could we do in
-those days of the 'North Briton?' By-the-bye,
-is this new movement about the stuff called gas
-spreading in London?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I wish you had been there on the 28th
-of January, 1807, and seen Pall-Mall actually
-lighted with it&mdash;by a man named Winsor, the
-Cockney call him a mad man for thinking of such
-a scheme!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did you pass through Edinburgh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was obliged to do so, my lord, unfortunately."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did you make any stay there?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stay! I should think not&mdash;only long enough
-to dine with some jolly fellows of the Cinque
-Ports Dragoons, at the new barrack, built some
-fifteen years ago at Piershill&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Once Colonel Piers' place&mdash;Piers, of the old
-Scotch 17th&mdash;Aberdour's Light Dragoons."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly, and then to get a relay of post-horses
-at Ramsay's stables. But as for staying
-in Edinburgh, egad! it would be intolerable to
-me, with its would-be dandies and its freckled
-women, whose faces have that sweet expression
-imparted by the soothing influences of
-Presbyterianism and the east wind; and then its one
-street, or only half a street to promenade in,
-who the devil would stay there that could stay
-out of it? Why, not even the rhyming
-ganger who hailed it as 'Edina, Scotia's darling
-seat.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As his son concluded with a loud laugh, Lord
-Rohallion shook his powdered head, for he could
-not endorse this unpatriotic depreciation of the
-Scottish metropolis, and poor Lady Winifred
-sighed as she glanced at a black silhouette by Miers,
-presented to her by the bard of Coila, with a copy
-of his verses in her honour; and then remembering
-the fancied glories of the Old Assembly Close,
-as she and her friend, Lady Eglinton, had seen
-them in their girlhood, she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In my time, Cosmo, Edinburgh was wont to
-be gay enough."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A sad gaiety. Thank God, mother, the
-Guards can never be quartered in so dull a
-provincial town."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Its dulness is the effect of the Union,
-which removed court, council, parliament, revenue,
-and everything," said Lord Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thought most people had ceased to consider
-that a grievance," said his son, laughing again;
-"but I think that if Edinburgh has been dull
-since 1707, it must have been truly diabolical
-before it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo," said his mother, reproachfully, "I
-know not what some of your ancestors who fought
-at Flodden and Pinkey would have thought of
-you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The more fools they to fight at such places."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not so," said the old lord rising, with some
-asperity in his tone; "God rest all who ever
-fought or died for Scotland and her kings; and I
-must tell you, Cosmo, that you will never be the
-better or the truer Briton for being a bad or false
-Scotsman!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master gave another of his sinister laughs;
-and, finding that the conversation had suddenly
-taken an uncomfortable turn, his father said with
-a smile&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was about to express a hope, Cosmo, that
-with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, you mean to
-settle at last, and become quiet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What, my lord&mdash;have I been drawing too
-heavily upon you and old John Girvan of late?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean, that pranks which passed well enough
-in a subaltern, won't do in one who looks to the
-command of a regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pelting the rabble with rotten eggs at Epsom,
-and so forth, you mean? No; in my days a
-sub, after pulling off half the knockers in
-Piccadilly, breaking all the oil lamps in Pall Mall,
-getting up a cry of fire in the Hay market, and
-bringing out the engines to pump on the rascally
-mob; having, at least, one set-to with the rough
-and muscular democrats of the watch, would
-finish off by a champagne supper somewhere,
-and thus bring to a close a reputable London
-day, which, in our corps, usually begins after
-evening parade. Ah, my lord, you slow fellows
-of the King's Own Borderers knew nothing of
-such pranks, with your long pigtails, your funny
-regimentals, and Kevenhüller hats."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The reason, perhaps, we cocked those same
-hats so bravely on many a field," retorted
-his father. "In my days the army was the
-school of good-breeding, sir&mdash;but here's Jack
-Andrews announcing tea and devilled grouse in
-the inner drawing-room."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo, give your arm to Flora, if Quentin
-can spare her," said Lady Rohallion, smiling.
-"They are great friends and companions."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh&mdash;ah&mdash;indeed," said the Master, sarcastically,
-as he gave Flora Warrender his arm.
-"I think I saw them exchanging strong marks
-of their mutual goodwill as I rode up the
-avenue."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin grew scarlet, and Flora painfully pale
-at this remark, which stung her deeply, and
-roused her indignation.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-AN ABRUPT PROPOSAL.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Wherefore dwell so sad and lonely,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By the desolate sea-shore;<br />
- With the melancholy surges<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beating at your cottage door?<br />
- You shall dwell beside the castle,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shadowed by our ancient trees!<br />
- And your life shall pass on gently,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cared for and in rest and ease."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-For two days after his arrival the Master strove
-to engross as much of Flora's time as she would
-yield, or as he could spare from the study of his
-betting-book, the pages of the "Sporting Magazine,"
-playing billiards right hand against the
-left, quizzing the dominie, who paid him a
-ceremonious visit, and in relating to the
-quartermaster certain military "crammers" about the
-alterations and improvements in the service since
-his time, some of which were astounding enough
-to make the old fellow's pigtail stand on end,
-with wonder and dismay, lest the said service was
-going to the deuce, or further.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin he seldom favoured with more notice
-than a cool and insolent survey through his eyeglass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were times when the Honourable Cosmo
-was moody, ennuyéed, and irritable, and none
-knew why or wherefore; but he had frequent
-recourse to Mr. Spillsby, the butler, for brandy
-and rare dry old sherry; and he smoked a great
-many cigars, which were a source of marvel to
-all who saw them, tobacco, in that form, being
-almost unknown in England, till the close of the
-Peninsular War.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not ambition, or a desire to see active
-service that made the haughty and somewhat
-<i>blasé</i> Master propose to leave the household troops
-and begin the sliding scale from the Guards to
-the line; nor was it any desire to settle in life
-that made him enter at once and so readily into
-his mother's old and favourite scheme of a
-marriage between him and their ward, the heiress of
-Ardgour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While he could not be insensible to the fresh
-budding beauty of Flora Warrender, the conviction
-that he had impaired his finances, anticipated
-his heritage, and had calculated to a nicety the
-value of all the oak, pine, and larch woods upon
-the estate&mdash;that each and all were numbered and
-known to certain hook-nosed, long-bearded, and
-dirty children of Judah in London&mdash;all, even to
-the venerable lines of sycamores in the long avenue,
-the pride of his father's heart&mdash;trees that for
-centuries had cast their shadows on his ancestors in
-youth, in prime, and age. While this conviction,
-we say, filled him with as much shame, sorrow,
-and repentance as he could feel, with it came the
-knowledge that Flora's fortune, which had
-accumulated during her minority, and, indeed, ever
-since her father's fall in Egypt, would afford him
-a most seasonable escape from shipwreck on
-several rocks which he saw ahead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hah!" said Cosmo, as he tossed away the
-end of his cigar, "some one says truly&mdash;don't
-know who the devil he is&mdash;that if we could look
-into each other's breasts, there would be no such
-thing as envy in the world. Egad! I'll enter for
-the country heiress."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He roused himself and resolved to make the
-effort, all the more willingly, that to a half, or
-wholly <i>blasé</i> guardsman like himself, long used
-to the glittering banquets, the late orgies, and
-startling scenes of Carlton House and the
-Pavilion at Brighton, the bloom, beauty, and
-country freshness of Flora Warrender, were indeed
-charming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora, instinctively, and in a feminine spirit of
-pride and opposition to Lady Rohallion's plots
-and plans, kept somewhat studiously out of the
-Master's way&mdash;a somewhat difficult task, even in
-a mansion so spacious and rambling as the old
-castle; but on the evening of the second day
-after his arrival, from the stone balustraded
-terrace of the antique Scoto-French garden where
-he was smoking, Cosmo saw her light muslin
-dress fluttering among the narrow green alleys
-of the old and carefully clipped yew labyrinth, and
-then he hastened to join her, to the infinite
-mortification and chagrin of Quentin Kennedy, who
-had not seen her for the entire day; and who, just
-as he was approaching the garden, found himself
-anticipated, so he at once retired, leaving the field
-in possession of the enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An older or more experienced lover would have
-joined them, and thus, perhaps, might have
-marred the plans of the Master, who, to do justice
-to his coolness and courage, lost no time in
-opening the trenches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Midsummer was past now; the foliage of the
-tall sycamores, of the oakwood shaw, and other
-copses of Rohallion, though leafy and green,
-were crisped and dry; in the haughs or low-lying
-meadows, the mower had already relinquished his
-scythe; the green corn rigs were yellowing on the
-upland slopes "that beaked foment the sun;"
-next month they would be golden, brown and
-ready for the sickle; on bush and spray the
-blackbird sang cheerily, and the plover's note came
-shrilly out of the green and waving fern.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun was setting, and the screech of the
-white owl would ere long be heard, as he blinked
-and looked forth for the moon from the ivied
-windows of Kilhenzie. The white smokes of the
-hamlet on the shore of the little bay, passing up
-among the trees, curled into the clear air and
-melted over the ocean. The flowers that whilome
-had endured the scorch of the noonday sun, were
-drooping now, as if pining for the coming dew;
-and the stately peacocks sat listlessly, with their
-broad tails, argus-eyed, upon the balustrades of
-the garden terrace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Inspired by the beauty of the evening, lulled
-by the summer hum of insect life among the
-flowers, and all unaware that her lover, with his
-gun on his shoulder and wrath in his young heart,
-was plunging pitilessly through some one's corn,
-Flora was musing or dreaming, as only a young
-girl dreams or muses, on what fate had in store
-for her now, with this new inmate of her present
-home. Mr. Walter Scott's new poem "Marmion"
-had fallen from her hand, which was ungloved,
-and so, pure in whiteness and delicacy, was half
-hidden among her dark and wavy hair, as she
-reclined with her elbow upon the arm of a
-moss-grown seat, which yet bears the date, 1590, with
-the Rohallion arms and coronet, upon a hanging
-shield. The fingers of her left hand were playing
-unconsciously with the strings of her gipsy
-hat, which lay upon the gravel at her feet; and
-as the Master approached her, the young lady
-seemed the perfection of bloom and beauty, as she
-sat enshrined in the glory of the sunset that
-streamed along the alley of the labyrinth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His costume was very accurate, for the
-gentleman and the tradesman did not then, as now,
-dress exactly alike, and wear exactly the same
-stuffs; and certainly Cosmo was looking his best,
-as he seated himself by her side and very deliberately
-took possession of her left hand, saying in
-a voice which he meant to be, and which had often
-enough proved elsewhere to be, very seductive.&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I fear, my dear Miss Warrender, that this
-gloomy old barrack is not a place for you to
-vegetate in."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How so, sir?" she asked, while regarding
-him with a quiet smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It too evidently influences your naturally
-joyous temperament; and pardon me, you look
-<i>triste</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, no&mdash;your mother is quite one to me, and
-I love Rohallion very much."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then as for Ardgour, I think it gloomier still."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some parts of Ardgour&mdash;the vaults, I believe&mdash;are
-said to be coeval with the Bruce's castle of
-Turnberry; at least so the dominie told me.
-Mamma so loved it; and for her sake, I love it
-too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very proper, and very pretty; but the world
-of fashion&mdash;a brilliant world, of which you know
-nothing&mdash;should be your sphere, my dear Miss
-Warrender. London, Brighton, the Prince's balls
-at Carlton House, the parks, the theatre, the
-opera! You must come forth from your shell,
-my dear Flora, like&mdash;like&mdash;like (he thought of
-Venus rising from the sea, but the simile was not
-apt)&mdash;for you know it is absurd, positively absurd,
-that you should be buried alive in this horrid
-old-fashioned Scotch place, among rocks and rooks,
-ivy and ghost stories. Egad! were the house
-mine, I'd blow it up, and build one more suitable
-to the present time and its requirements."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What! would you really uproot this fine old
-place of so many historic memories?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the last stone! What the devil&mdash;pardon
-me&mdash;do old memories matter now, my dear girl?
-<i>En avant!</i> we should look forward&mdash;never back."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am sorry that your sentiments are so
-prosaic," said Flora, coldly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I trust that my mother has not filled your
-dear little head with her usual nonsense about
-Scotch patriotism, the defunct Pretender, the
-unlucky Union, and so forth&mdash;eh? I always said
-that the verses addressed to her by her rhyming
-friend Burns, the democratic gauger, turned her
-head; and this new man, Scott, with his
-Marmions and Minstrels, bids fair to make the
-disease chronic. You have no idea, Miss
-Warrender, how we laugh at all such stuff in London.
-Patriotism indeed! It doesn't pay, so Scotchmen
-don't adopt it, and they are wise. All
-patriotism <i>not</i> English is purely provincialism,
-and any man holding other opinions in Parliament
-would be as much out of place as a crusader
-or a cavalier. But to return to what I was
-saying. I should like to show you the great
-world that lies beyond the Craigs of Kyle and
-the rocky hills of Carrick&mdash;to take you back
-again to London."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"London is to me full of sad memories."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sad&mdash;the deuce&mdash;how?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For there my dear mother died," said Flora,
-lowering her voice and withdrawing her hand,
-while her eyes and her heart filled with emotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a pause:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I love you, dear Flora," said Cosmo, again
-taking possession of her hand, and placing his
-lips close to her shrinking ear. "Our marriage
-is the dearest wish of my mother's heart, as it
-was of yours&mdash;and, may I add, that it is the
-dearest hope of mine?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was coming to the point with a vengeance!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Instead of being mightily flattered or
-overcome, as he not unnaturally expected, Flora,
-without withdrawing her hand, as if its retention
-mattered little, turned half round, and said, with
-a quiet, cairn smile:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Remember how little I have known you, sir,
-save through your parents, my guardians."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; the duties of honour at Court, and&mdash;ah,
-ah!&mdash;my profession, Flora, called me elsewhere;
-but you don't refuse me, eh? My dear
-girl&mdash;the deuce!&mdash;you surely can't mean that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora grew pale and hesitated, for with all her
-love for Lady Rohallion, she had a kind of awe
-of her, and Cosmo was eyeing her coldly and
-steadily through his glass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, speak, Flora," said he, with, perhaps,
-more irritation than tenderness in his tone. "I
-have, perhaps, not much personally to recommend
-me to a young girl's eye, and this wound, which
-I got at the Helder, when assisting to compel
-those Dutch devils to hoist the colours of the
-Prince of Orange&mdash;a sabre-cut across the face&mdash;has
-not improved me; but speak out, Flora Warrender;
-notwithstanding the ties between us, you
-refuse me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This proposal possesses all the abruptness of
-a scene in a drama."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, what is life but an absurd drama?
-'All the world's a stage, and the men and women
-merely players.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, I am not inclined to play the part you
-wish."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You refuse me?" he reiterated, his eyes the
-while assuming their wicked and louring expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do, Cosmo Crawford," she replied, trembling
-very much, but speaking, nevertheless,
-firmly; "I do once and for ever refuse you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Young and inexperienced though the girl was,
-the abrupt and systematic proposal of the Master
-rather insulted than flattered her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No <i>tie</i>," she added, "save a fancied one
-made by Lady Rohallion, ever bound us; so there
-are no pledges to return, no bonds, nor&mdash;I can't
-help laughing&mdash;hearts to break."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this desire to&mdash;to&mdash;" he stammered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was your mother's idea alone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Say not so, Miss Warrender, it is mine also.
-Though I know that my good mother, because
-she jilted some fellow in her youth&mdash;my father's
-younger brother, I believe&mdash;thinks she makes
-atonement to the gods, or whoever rule these
-little matters of love and marriage, by making as
-many miserable matches, and marrying right off
-as many persons as she can."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Miserable matches! So she conceived one
-for us. You are very encouraging and complimentary
-to say so just after your offer to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon me; but consider, my dear Flora,"
-he resumed, while rallying a little, though sorely
-provoked to find himself confused and baffled by
-a country girl, of whose rejection he felt actually
-ashamed to tell his own mother, "are you not
-labouring under some deuced misconception in
-giving this very decided, and, I must say, very
-extraordinary refusal?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is it not, that to the affection and rank I
-proffer, you prefer the absurd love of a silly
-upstart, who shall go hence as he came hither, no
-one knows or cares how&mdash;a waif cast on the shore
-like a piece of dead seaweed, or the drowned
-renegade his father&mdash;a creature whose past affords
-no hope of a brilliant future! Speak, girl," he
-exclaimed, while almost savagely he grasped her
-wrist; "is it this that prevails with you, in
-opposition to the wishes of your dead mother and the
-whole family of Rohallion?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What if it is, sir?" asked Flora, haughtily,
-for his categorical manner offended her deeply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What if it is!" he repeated with louring brow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, sir."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then the cool admission ill becomes Flora
-Warrender of Ardgour, whose forefathers bear so
-high a place in the annals of their country!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, but they were mere provincials, and
-their bravery or patriotism are unworthy the regard
-of such a citizen of the world as the Master of
-Rohallion," said Flora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sullenly threw her hand from him; but
-she did not retire, being loth that his family,
-especially the old Lord, whom she dearly loved and
-respected, should know of this scene; and loth,
-too, that it should end in this unseemly fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cursed be my mother's doting folly!"
-thought he, while his pale eyes alternately shrunk
-and dilated; "so&mdash;so, nothing but an heiress will
-suit our foundling, our 'Tom Jones,' for a charmer&mdash;it's
-vastly amusing. Confound it, a little more
-of this presumption will make me wring the
-brat's head off!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While his cool insolence piqued Flora, her
-decided rejection roused all his wrath and pride;
-he thought of his pecuniary interest, too, so both
-sat silent for a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, begad! this passes my comprehension!"
-he exclaimed at length, as he buttoned
-his accurately fitting straw-coloured kid gloves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To what do you refer, friend Cosmo?" asked
-Flora, looking at him almost spitefully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To this whole matter. Do you know, my fair
-friend, that you are perhaps the first young lady
-of your age that, in all my experience, ever took
-a fancy to a hobbledehoy lad in preference to a
-man; so while you reconsider the offer, you
-will perhaps permit me?" He bowed, and
-conceiving her consent given, proceeded to light a
-pipe, by the then very elaborate process of a
-small flint, steel and matches in a little silver
-tinder-box, on the lid of which his coat of arms
-was engraved. "And so you studied together, I
-presume, under that absurd Dominie Skaill, with
-the knee-breeches and huge shoe-buckles (like a
-heavy father at Old Drury), keen grey eyes, and
-Scotch cheekbones one might hang one's hat on, eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," replied Flora, tying the ribbons of her
-gipsy hat under her dimpled chin with an angry jerk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you learned Latin, Coptic, and Sanscrit
-together, I suppose," he continued in his cool
-sneering tone; "and to conjugate the verb <i>to
-love</i>, in all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly so, and in Greek, Chaldaic, and
-Chinese, and ever so many more languages, so
-that we became very perfect in grammar," replied
-she, smiling wickedly, while the grim Master's
-cat-like eyes filled with a very baleful green light;
-yet he had not the sense to see that his operations
-were conducted on a wrong plan before such
-a fortress as the fair lady of Ardgour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, Miss Warrender, whatever we do, hang it,
-don't let us quarrel, and so make fools of ourselves."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have not the least intention of quarrelling,
-and trust that you have none."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then allow me to kiss you once, and we shall
-become better friends, I promise you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Kiss <i>me</i>!" exclaimed Flora, starting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;why not&mdash;what does a little kiss signify?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So little that you shall never have one from
-me, were it to save your life," said Flora, with a
-burst of laughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps your fair cheek has become sacred
-since that beggarly little rival of mine saluted it?
-It is a capital joke, is it not?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps," said Flora, reddening, and rising to
-withdraw; "and what then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If so, I would say you were as great an idiot
-as my old grandmother Grizel Kennedy, of
-Kilhenzie, was."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Respectful to her and polite to me! And
-she&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After Prince Charles Edward kissed her at
-the Holyrood ball, she never permitted the lips
-of mortal man&mdash;not even those of my worthy
-grandfather Cosmo, Lord Rohallion, K.T., and so
-forth, to salute her, lest the charm of the royal kiss
-should be broken; and their married life extended
-over some forty years and more."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this apocryphal story, which has been told
-of more old ladies in Scotland than Grizel of
-Rohallion, Flora laughed heartily, as well she
-might; and her merriment made the Master
-excessively provoked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are, I hope, at least friends?" said he,
-presenting his hand with great but grim suavity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh yes, Cosmo, the best of friends&mdash;do excuse
-my laughing so; but nothing more, remember,
-nothing more," she replied, and withdrawing
-her hand, which he attempted to kiss, she darted
-through the labyrinth towards the house, leaving
-"Marmion" forgotten on the gravel behind her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By Jove! to be baffled, laughed at, and by
-a chick like this!" muttered Cosmo with an oath
-which we care not to record, as he gave the
-volume a kick, and strode angrily away, full of
-bitter and dark thoughts, and inspired with rage
-at a rivalry which, in truth, he was ashamed to
-acknowledge, even to himself.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-THE BLOW.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Take comfort: he no more shall see my face;<br />
- Lysander and myself will fly this place.<br />
- Before the time I did Lysander see,<br />
- Seemed Athens as a paradise to me:<br />
- Oh, then, what graces in my love do dwell,<br />
- That he hath turned a heaven unto a hell!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Midsummer Night's Dream.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-A very dark idea crossed the Master's mind, and
-then another, darker still!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few guineas judiciously bestowed among the
-smugglers, who, when the nights were dark and
-gusty, frequented the coves near the castle (and
-when some person or persons unknown hung a
-lantern over the rocks to guide their steerage
-through a narrow cleft in the Partan Craig),
-might for ever rid him of Quentin Kennedy.
-They could land him on the sands of Dunkirk or
-Boulogne, or, or&mdash;what?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Oh, no! he thrust away the next idea as too
-horrid, though <i>such</i> things had been done of old
-in Carrick by the lawless lairds of Auchindrane,
-and to denounce them, in one terrible instance,
-had not the sea given up its dead?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thought of despatching a line to the
-lieutenant commanding the pressgang at Ayr, by
-whose agency poor Quentin might be shipped off
-for seven years' sea service in the East or West
-Indies, but dread of exposure, and the outcry
-consequent thereto, made him relinquish such kidnapping
-ideas of revenge, though they were practical
-enough in the days when George III. was king.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Revolving these thoughts, with brows knit and
-his stealthy eyes fixed on the ground, Cosmo
-quitted the garden and entered the avenue, where
-the evening shadows under the sycamore trees
-were gloomy and dark; and there as he strode
-forward, with a quick and impatient step, he
-stumbled roughly against some one, who, like
-himself, seemed lost in reverie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quentin Kennedy!" he exclaimed in a hoarse
-voice, as this collision brought all his readily
-excited fury to the culminating point; "confound
-it, fellow, is this you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I beg pardon, sir&mdash;I did not see you&mdash;I was
-lost in thought," replied Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lost in thought, were you?" repeated Cosmo,
-in his most insulting tone; "you were loitering
-near the labyrinth in the garden?" he added with
-almost fierce suspicion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was down in the oakwood shaw, two miles off."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hah&mdash;indeed! and what have you been doing
-with that gun??
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sir!" stammered Quentin, his natural
-indignation rising as he perceived the other's resolute
-intention of insulting him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I say, what the deuce have you, or such as
-you, to do with that gun, and on these grounds?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin drew back, haughtily, in growing
-anger and surprise, and fearing that the Master
-was mad or intoxicated, and that he was about to
-make an assault, he very naturally brought the
-fowling-piece to the position of charging.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What, you scoundrel! would you charge me
-breast high?" cried the Master, choking with
-rage; "would you shoot me as the poacher Campbell
-shot Lord Eglinton on his own lands, here in
-Ayrshire too? I'll teach you to know your
-proper place, you scurvy young dog!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With these injurious words, and before even
-Quentin, who was completely astounded by the
-wantonness of the whole affair, could be aware of
-his purpose, Cosmo rushed upon him, wrenched
-the gun away, and clubbing it, dealt the poor
-lad a terrible blow on the head with the heavy
-iron butt, stretching him senseless on the grass.
-Then uttering a heavy malediction, the fierce
-Master, still boiling with unappeased rage, passed
-through the ivied-gateway and entered the mansion.
-Having the fowling-piece in his hand, force
-of habit led him towards the gun-room, where
-he proceeded to draw the charge, for it was
-still loaded, and to leave it for the
-under-game-keeper to clean.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perceiving that there was blood on the lock
-and also on his straw-coloured kid gloves, he
-carefully wiped the former, and threw the latter
-into a stove. Regret he had none for the atrocity
-just committed; but he disliked the appearance
-of blood, it looked ugly, he thought&mdash;dangerous,
-and deuced ugly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Egad, I hope I haven't killed the young
-rascal!" he muttered; "how the deuce am I to
-explain the affair to the old people?&mdash;they will be
-certain to blame me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stepping from the gun-room into the library,
-which adjoined it, he was suddenly met by Lady
-Rohallion, who gave him an affectionate glance,
-which suddenly turned to one of anxiety, as she
-surveyed him by the last light of the sunset, that
-streamed through a deeply-embayed window.
-With an assumed smile and some commonplace
-remark, he was about to pass on, shame and
-mortification compelling the concealment of what
-he had done, when she laid her hands on his arm,
-and said tenderly,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dearest Cosmo, what has happened&mdash;you
-look extremely pale?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do I, mother&mdash;pale, eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, and quite ruffled too," she added.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, perhaps so&mdash;your friend Flora is the cause."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora Warrender?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Explain, Cosmo, explain?" she asked with
-evident uneasiness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had a long conversation with her in the
-garden, and it was decidedly more animated than
-amatory in the end."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You quarrelled?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all&mdash;I proposed," he replied, with a
-strange smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And were accepted?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The reverse."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rejected&mdash;you&mdash;<i>my</i> son, rejected?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Finally so&mdash;or for the present shall we say?"
-replied Cosmo, lighting a pipe by the old and
-elaborate process, to conceal his agitation. "A
-wilful little jade she is as ever I knew. Evidently
-has no fancy for me, or for increasing the number
-of his Majesty's lieges under canvas, or for seeing
-the world in a baggage-waggon, as a lady attached
-to a regiment of the line."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The courtly old lady gazed at her son almost
-mournfully; for this mocking brusquerie, acquired
-in the Pavilion of the Prince Regent, but ill
-accorded with her old-fashioned ideas of gentle
-bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have been wrong, Cosmo," said she
-gravely; "you have been too hasty&mdash;too abrupt."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, faith, do you think so, really?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was absurd to propose for any girl,
-especially a young lady of family and fortune, after
-a two days' acquaintance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Egad, my most respected mamma, in London,
-I've known a score of women of the first fashion,
-who would have eloped with me for better or
-worse, and taken post horses for Gretna, on a two
-hours' acquaintance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Cosmo!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So I am wrong, you think, my lady mother?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Decidedly; but I trust that time will put
-all right. I do not despair."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Neither do I, be assured," said he, with one
-of his strange smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The silly girl, of course, felt flattered by your
-offer?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all&mdash;one might think such matters
-were of daily occurrence with her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did she make no consideration of our family
-and its antiquity?" she asked, bridling up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dear mother, it seems to be of very little
-importance to Flora Warrender whether the said
-family flourished at the court of old King Cole,
-from whose grave Kyle takes its name, or at that
-of his Majesty of the Cannibal Islands; at all
-events, she won't have me. Confound it!" he
-exclaimed, as if talking to himself; "to think
-that I, almost the pattern man of the Household
-Brigade&mdash;chosen by many a proud peeress to
-squire her through the crush of the opera; by
-the fighting men of the corps as their second in
-every affair of honour; by the Prince Regent to
-arrange his déjeuners, afternoon receptions, and
-crack suppers; I, the star of Fops' Alley&mdash;deemed
-the best stroke at billiards in London&mdash;the best
-hand on a tiller at Cowes, or to pull the bow-oar
-to Richmond; chosen to ride the most vicious
-brutes at Epsom and Melton, and who can hit a
-guinea at twenty yards with a saw-handle and a
-hair-trigger&mdash;that I, I say, should be outflanked
-by a country booby passes my comprehension,
-unless, as in old King James's days, there be
-witchcraft again in the Bailiwick of Carrick! To
-be jockeyed by a country lout and a lass of
-eighteen&mdash;deucedly disgusting! Thank heaven! this
-can never be known in town, or how would
-the lady-killing Cosmo be roasted! I think I
-hear Paget of the Hussars, and the rest of our set
-laughing over it; and, by Jove, they would laugh
-too, until I had one or two of them out at Chalk
-Farm for a morning appetiser."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How this little rebuff nettles you! Take
-courage, Cosmo," said his mother, almost laughing
-at his angry and odd enumeration of his many
-good qualities.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, I have changed my mind many times;
-so do women, and so may Flora. This is a boy's
-love; she will tire of his idea, and then is my
-time to cut in and win in a canter. You, my
-dear mother, yourself once loved, before my
-father proposed&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stay," said Lady Rohallion, interrupting, with
-sudden agitation, and hastening angrily to change
-the unwelcome topic; "a sudden light breaks
-upon me! Cosmo, on the night you arrived,
-it seemed to me you spoke very oddly of Flora
-Warrender and Quentin Kennedy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How&mdash;about something in the avenue, was it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; that you had seen them exchanging
-marks of their mutual good will, or words to
-that effect."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly so, my Lady Rohallion," said Cosmo,
-slowly emitting the smoke of his pipe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What did you mean, Cosmo?" she demanded,
-with increasing asperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Much more than I said, mother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That you saw Quentin kissing Flora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Or Flora kissing Quentin, my dear lady
-mother, I don't think it makes much difference,"
-said he, with an angry laugh, while she almost
-trembled with indignation; "but what do you
-think of your amiable ward and your protégé&mdash;a
-lively young fellow, isn't he?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I ought to have been prepared for this,"
-said Lady Rohallion; "indeed, Eleonora Eglinton
-forewarned me that something of this kind might
-happen. A separation by school, college, or
-something else, should have been made whenever
-Flora came here. I must consult Rohallion, and
-have such arrangements made for Quentin as shall
-prevent his interference with the views we have so
-long cherished for our only son. The foolish girl&mdash;the
-presumptuous boy&mdash;to be actually kissing her!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shameful, isn't it?" said Cosmo, who had
-been despatched somewhat precipitately into the
-Guards for making love to his mother's maids.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Such vagaries must be controlled and punished."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He should have been gazetted a year ago to
-a West India Regiment, or one of the eight
-Hottentot Battalions at the Cape; they are quite
-good enough for such as he; or send him
-still-hunting with a line regiment into Ireland, where
-slugs from behind a hedge may send him to the
-devil before his time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh fie, Cosmo, you are cruel and unjust;"
-but she added bitterly as pride of birth, her only
-failing or weakness, got the mastery for the
-moment; "no unknown waif, no nameless person
-like this youth Kennedy shall come between my
-son, the Master of Rohallion, and our long
-cherished purpose&mdash;no, assuredly! Andrews," she
-added, raising her voice, as the thin, spare military
-valet passed through the library, "desire Miss
-Warrender to speak with me in the yellow
-drawing-room, before the bell rings for supper."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then leaving her son, Lady Rohallion swept
-out of the library to have a solemn interview with
-her ward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The last flush of sunset had died away, and
-one by one the stars were shining out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The night wore on, and nothing was seen or
-heard of Quentin. Indeed, save the Master, as
-yet no one missed him: but as he did not
-appear when the supper-bell clanged in the belfry
-of the old keep, Cosmo, with several unpleasant
-misgivings in his mind, hastened unseen into the
-avenue, down the long vista of which the waning
-moon shed a broad and pallid flood of radiance,
-ere, in clouds that betokened a rough night, it
-sunk beyond the wooded heights of Ardgour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo went to the place where so savagely he
-had struck the poor lad down; but Quentin was
-gone; the grass where he had lain was bruised,
-and on the gravel was a pool of blood about a foot
-in diameter&mdash;blood that must have flowed from
-the wound in his head; but other trace of him
-there was none!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-EXPOSTULATION.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Pledged till thou reach the verge of womanhood,<br />
- And shalt become thy own sufficient stay!<br />
- Too late I feel, sweet orphan! was the day<br />
- For steadfast hope the contrast to fulfil;<br />
- Yet still my blessing hover o'er thee still."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;WORDSWORTH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Rohallion had so frequently spoken to
-Flora Warrender on the subject of the proposed
-or expected marriage with Cosmo, that she had
-little diffidence generally in approaching the
-subject; but now there was a new and unexpected
-feature in the matter&mdash;a lover, a rival&mdash;thus she
-felt aware that the adoption of some tact became
-requisite.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What the good lady could hope to achieve,
-where her enterprising son had failed in person,
-it is difficult to imagine; nevertheless, she resolved
-to remonstrate with Flora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is too young to judge for herself, and
-must therefore let others judge for her," said she,
-half aloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You wished to see me, madam," said Flora,
-entering with an air of annoyance, only half concealed
-by a smile, as she correctly feared this formal
-summons had reference to the recent scene in the
-garden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seating Flora beside her on a sofa, she took her
-by the hand, and while considering what to say,
-played caressingly with her dark wavy hair, and
-said something in praise of her beauty, so the girl's
-heart foreboded what was coming next.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are rich, dear Flora," said Lady Rohallion,
-insinuatingly, "but most, perhaps, in beauty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am often told so, especially by you," replied
-Flora, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An heiress, too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But what of it, madam?" she asked, gravely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know, dear Flora, that money is the key
-to a thousand pleasures&mdash;it is alike the object of
-the avaricious, and the ambition of the poor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, Lady Rohallion," replied Flora, smiling
-again; "but, as we say in Scotland, a tocherless
-lass, though she may have a long pedigree, may
-have a pleasure that no heiress can ever enjoy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indeed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; the most flattering and glorious conviction!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pray tell me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She can prove to her heart's content that she
-is loved for herself, and herself alone. Poverty
-makes all equal&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True; but so does wealth," interrupted Lady
-Rohallion, annoyed by her own mismanagement
-in the beginning. "You are rich, but my son is
-also rich, and he loves you, Flora, well, truly, and
-devotedly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And have two days sufficed to summon all
-this truth and devotion?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora, Flora, you are well aware that it has
-been an old purpose and hope, between your
-parents and his, to unite or cement their old
-hereditary friendship by a stronger tie, and that this
-intended marriage has been an object of solicitude
-to all&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Save to those most interested in it&mdash;myself
-especially."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do not say so, my dear child&mdash;the match is
-most suitable."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A gesture of annoyance escaped Flora, but
-Lady Rohallion resumed:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our families have known each other so long;
-it has been a friendship of three generations&mdash;Cosmo
-and you suit each other so admirably; and
-then the Ardgour lands run the whole length of
-the Bailiwick with our own."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The most convincing argument of all," replied
-Flora, in a tone which made Lady Rohallion colour
-deeply, and the secret annoyance of both was
-gradually rising to a height, though each strove to
-conceal it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Consider our family, Flora!" exclaimed Lady
-Winifred, haughtily; "look at that gilded vane
-on yonder turret. It bears a date&mdash;1400; in
-that year, Sir Ranulph, first baron of Rohallion,
-was made Hereditary Admiral of the Firth of
-Clyde, from Glasgow Bridge to Ailsa Craig, by
-the Regent Duke of Albany. We are not people
-of yesterday!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora failed to perceive what this aqueous office
-had to do with her or her affairs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In three years," she began. "I shall cease to
-be your ward&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Three, by your father's will, Flora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So do not let us embitter those three
-remaining years, my dear madam, by this project,
-a constant recurrence to which serves but to excite
-and pique by the attempt to control me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I trust, my dear but wilful Flora, that we
-have not been unjust stewards in the execution
-of the trust your worthy parents bequeathed to
-us, and if the hope of a nearer and dearer
-connexion&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your son, the Master, is a brave and noble
-gentleman, I grant you," interrupted Flora, with
-quiet energy; "but save in name, we have been
-almost strangers to each other, and he is so many
-years my senior, that when we last met he treated
-me quite as a little girl&mdash;a child! Our tastes,
-habits, manners, and temper are all dissimilar; ah,
-madam, pardon me, but I never could love him!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Never love Cosmo&mdash;<i>my</i> Cosmo?" said Lady
-Rohallion, with indignant surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Never as a husband, though dearly as a
-friend."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fancy, all! You would love him with all a
-true wife's devotion ere long. In girls of your
-age, love always comes after marriage, it is
-unnecessary before it. You little know how dear and
-loveable he is, and how gallant too! What
-wrote Sir Ralph Abercrombie to the Duke of
-York concerning him, after that affair at the
-Helder? 'The bravery of the Honourable
-Captain Crawford, of the 3rd Guards, in the action
-of the 27th instant, forms one of the most
-brilliant episodes of the war in Holland!'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora gave an almost imperceptible shrug of
-her white shoulders, for praises of Cosmo's valour
-at the Helder had been a daily story of the old
-lady for some time past. Slight though the shrug
-and the smile that accompanied it, Lady Rohallion
-detected them, and her eyes sparkled brightly
-with anger. She arose with ineffable hauteur,
-and shook out her flounces, as a swan ruffles its
-pinions, to their fullest extent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Miss Warrender," said she, with her hands
-folded before her, and her powdered head borne
-very erect indeed, "is it possible that this strange
-opposition alike to the earnest wishes of the living
-and of the dead, arises from a cause which I have
-hitherto disdained to approach or allude to&mdash;as
-a species of midsummer madness&mdash;a love for
-the luckless lad to whom for so many years we
-have extended the hand of protection, Quentin
-Kennedy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the name which concluded this formal exordium,
-a deep blush suffused the delicate neck of
-Flora; but, as her back was to the lighted candles,
-the questioner did not perceive it, though
-scrutinising her keenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And why, madam, may I not love poor
-Quentin, if I choose?" asked the wilful Flora,
-bluntly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because he is, as you justly named him,
-<i>poor</i>," replied the other, with calm asperity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I am rich," urged Flora, laughing through
-all her annoyance, with an irresistible desire to
-pique Lady Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is nameless."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How know we that, madam? Kennedy is
-as good a name as Warrender."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, when borne by an Earl of Cassilis, by
-a Laird of Colzean, of Kilhenzie, or Dunure;
-but not by every landless waif who bears the
-name of the clan or family. God knoweth how
-in my heart I dearly love that boy; yet this fancy
-of yours passes all bounds of reason, and all my
-expectations, in its absurdity. I have destined
-you for my son, Cosmo, and none other shall
-have you!" she added, almost imperiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Destined," said Flora, with mingled laughter
-and chagrin, "because the march-dyke of
-Rohallion is also the march-dyke of Ardgour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, nay, think not so unworthily of us;
-we need to covet nothing and to court none; but
-destined you are, because it was your dear mother's
-dying wish."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To make me miserable?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To make you happy, foolish girl; dare you
-speak of misery with <i>my</i> son?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So you would actually have me to marry a
-man I don't like, and scarcely ever saw? It is
-a common sacrifice in the great world, I am
-aware; but my sphere has been rather small&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You would not marry a boy, surely?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I may at least love him," replied Flora,
-simply; "and I have no wish to marry at all&mdash;just
-now, at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is the very stuff of which your novels are
-made!" exclaimed Lady Rohallion, crimsoning
-with passion, and raising her voice in a manner
-quite unusual to her. "Mercy on me! I wonder
-why I have never detected Quentin at your feet,
-on his knees before you, for that I believe is the
-true and most approved mode; but we know
-nothing of him, he may be base-born for aught
-that we can tell, and Lord Rohallion shall learn
-that Quentin Kennedy&mdash;a brat, a very beggar's
-brat&mdash;shall never come between our own son and
-his success; and so, young lady, your humble
-servant!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And inflamed by genuine passion, Lady
-Rohallion, as she uttered this unpleasant speech,
-(which, to do her justice, was scarcely uttered ere
-repented for,) in a loud and imperious tone, swept
-away with a haughty bow, in all her amplitude
-of black satin, and with that hauteur of bearing
-which made the Scottish gentlewomen of her day
-so stately and imposing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her words, the fiery glance of anger she darted
-at Flora, and the tenor of the expostulation
-proved too much for the temper or the nerves of
-that young lady, who on being left to herself,
-burst into a passion of tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But a hand was laid on the lock of the door,
-as if some one was about to enter; and fearing
-it might be the Master, she started up and escaped
-by another door to her own apartment.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-FORTH INTO THE WORLD.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "This nicht is my departing nicht,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For here nae langer I maun stay;<br />
- There's neither friend or foe o' mine,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But wishes me away.<br />
- What I hae dune through lack o' wit,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I never, never can reca';<br />
- I hope you're a' my friends as yet&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gude nicht, and joy be wi' ye a'."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Johnnie Armstrong's Good Night.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The knock-down blow given to Quentin by the
-butt-end of the clubbed fowling-piece, beside
-inflicting a severe wound which bled profusely,
-stunned him completely for a time, and in this
-condition he was found by the quartermaster, who
-was returning from having a jug of punch and a
-quiet rubber with our quaint friend the dominie at
-his little thatched cottage in the village.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great were the alarm and concern of the
-kind-hearted veteran when he found his young friend
-and favourite in a condition so pitiable. He
-raised him, tied a handkerchief over his wound to
-stanch the bleeding; then gradually as
-consciousness returned, Quentin remembered all that
-had occurred, and told Girvan of his meeting
-with the Master&mdash;the unmerited and unexpected
-insolence of the latter, his sudden assault, and
-that was all he knew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The disquiet of the ex-quartermaster was
-greatly increased on hearing of a <i>fracas</i> so
-unseemly and so dangerous, and he knew in a
-moment that it contained <i>more</i> elements of
-discord than Quentin admitted or perhaps knew;
-though he was ignorant of the Master's abrupt
-proposal, the garden-scene, and of the subsequent
-expostulation, which was in progress at that
-moment, and which we have detailed in the
-preceding chapter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can't blame you, my boy," said the old
-soldier, half communing with himself, and shaking
-his head till his pigtail swung like a pendulum;
-"I can't blame ye," he repeated, as he gave
-Quentin his arm, and together they walked slowly
-towards the castle; "ye are young&mdash;the temptation
-is great, though I hae long since forgotten
-all of such matters, save that love-making tendeth
-to mischief."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quartermaster," stammered Quentin, "I
-don't understand, what&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I do! The devilment first began in
-Father Adam's garden, and it will go on so long
-as the world wags."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin coloured deeply, and his heart leaped
-with mingled rage and exultation&mdash;rage at the
-Master for the injury he had done him, and
-exultation for its cause&mdash;jealousy, by which he was
-assured that Flora loved him, despite all the
-attention and the greater attractions of the <i>blasé</i>
-guardsman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But what was to be done now?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To remain longer under the same roof with the
-Master of Rohallion was impossible; but whither
-was he to go? The quartermaster, without
-adverting further to what he too well knew to be the
-secret spring or moving cause of a quarrel so
-sudden and unbecoming in its details, hurried
-Quentin to his secluded little quarters, "the
-snuggery," already described as existing in a
-tower of the castle. There he gave him a glass
-of sherry and water as a reviver; sponged and
-cleansed, with ready and kindly hands, his face
-and hair from the clotted blood which disfigured
-them, applied with soldierlike promptitude a piece
-of court-plaster to the cut, and brushed a lock
-or so gently over to conceal it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That Lady Rohallion must be informed of the
-encounter and have it explained away, if possible;
-that the Master should be urged to apologise to
-Quentin (a very improbable hope); and that they
-should be made to shake hands and commit the
-affair to oblivion, was the mode in which the
-worthy ground-bailie proposed to solder up this
-untoward affair. Quentin was long inexorable,
-and with the fury of youth vowed to have some
-mysterious and terrible revenge; but gradually
-the inexpediency, the impropriety, and impossibility
-of obtaining reparation by the strong hand
-dawned upon him, and he consented to leave the
-matter in the hands of Girvan&mdash;to have it
-explained gently to Lady Rohallion, and leave her
-to be the mediator between them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On being informed by Jack Andrews that she
-was in the yellow drawing-room, and as there was
-still an hour to spare before the supper bell rang,
-they proceeded thither to have an interview with
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While passing through the outer drawing-room,
-which was quaintly furnished with <i>marqueterie</i>
-cabinets, tables, and bookcases, with chairs and
-<i>fauteuils</i> of Queen Anne's time, they heard voices
-in the inner apartment, and one of them was Lady
-Rohallion's, pitched in a louder key than was her
-wont, so they paused, unfortunately, only to hear
-the LAST words of her conversation with Flora&mdash;words
-which fell like molten lead on the ears and
-in the heart of the listener, whom they most concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"&mdash;We know nothing of him&mdash;he may be
-base-born for aught that we can tell, and Lord
-Rohallion shall learn that Quentin Kennedy&mdash;a
-brat, a very beggar's brat&mdash;shall never come
-between our own son and his success&mdash;and so, young
-lady, your humble servant!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These bitter, bitter words&mdash;words such as he
-had never heard from <i>her</i> lips before, made Quentin
-reel as if stunned, so that with the effect they
-produced upon him, added to that of the recent
-blow, he would have fallen had not the quartermaster
-caught him in his arms, and held him up,
-surveying him the while with a kind and father-like
-expression of solicitude and bewilderment in
-his old and weather-worn visage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rousing himself, with his teeth set and his eyes
-flashing, he made three efforts to turn the door
-handle and enter the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was <i>his</i> hand that Flora had heard upon the
-lock when she started from the sofa and fled to
-her own apartment in a passion of tears, so that
-when he entered the inner drawing-room it was
-empty, and thus Quentin knew not&mdash;though his
-heart foreboded&mdash;to whom the injurious words of
-Lady Rohallion had been addressed; but their
-tenor decided him at once in a preconceived
-intention of leaving, and for ever, the only home he
-had now in the world, and almost the only one
-of which he had any distinct memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is no longer a place for me, John Girvan,
-and so sure as God sees and hears me, I shall
-leave it this very night!" he exclaimed, as with
-his eyes flashing and full of tears, and his heart
-now filled only by new, and hitherto unknown
-emotions of sorrow, bitterness, and mortification
-(unknown to him at least) he walked to and fro
-upon the gun-battery, where the 24-pounders of
-<i>La Bonne Citoyenne</i> faced the waves of the
-Firth, on which the last rays of a waning moon
-were shining coldly and palely, especially on the
-ridge of foam that boiled for ever over the Partan
-Craig.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And whither would ye go, Quentin?" asked
-Girvan, who felt in his honest heart an intense
-commiseration for the lonely lad, knowing that
-were he to remain after the insult he had received,
-and the words he had heard, it would argue a
-poverty of spirit he would be loth to find in
-Quentin; "whither would ye go?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Away to France, to seek my mother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible&mdash;it's hostile ground, and once on
-it you would be made a prisoner by the authorities,
-and shut up in Bitche, Verdun, or Brisgau,
-if they did not hang you as a spy, or send you
-to serve as a private soldier in the <i>Corps Etranger</i>.
-You must think of another scheme, less rash and
-romantic."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know of none."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In all the wide world, Quentin," said Girvan,
-with his nether lip quivering, "ye have no home
-but this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>This!</i>" repeated Quentin, grinding his teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;I care not; I will go anywhere from
-it&mdash;the farther away the better!" (And
-Flora? suggested his heart.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In vain the quartermaster urged him to do
-nothing rashly, and to await the return of Lord
-Rohallion, who had ridden over to Eglinton castle,
-to visit his old friend and American comrade,
-Earl Hugh, who had just returned from London;
-but pride and passion, with a conviction that the
-mother's unwonted bitterness was only a supplement
-to the son's insulting conduct, seemed to
-dissolve all the ties that had bound Quentin to
-Rohallion and its family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These emotions of anger had full swing in his
-heart. What Lady Rohallion had said, the old
-Lord must, he argued, have heard repeatedly, and
-may often have thought; and so, forth&mdash;forth to
-seek his bread elsewhere, he would go before the
-clocks struck midnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mentally he vowed and resolved, that the first
-hour of another morning should see him far in
-search of a new home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Deluding good John Girvan by some excuse,
-he slipped to his own room and packed a few
-necessaries in a small portmanteau, feeling, while
-he did so, a sense of mortification that they were
-the gifts of those whom, in justice to himself, he
-was compelled to leave. His watch, a ring, a
-breast-pin, and other trinkets given to him by Lady
-Rohallion, he laid upon his dressing-table, leaving
-them in token that he took with him nothing but
-what was absolutely necessary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The time was an hour and a-half from midnight.
-Unheeding he had heard the supper-bell
-clanged long ago, and cared not what any
-one&mdash;Flora excepted&mdash;thought of his absence now.
-Opening a window, he looked forth upon the
-night. The moon had waned, and the atmosphere
-was thick and gusty&mdash;yea, nearly as stormy and
-as wild as on that night when he had been washed
-ashore on the sand of the bay below Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Putting his purse in his pocket&mdash;it contained
-but a half-guinea, he gave a last glance at his
-bed-room&mdash;to leave it with all its familiar
-features cost him a pang; there were some of Lady
-Rohallion's needlework, and sketches by Flora,
-books lent him by the dominie, gloves and foils
-that had borne the dint of many a bout between
-him and John Girvan; quaint shells given to him
-by Elsie Irvine, and many little trophies of his
-shooting expeditions with the gamekeeper, and so
-forth. He quitted the room with a sigh, and
-slipping downstairs reached the hall-door unseen by
-any of the household.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now a long farewell to Rohallion!" he
-exclaimed, as he reached the ivied arch of the
-haunted gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not so fast, Quentin," said a voice, and the
-rough hand of the worthy quartermaster grasped
-his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"John Girvan," said Quentin, with emotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thought it would come to this. So you
-are really about to take French leave of us&mdash;to
-levant in the night, and without beat of drum?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes,"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To go out into the wide world?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I knew it would be thus, for I knew your
-spirit, Quentin, and so have been keeping guard
-here at the gate."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Guard&mdash;for what purpose? To stop me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To aid and help ye, Quentin, laddie," said
-Girvan, placing a heavy purse in his hand. "I
-have saved something here, forty guineas or so,
-off my half-pay, take them and use them
-cautiously, wi' an auld man's blessing&mdash;an auld
-soldier's, if you like it better."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Girvan&mdash;John Girvan," said Quentin, with a
-very troubled voice; "I cannot&mdash;I cannot&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Deprive you of what I may never be able to
-repay."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ye must and ye shall take the money, or I'll
-fling it into the Lollard's Linn!" said the other,
-impetuously. "It was I who laid your father's
-head in the grave, laddie, in the auld kirkyard
-yonder in the glen, and ill would it become
-auld John Girvan, of the 25th, to let his
-son go forth to seek his fortune in this cold
-hard world, portionless and penniless, while
-there was a shot in the locker&mdash;a lad I love,
-too!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the repayment, John Girvan, the repayment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Heed not that&mdash;it will come time enough;
-and if it never comes I'll never miss it; but
-ye'll write to me from the next burgh-town, won't
-ye, Quentin, laddie?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall, John&mdash;I shall," replied Quentin, now
-so softened that he sobbed with his face on the
-old man's shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God bless ye, my bairn&mdash;God bless ye!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you, John."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You'll think o' me sometimes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, could I ever forget?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sorely will <i>she</i> repent this at my lord's
-homecoming," said Girvan, bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My father was an ill-starred wanderer, and
-perished miserably, poor man! What right have
-I to hope for, or to look for, a better fate than
-he? My mother, too..... Do they see me
-now, and know of all this? .... And Flora&mdash;dear
-Flora, whom I shall see no more!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Take a dram ere you go, laddie, for the night is
-dark and eerie," said Girvan, producing a flask from
-his pocket; "'a spur in the head is weel worth twa
-on the heels,' says an auld Scots proverb."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will bid the dominie good-bye for me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That shall I, laddie&mdash;that shall I."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And tell&mdash;tell <i>her</i>, that I have gone forth to
-seek my fortune, and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His voice failed him, so he slung his little
-portmanteau on his shoulder, and wrung the hand
-of his kind friend for the last time. Hurrying
-away, he disappeared in the darkness, and, as he
-did so, a sound that followed on the wind made
-him pause, but for an instant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the old quartermaster sobbing like a child.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, thus went Quentin Kennedy forth into the
-world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Few words," says a charming writer, "are
-more easily spoken than <i>He went forth to seek his
-fortune</i>; and what a whole world lies within the
-narrow compass! a world of high-hearted hopes
-and doubting fear; of noble ambition to be won
-and glorious paths to be trod, mingled with tender
-thoughts of home and those who made it such.
-What sustaining courage must be his who dares
-this course, and braves that terrible conflict&mdash;the
-toughest that ever man fought&mdash;between his own
-bright colouring of life, and the stern reality of
-the world. How many hopes has he to abandon&mdash;how
-many illusions to give up. How often is
-his faith to be falsified and his trustfulness
-betrayed; and, worst of all, what a fatal change
-do these trials impress upon himself&mdash;how different
-is he from what he had been."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bitterness tinged the spirit of Quentin Kennedy
-with an impression of fatalism, and he marched
-mournfully, doggedly on.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-UNAVAILING REGRET.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Ay waken oh!<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Waken and wearie;<br />
- Sleep I canna get<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For thinking o' my dearie.<br />
- When I sleep I dream,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And when I wake I'm eerie;<br />
- Rest I canna get,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For thinking o' my dearie."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Old Scots Song.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-When, three days after these events, Lord
-Rohallion returned home from his visit to Eglinton
-and to his brave old comrade&mdash;the "Sodger Hugh"
-of Burns' poem&mdash;he found the members of his
-household in a considerable state of consternation
-and excitement. This was consequent to the
-sudden and mysterious disappearance of his
-favourite, Quentin Kennedy; but gradually the
-whole story came out in all its details, even to
-the crushing observation, so unfortunately and
-unintentionally overheard by the lad and the
-quartermaster in the outer drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Rohallion was very indignant with his
-son for making an attack so unprovoked as the
-affair in the avenue, which, to do him justice, the
-Master described truly enough. He was seriously
-angry with Lady Winifred for speaking so
-ungenerously of his young favourite, and with the
-quartermaster too, for permitting, even aiding him
-in the means of flight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, three days had elapsed and no tidings
-had been heard of him; but there were no railroads
-or steamers in those days, or other means
-of locomotion than the occasional stage-coaches
-and carriers' waggons, so the family supposed that
-he could not be very far off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master was sullen, resenting all this
-interest as an insult to himself, so he spent the
-whole day abroad in search of grouse and ptarmigan,
-and had even ordered his valet to pack up
-and prepare for returning to London, an order
-which that powdered gentleman of the aiguillette
-heard with extreme satisfaction, "the hair of
-Hayrshire by no means agreeing with his
-constitution," while the "red hands and big
-beetle-crushers of the women were by no means to his
-taste."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was evident to Cosmo that Flora entertained
-a horror of him; and now that her anger had
-fully subsided and emotions of alarm replaced it,
-Lady Rohallion mourned for the poor lad, repenting
-of the past, and trembling for the unknown
-future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A plague on your planning and match-making,
-Winny," said her husband, as they sat
-together on the old stone seat in the garden, late
-on the third evening after Quentin had
-disappeared; "I never knew any good come of that
-sort of thing."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know, Reynold, how long this proposed
-marriage has been a favourite scheme of ourselves
-and the Warrenders," she urged, gently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you were&mdash;pardon me, Winny, dear&mdash;too
-officious or energetic; and Cosmo has been most
-reprehensibly rash!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, don't say so!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must! Had you left the girl to herself,
-this romantic fancy for her early playmate had
-soon been forgotten, or merged in a woman's love
-for Cosmo, and his proposal had been accepted, as
-I hope it yet shall be. Women change, don't
-they, sometimes?" he added, with a sly twinkle in
-his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; but there must be reasons," said she,
-hesitatingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course&mdash;of course."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"From the hints that Cosmo gave of what he
-had seen or overheard, I deemed it right to
-interfere."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An error, I think; couldn't you let the
-young folks alone? Heaven knows, many a girl
-I kissed, in my first red coat and epaulettes,"
-said Rohallion, while knocking the gravel about
-with his silver-headed cane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But Cosmo does so love that girl."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Love her?" said Rohallion, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then it must be after some odd fashion of
-his own."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, my lord?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why, zounds! Cosmo has passed unscathed
-through the perils of too many London seasons
-to be bird-limed by a country belle like
-Flora, beautiful though she be. She is not the
-style of girl that passes muster with the
-Household Brigade, I fear."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora Warrender?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean that she is too genuine&mdash;too
-unsophisticated&mdash;in fact, I don't know what I
-mean,&mdash;somewhat of a character, if you will; and then,
-Quentin&mdash;poor Quentin&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor dear boy! pray don't upbraid me more,
-Reynold," she urged with tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do not mean to do so, Winny."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I remember him only as the sweet little prattling
-child, saved from the wreck on that wild and
-stormy night; and I love him dearly, as if he
-were our own; he was full of affection and
-gentleness!" she continued, covering her face with
-her handkerchief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And yet you trampled on him, Winny,"
-said Lord Rohallion, taking a pinch of Prince's
-mixture with great energy, and making his
-hair-powder fly about like a floury halo, "trampled
-upon him as if he had been a beggar's cur&mdash;he a
-soldier's son!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Reynold, upbraidings again!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It wasn't like you, Winny, dear&mdash;it wasn't
-like you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My deep interest in Cosmo's welfare, provocation
-at Quentin, and the extreme wilfulness
-of Flora, all served to bewilder me. I own that
-I was wrong and not quite myself; but the dear
-bairn is gone, Reynold, gone from our roof-tree,
-and sorrow avails not."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was so good, so gentle, of so sweet a
-disposition," said Lord Rohallion, musingly;
-"always doing kind offices for everybody. Egad!
-I've seen him carrying horse-buckets for the old
-groom in the stable-court, because the man was
-feeble and ailing; but here come the dominie and
-John Girvan&mdash;perhaps they have news. Good
-evening, dominie. Any tidings of the deserter,
-Girvan?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The kind-hearted dominie, who since Quentin's
-disappearance had been as restless as if his
-galligaskins had been lined with Lieutenant James's
-horse-blister, shook his head mournfully, while
-lifting his old-fashioned three-cornered hat, and
-bowing thrice to the lady, who presented him
-with her lace-mittened hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have just been telling Lady Rohallion that
-I thought she was unnecessarily severe, and I
-regret very much, Girvan, that Quentin overheard
-those casual words in the drawing-room&mdash;words
-lightly spoken, and not meant for him to hear."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor lad! as for his falling in love with Miss
-Warrender, it was quite natural," said the
-quartermaster; "how could you expect aught else, my
-lady?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True&mdash;true," replied Lady Winifred, with an
-air of extreme annoyance at having private family
-matters openly canvassed by dependents; but the
-affair had gone beyond their own control now;
-"propinquity is frequently fatal."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Prop&mdash;what? I dinna quite comprehend,
-my lady; but this I know, that if a winsome
-young pair are left for ever together&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is exactly what I mean, Girvanmains,"
-interrupted the lady, with cold dignity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well&mdash;it is pretty much like leaving a lighted
-match near gunpowder; there will be a blow-up
-sometime when least expected."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"May you not be all wrong in your views of
-this matter?" said Lord Rohallion, who somewhat
-shared his wife's feeling of annoyance; "I must
-question Miss Warrender herself; I feel assured
-that she will conceal nothing from me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not even that she allowed this sprightly
-young fellow to kiss her in the avenue, eh?" said
-the sneering voice of the Master, who appeared
-suddenly at the back of the stone chair, which he
-had approached unseen, and whereon he lounged
-with a twig in his mouth, and a Newmarket hat
-knowingly depressed very much over his right
-eye. "It was very pretty and becoming, wasn't
-it, dominie? ha! ha!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo!" exclaimed his mother, with positive
-anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Osculatio</i>&mdash;a kissing-match&mdash;eh, dominie?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There may be no harm in a kiss, my good
-sir," said the pedant, gravely, for though mightily
-shocked, as became the precentor of Rohallion
-kirk, on hearing of such undue familiarity, he felt
-himself bound to defend his young pupil and
-friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No harm, you think?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indubitably not."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A rare old put it is! But what do such
-little favours lead to?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They may lead to reconciliation, as when the
-king kissed Absalom; or be the token of
-welcome, as when Moses kissed his father-in-law;
-or they may indicate homage, as we find in
-the book of Esther."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what about the kiss of Judas, dominie,
-when on such matters?" continued the sneering
-Cosmo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That I leave you, sir, to discover; but that
-there may be nothing wrong in the act itself, I
-can refer you to Genesis, Hosea, and all the sacred
-writings, which abound in solemn salutes by
-the lip, so that the kiss of Quentin may have
-been a pure and sinless one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie gave the fore-cock of his hat a
-twist with his hand, as if he had settled the
-matter, while Lord Rohallion, notwithstanding
-his annoyance, could not but join his son in a
-hearty laugh at the serious earnestness of the
-defence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will have a vigorous search made for
-Quentin Kennedy," said he; "despatch messengers
-in every direction, John Girvan; spare
-neither trouble nor money, but bring the young
-rogue back to us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That shall I do blithely, my lord," replied
-the quartermaster, as he and the dominie made
-their bows and retired, while Cosmo curled his
-thin lips; and after a pause, uttered one of his
-harsh and unpleasant mocking laughs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Master has the eyebrows of a wicked
-man, or I am no physiognomist&mdash;grieved am I
-to say so, dominie," whispered Girvan, as they
-walked away together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ye are right, John, the <i>intercilium</i> is covered
-with hair, whilk I like not, though Petronius
-and Ovid call such eyebrows the chief charm of
-the other sex;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
-"'Ye fill by art your eyebrows' vacant space,'
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-saith the latter. It is an auld&mdash;auld notion that
-beetle-brows indicate an evil temper&mdash;a crafty
-and fierce spirit; and of a verity, the Master
-Cosmo hath both."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who the deuce could have anticipated such
-a blow-up as this?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About a woman! Pah! women," said the
-dominie, cynically, "according to a German
-philosopher, are only like works carved of fine
-ivory: nothing is whiter or smoother, and nothing
-sooner turns <i>yellow</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are ye sure he was not a Roman philosopher?"
-asked the quartermaster, drily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am: yet Petronius and Ovid both say&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bother them both, dominie! leave Greek
-roots and Latin verbs alone, <i>now</i> that the poor
-boy is gone&mdash;God bless and watch over him! I
-know he'll ever have a warm corner in his heart
-for us both, and that, go wherever he may, he'll
-neither forget you nor the poor old quartermaster;
-but now to have a glass of grog, and
-then to set about this search that my lord has
-ordered&mdash;a search which I know right well will
-prove a bootless one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A vigorous pursuit and inquiry along all the
-highways were now instituted. Girvan, the
-dominie, the gardener, gamekeepers, grooms, Jack
-Andrews, Irvin the fisherman, the running
-footman, the parish minister on his puffy Galloway
-cob, and even Spillsby, the portly and unwieldy
-butler, were all despatched in various directions
-to the neighbouring farms, mansion sand villages,
-without avail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-John Legat, usually known in the Bailiwick
-as <i>Lang Leggie</i>, the running footman (for one of
-those officials still lingered in the old-fashioned
-household of Rohallion), scoured all Kyle and
-Cunninghame, with hard boiled eggs and sherry
-in the silver bulb that topped his long cane,
-scarcely pausing to imbibe these, his sustenance
-when on duty; and though he returned thrice to
-the castle, he was despatched like a liveried
-Mercury, thrice again, but without hearing tidings of
-the missing one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since the last Duke of Queensberry ("old Q.")
-who died in 1810, Lord Rohallion was perhaps
-the last Scottish peer who retained such an old
-state appendage as a running footman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long did they all, save the sullen Master,
-hope, and even flatter themselves, that the
-wanderer would return; but days became weeks,
-and no trace could be discovered and no tidings
-were heard of him anywhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An armed lugger that did not display her
-colours, but was very foreign in her build and in the
-rake of her masts, had been seen standing off and
-on near Rohallion Head. About midnight she
-was close in shore, steering clear of the Partan
-Craig, and burning a blue light. By sunrise
-she was far off at sea: could he have gone with
-<i>her</i>?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There had been a numerous and somewhat
-lawless body of gipsies encamped near the oakwood
-shaw on the night of his disappearance, for
-the ashes of their night-fires had been found,
-together with well-picked bones and broken bottles,
-the usual <i>débris</i> of their suppers <i>al fresco</i>;
-but there were other traces more alarming:
-several large pools of blood, which showed that
-there had been a fight&mdash;perhaps murder&mdash;committed
-among them. These wanderers had departed
-by sunrise, and passed beyond the craigs of
-Kyle, where all traces of them were lost. The
-quartermaster thought of the money he had
-given Quentin, and trembled lest the gold had
-only ensured his destruction, till the dominie
-reassured him by remembering that there were
-more Kennedies than Faas among those gipsies,
-and the former would be sure to protect him for
-the sake of his name.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On that night, too, the pressgang from Ayr
-had been more than ten miles inland, in search
-of certain seamen who had sought refuge as farm
-labourers; so this knowledge was another source
-of fear, as there was a great demand for men,
-and the officers were not very particular.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There had been a recruiting party beating up
-for various regiments in the Bailiwick of
-Cunninghame, and it had been at Maybole on the
-night after Quentin fled. The party had marched,
-no one could say whether for Edinburgh or
-Glasgow. Could Quentin have enlisted?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The night was a dark and stormy one; could
-he have lost his way and perished in the Doon
-or the Girvan, both of which were swollen by
-recent rains? This was barely possible, as he
-knew the country so well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were no electric wires to telegraph by,
-no rural police to apply to, and no penny dailies
-to advertise in. People travelled still by an
-armed stage or the carrier's waggon, just as their
-great-grandfathers did in the days of Queen Anne.
-Twanging his horn as he went or came, the
-Riding Post was still, as in Cowper's <i>Task</i>,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&mdash;&mdash;the herald of a noisy world,<br />
- With spattered boots, strapped waist, and frozen locks,<br />
- News from all nations lumbering at his back."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Posts came and went from the capital of the
-Bailiwick, but there were no tidings of Quentin,
-so the Master of Rohallion laughed in secret at
-all the exertions, doubts, and fears of those around
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every alarming idea was naturally suggested.
-The quartermaster's early instincts made him
-think most frequently of the recruiting party;
-but he grieved at the idea of the friendless and
-homeless lad, so delicately nurtured and gently
-bred, enduring all he had himself endured&mdash;the
-hardships and privations of a private soldier's life;
-while the kind-hearted dominie actually shed tears
-behind his huge horn barnacles at the bare thought
-of such a thing, and mourned for all his wasted
-classic lore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Aware that she had been in some measure the
-primary cause of Quentin's expulsion from Rohallion,
-Flora Warrender had rather a difficult part
-to play now. To conceal entirely that she mourned
-for him would be to act a part which she
-disdained; but when she spoke with sorrow or
-anxiety, she excited the sarcasms of Cosmo, and
-even a little pique in Lady Winifred, who more
-than once said to her, almost with asperity,
-"Flora, you should have known your own position,
-and made Quentin remember his; then all these
-unseemly events had never taken place."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, madam?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You should at once have put an end to his
-mooning and tomfoolery. Do you hear me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, madam," sighed Flora, who seemed to
-be intent on a book, though she held it upside
-down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How cool&mdash;how composed you are!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Less so, perhaps, than I seem," replied Flora,
-who felt that tears were suffusing her eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Young ladies took these matters very differently
-in my time: but since this revolution in
-France, manners are strangely altered. (Here we
-may mention that the epoch referred to was now
-superseding the Union in Lady Rohallion'a
-mind.) Tears!" she continued; "I am glad to see them,
-at least for your own sake."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They are <i>not</i> for my own sake, Lady Rohallion,
-but for the sake of poor Quentin, who has
-fallen under the displeasure of you all, and who,
-through my unwitting means, has&mdash;has&mdash;become&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Homeless, friendless, and alone! Oh, it must
-be so sad to be alone in the world&mdash;all alone!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Winifred lowered her eyes, and her
-irritation passed rapidly away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had somewhat changed since that stormy
-night on which we first introduced her to the
-reader, and had altered, as people do with increasing
-years, so as to be at times&mdash;shall we say it?&mdash;almost
-selfish in much that related to her own
-immediate hearth and household, and more especially
-in all that concerned the still more selfish
-Cosmo, on whom she doted, and in whom she
-could see no imperfection. Yet she could not
-but reproach herself bitterly when thinking of
-Quentin Kennedy, and the harsh, cutting words
-he had overheard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then as his smiling, loving, and handsome face
-came vividly in memory before her, she would ask
-of herself, "Is it thus, Winifred Rohallion, you
-have treated the strange orphan, the helpless
-child once, the mere lad now, who was cast by
-fate, misfortune, and the waves of that bleak
-November sea, years ago, at your door and at
-your mercy? Was it generous to cast forth
-upon the cold world the friendless, poor, and
-penniless youth, who loves you&mdash;ay, even as your
-own son never loved you? And what answer is
-to be given if, at some future day, his mother,
-who may be living yet, should come hither and
-demand him of you&mdash;you who stung and galled
-his proud spirit by taunts, upbraiding and
-unmerited reproach?" And so she would whisper and
-think what she dared not say aloud; though
-"perhaps the lowest of our whispers may reach
-eternity, for it is not very far from any of us, after
-all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the past memories of her early life&mdash;by
-those of <i>one</i> whose face came at times unbidden
-before her, and by the pleasant days of <i>their</i> youth
-in pastoral Nithsdale&mdash;by those evenings when
-the sunset glowed so redly on the green summits
-of Monswald and Criffel, while the Nith brawled
-joyously over its pebbled bed, and the white
-hawthorn cast its fragrance and its blossoms on the
-soft west wind&mdash;by all these, it might be asked,
-had she no compassion for the young love she was
-seeking to mar and crush?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had alike compunction and compassion;
-but in this instance she deemed it the mere love of
-a boy for a girl, and not quite such as Rohallion's
-brother, Ranulph Crawford, had for her some
-seven-and-thirty years before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seven-and-thirty! a long vista they were to
-look back through now; but the events of her
-youth seemed clearer at times than those of her
-middle age, and as we grow older they always are
-so in dreams.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin would soon forget the affair, she was
-assured, and self-interest and love for her own son
-blinded her to the rest&mdash;to all but a sorrow for
-the lost youth, and a craving to know his fate,
-where he was now, and with whom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus many a night after his disappearance her
-heart upbraided her keenly; and many a lonely
-hour, unseen by others, she wept and prayed&mdash;prayed
-for the welfare and safety of the unknown
-lad she might never see or hear of more, for as a
-mother she had been to him, and he had been ever
-tender, loving, and kind as a son to her&mdash;much
-more than ever the Master had been in the days
-of his infancy and boyhood, for he was always cold,
-cruel, and headstrong; and now Quentin's place
-was vacant among them, as completely as if he
-was in the grave.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Flora Warrender, though mentioned last,
-her sorrow was not the least. How lonely and
-how tiresome the old castle seemed to her now!
-All their favourite walks&mdash;the long, shady avenue
-by the foaming Lollard's Linn; the grand old
-garden with its aged yew hedges; the kelpies'
-haunted pool, where first she learned that he loved
-her, and felt his kiss upon her cheek; the ivied
-ruins of Kilhenzie, and every old trysting-place,
-seemed deserted now indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had no companion now in her rambles to
-touch up her sketches, to compare notes with
-in reading, to hover lovingly by her side at the
-piano, and so forth: thus Flora's "occupation"
-seemed, like the warlike Moor's, to be gone
-indeed!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sunny August mornings came, but there
-came not with them Quentin, to meet her fresh and
-ruddy from a gallop along the shore, with a dewy
-bouquet from the garden, or with a basket of
-speckled trout from the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly passed each lingering day, and evening
-followed; but there was no one to ramble with now
-by starlight in the terraced garden&mdash;to linger with
-by the sounding sea that surged upon the shore
-below and foamed upon the distant rock, or to share
-all her thoughts, and anticipate every wish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She hoped he would return when his money
-was spent and when his passion cooled, or his
-love for her obtained the mastery. So did Lady
-Rohallion and the old lord&mdash;that honest, worthy
-country gentleman and gallant peer&mdash;never
-doubted it; but the quicker-seeing quartermaster
-did; so day followed day until they began to
-count the weeks, and still there came no news of
-the lost Quentin Kennedy.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-AN OLD SOLDIER'S STORY.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"If he was of Leven's," said the lieutenant.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"I told him your honour was."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Then," said he, "I served three campaigns with him in<br />
- Flanders."&mdash;<i>Tristram Shandy</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-A last glance at his old friends before we go in
-pursuit of Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I fear me," said the quartermaster, shaking
-his old yellow wig, which still survived, and
-letting a long stream of tobacco smoke escape
-from his mouth, as he and the dominie lingered
-over their toddy-jugs one evening in "the snuggery,"
-"I fear me much that the Master's London
-debts and liabilities are more than his father,
-worthy man, reckons on, and that Rohallion,
-wood and haugh, hill and glen, main and farm-town,
-will all be made ducks and drakes of within
-a week after the old Lord is carried through the
-haunted gate and up the kirk loan yonder."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wae is me that I should hear this," said the
-dominie, sadly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I speak in confidence, dominie," said the
-quartermaster, laying his "yard of clay" lightly
-on the other's arm, and lowering his voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course&mdash;of course. But how different hath
-the Master's life been from his father's!
-Wasting his patrimony among London bucks and
-bullies&mdash;among parasites and flatterers, even as
-Timon of Athens wasted his substance, till he
-was driven to seek sustenance by digging for the
-poorest roots of the earth."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our old Lord has ever acted wisely, dominie;
-when not on active service, he has ever been resident
-on his ain auld patrimonial property&mdash;wisely
-so, I say, for it beseems not that the great names
-of the land should die out of the memory of
-those who inhabit it; d&mdash;n all absentees, say I!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as the quartermaster buried his red nose
-in his toddy-jug, the concluding anathema became
-an indistinct mumble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bankruptcy and disgrace are before the Master,
-I fear," he resumed with a sigh, as he snuffed
-the long candles, which were placed in
-square-footed holders of carved mahogany, mounted
-with silver rings on the stems; "war may save
-him for a time, but only if he leaves the Guards."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"War, say ye?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;for if he owed sums that surpassed the
-national debt, his creditors could never touch him
-while under orders for foreign service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But at his home-coming?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ay, there's the rub, dominie. A fine story
-it would be to have the Master of Rohallion&mdash;he,
-the heir of a line that never was disgraced&mdash;ever
-stainless and true&mdash;arrested by a dog of a
-bailiff&mdash;arrested, perhaps, at the head of his regiment,
-it might be after fighting the battles of his
-country! Zounds, dominie, it would be enough
-to make all the old oaks in Rohallion wood drop
-their leaves and die, as if a curse had come upon
-the land! It would break his father's heart, and,
-much as I love the family, I would rather that
-Cosmo was killed in action, than that he had to
-endure such disgrace, or that after facing the
-French, as I know he will do bravely (for there
-never came a coward of the Crawford line), he
-had to flee ignobly to Holyrood, and become an
-abbey laird, that he might snap his fingers at the
-laws of both Scotland and England, until,
-perhaps, he got the lands of Ardgour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie was truly grieved to hear such
-things, for he had all the old Scottish patriarchal
-love of the family, under whom his forefathers&mdash;stout
-men-at-arms in their time, had been trusted
-dependents, through long dark ages of war and
-tumult; so he drew a long sigh, took a deep draught
-from his toddy jug, and asked in a low voice&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If aught were to happen unto the Master,
-how would the title go?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I scarcely ken, dominie; by the death of
-Ranulph Crawford in a foreign land, it would
-probably fall to some far-awa cousin, after the
-lands had been frittered among disputants in the
-Court of Session, and the auld patent that King
-James signed on a kettle-drum head, had been
-hacked to rags by a Committee of Privileges.
-Confound the law, say I, wi' a' my heart!
-However, the old Lord, Heaven bless him! is a hale
-man and strong yet, so let us not anticipate evils,
-which are sufficient for their own day."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Four weeks&mdash;a whole month to-night, John,
-since we last saw Quentin," said the dominie, to
-change the subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Quentin!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a bairn how bonnie he was&mdash;yea, beautiful
-as Absalom!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster sighed with impatience, it
-might be with a little air of disappointment, as
-he pushed his toddy-jug aside, and proceeded
-energetically to refill the bowl of his pipe. Why,
-thought he, has Quentin never written to me,
-according to his promise?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was September now. The bearded grain
-that had been yellowing on the long corn-rigs of
-Rohallion was already gathered in; the harvest-kirn
-or home had been held in the great barn of
-the Home Farm, and the tawny stubbles gave the
-bared land a sterile aspect, till they disappeared
-as the plough turned up the shining furrows,
-where the black ravens flapped their wings, and
-the hoodie-crows sought for worms. The leaves
-were becoming brown and yellow as sienna tints
-spread over the copsewood, and the sound of the
-axe was heard at times, for now the husbandman
-looked forward to the closing year, and
-remembered the rhyming injunction:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Ere winter preventeth, while weather is good,<br />
- For galling of pasture get home with thy wood;<br />
- And carry out gravel to fill up a hole,<br />
- Both timber and furzen, the turf and the coal."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Four weeks&mdash;ay, it is September now," said
-the quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And I fear me the lad will return no more."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Say not so, dominie; he may come upon us
-when we least expect him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It may be, for, of a verity, life is full of
-strange coincidences."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Strange, indeed! I have told you many a
-soldier's yarn, dominie; but did you ever hear of
-the strange meeting I had with an old man of the
-clan Donald?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where&mdash;in the Highlands?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, in America."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie shook his head as a negative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then fill your pipe, brew your toddy, draw
-your chair nearer the fire, and I'll tell you about it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ye see, dominie, it was in the winter of '75,
-when Rohallion was lieutenant in the Light
-Company, and I but a corporal, that, with a
-detachment of ours, we joined Major Preston and
-Captain&mdash;afterwards the unfortunate Major&mdash;André
-in the stockaded fort of St. John, on the
-Richelieu River, in Lower Canada. In the fort
-were seven hundred rank and file, chiefly of the
-Cameronians and the 7th or Royal Fusiliers, and
-our orders were to defend the place to the last!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We were soon attacked with great vigour by
-the American General Montgomery, at the head
-of Lord knows how many rebellious Yankees
-and yelling Indian devils; but like brave men we
-defended ourselves till the whole place was
-unroofed and riddled by shot and shell&mdash;defended
-ourselves, amid the snows of severe winter, on
-half-rations, and what was worse, on half-grog,
-till our ammunition was expended. Then, but
-not till <i>then</i>, we were compelled to surrender, and
-give up our arms, baggage, and everything to the
-foe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Disheartened by defeat, and denuded of everything
-but our regimentals, we were marched up
-the lakes by Ticonderoga. As I had no desire
-for remaining a prisoner during a war, the end of
-which none could foresee, and not being an officer,
-having no parole to break, I resolved to escape on
-the first available opportunity, and did so very
-simply, on the night-march along the borders of
-Lake George. There was a halt, during which
-I contrived to creep unseen into a thick furzy
-bush, and there I remained, scarcely daring to
-breathe, till the prisoners fell into their ranks an
-hour before daybreak, and surrounded by their
-escort of triumphant Yankees and Indians in
-their war paint, proceeded on their sad and
-heartless journey into the interior.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After the poor fellows had departed and all
-was still, while the ashes of the watch-fires
-smouldered and reddened in every breath of wind that
-passed over the snowy waste&mdash;and keen and biting
-blasts they were, I can tell ye, dominie&mdash;I slipped
-out of my friendly bush, stealthily as a snake
-might have done, and crawled away on my hands
-and knees from the vicinity of the deserted
-halting-place, for I dreaded to encounter some straggler
-of the escort, and still more did I dread some
-rambling Indian, who would have swooped down
-upon me with his scalping knife, and I had not
-the slightest ambition to see my natural wig
-added to the other grizzly trophies on a
-warrior's hunting shirt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Arms I had none, and was scarcely clothed.
-I was hungry, weary, and, on finding myself
-alone, I began to reflect whether I had acted
-wisely in escaping to face individually the perils
-that awaited me, for my tattered red coat marked
-me as an enemy, and in the stern frost of an
-American winter, you may believe, it was not to be
-discarded or cast aside without a substitute. Such
-a garb increased my perils, and we all know what
-it cost poor Major André, of the Cameronians,
-when caught in his uniform within the American
-lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The cold seemed to freeze my faculties, and
-vaguely endeavouring to retrace the way we had
-come, I hoped by some chance, and by the care of
-Providence, to reach the junction of the Sorrel or
-the Richelieu with the St. Lawrence, for there I
-knew that Colonel Maclean was posted with the
-royal regiment of Scottish Emigrants, but
-concerning how far I was from thence, and how I was
-to reach it, I knew no more than of what the man
-in the moon may be about at this moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Vainly I toiled on till day dawned fully on
-the vast extent of snow-covered country. Then I
-found myself among the high and wooded hills
-that look down upon the bosom of the Hudson.
-Far in the distance lay Fort St. John which we
-had so long defended, and which had the Stars and
-Stripes where the Union Jack waved before. On
-the other hand, Lake George, a sheet of snow-covered
-ice, with all its isles, lay like a map at my
-feet, far down below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cold, cold, ice, frost, snow, a biting wind
-everywhere! I sighed and shuddered with misery,
-and longed for any other garment than my fatal
-red coat, that I might approach a house or homestead,
-and crave a morsel of food, and permission,
-for a minute, to warm myself by the kitchen fire,
-but to make the attempt was too rash, and,
-though my prospects were not cheering, I had no
-desire to court a rifle-shot from some loophole or
-upper window.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As I stumbled on by the skirts of a fir copse,
-which somewhat sheltered me from the biting
-north wind, and while the drowsy numbness of
-exhaustion was stealing over me, I heard a loud
-and sonorous voice commanding me to 'stop.' I
-turned and saw a man approaching me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His form was powerful and athletic, apparently,
-rather than tall, and he seemed about
-fifty years of age or more; very brown and weather-beaten
-in visage, and his hair was white as the
-snow around us. He had on a thick fur cap, the
-warm earlaps of which were tied under his chin;
-and over a yellow Indian hunting-shirt he wore a
-seaman's pea-jacket, with two rows of large white
-horn buttons in front. It was girt by a belt of
-untanned leather, in which were stuck a hunting-knife,
-a pair of brass-mounted pistols, and a rusty
-basket-hilted Highland broadsword. He was
-evidently one of the insurgents&mdash;'Mr. Washington's
-rebels,' as we named them. He carried a
-long rifle, and wore a pair of large deer-skin
-boots, that came well over his sturdy thighs, and
-were strapped to his waist-belt. His whole
-appearance and bearing indicated a state of bodily
-strength, hardihood, confidence, and warmth, all
-of which, at that particular moment, I greatly
-envied. With his right hand on the hammer
-and his left on the barrel of his rifle, as if about
-to cock it, he said, in a voice that was both sharp
-and deep in tone&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Stand, Englishman, if you would not be shot
-down, as many a time I have seen your countrymen
-shoot others, in cold blood.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I don't think even death could make my blood
-colder than it is already,' said I, with chattering
-teeth; 'but you accuse us unjustly of outrage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Do I?' said he, with a fierce sneer; 'by
-your doings at Lexington, I don't think the
-Redcoats are much changed since I saw them in
-Lochaber.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I am not an Englishman,' said I, glancing
-at the sword in his girdle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Then, what the devil <i>are</i> you?' he asked,
-sharply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I am a Scotsman, as I rather think you
-are,' I added, for he had a Skye-terrier look about
-the face that indicated a West Highlander.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Indeed,' said he, in an altered tone, placing
-the butt of his rifle on the ground, greatly to my
-satisfaction and general ease of mind; 'you are
-one of the force that defended Fort St. John, under
-Major Preston and Captain André?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And how, then, are you here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I was a prisoner, but escaped; and so great is
-my misery, that I beg of you to make me a prisoner
-again, if you are in the American interest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'By your yellow facings, you are not one of
-the King's Fusiliers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I am a 25th man,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A 25th man?' he repeated, coming nearer,
-and looking hastily about to see if we were
-observed, but all around the vast landscape seemed
-desolate and tenantless; 'I will screen and save
-you if I can, for the sake of the old country
-neither of us may ever see again; but, more than
-all, for the sake of the <i>number</i> on your buttons.
-Here, taste this first, and then follow me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He drew a leather hunting-bottle from the
-pocket of his rough pea-jacket, and gave me a
-good dram of Jamaica rum, but for which, I
-am sure, I should have died there, for the cold
-was fast overpowering me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'So you are a 25th man?' said he, surveying
-me with considerable interest; 'well, for that
-reason, if it were for nothing else, I shall befriend
-you. Come this way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was too cold&mdash;too intensely miserable&mdash;to
-question his meaning, but accompanied him
-through the wood, by a narrow path where the
-snow lay deep, and where, in some places, it had
-fallen in such a manner over the broad, horizontal
-and interlaced branches of the pine trees as to
-form quite a covered passage, where the atmosphere
-felt mild&mdash;even warm, compared with the
-temperature elsewhere. After a time, we reached
-an open plateau, on the slope of the hills that
-look towards Lake George, where we found his
-hut, a comfortable and warm little dwelling,
-sheltered by stupendous pines, and built entirely
-of fir logs, dressed and squared by the hatchet,
-and pegged each down into the other through
-holes bored by an auger. It had a stone
-chimney, within which a smouldering fire soon
-shot up into a ruddy blaze as he cast a heap of
-crackling fir cones on it, and then added some
-dry birch billets, that roared and sputtered
-cheerily, and threw showers of sparks all over us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He gave me some food, broiled venison,
-hard biscuits, and a good can of Jamaica grog;
-and he also gave me that which I needed sorely&mdash;warm
-clothing, in the shape of an old frieze coat,
-lined with martin skins, in lieu of my poor, faded
-and tattered regimentals, which, for security's
-sake, we cast into the fire and burned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Three days I remained with the trapper or
-hunter, for such he seemed to be, and on the
-fourth, after having carefully reconnoitred all the
-neighbourhood, he announced his intention of
-conducting me to Colonel Maclean's outposts
-upon the Richelieu; and being now thoroughly
-refreshed, I was glad to hear the tidings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I shall never forget your kindness to me,'
-said I; 'and I value it all the more, because you
-are one of those who are in arms against the
-king.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'It is maybe not the first time I have been so,'
-said he, with a deep smile puckering all his eyelids.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And you saved my life simply because I was
-a 25th man?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes&mdash;because one of your regiment&mdash;it was
-Lord Leven's&mdash;no, Lord Semple's then&mdash;saved
-mine, at a harder pinch, some thirty years ago,'
-said he, gravely, as he marched on before me
-through the snow, with his long rifle sloped on
-his shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You have been a soldier, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Like yourself, Lowlander, for I know you are
-southland bred by your tongue.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'In what regiment?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'In the clan regiment of Macdonald of Keppoch.
-Rest him, God!' he exclaimed, taking off
-his cap and looking upward, while his keen grey
-eyes glistened, it might be in the frosty wind,
-under his bushy eyebrows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'When was this&mdash;and where?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can you be so dull as not to guess? It was
-in the ever-memorable and ever-glorious campaign
-under His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales,
-whom heaven long preserve! It was in 1746,
-just thirty years ago. Look at these scars,' he
-added, showing me several sword wounds that
-were visible among his thick white hair. 'I got
-these at Culloden, from Bland's dragoons, when
-fighting for Scotland and King James VIII.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You must be an old man?' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Old,' he exclaimed; 'I am barely fifty&mdash;young
-enough to fight and ripe enough to die for
-my new home, this land of America, to which I was
-banished as a slave with many more of my clan
-and kindred.' He was now warming with his
-subject and the recollections of the past. 'There
-is,' he resumed, 'a pass in the hills here that
-reminds me of my native glen in Croy. Often I go
-there and sit on the 16th April, as the fatal day
-comes round, when outnumbered, three to one,
-by British and Hanoverians, the Highland
-swordsmen went down like grass on Culloden moor,
-before the withering fire of grape and musketry!
-Then the river that flows into Lake George seems
-the Nairn&mdash;the water of Alders; yonder open
-moorland seems the plain of Drummossie, and
-the distant farm among the pine-trees passes for
-Culloden House. Afar off in the distance the
-bastions of Ticonderoga become those of Fort
-George, that jut into the Moray Firth, and
-yonder wooded mountain, as yet without a name,
-seems to me like wild Dun-daviot; and then as
-with the eyes of a seer, it all comes before me
-again, that April day, with its terrible memories!
-Then,' he continued, with flashing eyes,
-as he pointed across the plain, 'then I seem to
-see the white battle-smoke rolling over the purple
-heather, and the far extended lines of the
-hell-doomed Cumberland reaching from Bland's
-scarlet horse on the right to the false Lord
-Ancrum's blue dragoons upon the left&mdash;these long
-and steady lines of infantry, Barrel's, Munro's,
-the Fusiliers, the Royals, and all the rest, in
-grim array, three ranks deep, the colours waving
-in the centre, the bayonets glittering in the sun.
-On the other,' his voice failed him, and almost
-with a sob, he continued, 'on the <i>other</i> hand,
-I see the handsome Prince, the idol of all our
-hearts, on his white horse, half shimmering
-through the smoke and morning mist, and then
-the loyal clans in all their tartans, with target and
-claymore: Murray on the right, and Perth on
-the left, in the centre Athol, Lochiel, Appin,
-Cluny, and Lovat, Keppoch, Glengarry, and others
-with wild Lord Lewis and old Glenbucket in the
-rear! Then once again from yonder pine forest
-I seem to hear the war-pipes playing the onset, and
-a thrill passes over me. I feel my sword in
-my hand"&mdash;he dashed down his rifle and drew his
-claymore&mdash;'I draw down my bonnet; I hear the
-wild cheer, the battle cry of <i>Righ Hamish gu bragh!</i>
-pass along the line, as with heads stooped and
-targets up, we burst like a thunderbolt through
-the first line of charged bayonets! In a moment
-it is dispersed and overborne&mdash;it is all dirk
-and claymore, cutting, hewing and stabbing. On
-yet, on&mdash;and whoop! we break through the second
-line; on yet, through the <i>third</i>, and the day
-may be our own! Its fire is deadly and
-concentrated; I am beside the aged and white-haired
-Keppoch, my chief&mdash;all our people have fallen back
-in dismay before the fire of musketry and the
-treachery of the Campbells, who turned our flank.
-Keppoch waves his bonnet; again I hear him cry
-My God! my God! have the children of my
-tribe forsaken me? Again the bullets seem, to
-pierce me, and we fall to the earth together&mdash;and
-so the wild vision passes away!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"While pouring forth all this, the Highland
-exile seemed like one possessed, and in his
-powerful imagination, I have no doubt that while
-speaking, the present snow-clad landscape passed
-away, and in fancy he saw the moor and battle
-of Culloden all spreading like a bloody panorama
-before him. Until he sheathed his sword I was
-not without uneasiness lest he might fill up the
-measure of his wrath by cutting and carving on me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'At last it was all over,' he resumed quietly
-and sadly; 'and then came the butchery of the
-wounded by platoon firing and the desecration of
-the dead. Sorely wounded and faint with loss
-of blood, I found myself on the skirt of the field
-near the wall which the Campbells had broken
-down to enable the light dragoons to turn our
-right flank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Weary with the battle of the past day, a
-soldier was leaning against the wall, screwing a
-fresh flint into the lock of his musket. On
-seeing me move, he mercifully gave me a mouthful of
-water from his wooden canteen, and bound up my
-head with a shred torn from my plaid. I then
-begged him to help me a little way out of the
-field, as I was the sole support of an aged mother,
-and must live if possible. The good fellow said
-it was as much as his life was worth, were it
-known that he had spared mine; but as he, too,
-had an old mother in the lowlands far away, for
-her sake he would run the risk of assisting me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The morning was yet dark and we were
-unseen. He half carried, half dragged me for
-more than a mile, till we reached a thicket where
-I was in safety from the parties who were
-butchering the wounded. Some of these burned my
-mother's hut and bayonetted her on the threshold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I offered the soldier the tassels of my
-sporran or the silver buttons of my waistcoat as
-a reward, but he proudly refused them. I then
-pressed upon him my snuff-mull, on the lid of
-which my initials were engraved&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And he took it?' said I, eagerly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'He did, but with reluctance; and then I
-asked his name, that I might remember it in my
-gratitude&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And he told you that he was John Girvan of
-Semple's Foot&mdash;the 25th,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes&mdash;yes; but how know <i>you</i> that?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Because that friendly soldier was <i>my father</i>.
-He served against the Prince at Culloden (<i>four</i>
-Scotch regiments did so that day), and often have
-I heard him tell the story of how the mull came into
-his possession, and of the brave Highlander who
-adhered to old Keppoch when all the clans
-fell back before the mingled shock of horse and
-foot in front and flank!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Your father!&mdash;that brave man your father?
-I thank God who has thus enabled me to repay
-to you the good deed done to me on that dark
-morning on Culloden Moor,' said the Highlander
-with deep emotion, as he shook my hand with
-great warmth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Here is the mull,' said I, producing it, 'and
-you are welcome to a pinch from it again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'It is indeed like an old friend's face,' said
-he, looking with interest at his initials, D. McD.,
-graven on the silver top. 'I made and mounted
-it, in my mother's hut in Croy. Woe is me!
-How many changes have I seen since that day
-thirty years ago, when last I held it in my hand?
-And your father, soldier&mdash;I hope that brave and
-good man yet lives?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Alas! no,' said I, sadly; 'he entered the
-Royals fifteen years after Culloden, and volunteered,
-as a serjeant, with the forlorn hope, at the
-storming of the Moro Castle. He fell in the
-breach, and the mull was found in his havresack
-by the men who buried him there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Highlander took off his cap and muttered
-a prayer, crossing himself the while very devoutly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'But for him,' said he, 'instead of being a
-lonely trapper here by the shore of Lake George,
-the heather bells of thirty summers had bloomed
-and withered over my grave on the fatal moor of
-Culloden; but God's blessed will be done.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After this unexpected meeting with one of
-whom I had so often heard my worthy father
-speak when I was but a bairn, we became quite
-as old friends, and parted with regret when
-we reached the outposts of the Royal Scottish
-Emigrants, close to which he guided me, and
-then took his departure to join General
-Montgomery, who deemed Donald Macdonald the
-chief of his marksmen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I never heard of him more; and as for the
-snuff-mull, I was robbed of it by some Germans,
-who cut the knapsack off my back as I lay
-wounded in the skirmish at Stoney Point, in the
-State of New York, in 1776; but this chance
-meeting with its original proprietor, shows us,
-dominie, what unexpected things come to pass in
-the world. Life, as I said, is full of strange
-coincidences, and we may meet with Quentin Kennedy
-or hear sure tidings of him, when least expected."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I pray Heaven it may be so," sighed the
-dominie, over his empty toddy-jug, as he tied an
-ample yellow bandanna over his old three-cornered
-hat, and under his chin; and then assuming his
-cane, prepared to depart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Jack Andrews has brought your pony round to
-the private door; take care o' the Lollard's Linn,
-for the night is dark; and now for the <i>deoch</i>&mdash;the
-stirrup-cup."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whilk the Romans ever drank in honour of
-Mercury, as I do now&mdash;that he may bestow a
-sound night's sleep," said the dominie, smacking
-his lips as the dram went down.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-THE WAYFARER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "On, on! through the wind and rain,<br />
- With the blinding tears and burning vein!<br />
- When the toil is o'er and the pain is past,<br />
- What recks it all if we sleep at last."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>All the Year Round.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-When we last saw him, we said that Quentin
-was going forth into the world to seek his
-fortune, though, perhaps, his chief idea or emotion
-was to get as far away as possible from the vicinity
-of Rohallion, its haughty lady, and the cold and
-crafty Master. As he passed through the ivied
-archway, he dashed aside the tears that his
-farewell with the old quartermaster had summoned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How often," thought he, "have I read in
-novels and romances, in dramas and story-books,
-of the heroes doing <i>this</i>&mdash;setting out on the
-vague and hopeful errand that was to lead to
-fame and fortune; but how little I ever expected
-to experience the stern reality, or believe that it
-would be my own fate! And now the hour has
-come&mdash;oh, it seems so strange now-a-days!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing down the avenue, the stately trees of
-which were tossing their branches wildly in the
-gathering blast, he issued upon the highway, and
-proceeded along it without caring, and perhaps
-without considering, whether he went to the right
-or to the left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Intense was the loneliness, and bitter the
-irritation of mind in which he pursued his aimless
-way, by the old and narrow road, which was
-bordered by ancient hedgerows where brambles and
-Gueldre-roses were growing wild and untrimmed,
-and where the wind was howling now among the
-old beech-trees, as an occasional drop of rather
-warm rain that fell on his face, or plashed in the
-dust under foot, gave warning for a rough and
-comfortless night for a belated wayfarer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again and again he looked back to the picturesque,
-turreted, and varied outline of Rohallion,
-and saw its many lighted windows, one which he
-knew well, in the crowstepped gable of the western
-wing. It was the sleeping-place of Flora Warrender.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She would be there now&mdash;her head resting on
-her pillow, perhaps, sleepless and weeping for
-him, no doubt, and for the probable results of a
-quarrel, the end of which she could not
-foresee&mdash;weeping for the young heart that loved her so
-truly, so he flattered himself; and in the morning
-she would find that his room was tenantless, his
-bed unslept in, and that he was gone&mdash;gone
-no-one knew whither!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hope had scarcely yet risen in Quentin's
-breast; he felt but the stern and crushing knowledge
-that he was leaving his only home where all
-had loved, and where he truly loved all save one,
-to launch out upon an unknown world, and to
-begin a career that was as friendless as it was
-shadowy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had no defined plan, where to proceed, or
-what to essay. He naturally thought of the army;
-but, as he had ever anticipated a commission,
-he shrunk from enlisting, and thereby depriving
-himself of all liberty of action, and perhaps of
-forfeiting for ever the place which he felt himself,
-by birth and education, entitled to take in
-society.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of business or the mode of attaining a profession,
-he was as ignorant as of the contents of the
-Koran, the Talmud, the Shasters, or the books
-of Brahma; and had he dropped from the moon,
-or sprung out of the turf, he could not have felt
-more lonely, friendless, and isolated in the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was now passing the old ruined church,
-with its low and crumbling boundary-wall that
-encloses the graveyard, where, long ago, his
-drowned father had been reverently laid by the
-Rohallion Volunteers and the worthy old quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How well Quentin knew the spot amid the
-solemn obscurity! he could see it from the
-time-worn foot-stile where he lingered for a
-moment. <i>He</i> was lying beside the ancient east
-window, near the Rohallion aisle, where dead
-Crawfords of ages past, even those who had
-fallen in their armour at Flodden and Pinkey,
-Sark and Arkinholme, were buried. No stone
-marked the spot; but now the rough-bearded
-thistle, the long green nettle, the broad-leaved
-dock, and the sweetbriar, mingled mournfully
-over the humble last home of the poor dead
-wanderer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin felt his heart very full at that
-moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Did the father <i>see</i> his son to-night? Was he
-looking upon him from some mysterious bourne
-among the stars? Did he know the tumult, the
-sorrow, and the half-despair that were mingling in
-his breast?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin almost asked these questions aloud,
-as, with a mind deeply agitated by conflicting
-thoughts, the poor fellow journeyed on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A strong regard for the home he had left (of
-any <i>other</i> he had no memory now save a vague
-and indistinct dream), with painful doubts lest
-he had been ungracious, ungrateful, or unkind to
-any there, beset him, after the soft revulsion of
-feeling excited by the solemn aspect of the
-midnight churchyard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then came dim foreshadowings, the anxious
-hopes&mdash;a boy's certainty of future fame and
-distinction; but how, where, and in what path?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His romance-reading with Flora and the yarns
-of the quartermaster had filled his mind with
-much false enthusiasm and many odd fancies.
-He had misty recollections of heroes expelled or
-deserting from home under circumstances pretty
-similar to his own, who had flung themselves over
-awful precipices, when their bones were picked
-white (a doubly unpleasant idea) by the Alpine
-eagles or bears of the Black Forest: or who had
-thrown themselves upon their swords, or drowned
-themselves (the Lollard's Linn was pouring not far
-off; but the night was decidedly <i>cold</i>), yet none
-of these modes of exit, suited his purpose so well
-as walking manfully on, and imagining, with a
-species of grim satisfaction, the surmises and so
-forth at Rohallion, when the supper-bell rang and
-he did not appear; when Jack Andrews, with military
-punctuality, closed the old feudal fortress for
-the night, and still he was not to be found; and
-then the next day, with its increased excitement,
-was a thought that quite cheered him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was Flora&mdash;sweet Flora Warrender,
-with all her winning little ways; and her image came
-upbraidingly before him despite the smarting of
-the wound given him by the Master, and the
-deeper sting of Lady Rohallion's words.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As glittering fancies rose like soap-bubbles in
-the sunshine; as the <i>Châteaux en Espagne</i> rose
-too, and faded away into mud-hovels and even
-prisons, love and affection drew his thoughts <i>back</i>
-and seemed to centre his hopes in and about
-Rohallion. Flora's face, the memory of past
-years of love and kindness experienced from Lady
-Winifred, and from the old Lord, melted his heart,
-or filled it with regard and gratitude towards
-them, and he felt that, go where he might, Rohallion
-could never be forgotten. A verse of Burns
-that occurred to him, seemed but to embody his
-own ideas and emotions&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "The monarch may forget his crown,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That on his head an hour hath been;<br />
- The bridegroom may forget the bride,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Was made his wedded wife yestreen;<br />
- The mother may forget her child,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That smiles so sweetly on her knee;<br />
- <i>But I'll remember thee, Glencairn,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And all that thou hast done for me.</i>"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-From an eminence above the oakwood shaw,
-he turned to take his last view of the old dwelling-place;
-but he could only see its lights twinkling
-like distant stars, for the night was obscure and
-murky; the clouds were rolling in great masses;
-the wind came in fierce and fitful gusts from the
-Firth of Clyde, while the rain began to descend
-steadily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bodily discomfort soon recalled all his emotions
-of hate and anger at the Master, and with eyes
-that flashed in the dark, he turned his back,
-almost resentfully, on the old castle, and resumed
-his aimless journey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is sometimes," says a writer, "a
-stronger sense of unhappiness attached to what is
-called being hardly used by the world, than by a
-direct and palpable misfortune, for though the
-sufferer may not be able even in his own heart to
-set out with clearness one single count in the
-indictment, yet a <i>general</i> sense of hard treatment,
-unfairness, and so forth, brings with it a great
-depression and feeling of desolation."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why was I orphaned in youth?" thought
-Quentin, bitterly, as this sense of unfairness and
-depression came over him; "why was I cast on
-the bounty, the mercy, of strangers? Why did
-I love Flora&mdash;why do we love each other so
-vainly, and why are we to be hopelessly
-separated?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All these questions remained unanswered; but
-the blinding rain was now coming down in sheets,
-and he felt the necessity of seeking shelter
-without delay.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-THE VAULT OF KILHENZIE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Through gloomy paths unknown,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paths which untrodden be,<br />
- From rock to rock I go<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Along the dashing sea.<br />
- And seek from busy woe,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With hurrying steps to flee;<br />
- But know, fair lady! know,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All this I bear for thee!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Ancient Poetry of Spain.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-On passing the long thicket or copse, known as
-the oakwood shaw, a number of fires burning on
-the heath beyond, and sheltered by the oaks from
-the west wind, at once indicated to Quentin that
-a gipsy camp was there. Indeed, he could see
-their figures flitting darkly to and fro around the
-red fires, on which they were heaping wood that
-smoked and sputtered in the wind and rain. He
-could also see the little tents or wigwams which
-were simply formed by half circular hoops stuck
-in the earth, and covered by canvas or tarpaulin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their miserable ponies were picquetted on the
-open heath, where, with drooping ears and
-comfortless aspect, they cropped the scanty herbage
-or chewed the whin bushes. Aware that these
-people were to be sedulously avoided, and that he
-must neither risk the loss of his portmanteau, or
-the money so generously lent him by the quartermaster,
-he clutched his walking-cane, turned hastily
-aside, and passing up a lane between hedge-rows,
-proceeded towards a farm-house, the occupants
-of which he feared might know him; but he was
-resolved to risk recognition, for the weather was
-becoming pitiless, and he had no alternative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A watchdog barked furiously and madly,
-straining on his chain and standing on his
-hind-legs, open-mouthed, as Quentin approached
-the house, which was involved in darkness and
-silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rain was dashing on the closed windows,
-washing the bleak walls and gorging the spouts
-and gutters, as he handled vigorously and
-impatiently a large brass knocker, with which the
-front door was furnished. After the third or
-fourth summons, a window was opened in the
-upper story, and by the light within the room
-Quentin could perceive the face and figure of the
-irate farmer, Gibbie Crossgrane, in a white
-nightcap and armed with a gun or musket, for Gibbie
-was one of the Rohallion volunteers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wha are ye, and what do ye seek at this
-time o' night?" he demanded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shelter&mdash;&mdash;" Quentin began.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shelter!" shouted the other; "my certie! do
-ye take this for a change-house, or an ale-wife's,
-that ye rap sae loud and lang?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have lost my way, Mr. Crossgrane&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then ye are the mair fule! But be off,"
-he added, cocking his piece; "I warrant ye are
-nae better than ye should be. This is the third
-time I hae been roused out o' my warm bed this
-blessed night by yon cursed tinkler bodies, that
-hae been fechting and roost-robbing about Kilhenzie
-a' day, so be off, carle, I say, or aiblins I'll
-shoot ye like a hoodiecraw, ye vagrant limmer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With these threatening words, which showed
-that he was determined to consider his visitor one
-of the gipsies, he slapped the butt of his gun
-significantly, and sharply closed the window ere
-poor Quentin could explain or reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Churlish wretch!" he sighed, as he turned
-away, and revenged himself by hurling a huge
-stone at the yelling watch-dog, which, like a
-cowed bully, instantly plunged into his kennel,
-where he snapped and snarled in spite and anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Aware of the futility of making any further
-attempt in this quarter, Quentin returned to the
-high road, when, passing the ruins of Kilhenzie,
-he conceived the idea of taking shelter in one of
-the remaining vaults, wherein he knew that
-Farmer Crossgrane was wont to store straw and
-hay for his cattle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the memory of John the Master's
-wraith, the spectre-hound of the holly thicket,
-and other dark stories somewhat impressed him
-at this hour, and awed him as he approached the
-ruined walls, he hastened to avail himself of their
-shelter, quickening his pace to a run as he passed
-the giant tree of Kilhenzie, on the branches of
-which, the quartermaster and dominie averred, so
-many men had taken their leave of a setting sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He went straight to an arched vault which he
-knew well, as it opened off the grass-grown
-barbican, and finding it, as he expected, full of dry
-straw, he burrowed among it for warmth, and
-placing his portmanteau under his head, strove to
-avoid all thoughts of the gloomy ruin in which
-he had a shelter, and to sleep, if possible, till
-dawn of day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old stronghold was a familiar place,
-endeared to him by the memory of many an evening
-ramble with Flora Warrender, with whom he had
-explored every turret, nook, and corner of it;
-and with the dominie, too, whose old legends of
-the fiery Kennedies of Kilhenzie&mdash;with whom he
-always loved to connect his pupil&mdash;were alike
-strange and stirring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, if I should indeed prove to be the Laird
-of Kilhenzie&mdash;I who lurk here like a beggar
-to-night!" said Quentin, and then the quaint figure
-of his tutor the dominie, with his long ribbed
-galligaskins drawn over the knees of his corduroy
-breeches, came vividly before him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thought of the stately Lady Eglinton, who
-had always ridiculed this ideal descent, and of her
-daughters, but chiefly his old playmate, the gentle
-Lady Mary, and wondered whether they would
-mourn when they heard of what had befallen him.
-But Quentin was fated never to see the fair
-Montgomerys more; for Lady Mary died in her youth,
-and Lady Lilias died far away in Switzerland,
-where she was interred in the same grave with
-her husband.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was now, after his recent rude repulse at
-the farmhouse, that he felt himself indeed a
-wanderer and an outcast!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wet and weary, he shuddered with cold; the
-loss of blood he had suffered rendered him weak
-and drowsy, and but for the brandy so thoughtfully
-given him by old John Girvan, he could not
-have proceeded so far on his aimless journey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He strove hard, with his nervous excitement,
-to sleep, and to find in oblivion a temporary
-release from thoughts of the happy days of past
-companionship and of love-making&mdash;days that
-would return no more&mdash;moments of delight and
-joy never to be lived over again! Flora's voice,
-as low and sweet as ever Annie Laurie's was;
-her clear and smiling eyes, her ringing laugh,
-so silvery and joyous, were all vividly haunting
-him, with the memory of that dear and&mdash;as it
-proved&mdash;<i>last</i> kiss in the ancient avenue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All these were to be foregone now, it too
-probably seemed for ever, and Cosmo, with his
-thousand chances, had the field to himself, nor
-would he fail to use them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Despite his strong and almost filial love for
-Lord and Lady Rohallion, Quentin felt in his
-heart that he hated the cold and haughty Master
-as the primary cause of all his misery, and the
-memory of the degrading blow, so ruthlessly dealt
-by his hand, burned like a plague-spot on his
-soul, if we may use such a simile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gradually, however, sleep stole upon him, but
-not repose, for he had strange shuddering fits,
-nervous startings, and perpetual dreams of vague
-and horrible things, which he could neither
-understand nor realize.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once he sprang up with a half-stifled cry,
-having imagined that the hand of a strange man had
-clutched his throat! So vivid was this idea,
-that some minutes elapsed before he fully
-recovered his self-possession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The wound on my head and the consequent
-loss of blood cause these unusual visions,"
-thought he, not unnaturally. "Oh, that I could
-but sleep&mdash;sleep soundly, and forget everything
-for a little time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rain and the wind had ceased now, and he
-heard only the cawing of the rooks in the echoing
-ruin. He could see the morning star shining
-with diamond-like brilliance, but coldly and palely
-through a loophole of the vault, and with a sigh
-of impatience for the coming day he was
-composing himself once more to sleep, when suddenly
-his hand came in contact with the fingers of
-another, protruding from the straw near
-him&mdash;the straw on which he was lying!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His first emotion was terror at being there
-with some person unknown, without other weapon
-than a walking-cane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His next thought was flight from this silent
-companion, whom he addressed thrice without
-receiving other reply than the echo of his own
-voice reverberating in the vault.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It had been no dream; a hand must indeed
-have been on his throat&mdash;a hand that if he stirred
-or breathed might clutch him again; but whose
-hand?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prepared to make a most desperate resistance,
-he listened, but heard only the beating of his
-heart, and the drip, drip, dripping of moisture
-from the ivy leaves without, or the occasional
-rustle of the straw within the vault. Fearfully
-he put forth his hand to search again, for a streak
-of dim light was glimmering through a loophole,
-and again his hand came in contact with the
-other. Cold, rigid, motionless, it was, he knew,
-with a thrill of horror, the hand of a corpse!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With an irrepressible and shuddering cry,
-Quentin sprang up, and as he did so he could now
-see, half-hidden amid the straw on which he had
-slept, and literally beneath him, the dead body of
-a man&mdash;the features white, pale, and pinched;
-the hands half-upraised, as if he had died in the
-act of resistance or in agony. A bunch of wooden
-ladles, porridge spurtles, and horn spoons that
-lay near, all covered with blood, showed that he
-was a gipsy, who had been slain in one of the
-scuffles which were of frequent occurrence
-between adverse tribes of those lawless wanderers,
-and that he had been concealed in the vault of
-Kilhenzie, or had crawled there to die. Quentin
-conceived the former to be the most probable
-cause for the body being there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All that the foregoing paragraph has embraced
-Quentin's eye and mind took in with the rapidity
-of a flash of lightning, and snatching his
-portmanteau, he sprang out of the vault, rushed down
-the slope on which the old castle stands, and
-shivering with disgust, affright, and the cold air
-of the damp morning, found himself again on the
-highway that led to Maybole.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The birds were singing and twittering merrily
-in the green hedgerows and among the dew-dripping
-trees, as the August day came in. Already
-the roads were almost dry, and as a
-blue-bonneted ploughboy passed with a pair of huge
-Clydesdale horses afield, whistling gaily, Quentin
-shrunk behind a hedge, for his clothes, damped by
-the rain over-night, were nowise improved in
-aspect by the bed he had selected; and now on
-examining them, he perceived to his dismay and
-repugnance that they exhibited several spots of
-blood, and his hands wore the same sanguine hue.
-Whether these ominous marks had come from his
-own veins or from those of the corpse near which
-he had so unpleasantly lain, Quentin knew not, but
-in great haste he sought a runnel that gurgled
-by the wayside, and there with the aid of a
-handkerchief he removed the stains with as much
-dispatch and care as if they had been veritable signs
-of guilt and shame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that blood gouts had been found
-in the gipsy bivouac, and Farmer Crossgrane had
-mentioned incidentally that the vagrants had been
-fighting. They were notorious for the free and
-reckless use of their knives and daggers, so
-doubtless, the body lying in Kilhenzie was the
-result of a recent affray. Quentin now discovered
-that he had lost his walking-cane, and that in his
-flight from the ruin he had left it in the vault
-beside the dead man. He regretted this, as the
-cane was a present from Lord Rohallion, and had
-his initials graven on its silver head; but he
-could not overcome his repugnance sufficiently to
-face again his ghastly bedfellow, or to return, and
-so hastened from the vicinity of the old castle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had not, however, proceeded two miles or
-so, before the alarming idea occurred to him, that
-this cane, if found beside the dead man, might
-serve to implicate him in the affair; and through
-the medium of his active fancy he saw a long
-train of circumstantial evidence adduced against
-him, and in his ruin, disgrace, it might be death,
-a triumph given to Cosmo Crawford which even
-he could not exult in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These terrible reflections gave the additional
-impulse of fear to urge him on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The morning was sunny, breezy, and lovely;
-the sky a pure deep blue, and without a cloud;
-the light white mists were rising from the shady
-glens and haughs where the wimpling burns ran
-through the leafy copse or under the long
-yellow broom, when from an eminence Quentin
-took his last farewell of scenery that was
-endeared to him by all his recollections of
-childhood and youth, and heavy, heavy grew his heart
-as he did so. He could see the glorious Firth of
-Clyde opening in the distance, and all the bold
-and beautiful shore of Carrick stretching from
-the high Black Vault of Dunure away towards
-the bluff and castle of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dunduff and Carrick's brown hill had mist
-yet resting on their summits, and afar off, paling
-away to greyish blue, was Ailsa Craig, rising like
-a cloud from the water&mdash;the white canvas of
-many a ship, homeward-bound or outward-bound,
-merchantman, privateer and letter-of-marque, like
-sea birds floating on the bosom of the widening
-river. On the other side he saw the rich
-undulations that look down on the vast and fertile
-plains of Kyle and Cunninghame, and in the
-middle distance Maybole, amid the golden
-morning haze, the quaint little capital of Carrick, with
-its baronial tower and Tolbooth spire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There he considered himself as certain of being
-recognised by some of the vintners, ostlers, or by
-Pate, the town piper, for the place had been a
-favourite turning point with him and Flora
-Warrender in their evening rides; and he also knew
-that if he were <i>not</i> recognised, the smallness of his
-portmanteau suggested that the estimate which
-might be formed of him by Boniface, by waiters
-and others, would not be very high.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He therefore resolved to avoid that ancient
-Burgh-of-Barony altogether, and the carrier for
-Ayr coming up at that moment, he struck a
-bargain with him for conveyance thither.
-Remembering how Roderick Random and other great
-men had travelled by this humble mode of
-locomotion, he gladly took his seat by the side of the
-driver, a lively and cheerful fellow, who knew all
-the cottars and girls on the road, and who
-whistled or sang incessantly varying marches,
-rants, and reels, with Burns' songs, every one of
-which he knew by heart&mdash;and he knew Burns
-too, having, as he boasted, "flitted the poet from
-Irvine to Mossgiel in '84&mdash;just four-and-twenty
-years sinsyne."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He blithely shared his humble breakfast of
-sour milk in a luggie, barley meal bannock and
-Dunlop cheese, with our hero, whose spirits seemed
-to rise as the morning sun soared into the cloudless
-sky, and he seemed to feel now the necessity
-of ceasing to mope, of becoming the maker of his
-own fate, the arbiter of his own destiny, and
-he determined, if possible, to "wrestle with the
-dark angel of adversity till she brightened and
-blessed him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When left to himself, however, lulled by the
-monotonous rumble of the waggon wheels, he lay
-back among the carrier's bales, and gave himself
-up to day-dreams and his old trade of airy
-castle-building.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had forty guineas in his pocket, he was
-sound wind and limb, and had all the world
-before him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All tinted in rosy and golden colours, he saw
-the future scenes in which he was to figure&mdash;kings
-being at times but accessories and "supers"
-of the grouping. He held imaginary conversations
-with the great, the noble, and the wealthy;
-he was the hero of a hundred achievements, but
-whether on land, on sea, or in the air, he had not
-as yet the most remote idea; but they all tended
-to one point, for his fancies, ambitions, and hopes
-seemed, not unnaturally, to revolve in an orbit,
-of which Flora Warrender and Lady Rohallion&mdash;for
-he dearly loved her too&mdash;were the combined
-centre of attraction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Full of himself and of the little world of fancy
-he was weaving, he cared not where he went or
-how the time passed, for he was just at that
-delightful and buoyant period of life when novels
-and tales of adventure fill the mind with
-sentiments and imageries that seem quite <i>realities</i>;
-thus, he felt assured that like some of the
-countless heroes, whose career he had studied at times
-in history but much oftener in fiction, he was
-destined for a very remarkable and brilliant future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Travelling in the corner of a carrier's waggon,
-after sharing the proprietor's sour milk and
-home-baked bannocks, did not look very like it; but
-was not this simply <i>the beginning of the end?</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When again they met, how much would he have
-to tell Flora, commencing with the very first night
-of his departure, and that horrible adventure in
-the vault of Kilhenzie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But how if she married the Master, with his
-sneering smile and cat-like eyes?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This fear chilled him certainly; but he felt
-trustful. Hope inspires fresh love as love
-inspires hope, for they must grow and flourish
-together; and so on and on he dreamed, until a
-sudden jolt of the waggon roughly roused him,
-and he found that it was just crossing "the auld
-brig o' Ayr," the four strong and lofty arches of
-which first spanned the stream when Alexander
-II. was king.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><br />
-THE QUEEN ANNE'S HEAD.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-"Well, suppose life be a desert? There are halting-places
-and shades, and refreshing waters; let us profit by them for
-to-day. We know that we must march on when to-morrow
-comes, and tramp on our destiny onward."&mdash;THACKERAY.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Having amply satisfied the worthy carrier,
-Quentin quitted the waggon, and proceeded through
-the bustling, but then narrow, unpaved, and
-ill-lighted streets of Ayr, towards one of the
-principal inns, the Queen Anne's Head, the only
-ONe in the town with which he was familiar, as
-Lord Rohallion's carriage occasionally stopped there.
-It was a large, rambling, old-fashioned house,
-with a galleried court, ample stabling, low ceiled
-rooms; with dark oak panels, heavy dormant
-beams, and stone fire-places; wooden balconies
-projecting over stone piazzas, tall gables, and
-turret-like turnpike stairs; and a mouldered
-escutcheon over the entrance door showed that in
-palmier days it had been the town mansion of
-some steel-coated lesser baron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hotels were still unknown in the three bailiwicks
-of Carrick, Kyle, and Cunninghame; thus in
-the yard behind the Queen Anne's Head, the
-stage coach, his majesty's mail (whose scarlet-coated
-guard bore pistols, and a blunderbuss that
-might have frightened Bonaparte), the carrier's
-waggon, the farmer's gig, and the lumbering,
-old-fashioned coaches of my Lord Rohallion, or the
-Earls of Cassilis and Eglinton, with their wooden
-springs and stately hammercloths, might all be seen
-standing side by side. Though war rendered the
-continent a sealed book to the English, Sir Walter
-Scott's poems and novels had not as yet opened
-up all Scotland to the tourists of Europe and
-Cockneydom. The kingdom of the Jameses could
-not be "done" then as now, by Brown, Jones,
-and Robinson, with knapsack on back (with
-Black's Guide and Bradshaw's Table, tartan
-peg-tops and paper collars), in a fortnight by rail and
-steam; hence a traveller on foot, and portmanteau
-in hand, was apt to be considered in the rural
-districts as an English pedlar or worse. Indeed,
-Scotland and England were then very little changed
-from what they had been in the days of William
-and Mary, and but for worthy old James Watt
-they might have been so <i>still</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'll be extravagant&mdash;I'll have a jovial dinner
-and a glass of wine," thought Quentin, who,
-though pale and weary, had the appetite of a
-young hawk, notwithstanding all his doubts and
-troubles. "Which way?" he inquired of a surly-looking
-waiter, who stood at the inn door, with a
-towel over his arm; but this official, instead of
-replying, very leisurely surveyed Quentin from
-head to foot, and then glanced superciliously at
-his portmanteau.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His wetting over night, his repose among the
-straw, and the subsequent journey among the
-carrier's bales and butter firkins had not improved his
-external appearance. Quentin felt aware of this,
-and reiterated angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which way&mdash;did you not hear me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You've taen the wrang gate, my friend, I'm
-thinking," replied the waiter, shaking his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wrong way! What do you mean, fellow?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nae mair a fellow than yoursel'," said the
-waiter, saucily. "The 'Blue Bell,' doon the next
-wynd, or the 'Souter Johnnie,' opposite the
-Tolbooth, will better suit ye than the 'Anne's
-Head.' They are famous resorts for packmen and
-dustifute bodies."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean to remain where I am. Show me to a
-bedroom, and order dinner for me in the dining-room,"
-said Quentin, flushing up with sudden passion.
-"The best in the house, and lose no time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some military gentlemen are in the best
-chamber," urged the waiter, whom this manner
-did not fail to impress, as he lingered with his
-hand on the lock of a door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If the devil himself were there, what is it to
-me? Do as I order, or I will kick you into the
-street!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The waiter, who, as tourists and idle travellers
-were then unknown in Ayr, was utterly at a loss
-to make out the character of this new guest, bowed
-and ushered him into a bedroom, after which, he
-hastened away, no doubt to report upon the
-dubious kind of occupant, who had almost forced
-his way into No. 20.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the contents of Quentin's portmanteau
-were limited, he speedily made such an improvement
-in his toilet, that when he came forth he received
-a very gracious bow from Boniface, who had been
-hovering about the corridor on the watch; and he
-was ushered into the principal dining-room of the
-establishment, a long and rather low-roofed
-apartment, having several massive tables and
-oval-backed old-fashioned chairs, a gigantic sideboard,
-within the brass rail of which stood three upright
-knife and spoon cases, several plated tankards,
-salvers, and branch candlesticks of quaint and
-antique form.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The room was decorated with prints of Nelson's
-victories, the Siege of Gibraltar, the Battle
-of Alexandria, and other recent glories of our
-arms by sea and land; while over the mantel-piece
-was one of Gillray's gaudily-coloured political
-caricatures, which were then so much in
-vogue&mdash;for he was the H.B. and <i>Punch</i> of the
-Regency.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two officers in undress uniform, with blue
-facings (their swords, sashes, and caps lying on
-the table beside them) were lounging over some
-brandy and water, and laughing at Gillray's, not
-over-delicate print, while Quentin retired to a
-remote corner of the room, and smarting under the
-waiter's impertinence, now felt more lonely and
-depressed than he had done since leaving home.
-He could remember that his last reception in that
-very house had been so different, when, in Lady
-Rohallion's carriage, he and Flora Warrender had
-driven up to the door and ordered luncheon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of the military guests was a tall, weather-beaten,
-soldier-like man, about thirty-five years of
-age, a lieutenant apparently by the bullion of his
-epaulettes; the other was slender, fair-haired, and
-rather plainly featured, and proved to be the
-ensign of his recruiting party, which was then
-beating up at Ayr. As the churlish waiter passed
-them after putting some wine before Quentin, the
-lieutenant asked, in a low voice&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is <i>he</i>?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who, sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That young fellow in the corner."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Too proud for a recruit&mdash;an officer, I think,"
-said the waiter, with a grin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A sheriff's officer?&mdash;that boy, do you mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, sir&mdash;in the army," whispered the waiter,
-with a still more impertinent grin, and retired
-before Quentin could hurl the decanter at his
-head, which he felt very much inclined to do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was seriously offended, but affected to look
-out of the window, while the two subalterns,
-turning their backs on him, resumed their
-conversation as if he had not been present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And so, Pimple," said the senior, "when you
-proposed for the Bailie's daughter you were deep
-in love&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;very."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And in debt and drink, too?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was in love, I tell you," said the ensign,
-angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For the <i>twenty-fifth</i> time, eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not exactly, Monkton; but you are aware
-that fathers have flinty hearts, and seldom see
-with&mdash;with&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With what&mdash;out with it, old fellow.",
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Their charming daughters' eyes," sighed the
-ensign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, or I should have been seen to advantage
-long ago. But an ensign under orders for
-foreign service is not the most eligible of sons-in-law."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True&mdash;but in <i>my</i> ease, at least," continued the
-ensign, who was quite serious, while his senior
-officer was purple with suppressed laughter, "in
-my case, as a young gentleman possessed of
-moderate fortune, moderate accomplishments&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And moderate virtue&mdash;eh, Pimple?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are very impertinent, Monkton,"
-remonstrated the other, upbraidingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But truthful, my dear boy, very truthful,"
-said the quizzing lieutenant, for half the
-conversation was mere "barrack-room chaff," to
-use a phrase then unknown; "and if old
-Squaretoes&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who do you mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mean? why this rich old flax-spinner, the
-father of your fair one. If he should come down
-handsomely, we fellows of the 25th would
-consider you quite as our factor&mdash;eh, Pimple?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On hearing this number, which was so familiar
-to his ear, Quentin Kennedy turned to observe the
-speakers more particularly, when a third officer,
-a very handsome man, about forty years of age,
-with a nut-brown cheek, a rollicking blue eye,
-and a hearty laugh, a square, well-built form,
-clad in full regimentals, scarlet-faced and lapelled
-with green and gold to the waist, and wearing
-large loose epaulettes, burst into the room, noisily
-and without ceremony. As he did so, he
-threw his arms round a very pretty chambermaid,
-who was tripping past with something from the
-sideboard, and kissing the girl, who was half
-pleased and half scared, he shouted in a
-tragi-comic manner, a passage from the <i>Merchant's
-Wife</i>, a now forgotten play:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Woman thou stol'st my heart&mdash;just now thou stol'st it,<br />
- A cannon-bullet might have kissed my lips<br />
- And left me as much life!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"If the sour-visaged landlord catches you
-kissing any of his squaws"&mdash;&mdash;suggested the lieutenant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is a custom we learned in the Dutch service,"
-replied the new comer, laughingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you got the route for to-morrow,
-Warriston?" asked the lieutenant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right," said the other, flourishing an
-oblong official paper; "it was brought by an
-orderly dragoon&mdash;here it is. His majesty's will
-and pleasure, &amp;c., to civil (query, uncivil)
-magistrates and others and so forth, to provide billets
-for the noisy, carriages for the drunken, and
-handcuffs for the disorderly, of three officers, three
-sergeants, and seventy rank and file, proceeding
-by Muirkirk and Kirknewton to Edinburgh&mdash;a
-seventy miles' march."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ugh!" groaned the lieutenant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So, Pimple, your love affair must be off like
-ourselves, by beat of drum to-morrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ensign heaved a kind of mock sigh, and
-raised his white eyebrows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, waiter, quick with dinner&mdash;the best in
-larder and cellar," said the captain to that
-churlish attendant, who laid a knife and fork for
-Quentin at the extreme end of the long table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who is the solitary or exclusive person that
-is to be carved for there, half a mile off?" asked
-the captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The waiter glanced towards Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nonsense," said the Captain of the 94th,
-"lay his cover with ours&mdash;absurd to dine alone
-at the end of this devilish long table. You'll join
-us, eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With pleasure," said Quentin, bowing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A glass of wine with you. What are you
-drinking?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sherry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They filled their glasses, bowed, and drank,
-after which Quentin came forward and joined
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'm Dick Warriston, 94th. My friends,
-Mr. Monkton and Mr. Boyle, 25th."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mr. Kennedy," said Quentin, introducing
-himself, with a heightened colour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin soon learned from their conversation
-that the captain had been recruiting for the 94th,
-and the other two officers for the 25th, in
-Ayrshire, with considerable success; that they had
-obtained a sufficient number of men, and were
-under orders to march for the head-quarters of
-their respective corps by daybreak on the
-morrow. He also heard, incidentally, some of the
-little secrets of recruiting, and the tricks played
-by knowing sergeants to trepan men into paying
-smart-money, and so forth; that the lieutenant
-had been "rowed" with a threat of being
-summoned to head-quarters for enlisting men beneath
-the proper height, his sergeant having supplied
-them with false heels, five feet seven being the
-minimum for "the Borderers;" and next, that he
-had narrowly escaped a court-martial for sending
-some half-dozen O'Neils and O'Donnels (all Irish)
-to the regiment, as MacNeils and MacDonnels
-from the Western Isles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The three officers, in their jollity, thoughtlessness,
-laughter, and general lightness of heart,
-formed a strong contrast to poor Quentin's
-dejection of spirit. He envied them, and asked of
-himself why was he not happy and merry too&mdash;why
-was he not one of them?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Warriston, the senior, had begun life
-as a subaltern in General Sir Ralph Dundas's
-Regiment of the Scots-Dutch, as they were
-named&mdash;the famous old Scots brigade of six
-battalions, which served their High Mightinesses
-the States of Holland from the days of James VI. to
-those of the French Revolution&mdash;in all the
-bloody wars of two centuries, bearing themselves
-with honour and never losing a standard, though
-they had captured many from every army in
-Europe. They volunteered, as the 94th Foot,
-into the British service about the end of the last
-century, and came back to Scotland clad in the
-old Dutch yellow uniform; hence Warriston's
-stories and memories were all of Holland and
-Flanders, Prussia and Austria, and many a strange
-anecdote he had to tell at times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Desirous of showing the suspicious landlord and
-impertinent waiter how <i>other</i> persons viewed
-him, Quentin ordered another bottle of wine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The deuce!" he heard the captain whisper
-to Monkton; "we can't permit this mere boy to
-treat us to wine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Two</i> bottles, and be sharp, waiter," said
-Quentin, whose pride the well-meaning officer
-had piqued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is a regular trump," said Monkton, adjusting
-his napkin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A gentleman&mdash;a phrase I prefer," added
-Warriston in the same undertone, as he proceeded to
-slice down a gallant capon; for he could perceive
-at once, by Quentin's bearing at the dinner-table&mdash;the
-truest and best test&mdash;that he knew all its
-etiquette and had been used to good society. As
-the wine circulated and reserve thawed (not that
-there was much of it, certainly, in the present
-quartet) Quentin asked Monkton if he remembered
-an officer named Girvan in his corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Girvan&mdash;Girvan&mdash;remember him?&mdash;yes; an
-old quartermaster&mdash;rose from the ranks, didn't he?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He left us on a half-pay commission in the
-year I joined, during Lord Rohallion's
-lieutenant-colonelcy. (By-the-bye, his lordship lives
-somewhere hereabout; should leave our cards for him,
-but have no time.) Girvan was a queer old fellow,
-who always wore a yellow wig&mdash;do you know him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Intimately. I have known him from my
-childhood," said Quentin, his eyes sparkling and
-heart swelling with pleasure, that he could speak
-of some one at home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Any relation of yours?" asked Monkton;
-and so weak is human nature that Quentin
-blushed that any one should think he was so, and
-then blushed deeper still that he was ashamed of
-his true and sterling old friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps he is your father?" suggested the
-ensign, mischievously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sir, I said my name is Kennedy; my father was
-a captain of the Scots Brigade in the French service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah&mdash;indeed!" said Warriston, becoming suddenly
-interested; "is he still alive?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Alas, sir, no!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Killed in action, likely?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was drowned at sea, after an engagement
-with a French ship off the mouth of the Clyde."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And where have you come from, that you
-travel thus alone?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot say."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then where are you going to?" asked the
-ensign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know," replied Quentin, sadly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can't say and don't know!" said the captain
-of the Scots Brigade; "then my advice would
-be to stay where you are."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is not possible."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are an odd fellow&mdash;quite an enigma,"
-said Monkton, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps I am," replied poor Quentin, with a
-sickly smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you know, my young friend, that I have
-been observing you closely for some time (pardon
-me saying so), but with something of friendly
-interest, and I perceive an air of dejection about
-you that shows there is something wrong&mdash;a screw
-loose somewhere," said Captain Warriston, kindly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wrong?" repeated Quentin, flushing, and in
-doubt how to take the remark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I have seen so much of the world that
-I can read a man's face like an open book."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the reading of mine&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is satisfactory; but there is something in
-your eyes that tells me you are in a scrape
-somehow&mdash;at home, perhaps?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Home!" exclaimed Quentin, in a voice that
-trembled, for the wine was affecting him; "I
-have <i>none</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The three officers glanced at each other, and
-the fair-haired ensign's white eyebrows went up
-rather superciliously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I find that I must talk with you, my young
-friend," said Warriston&mdash;"will you have a cigar?"
-he added, offering his case after the cloth was
-removed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thank you&mdash;no; I am not a smoker."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fact, Quentin had never seen the soothing
-"weed" in such a form, until his foe, the
-Master, came to Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Waiter, bring candles&mdash;another bottle, and
-then be off; these decanters are empty&mdash;fill again;
-le Roi est mort&mdash;vive le Roi!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In short, Mr. Kennedy, you have run from
-college or home, I fear," said Monkton; "what
-have you been about&mdash;making love to some of
-your lady-mother's maids, and got into a double
-scrape, or what? See how he flushes&mdash;there has
-been some love in the case, at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Were you never in love?" asked Quentin,
-who certainly did redden, but with annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who&mdash;I&mdash;me?&mdash;what the devil&mdash;in love!"
-and the bulky lieutenant lay back in his chair and
-fairly laughed himself crimson, either at the idea
-or the simplicity of the question. "I have long
-since learned that there is nothing so variable in
-the world as woman's temper."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Horse Guards excepted," said Warriston;
-"the great nobs there never know their own
-minds for three days consecutively; witness all
-the vacillation about who is to command the
-Spanish expedition."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then, Mr. Pimple," began Quentin, "have
-you ever&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mr. Kennedy," said the ensign, angrily, "I'll
-have you to know, sir, that my name is
-Boyle&mdash;Ensign Patrick Boyle, at your service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So it is," said the lieutenant, choking with
-laughter, on perceiving that Quentin looked quite
-bewildered; "but we call him Pimple at the mess
-for being only five feet and an inch or so. He
-is not big enough to be a Boyle, though he is one
-of a tall Ayrshire stock. Is not it so, Pat, old
-boy? Perhaps you are some relation of the
-famous chemist?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which&mdash;who?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean Robert Boyle was seventh son of the
-Earl of Cork, and became <i>father</i> of chemistry.
-Now, don't think of calling me out, Pat, for, 'pon
-my soul, I won't go. The 25th couldn't do
-without us. You must know, Warriston, that Pimple
-was in the Royals before he joined us; but he
-had always a fancy for the Borderers. You used
-to pass yourself, in mufti, as a 25th man; didn't
-you, Pimple?&mdash;long before you had the honour
-to admire that blessed number on your own
-buttons&mdash;eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though hearty, hospitable, and jovial, to
-Quentin it seemed that Monkton had an irrepressible
-desire to quiz the ensign, even to rudeness,
-and the latter took it all good-naturedly enough
-till the fumes of the wine mounted into his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But, to return to what we were talking of,"
-said Warriston, earnestly and kindly. "Can I
-advise you in any way, my friend? Are you
-already a prodigal, who has neither a herd of
-promising pigs, nor the husks wherewith to feed
-them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse me entering much into my own affairs.
-My father, I have told you, is dead. I have no
-mother&mdash;no friends&mdash;to counsel me," he continued,
-in a tremulous voice, "and I know not whether
-to join the service or drown myself in the nearest
-river."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Ayr is not very deep," said Monkton,
-despite a deprecatory glance from his senior;
-"why don't you say hang yourself?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, then, or hang myself," said Quentin,
-bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the alternative is joining the service?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You pay his Majesty and his uniform a high
-compliment," said Warriston, with a hearty laugh,
-in which Quentin, seeing the ungraciousness of
-his remark, was fain to join; "but as for entering
-the ranks, you must not think of that. Why
-not do as I did, and many better men have done&mdash;join
-some regiment of Cavalry or Infantry, as a
-gentleman volunteer?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A new light seemed to break upon Quentin
-with these words&mdash;a new hope and spirit flashed
-up in his heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How, sir," he asked, "how, sir? Explain to
-me, pray."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Zounds, man! it is very simple. A letter of
-recommendation to the officer commanding any
-regiment now under orders for the seat of war,
-a few pounds in your pocket to pay your way till
-under canvas or before the enemy, are all that is
-necessary."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks to a dear friend, I have money enough
-and to spare; but the letter&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have too many volunteers already with
-both battalions of the Scots Brigade," said
-Warriston, reflectively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But you can give him a letter to our
-commanding officer," interposed Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why not give him one yourself, Dick?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Old Middleton would never believe in any
-person who was warmly recommended for the
-first vacant commission by such a fellow as I."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Egad, you are perhaps right," said
-Warriston, laughing; "get me ink and paper,
-Pimple&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Boyle," said the ensign, sullenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Beg pardon, Boyle, I mean&mdash;thanks. Here
-goes for all the virtues that were ever recorded on
-a rich man's tombstone." With great readiness
-Captain Warriston wrote a letter of introduction
-and recommendation for Quentin to the officer
-commanding the 25th Foot, in which he gave
-him as many good qualities as the sheet of paper
-could contain, and wrote of him as warmly as if
-he had known him from boyhood. It was
-unanimously approved of by all present&mdash;by none
-more than Quentin himself, and after it was duly
-scaled, he pocketed it as carefully as ever Gil
-Blas did his patent of nobility.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-<br /><br />
-NEW FRIENDS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Why unite to banish care?<br />
- Let him come our joys to share;<br />
- Doubly blest our cup shall flow<br />
- When it soothes a brother's woe;<br />
- 'Twas for this the powers divine<br />
- Crowned our board with generous wine."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;TANNAHILL.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"The first skirmish, perhaps, and the first general
-action certainly, will see you an officer; you shall
-be one yet, my boy, and a gallant one, I hope,"
-said Warriston, shaking Quentin's hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The weird sisters' prophecy was not more
-grateful to the ears of the Scottish usurper than
-these words were to Quentin Kennedy; but he
-asked,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If I should be disabled before appointment?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, the devil! don't think of that; you
-would get only a private soldier's pension."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is not very encouraging."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis better for the volunteer to be shot
-outright than merely mutilated. But remember,
-that many of our best officers have joined the
-army as simple volunteers. There was Lord
-Heathfield, the gallant defender of Gibraltar,
-began life as a volunteer with the 23rd at
-Edinburgh; and one of our Highland regiments, the
-71st, I think, had as many as fifteen such cadets
-serving in its ranks during the American war,
-and splendid officers they have all become. I did
-not serve in America, for our corps was then in
-the Dutch service. The Prussian army under
-old Frederick was the Paradise of such volunteers,
-and I know one instance in which a soldier of my
-father's regiment was made a general in one year,
-by Frederick's mere caprice."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A general!" exclaimed Monkton, who was
-somewhat soured by the slowness of his promotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was at the battle before Prague, and while
-my father, John Warriston of that ilk, then a very
-young man, commanded the senior battalion of
-the Prussian Foot Guards, that Marshal Daun
-forced Frederick to raise the siege and retire.
-As the Prussians fell back, their left wing became
-confused by the fury of the Austrian advance.
-Frederick's aides-de-camp were all killed, and he
-was compelled to gallop about, giving his own
-orders, accompanied by a single orderly, Strutzki,
-the old Putkammer Hussar, in whose arms he died
-thirty years after. The ground was rough and
-his horse was weary, so it stumbled suddenly and
-threw him at a place where the field was covered
-by the killed and wounded of my father's battalion,
-which was then retreating, but in good
-order. As Frederick gathered himself up, a
-soldier who lay near him wounded, exclaimed,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Sire, sire, get a brigade of guns into position
-on yonder eminence, or it is all up with your
-left wing!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'How so, fellow?' asked the king, whose
-temper was no way improved by his tumble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Because there is an ambuscade in the valley
-beyond it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I have twice tried to make a stand, comrade.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Try a third time, Father Frederick.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A third chance is ever the lucky one.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Good; I'll throw forward the Putkammer
-Hussars, and let the brigade of Seydlitz support
-them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'But try the effect of a few round shot in the
-defile,' persisted the wounded man. 'A devil of a
-day this for us, Father Frederick! Macchiavelli, in
-his 'Art of War,' declares the invention of
-gun-powder a mere matter of smoke, not to be deemed
-of the smallest importance. Ach, Gott! I wish he
-was here before Prague with this Austrian bullet
-in the calf of his leg.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'What, my friend, you are a reader as well as
-a soldier?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes, sire, I have had the honour to read all
-the works of your majesty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A man of sense!" said Frederick, taking a
-pinch of rappee; 'your name?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Peter Schreutzer, of Colonel Warriston's
-battalion of the Guards.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Frederick drew from one of his fingers a ring
-of small value (he was not a man given to trinkets
-or adornment), and gave it to the soldier, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'If you escape this field of Prague, bring this
-ring to me yourself, comrade Peter.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mounting his horse, he galloped after his
-retreating army, and overtaking a few pieces of
-artillery he posted them on the height indicated
-by Schreutzer, and opened fire on the wooded
-defile&mdash;a measure which dislodged a great
-ambuscade of Marshal Daun's infantry, and saved from
-destruction the Prussian left wing, the retreat of
-which was nobly covered by the Warriston
-battalion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Three months after this, when Frederick was
-seated in his tent, surrounded by his staff and
-dictating orders, a private of the Guards limped
-in, supported by a stick, and kneeling presented
-him with a ring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Ach, Gott, what is this?' said Frederick;
-'Oho, 'tis my student of Macchiavelli; well,
-comrade, I followed your advice and saved my left
-wing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Thank God, who inspired me with the
-idea!' said Schreutzer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'For that day's work I name you a captain
-in the Line,' exclaimed the king.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At Rosbach, where in the same year
-Frederick defeated the French, Peter gained his
-majority in the morning and his lieutenant-colonelcy
-in the evening. Then came the affair of Dresden,
-where the advice given by him at a council of war
-was so sound and skilful that he was appointed
-major-general. What think you of that, my
-young volunteer&mdash;in one year to have the private's
-shoulder-knot replaced by the aiguilette of
-a general officer?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was talent, but strangely favoured by
-kingly caprice," said Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Schreutzer succeeded my father in command
-of the Guards, when he fell under Frederick's
-displeasure and quitted the Prussian service in
-disgust. Remind me on the march to-morrow to
-tell you how that came about, for it is rather a
-good story."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now to bed," said Monkton, who had
-imbibed a considerable quantity of wine; "at
-last we may put our 'beating orders' in the fire,
-for march is the word!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What are they?" asked Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Warrants to raise men by beat of drum,"
-explained the captain, politely. "They are
-originally signed by the royal hand, but copies are
-taken from them, and signed by the secretary of
-state for war, and without them no officer can
-beat a recruiting drum anywhere. You have
-raised nearly a hundred men here, Dick, and must
-have made something of it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Much need," grumbled the lieutenant, making
-ineffectual attempts to buckle on his sword, as if
-he was going to bed with it. "I am Dick
-Monkton, of Monkton in Lothian, of course;
-but in name only, for those paternal acres are so
-covered by original sin in the shape of
-mortgages that never a penny comes to me; so I
-am compelled to live and be jolly on six
-shillings and sixpence per diem, less the infernal
-income-tax; and being a fellow of a generous
-disposition, I am always losing my heart and my
-money among the fair sex."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good night, Mr. Kennedy," said Captain
-Warriston; "if you are still in the same mood of
-mind to-morrow, you may turn my letter to some
-account. The drum will beat at daybreak."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Put your pride in a knapsack or wherever else
-it can be conveniently carried, my boy," said
-Monkton, making a fearful lurch over a chair;
-"volunteer and come with us to fight Nap and
-his Frenchmen." Then he began to sing, tipsily:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "'Since some have from ditches<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And coarse leather breeches<br />
- Been raised to be rulers and wallowed in riches,<br />
- Prythee, Dame Fortune, come down from thy wheel;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For if the gipsies don't lie<br />
- I shall be a general at least ere I die!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, damme, but we are not in the Prussian
-service, like that old cock, Peter Shooter, or
-what's his name?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Monkton was becoming seriously tipsy, so
-Quentin, on receiving a warning glance from
-Captain Warriston, took his candle and retired to
-No. 20 for the night, feeling sensibly that he had
-imbibed more wine than he was wont to do after
-supper at Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could not sleep, however, till the night was
-far advanced, and the knowledge that drum was to
-beat by daybreak kept him nervously wakeful,
-lest he might not hear it, and perhaps be left
-behind. The drum was to beat, and <i>for him</i>!
-There was a strange charm in the idea: it seemed
-to realize somewhat of his old day-dreams and
-romantic aspirations. Already he felt himself a
-soldier, and bound for service and adventure!
-How much would he have to relate when he wrote
-to the good old quartermaster, announcing that he
-was off to join the army, and <i>his own</i> old corps,
-the 25th, whose memory he so treasured, though
-his name, alas! was long since forgotten in its
-ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And there was Flora&mdash;dear, loving, gentle
-Flora. When was he to write to her, and through
-what channel? Ah, if he could calculate on
-promotion like that of Peter Schreutzer! He had
-only been absent from Flora a night and a day,
-just four-and-twenty hours, and already weeks
-seemed to have elapsed, (what would months&mdash;what
-would years seem?) while the arrival of Cosmo
-and long prior events seemed to have happened
-but yesterday. Under these circumstances,
-severance frequently causes the same inverted ideas of
-time, that a sudden death or other great calamity
-occasion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the moment Quentin was dozing off to
-sleep, and to dream of past pleasures or of future
-triumphs (the ensign being long since in deep
-slumber on a sofa), he heard his two new friends
-parting in the corridor after having had one
-bottle more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I say, Warriston, old boy, see me to my
-door, and just shove me in&mdash;there's a good
-fellow&mdash;here it is&mdash;thanks," stammered Monkton;
-"may you not have been rash in giving such a
-fi&mdash;fi&mdash;fiery old Turk as Middleton of ours, a
-letter for&mdash;for&mdash;damme, a perfect
-stranger&mdash;perfect stranger?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all," he heard Warriston reply; "the
-lad has a bearing I like, and on his own good
-and unerring conduct as a gentleman and
-volunteer must depend his chances of ever wearing
-these honourable badges on his shoulders. (He
-shook his large gold epaulettes as he spoke.) One
-o'clock&mdash;in three hours the drum will beat!
-I hope we shall have a fine day; last night the
-rain fell as if old Noah had hove up his anchor
-again. Good-night, Monkton&mdash;sleep if you can."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-<br /><br />
-THE YOUNG VOLUNTEER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "When I was an infant, gossips would say<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I'd when older be a soldier;<br />
- Rattles and toys I'd throw them away,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unless a gun or sabre.<br />
- When a younker up I grew,<br />
- I saw one day a grand review,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Colours flying set me dying,<br />
- To embark in a life so new.<br />
- Roll drums merrily&mdash;march away!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Old Song.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin had been asleep&mdash;to him it seemed but
-five minutes, though two hours had elapsed&mdash;when
-he started as if he had received an electric shock.
-The warning drum was being beaten loudly and
-sharply under his window, and soon after followed
-the long roll, whose summons admits of no delay,
-even to the most weary soldier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half asleep and half refreshed, he sprang from
-bed; grey daylight was stealing faintly in, and
-all Ayr seemed yet a-bed, the shutters closed,
-the chimneys smokeless. The morning mist was
-curling in masses along the slopes of the uplands;
-the summits of the town steeples and the gothic
-tower of St. John were reddened by the first rays
-of the sun that was yet below the horizon, and the
-little drummer boy, as he paced slowly to and fro,
-in heavy marching order, with a black glazed
-knapsack strapped on his back, and a white canvas
-havresack slung crosswise over his pipeclayed
-sword-belt, seemed to be the only person abroad
-in the streets as yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rouse!" cried a voice, which Quentin knew
-to be that of Captain Warriston, who knocked
-sharply on the room door; "pack your traps,
-Kennedy, as quickly us you can. My man will
-put your portmanteau on the baggage-cart. A
-cup of hot coffee awaits you in the dining-room.
-Never march with an empty stomach, unless you
-can't help it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While dressing hurriedly, Quentin heard the
-worthy captain rousing his lieutenant, which
-seemed a process of some difficulty, and
-productive of considerable banter and vociferation.
-As for the ensign, he had never undressed or been
-in bed, so he was already awake, and accoutred
-with sword, sash, and gorget, and looked very pale
-and miserable as he swallowed his hot coffee in
-the twilight of the wainscoted dining-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The early morning air was chilly, and Quentin,
-but half awake, felt his teeth chattering as he
-issued into the street. The reflection flashed on
-his mind that it was not yet too late to retrace
-his steps, and alter his intentions. But why do
-so? asked reason. What other course was open
-to him? On this morning, with his new friends
-and patrons&mdash;particularly Warriston, for whom he
-had conceived a great friendship&mdash;he felt his
-position was very different from what it was
-yesterday, when, without views, objects, or a
-defined future, he awoke among Gibbie
-Crossgrane's straw in the vault of Kilhenzie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Already the soldiers of the recruiting-parties,
-with their various recruits, were falling in.
-There were three sergeants, three corporals, three
-privates, three drummers, and three fifers of the
-25th, the 90th (Lord Lynedoch's Greybreeks), and
-the 94th, with fifty-five recruits, all sturdy rustics,
-with cockades of tricoloured ribbon streaming
-from their bonnets, for that most hideous of
-headdresses, the round hat, was almost unknown then
-among the peasantry of Scotland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All seemed sleepy, heavy-eyed, and were yawning
-drowsily, as they shouldered against each other,
-and shuffled awkwardly while forming line and
-answering to their names, which were called over
-by Monkton's sergeant, a portly old halberdier,
-named Norman Calder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now then, Master William Monkton, are we
-to march, without you, or must I detail a fatigue
-party to tumble you out of bed?" cried Warriston,
-angrily, in the hall of the inn. "There goes the
-last roll of the drum, and all are present but you!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ugh!" said the lieutenant, as he came forth
-adjusting his regimentals in the street, tying his
-sash, and buckling his sword-belt, and certainly
-not looking the better for his potations overnight;
-"as Scott of Amwell says, 'I hate that drum's
-discordant sound'&mdash;'pon my soul, I do! Such a
-restless dog you are, Warriston! Two hours
-hence would have done just as well for you, and
-immensely better for all, than this. Half-past
-four, A.M.&mdash;damme!" he added, glancing up at a
-church-dial which was glittering in the rising
-sun; "this is a most unearthly proceeding, and
-likely to be the death of poor Pimple. Good
-morning, Kennedy, my young volunteer; how do
-you like this kind of work?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin felt bound to say that he enjoyed it
-very much.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bah! after being two hours in bed, having
-to tumble up in this fashion, is just as pleasant
-as having to go out with a dead shot in the
-honeymoon, or in the morning on which you
-have made an assignation with a pretty girl on
-your way home; or having a bill returned on
-your hands; a horse lamed when the starting-bell
-rings, or when you are about to ride a steeple-chase,
-or lead a charge; or any other thing that
-annoys you, by jingo!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Quentin had never experienced any of the
-five grievances enumerated by Monkton, he could
-only laugh, and ask&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then what about 'the lark at Heaven's
-gate'&mdash;has his voice no charms?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'd rather hear his morning reveille when
-going home to my quarters."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scene had now become very animated.
-The soldiers, fifteen in number, were all in heavy
-marching order, with only their side-arms, however,
-and were all sturdy, weatherbeaten fellows,
-with whom Quentin found himself rather an
-object of interest, as he had given Sergeant
-Calder a couple of guineas to enable them all to
-drink his health.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many of the townspeople were crowding round
-to see them depart; and many a repentant recruit
-now bade a last farewell to sobbing parents, to
-brother, or sister, or sweetheart, all deploring the
-step which they deemed would lead him to ruin
-and death, for there were no marshal's batons to
-be found in the knapsacks of the 25th or 94th,
-as in those of "the Corsican Tyrant," whose name
-was as that of a bogle for nurses to scare their
-children with.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Warriston, an indefatigable officer,
-bustled about, getting the motley party into
-something like military order, and detailed a
-corporal and three men to take charge of the
-impressed cart which was to carry their baggage,
-with some of the soldiers' wives and children, his
-lieutenant lounged at the door of the Queen
-Anne's Head, smoking a pipe, with his shako
-very much over one of his wicked eyes, as he
-joked and bantered those about him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, landlord," said he to the sulky Boniface,
-who made his appearance with a red Kilmarnock
-nightcap on his head; "give us a farewell
-smile, do, there's a good fellow; I'll take a kiss
-from your wife, too, on credit (I'm her debtor a
-long way already), and you may put both in the
-bill when next we halt here. Gad, Kennedy,
-these people hate the sight of a billet-order as the
-devil hates holy water. Those who grudge the
-British soldier a night's lodging should have a
-trial of a few Cossacks or Austrians; but it all
-comes of the levellers, the opposition, and the
-democrats, damme! So Pimple, my boy, have a
-dram&mdash;you have had your run of flirtation with
-the flax-dresser's daughter, and yet have got off
-without having to propose for the passée heiress,
-or go out about sunrise with the incensed parent."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," replied the ensign, playing with the
-tassels of his sash, and assuming a would-be gallant
-air; "close run, though&mdash;once thought I was
-nearly in for it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, you're safe now; but what says the couplet?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What couplet? I don't know."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It says that to you, my friend,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "From wedlock's noose thus once by fate exempt,<br />
- The next may prove, alas! a noose of hemp!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The ensign was about to make an angry retort,
-when Warriston gave the command,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Threes right&mdash;quick march! come, come,
-move off, gentlemen." The sharp drums and
-shrill fifes struck up merrily in the echoing streets
-(it was the unvarying 'Girl I left behind me'); a
-lusty cheer from the departing recruits was loudly
-responded to by the people around and from those
-at many a window. Others followed, loud, long,
-and hearty, and catching the spirit of enthusiasm
-from those about him, Quentin felt every pulse
-throb, every nerve and fibre quicken, as his heart
-became light and joyous, and as Warriston drew
-his arm through his own, and falling into the rear
-of the party, they departed from the inn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How different were Quentin's emotions now,
-when compared to the sense of dejection and
-desolation, with which, portmanteau in hand, he
-had entered that ancient caravanserai yesterday!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now for your first day's march, Kennedy,"
-said the captain; "never mind the <i>past</i>&mdash;it is
-gone for ever, and is useless now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Unless it afford me some hint to guide me
-for the future."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right," said the captain; "faith! boy, I like
-your spirit and reflective turn."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cheers of the people and the rattle of the
-drums, as the party marched over the new bridge
-of Ayr, defied every attempt at conversation.
-All viewed the departing band with interest, for,
-ere long, they would be all sent to the seat of
-war, and be before the enemy; and of those
-blue-bonneted recruits who were leaving the banks
-and braes of Ayr, and old Coila's hills and glens,
-few or none might ever return. But there was
-then a high spirit in all the British Isles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long dread of invasion from France, political
-and religious rancour, with years of continued
-victory by sea and land&mdash;the glories and
-the fall of Nelson and Abercrombie, the brilliant
-but terrible career of Napoleon following close
-on the atrocities of the French Revolution&mdash;all
-conspired to fill honest Mr. Bull's heart with a
-furore for military fame; he ceased to smoke the
-pipe of peace, and the worthy man's funny red
-coat and warlike pigtail were never off. Gillray's
-coloured caricatures of French soldiers in cocked
-hats and long blue coats, and of their "Corsican
-tyrant," in every ridiculous and degrading
-situation that art could conceive or malevolence
-inspire, filled every print-shop; and the press,
-such as it was, groaned alternately under puffs of
-self-glorification and scurrilous abuse of France
-and its emperor, with a systematic expression of
-true British contempt for anything foreign and
-continental. Thus the whole country swarmed
-with troops of every arm, and all Britain was a
-species of garrison, from London to Lerwick,
-and from Banff to Bristol.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had been some hours on the march before
-Quentin thought of obtaining a very requisite
-piece of information&mdash;to wit, their destination,
-when he was informed by Captain Warriston that
-the three recruiting parties were to embark at
-Leith on board an armed smack or letter-of-marque,
-for Colchester barracks in England,
-where the three Scottish regiments were stationed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After I travel so far," said Quentin, "I do
-sincerely hope the commanding officer will
-approve of me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rest assured that he will," replied Warriston,
-confidently; "he is a plain, sometimes rough old
-soldier, but he knows me well."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who is colonel of the regiment?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lieutenant-General Lord Elphinstone is our
-colonel," said Monkton; "and our lieutenant-colonel
-being aged&mdash;an old Minden officer,
-indeed&mdash;has permission to sell out. Jack Middleton,
-the major, is in command at present, and as
-he is too poor to purchase, he is revenging himself
-upon the regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?" asked Quentin, with surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Though our corps is a crack one (what corps
-is not so in its own estimation?) he harangues us
-daily on the bad discipline and disorder in which
-his predecessor has left us; so all have gone to
-school again, from the oldest captain down to the
-youngest fifer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indeed," said the bewildered volunteer; "that
-is very hard!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So it is, damme! but old fellows who smelt
-powder against Washington at Brandywine, and
-under the Duke in Holland, at Alkmaar and
-Egmont-op-Zee, are now at the goose-step and
-pacing-stick; and woe to the private who fails to
-have the barrel and lock of his musket bright as
-silver, and his pouch bottled to perfection, so that
-he might shave or dress his pigtail in it. We
-have punishment parades, extra drills, kit-inspections,
-drums beating, bugles sounding all day,
-and often check-rolls thrice in the night, and
-orderlies flying all over the barracks like
-madmen, and all because old Jack Middleton has not
-enough of tin to purchase the lieutenant-colonelcy.
-There is little Pimple&mdash;by Jove! he'll not be in
-Colchester a week before the major frightens him
-into the measles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who is to succeed the lieutenant-colonel?"
-asked Warriston, who laughed at the subaltern's
-angry description of the state of matters at
-headquarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Horse Guards, those Fates who sit on
-high over the British soldier, alone know. Some
-good kind of fellow, I hope, before I rejoin; for
-rather than serve under old Middleton (excuse me,
-Warriston, as he is a friend of yours) I'd send in
-my papers&mdash;go recruiting for the 2nd West India
-at Sierra Leone, or join that fine body of men,
-the York Rangers!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What are they?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A condemned corps, named for the good
-duke; but whose officers, damme, sleep at night
-with loaded pistols under their pillows, for fear of
-their own men."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is not very cheering for you, Kennedy,"
-said Warriston, laughing heartily; "but you must
-not mind all Monkton says."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No matter; I have given my word, and go I
-shall."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was evident that Monkton was a little soured,
-for he alternately vowed himself tired of the
-service and then an enthusiast for it, and his corps
-in particular; but he was rather blue-devilled this
-morning, and uncheered by the blue sunny sky
-and golden cornfields, the songs of the birds and
-mild morning breeze, he swore at the long dusty
-road and grumbled at the slowness of his promotion,
-and that by circumstances beyond his control,
-after fifteen years' service and having seen much
-fighting, he was only a lieutenant still; "but you
-will learn, ere long, Kennedy," he added, "that
-the lieutenants are the salt of the service, and do
-all the actual work. Middleton will judge of you,
-not from others, but from yourself alone. The
-battalion will likely go abroad under his orders;
-a month more may see us before the enemy, and
-you in possession of your epaulettes, if some poor
-sub&mdash;say Pimple here&mdash;is knocked on the head."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thank you," said Boyle; "why not suggest
-yourself&mdash;one sub is the same as another."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not all&mdash;not at all; it would be no use.
-They never hit me seriously in Flanders or
-Denmark, and they won't do it in Spain or North
-Holland."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My old friend Middleton must have changed
-sorely to have become the Tartar and martinet
-you describe him," said Warriston; "if so, he
-would have suited old Frederick of Prussia to a
-hair."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You told us to remind you of a story which
-was worth telling."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About Frederick and my father?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly," said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And how he and I came to be in the Dutch
-service. Well, the story has something droll in
-it, and though some may have heard the affair, as
-it found its way into the newspapers, I shall give
-you the version which I gave to Mr. Thomas
-Holcroft, when he was preparing that very light
-and most readable work on the Life, Times, and
-Works of the Great Frederick, in thirteen huge
-royal octavo volumes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then it is to be found there?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On the contrary, he omitted it, not considering
-it quite a feather in his hero's cap."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the story&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Occurred in this way."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the story with which Warriston beguiled a
-few miles of the morning march deserves,
-perhaps, a chapter to itself.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXV.
-<br /><br />
-THE PRUSSIAN GRENADIER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "There was a criminal in a cart<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A-going to be hanged;<br />
- Respite to him was granted,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And cart and crowd did stand,<br />
- To know if he would marry a wife<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or rather choose to die;<br />
- ''Tother's the worst, drive on the cart,'<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The criminal did reply."&mdash;<i>Old Ballad.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-You have all heard I presume (the captain began),
-of the singular predilection which the late
-King of Prussia had for tall swinging grenadiers,
-how he raked all Germany and Pomerania to
-procure them, and had them formed into corps and
-companies, sparing nothing in their equipment to
-add to their vast stature and warlike aspect&mdash;giving
-them the highest of heels to their boots,
-the tallest bearskin caps, and the longest and
-largest feathers that could be worn with safety
-to the neck and vertebral column. Those
-cross-belted Goliaths were quite a passion with him,
-and the first battalion of his Foot Guards, which
-my worthy father had the honour to command,
-was, no doubt, the most gigantic regiment in the
-Prussian army, perhaps in Europe; and to see its
-twelve companies of giants marching past in review
-order, and in open column, on that little meadow
-near Halle, which, from the time of the old
-Dessauer,* has been the training ground of the
-Prussian infantry, was truly a sight to marvel
-at and remember.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Prince Leopold, of Anhalt Dessau, born there in 1676,
-the bravest of three generations who held the highest rank in
-the Prussian army.&mdash;<i>General Seydlitz's Life</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The Battalion Von Warriston was, to Frederick
-the Great, his pet band&mdash;the flower and pattern
-corps of his carefully-trained and well-developed
-army!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now it chanced that one day, about the year
-1780, he had been riding in the environs of Berlin,
-attended only by Strutzki, his old Putkammer
-orderly, with the gunpowder-spotted visage. As
-he pottered along on his old shambling horse,
-with a pair of large spectacles on his nose&mdash;the
-royal nose, I mean&mdash;one eye was fixed on his
-bridle and the other on Herr Doctor Johann Georg
-Zimmerman's then famous but dreary work on
-Solitude, with his flap pockets stuffed with
-letters from Voltaire and Hume, general orders,
-proof-sheets of plays, and other rubbish, he
-suddenly saw something in the opinions of the Herr
-Doctor which displeased him, and jotting off a
-note on the subject, he despatched it by Strutzki.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then resuming his meditations he rode on
-alone into the fields, smoking a pipe which had
-belonged to his old and faithful comrade, Seydlitz,
-and which he had picked up on the field of Rosbach,
-when that general gave his usual signal for
-the Hussars to charge by flinging his pipe into
-the air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a lonely place he came suddenly upon a
-peasant girl who possessed remarkable beauty,
-but that which he greatly preferred, astonishing
-stature. She was fully six feet, and so splendidly
-proportioned that Frederick reined up his horse
-and slung his pipe at his button-hole to observe
-her, which he could do for some time unobserved,
-as she was busy twining creepers and flowers
-over the front paling of a cottage named the Wild
-Katze, a wayside tavern.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bey'm Henker!" thought he, "could I but
-get you married to one of my grenadiers, my
-long-legged Fraulein, what sons you might have!
-What recruits&mdash;what a progeny of giant children
-to recruit the next generation of my guards!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tall girl now perceived the king observing
-her, and curtseyed and laughed, for she had no
-idea of his rank. His horse furniture was shabby,
-and his own appearance was far from being stately
-or imposing. He stooped about the shoulders,
-and had a snuffy drop at the end of his nose.
-Over his uniform and decorations he wore a greasy
-old military surtout-coat of blue cloth, lined with
-white merino, its buttons, sleeves, and all of the
-plainest kind; an old battered cocked-hat, with
-what had once been a white feather binding the
-edge of it, and its rim being perforated by musket-shot;
-a pair of common dragoon pistols in holsters
-without flaps, and a pair of rusty spurs on long
-jack-boots that had never been blackened since
-they left the maker's hands, though they were
-greased by Strutzki every morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is your name, my handsome fraulein?"
-he inquired, while lifting his hat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gretchen Viborg," replied the tall beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are you married?" he asked with increasing
-suavity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, mein herr."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But anxious to be, doubtless," said Frederick,
-perpetrating a wink.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the girl, supposing that this funny old man
-was about to make some proposal to her, burst
-into a fit of laughter, in which the king
-good-humouredly joined, and then asked,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How old are you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nearly twenty, mein herr."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good. Are you the keeper of the Wilde Katze?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;my father is."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Would you like to earn easily a rix-dollar?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That will I do readily, mein herr," said the
-girl, coming briskly forward, for a rix-dollar was
-then about the value of four of our guineas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then you must deliver a note for me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In the city."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And to whom, mein herr?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the Colonel von Warriston at the palace
-near the Wiesse Saal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl, little suspecting what was in store for
-her, curtseyed and signified her readiness, while
-the king, drawing forth his tablets, and using his
-holster for a desk, wrote to my father in this
-manner:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"MY DEAR COLONEL VON WARRISTON,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On receipt of this order, you are to marry
-<i>the tallest</i> of your grenadiers to the bearer thereof,
-taking particular care to have the ceremony
-performed in your own presence; and for the
-execution of this, I hold you responsible.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"FRIEDRICH."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"P.S.&mdash;If he refuse, to Spandau with him,
-until further orders."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Can you read, fraulein?" asked he, while
-folding this remarkable order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, mein herr."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good; then there is the less use for a seal,
-which I have not here." He placed the note
-and the rix-dollar in the large fair hand of the
-girl, and added, "I have noted this place&mdash;the
-Wilde Katze in my tablets, and I trust to your
-honesty and fidelity, Gretchen, in delivering my
-note without delay, as the matter is of great
-consequence to me, and may not prove unpleasant to
-yourself." And giving her a look that somehow
-impressed her, he put spurs to his old charger,
-and shambled off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As ignorant of the contents of the letter as of
-the exalted rank of its writer, Gretchen Viborg
-was hurrying along the road towards Berlin, when
-she suddenly remembered that she had to keep an
-appointment with her lover, a remarkably jealous
-little fellow, who had a mill on the Spree&mdash;an
-assignation which the delivery of this note would
-completely mar! While pausing to consider this
-dilemma, honesty impelling her forward, and love
-or fear staying her steps, she met an old crone
-who was employed by her at the Wilde Katze, to
-till the ground, carry wood and do other out-door
-work; and supposing it was all one <i>who</i> delivered
-the note, provided that it safely reached its
-destination, she offered her a ducat to bear it to the
-palace near the White Hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now this old crone could read; she scanned
-the note, saw the whole bearings of the case, and
-knew who the writer was in an instant. She
-grinned a horrible grin of intense satisfaction,
-undertook the mission, and already beheld in
-prospect her victim&mdash;the tallest grenadier!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This cunning hag was past fifty years of age,
-and one of her legs was shorter than the other
-leg at least by half an inch; she stooped in gait and
-was not much more than four feet high, and was
-remarkably hideous, even for a continental woman,
-her face being a mass of wrinkles, her pointed
-chin covered with wiry sprouts of grey hair, while
-her teeth were reduced to a few yellow fangs; thus,
-great was my father's astonishment, when he
-perused the note which she gave him faithfully at
-the palace-gate, just as he was mounting his
-charger to join the evening parade of his boasted
-battalion of the Guards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was too familiar with the handwriting of
-the great Frederick to doubt for a moment the
-authenticity of the note; but he could by no
-means reconcile its singular contents with the
-extreme years and appalling aspect of the old
-witch who brought it, and he surveyed them
-alternately for some time, in utter bewilderment,
-till the "P.S." about Spandau, that formidable
-state prison in Brandenburg, made him dread a
-trip there in person, if the king's orders were
-trifled with or delayed; so turning with repugnance
-from the woman, who continued to grin and drop
-endless curtsies by his side, he summoned the
-sergeant-major.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who is the tallest of our grenadiers?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Otto Vogelwiede," replied the sergeant, with
-a profound salute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How tall is he?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Six feet, eight inches and a quarter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is he on parade with his company?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, Herr Colonel&mdash;on duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With the guard at the Zeug-haus." (This
-was the arsenal on the narrow bridge over the
-Spree.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have him relieved by the next file for duty,
-and brought here immediately."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Private Vogelwiede, a sturdy Silesian
-campaigner, who had been wounded at Cunnersdorf,
-and had served under my father in all the great
-battles of the Seven Years' War, soon appeared
-at the palace, with a mingled expression of
-surprise and alarm on his large visage, supposing
-that some misdemeanour was to be alleged against
-him; but this soon changed into downright
-horror, when my father, with a manner oddly
-indicative of half comicality and entire
-commiseration, read the king's peremptory order, and
-pointed to the blooming bride.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sturm und Gewitter!" swore the luckless
-grenadier in great wrath; "do you mean to say,
-Herr Colonel, that I am to marry this old bag of
-bones&mdash;this very shrivling?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor Vogelwiede, it is marry, or march
-to Spandau."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ach Gott, what an old vampire it is!" said
-Vogelwiede, shuddering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am utterly bewildered, comrade," said my father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In mercy to me, Herr Colonel, tell me <i>what</i>
-I have done that I am to be punished thus?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can't say, my poor fellow, that I understand
-the affair in any way; but we all know our
-father Frederick, and that the dose, however
-nauseous, must be swallowed. You must either
-be chained to her, or to a thirty-six pound shot
-in Spandau&mdash;a companion you will not get rid of,
-even by day."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Der teufel! der teufel!" groaned the grenadier,
-who was actually perspiring with the idea of
-the whole affair, while the old woman, with her
-grey hairs, yellow fangs, and grimy wrinkles,
-grinned like some gnome sent by the Ruberzahl,
-or a witch from the Blocksberg; and to him it
-seemed as the sentence of death when my father
-said,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Send for the chaplain of the brigade, and
-desire him to bring his prayer-book and surplice."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Colonel, remember Cunnersdorf, and
-how when a boy I held Velt-marshal Keith dying
-in my arms at Hochkirchen&mdash;I was his favourite
-orderly," urged poor Vogelwiede, melted almost
-to tears; but it was espouse or Spandau, and he
-was married in the military chapel, to his own
-intense misery, to the utter bewilderment of his
-comrades, who knew not what to make of the
-affair, and to the exulting joy of the hideous old
-crone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Six months after, Frederick returned from
-the reviews at Halle to Berlin, and desired my
-father to bring before him the couple who had
-been married by his orders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ach Gott!" he exclaimed, on seeing the
-grinning hag and the miserable grenadier, who
-already looked grey and worn; "what the devil is
-this you have done, Herr Colonel?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I obeyed your majesty's singular command,"
-replied my father, haughtily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is this the woman to whom you have married
-Otto Vogelwiede, the premier grenadier of
-my Guards?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis the woman who bore your majesty's
-somewhat peremptory order, as all the corps can
-testify."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Der teufel! she is no more to compare to
-the one who received it, than a cup of Dresden
-dima is to a bowl of Bunzlau clay! But I
-shall find her out yet, and married she shall be
-to the next tallest man in the battalion, so sure
-as Heaven hears me! and as for you,
-Colonel&mdash;dummer teufel&mdash;as for you&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No more dummer teufel (blockhead) than
-yourself, Frederick of Prussia," exclaimed my
-father, furiously. "This to me? Have you
-forgotten my services, and that day at Amoneburg,
-when side by side we built up breastworks of the
-fallen dead, and fired over them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have not Herr Colonel; but potztausend!&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Remember that I am the well-born Warriston
-von Warriston, which in plain Scottish means <i>of
-that ilk</i>, and I shall not be sworn at even by a
-king of Prussia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frederick danced with rage in his old jackboots,
-and dashed his Rosbach pipe upon the
-floor, exclaiming&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Out of my sight, sir! Begone to your
-Bergschotten.* I have done with you!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Scots Highlanders; this is a true anecdote of Frederick's
-caprice.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Whether Gretchen Viborg was married to the
-next tallest grenadier, or to the miller on the
-Spree, I know not, for that very day my father
-doffed the uniform of which he was so proud&mdash;the
-trappings of the 1st Guards&mdash;the same uniform in
-which Frederick was buried six years after at
-Potsdam, and resigned his commission, in which he was
-succeeded by Peter Schreutzer, the king's new
-favourite. Entering the service of the States
-General, he was made Colonel-in-Chief of their
-Scots Brigade, then consisting of six battalions,
-in one of which I obtained a cadetship; so you
-may perceive the strange chain of events by
-which&mdash;because Gretchen Viborg had to meet her miller,
-and her note found another bearer&mdash;I ultimately
-find myself a captain in His Britannic Majesty's
-94th Foot, and in the service of my native
-country."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We shall have other marches of more importance
-to detail than the first essay of our young
-volunteer, who, though cheered from time to time
-by the merry music of the drums and fifes (which,
-in fact, are more inspiring and martial than any
-brass band can ever be), found the route weary
-enough by the pre-macadamite roads of those
-days, which were somewhat like the dry beds of
-mountain burns. So marching was rough and
-weary work, yet Quentin never flinched, as they
-proceeded by the dark, heathy, and solitary hills
-of the Muirkirk-of-Kyle, by Carnwath, where a
-party of the Gordon Highlanders, under Logan of
-that ilk, joined them, and by Kirknewton, where,
-from an eminence over which the roadway
-wound, he saw, for the first time, the wooded
-expanse of the beautiful Lothians, with the swelling
-outline of Arthur's Seat, the blue Firth, widening
-to a sea, the fertile hills of Fife, the lordly Ochil
-mountains, and those of thirteen counties, stretching
-far away even to the distant Lammermuirs, and
-in the middle distance, grey, dim, and smoky,
-the "Queen of the North, upon her hilly throne."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the soldiers hailed her with a cheer and a
-roll on the drums, announcing that there ended
-their last day's march.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap26"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-<br /><br />
-COLCHESTER BARRACKS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Hail, sweet recruiting service, pleasing toil,<br />
- Ball-room campaigns, tea-parties, dice and Hoyle!<br />
- Ye days when dangling was my only duty,<br />
- Envied by cits, caressed by every beauty;<br />
- Envied by cits, so scared by every glance,<br />
- Shot at their daughters, going down the dance."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Military Magazine</i>, 1812.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Faithful to his promise, before embarking,
-Quentin Kennedy wrote from Edinburgh to his friend
-the old quartermaster, informing him of the step
-he had taken, of the lucky chance that had turned
-up for him in the Queen Anne's Head at Ayr, and
-that he was off to join the army as a simple
-volunteer; but being resolved to owe all to himself and
-to his own spirit, courage, and energy, and to
-prevent his old friend, Lord Rohallion, from doing
-anything, strange to say, he did not mention what
-regiment of the line he had chosen, though he
-knew well that the mystical No. 25 would have
-made the hearts of the veteran general and the
-quartermaster leap within them, while poor old
-Jack Andrews would be certain to get helplessly
-groggy in honour of the occasion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sent no messages or memories to any one,
-for the letter was indited amid the hurly-burly of
-Poolers gay and then well-known military coffee-house
-in Princess-street, nearly opposite the North
-Bridge; and Captain Warriston, who was standing
-fully accoutred with a group of other officers of
-various Scottish regiments, all talking, laughing,
-and smoking, urged him "to be sharp," as they
-had not a moment to lose before the mail started,
-and that the smack, <i>Lord Nelson</i>, had her topsail
-loose; so he sent no remembrance to his dear
-Flora Warrender, though he sealed his letter with
-a sigh, and his soul seemed to go with it to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sailing in an armed Leith ship, without convoy,
-Captain Warriston's detachments of recruits, after
-beating against a head wind for two weeks, but
-without encountering a storm, a gale, or an
-enemy's ship of Avar, made the coast of Essex,
-landed at Harwich, and marched to Colchester
-Barracks, where each subaltern reported himself
-to his commanding officer, and handed over his
-detachment of recruits, doubtless glad to be rid of
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How often were the last scene with Flora,
-those last words and those last kisses, under the
-old sycamores in the avenue, rehearsed over and
-over again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah," thought he, "could I but persuade
-myself that she will not entirely forget me; that
-some tender recollections, some soft memory of
-the poor lonely and friendless lad, who loved her
-so well, will remain in her heart, now that I am
-far away&mdash;gone she knows not where, but gone
-for ever! For ever!&mdash;then what will love or
-memory avail me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The novelty of his situation, the sudden and
-remarkable change of scene, the short sea voyage,
-the crowded and somewhat noisy barracks of
-Colchester, then filled with troops, preparing by
-hourly training, prior to their departure for the
-seat of war; squads undergoing manual, platoon,
-and pacing-stick drill, others worked up in companies,
-battalions, and brigades, the general bustle
-and light-heartedness of all around him; the new
-occupation, new faces and new episodes, all so
-different from his former monotonous life in that
-old castle by the Firth of Clyde&mdash;a life that
-seemed like a dream now&mdash;soon weaned Quentin
-from his sadder thoughts, and he was startled to
-find that, after a time, instead of brooding over
-Flora's image and idea perpetually, he could only
-think of her occasionally, and ere long, that he
-began to take an interest in the crowds of ladies
-who came to view the evening parades, to promenade
-with the officers who were not on duty, and
-to hear the bands play. "Love sickness, according
-to our revised medical code, is nothing more
-than a disarranged digestion," says a writer; so,
-in this year of the world&mdash;five thousand and odd,
-according to Genesis, and Heaven knows how
-many more according to geology&mdash;no one dies of
-love, and, in the jovial barracks of Colchester,
-our friend Quentin showed no signs of the
-malady.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But we are anticipating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The battalion of the 25th, or the King's Own
-Borderers, to which he was attached, occupied a
-portion of the stately and spacious barracks, which
-were built for the accommodation often thousand
-infantry, and had a fine park of artillery attached
-to them. These have all been since pulled down
-by an absurd spirit of mistaken economy, so that
-there are barely quarters for a single regiment in
-the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the day after his arrival, anxious to create
-a good impression, he made a most careful toilet,
-and with a throbbing heart was introduced by Monkton
-to the officer commanding, the irritable Major
-Middleton, of whom he had heard so much, and
-to whom he presented the letter of introduction
-and recommendation given by his good friend
-Captain Warriston, who unfortunately was
-compelled to be absent elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The major was a fine-looking old man, who
-had entered the service from the militia somewhat
-late in life, and hence the extreme slowness
-of his promotion, for he was now near his sixtieth
-year. He had a clear, keen, and bright blue eye;
-a suave, but grave and decided manner, with a
-deep and authoritative tone of voice. He still
-wore his thin hair queued, though after being
-reduced to seven inches in length, by the general
-order of 1804, by another order in 1808, the
-entire army was shorn of those appendages.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fearing a mutiny, or something like it, the
-obnoxious mandate was countermanded the next
-day, but, Ichabod! the glory had departed. The
-regimental barbers had done their fatal work, and
-not a pigtail remained in the service, from the
-Life Guards to the Shetland Volunteers, save
-among a few privileged men of the old school,
-who stuck to it in defiance alike of taste and
-authority, and one of these was Major Middleton,
-who now appeared in full uniform, with his
-snow-white shirt-frill peeping through his gorget,&mdash;a
-badge retained till 1830&mdash;and a spotless white
-waistcoat covering the comely paunch, while his
-queue, seven inches long, with its black silk rosette,
-wagged gracefully at the back of his fine old head,
-which was powdered by time to a whiteness his
-servant could never achieve with the puff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He cordially shook hands with Quentin and
-with Monkton, and welcoming the latter back to
-head-quarters, bowed them to chairs with great
-formality, his sword and pigtail going up and
-down like pump-handles the while, and then with
-his sturdy back planted against the chimney-piece,
-he proceeded to read over the letter of
-Warriston, Quentin in the meantime undergoing
-the pleasant process of being occasionally eyed
-askance with those clear, keen eyes&mdash;and a steady
-glance they had&mdash;the glance of one who had often
-been face to face with death and danger, in the
-East Indies and the West, in America, and
-wherever conquests were to be added to Britain's
-growing empire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My old friend Warriston recommends you
-highly, Mr. Kennedy&mdash;very highly indeed," said
-the major, as he folded the letters and again
-shook Quentin by the hand; "but I hope that
-the step you are taking has the full concurrence
-of all who are interested in your welfare?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a heightened colour, Quentin begged the
-worthy major to be assured that it had.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I need not tell you, my young friend, that no
-ordinary bravery is required of the gentleman
-volunteer, for something more dashing than mere
-service in the ranks is necessary to win the notice
-of those in authority and to obtain a commission
-in His Majesty's service. I trust, therefore, that
-you have weighed well and examined your mind,
-and are assured that you possess the qualifications
-necessary for the profession&mdash;I may well say,
-the perilous career&mdash;on which you are about to
-enter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Qualifications, sir?" stammered Quentin,
-who was somewhat oppressed by the major's
-exordium, and began to think of Dominie Skaill's
-Greek and Latin roots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; for the task before you requires a
-daring spirit, and a most stoical indifference to
-privation, to suffering, and to death, as you will
-have to bear a voluntary part in every dangerous
-or arduous enterprise, on every desperate duty;
-and have to volunteer for every forlorn hope and
-reckless adventure."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have weighed well, major, and I shall shrink
-from nothing! I long only for the opportunity
-of showing that I shall be&mdash;shall be what my
-father was before me," said Quentin, with flashing
-eyes and quivering lips, while he felt that
-these were not the kind of men to boast before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old major regarded the lad attentively, and
-said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Give me your hand again; I like your spirit,
-and hope ere long to wet your commission and
-welcome you as a brother officer. I enforce the
-strictest obedience, and some term me severe, yet
-I hope you will like me; for, if pleased with you,
-your future prospects shall be my peculiar care."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, sir," said Quentin, with a very
-full heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I like to regard the regiment as one large
-family; and when we consider the manifold
-clangers we dare, and the sufferings we endure
-together, all soldiers&mdash;officers and men
-alike&mdash;more than any other human community, have
-reasons for strong mutual attachment, and for
-feeling themselves indeed brothers. There are
-some of the brotherhood, however, over whom I
-have, at times, to keep a tight hand&mdash;yourself,
-for instance&mdash;Dick Monkton, eh!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, major, the adjutant has come to me in his
-harness more than once for my sword; but like
-a good fellow, you always sent it back again,"
-said Monkton, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two remarks of the great General Monk
-should always be borne in mind by those who
-enter the service," said the major, who seemed a
-well-read and intelligent officer; "and in youth
-I learned them by rote, and so have never
-forgotten them since. 'War, the profession of a
-soldier, is that of all others which, as it conferreth
-most honour upon a man who therein acquitteth
-himself well, so it draweth the greatest infamy
-upon one who demeaneth himself ill; for <i>one</i> fault
-committed can <i>never</i> be repaired, and <i>one</i> hour
-causeth the loss of that reputation which hath
-been thirty years acquiring!' Elsewhere he
-says, 'A soldier must be always ready to confront
-extremity of danger by extremity of valour, and
-overtop fury with a higher resolution. A soldier
-ought to fear nothing but <i>God and Dishonour</i>,
-and the officer who commands should feel for
-him as a parent does for his child!' And now, to
-become more matter of fact, Monkton will tell
-you, Mr. Kennedy, all about a volunteer's outfit;
-the plainer, and the less there is of it, the better."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks, sir; you are most thoughtful."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You shall have to carry the arms and
-accoutrements of a private, and a knapsack too,
-perhaps, under some circumstances, till luck turns
-up a commission for you. In all respects you
-will be treated as a gentleman; but doing the
-duty and yielding the implicit obedience of a
-private soldier. Do you understand me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perfectly, sir," replied Quentin, cheerfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As for the knapsack," said Monkton, "its
-weight matters little if your heart be light, my
-friend."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin smiled, as if he meant to confront
-fortune boldly, and the future too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are now under orders to hold ourselves
-in readiness for foreign service, and a fortnight at
-farthest will see the regiment on board ship."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For where?" asked Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The continent of Europe."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin was glad to hear this, as he knew
-that his funds would not last him long in Colchester,
-and if reduced to his volunteer pay of
-one shilling per diem, current coin of this realm,
-what would become of him then?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You shall dine with me at the mess to-day
-as my guest, Mr. Kennedy," said the major,
-"and I shall have the pleasure of introducing
-you to the corps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And as my guest to-morrow, Quentin," said
-Monkton; "it is the last time we shall have our
-legs under its blessed mahogany, as it is to be
-broken up."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What&mdash;the table?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, the mess. Adieu till the drum beats, major."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With Monkton, Quentin quitted Middleton's
-quarters, extremely well-pleased with his
-interview, convinced that the lieutenant must have
-quizzed him about the major's alleged severity,
-and now with satisfaction feeling himself in some
-manner a member of the corps and of the service,
-a part or portion of the 25th Foot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His uniform, a plain scarlet coatee, faced,
-lapelled and buttoned like that of an officer,
-with two little swallow-tails nine inches long
-(then the regulation), though destitute of lace or
-epaulettes, with his other requisites, made a sad
-hole in his little exchequer; and, as he sat in his
-room that night, and counted over the fifteen that
-remained of the good quartermaster's guineas, he
-felt something like a miser, and trembled for the
-future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, fifteen guineas were more than a
-subaltern's pay for a month; he was only to
-be two weeks in barracks, and when once in camp,
-a small sum with rations would go a long way.
-He had a subaltern's quarters assigned him, with
-an officer's allowance of coal, candle, and barrack
-furniture&mdash;to wit: one hard wood table; two
-ditto chairs, of the Windsor pattern; an elegant
-coal-box, like a black iron trough, bearing the
-royal arms, and the huge enigmatical letters B.O.,
-of which he could make nothing; a pair of bellows,
-fire-irons, fender, and an iron candlestick,
-unique in form and colour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These, with a pallet, formed his principal
-household gear, and for two at least of the
-remaining fourteen days, he would have the luxury
-of the festive mess, the perfection of a dinner
-table; and thereafter, as he had been told, it
-would be broken up, its rich old plate and
-appurtenances consigned to iron-bound chests, and left
-behind in the barrack stores, and many who dined
-therewith might never meet around that jolly table
-more, for war and peril were before them, and
-the dust would be gathering on the forgotten
-mess chests, as the grass would be sprouting on
-the graves of the slain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But little thought "The Borderers" of that&mdash;for
-the soldier, luckily for himself, is seldom of
-a very reflective turn&mdash;when the orderly drum
-and fife struck up "The Roast Beef" in front
-of the mess-house to announce that dinner was
-being served; and there Quentin hurried, in
-company with the major and Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap27"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-<br /><br />
-THE LOST LETTER.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "And when they talk of him, they shake their heads,<br />
- And whisper one another in the ear:<br />
- And he that speaks doth grip the hearer's wrist,<br />
- Whilst he that hears makes fearful action,<br />
- With wrinkled brows, with nods, with rolling eyes."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SHAKESPEARE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-As Quentin's heart foreboded, the Master of
-Rohallion made the best use of his time with
-Flora Warrender; but without much avail. Late
-events had engendered in her breast a spirit of
-obstinacy and antagonism to his proposals,
-together with a desire for freedom of thought and
-liberty of action that proved very damaging to
-the cause of Cosmo, and in a fit of spleen he
-departed for a week or two, to visit Earl Hugh at
-Eglinton; for though by no means a marrying
-man, the Honourable Cosmo, as we have stated,
-conceived that, in the present state of his finances,
-he might get through the world,&mdash;"battle the
-watch," as he phrased it,&mdash;pretty well, if he
-obtained the lands of Ardgour, the accumulated
-rents of which had been so long under trust, and
-would prove to him a very lucky accession, even
-though encumbered by Flora Warrender as a wife
-or appendage. But on obtaining the command
-of a regiment of the line, with all the perquisites
-which then attended that appointment, he did
-not despair of ultimately getting rid of his <i>bêtes
-noires</i>, the children of Judah.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus his cold hauteur and nonchalance on one
-hand, and Lady Rohallion's steady resolve on the
-other to bend her to their will, together with sorrow
-for Quentin, whom she viewed as a victim, rendered
-Flora Warrender inexorable in her opposition, and,
-as Lord Rohallion said, their own mismanagement
-still continued to spoil the whole affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After an absence of some days Cosmo returned,
-and resolved to make a last effort with Flora, and
-thought to pique her by praises of the fair
-daughters of Earl Hugh, the Ladies Jane, Lilias,
-and Mary; but this artifice was so shallow that
-she merely laughed when she heard him, while
-poor simple Lady Rohallion feared that his heart
-had really been affected in another quarter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And so you really admire Lady Lilias Montgomery,
-our old friend's daughter?" she asked, as
-they sat in the bay window of the old yellow
-drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I always did so," replied the Master; "there
-is certainly an exquisite air of refinement about
-the girl, and she has a splendid seat on horseback."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Her air is peculiar to all the Montgomerys; I
-remember me well of Earl Alexander, who was shot
-by the villain Mungo Campbell, and he had the air of
-a prince! But what do you think of Lady Lilias?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Think?" pondered Cosmo, dreamily, as he
-lay back in a satin fauteuil, and gazed on the
-far-stretching landscape that was steeped in sunny haze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," said his mother, anxiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I think she has <i>not</i> the lands and rental of
-Ardgour, or their equivalent."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cosmo, Cosmo," said Lady Rohallion, with
-asperity, "I would have you to love Flora for
-herself, and herself only."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dear mother, you old-fashioned folks in
-Carrick here are sadly behind the age; but I am
-booked for foreign service, and a wife would only
-prove a serious encumbrance after all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Flora Warrender may change, or, what would
-be better, she may know her own mind before,
-or long before, you come back."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps," sneered Cosmo; "love of change
-or change of love effects miracles in the female
-heart at times. Till <i>then</i>, we must content
-ourselves with drawing stakes, while I march off, not
-exactly with the honours of war, but with the
-band playing 'the girl I left behind me'&mdash;very
-consoling it is no doubt, damme!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you really love that girl, Cosmo?" asked
-the old lady, looking up from a mysterious piece of
-needlework, with which she always believed herself
-to be busy, and mistaking Cosmo's wounded
-self-esteem for a softer sentiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Love her&mdash;yes, of course I do&mdash;that is, well
-enough, perhaps, to marry her, as marriage goes
-now-a-days; but" (and here he spoke with
-concentrated passion) "I hate the beggar's brat who
-has come between her and me!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Cosmo, don't say so, I implore you?"
-said Lady Rohallion, sighing bitterly; "after all
-the past, and with the doubt and mystery that
-overhang his future, I cannot bear to hear our
-lost Quentin spoken of thus."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor chick&mdash;our lost darling!" said Cosmo;
-"but after seventeen years spent in the Household
-Brigade, to be out-manoeuvred by a country
-Dolly such as Flora and a fellow like this Quentin
-of yours, is simply and decidedly absurd!" he
-added, with fierce grimace, while his father, who
-entered at that moment and overheard him, laughed
-heartily at his chagrin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now about this time John Legate, the tall
-spindle-shanked running footman, brought, among
-other letters from Maybole, one for the Master,
-endorsed "on His Majesty's Service," and another
-for Mr. John Girvan, so worn, frayed, and covered
-with postage-marks, that the good man was quite
-puzzled by its appearance, and thrice wiped his
-spectacles to decipher all the names and dates,
-until the dominie, who was seated by him, beside
-a friendly jug of toddy, suggested that candles
-should be procured, as the twilight was deepening
-into night, and the interior of the missive would
-resolve all their doubts and expectations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was opened, and proved to be from Quentin
-Kennedy&mdash;from Quentin, and dated at Poole's
-Military Coffeehouse, Edinburgh, more than a
-month back! He had addressed it simply to the
-castle of Rohallion, and it had gone by mail and
-stage over all Britain, until some chance hand,
-endorsing "try Ayrshire," sent it to its destination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Awa soldiering as a volunteer! Wae is me,
-wae is me, but this is pitiful, exceedingly pitiful!"
-exclaimed the dominie, lifting up his hands
-and eyes; "think of my wasted latinity!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dominie, you are a gowk! I like the lad's
-spirit, and respect it," said the quartermaster, whose
-eyes were so full that he could scarcely peruse the
-letter; "but he's ower young, he's far ower young
-for such hard work. I mind well of what I had to
-go through in my time in Germany and America."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ower young, think ye?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But he is hardy and manly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"According to Polybius, in his sixth book, the
-Romans could be soldiers, indeed, <i>had</i> to be
-soldiers, in their seventeenth year."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bother your Romans! fill your jug&mdash;a steaming
-brimmer, and drain it to Quentin's health and
-success, and his safety too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then standing up erect, the quartermaster
-drained his jug at a draught, a process promptly
-followed by the dominie; but after what they had
-imbibed already, it had the effect of rapidly multiplying
-the lights and other objects, and also tended
-to make their utterance thick and indistinct.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must away to my lord wi' this braw news,"
-said Girvan; "the puir lad! he didna deceive me
-after all, but wrote when he had time. And this
-Captain Warriston who befriended Quentin&mdash;(God
-bless him, say I!)&mdash;befriended him, dominie,
-because he was a soldier's son. Ah, dominie,
-dominie!&mdash;that is the <i>freemasonry of the service</i>,
-which makes all in it brothers&mdash;the true spirit of
-camaraderie! Another jorum to the health of this
-captain, whoever he be."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bring forth the <i>amphora</i>&mdash;the greybeard o'
-whisky; but John, John," said the dominie,
-shaking his old wig sententiously, "what saith
-Habakkuk?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How the deevil should I ken? and it is but
-little I care," added the irreverent quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He saith, 'Woe unto him that giveth his
-neighbour drink, that putteth a bottle to him, and
-maketh him drunken,'" said the dominie, balancing
-himself by turns on each leg; and opening and
-shutting each eye alternately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Drunken, you whaislin precentor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yea, as thou, wicked quartermaster, hast made
-me, and when we are close on the hour 'o' night's
-black arch the keystone,' as puir Burns has it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Never mind, dominie, the night is dark, and
-naebody will see you," stammered Girvan; "stick
-your knees into the saddle&mdash;gie your powny the
-reins, and he'll take you straight home, as he
-usually does. But I must away to my lord with
-this news; and so good-night. Now, dominie,
-steady&mdash;eyes front if you can!&mdash;hat cocked
-forward, cockade over the left eye&mdash;queue dressed
-straight with the seam of the coat&mdash;head up, little
-finger of each hand on the seam of the breeches&mdash;left
-foot thrown well out&mdash;pike advanced&mdash;forward,
-march! and hip, hip, hurrah for Quentin
-the volunteer!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And arm in arm the two old topers quitted the
-"snuggery," the dominie to go home in care
-of his pony, and his entertainer to seek Lord and
-Lady Rohallion before they retired for the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That sure tidings had come of Quentin's safety
-occasioned the noble and worthy couple sincere joy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So, so," said the old Lord; "it is as I feared&mdash;the
-poor lad has joined the service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a volunteer," added Girvan, with great
-empressement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a poor, friendless volunteer, Winny; think
-of that, when one line from me to the Duke of
-York would give him an ensigncy. We have
-cruelly mismanaged this boy's prospects! I
-would that we knew the regiment he has joined;
-but, strange to say, he omits to mention it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his joy and hurry, the quartermaster had
-never thought of the omission.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This officer, Warriston, whom he mentions,
-must be a right good fellow, and his name may
-be a clue. We shall search the Army List
-to-morrow, John; till then, good-night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tidings that a letter had come from Quentin
-at last, spread through the castle like wild-fire,
-and it was the first news with which Flora's maid
-greeted her, when, an hour before the usual time,
-she tapped on her bedroom door, and, as the
-reader may imagine, the abigail was despatched at
-once to the quartermaster for a sight of the
-all-important letter, which she took care to read
-before it reached the hands of her impatient
-young mistress. Flora read it over twice or thrice,
-examining all the successive postmarks which
-indicated its devious wanderings. In the text
-there was no mention of her. She was disappointed
-at first, but after reflecting, she deemed
-that his silence was delicate and wise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were great and genuine rejoicings in the
-servants'-hall, where the gamekeepers, grooms,
-the gardeners, Mr. Spillsby the butler, John the
-running-footman, the housemaids, and old
-Andrews, made such a clatter and noise that they
-kindled the somewhat ready wrath of the Master,
-who rang his bell furiously to "still the infernal
-hubbub," as he lay a-bed reading his missive, which
-was not quite to his taste; and, as for the veteran
-Jack Andrews, he got most disreputably tipsy by
-imbibing a variety of drams to Quentin's health
-in Mr. Spillsby's pantry; and in short, the
-quartermaster's letter proved a nine days' wonder in
-Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-END OF VOL. I.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
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