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+<title>THE MARQUIS OF LOSSIE.</title>
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Marquis of Lossie, by George MacDonald
+#27 in our series by George MacDonald
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Marquis of Lossie
+
+Author: George MacDonald
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7174]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on March 22, 2003]
+Last Updated: August 7, 2016
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+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MARQUIS OF LOSSIE ***
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced by Martin Robb [MartinRobb@ieee.org]
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<pre>
+THE MARQUIS OF LOSSIE.
+by George MacDonald
+</pre>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I: THE STABLE YARD</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II: THE LIBRARY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III: MISS HORN</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV: KELPIE'S AIRING</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V: LIZZY FINDLAY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI: MR CRATHIE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII: BLUE PETER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII: VOYAGE TO
+LONDON</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX: LONDON STREETS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X: THE TEMPEST</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI: DEMON AND THE
+PIPES</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII: A NEW LIVERY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII: TWO
+CONVERSATIONS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV: FLORIMEL</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV: PORTLOSSIE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI: ST JAMES THE
+APOSTLE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII: A DIFFERENCE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII: LORD LIFTORE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX: KELPIE IN LONDON</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX: BLUE PETER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI: MR GRAHAM</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII: RICHMOND PARK</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII: PAINTER AND
+GROOM</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV: A LADY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV: THE PSYCHE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI: THE
+SCHOOLMASTER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII: THE PREACHER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII: THE
+PORTRAIT</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX: AN EVIL OMEN</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX: A QUARREL</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI: THE TWO
+DAIMONS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII: A
+CHASTISEMENT</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII: LIES</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV: AN OLD ENEMY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV: THE EVIL
+GENIUS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI: CONJUNCTIONS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII: AN INNOCENT
+PLOT</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII: THE
+JOURNEY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX: DISCIPLINE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL: MOONLIGHT</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI_">CHAPTER XLI: THE SWIFT</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII: ST RONAN'S
+WELL</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII: A PERPLEXITY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV: THE MIND OF THE
+AUTHOR</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV: THE RIDE HOME</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI: PORTLAND PLACE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII: PORTLOSSIE AND
+SCAURNOSE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVIII">CHAPTER XLVIII: TORTURE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIX">CHAPTER XLIX: THE PHILTRE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_L">CHAPTER L: THE DEMONESS AT BAY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LI">CHAPTER LI: THE PSYCHE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LII">CHAPTER LII: HOPE CHAPEL</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LIII">CHAPTER LIII: A NEW PUPIL</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LIV">CHAPTER LIV: THE FEY FACTOR</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LV">CHAPTER LV: THE WANDERER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LVI">CHAPTER LVI: MID OCEAN</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LVII">CHAPTER LVII: THE SHORE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LVIII">CHAPTER LVIII: THE TRENCH</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LIX">CHAPTER LIX: THE PEACEMAKER</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LX">CHAPTER LX: AN OFFERING</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXI">CHAPTER LXI: THOUGHTS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXII">CHAPTER LXII: THE DUNE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXIII">CHAPTER LXIII: CONFESSION OF
+SIN</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXIV">CHAPTER LXIV: A VISITATION</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXV">CHAPTER LXV: THE EVE OF THE
+CRISIS</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXVI">CHAPTER LXVI: SEA</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXVII">CHAPTER LXVII: SHORE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXVIII">CHAPTER LXVIII: THE CREW OF THE
+BONNIE ANNIE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXIX">CHAPTER LXIX: LIZZY'S BABY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXX">CHAPTER LXX: THE DISCLOSURE</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXXI">CHAPTER LXXI: THE ASSEMBLY</a></h3>
+
+<h3><a href="#CHAPTER_LXXII">CHAPTER LXXII: KNOTTED
+STRANDS</a></h3>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I: THE STABLE
+YARD</h1>
+
+<p>It was one of those exquisite days that come in every winter,
+in which it seems no longer the dead body, but the lovely ghost
+of summer. Such a day bears to its sister of the happier time
+something of the relation the marble statue bears to the living
+form; the sense it awakes of beauty is more abstract, more
+ethereal; it lifts the soul into a higher region than will summer
+day of lordliest splendour. It is like the love that loss has
+purified.</p>
+
+<p>Such, however, were not the thoughts that at the moment
+occupied the mind of Malcolm Colonsay. Indeed, the loveliness of
+the morning was but partially visible from the spot where he
+stood -- the stable yard of Lossie House, ancient and roughly
+paved. It was a hundred years since the stones had been last
+relaid and levelled: none of the horses of the late Marquis
+minded it but one -- her whom the young man in Highland dress was
+now grooming -- and she would have fidgeted had it been an oak
+floor. The yard was a long and wide space, with two storied
+buildings on all sides of it. In the centre of one of them rose
+the clock, and the morning sun shone red on its tarnished gold.
+It was an ancient clock, but still capable of keeping good time
+-- good enough, at least, for all the requirements of the house,
+even when the family was at home, seeing it never stopped, and
+the church clock was always ordered by it.</p>
+
+<p>It not only set the time, but seemed also to set the fashion
+of the place, for the whole aspect of it was one of wholesome,
+weather beaten, time worn existence. One of the good things that
+accompany good blood is that its possessor does not much mind a
+shabby coat. Tarnish and lichens and water wearing, a wavy house
+ridge, and a few families of worms in the wainscot do not annoy
+the marquis as they do the city man who has just bought a little
+place in the country. When an old family ceases to go lovingly
+with nature, I see no reason why it should go any longer. An old
+tree is venerable, and an old picture precious to the soul, but
+an old house, on which has been laid none but loving and
+respectful hands, is dear to the very heart. Even an old barn
+door, with the carved initials of hinds and maidens of vanished
+centuries, has a place of honour in the cabinet of the poet's
+brain. It was centuries since Lossie House had begun to grow
+shabby -- and beautiful; and he to whom it now belonged was not
+one to discard the reverend for the neat, or let the vanity of
+possession interfere with the grandeur of inheritance.</p>
+
+<p>Beneath the tarnished gold of the clock, flushed with the red
+winter sun, he was at this moment grooming the coat of a powerful
+black mare. That he had not been brought up a groom was pretty
+evident from the fact that he was not hissing; but that he was
+Marquis of Lossie there was nothing about him to show. The mare
+looked dangerous. Every now and then she cast back a white glance
+of the one visible eye. But the youth was on his guard, and as
+wary as fearless in his handling of her. When at length he had
+finished the toilet which her restlessness -- for her four feet
+were never all still at once upon the stones -- had considerably
+protracted, he took from his pocket a lump of sugar, and held it
+for her to bite at with her angry looking teeth.</p>
+
+<p>It was a keen frost, but in the sun the icicles had begun to
+drop. The roofs in the shadow were covered with hoar frost;
+wherever there was shadow there was whiteness. But for all the
+cold, there was keen life in the air, and yet keener life in the
+two animals, biped and quadruped.</p>
+
+<p>As they thus stood, the one trying to sweeten the other's
+relation to himself, if he could not hope much for her general
+temper, a man, who looked half farmer, half lawyer, appeared on
+the opposite side of the court in the shadow.</p>
+
+<p>"You are spoiling that mare, MacPhail," he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I canna weel du that, sir; she canna be muckle waur," said
+the youth.</p>
+
+<p>"It's whip and spur she wants, not sugar."</p>
+
+<p>"She has had, and sail have baith, time aboot (in turn); and I
+houp they'll du something for her in time, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Her time shall be short here, anyhow. She's not worth the
+sugar you give her."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, sir! luik at her," said Malcolm, in a tone of
+expostulation, as he stepped back a few paces and regarded her
+with admiring eyes. "Saw ye ever sic legs? an' sic a neck? an'
+sic a heid? an' sic fore an' hin' quarters? She's a' bonny but
+the temper o' her, an' that she canna help like the likes o' you
+an me."</p>
+
+<p>"She'll be the death o' somebody some day. The sooner we get
+rid of her the better. Just look at that," he added, as the mare
+laid back her ears and made a vicious snap at nothing in
+particular.</p>
+
+<p>"She was a favourite o' my -- maister, the marquis," returned
+the youth, "an' I wad ill like to pairt wi' her."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take any offer in reason for her," said the factor.
+"You'll just ride her to Forres market next week, and see what
+you can get for her. I do think she's quieter since you took her
+in hand."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure she is -- but it winna laist a day. The moment I
+lea' her, she'll be as ill's ever," said the youth. "She has a
+kin' a likin' to me, 'cause I gi'e her sugar, an' she canna cast
+me; but she's no a bit better i' the hert o' her yet. She's an
+oonsanctifeed brute. I cudna think o' sellin' her like this."</p>
+
+<p>"Lat them 'at buys tak' tent (beware)," said the factor.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow ay! lat them; I dinna objec'; gien only they ken what
+she's like afore they buy her," rejoined Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>The factor burst out laughing. To his judgment the youth had
+spoken like an idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll not send you to sell," he said. "Stoat shall go with
+you, and you shall have nothing to do but hold the mare and your
+own tongue."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said Malcolm, seriously, "ye dinna mean what ye say? Ye
+said yersel' she wad be the deith o' somebody, an' to sell her
+ohn tell't what she's like wad be to caw the saxt comman'ment
+clean to shivers."</p>
+
+<p>"That may be good doctrine i' the kirk, my lad, but it's pure
+heresy i' the horse market. No, no! You buy a horse as you take a
+wife -- for better for worse, as the case may be. A woman's not
+bound to tell her faults when a man wants to marry her. If she
+keeps off the worst of them afterwards, it's all he has a right
+to look for."</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot, sir! there's no a pair o' parallel lines in a' the
+compairison," returned Malcolm. "Mistress Kelpie here 's e'en
+ower ready to confess her fauts, an' that by giein' a taste o'
+them; she winna bide to be speired; but for haudin' aff o' them
+efter the bargain's made -- ye ken she's no even responsible for
+the bargain. An' gien ye expec' me to haud my tongue aboot them
+-- faith, Maister Crathie, I wad as sune think o' sellin' a
+rotten boat to Blue Peter. Gien the man 'at has her to see tilt
+dinna ken to luik oot for a storm o' iron shune or lang teeth ony
+moment, his wife may be a widow that same market nicht: An'
+forbye, it's again' the aucht comman'ment as weel's the saxt.
+There's nae exception there in regaird o' horse flesh. We maun be
+honest i' that as weel's i' corn or herrin', or onything ither
+'at 's coft an' sell't atween man an' his neibor."</p>
+
+<p>"There's one commandment, my lad," said Mr Crathie, with the
+dignity of intended rebuke, "you seem to find hard to learn, and
+that is, to mind your own business."</p>
+
+<p>"Gien ye mean catchin' the herrin', maybe ye're richt," said
+the youth. "I ken muir aboot that nor the horse coupin', and it's
+full cleaner."</p>
+
+<p>"None of your impudence!" returned the factor. "The marquis is
+not here to uphold you in your follies. That they amused him is
+no reason why I should put up with them. So keep your tongue
+between your teeth, or you'll find it the worse for you."</p>
+
+<p>The youth smiled a little oddly, and held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>"You're here to do what I tell you, and make no remarks,"
+added the factor.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm awaur o' that, sir -- within certain leemits," returned
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean within the leemits o' duin' by yer neibor as ye wad
+ha'e yer neibor du by you -- that's what I mean, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I've told you already that doesn't apply in horse dealing.
+Every man has to take care of himself in the horse market: that's
+understood. If you had been brought up amongst horses instead of
+herring, you would have known that as well as any other man."</p>
+
+<p>"I doobt I'll ha'e to gang back to the herrin' than, sir, for
+they're like to pruv' the honester o' the twa; But there's nae
+hypocrisy in Kelpie, an' she maun ha'e her day's denner, come o'
+the morn's what may."</p>
+
+<p>At the word hypocrisy, Mr Crathie's face grew red as the sun
+in a fog. He was an elder of the kirk, and had family worship
+every night as regularly as his toddy. So the word was as
+offensive and insolent as it was foolish and inapplicable. He
+would have turned Malcolm adrift on the spot, but that he
+remembered -- not the favour of the late marquis for the lad --
+that was nothing to the factor now: his lord under the mould was
+to him as if he had never been above it -- but the favour of the
+present marchioness, for all in the house knew that she was
+interested in him. Choking down therefore his rage and
+indignation, he said sternly;</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm, you have two enemies -- a long tongue, and a strong
+conceit. You have little enough to be proud of, my man, and the
+less said the better. I advise you to mind what you're about, and
+show suitable respect to your superiors, or as sure as judgment
+you'll go back to fish guts."</p>
+
+<p>While he spoke, Malcolm had been smoothing Kelpie all over
+with his palms; the moment the factor ceased talking, he ceased
+stroking, and with one arm thrown over the mare's back, looked
+him full in the face.</p>
+
+<p>"Gien ye imaigine, Maister Crathie," he said, "'at I coont it
+ony rise i' the warl' 'at brings me un'er the orders o' a man
+less honest than he micht be, ye're mista'en. I dinna think it's
+pride this time; I wad ile Blue Peter's lang butes till him, but
+I winna lee for ony factor atween this an' Davy Jones."</p>
+
+<p>It was too much. Mr Crathie's feelings overcame him, and he
+was a wrathful man to see, as he strode up to the youth with
+clenched fist.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud frae the mere, for God's sake, Maister Crathie," cried
+Malcolm. But even as he spoke, two reversed Moorish arches of
+gleaming iron opened on the terror quickened imagination of the
+factor a threatened descent from which his most potent instinct,
+that of self preservation, shrank in horror. He started back
+white with dismay, having by a bare inch of space and a bare
+moment of time, escaped what he called Eternity. Dazed with fear
+he turned and had staggered halfway across the yard, as if going
+home, before he recovered himself. Then he turned again, and with
+what dignity he could scrape together said -- "MacPhail, you go
+about your business."</p>
+
+<p>In his foolish heart he believed Malcolm had made the brute
+strike out.</p>
+
+<p>"I canna weel gang till Stoat comes hame," answered
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"If I see you about the place after sunset, I'll horsewhip
+you," said the factor, and walked away, showing the crown of his
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm again smiled oddly, but made no reply. He undid the
+mare's halter, and took her into the stable. There he fed her,
+standing by her all the time she ate, and not once taking his
+eyes off her. His father, the late marquis, had bought her at the
+sale of the stud of a neighbouring laird, whose whole being had
+been devoted to horses, till the pale one came to fetch himself:
+the men about the stable had drugged her, and, taken with the
+splendid lines of the animal, nor seeing cause to doubt her
+temper as she quietly obeyed the halter, he had bid for her, and,
+as he thought, had her a great bargain. The accident that finally
+caused his death followed immediately after, and while he was ill
+no one cared to vex him by saying what she had turned out. But
+Malcolm had even then taken her in hand in the hope of taming her
+a little before his master, who often spoke of his latest
+purchase, should see her again. In this he had very partially
+succeeded; but if only for the sake of him whom he now knew for
+his father, nothing would have made him part with the animal.
+Besides, he had been compelled to use her with so much severity
+at times that he had grown attached to her from the reaction of
+pity as well as from admiration of her physical qualities, and
+the habitude of ministering to her wants and comforts. The
+factor, who knew Malcolm only as a servant, had afterwards
+allowed her to remain in his charge, merely in the hope, through
+his treatment, of by and by selling her, as she had been bought,
+for a faultless animal, but at a far better price.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II: THE
+LIBRARY</h1>
+
+<p>When she had finished her oats, Malcolm left her busy with her
+hay, for she was a huge eater, and went into the house, passing
+through the kitchen and ascending a spiral stone stair to the
+library -- the only room not now dismantled. As he went along the
+narrow passage on the second floor leading to it from the head of
+the stair, the housekeeper, Mrs Courthope, peeped after him from
+one of the many bedrooms opening upon it, and watched him as he
+went, nodding her head two or three times with decision: he
+reminded her so strongly -- not of his father, the last marquis,
+but the brother who had preceded him, that she felt all but
+certain, whoever might be his mother, he had as much of the
+Colonsay blood in his veins as any marquis of them all. It was in
+consideration of this likeness that Mr Crathie had permitted the
+youth, when his services were not required, to read in the
+library.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm went straight to a certain corner, and from amongst a
+dingy set of old classics took down a small Greek book, in large
+type. It was the manual of that slave among slaves, that noble
+among the free, Epictetus. He was no great Greek scholar, but,
+with the help of the Latin translation, and the gloss of his own
+rath experience, he could lay hold of the mind of that slave of a
+slave, whose very slavery was his slave to carry him to the
+heights of freedom. It was not Greek he cared for, but Epictetus.
+It was but little he read, however, for the occurrence of the
+morning demanded, compelled thought. Mr Crathie's behaviour
+caused him neither anger nor uneasiness, but it rendered
+necessary some decision with regard to the ordering of his
+future.</p>
+
+<p>I can hardly say he recalled how, on his deathbed, the late
+marquis, about three months before, having, with all needful
+observances, acknowledged him his son, had committed to his trust
+the welfare of his sister; for the memory of this charge was
+never absent from his feeling even when not immediately present
+to his thought. But although a charge which he would have taken
+upon him all the same had his father not committed it to him, it
+was none the less a source of perplexity upon which as yet all
+his thinking had let in but little light. For to appear as
+Marquis of Lossie was not merely to take from his sister the
+title she supposed her own, but to declare her illegitimate,
+seeing that, unknown to the marquis, the youth's mother, his
+first wife, was still alive when Florimel was born. How to act so
+that as little evil as possible might befall the favourite of his
+father, and one whom he had himself loved with the devotion
+almost of a dog, before he knew she was his sister, was the main
+problem.</p>
+
+<p>For himself, he had had a rough education, and had enjoyed it:
+his thoughts were not troubled about his own prospects.
+Mysteriously committed to the care of a poor blind Highland
+piper, a stranger from inland regions, settled amongst a fishing
+people, he had, as he grew up, naturally fallen into their ways
+of life and labour, and but lately abandoned the calling of a
+fisherman to take charge of the marquis's yacht, whence, by
+degrees, he had, in his helpfulness, grown indispensable to him
+and his daughter, and had come to live in the house of Lossie as
+a privileged servant. His book education, which he owed mainly to
+the friendship of the parish schoolmaster, although nothing
+marvellous, or in Scotland very peculiar, had opened for him in
+all directions doors of thought and inquiry, but the desire of
+knowledge was in his case, again through the influences of Mr
+Graham, subservient to an almost restless yearning after the
+truth of things, a passion so rare that the ordinary mind can
+hardly master even the fact of its existence.</p>
+
+<p>The Marchioness of Lossie, as she was now called, for the
+family was one of the two or three in Scotland in which the title
+descends to an heiress, had left Lossie House almost immediately
+upon her father's death, under the guardianship of a certain
+dowager countess. Lady Bellair had taken her first to Edinburgh,
+and then to London. Tidings of her Malcolm occasionally received
+through Mr Soutar of Duff Harbour, the lawyer the marquis had
+employed to draw up the papers substantiating the youth's claim.
+The last amounted to this, that, as rapidly as the proprieties of
+mourning would permit, she was circling the vortex of the London
+season; and Malcolm was now almost in despair of ever being of
+the least service to her as a brother to whom as a servant he had
+seemed at one time of daily necessity. If he might but once be
+her skipper, her groom, her attendant, he might then at least
+learn how to discover to her the bond between them, without
+breaking it in the very act, and so ruining the hope of service
+to follow.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III: MISS
+HORN</h1>
+
+<p>The door opened, and in walked a tall, gaunt, hard featured
+woman, in a huge bonnet, trimmed with black ribbons, and a long
+black net veil, worked over with sprigs, coming down almost to
+her waist. She looked stern, determined, almost fierce, shook
+hands with a sort of loose dissatisfaction, and dropped into one
+of the easy chairs in which the library abounded. With the act
+the question seemed shot from her -- "Duv ye ca' yersel' an
+honest man, noo, Ma'colm?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ca' myself naething," answered the youth; "but I wad fain
+be what ye say, Miss Horn."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow! I dinna doobt ye wadna steal, nor yet tell lees aboot a
+horse: I ha'e jist come frae a sair waggin' o' tongues about ye.
+Mistress Crathie tells me her man's in a sair vex 'at ye winna
+tell a wordless lee aboot the black mere: that's what I ca't --
+no her. But lee it wad be, an' dinna ye aither wag or haud a
+leein' tongue. A gentleman maunna lee, no even by sayin' naething
+-- na, no gien 't war to win intill the kingdom. But, Guid be
+thankit, that's whaur leears never come. Maybe ye're thinkin' I
+ha'e sma' occasion to say sic like to yersel'. An' yet what's yer
+life but a lee, Ma'colm? You 'at's the honest Marquis o' Lossie
+to waur yer time an' the stren'th o' yer boady an' the micht o'
+yer sowl tyauvin' (wrestling) wi' a deevil o' a she horse, whan
+there's that half sister o' yer' ain gauin' to the verra deevil
+o' perdition himsel' amang the godless gentry o' Lon'on!"</p>
+
+<p>"What wad ye ha'e me un'erstan' by that, Miss Horn?" returned
+Malcolm. "I hear no ill o' her. I daursay she's no jist a sa'nt
+yet, but that's no to be luiked for in ane o' the breed: they
+maun a' try the warl' first ony gait. There's a heap o' fowk --
+an' no aye the warst, maybe," continued Malcolm, thinking of his
+father, "'at wull ha'e their bite o' the aipple afore they spite
+it oot. But for my leddy sister, she's owre prood ever to
+disgrace hersel'."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, maybe, gien she bena misguidit by them she's wi'. But
+I'm no sae muckle concernt aboot her. Only it's plain 'at ye ha'e
+no richt to lead her intill temptation."</p>
+
+<p>"Hoo am I temptin' at her, mem?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's plain to half an e'e. Ir ye no lattin' her live
+believin' a lee? Ir ye no allooin' her to gang on as gien she was
+somebody mair nor mortal, when ye ken she's nae mair Marchioness
+o' Lossie nor ye're the son o' auld Duncan MacPhail? Faith, ye
+ha'e lost trowth gien ye ha'e gaint the warl' i' the cheenge o'
+forbeirs!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mint at naething again the deid, mem. My father's gane till's
+accoont; an it's weel for him he has his father an' no his sister
+to pronoonce upo' him."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed ye're right there, laddie," said Miss Horn, in a
+subdued tone.</p>
+
+<p>"He's made it up wi' my mither afore noo, I'm thinkin'; an'
+ony gait he confesst her his wife an' me her son afore he dee'd,
+an' what mair had he time to du?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's fac'," returned Miss Horn. "An' noo luik at yersel':
+what yer father confesst wi' the verra deid thraw o' a labourin'
+speerit, to the whilk naething cud ha'e broucht him but the deid
+thraws (death struggles) o' the bodily natur' an' the fear o'
+hell, that same confession ye row up again i' the cloot o'
+secrecy, in place o' dightin' wi' 't the blot frae the memory o'
+ane wha I believe I lo'ed mair as my third cousin nor ye du as
+yer ain mither!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's no blot upo' her memory, mem," returned the youth,
+"or I wad be markis the morn. There's never a sowl kens she was
+mither but kens she was wife -- ay, an' whase wife, tu."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Horn had neither wish nor power to reply, and changed her
+front.</p>
+
+<p>"An' sae, Ma'colm Colonsay," she said, "ye ha'e no less nor
+made up yer min' to pass yer days in yer ain stable, neither
+better nor waur than an ostler at the Lossie Airms, an' that
+efter a' 'at I ha'e borne an' dune to mak a gentleman o' ye,
+bairdin' yer father here like a verra lion in 's den, an' garrin'
+him confess the thing again' ilka hair upon the stiff neck o'
+'im? Losh, laddie! it was a pictur' to see him stan'in wi' 's
+back to the door like a camstairy (obstinate) bullock!"</p>
+
+<p>"Haud yer tongue, mem, gien ye please. I canna bide to hear my
+father spoken o' like that. For ye see I lo'ed him afore I kent
+he was ony drap 's blude to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, that's verra weel; but father an' mither's man and
+wife, an' ye camna o' a father alane."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true, mem, an' it canna be I sud ever forget yon face
+ye shawed me i' the coffin, the bonniest, sairest sicht I ever
+saw," returned Malcolm, with a quaver in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"But what for cairry yer thouchts to the deid face o' her? Ye
+kent the leevin' ane weel," objected Miss Horn.</p>
+
+<p>"That's true, mem; but the deid face maist blottit the leevin'
+oot o' my brain."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry for that. -- Eh, laddie, but she was bonny to
+see!"</p>
+
+<p>"I aye thoucht her the bonniest leddy I ever set e'e upo'. An'
+dinna think, mem, I'm gaein to forget the deid, 'cause I'm mair
+concemt aboot the leevin'. I tell ye I jist dinna ken what to du.
+What wi' my father's deein' words committin' her to my chairge,
+an' the more than regaird I ha'e to Leddy Florimel hersel', I'm
+jist whiles driven to ane mair. Hoo can I tak the verra sunsheen
+oot o' her life 'at I lo'ed afore I kent she was my ain sister,
+an' jist thoucht lang to win near eneuch till to du her ony guid
+turn worth duin? An' here I am, her ane half brither, wi'
+naething i' my pooer but to scaud the hert o' her, or else lee!
+Supposin' she was weel merried first, hoo wad she stan' wi' her
+man whan he cam to ken 'at she was nae marchioness -- hed no
+lawfu' richt to ony name but her mither's? An' afore that, what
+richt cud I ha'e to alloo ony man to merry her ohn kent the
+trowth aboot her? Faith, it wad be a fine chance though for the
+fin'in' oot whether or no the man was worthy o' her! But, ye see
+that micht be to make a playock o' her hert. Puir thing, she
+luiks doon upo' me frae the tap o' her bonny neck, as frae a
+h'avenly heicht; but I s' lat her ken yet, gien only I can win at
+the gait o' 't, that I ha'ena come nigh her for naething."</p>
+
+<p>He gave a sigh with the words, and a pause followed.</p>
+
+<p>"The trowth's the trowth," resumed Miss Horn, "neither mair
+nor less."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," responded Malcolm; "but there's a richt an' a wrang time
+for the telling' o' 't. It's no as gien I had had han' or tongue
+in ony foregane lee. It was naething o' my duin', as ye ken, mem.
+To mysel', I was never onything but a fisherman born. I confess
+'at whiles, when we wad be lyin' i' the lee o' the nets, tethered
+to them like, wi' the win' blawin' strong 'an steady, I ha'e
+thocht wi' mysel' 'at I kent naething aboot my father, an' what
+gien it sud turn oot 'at I was the son o' somebody -- what wad I
+du wi' my siller?"</p>
+
+<p>"An' what thoucht ye ye wad du, laddie?" asked Miss Horn
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>"What but bigg a harbour at Scaurnose for the puir fisher fowk
+'at was like my ain flesh and blude!"</p>
+
+<p>"Weel," rejoined Miss Horn eagerly, "div ye no look upo' that
+as a voo to the Almichty -- a voo 'at ye're bun' to pay, noo 'at
+ye ha'e yer wuss? An' it's no merely 'at ye ha'e the means, but
+there's no anither that has the richt; for they're yer ain fowk,
+'at ye gaither rent frae, an 'at's been for mony a generation
+sattlet upo' yer lan' -- though for the maitter o' the lan', they
+ha'e had little mair o' that than the birds o' the rock ha'e ohn
+feued -- an' them honest fowks wi' wives an' sowls o' their ain!
+Hoo upo' airth are ye to du yer duty by them, an' render yer
+accoont at the last, gien ye dinna tak till ye yer pooer an'
+reign? Ilk man 'at 's in ony sense a king o' men is bun' to reign
+ower them in that sense. I ken little aboot things mysel', an' I
+ha'e no feelin's to guide me, but I ha'e a wheen cowmon sense,
+an' that maun jist stan' for the lave."</p>
+
+<p>A silence followed.</p>
+
+<p>"What for speak na ye, Ma'colm?" said Miss Horn, at
+length.</p>
+
+<p>"I was jist tryin'," he answered, "to min' upon a twa lines
+'at I cam' upo' the ither day in a buik 'at Maister Graham gied
+me afore he gaed awa -- 'cause I reckon he kent them a' by hert.
+They say jist sic like's ye been sayin', mem -- gien I cud but
+min' upo' them. They're aboot a man 'at aye does the richt gait
+-- made by ane they ca' Wordsworth."</p>
+
+<p>"I ken naething aboot him," said Miss Horn, with emphasized
+indifference.</p>
+
+<p>"An' I ken but little: I s' ken mair or lang though. This is
+hoo the piece begins:</p>
+
+<pre>
+
+Who is the happy warrior? Who is he
+That every Man in arms should wish to be? --
+It is the generous Spirit, who, when brought
+Among the tasks of real life, hath wrought
+Upon the plan that pleased his childish thought.
+</pre>
+
+<p>-- There! that's what ye wad hae o' me, mem!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hear till him!" cried Miss Horn. "The man's i' the richt,
+though naebody never h'ard o' 'im. Haud ye by that, Ma'colm, an'
+dinna ye rist till ye ha'e biggit a harbour to the men an' women
+o' Scaurnose. Wha kens hoo mony may gang to the boddom afore it
+be dune, jist for the want o' 't?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fundation maun be laid in richteousness, though, mem,
+else -- what gien 't war to save lives better lost?"</p>
+
+<p>"That belangs to the Michty," said Miss Horn.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but the layin' o' the fundation belangs to me. An' I'll
+no du't till I can du't ohn ruint my sister."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, there's ae thing clear: ye'll never ken what to do sae
+lang's ye hing on aboot a stable, fu' o' fower fittet animals
+wantin' sense -- an' some twa fittet 'at has less."</p>
+
+<p>"I doobt ye're richt there, mem; and gien I cud but tak puir
+Kelpie awa' wi' me --"</p>
+
+<p>"Hoots! I'm affrontit wi ye. Kelpie -- quo he! Preserve's a'!
+The laad 'ill lat his ain sister gang, an' bide at hame wi' a
+mere!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, I'm thinkin' I maun gang," he said at length.</p>
+
+<p>"Whaur till, than?" asked Miss Horn.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow! to Lon'on -- whaur ither?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what'll yer lordship du there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dinna say lordship to me, mem, or I'll think ye're jeerin' at
+me. What wad the caterpillar say," he added, with a laugh, "gien
+ye ca'd her my leddie Psyche?"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm of course pronounced the Greek word in Scotch
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"I ken naething aboot yer Seechies or yer Sukies," rejoined
+Miss Horn. "I ken 'at ye're bun' to be a lord and no a stableman,
+an' I s' no lat ye rist till ye up an' say what neist?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's what I ha'e been sayin' for the last three month," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, I daursay; but ye ha'e been sayin' 't upo' the braid o'
+yer back, and I wad ha'e ye up an' sayin' 't."</p>
+
+<p>"Gien I but kent what to du!" said Malcolm, for the thousandth
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye can at least gang whaur ye ha'e a chance o' learnin',"
+returned his friend. -- "Come an' tak yer supper wi' me the nicht
+-- a rizzart haddie an' an egg, an' I'll tell ye mair aboot yer
+mither."</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm avoided a promise, lest it should interfere with
+what he might find best to do.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV: KELPIE'S
+AIRING</h1>
+
+<p>When Miss Horn left him -- with a farewell kindlier than her
+greeting -- rendered yet more restless by her talk, he went back
+to the stable, saddled Kelpie, and took her out for an
+airing.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed the factor's house, Mrs Crathie saw him from the
+window. Her colour rose. She arose herself also, and looked after
+him from the door -- a proud and peevish woman, jealous of her
+husband's dignity, still more jealous of her own.</p>
+
+<p>"The verra image o' the auld markis!" she said to herself; for
+in the recesses of her bosom she spoke the Scotch she scorned to
+utter aloud; "and sits jist like himsel', wi' a wee stoop i' the
+saiddle, and ilka noo an' than a swing o' his haill boady back,
+as gien some thoucht had set him straught. -- Gien the fractious
+brute wad but brak a bane or twa o' him!" she went on in growing
+anger. "The impidence o' the fallow! He has his leave: what for
+disna he tak' it an' gang? But oot o' this gang he sail. To ca' a
+man like mine a heepocreet 'cause he wadna procleem till a haul
+market ilka secret fau't o' the horse he had to sell! Haith, he
+cam' upo' the wrang side o' the sheet to play the lord and
+maister here! and that I can tell him!"</p>
+
+<p>The mare was fresh, and the roads through the policy hard both
+by nature and by frost, so that he could not let her go, and had
+enough to do with her. He turned, therefore, towards the sea
+gate, and soon reached the shore. There, westward of the Seaton,
+where the fisher folk lived, the sand lay smooth, flat, and wet
+along the edge of the receding tide: he gave Kelpie the rein, and
+she sprang into a wild gallop, every now and then flinging her
+heels as high as her rider's head. But finding, as they
+approached the stony part from which rose the great rock called
+the Bored Craig, that he could not pull her up in time, he turned
+her head towards the long dune of sand which, a little beyond the
+tide, ran parallel with the shore. It was dry and loose, and the
+ascent steep. Kelpie's hoofs sank at every step, and when she
+reached the top, with wide spread struggling haunches, and
+"nostrils like pits full of blood to the brim," he had her in
+hand. She stood panting, yet pawing and dancing, and making the
+sand fly in all directions.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a woman with a child in her arms rose, as it seemed
+to Malcolm, under Kelpie's very head. She wheeled and reared,
+and, in wrath or in terror, strained every nerve to unseat her
+rider, while, whether from faith or despair, the woman stood
+still as a statue, staring at the struggle.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud awa' a bit, Lizzy," cried Malcolm. "She's a mad brute,
+an' I mayna be able to haud her. Ye ha'e the bairnie, ye
+see!"</p>
+
+<p>She was a young woman, with a sad white face. To what Malcolm
+said she paid no heed, but stood with her child in her arms and
+gazed at Kelpie as she went on plunging and kicking about on the
+top of the dune.</p>
+
+<p>"I reckon ye wadna care though the she deevil knockit oot yer
+harns; but ye ha'e the bairn, woman! Ha'e mercy on the bairn, an'
+rin to the boddom."</p>
+
+<p>"I want to speak to ye, Ma'colm MacPhail," she said, in a tone
+whose very stillness revealed a depth of trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"I doobt I canna hearken to ye richt the noo," said Malcolm.
+"But bide a wee." He swung himself from Kelpie's back, and,
+hanging hard on the bit with one hand, searched with the other in
+the pocket of his coat, saying, as he did so -- "Sugar, Kelpie!
+sugar!"</p>
+
+<p>The animal gave an eager snort, settled on her feet, and began
+snuffing about him. He made haste, for, if her eagerness should
+turn to impatience, she would do her endeavour to bite him. After
+crunching three or four lumps, she stood pretty quiet, and
+Malcolm must make the best of what time she would give him.</p>
+
+<p>"Noo, Lizzy!" he said hurriedly. "Speyk while ye can."</p>
+
+<p>"Ma'colm," said the girl, and looked him full in the face for
+a moment, for agony had overcome shame; then her gaze sought the
+far horizon, which to seafaring people is as the hills whence
+cometh their aid to the people who dwell among mountains; "--
+Ma'colm, he's gaein' to merry Leddy Florimel."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm started. Could the girl have learned more concerning
+his sister than had yet reached himself? A fine watching over her
+was his, truly! But who was this he?</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy had never uttered the name of the father of her child,
+and all her people knew was that he could not be a fisherman, for
+then he would have married her before the child was born. But
+Malcolm had had a suspicion from the first, and now her words all
+but confirmed it. -- And was that fellow going to marry his
+sister? He turned white with dismay -- then red with anger, and
+stood speechless.</p>
+
+<p>But he was quickly brought to himself by a sharp pinch under
+the shoulder blade from Kelpie's long teeth: he had forgotten
+her, and she had taken the advantage.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha tellt ye that, Lizzy?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm no at leeberty to say, Ma'colm, but I'm sure it's true,
+an' my hert's like to brak."</p>
+
+<p>"Puir lassie!" said Malcolm, whose own trouble had never at
+any time rendered him insensible to that of others. "But is't
+onybody 'at kens what he says?" he pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I dinna jist richtly ken gien she kens, but I think she
+maun ha'e gude rizzon, or she wadna say as she says. Oh me! me!
+my bairnie 'ill be scornin' me sair whan he comes to ken.
+Ma'colm, ye're the only ane 'at disna luik doon upo' me, an whan
+ye cam' ower the tap o' the Boar's Tail, it was like an angel in
+a fire flaucht, an' something inside me said -- Tell 'im; tell
+'im; an' sae I bude to tell ye."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was even too simple to feel flattered by the girl's
+confidence, though to be trusted is a greater compliment than to
+be loved.</p>
+
+<p>"Hearken, Lizzy!" he said. "I canna e'en think, wi' this brute
+ready ilka meenute to ate me up. I maun tak' her hame. Efter
+that, gien ye wad like to tell me onything, I s' be at yer
+service. Bide aboot here -- or, luik ye: here's the key o' yon
+door; come throu' that intil the park -- throu' aneth the toll
+ro'd, ye ken. There ye'll get into the lythe (lee) wi' the
+bairnie; an' I'll be wi' ye in a quarter o' an hoor. It'll tak'
+me but twa meenutes to gang hame. Stoat 'ill put up the mere, and
+I'll be back -- I can du't in ten meenutes."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh! dinna hurry for me, Ma'colm: I'm no worth it," said
+Lizzy.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm was already at full speed along the top of the
+dune.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord preserve 's!" cried Lizzy, when she saw him clear the
+brass swivel. "Sic a laad as that is! Eh, he maun ha'e a richt
+lass to lo'e him some day! It's a' ane to him, boat or beast. He
+wadna turn frae the deil himsel'. An syne he's jist as saft's a
+deuk's neck when he speyks till a wuman or a bairn -- ay, or an
+auld man aither!"</p>
+
+<p>And full of trouble as it was about another, Lizzy's heart yet
+ached at the thought that she should be so unworthy of one like
+him.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V: LIZZY
+FINDLAY</h1>
+
+<p>From the sands she saw him gain the turnpike road with a bound
+and a scramble. Crossing it he entered the park by the sea gate;
+she had to enter it by the tunnel that passed under the same
+road. She approached the grated door, unlocked it, and looked in
+with a shudder. It was dark, the other end of it being obscured
+by trees, and the roots of the hill on whose top stood the temple
+of the winds. Through the tunnel blew what seemed quite another
+wind -- one of death, from regions beneath. She drew her shawl,
+one end of which was rolled about her baby, closer around them
+both ere she entered. Never before had she set foot within the
+place, and a strange horror of it filled her: she did not know
+that by that passage, on a certain lovely summer night, Lord
+Meikleham had issued to meet her on the sands under the moon. The
+sea was not terrible to her; she knew all its ways nearly as well
+as Malcolm knew the moods of Kelpie; but the earth and its ways
+were less known to her, and to turn her face towards it and enter
+by a little door into its bosom was like a visit to her grave.
+But she gathered her strength, entered with a shudder, passed in
+growing hope and final safety through it, and at the other end
+came out again into the light, only the cold of its death seemed
+to cling to her still. But the day had grown colder; the clouds
+that, seen or unseen, ever haunt the winter sun, had at length
+caught and shrouded him, and through the gathering vapours he
+looked ghastly. The wind blew from the sea. The tide was going
+down. There was snow in the air. The thin leafless trees were all
+bending away from the shore, and the wind went sighing, hissing,
+and almost wailing through their bare boughs and budless twigs.
+There would be a storm, she thought, ere the morning, but none of
+their people were out.</p>
+
+<p>Had there been -- well, she had almost ceased to care about
+anything, and her own life was so little to her now, that she had
+become less able to value that of other people. To this had the
+ignis fatuus of a false love brought her! She had dreamed
+heedlessly, to awake sorrowfully. But not until she heard he was
+going to be married, had she come right awake, and now she could
+dream no more. Alas! alas! what claim had she upon him? How could
+she tell, since such he was, what poor girl like herself she
+might not have robbed of her part in him?</p>
+
+<p>Yet even in the midst of her misery and despair, it was some
+consolation to think that Malcolm was her friend.</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing that he had already suffered from the blame of her
+fault, or the risk at which he met her, she would have gone
+towards the house to meet him the sooner, had not this been a
+part of the grounds where she knew Mr Crathie tolerated no one
+without express leave given. The fisher folk in particular must
+keep to the road by the other side of the burn, to which the sea
+gate admitted them. Lizzy therefore lingered near the tunnel,
+afraid of being seen.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Crathie was a man who did well under authority, but upon
+the top of it was consequential, overbearing, and far more
+exacting than the marquis. Full of his employer's importance when
+he was present, and of his own when he was absent, he was yet in
+the latter circumstances so doubtful of its adequate recognition
+by those under him, that he had grown very imperious, and
+resented with indignation the slightest breach of his orders.
+Hence he was in no great favour with the fishers.</p>
+
+<p>Now all the day he had been fuming over Malcolm's behaviour to
+him in the morning, and when he went home and learned that his
+wife had seen him upon Kelpie, as if nothing had happened, he
+became furious, and, in this possession of the devil, was at the
+present moment wandering about the grounds, brooding on the words
+Malcolm had spoken. He could not get rid of them. They caused an
+acrid burning in his bosom, for they had in them truth, like
+which no poison stings.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm, having crossed by the great bridge at the house,
+hurried down the western side of the burn to find Lizzy, and soon
+came upon her, walking up and down.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, lassie, ye maun be cauld!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No that cauld," she answered, and with the words burst into
+tears: "But naebody says a kin' word to me noo," she said in
+excuse, "an' I canna weel bide the soun' o' ane when it comes;
+I'm no used till 't."</p>
+
+<p>"Naebody?" exclaimed Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, naebody," she answered. "My mither winna, my father
+daurna, an' the bairnie canna, an I gang near naebody
+forbye."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, we maunna stan' oot here i' the cauld: come this gait,"
+said Malcolm. "The bairnie 'll get its deid."</p>
+
+<p>"There wadna be mony to greit at that," returned Lizzy, and
+pressed the child closer to her bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm led the way to the little chamber contrived under the
+temple in the heart of the hill, and unlocking the door made her
+enter. There he seated her in a comfortable chair, and wrapped
+her in the plaid he had brought for the purpose. It was all he
+could do to keep from taking her in his arms for very pity, for,
+both body and soul, she seemed too frozen to shiver. He shut the
+door, sat down on the table near her, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"There's naebody to disturb 's here, Lizzy: what wad ye say to
+me noo?"</p>
+
+<p>The sun was nearly down, and its light already almost
+smothered in clouds, so that the little chamber, whose door and
+window were in the deep shadow of the hill, was nearly dark.</p>
+
+<p>"I wadna hae ye tell me onything ye promised no to tell,"
+resumed Malcolm, finding she did not reply, "but I wad like to
+hear as muckle as ye can say."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae naething to tell ye, Ma'colm, but jist 'at my leddy
+Florimel's gauin' to be merried upo' Lord Meikleham -- Lord
+Liftore, they ca' him noo. Hech me!"</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid she sud be merried upon ony sic a bla'guard!"
+cried Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinna ca' 'im ill names, Ma'colm. I canna bide it, though I
+hae no richt to tak up the stick for him."</p>
+
+<p>"I wadna say a word 'at micht fa' sair on a sair hert," he
+returned; "but gien ye kent a', ye wad ken I hed a gey sized craw
+to pluck wi' 's lordship mysel'."</p>
+
+<p>The girl gave a low cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye wadna hurt 'im, Ma'colm?" she said, in terror at the
+thought of the elegant youth in the clutches of an angry
+fisherman, even if he were the generous Malcolm MacPhail
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I wad raither not," he replied, "but we maun see hoo he
+cairries himsel'."</p>
+
+<p>"Du naething till 'im for my sake, Ma'colm. Ye can hae
+naething again' him yersel'."</p>
+
+<p>It was too dark for Malcolm to see the keen look of wistful
+regret with which Lizzy tried to pierce the gloom and read his
+face: for a moment the poor girl thought he meant he had loved
+her himself. But far other thoughts were in Malcolm's mind: one
+was that her whom, as a scarce approachable goddess, he had loved
+before he knew her of his own blood, he would rather see married
+to an honest fisherman in the Seaton of Portlossie, than to such
+a lord as Meikleham. He had seen enough of him at Lossie House to
+know what he was, and puritanical fish catching Malcolm had ideas
+above those of most marquises of his day: the thought of the
+alliance was horrible to him. It was possibly not inevitable,
+however; only what could he do, and at the same time avoid
+grievous hurt?</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna think he'll ever merry my leddy," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What gars ye say that, Ma'colm?" returned Lizzy, with
+eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"I canna tell ye jist i' the noo; but ye ken a body canna weel
+be aye aboot a place ohn seein things. I'll tell ye something o'
+mair consequence hooever," he continued. . "Some fowk say there's
+a God, an' some say there's nane, an' I ha'e no richt to preach
+to ye, Lizzy; but I maun jist tell ye this -- 'at gien God dinna
+help them 'at cry till 'im i' the warst o' tribles, they micht
+jist as weel ha'e nae God at a'. For my ain pairt I ha'e been
+helpit, an' I think it was him intil 't. Wi' his help, a man may
+warstle throu' onything. I say I think it was himsel' tuik me
+throu' 't, an' here I stan' afore ye, ready for the neist trible,
+an' the help 'at 'll come wi' 't. What it may be, God only
+knows!"</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI: MR
+CRATHIE</h1>
+
+<p>He was interrupted by the sudden opening of the door, and the
+voice of the factor in exultant wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"MacPhail!" it cried. "Come out with you. Don't think to sneak
+there. I know you. What right have you to be on the premises?
+Didn't I send you about your business this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, sir, but ye didna pay me my wages," said Malcolm, who had
+sprung to the door and now stood holding it half shut, while Mr
+Crathie pushed it half open.</p>
+
+<p>"No matter. You're nothing better than a housebreaker if you
+enter any building about the place."</p>
+
+<p>"I brak nae lock," returned Malcolm. "I ha'e the key my lord
+gae me to ilka place 'ithin the wa's excep' the strong room."</p>
+
+<p>"Give it me directly. I'm master here now."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, I s' du nae sic thing, sir. What he gae me I'll
+keep."</p>
+
+<p>"Give up that key, or I'll go at once and get a warrant
+against you for theft."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, we s' refar't to Maister Soutar."</p>
+
+<p>"Damn your impudence -- 'at I sud say't! -- what has he to do
+with my affairs? Come out of that directly."</p>
+
+<p>"Huly, huly, sir!" returned Malcolm, in terror lest he should
+discover who was with him.</p>
+
+<p>"You low bred rascal! Who have you there with you?"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke Mr Crathie would have forced his way into the
+dusky chamber, where he could just perceive a motionless
+undefined form. But stiff as a statue Malcolm kept his stand, and
+the door was immovable. Mr Crathie gave a second and angrier
+push, but the youth's corporeal as well as his mental equilibrium
+was hard to upset, and his enemy drew back in mounting fury.</p>
+
+<p>"Get out of there," he cried, "or I'll horsewhip you for a
+damned blackguard."</p>
+
+<p>"Whup awa'," said Malcolm, "but in here ye s' no come the
+nicht."</p>
+
+<p>The factor rushed at him, his heavy whip upheaved -- and the
+same moment found himself, not in the room, but lying on the
+flower bed in front of it. Malcolm instantly stepped out, locked
+the door, put the key in his pocket, and turned to assist him.
+But he was up already, and busy with words unbefitting the mouth
+of an elder of the kirk.</p>
+
+<p>"Didna I say 'at ye sudna come in, sir? What for wull fowk no
+tak' a tellin'?" expostulated Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>But the factor was far beyond force of logic or illumination
+of reason. He raved and swore.</p>
+
+<p>"Get oot o' my sicht," he cried, "or I'll shot ye like a
+tyke."</p>
+
+<p>"Gang an' fess yer gun," said Malcolm, "an' gien ye fin' me
+waitin' for ye, ye can lat at me."</p>
+
+<p>The factor uttered a horrible imprecation on himself if he did
+not make him pay dearly for his behaviour.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoots, sir! Be asham't o' yersel'. Gang hame to the mistress,
+an' I s' be up the morn's mornin' for my wages."</p>
+
+<p>"If ye set foot on the grounds again, I'll set every dog in
+the place upon you."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Gien I was to turn the order the ither gait, wad they min'
+you or me, div ye think, Maister Crathie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me that key, and go about your business."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na, sir! What my lord gae me I s' keep -- for a' the
+factors atween this an' the Land's En'," returned Malcolm. "An'
+for lea'in' the place, gien I be na in your service, Maister
+Crathie, I'm nae un'er your orders. I'll gang whan it shuits me.
+An' mair yet, ye s' gang oot o' this first, or I s' gar ye, an
+that ye'll see:'</p>
+
+<p>It was a violent proceeding, but for a matter of manners he
+was not going to risk what of her good name poor Lizzy had left:
+like the books of the Sibyl, that grew in value. He made,
+however, but one threatful stride towards the factor, for the
+great man turned and fled.</p>
+
+<p>The moment he was out of sight, Malcolm unlocked the door, led
+Lizzy out, and brought her through the tunnel to the sands. There
+he left her, and set out for Scaurnose.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII: BLUE
+PETER</h1>
+
+<p>The door of Blue Peter's cottage was opened by his sister. Not
+much at home in the summer, when she carried fish to the country,
+she was very little absent in the winter, and as there was but
+one room for all uses, except the closet bedroom and the garret
+at the top of the ladder, Malcolm, instead of going in, called to
+his friend, whom he saw by the fire with his little Phemy upon
+his knee, to come out and speak to him.</p>
+
+<p>Blue Peter at once obeyed the summons.</p>
+
+<p>"There's naething wrang, I houp, Ma'colm?" he said, as he
+closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>"Maister Graham wad say," returned Malcolm, "naething ever was
+wrang but what ye did wrang yersel', or wadna pit richt whan ye
+had a chance. I ha'e him nae mair to gang till, Joseph, an' sae
+I'm come to you. Come doon by, an' i' the scoug o' a rock, I'll
+tell ye a' aboot it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye wadna ha'e the mistress no ken o' 't?" said his friend. "I
+dinna jist like haein' secrets frae her."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye sall jeedge for yersel', man, an' tell her or no just as
+ye like. Only she maun haud her tongue, or the black dog 'll ha'e
+a' the butter."</p>
+
+<p>"She can haud her tongue like the tae stane o' a grave," said
+Peter.</p>
+
+<p>As they spoke they reached the cliff that hung over the
+shattered shore. It was a clear, cold night. Snow, the remnants
+of the last storm, which frost had preserved in every shadowy
+spot, lay all about them. The sky was clear, and full of stars,
+for the wind that blew cold from the northwest had dispelled the
+snowy clouds. The waves rushed into countless gulfs and crannies
+and straits on the ruggedest of shores, and the sounds of waves
+and wind kept calling like voices from the unseen. By a path,
+seemingly fitter for goats than men, they descended halfway to
+the beach, and under a great projection of rock stood sheltered
+from the wind. Then Malcolm turned to Joseph Mair, commonly
+called Blue Peter, because he had been a man of war's man, and
+laying his hand on his arm said:</p>
+
+<p>"Blue Peter, did ever I tell ye a lee?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, never," answered Peter. "What gars ye speir sic a
+thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cause I want ye to believe me noo, an' it winna be easy."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll believe onything ye tell me -- 'at can be believed."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I ha'e come to the knowledge 'at my name's no MacPhail:
+it's Colonsay. Man, I'm the Markis o' Lossie."</p>
+
+<p>Without a moment's hesitation, without a single stare of
+unbelief or even astonishment, Blue Peter pulled off his bonnet,
+and stood bareheaded before the companion of his toils.</p>
+
+<p>"Peter!" cried Malcolm, "dinna brak my hert: put on yer
+bonnet."</p>
+
+<p>"The Lord o' lords be thankit, my lord!" said Blue Peter: "the
+puir man has a freen' this day."</p>
+
+<p>Then replacing his bonnet he said -- "An' what'll be yer
+lordship's wull?"</p>
+
+<p>"First and foremost, Peter, that my best freen', efter my auld
+daddy and the schulemaister, 's no to turn again' me 'cause I hed
+a markis an' neither piper nor fisher to my father."</p>
+
+<p>"It's no like it, my lord," returned Blue Peter, "whan the
+first thing I say is -- what wad ye ha'e o' me? Here I am -- no
+speirin' a queston!"</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I wad ha'e ye hear the story o' 't a'."</p>
+
+<p>"Say on, my lord," said Peter.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm was silent for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinkin', Peter," he said at last, "whether I cud bide
+to hear you say my lord to me. Dootless, as it 'll ha'e to come
+to that, it wad be better to grow used till 't while we're
+thegither, sae 'at whan it maun be, it mayna ha'e the luik o'
+cheenge until it, for cheenge is jist the thing I canna bide. I'
+the meantime, hooever, we canna gi'e in till 't, 'cause it wad
+set fowk jaloosin'. But I wad be obleeged till ye, Peter, gien
+you wad say my lord whiles, whan we're oor lanes, for I wad fain
+grow sae used till't 'at I never kent ye said it, for 'atween you
+an' me I dinna like it. An' noo I s' tell ye a' 'at I ken."</p>
+
+<p>When he had ended the tale of what had come to his knowledge,
+and how it had come, and paused:</p>
+
+<p>"Gie's a grup o' yer han', my lord," said Blue Peter, "an' may
+God haud ye lang in life an' honour to reule ower us. Noo, gien
+ye please, what are ye gauin' to du?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell ye me, Peter, what ye think I oucht to du."</p>
+
+<p>"That wad tak a heap o' thinkin'," returned the fisherman;
+"but ae thing seems aboot plain: ye ha'e no richt to lat yer
+sister gang exposed to temptations ye cud haud frae her. That's
+no, as ye promised, to be kin' till her. I canna believe that's
+hoo yer father expeckit o' ye. I ken weel 'at fowk in his
+poseetion ha'ena the preevileeges o' the like o' hiz -- they
+ha'ena the win, an' the watter, an' whiles a lee shore to gar
+them know they are but men, an' sen' them rattling at the wicket
+of h'aven; but still I dinna think, by yer ain accoont, specially
+noo 'at I houp he's forgi'en an' latten in -- God grant it! -- I
+div not think he wad like my leddy Florimel to be oon'er the
+influences o' sic a ane as that Leddy Bellair. Ye maun gang till
+her. Ye ha'e nae ch'ice, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"But what am I to do, whan I div gang?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what ye hev to gang an' see."</p>
+
+<p>"An' that's what I ha'e been tellin' mysel', an' what Miss
+Horn's been tellin' me tu. But it's a gran' thing to get yer ain
+thouchts corroborat. Ye see I'm feart for wrangin' her for pride,
+and bringin' her doon to set mysel' up."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," said Blue Peter, solemnly, "ye ken the life o' puir
+fisher fowk; ye ken hoo it micht be lichtened, sae lang as it
+laists, an' mony a hole steikit 'at the cauld deith creeps in at
+the noo: coont ye them naething, my lord? Coont ye the wull o'
+Providence, 'at sets ye ower them, naething? What for could the
+Lord ha'e gie ye sic an upbringin' as no markis' son ever hed
+afore ye, or maybe ever wull ha'e efter ye, gien it bena 'at ye
+sud tak them in han' to du yer pairt by them? Gien ye forsak them
+noo, ye'll be forgettin' him 'at made them an' you, an' the sea,
+an' the herrin' to be taen intil 't. Gien ye forget them, there's
+nae houp for them, but the same deith 'ill keep on swallowin' at
+them upo' sea an' shore."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye speyk the trowth as I ha'e spoken't till mysel', Peter.
+Noo, hearken: will ye sail wi' me the nicht for Lon'on toon?" The
+fisherman was silent a moment -- then answered, "I wull, my lord;
+but I maun tell my wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Rin, an' fess her here than, for I'm fleyed at yer sister,
+honest wuman, an' little Phemy. It wad blaud a' thing gien I was
+hurried to du something afore I kenned what."</p>
+
+<p>"I s' ha'e her oot in a meenute," said Joseph, and scrambled
+up the cliff.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII:
+VOYAGE TO LONDON</h1>
+
+<p>For a few minutes Malcolm stood alone in the dim starlight of
+winter, looking out on the dusky sea, dark as his own future,
+into which the wind now blowing behind him would soon begin to
+carry him. He anticipated its difficulties, but never thought of
+perils: it was seldom anything oppressed him but the doubt of
+what he ought to do. This was ever the cold mist that swallowed
+the airy castles he built and peopled with all the friends and
+acquaintances of his youth. But the very first step towards
+action is the death warrant of doubt, and the tide of Malcolm's
+being ran higher that night, as he stood thus alone under the
+stars, than he had ever yet known it run. With all his common
+sense, and the abundance of his philosophy, which the much
+leisure belonging to certain phases of his life had combined with
+the slow strength of his intellect to render somewhat long winded
+in utterance, there was yet room in Malcolm's bonnet for a bee
+above the ordinary size, and if it buzzed a little too
+romantically for the taste of the nineteenth century, about
+disguises and surprises and bounty and plots and rescues and such
+like, something must be pardoned to one whose experience had
+already been so greatly out of the common, and whose nature was
+far too childlike and poetic, and developed in far too simple a
+surrounding of labour and success, difficulty and conquest,
+danger and deliverance, not to have more than the usual amount of
+what is called the romantic in its composition.</p>
+
+<p>The buzzing of his bee was for the present interrupted by the
+return of Blue Peter with his wife. She threw her arms round
+Malcolm's neck, and burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoots, my woman!" said her husband, "what are ye greitin'
+at?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Peter!" she answered, "I canna help it. It's jist like a
+deith. He's gauin' to lea' us a', an' gang hame till 's ain, an'
+I canna bide 'at he sud grow strange-like to hiz 'at ha'e kenned
+him sae lang."</p>
+
+<p>"It'll be an ill day," returned Malcolm, "whan I grow strange
+to ony freen'. I'll ha'e to gang far down the laich (low) ro'd
+afore that be poassible. I mayna aye be able to du jist what ye
+wad like; but lippen ye to me: I s' be fair to ye. An' noo I want
+Blue Peter to gang wi' me, an' help me to what I ha'e to du --
+gien ye ha'e nae objection to lat him."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, nane ha'e I. I wad gang mysel' gien I cud be ony use,"
+answered Mrs Mair; "but women are i' the gait whiles."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I'll no even say thank ye; I'll be awin' ye that as
+weel's the lave. But gien I dinna du weel, it winna be the fau't
+o' ane or the ither o' you twa freen's. Noo, Peter, we maun be
+aff."</p>
+
+<p>"No the nicht, surely?" said Mrs Mair, a little taken by
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"The suner the better, lass," replied her husband. "An' we
+cudna ha'e a better win'. Jist rin ye hame, an' get some
+vicktooals thegither, an' come efter hiz to Portlossie."</p>
+
+<p>"But hoo 'ill ye get the boat to the watter ohn mair han's?
+I'll need to come mysel' an' fess Jean."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na; let Jean sit. There's plenty i' the Seaton to help.
+We're gauin' to tak' the markis's cutter. She's a heap easier to
+lainch, an' she'll sail a heap fester."</p>
+
+<p>"But what'll Maister Crathie say?"</p>
+
+<p>"We maun tak' oor chance o' that," answered her husband, with
+a smile of confidence; and thereupon he and Malcolm set out for
+the Seaton, while Mrs Mair went home to get ready some provisions
+for the voyage, consisting chiefly of oatcakes.</p>
+
+<p>The prejudice against Malcolm from his imagined behaviour to
+Lizzy Findlay, had by this time, partly through the assurances of
+Peter, partly through the power of the youth's innocent presence,
+almost died out, and when the two men reached the Seaton, they
+found plenty of hands ready to help them to reach the little
+sloop. Malcolm said he was going to take her to Peterhead, and
+they asked no questions but such as he contrived to answer with
+truth, or to leave unanswered. Once afloat, there was very little
+to be done to her, for she had been laid up in perfect condition,
+and as soon as Mrs Mair appeared with her basket, and they had
+put that, a keg of water, some fishing lines, and a pan of
+mussels for bait, on board, they were ready to sail, and wished
+their friends a light goodbye, leaving them to imagine they were
+gone but for a day or two, probably on some business of Mr
+Crathie's.</p>
+
+<p>With the wind from the northwest, they soon reached Duff
+Harbour, where Malcolm went on shore and saw Mr Soutar. He, with
+a landsman's prejudice, made strenuous objections to such a mad
+prank as sailing to London at that time of the year, but in vain.
+Malcolm saw nothing mad in it, and the lawyer had to admit he
+ought to know best. He brought on board with him a lad of Peter's
+acquaintance, and now fully manned, they set sail again, and by
+the time the sun appeared were not far from Peterhead.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's spirits kept rising as they bowled along over the
+bright cold waters. He never felt so capable as when at sea. His
+energies had been first called out in combat with the elements,
+and hence he always felt strongest, most at home, and surest of
+himself on the water. Young as he was, however, such had been his
+training under Mr Graham, that a large part of this elevation of
+spirit was owing to an unreasoned sense of being there more
+immediately in the hands of God. Later in life, he interpreted
+the mental condition thus -- that of course he was always and in
+every place equally in God's hands, but that at sea he felt the
+truth more keenly. Where a man has nothing firm under him, where
+his life depends on winds invisible and waters unstable, where a
+single movement may be death, he learns to feel what is at the
+same time just as true every night he spends asleep in the bed in
+which generations have slept before him, or any sunny hour he
+spends walking over ancestral acres.</p>
+
+<p>They put in at Peterhead, purchased a few provisions, and
+again set sail.</p>
+
+<p>And now it seemed to Malcolm that he must soon come to a
+conclusion as to the steps he must take when he reached London.
+But think as he would, he could plan nothing beyond finding out
+where his sister lived, going to look at the house, and getting
+into it if he might. Nor could his companion help him with any
+suggestions, and indeed he could not talk much with him because
+of the presence of Davy, a rough, round eyed, red haired young
+Scot, of the dull invaluable class that can only do what they are
+told, but do that to the extent of their faculty.</p>
+
+<p>They knew all the coast as far as the Frith of Forth; after
+that they had to be more careful. They had no charts on board,
+nor could have made much use of any. But the wind continued
+favourable, and the weather cold, bright, and full of life. They
+spoke many coasters on their way, and received many
+directions.</p>
+
+<p>Off the Nore they had rough weather, and had to stand off and
+on for a day and a night till it moderated. Then they spoke a
+fishing boat, took a pilot on board, and were soon in smooth
+water. More and more they wondered as the channel narrowed, and
+ended their voyage at length below London Bridge, in a very
+jungle of masts.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX: LONDON
+STREETS</h1>
+
+<p>Leaving Davy to keep the sloop, the two fishermen went on
+shore. Passing from the narrow precincts of the river, they found
+themselves at once in the roar of London city. Stunned at first,
+then excited, then bewildered, then dazed, without plan to guide
+their steps, they wandered about until, unused to the hard
+stones, their feet ached. It was a dull day in March. A keen wind
+blew round the corners of the streets. They wished themselves at
+sea again.</p>
+
+<p>"Sic a sicht o' fowk!" said Blue Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"It's hard to think," rejoined Malcolm, "what w'y the God 'at
+made them can luik efter them a' in sic a tumult. But they say
+even the sheep dog kens ilk sheep i' the flock 'at 's gien him in
+chairge."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye see," said Blue Peter, "they're mair like a shoal
+o' herrin' nor a flock o' sheep."</p>
+
+<p>"It's no the num'er o' them 'at plagues me," said Malcolm.
+"The gran' diffeeculty is hoo He can lat ilk ane tak' his ain
+gait an' yet luik efter them a'. But gien He does't, it stan's to
+rizzon it maun be in some w'y 'at them 'at's sae luikit efter
+canna by ony possibeelity un'erstan'."</p>
+
+<p>"That's trowth, I'm thinkin'. We maun jist gi'e up an' confess
+there's things abune a' human comprehension."</p>
+
+<p>"Wha kens but that maybe 'cause i' their verra natur' they're
+ower semple for cr'aturs like hiz 'at's made sae mixed-like, an'
+see sae little intill the hert o' things?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're ayont me there," said Blue Peter, and a silence
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>It was a conversation very unsuitable to London Streets -- but
+then these were raw Scotch fisherman, who had not yet learned how
+absurd it is to suppose ourselves come from anything greater than
+ourselves, and had no conception of the liberty it confers on a
+man to know that he is the child of a protoplasm, or something
+still more beautifully small.</p>
+
+<p>At length a policeman directed them to a Scotch eating house,
+where they fared after their country's fashions, and from the
+landlady gathered directions by which to guide themselves towards
+Curzon Street, a certain number in which Mr Soutar had given
+Malcolm as Lady Bellair's address.</p>
+
+<p>The door was opened to Malcolm's knock by a slatternly
+charwoman, who, unable to understand a word he said, would, but
+for its fine frank expression, have shut the door in his face.
+From the expression of hers, however, Malcolm suddenly remembered
+that he must speak English, and having a plentiful store of the
+book sort, he at once made himself intelligible in spite of tone
+and accent. It was, however, only a shifting of the difficulty,
+for he now found it nearly impossible to understand her. But by
+repeated questioning and hard listening he learnt at last that
+Lady Bellair had removed her establishment to Lady Lossie's house
+in Portland Place.</p>
+
+<p>After many curious perplexities, odd blunders, and vain
+endeavours to understand shop signs and notices in the windows;
+after they had again and again imagined themselves back at a
+place they had left miles away; after many a useless effort to
+lay hold of directions given so rapidly that the very sense could
+not gather the sounds, they at length stood -- not in Portland
+Place, but in front of Westminster Abbey. Inquiring what it was,
+and finding they could go in, they entered.</p>
+
+<p>For some moments not a word was spoken between them, but when
+they had walked slowly halfway up the nave Malcolm turned and
+said, "Eh, Peter! sic a blessin'!" and Peter replied, "There
+canna be muckle o' this i' the warl'!"</p>
+
+<p>Comparing impressions afterwards, Peter said that the moment
+he stepped in, he heard the rush of the tide on the rocks of
+Scaurnose; and Malcolm declared he felt as if he had stepped out
+of the world into the regions of eternal silence.</p>
+
+<p>"What a mercy it maun be," he went on, "to mony a cratur', in
+sic a whummle an' a rum'le an' a remish as this Lon'on, to ken
+'at there is sic a cave howkit oot o' the din, 'at he can gang
+intill an' say his prayers intill! Man, Peter! I'm jist some
+feared whiles 'at the verra din i' my lugs mayna 'maist drive the
+thoucht o' God oot o' me."</p>
+
+<p>At length they found their way into Regent Street, and leaving
+its mean assertion behind, reached the stately modesty of
+Portland Place; and Malcolm was pleased to think the house he
+sought was one of those he now saw.</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the largest in the Place. He would not, however,
+yield to the temptation to have a good look at it, for fear of
+attracting attention from its windows and being recognised. They
+turned therefore aside into some of the smaller thoroughfares
+lying between Portland Place and Great Portland Street, where
+searching about, they came upon a decent looking public house and
+inquired after lodgings. They were directed to a woman in the
+neighbourhood, who kept a dingy little curiosity shop. On payment
+of a week's rent in advance, she allowed them a small bedroom.
+But Malcolm did not want Peter with him that night; he wished to
+be perfectly free; and besides it was more than desirable that
+Peter should go and look after the boat and the boy.</p>
+
+<p>Left alone he fell once more to his hitherto futile scheming:
+How was he to get near his sister? To the whitest of lies he had
+insuperable objection, and if he appeared before her with no
+reason to give, would she not be far too offended with his
+presumption to retain him in her service? And except he could be
+near her as her servant, he did not see a chance of doing
+anything for her without disclosing facts which might make all
+such service as he would most gladly render her impossible, by
+causing her to hate the very sight of him. Plan after plan rose
+and passed from his mind rejected, and the only resolution he
+could come to was to write to Mr Soutar, to whom he had committed
+the protection of Kelpie, to send her up by the first smack from
+Aberdeen. He did so, and wrote also to Miss Horn, telling her
+where he was, then went out, and made his way back to Portland
+Place.</p>
+
+<p>Night had closed in, and thick vapours hid the moon, but lamps
+and lighted windows illuminated the wide street. Presently it
+began to snow. But through the snow and the night went carriages
+in all directions, with great lamps that turned the flakes into
+white stars for a moment as they gleamed past. The hoofs of the
+horses echoed hard from the firm road.</p>
+
+<p>Could that house really belong to him? It did, yet he dared
+not enter it. That which was dear and precious to him was in the
+house, and just because of that he could not call it his own.
+There was less light in it than in any other within his range. He
+walked up and down the opposite side of the street its whole
+length some fifty times, but saw no sign of vitality about the
+house. At length a brougham stopped at the door, and a man got
+out and knocked. Malcolm instantly crossed, but could not see his
+face. The door opened, and he entered. The brougham waited. After
+about a quarter of an hour he came out again, accompanied by two
+ladies, one of whom he judged by her figure to be Florimel. They
+all got into the carriage, and Malcolm braced himself for a
+terrible run. But the coachman drove carefully, the snow lay a
+few inches deep, and he found no difficulty in keeping near them,
+following with fleet foot and husbanded breath.</p>
+
+<p>They stopped at the doors of a large dark looking building in
+a narrow street He thought it was a church, and wondered that so
+his sister should be going there on a week night. Nor did the
+aspect of the entrance hall, into which he followed them,
+undeceive him. It was more showy, certainly, than the vestibule
+of any church he had ever been in before, but what might not
+churches be in London? They went up a great flight of stairs --
+to reach the gallery, as he thought, and still he went after
+them. When he reached the top, they were just vanishing round a
+curve, and his advance was checked: a man came up to him, said he
+could not come there, and gruffly requested him to show his
+ticket.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't got one. What is this place?" said Malcolm, whom
+the aspect of the man had suddenly rendered doubtful, mouthing
+his English with Scotch deliberation. The man gave him a look of
+contemptuous surprise, and turning to another who lounged behind
+him with his hands in his pockets, said -- "Tom, here's a
+gentleman as wants to know where he is: can you tell him?" The
+person addressed laughed, and gave Malcolm a queer look.</p>
+
+<p>"Every cock crows on his own midden," said Malcolm, "but if I
+were on mine, I would try to be civil."</p>
+
+<p>"You go down there, and pay for a pit ticket, and you'll soon
+know where you are, mate," said Tom.</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed, and after a few inquiries, and the outlay of two
+shillings, found himself in the pit of one of the largest of the
+London theatres.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X: THE
+TEMPEST</h1>
+
+<p>The play was begun, and the stage was the centre of light.
+Thither Malcolm's eyes were drawn the instant he entered. He was
+all but unaware of the multitude of faces about him, and his
+attention was at once fascinated by the lovely show revealed in
+soft radiance. But surely he had seen the vision before! One long
+moment its effect upon him was as real as if he had been actually
+deceived as to its nature: was it not the shore between Scaurnose
+and Portlossie, betwixt the Boar's Tail and the sea? and was not
+that the marquis, his father, in his dressing gown, pacing to and
+fro upon the sands? He yielded himself to illusion -- abandoned
+himself to the wonderful, and looked only for what would come
+next.</p>
+
+<p>A lovely lady entered: to his excited fancy it was Florimel. A
+moment more and she spoke.</p>
+
+<pre>
+If by your art, my dearest father, you have
+Put the wild waters in this roar, allay them.
+</pre>
+
+<p>Then first he understood that before him rose in wondrous
+realization the play of Shakspere he knew best -- the first he
+had ever read: The Tempest, hitherto a lovely phantom for the
+mind's eye, now embodied to the enraptured sense. During the
+whole of the first act he never thought either of Miranda or
+Florimel apart. At the same time so taken was he with the
+princely carriage and utterance of Ferdinand that, though with a
+sigh, he consented he should have his sister.</p>
+
+<p>The drop scene had fallen for a minute or two before he began
+to look around him. A moment more and he had commenced a thorough
+search for his sister amongst the ladies in the boxes. But when
+at length he found her, he dared not fix his eyes upon her lest
+his gaze should make her look at him, and she should recognise
+him. Alas, her eyes might have rested on him twenty times without
+his face once rousing in her mind the thought of the fisher lad
+of Portlossie! All that had passed between them in the days
+already old was virtually forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees he gathered courage, and soon began to feel that
+there was small chance indeed of her eyes alighting upon him for
+the briefest of moments. Then he looked more closely, and felt
+through rather than saw with his eyes that some sort of change
+had already passed upon her. It was Florimel, yet not the very
+Florimel he had known. Already something had begun to supplant
+the girl freedom that had formerly in every look and motion
+asserted itself. She was more beautiful, but not so lovely in his
+eyes; much of what had charmed him had vanished. She was more
+stately, but the stateliness had a little hardness mingled with
+it: and could it be that the first of a cloud had already
+gathered on her forehead? Surely she was not so happy as she had
+been at Lossie House. She was dressed in black, with a white
+flower in her hair.</p>
+
+<p>Beside her sat the bold faced countess, and behind them her
+nephew, Lord Meikleham that was now Lord Liftore. A fierce
+indignation seized the heart of Malcolm at the sight. Behind the
+form of the earl, his mind's eye saw that of Lizzy, out in the
+wind on the Boar's Tail, her old shawl wrapped about herself and
+the child of the man who sat there so composed and comfortable.
+His features were fine and clear cut, his shoulders broad, and
+his head well set: he had much improved since Malcolm offered to
+fight him with one hand in the dining room of Lossie House. Every
+now and then he leaned forward between his aunt and Florimel, and
+spoke to the latter. To Malcolm's eyes she seemed to listen with
+some haughtiness. Now and then she cast him an indifferent
+glance. Malcolm was pleased: Lord Liftore was anything but the
+Ferdinand to whom he could consent to yield his Miranda. They
+would make a fine couple certainly, but for any other fitness,
+knowing what he did, Malcolm was glad to perceive none. The more
+annoyed was he when once or twice he fancied he caught a look
+between them that indicated more than acquaintanceship -- some
+sort of intimacy at least. But he reflected that in the relation
+in which they stood to Lady Bellair it could hardly be
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>The play was tolerably well put upon the stage, and free of
+the absurdities attendant upon too ambitious an endeavour to
+represent to the sense things which Shakspere and the dramatists
+of his period freely committed to their best and most powerful
+ally, the willing imagination of the spectators. The opening of
+the last scene, where Ferdinand and Miranda are discovered at
+chess, was none the less effective for its simplicity, and
+Malcolm was turning from a delighted gaze at its loveliness to
+glance at his sister and her companions, when his eyes fell on a
+face near him in the pit which had fixed an absorbed regard in
+the same direction. It was that of a man a few years older than
+himself, with irregular features, but a fine mouth, large chin;
+and great forehead. Under the peculiarly prominent eyebrows shone
+dark eyes of wondrous brilliancy and seeming penetration. Malcolm
+could not but suspect that his gaze was upon his sister, but as
+they were a long way from the boxes, he could not be certain.
+Once he thought he saw her look at him, but of that also he could
+be in no wise certain.</p>
+
+<p>He knew the play so well that he rose just in time to reach
+the pit door ere exit should be impeded with the outcomers, and
+thence with some difficulty he found his way to the foot of the
+stair up which those he watched had gone. There he had stood but
+a little while, when he saw in front of him, almost within reach
+of an outstretched hand, the same young man waiting also. After
+what seemed a long time, he saw his sister and her two companions
+come slowly down the stair in the descending crowd. Her eyes
+seemed searching amongst the multitude that filled the lobby.
+Presently an indubitable glance of still recognition passed
+between them, and by a slight movement the young man placed
+himself so that she must pass next him in the crowd. Malcolm got
+one place nearer in the change, and thought they grasped hands.
+She turned her head slightly back, and seemed to put a question
+-- with her lips only. He replied in the same manner. A light
+rushed into her face and vanished. But not a feature moved and
+not a word had been spoken. Neither of her companions had seen
+the dumb show, and her friend stood where he was till they had
+left the house. Malcolm stood also, much inclined to follow him
+when he went, but, his attention having been attracted for a
+moment in another direction, when he looked again he had
+disappeared. He sought him where he fancied he saw the movement
+of his vanishing, but was soon convinced of the uselessness of
+the attempt, and walked home.</p>
+
+<p>Before he reached his lodging, he had resolved on making trial
+of a plan which had more than once occurred to him, but had as
+often been rejected as too full of the risk of repulse.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI: DEMON AND
+THE PIPES</h1>
+
+<p>His plan was to watch the house until he saw some
+entertainment going on, then present himself as if he had but
+just arrived from her ladyship's country seat. At such a time no
+one would acquaint her with his appearance, and he would, as if
+it were but a matter of course, at once take his share in waiting
+on the guests. By this means he might perhaps get her a little
+accustomed to his presence before she could be at leisure to
+challenge it.</p>
+
+<p>When he put Kelpie in her stall the last time for a season,
+and ran into the house to get his plaid for Lizzy, who was
+waiting him near the tunnel, he bethought himself that he had
+better take with him also what other of his personal requirements
+he could carry. He looked about therefore, and finding a large
+carpet bag in one of the garret rooms, hurried into it some of
+his clothes -- amongst them the Highland dress he had worn as
+henchman to the marquis, and added the great Lossie pipes his
+father had given to old Duncan as well, but which the piper had
+not taken with him when he left Lossie House. The said Highland
+dress he now resolved to put on, as that in which latterly
+Florimel had been most used to see him: in it he would watch his
+opportunity of gaining admission to the house.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Blue Peter made his appearance early. They
+went out together, spent the day in sightseeing, and, on
+Malcolm's part chiefly, in learning the topography of London.</p>
+
+<p>In Hyde Park Malcolm told his friend that he had sent for
+Kelpie.</p>
+
+<p>"She'll be the deid o' ye i' thae streets, as fu' o' wheels as
+the sea o' fish: twize I've been 'maist gr'un to poother o' my
+ro'd here," said Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye see, oot here amo' the gentry it's no freely sae
+ill, an' the ro'ds are no a' stane; an' here, ye see, 's the
+place whaur they come, leddies an' a', to ha'e their rides
+thegither. What I'm fleyt for is 'at she'll be brackin' legs wi'
+her deevilich kickin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Haud her upo' dry strae an' watter for a whilie, till her
+banes begin to cry oot for something to hap them frae the cauld:
+that'll quaiet her a bit," said Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a' ye ken!" returned Malcolm. "She's aye the wau
+natur'd, the less she has to ate. Na, na; she maun be weel lined.
+The deevil in her maun lie warm, or she'll be neither to haud nor
+bin'. There's nae doobt she's waur to haud in whan she's in guid
+condeetion; but she's nane sae like to tak' a body by the sma' o'
+the back, an' shak the inside oot o' 'im, as she maist did ae day
+to the herd laddie at the ferm, only he had an auld girth aboot
+the mids o' 'im for a belt, an' he tuik the less scaith."</p>
+
+<p>"Cudna we gang an' see the maister the day?" said Blue Peter,
+changing the subject.</p>
+
+<p>He meant Mr Graham, the late schoolmaster of Portlossie, whom
+the charge of heretical teaching had driven from the place.</p>
+
+<p>"We canna weel du that till we hear whaur he is. The last time
+Miss Horn h'ard frae him, he was changin' his lodgin's, an' ye
+see the kin' o' a place this Lon'on is," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Peter was gone, to return to the boat, Malcolm
+dressed himself in his kilt and its belongings, and when it was
+fairly dusk, took his pipes under his arm, and set out for
+Portland Place. He had the better hope of speedy success to his
+plan, that he fancied he had read on his sister's lips, in the
+silent communication that passed between her and her friend in
+the crowd, the words come and tomorrow. It might have been the
+merest imagination, yet it was something: how often have we not
+to be grateful for shadows! Up and down the street he walked a
+long time, without seeing a sign of life about the house. But at
+length the hall was lighted. Then the door opened, and a servant
+rolled out a carpet over the wide pavement, which the snow had
+left wet and miry -- a signal for the street children, ever on
+the outlook for sights, to gather. Before the first carriage
+arrived, there was already a little crowd of humble watchers and
+waiters about the gutter and curb stone. But they were not
+destined to much amusement that evening, the visitors amounting
+only to a small dinner party. Still they had the pleasure of
+seeing a few grand ladies issue from their carriages, cross the
+stage of their Epiphany, the pavement, and vanish in the paradise
+of the shining hall, with its ascent of gorgeous stairs. No
+broken steps, no missing balusters there! And they have the show
+all for nothing! It is one of the perquisites of street service.
+What one would give to see the shapes glide over the field of
+those camerae obscurae, the hearts of the street Arabs! once to
+gaze on the jewelled beauties through the eyes of those shocked
+haired girls! I fancy they do not often begrudge them what they
+possess, except perhaps when feature or hair or motion chances to
+remind them of some one of their own people, and they feel
+wronged and indignant that size should flaunt in such splendour,
+"when our Sally would set off grand clothes so much better!" It
+is neither the wealth nor the general consequence it confers that
+they envy, but, as I imagine, the power of making a show -- of
+living in the eyes and knowledge of neighbours for a few radiant
+moments: nothing is so pleasant to ordinary human nature as to
+know itself by its reflection from others. When it turns from
+these warped and broken mirrors to seek its reflection in the
+divine thought, then it is redeemed; then it beholds itself in
+the perfect law of liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Before he became himself an object of curious interest to the
+crowd he was watching, Malcolm had come to the same conclusion
+with many a philosopher and observer of humanity before him --
+that on the whole the rags are inhabited by the easier hearts;
+and he would have arrived at the conclusion with more certainty
+but for the high training that cuts off intercourse between heart
+and face.</p>
+
+<p>When some time had elapsed, and no more carriages appeared,
+Malcolm, judging the dinner must now be in full vortex, rang the
+bell of the front door. It was opened by a huge footman, whose
+head was so small in proportion that his body seemed to have
+absorbed it. Malcolm would have stepped in at once, and told what
+of his tale he chose at his leisure; but the servant, who had
+never seen the dress Malcolm wore, except on street beggars, with
+the instinct his class shares with watchdogs, quickly closed the
+door. Ere it reached the post, however, it found Malcolm's foot
+between.</p>
+
+<p>"Go along, Scotchy. You're not wanted here," said the man,
+pushing the door hard. "Police is round the corner."</p>
+
+<p>Now one of the weaknesses Malcolm owed to his Celtic blood was
+an utter impatience of rudeness. In his own nature entirely
+courteous, he was wrathful even to absurdity at the slightest
+suspicion of insult. But that, in part through the influence of
+Mr Graham, the schoolmaster, he had learned to keep a firm hold
+on the reins of action, this foolish feeling would not
+unfrequently have hurried him into conduct undignified. On the
+present occasion, I fear the main part of his answer, but for the
+shield of the door, would have been a blow to fell a bigger man
+than the one that now glared at him through the shoe broad
+opening. As it was, his words were fierce with suppressed
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"Open the door, an' lat me in," was, however, all he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What's your business?" asked the man, on whom his tone had
+its effect.</p>
+
+<p>"My business is with my Lady Lossie," said Malcolm, recovering
+his English, which was one step towards mastering, if not
+recovering, his temper.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't see her. She's at dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me in, and I'll wait. I come from Lossie House."</p>
+
+<p>"Take away your foot and I'll go and see," said the man.</p>
+
+<p>"No. You open the door," returned Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>The man's answer was an attempt to kick his foot out of the
+doorway. If he were to let in a tramp, what would the butler
+say?</p>
+
+<p>But thereupon Malcolm set his port vent to his mouth, rapidly
+filled his bag, while the man stared as if it were a petard with
+which he was about to blow the door to shivers, and then sent
+from the instrument such a shriek, as it galloped off into the
+Lossie Gathering, that involuntarily his adversary pressed both
+hands to his ears. With a sudden application of his knee Malcolm
+sent the door wide, and entered the hall, with his pipes in full
+cry. The house resounded with their yell -- but only for one
+moment. For down the stair, like bolt from catapult, came Demon,
+Florimel's huge Irish staghound, and springing on Malcolm, put an
+instant end to his music. The footman laughed with exultation,
+expecting to see him torn to pieces. But when instead he saw the
+fierce animal, a foot on each of his shoulders, licking Malcolm's
+face with long fiery tongue, he began to doubt.</p>
+
+<p>"The dog knows you," he said sulkily.</p>
+
+<p>"So shall you, before long," returned Malcolm. "Was it my
+fault that I made the mistake of looking for civility from you?
+One word to the dog, and he has you by the throat."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go and fetch Wallis," said the man, and closing the
+door, left the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Now this Wallis had been a fellow servant of Malcolm's at
+Lossie House, but he did not know that he had gone with Lady
+Bellair when she took Florimel away: almost everyone had left at
+the same time. He was now glad indeed to learn that there was one
+amongst the servants who knew him.</p>
+
+<p>Wallis presently made his appearance, with a dish in his
+hands, on his way to the dining room, from which came the
+confused noises of the feast.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be come up to wait on Lady Lossie," he said. "I
+haven't a moment to speak to you now, for we're at dinner, and
+there's a party."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind me. Give me that dish; I'll take it in: you can go
+for another," said Malcolm, laying his pipes in a safe spot.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't go into the dining room that figure," said Wallis,
+who was in the Bellair livery.</p>
+
+<p>"This is how I waited on my lord," returned Malcolm, "and this
+is how I'll wait on my lady."</p>
+
+<p>Wallis hesitated. But there was that about the fisher fellow
+was too much for him. As he spoke, Malcolm took the dish from his
+hands, and with it walked into the dining room.</p>
+
+<p>There one reconnoitring glance was sufficient. The butler was
+at the sideboard opening a champagne bottle. He had cut wire and
+strings, and had his hand on the cork as Malcolm walked up to
+him. It was a critical moment, yet he stopped in the very
+article, and stared at the apparition.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm Lady Lossie's man from Lossie House. I'll help you to
+wait," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>To the eyes of the butler he looked a savage. But there he was
+in the room with the dish in his hands, and speaking at least
+intelligibly; the cork of the champagne bottle was pushing hard
+against his palm, and he had no time to question. He peeped into
+Malcolm's dish.</p>
+
+<p>"Take it round, then," he said. So Malcolm settled into the
+business of the hour.</p>
+
+<p>It was some time, after he knew where she was, before he
+ventured to look at his sister: he would have her already
+familiarised with his presence before their eyes met. That crisis
+did not arrive during dinner.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Liftore was one of the company, and so, to Malcolm's
+pleasure, for he felt in him an ally against the earl, was
+Florimel's mysterious friend.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII: A NEW
+LIVERY</h1>
+
+<p>Scarcely had the ladies gone to the drawing room, when
+Florimel's maid, who knew Malcolm, came in quest of him. Lady
+Lossie desired to see him.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the meaning of this, MacPhail?" she said, when he
+entered the room where she sat alone. "I did not send for you.
+Indeed, I thought you had been dismissed with the rest of the
+servants."</p>
+
+<p>How differently she spoke! And she used to call him Malcolm!
+The girl Florimel was gone, and there sat -- the marchioness, was
+it? -- or some phase of riper womanhood only? It mattered little
+to Malcolm. He was no curious student of man or woman. He loved
+his kind too well to study it. But one thing seemed plain: she
+had forgotten the half friendship and whole service that had had
+place betwixt them, and it made him feel as if the soul of man no
+less than his life were but as a vapour that appeareth for a
+little and then vanisheth away.</p>
+
+<p>But Florimel had not so entirely forgotten the past as Malcolm
+thought -- not so entirely at least but that his appearance, and
+certain difficulties in which she had begun to find herself,
+brought something of it again to her mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought," said Malcolm, assuming his best English, "your
+ladyship might not choose to part with an old servant at the will
+of a factor, and so took upon me to appeal to your ladyship to
+decide the question."</p>
+
+<p>"But how is that? Did you not return to your fishing when the
+household was broken up?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady. Mr Crathie kept me to help Stoat, and do odd
+jobs about the place."</p>
+
+<p>"And now he wants to discharge you?"</p>
+
+<p>Then Malcolm told her the whole story, in which he gave such a
+description of Kelpie, that her owner, as she imagined herself,
+expressed a strong wish to see her; for Florimel was almost
+passionately fond of horses.</p>
+
+<p>"You may soon do that, my lady," said Malcolm. "Mr Soutar, not
+being of the same mind as Mr Crathie, is going to send her up. It
+will be but the cost of the passage from Aberdeen, and she will
+fetch a better price here if your ladyship should resolve to part
+with her. She won't fetch the third of her value anywhere,
+though, on account of her bad temper and ugly tricks."</p>
+
+<p>"But as to yourself, MacPhail -- where are you going to go?"
+said Florimel. "I don't like to send you away, but, if I keep
+you, I don't know what to do with you. No doubt you could serve
+in the house, but that would not be suitable at all to your
+education and previous life."</p>
+
+<p>"A body wad tak' you for a granny grown!" said Malcolm to
+himself. But to Florimel he replied -- "If your ladyship should
+wish to keep Kelpie, you will have to keep me too, for not a
+creature else will she let near her."</p>
+
+<p>"And pray tell me what use then can I make of such an animal,"
+said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"Your ladyship, I should imagine, will want a groom to attend
+you when you are out on horseback, and the groom will want a
+horse -- and here am I and Kelpie!" answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," she said. "You contrive I shall have a horse nobody
+can manage but yourself."</p>
+
+<p>She rather liked the idea of a groom so mounted, and had too
+much well justified faith in Malcolm to anticipate dangerous
+results.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," said Malcolm, appealing to her knowledge of his
+character to secure credit, for he was about to use his last
+means of persuasion, and as he spoke, in his eagerness he
+relapsed into his mother tongue, -- "My lady, did I ever tell ye
+a lee?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, Malcolm, so far as I know. Indeed I am sure
+you never did," answered Florimel, looking up at him in a
+dominant yet kindly way.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," continued Malcolm, "I'll tell your ladyship something
+you may find hard to believe, and yet is as true as that I loved
+your ladyship's father. -- Your ladyship knows he had a kindness
+for me."</p>
+
+<p>"I do know it," answered Florimel gently, moved by the tone of
+Malcolm's voice, and the expression of his countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I make bold to tell your ladyship that on his deathbed
+your father desired me to do my best for you -- took my word that
+I would be your ladyship's true servant."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so, indeed, Malcolm?" returned Florimel, with a serious
+wonder in her tone, and looked him in the face with an earnest
+gaze. She had loved her father, and it sounded in her ears almost
+like a message from the tomb.</p>
+
+<p>"It's as true as I stan' here, my leddy," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was silent for a moment. Then she said, "How is it
+that only now you come to tell me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your father never desired me to tell you, my lady -- only he
+never imagined you would want to part with me, I suppose. But
+when you did not care to keep me, and never said a word to me
+when you went away, I could not tell how to do as I had promised
+him. It wasn't that one hour I forgot his wish, but that I feared
+to presume; for if I should displease your ladyship my chance was
+gone. So I kept about Lossie House as long as I could, hoping to
+see my way to some plan or other. But when at length Mr Crathie
+turned me away, what was I to do but come to your ladyship? And
+if your ladyship will let things be as before in the way of
+service, I mean -- I canna doot, my leddy, but it'll be pleesant
+i' the sicht o' yer father, whanever he may come to ken o' 't, my
+lady."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel gave him a strange, half startled look. Hardly more
+than once since her father's funeral had she heard him alluded
+to, and now this fisher lad spoke of him as if he were still at
+Lossie House.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm understood the look.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye mean, my leddy -- I ken what ye mean," he said. "I canna
+help it. For to lo'e onything is to ken't immortal. He's livin'
+to me, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel continued staring, and still said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>I sometimes think that the present belief in mortality is
+nothing but the almost universal although unsuspected unbelief in
+immortality grown vocal and articulate.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm gathered courage and went on,</p>
+
+<p>"An' what for no, my leddy?" he said, floundering no more in
+attempted English, but soaring on the clumsy wings of his mother
+dialect. "Didna he turn his face to the licht afore he dee'd? an'
+him 'at rase frae the deid said 'at whaever believed in him sud
+never dee. Sae we maun believe 'at he's livin', for gien we dinna
+believe what he says, what are we to believe, my leddy?"</p>
+
+<p>Florimel continued yet a moment looking him fixedly in the
+face. The thought did arise that perhaps he had lost his reason,
+but she could not look at him thus and even imagine it. She
+remembered how strange he had always been, and for a moment had a
+glimmering idea that in this young man's friendship she possessed
+an incorruptible treasure. The calm, truthful, believing, almost
+for the moment enthusiastic, expression of the young fisherman's
+face wrought upon her with a strangely quieting influence. It was
+as if one spoke to her out of a region of existence of which she
+had never even heard, but in whose reality she was compelled to
+believe because of the sound of the voice that came from it.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm seldom made the mistake of stamping into the earth any
+seeds of truth he might cast on it: he knew when to say no more,
+and for a time neither spoke. But now for all the coolness of her
+upper crust, Lady Florimel's heart glowed -- not indeed with the
+power of the shining truth Malcolm had uttered, but with the
+light of gladness in the possession of such a strong, devoted,
+disinterested squire.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you to understand," she said at length, "that I am not
+at present mistress of this house, although it belongs to me. I
+am but the guest of Lady Bellair who has rented it of my
+guardians. I cannot therefore arrange for you to be here. But you
+can find accommodation in the neighbourhood, and come to me every
+day for orders. Let me know when your mare arrives: I shall not
+want you till then. You will find room for her in the stables.
+You had better consult the butler about your groom's livery."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was astonished at the womanly sufficiency with which
+she gave her orders. He left her with the gladness of one who has
+had his righteous desire, held consultation with the butler on
+the matter of the livery, and went home to his lodging. There he
+sat down and meditated.</p>
+
+<p>A strange new yearning pity rose in his heart as he thought
+about his sister and the sad facts of her lonely condition. He
+feared much that her stately composure was built mainly on her
+imagined position in society, and was not the outcome of her
+character. Would it be cruelty to destroy that false foundation,
+hardly the more false as a foundation for composure that beneath
+it lay a mistake? -- or was it not rather a justice which her
+deeper and truer self had a right to demand of him? At present,
+however, he need not attempt to answer the question.
+Communication even such as a trusted groom might have with her,
+and familiarity with her surroundings, would probably reveal
+much. Meantime it was enough that he would now be so near her
+that no important change of which others might be aware, could
+well approach her without his knowledge, or anything take place
+without his being able to interfere if necessary.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII: TWO
+CONVERSATIONS</h1>
+
+<p>The next day Wallis came to see Malcolm and take him to the
+tailor's. They talked about the guests of the previous
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a great change on Lord Meikleham," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"There is that," said Wallis. "I consider him much improved.
+But you see he's succeeded; he's the earl now, and Lord Liftore
+-- and a menseful, broad shouldered man to the boot of the
+bargain. He used to be such a windle straw!"</p>
+
+<p>In order to speak good English, Wallis now and then, like some
+Scotch people of better education, anglicized a word
+ludicrously.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no news of his marriage?" asked Malcolm, adding,
+"they say he has great property."</p>
+
+<p>"My love she's but a lassie yet," said Wallis, "-- though she
+too has changed quite as much as my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you speaking of?" asked Malcolm, anxious to hear the
+talk of the household on the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Lady Lossie, of course. Anybody with half an eye can see
+as much as that."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it settled then?"</p>
+
+<p>"That would be hard to say. Her ladyship is too like her
+father: no one can tell what may be her mind the next minute.
+But, as I say, she's young, and ought to have her fling first --
+so far, that is, as we can permit it to a woman of her rank.
+Still, as I say, anybody with half an eye can see the end of it
+all: he's for ever hovering about her. My lady, too, has set her
+mind on it, and for my part I can't see what better she can do. I
+must say I approve of the match. I can see no possible objection
+to it."</p>
+
+<p>"We used to think he drank too much," suggested Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Claret," said Wallis, in a tone that seemed to imply no one
+could drink too much of that.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not claret only. I've seen the whisky follow the
+claret."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he don't now -- not whisky at least. He don't drink too
+much -- not much too much -- not more than a gentleman should. He
+don't look like it -- does he now? A good wife, such as my Lady
+Lossie will make him, will soon set him all right. I think of
+taking a similar protection myself, one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"He is not worthy of her," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I confess his family won't compare with hers. There's a
+grandfather in it somewhere that was a banker or a brewer or a
+soap boiler, or something of the sort, and she and her people
+have been earls and marquises ever since they walked arm in arm
+out of the ark. But, bless you! all that's been changed since I
+came to town. So long as there's plenty of money and the mind to
+spend it, we have learned not to be exclusive. It's selfish that.
+It's not Christian. Everything lies in the mind to spend it
+though. Mrs Tredger -- that's our lady's maid -- only this is a
+secret -- says it's all settled -- she knows it for certain fact
+-- only there's nothing to be said about it yet -- she's so
+young, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was the man that sat nearly opposite my lady, on the
+other side of the table?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"I know who you mean. Didn't look as if he'd got any business
+there -- not like the rest of them, did he? No, they never do.
+Odd and end sort of people like he is, never do look the right
+thing -- let them try ever so hard. How can they when they ain't
+it? That's a fellow that's painting Lady Lossie's portrait! Why
+he should be asked to dinner for that, I'm sure I can't tell. He
+ain't paid for it in victuals, is he? I never saw such land
+leapers let into Lossie House, I know! But London's an awful
+place. There's no such a thing as respect of persons here. Here
+you meet the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, any night
+in my lady's drawing room. I declare to you, Mawlcolm MacPhail,
+it makes me quite uncomfortable at times to think who I may have
+been waiting upon without knowing it. For that painter fellow,
+Lenorme they call him, I could knock him on the teeth with the
+dish every time I hold it to him. And to see him stare at Lady
+Lossie as he does!"</p>
+
+<p>"A painter must want to get a right good hold of the face he's
+got to paint," said Malcolm. "Is he here often?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's been here five or six times already," answered Wallis,
+"and how many times more I may have to fill his glass, I don't
+know. I always give him second best sherry, I know. I'm sure the
+time that pictur' 's been on hand! He ought to be ashamed of
+himself. If she's been once to his studio, she's been twenty
+times -- to give him sittings as they call it. He's making a
+pretty penny of it, I'll be bound! I wonder he has the cheek to
+show himself when my lady treats him so haughtily. But those sort
+of people have no proper feelin's, you see: it's not to be
+expected of such."</p>
+
+<p>Wallis liked the sound of his own sentences, and a great deal
+more talk of similar character followed before they got back from
+the tailor's. Malcolm was tired enough of him, and never felt the
+difference between man and man more strongly than when, after
+leaving him, he set out for a walk with Blue Peter, whom he found
+waiting him at his lodging. On this same Blue Peter, however,
+Wallis would have looked down from the height of his share of the
+marquisate as one of the lower orders -- ignorant, vulgar, even
+dirty.</p>
+
+<p>They had already gazed together upon not a few of the marvels
+of London, but nothing had hitherto moved or drawn them so much
+as the ordinary flow of the currents of life through the huge
+city. Upon Malcolm, however, this had now begun to pall, while
+Peter already found it worse than irksome, and longed for
+Scaurnose. At the same time loyalty to Malcolm kept him from
+uttering a whisper of his homesickness. It was yet but the fourth
+day they had been in London.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, my lord!" said Blue Peter, when by chance they found
+themselves in the lull of a little quiet court, somewhere about
+Gray's Inn, with the roar of Holborn in their ears, "it's like a
+month sin' I was at the kirk. I'm feart the din's gotten into my
+heid, an' I'll never get it out again. I cud maist wuss I was a
+mackerel, for they tell me the fish hears naething. I ken weel
+noo what ye meant, my lord, whan ye said ye dreidit the din micht
+gar ye forget yer Macker."</p>
+
+<p>"I hae been wussin' sair mysel', this last twa days,"
+responded Malcolm, "'at I cud get ae sicht o' the jaws clashin'
+upo' the Scaurnose, or rowin up upo' the edge o' the links. The
+din o' natur' never troubles the guid thouchts in ye. I reckon
+it's 'cause it's a kin' o' a harmony in 'tsel', an' a harmony's
+jist, as the maister used to say, a higher kin' o' a peace. Yon
+organ 'at we hearkent till ae day ootside the kirk, ye min' --
+man, it was a quaietness in 'tsel', and cam' throu' the din like
+a bonny silence -- like a lull i' the win' o' this warl'! It
+wasna a din at a', but a gran' repose like. But this noise
+tumultuous o' human strife, this din' o' iron shune an' iron
+wheels, this whurr and whuzz o' buyin' an' sellin' an' gettin'
+gain -- it disna help a body to their prayers."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, na, my lord! Jist think o' the preevilege -- I never saw
+nor thoucht o' 't afore -- o' haein' 't i' yer pooer, ony nicht
+'at ye're no efter the fish, to stap oot at yer ain door, an' be
+in the mids o' the temple! Be 't licht or dark, be 't foul or
+fair, the sea sleepin' or ragin', ye ha'e aye room, an' naething
+atween ye an' the throne o' the Almichty, to the whilk yer
+prayers ken the gait, as weel 's the herrin' to the shores o'
+Scotlan': ye ha'e but to lat them flee, an' they gang straucht
+there. But here ye ha'e aye to luik sae gleg efter yer boady,
+'at, as ye say, my lord, yer sowl's like to come aff the waur,
+gien it binna clean forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>"I doobt there's something no richt aboot it, Peter," returned
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"There maun be a heap no richt aboot it," answered Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but I'm no meanin' 't jist as ye du. I had the haill
+thing throu' my heid last nicht, an' I canna but think there's
+something wrang wi' a man gien he canna hear the word o' God as
+weel i' the mids o' a multitude no man can number, a' made ilk
+ane i' the image o' the Father -- as weel, I say, as i' the hert
+o' win' an' watter an' the lift an' the starns an' a'. Ye canna
+say 'at thae things are a' made i' the image o' God, in the same
+w'y, at least, 'at ye can say 't o' the body an' face o' a man,
+for throu' them the God o' the whole earth revealed Himsel' in
+Christ."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, weel, I wad alloo what ye say, gien they war a' to be
+considered Christians."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, I grant we canna weel du that i' the full sense, but I
+doobt, gien they bena a' Christians 'at ca's themsel's that,
+there's a heap mair Christianity nor get's the credit o' its ain
+name. I min' weel hoo Maister Graham said to me ance 'at hoo
+there was something o' Him 'at made him luikin' oot o' the een o'
+ilka man 'at he had made; an' what wad ye ca' that but a scart or
+a straik o' Christianity."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I kenna; but ony gait I canna think it can be again'
+the trowth o' the gospel to wuss yersel' mair alane wi' yer God
+nor ye ever can be in sic an awfu' Babylon o' a place as
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na, Peter; I'm no sayin' that. I ken weel we're to gang
+intill the closet and shut to the door. I'm only afeart 'at there
+be something wrang in mysel' 'at tak's 't ill to be amon' sae
+mony neibors. I'm thinkin' 'at, gien a' was richt 'ithin me, gien
+I lo'ed my neibor as the Lord wad hae them 'at lo'ed Him lo'e ilk
+ane his brither, I micht be better able to pray amang them -- ay,
+i' the verra face o' the bargainin' an' leein' a' aboot me."</p>
+
+<p>"An' min' ye," said Peter, pursuing the train of his own
+thoughts, and heedless of Malcolm's, "'at oor Lord himsel' bude
+whiles to win awa', even frae his dissiples, to be him lane wi'
+the Father o' 'im."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ye're richt there, Peter," answered Malcolm, "but there's
+ae p'int in 't ye maunna forget -- and that is 'at it was never
+i' the day-time -- sae far's I min' -- 'at he did sae. The lee
+lang day he was among 's fowk -- workin' his michty wark. Whan
+the nicht cam', in which no man could wark, he gaed hame till 's
+Father, as 't war. Eh me! but it's weel to ha'e a man like the
+schuilmaister to put trowth intill ye. I kenna what comes o' them
+'at ha'e drucken maisters, or sic as cares for naething but
+coontin' an Laitin, an' the likes o' that!"</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV:
+FLORIMEL</h1>
+
+<p>That night Florimel had her thoughts as well as Malcolm.
+Already life was not what it had been to her, and the feeling of
+a difference is often what sets one a-thinking first. While her
+father lived, and the sureness of his love overarched her
+consciousness with a heaven of safety, the physical harmony of
+her nature had supplied her with a more than sufficient sense of
+well being. Since his death, too, there had been times when she
+even fancied an enlargement of life in the sense of freedom and
+power which came with the knowledge of being a great lady,
+possessed of the rare privilege of an ancient title and an
+inheritance which seemed to her a yet greater wealth than it was.
+But she had soon found that, as to freedom, she had less of that
+than before -- less of the feeling of it within her: not much
+freedom of any sort is to be had without fighting for it, and she
+had yet to discover that the only freedom worth the name -- that
+of heart, and soul, and mind -- is not to be gained except
+through the hardest of battles. She was very lonely, too. Lady
+Bellair had never assumed with her any authority, and had always
+been kind even to petting, but there was nothing about her to
+make a home for the girl's heart. She felt in her no superiority,
+and for a spiritual home that is essential. As she learned to
+know her better, this sense of loneliness went on deepening, for
+she felt more and more that her guardian was not one in whom she
+could place genuine confidence, while yet her power over her was
+greater than she knew. The innocent nature of the girl had begun
+to recoil from what she saw in the woman of the world, and yet
+she had in herself worldliness enough to render her fully
+susceptible of her influences. Notwithstanding her fine health
+and natural spirits, Florimel had begun to know what it is to
+wake suddenly of a morning between three and four, and lie for a
+long weary time, sleepless. In youth bodily fatigue ensures
+falling asleep, but as soon as the body is tolerably rested, if
+there be unrest in the mind, that wakes it, and consciousness
+returns in the shape of a dull misgiving like the far echo of the
+approaching trump of the archangel. Indeed, those hours are as a
+vestibule to the great hall of judgment, and to such as, without
+rendering it absolute obedience, yet care to keep on some sort of
+terms with their conscience, is a time of anything but comfort.
+Nor does the court in those hours sitting, concern itself only
+with heavy questions of right or wrong, but whoever loves and
+cares himself for his appearance before the eyes of men, finds
+himself accused of paltry follies, stupidities, and
+indiscretions, and punished with paltry mortifications, chagrins,
+and anxieties. From such arraignment no man is free but him who
+walks in the perfect law of liberty -- that is, the will of the
+Perfect -- which alone is peace.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning after she had thus taken Malcolm again into her
+service, Florimel had one of these experiences -- a foretaste of
+the Valley of the Shadow: she awoke in the hour when judgment
+sits upon the hearts of men. Or is it not rather the hour for
+which a legion of gracious spirits are on the watch -- when,
+fresh raised from the death of sleep, cleansed a little from the
+past and its evils by the gift of God, the heart and brain are
+most capable of their influences? -- the hour when, besides,
+there is no refuge of external things wherein the man may shelter
+himself from the truths they would so gladly send conquering into
+the citadel of his nature, -- no world of the senses to rampart
+the soul from thought, when the eye and the ear are as if they
+were not, and the soul lies naked before the infinite of reality.
+This live hour of the morning is the most real hour of the day,
+the hour of the motions of a prisoned and persecuted life, of its
+effort to break through and breathe. A good man then finds his
+refuge in the heart of the Purifying Fire; the bad man curses the
+swarms of Beelzebub that settle upon every sore spot in his
+conscious being.</p>
+
+<p>But it was not the general sense of unfitness in the
+conditions of her life, neither was it dissatisfaction with Lady
+Bellair, or the want of the pressure of authority upon her
+unstable being; it was not the sense of loneliness and
+unshelteredness in the sterile waste of fashionable life, neither
+was it weariness with the same and its shows, or all these things
+together, that could have waked the youth of Florimel and kept it
+awake at this hour of the night -- for night that hour is,
+however near the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Some few weeks agone, she had accompanied to the study of a
+certain painter, a friend who was then sitting to him for her
+portrait. The moment she entered, the appearance of the man and
+his surroundings laid hold of her imagination. Although on the
+very verge of popularity, he was young -- not more than five and
+twenty. His face, far from what is called handsome, had a certain
+almost grandeur in it, owed mainly to the dominant forehead, and
+the regnant life in the eyes. To this the rest of the countenance
+was submissive. The mouth was sweet yet strong, seeming to derive
+its strength from the will that towered above and overhung it,
+throned on the crags of those eyebrows. The nose was rather
+short, not unpleasantly so, and had mass enough. In figure he was
+scarcely above the usual height, but well formed. To a first
+glance even, the careless yet graceful freedom of his movements
+was remarkable, while his address was manly, and altogether
+devoid of self recommendation. Confident modesty and unobtrusive
+ease distinguished his demeanour. His father, Arnold Lenorme,
+descended from an old Norman family, had given him the Christian
+name of Raoul, which, although outlandish, tolerably fitted the
+surname, notwithstanding the contiguous l's, objectionable to the
+fastidious ear of their owner. The earlier and more important
+part of his education, the beginnings, namely, of everything he
+afterwards further followed, his mother herself gave him, partly
+because she was both poor and capable, and partly because she was
+more anxious than most mothers for his best welfare. The poverty
+they had crept through, as those that strive after better things
+always will, one way or another, with immeasurable advantage, and
+before the time came when he must leave home, her influence had
+armed him in adamant -- a service which alas! few mothers seem
+capable of rendering the knights whom they send out into the
+battlefield of the world. Most of them give their children the
+best they have; but how shall a foolish woman ever be a wise
+mother? The result in his case was, that reverence for her as the
+type of womanhood, working along with a natural instinct for
+refinement, a keen feeling of the incompatibility with art of
+anything in itself low or unclean, and a healthful and successful
+activity of mind, had rendered him so far upright and honourable
+that he had never yet done that in one mood which in another he
+had looked back upon with loathing. As yet he had withstood the
+temptations belonging to his youth and his profession -- in great
+measure also the temptations belonging to success; he had not yet
+been tried with disappointment, or sorrow, or failure.</p>
+
+<p>As to the environment in which Florimel found him, it was to
+her a region of confused and broken colour and form -- a kind of
+chaos out of which beauty was ever ready to start. Pictures stood
+on easels, leaned against chair backs, glowed from the wall --
+each contributing to the atmosphere of solved rainbow that seemed
+to fill the space. Lenorme was seated -- not at his easel, but at
+a grand piano, which stood away, half hidden in a corner, as if
+it knew itself there on sufferance, with pictures all about the
+legs of it. For they had walked straight in without giving his
+servant time to announce them. A bar of a song, in a fine tenor
+voice, broke as they opened the door; and the painter came to
+meet them from the farther end of the study. He shook hands with
+Florimel's friend, and turned with a bow to her. At the first
+glance the eyes of both fell. Raised the same instant, they
+encountered each other point blank, and then the eloquent blood
+had its turn at betrayal. What the moment meant, Florimel did not
+understand; but it seemed as if Raoul and she had met somewhere
+long ago, were presumed not to know it, but could not help
+remembering it, and agreeing to recognise it as a fact. A strange
+pleasure filled her heart. While Mrs Barnardiston sat she flitted
+about the room like a butterfly, looking at one thing after
+another, and asking now the most ignorant, now the most
+penetrative question, disturbing not a little the work, but
+sweetening the temper of the painter, as he went on with his
+study of the mask and helmet into which the Gorgon stare of the
+Unideal had petrified the face and head of his sitter. He found
+the situation trying nevertheless. It was as if Cupid had been
+set by Jupiter to take a portrait of Io in her stall, while
+evermore he heard his Psyche fluttering about among the peacocks
+in the yard. For the girl had bewitched him at first sight. He
+thought it was only as an artist, though to be sure a certain
+throb, almost of pain, in the region of the heart, when first his
+eyes fell before hers, might have warned, and perhaps did in vain
+warn him otherwise. Sooner than usual he professed himself
+content with the sitting, and then proceeded to show the ladies
+some of his sketches and pictures. Florimel asked to see one
+standing as in disgrace with its front to the wall. He put it,
+half reluctantly, on an easel, and said it was meant for the
+unveiling of Isis, as presented in a maehrchen of Novalis,
+introduced in Die Lehrlinge zu Sais, in which the goddess of
+Nature reveals to the eager and anxious gaze of the beholder the
+person of his Rosenbluethchen, whom he had left behind him when
+he set out to visit the temple of the divinity. But on the great
+pedestal where should have sat the goddess there was no gracious
+form visible. That part of the picture was a blank. The youth
+stood below, gazing enraptured with parted lips and outstretched
+arms, as if he had already begun' to suspect what had begun to
+dawn through the slowly thinning veil -- but to the eye of the
+beholder he gazed as yet only on vacancy, and the picture had not
+reached an attempt at self explanation. Florimel asked why he had
+left it so long unfinished, for the dust was thick on the back of
+the canvas.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I have never seen the face or figure," the painter
+answered, "either in eye of mind or of body, that claimed the
+position."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, his eyes seemed to Florimel to lighten strangely,
+and as if by common consent they turned away, and looked at
+something else. Presently Mrs Barnardiston, who cared more for
+sound than form or colour, because she could herself sing a
+little, began to glance over some music on the piano, curious to
+find what the young man had been singing, whereupon Lenorme said
+to Florimel hurriedly, and almost in a whisper, with a sort of
+hesitating assurance,</p>
+
+<p>"If you would give me a sitting or two -- I know I am
+presumptuous, but if you would -- I -- I should send the picture
+to the Academy in a week."</p>
+
+<p>"I will," replied Florimel, flushing like a wild poppy, and as
+she said it, she looked up in his face and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"It would have been selfish," she said to herself as they
+drove away, "to refuse him."</p>
+
+<p>This first interview, and all the interviews that had
+followed, now passed through her mind as she lay awake in the
+darkness preceding the dawn, and she reviewed them not without
+self reproach. But for some of my readers it will be hard to
+believe that one of the feelings that now tormented the girl was
+a sense of lowered dignity because of the relation in which she
+stood to the painter -- seeing there was little or no ground for
+moral compunction, and the feeling had its root merely in the
+fact that he was a painter fellow, and she a marchioness. Her
+rank had already grown to seem to her so identified with herself
+that she was hardly any longer capable of the analysis that
+should show it distinct from her being. As to any duty arising
+from her position, she had never heard the word used except as
+representing something owing to, not owed by rank. Social
+standing in the eyes of the super excellent few of fashion was
+the Satan of unrighteousness worshipped around her. And the
+precepts of this worship fell upon soil prepared for it. For with
+all the simplicity of her nature, there was in it an inborn sense
+of rank, of elevation in the order of the universe above most
+others of the children of men -- of greater intrinsic worth
+therefore in herself. How could it be otherwise with the
+offspring of generations of pride and falsely conscious
+superiority? Hence, as things were going now with the mere human
+part of her, some commotion, if not earthquake indeed, was
+imminent. Nay the commotion had already begun, as manifest in her
+sleeplessness and the thoughts that occupied it.</p>
+
+<p>Rightly to understand the sense of shame and degradation she
+had not unfrequently felt of late, we must remember that in the
+circle in which she moved she heard professions, arts, and trades
+alluded to with the same unuttered, but the more strongly implied
+contempt -- a contempt indeed regarded as so much a matter of
+course, so thoroughly understood, so reasonable in its nature, so
+absolute in its degree, that to utter it would have been bad
+taste from very superfluity. Yet she never entered the painter's
+study but with trembling heart, uncertain foot, and fluttering
+breath, as of one stepping within the gates of an enchanted
+paradise, whose joy is too much for the material weight of
+humanity to ballast even to the steadying of the bodily step, and
+the outward calm of the bodily carriage. How far things had gone
+between them we shall be able to judge by and by; it will be
+enough at present to add that it was this relation and the inward
+strife arising from it that had not only prematurely, but over
+rapidly ripened the girl into the woman.</p>
+
+<p>This my disclosure of her condition, however, has not yet
+uncovered the sorest spot upon which the flies of Beelzebub
+settled in the darkness of this torture hour of the human clock.
+Although still the same lively, self operative nature she had
+been in other circumstances, she was so far from being insensible
+or indifferent to the opinions of others, that she had not even
+strength enough to keep a foreign will off the beam of her
+choice: the will of another, in no way directly brought to bear
+on hers, would yet weigh to her encouragement where her wish was
+doubtful, or to her restraint where impulse was strong; it would
+even move her towards a line of conduct whose anticipated results
+were distasteful to her. Ever and anon her pride would rise armed
+against the consciousness of slavery, but its armour was too
+weak either for defence or for deliverance. She knew that the
+heart of Lady Bellair, what of heart she had, was set upon her
+marriage with her nephew, Lord Liftore. Now she recoiled from the
+idea of marriage, and dismissed it into a future of indefinite
+removal; she had no special desire to please Lady Bellair from
+the point of gratitude, for she was perfectly aware that her
+relation to herself was far from being without advantage to that
+lady's position as well as means: a whisper or two that had
+reached her had been enough to enlighten her in that direction;
+neither could she persuade herself that Lord Liftore was at all
+the sort of man she could become proud of as a husband; and yet
+she felt destined to be his wife. On the other hand she had no
+dislike to him: he was handsome, well informed, capable -- a
+gentleman, she thought, of good regard in the circles in which
+they moved, and one who would not in any manner disgrace her,
+although to be sure he was her inferior in rank, and she would
+rather have married a duke. At the same time, to confess all the
+truth, she was by no means indifferent to the advantages of
+having for a husband a man with money enough to restore the
+somewhat tarnished prestige of her own family to its pristine
+brilliancy. She had never said a word to encourage the scheming
+of Lady Bellair; neither, on the other hand, had she ever said a
+word to discourage her hopes, or give her ground for doubting the
+acceptableness of her cherished project. Hence Lady Bellair had
+naturally come to regard the two as almost affianced. But
+Florimel's aversion to the idea of marriage, and her horror at
+the thought of the slightest whisper of what was between her and
+Lenorme, increased together.</p>
+
+<p>There were times too when she asked herself in anxious
+discomfort whether she was not possibly a transgressor against a
+deeper and simpler law than that of station -- whether she was
+altogether maidenly in the encouragement she had given and was
+giving to the painter. It must not be imagined that she had once
+visited him without a companion, though that companion was indeed
+sometimes only her maid -- her real object being covered by the
+true pretext of sitting for her portrait, which Lady Bellair
+pleased herself with imagining would one day be presented to Lord
+Liftore. But she could not, upon such occasions of morning
+judgment as this, fail to doubt sorely whether the visits she
+paid him, and the liberties which upon fortunate occasions she
+allowed him, were such as could be justified on any ground other
+than that she was prepared to give him all. All, however, she was
+by no means prepared to give him: that involved consequences far
+too terrible to be contemplated even as possibilities.</p>
+
+<p>With such causes for disquiet in her young heart and brain, it
+is not then wonderful that she should sometimes be unable to slip
+across this troubled region of the night in the boat of her
+dreams, but should suffer shipwreck on the waking coast, and have
+to encounter the staring and questioning eyes of more than one
+importunate truth. Nor is it any wonder either that, to such an
+inexperienced and so troubled a heart, the assurance of one
+absolutely devoted friend should come with healing and hope --
+even if that friend should be but a groom, altogether incapable
+of understanding her position, or perceiving the phantoms that
+crowded about her, threatening to embody themselves in her ruin.
+A clumsy, ridiculous fellow, she said to herself, from whose
+person she could never dissociate the smell of fish, who talked a
+horrible jargon called Scotch, and who could not be prevented
+from uttering unpalatable truths at uncomfortable moments; yet
+whose thoughts were as chivalrous as his person was powerful, and
+whose countenance was pleasing if only for the triumph of honesty
+therein: she actually felt stronger and safer to know he was
+near, and at her beck and call.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV:
+PORTLOSSIE</h1>
+
+<p>Mr Crathie, seeing nothing more of Malcolm, believed himself
+at last well rid of him; but it was days before his wrath ceased
+to flame, and then it went on smouldering. Nothing occurred to
+take him to the Seaton, and no business brought any of the fisher
+people to his office during that time. Hence he heard nothing of
+the mode of Malcolm's departure. When at length in the course of
+ordinary undulatory propagation the news reached him that Malcolm
+had taken the yacht with him, he was enraged beyond measure at
+the impudence of the theft, as he called it, and ran to the
+Seaton in a fury. He had this consolation, however: the man who
+had accused him of dishonesty and hypocrisy had proved but a
+thief.</p>
+
+<p>He found the boathouse indeed empty, and went storming from
+cottage to cottage, but came upon no one from whom his anger
+could draw nourishment, not to say gain satisfaction. At length
+he reached the Partan's, found him at home, and commenced, at
+haphazard, abusing him as an aider and abettor of the felony. But
+Meg Partan was at home also, as Mr Crathie soon learned to his
+cost; for, hearing him usurp her unique privilege of falling out
+upon her husband, she stole from the ben end, and having stood
+for a moment silent in the doorway, listening for comprehension,
+rushed out in a storm of tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"An' what for sudna my man," she cried, at full height of her
+screeching voice, "lay tu his han' wi' ither honest fowk to du
+for the boat what him 'at was weel kent for the captain o' her,
+sin' ever she was a boat, wantit dune? Wad ye tak the comman' o'
+the boat, sir, as weel's o' a' thing ither aboot the place?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, woman," said the factor; "I have nothing to
+say to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Aigh, sirs! but it's a peety ye wasna foreordeent to be
+markis yersel'! It maun be a sair vex to ye 'at ye're naething
+but the factor."</p>
+
+<p>"If ye don't mind your manners, Mistress Fin'lay," said Mr
+Crathie in glowing indignation, "perhaps you'll find that the
+factor is as much as the marquis, when he's all there is for
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord safe 's hear till 'im !" cried the Partaness. "Wha wad
+hae thoucht it o' 'im? There's fowk 'at it sets weel to tak upo'
+them! His father, honest man, wad ne'er hae spoken like that to
+Meg Partan; but syne he was an honest man, though he was but the
+heid shepherd upo' the estate. Man, I micht hae been yer mither
+-- gien I had been auld eneuch for 's first wife, for he wad fain
+hae had me for 's second."</p>
+
+<p>"I've a great mind to take out a warrant against you, John
+Fin'lay, otherwise called the Partan, as airt an' pairt in the
+stealing of the Marchioness of Lossie's pleasure boat," said the
+factor. "And for you, Mistress Fin'lay, I would have you please
+to remember that this house, as far at least as you are
+concerned, is mine, although I am but the factor, and not the
+marquis; and if you don't keep that unruly tongue of yours a
+little quieter in your head, I'll set you in the street the next
+quarter day but one, as sure's ever you gutted a herring, and
+then you may bid goodbye to Portlossie, for there's not a house,
+as you very well know, in all the Seaton, that belongs to another
+than her ladyship."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, Mr Crathie," returned Meg Partan, a little sobered by
+the threat, "ye wad hae mair sense nor rin the risk o' an
+uprisin' o' the fisher fowk. They wad ill stan' to see my auld
+man an' me misused, no to say 'at her leddyship hersel' wad see
+ony o' her ain fowk turned oot o' hoose an' haudin' for naething
+ava."</p>
+
+<p>"Her ladyship wad gi'e hersel' sma' concern gien the haill
+bilin' o' ye war whaur ye cam frae," returned the factor. "An'
+for the toon here, the fowk kens the guid o' a quaiet caus'ay
+ower weel to lament the loss o' ye."</p>
+
+<p>"The deil's i' the man!" cried the Partaness in high scorn.
+"He wad threip upo' me 'at I was ane o' thae lang tongued limmers
+'at maks themsel's h'ard frae ae toon's en' to the tither! But I
+s' gar him priv 's words yet!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, sir," interposed the mild Partan, anxious to shove
+extremities aside, "we didna ken 'at there was onything intill't
+by ord'nar. Gien we had but kent 'at he was oot o' your guid
+graces,"</p>
+
+<p>"Haud yer tongue afore ye lee, man," interrupted his wife. "Ye
+ken weel eneuch ye wad du what Ma'colm MacPhail wad hae ye du,
+for ony factor in braid Scotlan'."</p>
+
+<p>"You must have known," said the factor to the Partan,
+apparently heedless of this last outbreak of the generous evil
+temper, and laying a cunning trap for the information he sorely
+wanted, but had as yet failed in procuring -- "else why was it
+that not a soul went with him? He could ill manage the boat
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>"What put sic buff an' styte i' yer heid, sir?" rejoined Meg;
+defiant of the hints her husband sought to convey to her.
+"There's mony ane wad hae been ready to gang, only wha sud gang
+but him 'at gaed wi' him an' 's lordship frae the first?"</p>
+
+<p>"And who was that?" asked Mr Crathie.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow! wha but Blue Peter?" answered Meg.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm!" said the factor, in a tone that for almost the first
+time in her life made the woman regret that she had spoken, and
+therewith he rose and left the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, mither!" cried Lizzy, in her turn appearing from the ben
+end, with her child in her arms, "ye hae wroucht ruin i' the
+earth! He'll hae Peter an' Annie an' a' oot o' hoose an' ha',
+come midsummer."</p>
+
+<p>"I daur him till't!" cried her mother, in the impotence and
+self despite of a mortifying blunder; "I'll raise the toon upon
+'im."</p>
+
+<p>"What wad that du, mither?" returned Lizzy, in distress about
+her friends. "It wad but mak' ill waur."</p>
+
+<p>"An' wha are ye to oppen yer mou' sae wide to yer mither?"
+burst forth Meg Partan, glad of an object upon which the chagrin
+that consumed her might issue in flame. "Ye havena luikit to yer
+ain gait sae weel 'at ye can thriep to set richt them 'at broucht
+ye forth. -- Wha are ye, I say?" she repeated in rage.</p>
+
+<p>"Ane 'at folly's made wiser, maybe, mither," answered Lizzie
+sadly, and proceeded to take her shawl from behind the door: she
+would go to her friends at Scaurnose, and communicate her fears
+for their warning. But her words smote the mother within the
+mother, and she turned and looked at her daughter with more of
+the woman and less of the Partan in her rugged countenance than
+had been visible there since the first week of her married life.
+She had been greatly injured by the gaining of too easy a
+conquest and resultant supremacy over her husband, whence she had
+ever after revelled in a rule too absolute for good to any
+concerned. As she was turning away, her daughter caught a glimpse
+of her softened eyes, and went out of the house with more comfort
+in her heart than she had felt ever since first she had given her
+conscience cause to speak daggers to her.</p>
+
+<p>The factor kept raging to himself all the way home, flung
+himself trembling on his horse, vouchsafing his anxious wife
+scarce any answer to her anxious enquiries, and galloped to Duff
+Harbour to Mr Soutar.</p>
+
+<p>I will not occupy my tale with their interview. Suffice it to
+say that the lawyer succeeded at last in convincing the demented
+factor that it would be but prudent to delay measures for the
+recovery of the yacht and the arrest and punishment of its
+abductors, until he knew what Lady Lossie would say to the
+affair. She had always had a liking for the lad, Mr Soutar said,
+and he would not be in the least surprised to hear that Malcolm
+had gone straight to her ladyship and put himself under her
+protection. No doubt by this time the cutter was at its owner's
+disposal: it would be just like the fellow! He always went the
+nearest road anywhere. And to prosecute him for a thief would in
+any case but bring down the ridicule of the whole coast upon the
+factor, and breed him endless annoyance in the getting in of his
+rents -- especially among the fishermen. The result was that Mr
+Crathie went home -- not indeed a humbler or wiser man than he
+had gone, but a thwarted man, and therefore the more dangerous in
+the channels left open to the outrush of his angry power.</p>
+
+<p>When Lizzy reached Scaurnose, her account of the factor's
+behaviour, to her surprise, did not take much effect upon Mrs
+Mair: a queer little smile broke over her countenance, and
+vanished. An enforced gravity succeeded, however, and she began
+to take counsel with Lizzy as to what they could do, or where
+they could go, should the worst come to the worst, and the doors,
+not only of her own house, but of Scaurnose and Portlossie as
+well, be shut against them. But through it all reigned a calm
+regard and fearlessness of the future which, to Lizzy's roused
+and apprehensive imagination, was strangely inexplicable. Annie
+Mair seemed possessed of some hidden and upholding assurance that
+raised her above the fear of man or what he could do to her. The
+girl concluded it must be the knowledge of God, and prayed more
+earnestly that night than she had prayed since the night on which
+Malcolm had talked to her so earnestly before he left. I must add
+this much, that she was not altogether astray: God was in
+Malcolm, giving new hope to his fisher folk.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI: ST
+JAMES THE APOSTLE</h1>
+
+<p>When Malcolm left his sister, he had a dim sense of having
+lapsed into Scotch, and set about buttressing and strengthening
+his determination to get rid of all unconscious and unintended
+use of the northern dialect, not only that, in his attendance
+upon Florimel, he might be neither offensive nor ridiculous, but
+that, when the time should come in which he must appear what he
+was, it might be less of an annoyance to her to yield the
+marquisate to one who could speak like a gentleman and one of the
+family. But not the less did he love the tongue he had spoken
+from his childhood, and in which were on record so many precious
+ballads and songs, old and new; and he resolved that, when he
+came out as a marquis, he would at Lossie House indemnify himself
+for the constraint of London. He would not have an English
+servant there except Mrs Courthope: he would not have the natural
+country speech corrupted with cockneyisms, and his people taught
+to speak like Wallis! To his old friends the fishers and their
+families, he would never utter a sentence but in the old tongue,
+haunted with all the memories of relations that were never to be
+obliterated or forgotten, its very tones reminding him and them
+of hardships together endured, pleasures shared, and help
+willingly given. At night, notwithstanding, he found that in
+talking with Blue Peter, he had forgotten all about his resolve,
+and it vexed him with himself not a little. He now saw that if he
+could but get into the way of speaking English to him, the
+victory would be gained, for with no one else would he find any
+difficulty then.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning he went down to the stairs at London Bridge,
+and took a boat to the yacht. He had to cross several vessels to
+reach it. When at length he looked down from the last of them on
+the deck of the little cutter, he saw Blue Peter sitting on the
+coamings of the hatch, his feet hanging down within. He was lost
+in the book he was reading. Curious to see, without disturbing
+him, what it was that so absorbed him, Malcolm dropped quietly on
+the tiller, and thence on the deck, and approaching softly peeped
+over his shoulder. He was reading the epistle of James the
+apostle. Malcolm fell a-thinking. From Peter's thumbed bible his
+eyes went wandering through the thicket of masts, in which moved
+so many busy seafarers, and then turned to the docks and wharfs
+and huge warehouses lining the shores; and while they scanned the
+marvellous vision, the thoughts that arose and passed through his
+brain were like these: "What are ye duin' here, Jeames the Just?
+Ye was naething but a fisher body upon a sma' watter i' the hert
+o' the hills, 'at wasna even saut; an' what can the thochts that
+gaed throu' your fish catchin' brain hae to du wi' sic a sicht 's
+this? I won'er gien at this moment there be anither man in a'
+Lon'on sittin' readin' that epistle o' yours but Blue Peter here?
+He thinks there's naething o' mair importance, 'cep' maybe some
+ither pairts o' the same buik; but syne he's but a puir fisher
+body himsel', an' what kens he o' the wisdom an' riches an' pooer
+o' this michty queen o' the nations, thron't aboot him? -- Is't
+possible the auld body kent something 'at was jist as necessar'
+to ilka man, the busiest in this croodit mairt, to ken an' gang
+by, as it was to Jeames an' the lave o' the michty apostles
+themsel's? For me, I dinna doobt it -- but hoo it sud ever be
+onything but an auld warld story to the new warld o' Lon'on, I
+think it wad bleck Maister Graham himsel' til imaigine."</p>
+
+<p>Before this, Blue Peter had become aware that some one was
+near him, but, intent on the words of his brother fisher of the
+old time, had half unconsciously put off looking up to see who
+was behind him. When now he did so, and saw Malcolm, he rose and
+touched his bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>"It was jist i' my heid, my lord," he said, without any
+preamble, "sic a kin' o' a h'avenly Jacobin as this same Jacobus
+was! He's sic a leveller as was feow afore 'im, I doobt, wi' his
+gowd ringt man, an' his cloot cled brither! He pat me in twa
+min's, my lord, whan I got up, whether I wad touch my bonnet to
+yer lordship or no."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm laughed with hearty appreciation.</p>
+
+<p>"When I am king of Lossie," he said, "be it known to all whom
+it may concern, that it is and shall be the right of Blue Peter,
+and all his descendants, to the end of time, to stand with
+bonneted heads in the presence of Lord or -- no, not Lady, Peter
+-- of the house of Lossie."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye see, Ma'colm," said Peter, forgetting his address,
+and his eye twinkling in the humour of the moment, "it's no by
+your leave, or ony man's leave; it's the richt o' the thing; an'
+that I maun think aboot, an' see whether I be at leeberty to ca'
+ye my lord or no."</p>
+
+<p>"Meantime, don't do it," said Malcolm, "lest you should have
+to change afterwards. You might find it difficult."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're cheengt a'ready," said Blue Peter, looking up at him
+sharply. "I ne'er h'ard ye speyk like that afore."</p>
+
+<p>"Make nothing of it," returned Malcolm. "I am only airing my
+English on you; I have made up my mind to learn to speak in
+London as London people do, and so, even to you, in the meantime
+only, I am going to speak as good English as I can. -- It's
+nothing between you and me, Peter and you must not mind it," he
+added, seeing a slight cloud come over the fisherman's face.</p>
+
+<p>Blue Peter turned away with a sigh. The sounds of English
+speech from the lips of Malcolm addressed to himself, seemed
+vaguely to indicate the opening of a gulf between them, destined
+ere long to widen to the whole social width between a fisherman
+and a marquis, swallowing up in it not only all old memories, but
+all later friendship and confidence. A shadow of bitterness
+crossed the poor fellow's mind, and in it the seed of distrust
+began to strike root, and all because a newer had been
+substituted for an older form of the same speech and language.
+Truly man's heart is a delicate piece of work, and takes gentle
+handling or hurt. But that the pain was not all of innocence is
+revealed in the strange fact, afterwards disclosed by the
+repentant Peter himself, that, in that same moment, what had just
+passed his mouth as a joke, put on an important, serious look,
+and appeared to involve a matter of doubtful duty: was it really
+right of one man to say my lord to another? Thus the fisherman,
+and not the marquis, was the first to sin against the other
+because of altered fortune. Distrust awoke pride in the heart of
+Blue Pete; and he erred in the lack of the charity that thinketh
+no evil.</p>
+
+<p>But the lack and the doubt made little show as yet. The two
+men rowed in the dinghy down the river to the Aberdeen wharf to
+make arrangements about Kelpie, whose arrival Malcolm expected
+the following Monday, then dined together, and after that had a
+long row up the river.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII: A
+DIFFERENCE</h1>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his keenness of judgment and sobriety in
+action, Malcolm had yet a certain love for effect, a delight,
+that is, in the show of concentrated results, which, as I believe
+I have elsewhere remarked, belongs especially to the Celtic
+nature, and is one form in which the poetic element vaguely
+embodies itself. Hence arose the temptation to try on Blue Peter
+the effect of a literally theatrical surprise. He knew well the
+prejudices of the greater portion of the Scots people against
+every possible form of artistic, most of all, dramatic
+representation. He knew, therefore, also, that Peter would never
+be persuaded to go with him to the theatre: to invite him would
+be like asking him to call upon Beelzebub; but as this feeling
+was cherished in utter ignorance of its object, he judged he
+would be doing him no wrong if he made experiment how the thing
+itself would affect the heart and judgment of the unsophisticated
+fisherman.</p>
+
+<p>Finding that The Tempest was still the play represented, he
+contrived, as they walked together, so to direct their course
+that they should be near Drury Lane towards the hour of
+commencement. He did not want to take him in much before the
+time: he would not give him scope for thought, doubt, suspicion,
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>When they came in front of the theatre, people were crowding
+in, and carriages setting down their occupants. Blue Peter gave a
+glance at the building.</p>
+
+<p>"This'll be ane o' the Lon'on kirks, I'm thinkin'?" he said.
+"It's a muckle place; an' there maun be a heap o' guid fowk in
+Lon'on, for as ill's it's ca'd, to see sae mony, an' i' their
+cairritches, comin' to the kirk -- on a Setterday nicht tu. It
+maun be some kin' o' a prayer meetin', I'm thinkin'."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm said nothing, but led the way to the pit entrance.</p>
+
+<p>"That's no an ill w'y o' getherin' the baubees," said Peter,
+seeing how the incomers paid their money. "I hae h'ard o' the
+plate bein' robbit in a muckle toon afore noo."</p>
+
+<p>When at length they were seated, and he had time to glance
+reverently around him, he was a little staggered at sight of the
+decorations; and the thought crossed his mind of the pictures and
+statues he had heard of in catholic churches; but he remembered
+Westminster Abbey, its windows and monuments, and returned to his
+belief that he was, if in an episcopal, yet in a protestant
+church. But he could not help the thought that the galleries were
+a little too gaudily painted, while the high pews in them
+astonished him. Peter's nature, however, was one of those calm,
+slow ones which, when occupied by an idea or a belief, are by no
+means ready to doubt its correctness, and are even ingenious in
+reducing all apparent contradictions to theoretic harmony with it
+-- whence it came that to him all this was only part of the
+church furniture according to the taste and magnificence of
+London. He sat quite tranquil, therefore, until the curtain rose,
+revealing the ship's company in all the confusion of the wildest
+of sea storms.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm watched him narrowly. But Peter was first so taken by
+surprise, and then so carried away with the interest of what he
+saw, that thinking had ceased in him utterly, and imagination lay
+passive as a mirror to the representation. Nor did the sudden
+change from the first to the second scene rouse him, for before
+his thinking machinery could be set in motion, the delight of the
+new show had again caught him in its meshes. For to him, as it
+had been to Malcolm, it was the shore at Portlossie, while the
+cave that opened behind was the Bailie's Barn, where his friends
+the fishers might at that moment, if it were a fine night, be
+holding one of their prayer meetings. The mood lasted all through
+the talk of Prospero and Miranda; but when Ariel entered there
+came a snap, and the spell was broken. With a look in which doubt
+wrestled with horror, Blue Peter turned to Malcolm, and whispered
+with bated breath -- "I'm jaloosin' -- it canna be -- it's no a
+playhoose, this?"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm merely nodded, but from the nod Peter understood that
+he had had no discovery to make as to the character of the place
+they were in.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh!" he groaned, overcome with dismay. Then rising suddenly
+-- "Guid nicht to ye, my lord," he said, with indignation, and
+rudely forced his way from the crowded house.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm followed in his wake, but said nothing till they were
+in the street. Then, forgetting utterly his resolves concerning
+English in the distress of having given his friend ground to
+complain of his conduct towards him, he laid his hand on Blue
+Peter's arm, and stopped him in the middle of the narrow
+street.</p>
+
+<p>"I but thoucht, Peter," he said, "to get ye to see wi' yer ain
+een, an' hear wi' yer ain ears, afore ye passed jeedgment; but
+ye're jist like the lave."</p>
+
+<p>"An' what for sudna I be jist like the lave?" returned Peter,
+fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"'Cause it's no fair to set doon a' thing for wrang 'at ye
+ha'e been i' the w'y o' hearing aboot by them 'at kens as little
+aboot them as yersel'. I cam here mysel', ohn kent whaur I was
+gaein', the ither nicht, for the first time i' my life; but I
+wasna fleyt like you, 'cause I kent frae the buik a' 'at was
+comin'. I hae h'ard in a kirk in ae ten meenutes jist a sicht o'
+what maun ha'e been sair displeasin' to the hert a' the maister
+a' 's a'; but that nicht I saw nae ill an' h'ard nae ill, but was
+weel peyed back upo' them 'at did it an' said it afore the
+business was ower, an' that's mair nor ye'll see i' the streets
+o' Portlossie ilka day. The playhoose is whaur ye gang to see
+what comes o' things 'at ye canna follow oot in ordinar'
+life."</p>
+
+<p>Whether Malcolm, after a year's theatre going, would have said
+precisely the same is hardly doubtful. He spoke of the ideal
+theatre to which Shakspere is true, and in regard to that he
+spoke rightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye decoy't me intill the hoose o' ineequity!" was Peter's
+indignant reply; "an' it 's no what ye ever ga'e me cause to
+expec' o' ye, sae 'at I micht ha'e ta'en tent o' ye."</p>
+
+<p>"I thoucht nae ill o' 't," returned Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I div," retorted Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"Then perhaps you are wrong," said Malcolm, "for charity
+thinketh no evil. You wouldn't stay to see the thing out."</p>
+
+<p>"There ye are at yer English again! an' misgugglin' Scriptur'
+wi' 't an' a' this upo' Setterday nicht -- maist the Sawbath day!
+Weel, I ha'e aye h'ard 'at Lon'on was an awfu' place, but I
+little thoucht the verra air o' 't wad sae sune turn an honest
+laad like Ma'colm MacPhail intill a scoffer. But maybe it's the
+markis o' 'im, an' no the muckle toon 'at's made the differ. Ony
+gait, I'm thinkin' it'll be aboot time for me to be gauin'
+hame."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was vexed with himself, and both disappointed and
+troubled at the change which had come over his friend, and
+threatened to destroy the lifelong relation between them; his
+feelings therefore held him silent. Peter concluded that the
+marquis was displeased, and it clenched his resolve to go.</p>
+
+<p>"What w'y am I to win hame, my lord?" he said, when they had
+walked some distance without word spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"By the Aberdeen smack," returned Malcolm. "She sails on
+Tuesday. I will see you on board. You must take young Davy with
+you, for I wouldn't have him here after you are gone. There will
+be nothing for him to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're unco ready to pairt wi' 's noo 'at ye ha'e nae mair use
+for 's," said Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"No sae ready as ye seem to pairt wi' yer chairity," said
+Malcolm, now angry too.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see Annie 'ill be thinkin' lang," said Peter, softening a
+little.</p>
+
+<p>No more angry words passed between them, but neither did any
+thoroughly cordial ones, and they parted at the stairs in mutual,
+though, with such men, it could not be more than superficial
+estrangement.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII:
+LORD LIFTORE</h1>
+
+<p>The chief cause of Malcolm's anxiety had been, and perhaps
+still was, Lord Liftore. In his ignorance of Mr Lenorme there
+might lie equal cause with him, but he knew such evil of the
+other that his whole nature revolted against the thought of his
+marrying his sister. At Lossie he had made himself agreeable to
+her, and now, if not actually living in the same house, he was
+there at all hours of the day.</p>
+
+<p>It took nothing from his anxiety to see that his lordship was
+greatly improved. Not only had the lanky youth passed into a well
+formed man, but in countenance, whether as regarded expression,
+complexion, or feature, he was not merely a handsomer but looked
+in every way a healthier and better man. Whether it was from some
+reviving sense of duty, or that, in his attachment to Florimel,
+he had begun to cherish a desire of being worthy of her, I cannot
+tell; but he looked altogether more of a man than the time that
+had elapsed would have given ground to expect, even had he then
+seemed on the mend, and indeed promised to become a really fine
+looking fellow. His features were far more regular if less
+informed than those of the painter and his carriage prouder if
+less graceful and energetic. His admiration of and consequent
+attachment to Florimel had been growing ever since his visit to
+Lossie House the preceding summer, and if he had said nothing
+quite definite, it was only because his aunt represented the
+impolicy of declaring himself just yet: she was too young. She
+judged thus, attributing her evident indifference to an
+incapacity as yet for falling in love. Hence, beyond paying her
+all sorts of attentions and what compliments he was capable of
+constructing, Lord Liftore had not gone far towards making
+himself understood -- at least, not until just before Malcolm's
+arrival, when his behaviour had certainly grown warmer and more
+confidential.</p>
+
+<p>All the time she had been under his aunt's care he had had
+abundant opportunity for recommending himself, and he had made
+use of the privilege. For one thing, credibly assured that he
+looked well in the saddle, he had constantly encouraged
+Florimel's love of riding and desire to become a thorough horse
+woman, and they had ridden a good deal together in the
+neighbourhood of Edinburgh. This practice they continued as much
+as possible after they came to London early in the spring; but
+the weather of late had not been favourable, and Florimel had
+been very little out with him.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time Lady Bellair had had her mind set on a match
+between the daughter of her old friend the Marquis of Lossie and
+her nephew, and it was with this in view that, when invited to
+Lossie House, she had begged leave to bring Lord Meikleham with
+her. The young man was from the first sufficiently taken with the
+beautiful girl to satisfy his aunt, and would even then have
+shown greater fervour in his attentions, had he not met Lizzy
+Findlay at the wedding of Joseph Mair's sister, and found her
+more than pleasing. I will not say that from the first he
+purposed wrong to her: he was too inexperienced in the ways of
+evil for that; but even when he saw plainly enough to what their
+mutual attraction was tending, he gave himself no trouble to
+resist it; and through the whole unhappy affair had not had one
+smallest struggle with himself for the girl's sake. To himself he
+was all in all as yet, and such was his opinion of his own
+precious being, that, had he thought about it, he would have
+considered the honour of his attentions far more than sufficient
+to make up to any girl in such a position for whatever mishap his
+acquaintance might bring upon her. What were the grief and
+mortification of parents to put in the balance against his
+condescension? what the shame and the humiliation of the girl
+herself compared with the honour of having been shone upon for a
+period, however brief, by his enamoured countenance? Must not
+even the sorrow attendant upon her loss be rendered more than
+endurable -- be radiantly consoled by the memory that she had
+held such a demigod in her arms? When he left her at last, with
+many promises, not one of which he ever had the intention of
+fulfilling, he did purpose sending her a present. But at that
+time he was poor -- dependent, indeed, for his pocket money upon
+his aunt; and, up to this hour, he had never since his departure
+from Lossie House taken the least notice of her either by gift or
+letter. He had taken care also that it should not be in her power
+to write to him, and now he did not even know that he was a
+father. Once or twice the possibility of such being the case
+occurred to him, and he thought within himself that if he were,
+and it should come to be talked of, it might, in respect of his
+present hopes, be awkward and disagreeable; for, although such a
+predicament was nowise unusual, in this instance the
+circumstances were. More than one of his bachelor friends had a
+small family even, but then it was in the regular way of an open
+and understood secret: the fox had his nest in some pleasant
+nook, adroitly masked, where lay his vixen and her brood; one day
+he would abandon them for ever, and, with such gathered store of
+experience, set up for a respectable family man. A few tears, a
+neat legal arrangement, and all would be as it had never been,
+only that the blood of the Montmorencies or Cliffords would
+meander unclaimed in this or that obscure channel, beautifying
+the race, and rousing England to noble deeds! But in his case it
+would be unpleasant -- a little -- that every one of his future
+tenantry should know the relation in which he stood to a woman of
+the fisher people. He did not fear any resentment -- not that he
+would have cared a straw for it, on such trifling grounds, but
+people in their low condition never thought anything of such
+slips on the part of their women especially where a great man was
+concerned. What he did fear was that the immediate relations of
+the woman -- that was how he spoke of Lizzy to himself -- might
+presume upon the honour he had done them. Lizzy, however, was a
+good girl, and had promised to keep the matter secret until she
+heard from him, whatever might be the consequences; and surely
+there was fascination enough in the holding of a secret with such
+as he to enable her to keep her promise. She must be perfectly
+aware, however appearances might be against him, that he was not
+one to fail in appreciation of her conduct, however easy and
+natural all that he required of her might be. He would requite
+her royally when he was Lord of Lossie. Meantime, although it was
+even now in his power to make her rich amends, he would prudently
+leave things as they were, and not run the risk that must lie in
+opening communications.</p>
+
+<p>And so the young earl held his head high, looked as innocent
+as may be desirable for a gentleman, had many a fair clean hand
+laid in his, and many a maiden waist yielded to his arm, while
+"the woman" flitted about half an alien amongst her own, with his
+child wound in her old shawl of Lossie tartan; wandering not
+seldom in the gloaming when her little one slept, along the top
+of the dune, with the wind blowing keen upon her from the regions
+of eternal ice, sometimes the snow settling softly on her hair,
+sometimes the hailstones nestling in its meshes; the skies
+growing blacker about her, and the sea stormier, while hope
+retreated so far into the heavenly regions, that hope and heaven
+both were lost to her view. Thus, alas! the things in which he
+was superior to her, most of all that he was a gentleman, while
+she was but a peasant girl -- the things whose witchery drew her
+to his will, he made the means of casting her down from the place
+of her excellency into the mire of shame and loss. The only love
+worthy of the name ever and always uplifts.</p>
+
+<p>Of the people belonging to the upper town of Portlossie, which
+raised itself high above the sea town in other respects besides
+the topical, there were none who did not make poor Lizzy feel
+they were aware of her disgrace, and but one man who made her
+feel it by being kinder than before. That man, strange to say,
+was the factor. With all his faults he had some chivalry, and he
+showed it to the fisher girl. Nor did he alter his manner to her
+because of the rudeness with which her mother had taken Malcolm's
+part.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sore proof to Mr Crathie that his discharged servant
+was in favour with the marchioness when the order came from Mr
+Soutar to send up Kelpie. She had written to himself when she
+wanted her own horse; now she sent for this brute through her
+lawyer. It was plain that Malcolm had been speaking against him;
+and he was the more embittered therefore against his friends.</p>
+
+<p>Since his departure he had been twice on the point of
+poisoning the mare.</p>
+
+<p>It was with difficulty he found two men to take her to
+Aberdeen. There they had an arduous job to get her on board and
+secure her. But it had been done, and all the Monday night
+Malcolm was waiting her arrival at the wharf -- alone, for after
+what had passed between them, he would not ask Peter to go with
+him, and besides he was no use with horses. At length, in the
+grey of a gurly dawn, the smack came alongside. They had had a
+rough passage, and the mare was considerably subdued by sickness,
+so that there was less difficulty in getting her ashore, and she
+paced for a little while in tolerable quietness. But with every
+step on dry land, the evil spirit in her awoke, and soon Malcolm
+had to dismount and lead her. The morning was little advanced,
+and few vehicles were about, otherwise he could hardly have got
+her home uninjured, notwithstanding the sugar with which he had
+filled a pocket. Before he reached the mews he was very near
+wishing he had never seen her. But when he led her into the
+stable, he was a little encouraged as well as surprised to find
+that she had not forgotten Florimel's horse. They had always been
+a little friendly, and now they greeted each other with an
+affectionate neigh; after which, with the help of all she could
+devour, the demoness was quieter.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX: KELPIE
+IN LONDON</h1>
+
+<p>Before noon Lord Liftore came round to the mews: his riding
+horses were there. Malcolm was not at the moment in the
+stable.</p>
+
+<p>"What animal is that?" he asked of his own groom, catching
+sight of Kelpie in her loose box.</p>
+
+<p>"One just come up from Scotland for Lady Lossie, my lord,"
+answered the man.</p>
+
+<p>"She looks a clipper! Lead her out, and let me see her."</p>
+
+<p>"She's not sound in the temper, my lord, the groom that
+brought her says. He told me on no account to go near her till
+she got used to the sight of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you're afraid, are you?" said his lordship, whose
+breeding had not taught him courtesy to his inferiors.</p>
+
+<p>At the word the man walked into her box. As he did so he
+looked out for her hoofs, but his circumspection was in vain: in
+a moment she had wheeled, jammed him against the wall, and taken
+his shoulder in her teeth. He gave a yell of pain. His lordship
+caught up a stable broom, and attacked the mare with it over the
+door; but it flew from his hand to the other end of the stable,
+and the partition began to go after it. But she still kept her
+hold of the man. Happily, however, Malcolm was not far off and
+hearing the noise, rushed in. He was just in time to save the
+groom's life. Clearing the stall partition, and seizing the mare
+by the nose with a mighty grasp, he inserted a forefinger behind
+her tusk, for she was one of the few mares tusked like a horse,
+and soon compelled her to open her mouth. The groom staggered and
+would have fallen, so cruelly had she mauled him, but Malcolm's
+voice roused him.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake gang oot, as lang's there twa limbs o' ye
+stickin' thegither."</p>
+
+<p>The poor fellow just managed to open the door, and fell
+senseless on the stones. Lord Liftore called for help, and they
+carried him into the saddle room, while one ran for the nearest
+surgeon.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime Malcolm was putting a muzzle on Kelpie, which he
+believed she understood as a punishment, and while he was thus
+occupied, his lordship came from the saddle room and approached
+the box.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you?" he said. "I think I have seen you before."</p>
+
+<p>"I was servant to the late Marquis of Lossie, my lord, and now
+I am groom to her ladyship."</p>
+
+<p>"What a fury you've brought up with you! She'll never do for
+London."</p>
+
+<p>"I told the man not to go near her, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the use of her if no one can go near her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, she's a splendid creature to look at! but I don't
+know what you can do with her here, my man. She's fit to go
+double with Satan himself."</p>
+
+<p>"She'll do for me to ride after my lady well enough. If only I
+had room to exercise her a bit!"</p>
+
+<p>"Take her into the park early in the morning, and gallop her
+round. Only mind she don't break your neck. What can have made
+Lady Lossie send for such a devil as that!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try her myself some morning," said his lordship, who
+thought himself a better horseman than he was.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't advise you, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Who the devil asked your advice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ten to one she'll kill you, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"That's my look out," said Liftore, and went into the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he had done with Kelpie, Malcolm dressed himself in
+his new livery, and went to tell his mistress of her arrival. She
+sent him orders to bring the mare round in half an hour. He went
+back to her, took off her muzzle, fed her, and while she ate her
+corn, put on the spurs he had prepared expressly for her use -- a
+spike without a rowel, rather blunt, but sharp indeed when
+sharply used -- like those of the Gauchos of the Pampas. Then he
+saddled her, and rode her round.</p>
+
+<p>Having had her fit of temper, she was, to all appearance,
+going to be fairly good for the rest of the day, and looked
+splendid. She was a large mare, nearly thoroughbred, but with
+more bone than usual for her breeding, which she carried
+triumphantly -- an animal most men would have been pleased to
+possess -- and proud to ride. Florimel came to the door to see
+her, accompanied by Liftore, and was so delighted with the very
+sight of her that she sent at once to the stables for her own
+horse, that she might ride out attended by Malcolm. His lordship
+also ordered his horse.</p>
+
+<p>They went straight to Rotten Row for a little gallop, and
+Kelpie was behaving very well for her.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you have two such savages, horse and groom both, up
+from Scotland for, Florimel?" asked his lordship, as they
+cantered gently along the Row, Kelpie coming sideways after them,
+as if she would fain alter the pairing of her legs..</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned and cast an admiring glance on the two.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know I am rather proud of them," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"He's a clumsy fellow, the groom; and for the mare, she's
+downright wicked," said Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>"At least neither is a hypocrite," returned Florimel, with
+Malcolm's account of his quarrel with the factor in her mind.
+"The mare is just as wicked as she looks, and the man as good.
+Believe me, my lord, that man you call a savage never told a lie
+in his life!"</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke she looked him hard in the face -- with her
+father in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Liftore could not return the look with equal steadiness. It
+seemed for the moment to be inquiring too curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I know what you mean," he said. "You don't believe my
+professions."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he edged his horse close up to hers.</p>
+
+<p>"But," he went on, "if I know that I speak the truth when I
+swear that I love every breath of wind that has but touched your
+dress as it passed, that I would die gladly for one loving touch
+of your hand -- why should you not let me ease my heart by saying
+so? Florimel, my life has been a different thing from the moment
+I saw you first. It has grown precious to me since I saw that it
+might be -- Confound the fellow! what's he about now with his
+horse devil?"</p>
+
+<p>For at that moment his lordship's horse, a high bred but timid
+animal, sprang away from the side of Florimel's, and there stood
+Kelpie on her hind legs, pawing the air between him and his lady,
+and Florimel, whose old confidence in Malcolm was now more than
+revived, was laughing merrily at the discomfiture of his attempt
+at love making. Her behaviour and his own frustration put him in
+such a rage that, wheeling quickly round, he struck Kelpie, just
+as she dropped on all fours, a great cut with his whip across the
+haunches. She plunged and kicked violently, came within an inch
+of breaking his horse's leg, and flew across the rail into the
+park. Nothing could have suited Malcolm better. He did not punish
+her as he would have done had she been to blame, for he was
+always just to lower as well as higher animals, but he took her a
+great round at racing speed, while his mistress and her companion
+looked on, and everyone in the Row stopped and stared. Finally,
+he hopped her over the rail again, and brought her up dripping
+and foaming to his mistress. Florimel's eyes were flashing, and
+Liftore looked still angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Dinna du that again, my lord," said Malcolm. "Ye're no my
+maister; an' gien ye war, ye wad hae no richt to brak my
+neck."</p>
+
+<p>"No fear of that! That's not how your neck will be broken, my
+man," said his lordship, with an attempted laugh; for though he
+was all the angrier that he was ashamed of what he had done, he
+dared not further wrong the servant before his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>A policeman came up and laid his hand on Kelpie's bridle.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care what you're about," said Malcolm; "the mare's not
+safe. -- There's my mistress, the Marchioness of Lossie."</p>
+
+<p>The man saw an ugly look in Kelpie's eye, withdrew his hand,
+and turned to Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"My groom is not to blame," said she. "Lord Liftore struck his
+mare, and she became ungovernable."</p>
+
+<p>The man gave a look at Liftore, seemed to take his likeness,
+touched his hat, and withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better ride the jade home," said Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm only looked at his mistress. She moved on, and he
+followed.</p>
+
+<p>He was not so innocent in the affair as he had seemed. The
+expression of Liftore's face as he drew nearer to Florimel, was
+to him so hateful, that he interfered in a very literal fashion:
+Kelpie had been doing no more than he had made her until the earl
+struck her.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us ride to Richmond tomorrow," said Florimel, "and have a
+good gallop in the park. Did you ever see a finer sight than that
+animal on the grass?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fellow's too heavy for her," said Liftore. "I should very
+much like to try her myself."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel pulled up, and turned to Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"MacPhail," she said, "have that mare of yours ready whenever
+Lord Liftore chooses to ride her."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, my lady," returned Malcolm, "but would
+your ladyship make a condition with my lord that he shall not
+mount her anywhere on the stones."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove!" said Liftore scornfully. "You fancy yourself the
+only man that can ride!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's nothing to me, my lord, if you break your neck; but I am
+bound to tell you I do not think your lordship will sit my mare.
+Stoat can't; and I can only because I know her as well as my own
+palm."</p>
+
+<p>The young earl made no answer and they rode on -- Malcolm
+nearer than his lordship liked.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't think, Florimel," he said, "why you should want that
+fellow about you again. He is not only very awkward, but insolent
+as well."</p>
+
+<p>"I should call it straightforward," returned Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Lady Lossie! See how close he is riding to us
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"He is anxious, I daresay, as to your Lordship's behaviour. He
+is like some dogs that are a little too careful of their
+mistresses -- touchy as to how they are addressed -- not a bad
+fault in dog -- or groom either. He saved my life once, and he
+was a great favourite with my father: I won't hear anything
+against him."</p>
+
+<p>"But for your own sake -- just consider: -- what will people
+say if you show any preference for a man like that?" said
+Liftore, who had already become jealous of the man who in his
+heart he feared could ride better than himself.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord!" exclaimed Florimel, with a mingling of surprise and
+indignation in her voice, and suddenly quickening her pace,
+dropped him behind.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was after her so instantly that it brought him abreast
+of Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your own place," said his lordship, with stern
+rebuke.</p>
+
+<p>"I keep my place to my mistress," returned Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Liftore looked at him as it he would strike him. But he
+thought better of it apparently, and rode after Florimel.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX: BLUE
+PETER</h1>
+
+<p>By the time he had put up Kelpie, Malcolm found that his only
+chance of seeing Blue Peter before he left London, lay in going
+direct to the wharf. On his road he reflected on what had just
+passed, and was not altogether pleased with himself. He had
+nearly lost his temper with Liftore; and if he should act in any
+way unbefitting the position he had assumed, from the duties of
+which he was in no degree exonerated by the fact that he had
+assumed it for a purpose, it would not only be a failure in
+himself, but an impediment perhaps insurmountable in the path of
+his service. To attract attention was almost to insure
+frustration. When he reached the wharf he found they had nearly
+got her freight on board the smack. Blue Peter stood on the
+forecastle. He went to him and explained how it was that he had
+been unable to join him sooner.</p>
+
+<p>"I didna ken ye," said Blue Peter, "in sic playactor kin' o'
+claes."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody in London would look at me twice now. But you remember
+how we were stared at when first we came," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow ay!" returned Peter with almost a groan; "there's a sair
+cheenge past upo' you, but I'm gauin' hame to the auld w'y o'
+things. The herrin' 'll be aye to the fore, I'm thinkin'; an'
+gien we getna a harbour we'll get a h'aven."</p>
+
+<p>Judging it better to take no notice of this pretty strong
+expression of distrust and disappointment, Malcolm led him aside,
+and putting a few sovereigns in his hand, said,</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Peter, that will take you home."</p>
+
+<p>"It's ower muckle -- a heap ower muckle. I'll tak naething
+frae ye but what'll pay my w'y."</p>
+
+<p>"And what is such a trifle between friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"There was a time, Ma'colm, whan what was mine was yours, an'
+what was yours was mine, but that time's gane."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry to hear that, Peter; but still I owe you as much as
+that for bare wages."</p>
+
+<p>"There was no word o' wages when ye said, Peter, come to
+Lon'on wi' me. -- Davie there -- he maun hae his wauges."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel," said Malcolm, thinking it better to give way, "I'm no
+abune bein' obleeged to ye, Peter. I maun bide my time, I see,
+for ye winna lippen till me. Eh man! your faith's sune at the
+wa'."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith! what faith?" returned Peter, almost fiercely. "We're
+tauld to put no faith in man; an' gien I bena come to that yet
+freely, I'm nearer till't nor ever I was afore."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, Peter, a' 'at I can say is, I ken my ain hert, an' ye
+dinna ken't."</p>
+
+<p>"Daur ye tell me!" cried Peter. "Disna the Scriptur' itsel'
+say the hert o' man is deceitfu' an' despratly wickit: who can
+know it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Peter," said Malcolm, and he spoke very gently, for he
+understood that love and not hate was at the root of his friend's
+anger and injustice, "gien ye winna lippen to me, there's
+naething for't but I maun lippen to you. Gang hame to yer wife,
+an' gi'e her my compliments, an' tell her a' 'at's past atween
+you an' me, as near, word for word, as ye can tell the same; an'
+say till her, I pray her to judge atween you an' me -- an' to mak
+the best o' me to ye 'at she can, for I wad ill thole to loss yer
+freenship, Peter."</p>
+
+<p>The same moment came the command for all but passengers to go
+ashore. The men grasped each other's hand, looked each other in
+the eyes with something of mutual reproach, and parted -- Blue
+Peter down the river to Scaurnose and Annie, Malcolm to the yacht
+lying still in the Upper Pool.</p>
+
+<p>He saw it taken properly in charge, and arranged for having it
+towed up the river and anchored in the Chelsea Reach.</p>
+
+<p>When Blue Peter found himself once more safe out at sea, with
+twelve hundred yards of canvas spread above him in one mighty
+wing betwixt boom and gaff; and the wind blowing half a gale, the
+weather inside him began to change a little. He began to see that
+he had not been behaving altogether as a friend ought. It was not
+that he saw reason for being better satisfied with Malcolm or his
+conduct, but reason for being worse satisfied with himself; and
+the consequence was that he grew still angrier with Malcolm, and
+the wrong he had done him seemed more and more an unpardonable
+one.</p>
+
+<p>When he was at length seated on the top of the coach running
+betwixt Aberdeen and Fochabers, which would set him down as near
+Scaurnose as coach could go, he began to be doubtful how Annie,
+formally retained on Malcolm's side by the message he had to give
+her, would judge in the question between them; for what did she
+know of theatres and such places? And the doubt strengthened as
+he neared home. The consequence was that he felt in no haste to
+execute Malcolm's commission; and hence, the delights of greeting
+over, Annie was the first to open her bag of troubles: Mr Crathie
+had given them notice to quit at Midsummer.</p>
+
+<p>"Jist what I micht hae expeckit!" cried Blue Peter, starting
+up. "Woe be to the man 'at puts his trust in princes! I luikit
+till him to save the fisher fowk, an' no to the Lord; an' the
+tooer o' Siloam 's fa'en upo' my heid: -- what does he, the first
+thing, but turn his ain auld freen's oot o' the sma beild they
+had! That his father nor his gran'father, 'at was naither o' them
+God fearin' men, wad never hae put their han' till. Eh, wuman!
+but my hert's sair 'ithin me. To think o' Ma'colm MacPhail
+turnin' his back upo' them 'at's been freens wi' 'im sin ever he
+was a wee loonie, rinnin' aboot in coaties!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot, man! what's gotten intill yer heid?" returned his wife.
+"It's no Ma'colm; it's the illwully factor. Bide ye till he comes
+till 's ain, an' Maister Crathie 'll hae to lauch o' the wrang
+side o' 's mou'."</p>
+
+<p>But thereupon Peter began his tale of how he had fared in
+London, and in the excitement of keenly anticipated evil, and
+with his recollection of events wrapped in the mist of a
+displeasure which had deepened during his journey, he so clothed
+the facts of Malcolm's conduct in the garments of his own
+feelings that the mind of Annie Mair also became speedily
+possessed with the fancy that their friend's good fortune had
+upset his moral equilibrium, and that he had not only behaved to
+her husband with pride and arrogance, breaking all the ancient
+bonds of friendship between them, but had tried to seduce him
+from the ways of righteousness by inveigling him into a
+playhouse, where marvels of wickedness were going on at the very
+time. She wept a few bitter tears of disappointment, dried them
+hastily, lifted her head high, and proceeded to set her affairs
+in order as if death were at the door.</p>
+
+<p>For indeed it was to them as a death to leave Scaurnose. True,
+Annie came from inland, and was not of the fisher race, but this
+part of the coast she had known from childhood, and in this
+cottage all her married years had been spent, while banishment of
+the sort involved banishment from every place they knew, for all
+the neighbourhood was equally under the power of the factor. And
+poor as their accommodation here was, they had plenty of open air
+and land room; whereas if they should be compelled to go to any
+of the larger ports, it would be to circumstances greatly
+inferior, and a neighbourhood in all probability very undesirable
+for their children.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI: MR
+GRAHAM</h1>
+
+<p>When Malcolm at length reached his lodging, he found there a
+letter from Miss Horn, containing the much desired information as
+to where the schoolmaster was to be found in the London
+wilderness. It was now getting rather late, and the dusk of a
+spring night had begun to gather; but little more than the
+breadth of the Regent's Park lay between him and his best friend
+-- his only one in London -- and he set out immediately for
+Camden Town.</p>
+
+<p>The relation between him and his late schoolmaster was indeed
+of the strongest and closest. Long before Malcolm was born, and
+ever since, had Alexander Graham loved Malcolm's mother; but not
+until within the last few months had he learned that Malcolm was
+the son of Griselda Campbell. The discovery was to the
+schoolmaster like the bursting out of a known flower on an
+unknown plant. He knew then, not why he had loved the boy, for he
+loved every one of his pupils more or less, but why he had loved
+him with such a peculiar tone of affection.</p>
+
+<p>It was a lovely evening. There had been rain in the afternoon
+as Malcolm walked home from the Pool, but before the sun set it
+had cleared up; and as he went through the park towards the dingy
+suburb, the first heralds of the returning youth of the year met
+him from all sides in the guise of odours -- not yet those of
+flowers, but the more ethereal if less sweet, scents of buds and
+grass, and ever pure earth moistened with the waters of heaven.
+And to his surprise he found that his sojourn in a great city,
+although as yet so brief, had already made the open earth with
+its corn and grass more dear to him and wonderful. But when he
+left the park, and crossed the Hampstead Road into a dreary
+region of dwellings crowded and commonplace as the thoughts of a
+worshipper of Mammon, houses upon houses, here and there
+shepherded by a tall spire, it was hard to believe that the
+spring was indeed coming slowly up this way.</p>
+
+<p>After not a few inquiries, he found himself at a stationer's
+shop, a poor little place, and learned that Mr Graham lodged over
+it, and was then at home.</p>
+
+<p>He was shown up into a shabby room, with an iron bedstead, a
+chest of drawers daubed with sickly paint, a table with a stained
+red cover, a few bookshelves in a recess over the washstand, and
+two chairs seated with haircloth. On one of these, by the side of
+a small fire in a neglected grate, sat the schoolmaster reading
+his Plato. On the table beside him lay his Greek New Testament,
+and an old edition of George Herbert. He looked up as the door
+opened, and, notwithstanding his strange dress, recognising at
+once his friend and pupil, rose hastily, and welcomed him with
+hand and eyes, and countenance, but without word spoken. For a
+few moments the two stood silent, holding each the other's hand,
+and gazing each in the other's eyes, then sat down, still
+speechless, one on each side of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>They looked at each other and smiled, and again a minute
+passed. Then the schoolmaster rose, rang the bell, and when it
+was answered by a rather careworn young woman, requested her to
+bring tea.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry I cannot give you cakes or fresh butter, my lord,"
+he said with a smile, and they were the first words spoken. "The
+former is not to be had, and the latter is beyond my means. But
+what I have will content one who is able to count that abundance
+which many would count privation."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke in the choice word, measured phrase, and stately
+speech which Wordsworth says "grave livers do in Scotland use,"
+but under it all rang a tone of humour, as if he knew the form of
+his utterance too important for the subject matter of it, and
+would gently amuse with it both his visitor and himself.</p>
+
+<p>He was a man of middle height, but so thin that
+notwithstanding a slight stoop in the shoulders, he looked rather
+tall; much on the young side of fifty, but apparently a good way
+on the other, partly from the little hair he had being grey. He
+had sandy coloured whiskers, and a shaven chin. Except his large
+sweetly closed mouth, and rather long upper lip, there was
+nothing very notable in his features. At ordinary moments,
+indeed, there was nothing in his appearance other than
+insignificant to the ordinary observer. His eyes were of a pale
+quiet blue, but when he smiled they sparkled and throbbed with
+light. He wore the same old black tailcoat he had worn last in
+his school at Portlossie, but the white neckcloth he had always
+been seen in there had given place to a black one: that was the
+sole change in the aspect of the man.</p>
+
+<p>About Portlossie he had been greatly respected,
+notwithstanding the rumour that he was a "stickit minister," that
+is, one who had failed in the attempt to preach; and when the
+presbytery dismissed him on the charge of heresy, there had been
+many tears on the part of his pupils, and much childish defiance
+of his unenviable successor.</p>
+
+<p>Few words passed between the two men until they had had their
+tea, and then followed a long talk, Malcolm first explaining his
+present position, and then answering many questions of the master
+as to how things had gone since he left. Next followed anxious
+questions on Malcolm's side as to how his friend found himself in
+the prison of London.</p>
+
+<p>"I do miss the air, and the laverocks (skylarks), and the
+gowans," he confessed; "but I have them all in my mind, and at my
+age a man ought to be able to satisfy himself with the idea of a
+thing in his soul. Of outer things that have contributed to his
+inward growth, the memory alone may then well be enough. The
+sights which, when I lie down to sleep, rise before that inward
+eye Wordsworth calls the bliss of solitude, have upon me power
+almost of a spiritual vision, so purely radiant are they of that
+which dwells in them, the divine thought which is their
+substance, their hypostasis. My boy! I doubt if you can tell what
+it is to know the presence of the living God in and about
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I houp I hae a bit notion o' 't, sir," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"But believe me that in any case, however much a man may have
+of it, he may have it endlessly more. Since I left the cottage
+where I hoped to end my days under the shadow of the house of
+your ancestors, since I came into this region of bricks and
+smoke, and the crowded tokens too plain of want and care, I have
+found a reality in the things I had been trying to teach you at
+Portlossie, such as I had before imagined only in my best
+moments. And more still: I am now far better able to understand
+how it must have been with our Lord when he was trying to teach
+the men and women of Palestine to have faith in God. Depend upon
+it, we get our best use of life in learning by the facts of its
+ebb and flow to understand the Son of Man. And again, when we
+understand Him, then only do we understand our life and
+ourselves. Never can we know the majesty of the will of God
+concerning us except by understanding Jesus and the work the
+Father gave Him to do. Now, nothing is of a more heavenly delight
+than to enter into a dusky room in the house of your friend, and
+there, with a blow of the heavenly rod, draw light from the dark
+wall -- open a window, a fountain of the eternal light, and let
+in the truth which is the life of the world. Joyously would a man
+spend his life, right joyously even if the road led to the
+gallows, in showing the grandest he sees -- the splendid purities
+of the divine religion -- the mountain top up to which the voice
+of God is ever calling his children. Yes, I can understand even
+how a man might live, like the good hermits of old, in triumphant
+meditation upon such all satisfying truths, and let the waves of
+the world's time wash by him in unheeded flow until his cell
+changed to his tomb, and his spirit soared free. But to spend
+your time in giving little lessons when you have great ones to
+give; in teaching the multiplication table the morning after you
+made at midnight a grand discovery upon the very summits of the
+moonlit mountain range of the mathematics; in enforcing the old
+law, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself when you know in
+your own heart that not a soul can ever learn to keep it without
+first learning to fulfil an infinitely greater one -- to love his
+neighbour even as Christ hath loved him -- then indeed one may
+well grow disheartened, and feel as if he were not in the place
+prepared for, and at the work required of him. But it is just
+then that he must go back to school himself and learn not only
+the patience of God who keeps the whole dull obstinate world
+alive, while generation after generation is born and vanishes,
+and of the mighty multitude only one here and there rises up from
+the fetters of humanity into the freedom of the sons of God --
+and yet goes on teaching the whole, and bringing every man who
+will but turn his ear a little towards the voice that calls him,
+nearer and nearer to the second birth -- of sonship and liberty
+-- not only this divine patience must he learn, but the divine
+insight as well, which in every form spies the reflex of the
+truth it cannot contain, and in every lowliest lesson sees the
+highest drawn nearer, and the soul growing alive unto God."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII:
+RICHMOND PARK</h1>
+
+<p>The next day at noon, mounted on Kelpie, Malcolm was in
+attendance upon his mistress, who was eager after a gallop in
+Richmond Park. Lord Liftore, who had intended to accompany her,
+had not made his appearance yet, but Florimel did not seem the
+less desirous of setting out at the time she had appointed
+Malcolm. The fact was she had said one o'clock to Liftore,
+intending twelve, that she might get away without him. Kelpie
+seemed on her good behaviour, and they started quietly enough. By
+the time they had got out of the park upon the Kensington Road,
+however, the evil spirit had begun to wake in her. But even when
+she was quietest, she was nothing to be trusted, and about London
+Malcolm found he dared never let his thoughts go, or take his
+attention quite off her ears. They got to Kew Bridge in safety
+nevertheless, though whether they were to get safely across was
+doubtful all the time they were upon it, for again and again she
+seemed on the very point of clearing the stone balustrade, but
+for the terrible bit and chain without which Malcolm never dared
+ride her. Still, whatever her caracoles or escapades, they caused
+Florimel nothing but amusement, for her confidence in Malcolm --
+that he could do whatever he believed he could -- was unbounded.
+They got through Richmond -- with some trouble, but hardly were
+they well into the park, when Lord Liftore, followed by his
+groom, came suddenly up behind them at such a rate as quite
+destroyed the small stock of equanimity Kelpie had to go upon.
+She bolted.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was a good rider, and knew herself quite mistress of
+her horse, and if she now followed, it was at her own will, and
+with a design; she wanted to make the horses behind her bolt also
+if she could. His lordship came flying after her, and his groom
+after him, but she kept increasing her pace until they were all
+at full stretch, thundering over the grass -- upon which Malcolm
+had at once turned Kelpie, giving her little rein and plenty of
+spur. Gradually Florimel slackened speed, and at last pulled up
+suddenly. Liftore and his groom went past her like the wind. She
+turned at right angles and galloped back to the road. There, on a
+gaunt thoroughbred, with a furnace of old life in him yet, sat
+Lenorme, whom she had already passed and signalled to remain
+thereabout. They drew alongside of each other, but they did not
+shake hands; they only looked each in the other's eyes, and for a
+few moments neither spoke. The three riders were now far away
+over the park, and still Kelpie held on and the other horses
+after her. "I little expected such a pleasure," said Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>"I meant to give it you, though," said Florimel, with a merry
+laugh. "Bravo, Kelpie! take them with you," she cried, looking
+after the still retreating horsemen. "I have got a familiar since
+I saw you last, Raoul," she went on. "See if I don't get some
+good for us out of him! -- We'll move gently along the road here,
+and by the time Liftore's horse is spent, we shall be ready for a
+good gallop. I want to tell you all about it. I did not mean
+Liftore to be here when I sent you word, but he has been too much
+for me."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme replied with a look of gratitude; and as they walked
+their horses along, she told him all concerning Malcolm and
+Kelpie.</p>
+
+<p>"Liftore hates him already," she said, "and I can hardly
+wonder; but you must not, for you will find him useful. He is one
+I can depend upon. You should have seen the look Liftore gave him
+when he told him he could not sit his mare! It would have been
+worth gold to you."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme winced a little.</p>
+
+<p>"He thinks no end of his riding," Florimel continued; "but if
+it were not so improper to have secrets with another gentleman, I
+would tell you that he rides -- just pretty well."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme's great brow gloomed over his eyes like the Eiger in a
+mist, but he said nothing yet.</p>
+
+<p>"He wants to ride Kelpie, and I have told my groom to let him
+have her. Perhaps she'll break his neck."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme smiled grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't mind, would you, Raoul?" added Florimel, with a
+roguish look.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind telling me, Florimel, what you mean by the
+impropriety of having secrets with another gentleman? Am I the
+other gentleman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course! You know Liftore imagined he has only to name
+the day."</p>
+
+<p>"And you allow an idiot like that to cherish such a degrading
+idea of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Raoul! what does it matter what a fool like him
+thinks?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you don't mind it, I do. I feel it an insult to me that he
+should dare think of you like that."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. I suppose I shall have to marry him some
+day."</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Lossie, do you want to make me hate you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be foolish, Raoul. It won't be tomorrow -- nor the next
+day. Freuet euch des Lebens!"</p>
+
+<p>"0 Florimel! what is to come of this? Do you want to break my
+heart? -- I hate to talk rubbish. You won't kill me -- you will
+only ruin my work, and possibly drive me mad."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel drew close to his side, laid her hand on his arm, and
+looked in his face with a witching entreaty.</p>
+
+<p>"We have the present, Raoul," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"So has the butterfly," answered Lenorme; "but I had rather be
+the caterpillar with a future. -- Why don't you put a stop to the
+man's lovemaking? He can't love you or any woman. He does not
+know what love means. It makes me ill to hear him when he thinks
+he is paying you irresistible compliments. They are so silly! so
+mawkish! Good heavens, Florimel! can you imagine that smile every
+day and always? Like the rest of his class he seems to think
+himself perfectly justified in making fools of women. I want to
+help you to grow as beautiful as God meant you to be when he
+thought of you first. I want you to be my embodied vision of
+life, that I may for ever worship at your feet -- live in you,
+die with you: such bliss, even were there nothing beyond, would
+be enough for the heart of a God to bestow."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, stop, Raoul; I'm not worthy of such love," said
+Florimel, again laying her hand on his arm. "I do wish for your
+sake I had been born a village girl."</p>
+
+<p>"If you had been, then I might have wished for your sake that
+I had been born a marquis. As it is I would rather be a painter
+than any nobleman in Europe -- that is, with you to love me. Your
+love is my patent of nobility. But I may glorify what you love --
+and tell you that I can confer something on you also -- what none
+of your noble admirers can. -- God forgive me! you will make me
+hate them all!"</p>
+
+<p>"Raoul, this won't do at all," said Florimel, with the
+authority that should belong only to the one in the right. And
+indeed for the moment she felt the dignity of restraining a too
+impetuous passion. "You will spoil everything. I dare not come to
+your studio if you are going to behave like this. It would be
+very wrong of me. And if I am never to come and see you, I shall
+die -- I know I shall."</p>
+
+<p>The girl was so full of the delight of the secret love between
+them, that she cared only to live in the present as if there were
+no future beyond: Lenorme wanted to make that future like but
+better than the present. The word marriage put Florimel in a
+rage. She thought herself superior to Lenorme, because he, in the
+dread of losing her, would have her marry him at once, while she
+was more than content with the bliss of seeing him now and then.
+Often and often her foolish talk stung him with bitter pain --
+worst of all when it compelled him to doubt whether there was
+that in her to be loved as he was capable of loving. Yet always
+the conviction that there was a deep root of nobleness in her
+nature again got uppermost; and, had it not been so, I fear he
+would, nevertheless, have continued to prove her irresistible as
+often as she chose to exercise upon him the full might of her
+witcheries. At one moment she would reveal herself in such a
+sudden rush of tenderness as seemed possible only to one ready to
+become his altogether and for ever; the next she would start away
+as if she had never meant anything, and talk as if not a thought
+were in her mind beyond the cultivation of a pleasant
+acquaintance doomed to pass with the season, if not with the
+final touches to her portrait. Or she would fall to singing some
+song he had taught her, more likely a certain one he had written
+in a passionate mood of bitter tenderness, with the hope of
+stinging her love to some show of deeper life; but would, while
+she sang, look with merry defiance in his face, as if she adopted
+in seriousness what he had written in loving and sorrowful
+satire.</p>
+
+<p>They rode in silence for some hundred yards. At length he
+spoke, replying to her last asseveration. "Then what can you
+gain, child," he said --</p>
+
+<p>"Will you dare to call me child -- a marchioness in my own
+right!" she cried, playfully threatening him with uplifted whip,
+in the handle of which the little jewels sparkled.</p>
+
+<p>"What, then, can you gain, my lady marchioness," he resumed,
+with soft seriousness, and a sad smile, "by marrying one of your
+own rank? -- I should lay new honour and consideration at your
+feet. I am young. I have done fairly well already. But I have
+done nothing to what I could do now, if only my heart lay safe in
+the port of peace: -- you know where alone that is for me my --
+lady marchioness. And you know too that the names of great
+painters go down with honour from generation to generation, when
+my lord this or my lord that is remembered only as a label to the
+picture that makes the painter famous. I am not a great painter
+yet, but I will be one if you will be good to me. And men shall
+say, when they look on your portrait, in ages to come: No wonder
+he was such a painter when he had such a woman to paint."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke the words with a certain tone of dignified
+playfulness.</p>
+
+<p>"When shall the woman sit to you again, painter?" said
+Florimel -- sole reply to his rhapsody.</p>
+
+<p>The painter thought a little. Then he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like that tire woman of yours. She has two evil eyes
+-- one for each of us. I have again and again caught their
+expression when they were upon us, and she thought none were upon
+her: I can see without lifting my head when I am painting, and my
+art has made me quick at catching expressions, and, I hope, at
+interpreting them."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't altogether like her myself," said Florimel. "Of late
+I am not so sure of her as I used to be. But what can I do? I
+must have somebody with me, you know. -- A thought strikes me.
+Yes. I won't say now what it is lest I should disappoint my --
+painter; but -- yes -- you shall see what I will dare for you,
+faithless man!"</p>
+
+<p>She set off at a canter, turned on to the grass, and rode to
+meet Liftore, whom she saw in the distance returning, followed by
+the two grooms.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Raoul," she cried, looking back; "I must account for
+you. He sees I have not been alone."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme joined her, and they rode along side by side.</p>
+
+<p>The earl and the painter knew each other: as they drew near,
+the painter lifted his hat, and the earl nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You owe Mr Lenorme some acknowledgment, my lord, for taking
+charge of me after your sudden desertion," said Florimel. "Why
+did you gallop off in such a mad fashion?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," began Liftore a little embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! don't trouble yourself to apologise," said Florimel. "I
+have always understood that great horsemen find a horse more
+interesting than a lady. It is a mark of their breed, I am
+told."</p>
+
+<p>She knew that Liftore would not be ready to confess he could
+not hold his hack.</p>
+
+<p>"If it hadn't been for Mr Lenorme," she added, "I should have
+been left without a squire, subject to any whim of my four footed
+servant here."</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke she patted the neck of her horse. The earl, on
+his side, had been looking the painter's horse up and down with a
+would be humorous expression of criticism.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, marchioness," he replied; "but you pulled
+up so quickly that we shot past you. I thought you were close
+behind, and preferred following. -- Seen his best days, eh,
+Lenorme?" he concluded, willing to change the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy he doesn't think so," returned the painter. "I bought
+him out of a butterman's cart, three months ago. He's been coming
+to himself ever since. Look at his eye, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you knowing in horses, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't say I am, beyond knowing how to treat them something
+like human beings."</p>
+
+<p>"That's no ill," said Malcolm to himself. He was just near
+enough, on the pawing and foaming Kelpie, to catch what was
+passing. -- "The fallow 'll du. He's worth a score o' sic yerls
+as yon."</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! ha!" said his lordship; "I don't know about that -- He's
+not the best of tempers, I can see. But look at that demon of
+Lady Lossie's -- that black mare there! I wish you could teach
+her some of your humanity.</p>
+
+<p>"-- By the way, Florimel, I think now we are upon the grass,"
+-- he said it loftily, as if submitting to an injustice -- "I
+will presume to mount the reprobate."</p>
+
+<p>The gallop had communicated itself to Liftore's blood, and,
+besides, he thought after such a run Kelpie would be less
+extravagant in her behaviour.</p>
+
+<p>"She is at your service," said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>He dismounted, his groom rode up, he threw him the reins, and
+called Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring your mare here, my man," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm rode her up half way, and dismounted.</p>
+
+<p>"If your lordship is going to ride her," he said, "will you
+please get on her here. I would rather not take her near the
+other horses."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know her better than I do. -- You and I must ride
+about the same length, I think."</p>
+
+<p>So saying his lordship carelessly measured the stirrup leather
+against his arm, and took the reins.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand well forward, my lord. Don't mind turning your back to
+her head: I'll look after her teeth; you mind her hind hoof,"
+said Malcolm, with her head in one hand and the stirrup in the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>Kelpie stood rigid as a rock, and the earl swung himself up
+cleverly enough. But hardly was he in the saddle, and Malcolm had
+just let her go, when she plunged and lashed out; then, having
+failed to unseat her rider, stood straight up on her hind
+legs.</p>
+
+<p>"Give her her head, my lord," cried Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>She stood swaying in the air, Liftore's now frightened face
+half hid in her mane, and his spurs stuck in her flanks.</p>
+
+<p>"Come off her, my lord, for God's sake. Off with you!" cried
+Malcolm, as he leaped at her head. "She'll be on her back in a
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>Liftore only clung the harder. Malcolm caught her head -- just
+in time: she was already falling backwards.</p>
+
+<p>"Let all go, my lord. Throw yourself off."</p>
+
+<p>He swung her towards him with all his strength, and just as
+his lordship fell off behind her, she fell sideways to Malcolm,
+and clear of Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was on the side away from the little group, and their
+own horses were excited, those who had looked breathless on at
+the struggle could not tell how he had managed it, but when they
+expected to see the groom writhing under the weight of the
+demoness, there he was with his knee upon her head -- while
+Liftore was gathering himself up from the ground, only just
+beyond the reach of her iron shod hoofs.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" said Florimel, "there is no harm done. -- Well,
+have you had enough of her yet, Liftore?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty nearly, I think," said his lordship, with an attempt
+at a laugh, as he walked rather feebly and foolishly towards his
+horse. He mounted with some difficulty, and looked very pale.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you're not much hurt," said Florimel kindly, as she
+moved alongside of him.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least -- only disgraced," he answered, almost
+angrily. "The brute's a perfect Satan. You must part with her.
+With such a horse and such a groom you'll get yourself talked of
+all over London. I believe the fellow himself was at the bottom
+of it. You really must sell her."</p>
+
+<p>"I would, my lord, if you were my groom," answered Florimel,
+whom his accusation of Malcolm had filled with angry contempt;
+and she moved away towards the still prostrate mare.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was quietly seated on her head. She had ceased
+sprawling, and lay nearly motionless, but for the heaving of her
+sides with her huge inhalations. She knew from experience that
+struggling was useless.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, my lady," said Malcolm, "but I daren't get
+up."</p>
+
+<p>"How long do you mean to sit there then?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If your ladyship wouldn't mind riding home without me, I
+would give her a good half hour of it. I always do when she
+throws herself over like that. -- I've gat my Epictetus?" he
+asked himself feeling in his coat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Do as you please," answered his mistress. "Let me see you
+when you get home. I should like to know you are safe."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, my lady; there's little fear of that," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel returned to the gentlemen, and they rode homewards.
+On the way she said suddenly to the earl,</p>
+
+<p>"Can you tell me, Liftore, who Epictetus was?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I don't know," answered his lordship. "One of the
+old fellows."</p>
+
+<p>She turned to Lenorme. Happily the Christian heathen was not
+altogether unknown to the painter.</p>
+
+<p>"May I inquire why your ladyship asks?" he said, when he had
+told all he could at the moment recollect.</p>
+
+<p>"Because," she answered, "I left my groom sitting on his
+horse's head reading Epictetus."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove!" exclaimed Liftore. "Ha! ha! ha! In the original, I
+suppose!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't doubt it," said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>In about two hours Malcolm reported himself. Lord Liftore had
+gone home, they told him. The painter fellow, as Wallis called
+him, had stayed to lunch, but was now gone also, and Lady Lossie
+was alone in the drawing room.</p>
+
+<p>She sent for him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you safe, MacPhail," she said. "It is clear
+your Kelpie -- don't be alarmed; I am not going to make you part
+with her -- but it is clear she won't always do for you to attend
+me upon. Suppose now I wanted to dismount and make a call, or go
+into a shop?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a sort of a friendship between your Abbot and her, my
+lady; she would stand all the better if I had him to hold."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but how would you put me up again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought of that, my lady. Of course I daren't let you
+come near Kelpie."</p>
+
+<p>"Could you trust yourself to buy another horse to ride after
+me about town?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady, not without a ten days' trial. If lies stuck
+like London mud, there's many a horse would never be seen again.
+But there's Mr Lenorme! If he would go with me, I fancy between
+us we could do pretty well."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! a good idea," returned his mistress. "But what makes you
+think of him?" she added, willing enough to talk about him.</p>
+
+<p>"The look of the gentleman and his horse together, and what I
+heard him say," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you hear him say?"</p>
+
+<p>"That he knew he had to treat horses something like human
+beings. I've often fancied, within the last few months, that God
+does with some people something like as I do with Kelpie."</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing about theology."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't fancy you do, my lady; but this concerns biography
+rather than theology. No one could tell what I meant except he
+had watched his own history, and that of people he knew."</p>
+
+<p>"And horses too?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's hard to get at their insides, my lady, but I suspect it
+must be so. I'll ask Mr Graham."</p>
+
+<p>"What Mr Graham?"</p>
+
+<p>"The schoolmaster of Portlossie."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he in London, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady. He believed too much to please the presbytery,
+and they turned him out."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to see him. He was very attentive to my father
+on his death bed."</p>
+
+<p>"Your ladyship will never know till you are dead yourself what
+Mr Graham did for my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? What could he do for him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He helped him through sore trouble of mind, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was silent for a little, then repeated, "I should
+like to see him. I ought to pay him some attention. Couldn't I
+make them give him his school again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that, my lady; but I am sure he would not
+take it against the will of the presbytery."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to do something for him. Ask him to call."</p>
+
+<p>"If your ladyship lays your commands upon me," answered
+Malcolm; "otherwise I would rather not."</p>
+
+<p>"Why so, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because, except he can be of any use to you, he will not
+come."</p>
+
+<p>"But I want to be of use to him."</p>
+
+<p>"How, if I may ask, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I can't exactly say on the spur of the moment. I must
+know the man first -- especially if you are right in supposing he
+would not enjoy a victory over the presbytery. I should. He
+wouldn't take money, I fear."</p>
+
+<p>"Except it came of love or work, he would put it from him as
+he would brush the dust from his coat."</p>
+
+<p>"I could introduce him to good society. That is no small
+privilege to one of his station."</p>
+
+<p>"He has more of that and better than your ladyship could give
+him. He holds company with Socrates and St. Paul, and greater
+still."</p>
+
+<p>"But they're not like living people."</p>
+
+<p>"Very like them, my lady -- only far better company in
+general. But Mr Graham would leave Plato himself -- yes, or St.
+Paul either, though he were sitting beside him in the flesh, to
+go and help any old washerwoman that wanted him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I want him."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady, you don't want him."</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you say so?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you did, you would go to him."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel's eyes flashed, and her pretty lip curled. She turned
+to her writing table, annoyed with herself that she could not
+find a fitting word wherewith to rebuke his presumption --
+rudeness, was it not? -- and a feeling of angry shame arose in
+her, that she, the Marchioness of Lossie, had not dignity enough
+to prevent her own groom from treating her like a child. But he
+was far too valuable to quarrel with.</p>
+
+<p>She sat down and wrote a note.</p>
+
+<p>"There," she said, "take that note to Mr Lenorme. I have asked
+him to help you in the choice of a horse."</p>
+
+<p>"What price would you be willing to go to, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I leave that to Mr Lenorme's judgment -- and your own," she
+added.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, my lady," said Malcolm, and was leaving the room,
+when Florimel called him back.</p>
+
+<p>"Next time you see Mr Graham," she said, "give him my
+compliments, and ask him if I can be of any service to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do that, my lady. I am sure he will take it very
+kindly."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel made no answer, and Malcolm went to find the
+painter.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII:
+PAINTER AND GROOM</h1>
+
+<p>The address upon the note Malcolm had to deliver took him to a
+house in Chelsea -- one of a row of beautiful old houses fronting
+the Thames, with little gardens between them and the road. The
+one he sought was overgrown with creepers, most of them now
+covered with fresh spring buds. The afternoon had turned cloudy,
+and a cold east wind came up the river, which, as the tide was
+falling, raised little waves on its surface and made Malcolm
+think of the herring. Somehow, as he went up to the door, a new
+chapter of his life seemed about to commence.</p>
+
+<p>The servant who took the note, returned immediately, and
+showed him up to the study, a large back room, looking over a
+good sized garden, with stables on one side. There Lenorme sat at
+his easel.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" he said, "I'm glad to see that wild animal has not quite
+torn you to pieces. Take a chair. What on earth made you bring
+such an incarnate fury to London?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see well enough now, sir, she's not exactly the one for
+London use, but if you had once ridden her, you would never quite
+enjoy another between your knees."</p>
+
+<p>"She's such an infernal brute!"</p>
+
+<p>"You can't say too ill of her. But I fancy a gaol chaplain
+sometimes takes the most interest in the worst villain under his
+charge. I should be a proud man to make her fit to live with
+decent people."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid she'll be too much for you. At last you'll have to
+part with her, I fear."</p>
+
+<p>"If she had bitten you as often as she has me, sir, you
+wouldn't part with her. Besides, it would be wrong to sell her.
+She would only be worse with anyone else. But, indeed, though you
+will hardly believe it, she is better than she was."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what must she have been!"</p>
+
+<p>"You may well say that, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"Here your mistress tells me you want my assistance in
+choosing another horse."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir -- to attend upon her in London."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't profess to be knowing in horses: what made you think
+of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw how you sat your own horse, sir, and I heard you say
+you bought him out of a butterman's cart, and treated him like a
+human being: that was enough for me, sir. I've long had the
+notion that the beasts, poor things, have a half sleeping, half
+waking human soul in them, and it was a great pleasure to hear
+you say something of the same sort. 'That gentleman,' I said to
+myself, '-- he and I would understand one another.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you think so," said Lenorme, with entire courtesy.
+-- It was not merely that the very doubtful recognition of his
+profession by society had tended to keep him clear of his
+prejudices, but both as a painter and a man he found the young
+fellow exceedingly attractive; -- as a painter from the rare
+combination of such strength with such beauty, and as a man from
+a certain yet rarer clarity of nature which to the vulgar
+observer seems fatuity until he has to encounter it in action,
+when the contrast is like meeting a thunderbolt. Naturally the
+dishonest takes the honest for a fool. Beyond his understanding,
+he imagines him beneath it. But Lenorme, although so much more a
+man of the world, was able in a measure to look into Malcolm and
+appreciate him. His nature and his art combined in enabling him
+to do this.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, sir," Malcolm went on, encouraged by the simplicity
+of Lenorme's manner, "if they were nothing like us, how should we
+be able to get on with them at all, teach them anything, or come
+a hair nearer them, do what we might? For all her wickedness I
+firmly believe Kelpie has a sort of regard for me -- I won't call
+it affection, but perhaps it comes as near that as may be
+possible in the time to one of her temper."</p>
+
+<p>"Now I hope you will permit me, Mr MacPhail," said Lenorme,
+who had been paying more attention to Malcolm than to his words,
+"to give a violent wrench to the conversation, and turn it upon
+yourself. You can't be surprised, and I hope you will not be
+annoyed, if I say you strike one as not altogether like your
+calling. No London groom I have ever spoken to, in the least
+resembles you. How is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you don't mean to imply, sir, that I don't know my
+business," returned Malcolm, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Anything but that! It were nearer the thing to say, that for
+all I know you may understand mine as well."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I did, sir. Except the pictures at Lossie House and
+those in Portland Place, I've never seen one in my life. About
+most of them I must say I find it hard to imagine what better the
+world is for them. Mr Graham says that no work that doesn't tend
+to make the world better makes it richer. If he were a heathen,
+he says, he would build a temple to Ses, the sister of
+Psyche."</p>
+
+<p>"Ses? -- I don't remember her," said Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>"The moth, sir; -- 'the moth and the rust,' you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes; now I know! Capital! Only more things may tend to
+make the world better than some people think. -- Who is this Mr
+Graham of yours? He must be no common man."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right there, sir; there is not another like him in
+the whole world, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>And thereupon Malcolm set himself to give the painter an idea
+of the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>When they had talked about him for a little while,</p>
+
+<p>"Well, all this accounts for your being a scholar," said
+Lenorme; "but --"</p>
+
+<p>"I am little enough of that, sir," interrupted Malcolm. "Any
+Scotch boy that likes to learn finds the way open to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I am aware of that. But were you really reading Epictetus
+when we left you in the park this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir: why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the original?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; but not very readily. I am a poor Greek scholar.
+But my copy has a rough Latin translation on the opposite page,
+and that helps me out. It's not difficult. You would think
+nothing of it if it had been Cornelius Nepos, or Cordery's
+Colloquies. It's only a better, not a more difficult book."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that. It's not every one who can read
+Greek that can understand Epictetus. Tell me what you have
+learned from him?"</p>
+
+<p>"That would be hard to do. A man is very ready to forget how
+he came first to think of the things he loves best. You see they
+are as much a necessity of your being as they are of the man's
+who thought them first. I can no more do without the truth than
+Plato. It is as much my needful food and as fully mine to possess
+as his. His having it, Mr Graham says, was for my sake as well as
+his own. -- It's just like what Sir Thomas Browne says about the
+faces of those we love -- that we cannot retain the idea of them
+because they are ourselves. Those that help the world must be
+served like their master and a good deal forgotten, I fancy. Of
+course they don't mind it. -- I remember another passage I think
+says something to the same purpose -- one in Epictetus himself,"
+continued Malcolm, drawing the little book from his pocket and
+turning over the leaves, while Lenorme sat waiting, wondering,
+and careful not to interrupt him.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the forty-second chapter, and began to read from
+the Greek.</p>
+
+<p>"I've forgotten all the Greek I ever had," said Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>Then Malcolm turned to the opposite page and began to read the
+Latin.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut! tut!" said Lenorme, "I can't follow your Scotch
+pronunciation."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a pity," said Malcolm: "it's the right way."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't doubt it. You Scotch are always in the right! But
+just read it off in English -- will you?"</p>
+
+<p>Thus adjured, Malcolm read slowly and with choice of word and
+phrase</p>
+
+<p>"'And if any one shall say unto thee, that thou knowest
+nothing, notwithstanding thou must not be vexed: then know thou
+that thou hast begun thy work.' -- That is," explained Malcolm,
+"when you keep silence about principles in the presence of those
+that are incapable of understanding them. -- 'For the sheep also
+do not manifest to the shepherds how much they have eaten, by
+producing fodder; but, inwardly digesting their food, they
+produce outwardly wool and milk. And thou therefore set not forth
+principles before the unthinking, but the actions that result
+from the digestion of them.' -- That last is not quite literal,
+but I think it's about right," concluded Malcolm, putting the
+book again in the breast pocket of his silver buttoned coat. "--
+That's the passage I thought of, but I see now it won't apply. He
+speaks of not saying what you know; I spoke of forgetting where
+you got it."</p>
+
+<p>"Come now," said Lenorme, growing more and more interested in
+his new acquaintance, "tell me something about your life. Account
+for yourself. -- If you will make a friendship of it, you must do
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"I will, sir," said Malcolm, and with the word began to tell
+him most things he could think of as bearing upon his mental
+history up to and after the time also when his birth was
+disclosed to him. In omitting that disclosure he believed he had
+without it quite accounted for himself. Through the whole recital
+he dwelt chiefly on the lessons and influences of the
+schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must admit," said Lenorme when he had ended, "that
+you are no longer unintelligible, not to say incredible. You have
+had a splendid education, in which I hope you give the herring
+and Kelpie their due share."</p>
+
+<p>He sat silently regarding him for a few moments. Then he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what now: if I help you to buy a horse, you
+must help me to paint a picture."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know how I'm to do that," said Malcolm, "but if you
+do, that's enough. I shall only be too happy to do what I
+can."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll tell you. -- But you're not to tell anybody: it's a
+secret. -- I have discovered that there is no suitable portrait
+of Lady Lossie's father. It is a great pity. His brother and his
+father and grandfather are all in Portland Place, in Highland
+costume, as chiefs of their clan; his place only is vacant. Lady
+Lossie, however, has in her possession one or two miniatures of
+him, which, although badly painted, I should think may give the
+outlines of his face and head with tolerable correctness. From
+the portraits of his predecessors, and from Lady Lossie herself,
+I gain some knowledge of what is common to the family; and from
+all together I hope to gather and paint what will be recognizable
+by her as a likeness of her father -- which afterwards I hope to
+better by her remarks. These remarks I hope to get first from her
+feelings unadulterated by criticism, through the surprise of
+coming upon the picture suddenly; afterwards from her judgment at
+its leisure. Now I remember seeing you wait at table -- the first
+time I saw you -- in the Highland dress: will you come to me so
+dressed, and let me paint from you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do better than that, sir," cried Malcolm, eagerly. "I'll
+get up from Lossie Home my lord's very dress that he wore when he
+went to court -- his jewelled dirk, and Andrew Ferrara broadsword
+with the hilt of real silver. That'll greatly help your design
+upon my lady, for he dressed up in them all more than once just
+to please her."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Lenorme very heartily; "that will be of
+immense advantage. Write at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I will, sir. -- Only I'm a bigger man than my -- late master,
+and you must mind that."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see to it. You get the clothes, and all the rest of the
+accoutrements -- rich with barbaric gems and gold, and"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither gems nor gold, sir; -- honest Scotch cairngorms and
+plain silver," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"I only quoted Milton," returned Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you should have quoted correctly, sir. -- 'Showers on
+her kings barbaric pearl and gold,' -- that's the line, and you
+can't better it. Mr Graham always pulled me up if I didn't quote
+correctly. -- By the bye, sir, some say it's kings barbaric, but
+there's barbaric gold in Virgil."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say you are right," said Lenorme. "But you're far too
+learned for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't make game of me, sir. I know two or three books pretty
+well, and when I get a chance I can't help talking about them.
+It's so seldom now I can get a mouthful of Milton. There's no
+cave here to go into, and roll the mimic thunder in your mouth.
+If the people here heard me reading loud out, they would call me
+mad. It's a mercy in this London, if a working man get loneliness
+enough to say his prayers in!"</p>
+
+<p>"You do say your prayers then?" asked Lenorme, looking at him
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; don't you, sir? You had so much sense about the beasts I
+thought you must be a man that said his prayers."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme was silent. He was not altogether innocent of saying
+prayers; but of late years it had grown a more formal and
+gradually a rarer thing. One reason of this was that it had never
+come into his head that God cared about pictures, or had the
+slightest interest whether he painted well or ill. If a man's
+earnest calling, to which of necessity the greater part of his
+thought is given, is altogether dissociated in his mind from his
+religion, it is not wonderful that his prayers should by degrees
+wither and die. The question is whether they ever had much
+vitality. But one mighty negative was yet true of Lenorme: he had
+not got in his head, still less had he ever cherished in his
+heart, the thought that there was anything fine in disbelieving
+in a God, or anything contemptible in imagining communication
+with a being of grander essence than himself. That in which
+Socrates rejoiced with exultant humility, many a youth nowadays
+thinks himself a fine fellow for casting from him with ignorant
+scorn.</p>
+
+<p>A true conception of the conversation above recorded can
+hardly be had except my reader will take the trouble to imagine
+the contrast between the Scotch accent and inflection, the
+largeness and prolongation of vowel sounds, and, above all, the
+Scotch tone of Malcolm, and the pure, clear articulation, and
+decided utterance of the perfect London speech of Lenorme. It was
+something like the difference between the blank verse of Young
+and the prose of Burke.</p>
+
+<p>The silence endured so long that Malcolm began to fear he had
+hurt his new friend, and thought it better to take his leave.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go and write to Mrs Courthope -- that's the housekeeper,
+tonight, to send up the things at once. When would it be
+convenient for you to go and look at some horses with me, Mr
+Lenorme?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be at home all tomorrow," answered the painter, "and
+ready to go with you any time you like to come for me."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he held out his hand, and they parted like old
+friends.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV: A
+LADY</h1>
+
+<p>The next morning, Malcolm took Kelpie into the park, and gave
+her a good breathing. He had thought to jump the rails, and let
+her have her head, but he found there were too many park keepers
+and police about: he saw he could do little for her that way. He
+was turning home with her again when one of her evil fits came
+upon her, this time taking its first form in a sudden stiffening
+of every muscle: she stood stock still with flaming eyes. I
+suspect we human beings know but little of the fierceness with
+which the vortices of passion rage in the more purely animal
+natures. This beginning he knew well would end in a wild paroxysm
+of rearing and plunging. He had more than once tried the exorcism
+of patience, sitting sedate upon her back until she chose to
+move; but on these occasions the tempest that followed had been
+of the very worst description; so that he had concluded it better
+to bring on the crisis, thereby sure at least to save time; and
+after he had adopted this mode with her, attacks of the sort, if
+no less violent, had certainly become fewer. The moment therefore
+that symptoms of an approaching fit showed themselves, he used
+his spiked heels with vigour. Upon this occasion he had a stiff
+tussle with her, but as usual gained the victory, and was riding
+slowly along the Row, Kelpie tossing up now her head now her
+heels in indignant protest against obedience in general and
+enforced obedience in particular, when a lady on horseback, who
+had come galloping from the opposite direction, with her groom
+behind her, pulled up, and lifted her hand with imperative grace:
+she had seen something of what had been going on. Malcolm reined
+in. But Kelpie, after her nature, was now as unwilling to stop as
+she had been before to proceed, and the fight began again, with
+some difference of movement and aspect, but the spurs once more
+playing a free part.</p>
+
+<p>"Man! man!" cried the lady, in most musical reproof, "do you
+know what you are about?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a bad job for her and me too if I did not, my
+lady," said Malcolm, whom her appearance and manner impressed
+with a conviction of rank, and as he spoke he smiled in the midst
+of the struggle: he seldom got angry with Kelpie. But the smile
+instead of taking from the apparent roughness of his speech, only
+made his conduct appear in the lady's eyes more cruel.</p>
+
+<p>"How is it possible you can treat the poor animal so unkindly
+-- and in cold blood too?" she said, and an indescribable tone of
+pleading ran through the rebuke. "Why, her poor sides are
+actually --" A shudder, and look of personal distress completed
+the sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know what she is, my lady, or you would not think
+it necessary to intercede for her."</p>
+
+<p>"But if she is naughty, is that any reason why you should be
+cruel?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady; but it is the best reason why I should try to
+make her good."</p>
+
+<p>"You will never make her good that way."</p>
+
+<p>"Improvement gives ground for hope," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must not treat a poor dumb animal as you would a
+responsible human being."</p>
+
+<p>"She's not so very poor, my lady. She has all she wants, and
+does nothing to earn it -- nothing to speak of; and nothing at
+all with good will. For her dumbness, that's a mercy. If she
+could speak she wouldn't be fit to live among decent people. But
+for that matter, if some one hadn't taken her in hand, dumb as
+she is, she would have been shot long ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Better that than live with such usage."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think she would agree with you, my lady. My fear is
+that, for as cruel as it looks to your ladyship, take it
+altogether, she enjoys the fight. In any case, I am certain she
+has more regard for me than any other being in the universe."</p>
+
+<p>"Who can have any regard for you," said the lady very gently,
+in utter mistake of his meaning, "if you have no command of your
+temper? You must learn to rule yourself first."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true, my lady; and so long as my mare is not able to
+be a law to herself, I must be a law to her too."</p>
+
+<p>"But have you never heard of the law of kindness? You could do
+so much more without the severity."</p>
+
+<p>"With some natures I grant you, my lady, but not with such as
+she. Horse or man -- they never show kindness till they have
+learned fear. Kelpie would have torn me to pieces before now if I
+had taken your way with her. But except I can do a great deal
+more with her yet she will be nothing better than a natural brute
+beast made to be taken and destroyed."</p>
+
+<p>"The Bible again!" murmured the lady to herself. "Of how much
+cruelty has not that book to bear the blame!"</p>
+
+<p>All this time Kelpie was trying hard to get at the lady's
+horse to bite him. But she did not see that. She was much too
+distressed -- and was growing more and more so.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would let my groom try her," she said, after a
+pitiful pause. "He's an older and more experienced man than you.
+He has children. He would show you what can be done by
+gentleness."</p>
+
+<p>From Malcolm's words she had scarcely gathered even a false
+meaning -- not a glimmer of his nature -- not even a suspicion
+that he meant something. To her he was but a handsome, brutal
+young groom. From the world of thought and reasoning that lay
+behind his words, not an echo had reached her.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a great satisfaction to my old Adam to let him
+try her," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"The Bible again!" said the lady to herself.</p>
+
+<p>"But it would be murder," he added, "not knowing myself what
+experience he has had."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said the lady to herself; but loud enough for Malcolm
+to hear, for her tender heartedness had made her both angry and
+unjust, "his self conceit is equal to his cruelty -- just what I
+might have expected!"</p>
+
+<p>With the words she turned her horse's head and rode away,
+leaving a lump in Malcolm's throat.</p>
+
+<p>"I wuss fowk" -- he still spoke in Scotch in his own chamber
+-- "wad du as they're tell't, an' no jeedge ane anither. I'm sure
+it's Kelpie's best chance o' salvation 'at I gang on wi' her.
+Stable men wad ha'e had her brocken doon a'thegither by this
+time; an' life wad ha'e had little relish left."</p>
+
+<p>It added hugely to the bitterness of being thus rebuked, that
+he had never in his life seen such a radiance of beauty's softest
+light as shone from the face and form of the reproving angel. --
+"Only She canna be an angel," he said to himself; "or she wad
+ha'e ken't better."</p>
+
+<p>She was young -- not more than twenty, tall and graceful, with
+a touch of the matronly, which she must have had even in
+childhood, for it belonged to her -- so staid, so stately was she
+in all her grace. With her brown hair, her lily complexion, her
+blue gray eyes, she was all of the moonlight and its shadows --
+even now, in the early morning, and angry. Her nose was so nearly
+perfect that one never thought of it. Her mouth was rather large,
+but had gained in value of shape, and in the expression of
+indwelling sweetness, with every line that carried it beyond the
+measure of smallness. Most little mouths are pretty, some even
+lovely, but not one have I seen beautiful. Her forehead was the
+sweetest of half moons. Of those who knew her best some
+absolutely believed that a radiance resembling moonlight
+shimmered from its precious expanse.</p>
+
+<p>"Be ye angry and sin not," had always been a puzzle to
+Malcolm, who had, as I have said, inherited a certain Celtic
+fierceness; but now, even while he knew himself the object of the
+anger, he understood the word. It tried him sorely, however, that
+such gentleness and beauty should be unreasonable. Could it be
+that he should never have a chance of convincing her how mistaken
+she was concerning his treatment of Kelpie! What a celestial rosy
+red her face had glowed! and what summer lightnings had flashed
+up in her eyes, as if they had been the horizons of heavenly
+worlds up which flew the dreams that broke from the brain of a
+young sleeping goddess, to make the worlds glad also in the night
+of their slumber.</p>
+
+<p>Something like this Malcolm felt: whoever saw her must feel as
+he had never felt before. He gazed after her long and
+earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's an awfu' thing to ha'e a wuman like that angert at ye!",
+he said to himself when at length she had disappeared, "-- as
+bonny as she is angry! God be praised 'at he kens a'thing, an' 's
+no angert wi' ye for the luik o' a thing! But the wheel may come
+roon' again -- wha kens? Ony gait I s' mak' the best o' Kelpie I
+can. -- I won'er gien she kens Leddy Florimel! She's a heap mair
+boontifu' like in her beauty nor her. The man micht haud 's ain
+wi' an archangel 'at had a woman like that to the wife o' 'm. --
+Hoots! I'll be wussin' I had had anither upbringin', 'at I micht
+ha' won a step nearer to the hem o' her garment! an' that wad be
+to deny him 'at made an' ordeen't me. I wull not du that. But I
+maun hae a crack wi' Maister Graham, anent things twa or three,
+just to haud me straucht, for I'm jist girnin' at bein' sae
+regairdit by sic a Revelation. Gien she had been an auld wife, I
+wad ha'e only lauchen: what for 's that? I doobt I'm no muckle
+mair rizzonable nor hersel'! The thing was this, I fancy it was
+sae clear she spak frae no ill natur', only frae pure humanity.
+She's a gran' ane yon, only some saft, I doobt."</p>
+
+<p>For the lady, she rode away sadly strengthened in her doubts
+whether there could be a God in the world -- not because there
+were in it such men as she took Malcolm for, but because such a
+lovely animal had fallen into his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a sair thing to be misjeedged," said Malcolm to himself
+as he put the demoness in her stall; "but it's no more than the
+Macker o' 's pits up wi' ilka hoor o' the day, an' says na a
+word. Eh, but God's unco quaiet! Sae lang as he kens till himsel'
+'at he's a' richt, he lats fowk think 'at they like -- till he
+has time to lat them ken better. Lord, mak' clean my hert within
+me, an' syne I'll care little for ony jeedgement but thine."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV: THE
+PSYCHE</h1>
+
+<p>It was a lovely day, but Florimel would not ride: Malcolm must
+go at once to Mr Lenorme; she would not go out again until she
+could have a choice of horses to follow her.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Kelpie is all very well in Richmond Park, and I wish I
+were able to ride her myself, Malcolm, but she will never do in
+London."</p>
+
+<p>His name sounded sweet on her lips, but somehow today, for the
+first time since he saw her first, he felt a strange sense of
+superiority in his protection of her: could it be because he had
+that morning looked unto a higher orb of creation? It mattered
+little to Malcolm's generous nature that the voice that issued
+therefrom had been one of unjust rebuke.</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows, my lady," he answered his mistress, "but you may
+ride her some day! Give her a bit of sugar every time you see her
+-- on your hand, so that she may take it with her lips, and not
+catch your fingers."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall show me how," said Florimel, and gave him a note
+for Mr Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>When he came in sight of the river, there, almost opposite the
+painter's house, lay his own little yacht! He thought of Kelpie
+in the stable, saw Psyche floating like a swan in the reach, made
+two or three long strides, then sought to exhale the pride of
+life in thanksgiving.</p>
+
+<p>The moment his arrival was announced to Lenorme, he came down
+and went with him, and in an hour or two they had found very much
+the sort of horse they wanted. Malcolm took him home for trial,
+and Florimel was pleased with him. The earl's opinion was not to
+be had, for he had hurt his shoulder when he fell from the
+rearing Kelpie the day before, and was confined to his room in
+Curzon Street.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening Malcolm put on his yachter's uniform, and set
+out again for Chelsea. There he took a boat, and crossed the
+river to the yacht, which lay near the other side, in charge of
+an old salt whose acquaintance Blue Peter had made when lying
+below the bridges. On board he found all tidy and shipshape. He
+dived into the cabin, lighted a candle, and made some
+measurements: all the little luxuries of the nest, carpets,
+cushions, curtains, and other things, were at Lossie House,
+having been removed when the Psyche was laid up for the winter:
+he was going to replace them. And he was anxious to see whether
+be could not fulfil a desire he had once heard Florimel express
+to her father -- that she had a bed on board, and could sleep
+there. He found it possible, and had soon contrived a berth: even
+a tiny stateroom was within the limits of construction.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the deck, he was consulting Travers about a
+carpenter, when, to his astonishment, he saw young Davy, the boy
+he had brought from Duff Harbour, and whom he understood to have
+gone back with Blue Peter, gazing at him from before the
+mast.</p>
+
+<p>"Gien ye please, Maister MacPhail," said Davy, and said no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>"How on earth do you come to be here, you rascal?" said
+Malcolm. "Peter was to take you home with him!"</p>
+
+<p>"I garred him think I was gauin'," answered the boy,
+scratching his red poll, which glowed in the dusk.</p>
+
+<p>"I gave him your wages," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, he tauld me that, but I loot them gang an' gae him the
+slip, an' was ashore close ahint yersel', sir, jist as the smack
+set sail. I cudna gang ohn hed a word wi' yersel', sir, to see
+whether ye wadna lat me bide wi' ye, sir. I haena muckle wut,
+they tell me, sir, but gien I michtna aye be able to du what ye
+tell't me to du, I cud aye haud ohn dune what ye tell't me no
+to."</p>
+
+<p>The words of the boy pleased Malcolm more than he judged it
+wise to manifest. He looked hard at Davy. There was little to be
+seen in his face except the best and only thing -- truth. It
+shone from his round pale blue eyes; it conquered the self
+assertion of his unhappy nose; it seemed to glow in every freckle
+of his sunburnt cheeks, as earnestly he returned Malcolm's
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Malcolm, almost satisfied, "how is this, Travers?
+I never gave you any instructions about the boy."</p>
+
+<p>"There's where it is, sir," answered Travers. "I seed the boy
+aboard before, and when he come aboard again, jest arter you
+left, I never as much as said to myself, It's all right. I axed
+him no questions, and he told me no lies."</p>
+
+<p>"Gien ye please, sir," struck in Davy, "Maister Trahvers gied
+me my mait, an' I tuik it, 'cause I hed no sil'er to buy ony: I
+houp it wasna stealin', sir. An' gien ye wad keep me, ye cud tak
+it aft o' my wauges for three days."</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Davy," said Malcolm, turning sharp upon him, "can
+you swim?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay can I, sir, -- weel that," answered Davy.</p>
+
+<p>"Jump overboard then, and swim ashore," said Malcolm, pointing
+to the Chelsea bank.</p>
+
+<p>The boy made two strides to the larboard gunwale, and would
+have been over the next instant, but Malcolm caught him by the
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll do, Davy; I'll give you a chance, Davy," he said,
+"and if I get a good account of you from Travers, I'll rig you
+out like myself here."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said Davy. "I s' du what I can to please ye,
+sir. An' gien ye wad sen' my wauges hame to my mither, sir, ye
+wad ken 'at I cudna be gauin' stravaguin', and drinkin' whan yer
+back was turn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll write to your mother, and see what she says," said
+Malcolm. "Now I want to tell you, both of you, that this yacht
+belongs to the Marchioness of Lossie, and I have the command of
+her, and I must have everything on board shipshape, and as clean,
+Travers, as if she were a seventy-four. If there's the head of a
+pail visible, it must be as bright as silver. And everything must
+be at the word. The least hesitation, and I have done with that
+man. If Davy here had grumbled one mouthful, even on his way
+overboard, I wouldn't have kept him."</p>
+
+<p>He then arranged that Travers was to go home that night, and
+bring with him the next morning an old carpenter friend of his.
+He would himself be down by seven o'clock to set him to work.</p>
+
+<p>The result was that, before a fortnight was over, he had the
+cabin thoroughly fitted up, with all the luxuries it had formerly
+possessed, and as many more as he could think of -- to compensate
+for the loss of the space occupied by the daintiest little
+stateroom -- a very jewel box for softness and richness and
+comfort. In the cabin, amongst the rest of his additions, he had
+fixed in a corner a set of tiny bookshelves, and filled them with
+what books he knew his sister liked, and some that he liked for
+her. It was not probable she would read in them much, he said to
+himself, but they wouldn't make the boat heel, and who could tell
+when a drop of celestial nepenthe might ooze from one or another
+of them! So there they stood, in their lovely colours, of
+morocco, russia, calf or vellum -- types of the infinite rest in
+the midst of the ever restless -- the types for ever tossed, but
+the rest remaining.</p>
+
+<p>By that time also he had arranged with Travers and Davy a code
+of signals.</p>
+
+<p>The day after Malcolm had his new hack, he rode him behind his
+mistress in the park, and nothing could be more decorous than the
+behaviour of both horse and groom. It was early, and in Rotten
+Row, to his delight, they met the lady of rebuke. She and
+Florimel pulled up simultaneously, greeted, and had a little
+talk. When they parted, and the lady came to pass Malcolm, whom
+she had not suspected, sitting a civilised horse in all serenity
+behind his mistress, she cast a quick second glance at him, and
+her fair face flushed with the red reflex of yesterday's anger.
+He expected her to turn at once and complain of him to her
+mistress, but to his disappointment, she rode on.</p>
+
+<p>When they left the park, Florimel went down Constitution Hill,
+and turning westward, rode to Chelsea. As they approached Mr
+Lenorme's house, she stopped and said to Malcolm -- "I am going
+to run in and thank Mr Lenorme for the trouble he has been at
+about the horse. Which is the house?"</p>
+
+<p>She pulled up at the gate. Malcolm dismounted, but before he
+could get near to assist her, she was already halfway up the walk
+-- flying, and he was but in time to catch the rein of Abbot,
+already moving off curious to know whether he was actually
+trusted alone. In about five minutes she came again, glancing
+about her all ways but behind, with a scared look, Malcolm
+thought. But she walked more slowly and statelily than usual down
+the path. In a moment Malcolm had her in the saddle, and she
+cantered away -- past the hospital into Sloane Street, and across
+the park home. He said to himself, "She knows the way."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI: THE
+SCHOOLMASTER</h1>
+
+<p>Alexander Graham, the schoolmaster, was the son of a grieve,
+or farm overseer, in the North of Scotland. By straining every
+nerve, his parents had succeeded in giving him a university
+education, the narrowness of whose scope was possibly favourable
+to the development of what genius, rare and shy, might lurk among
+the students. He had laboured well, and had gathered a good deal
+from books and lectures, but far more from the mines they guided
+him to discover in his own nature. In common with so many Scotch
+parents, his had cherished the most wretched as well as hopeless
+of all ambitions, seeing it presumes to work in a region into
+which no ambition can enter -- I mean that of seeing their son a
+clergyman. In presbyter, curate, bishop, or cardinal, ambition
+can fare but as that of the creeping thing to build its nest in
+the topmost boughs of the cedar. Worse than that; my simile is a
+poor one; for the moment a thought of ambition is cherished, that
+moment the man is out of the kingdom. Their son with already a
+few glimmering insights, which had not yet begun to interfere
+with his acceptance of the doctrines of his church, made no
+opposition to their wish, but having qualified himself to the
+satisfaction of his superiors, at length ascended the pulpit to
+preach his first sermon.</p>
+
+<p>The custom of the time as to preaching was a sort of
+compromise between reading a sermon and speaking extempore, a
+mode morally as well as artistically false: the preacher learned
+his sermon by rote, and repeated it -- as much like the man he
+therein was not, and as little like the parrot he was, as he
+could. It is no wonder, in such an attempt, either that memory
+should fail a shy man, or assurance an honest man. In Mr Graham's
+case it was probably the former: the practice was universal, and
+he could hardly yet have begun to question it, so as to have had
+any conscience of evil. Blessedly, however, for his dawning truth
+and well being, he failed -- failed utterly -- pitifully. His
+tongue clave to the roof of his mouth; his lips moved, but shaped
+no sound; a deathly dew bathed his forehead; his knees shook; and
+he sank at last to the bottom of the chamber of his torture,
+whence, while his mother wept below, and his father clenched
+hands of despair beneath the tails of his Sunday coat, he was
+half led, half dragged down the steps by the bedral, shrunken
+together like one caught in a shameful deed, and with the ghastly
+look of him who has but just revived from the faint supervening
+on the agonies of the rack. Home they crept together, speechless
+and hopeless all three, to be thenceforth the contempt and not
+the envy of their fellow parishioners. For if the vulgar feeling
+towards the home born prophet is superciliousness, what must the
+sentence upon failure be in ungenerous natures, to which every
+downfall of another is an uplifting of themselves! But Mr
+Graham's worth had gained him friends in the presbytery, and he
+was that same week appointed to the vacant school of another
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>There it was not long before he made the acquaintance of
+Griselda Campbell, who was governess in the great house of the
+neighbourhood, and a love, not the less fine that it was hopeless
+from the first, soon began to consume the chagrin of his failure,
+and substitute for it a more elevating sorrow; -- for how could
+an embodied failure, to offer whose miserable self would be an
+insult, dare speak of love to one before whom his whole being
+sank worshipping. Silence was the sole armour of his privilege.
+So long as he was silent, the terrible arrow would never part
+from the bow of those sweet lips; he might love on, love ever,
+nor be grudged the bliss of such visions as to him, seated on its
+outer steps, might come from any chance opening of the heavenly
+gate. And Miss Campbell thought of him more kindly than he knew.
+But before long she accepted the offered situation of governess
+to Lady Annabel, the only child of the late marquis's elder
+brother, at that time himself marquis, and removed to Lossie
+House. There the late marquis fell in love with her, and
+persuaded her to a secret marriage. There also she became, in the
+absence of her husband, the mother of Malcolm. But the marquis of
+the time, jealous for the succession of his daughter, and fearing
+his brother might yet marry the mother of his child, contrived,
+with the assistance of the midwife, to remove the infant and
+persuade the mother that he was dead, and also to persuade his
+brother of the death of both mother and child; after which,
+imagining herself wilfully deserted by her husband, yet
+determined to endure shame rather than break the promise of
+secrecy she had given him, the poor lady accepted the hospitality
+of her distant relative, Miss Horn, and continued with her till
+she died.</p>
+
+<p>When he learned where she had gone, Mr Graham seized a chance
+of change to Portlossie that occurred soon after, and when she
+became her cousin's guest, went to see her, was kindly received,
+and for twenty years lived in friendly relations with the two. It
+was not until after her death that he came to know the strange
+fact that the object of his calm unalterable devotion had been a
+wife all those years, and was the mother of his favourite pupil.
+About the same time he was dismissed from the school on the
+charge of heretical teaching, founded on certain religious
+conversations he had had with some of the fisher people who
+sought his advice; and thereupon he had left the place, and gone
+to London, knowing it would be next to impossible to find or
+gather another school in Scotland after being thus branded. In
+London he hoped, one way or another, to avoid dying of cold or
+hunger, or in debt: that was very nearly the limit of his earthly
+ambition.</p>
+
+<p>He had just one acquaintance in the whole mighty city, and no
+more. Him he had known in the days of his sojourn at King's
+College, where he had grown with him from bejan to magistrand. He
+was the son of a linen draper in Aberdeen, and was a decent, good
+humoured fellow, who, if he had not distinguished, had never
+disgraced himself. His father, having somewhat influential
+business relations, and finding in him no leanings to a
+profession, bespoke the good offices of a certain large retail
+house in London, and sent him thither to learn the business. The
+result was that he had married a daughter of one of the partners,
+and become a partner himself. His old friend wrote to him at his
+shop in Oxford Street, and then went to see him at his house in
+Haverstock Hill.</p>
+
+<p>He was shown into the library -- in which were two mahogany
+cases with plate glass doors, full of books, well cared for as to
+clothing and condition, and perfectly placid, as if never
+disturbed from one week's end to another. In a minute Mr Marshal
+entered -- so changed that he could never have recognized him --
+still, however, a kind hearted, genial man. He received his
+classfellow cordially and respectfully -- referred merrily to old
+times, and begged to know how he was getting on, asked whether he
+had come to London with any special object, and invited him to
+dine with them on Sunday. He accepted the invitation, met him,
+according to agreement, at a certain chapel in Kentish Town, of
+which he was a deacon, and walked home with him and his wife.</p>
+
+<p>They had but one of their family at home -- the youngest son,
+whom his father was having educated for the dissenting ministry,
+in the full conviction that he was doing not a little for the
+truth, and justifying its cause before men, by devoting to its
+service the son of a man of standing and worldly means, whom he
+might have easily placed in a position to make money. The youth
+was of simple character and good inclination -- ready to do what
+he saw to be right, but slow in putting to the question anything
+that interfered with his notions of laudable ambition, or
+justifiable self interest. He was attending lectures at a
+dissenting college in the neighbourhood, for his father feared
+Oxford or Cambridge, not for his morals, but his opinions in
+regard to church and state.</p>
+
+<p>The schoolmaster spent a few days in the house. His friend was
+generally in town, and his wife, regarding him as very primitive
+and hardly fit for what she counted society -- the class, namely,
+that she herself represented, was patronising and condescending;
+but the young fellow, finding, to his surprise, that he knew a
+great deal more about his studies than he did himself, was first
+somewhat attracted and then somewhat influenced by him, so that
+at length an intimacy tending to friendship arose between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Graham was not a little shocked to discover that his ideas
+in respect of the preacher's calling were of a very worldly kind.
+The notions of this fledgling of dissent differed from those of a
+clergyman of the same stamp in this: -- the latter regards the
+church as a society with accumulated property for the use of its
+officers; the former regarded it as a community of communities,
+each possessing a preaching house which ought to be made
+commercially successful. Saving influences must emanate from it
+of course -- but dissenting saving influences.</p>
+
+<p>His mother was a partisan to a hideous extent. To hear her
+talk you would have thought she imagined the apostles the first
+dissenters, and that the main duty of every Christian soul was to
+battle for the victory of Congregationalism over Episcopacy, and
+Voluntaryism over State Endowment. Her every mode of thinking and
+acting was of a levelling commonplace. With her, love was liking,
+duty something unpleasant -- generally to other people, and
+kindness patronage. But she was just in money matters, and her
+son too had every intention of being worthy of his hire, though
+wherein lay the value of the labour with which he thought to
+counterpoise that hire, it were hard to say.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII: THE
+PREACHER</h1>
+
+<p>The sermon Mr Graham heard at the chapel that Sunday morning
+in Kentish Town was not of an elevating, therefore not of a
+strengthening description. The pulpit was at that time in offer
+to the highest bidder -- in orthodoxy, that is, combined with
+popular talent. The first object of the chapel's existence -- I
+do not say in the minds of those who built it, for it was an old
+place, but certainly in the minds of those who now directed its
+affairs -- was not to save its present congregation, but to
+gather a larger -- ultimately that they might be saved, let us
+hope, but primarily that the drain upon the purses of those who
+were responsible for its rent and other outlays, might be
+lessened. Mr Masquar, therefore, to whom the post was a desirable
+one, had been mainly anxious that morning to prove his orthodoxy,
+and so commend his services. Not that in those days one heard so
+much of the dangers of heterodoxy: that monster was as yet but
+growling far off in the jungles of Germany; but certain whispers
+had been abroad concerning the preacher which he thought
+desirable to hush, especially as they were founded in truth. He
+had tested the power of heterodoxy to attract attention, but
+having found that the attention it did attract was not of a kind
+favourable to his wishes, had so skilfully remodelled his
+theories that, although to his former friends he declared them in
+substance unaltered, it was impossible any longer to distinguish
+them from the most uncompromising orthodoxy; and his sermon of
+that morning had tended neither to the love of God, the love of
+man, nor a hungering after righteousness -- its aim being to
+disprove the reported heterodoxy of Jacob Masquar.</p>
+
+<p>As they walked home, Mrs Marshal, addressing her husband in a
+tone of conjugal disapproval, said, with more force than
+delicacy,</p>
+
+<p>"The pulpit is not the place to give a man to wash his dirty
+linen in."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see, my love," answered her husband in a tone of
+apology, "people won't submit to be told their duty by mere
+students, and just at present there seems nobody else to be had.
+There's none in the market but old stagers and young colts -- eh,
+Fred? But Mr Masquar is at least a man of experience."</p>
+
+<p>"Of more than enough, perhaps," suggested his wife. "And the
+young ones must have their chance, else how are they to learn?
+You should have given the principal a hint. It is a most
+desirable thing that Frederick should preach a little
+oftener."</p>
+
+<p>"They have it in turn, and it wouldn't do to favour one more
+than another."</p>
+
+<p>"He could hand his guinea, or whatever they gave him, to the
+one whose turn it ought to have been, and that would set it all
+right."</p>
+
+<p>At this point the silk mercer, fearing that the dominie, as he
+called him, was silently disapproving, and willing therefore to
+change the subject, turned to him and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Why shouldn't you give us a sermon, Graham?"</p>
+
+<p>The schoolmaster laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you never hear," he said, "how I fell like Dagon on the
+threshold of the church, and have lain there ever since."</p>
+
+<p>"What has that to do with it?" returned his friend, sorry that
+his forgetfulness should have caused a painful recollection.
+"That is ages ago, when you were little more than a boy.
+Seriously," he added, chiefly to cover his little indiscretion,
+"will you preach for us the Sunday after next?"</p>
+
+<p>Deacons generally ask a man to preach for them.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mr Graham.</p>
+
+<p>But even as he said it, a something began to move in his heart
+-- a something half of jealousy for God, half of pity for poor
+souls buffeted by such winds as had that morning been roaring,
+chaff laden, about the church, while the grain fell all to the
+bottom of the pulpit. Something burned in him: was it the word
+that was as a fire in his bones, or was it a mere lust of talk?
+He thought for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any gatherings between Sundays?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; every Wednesday evening," replied Mr Marshal. "And if
+you won't preach on Sunday, we shall announce tonight that next
+Wednesday a clergyman of the Church of Scotland will address the
+prayer meeting."</p>
+
+<p>He was glad to get out of it so, for he was uneasy about his
+friend, both as to his nerve, which might fail him, and his
+Scotch oddities, which would not.</p>
+
+<p>"That would be hardly true," said Mr Graham, "seeing I never
+got beyond a licence."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody here knows the difference between a licentiate and a
+placed minister; and if they did they would not care a straw. So
+we'll just say clergyman."</p>
+
+<p>"But I won't have it announced in any terms. Leave that alone,
+and I will try to speak at the prayer meeting."</p>
+
+<p>"It won't be in the least worth your while except we announce
+it. You won't have a soul to hear you but the pew openers, the
+woman that cleans the chapel, Mrs Marshal's washerwoman, and the
+old greengrocer we buy our vegetables from. We must really
+announce it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I won't do it. Just tell me -- what would our Lord have
+said to Peter or John if they had told Him that they had been to
+synagogue and had been asked to speak, but had declined because
+there were only the pew openers, the chapel cleaner, a
+washerwoman, and a greengrocer present?"</p>
+
+<p>"I said it only for your sake, Graham; you needn't take me up
+so sharply."</p>
+
+<p>"And ra-a-ther irreverently -- don't you think -- excuse me,
+sir?" said Mrs Marshal very softly. But the very softness had a
+kind of jellyfish sting in it.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," rejoined the schoolmaster, indirectly replying, "we
+must be careful to show our reverence in a manner pleasing to
+our Lord. Now I cannot discover that he cares for any reverences
+but the shaping of our ways after his; and if you will show me a
+single instance of respect of persons in our Lord, I will press
+my petition no farther to be allowed to speak a word to your pew
+openers, washerwoman, and greengrocer."</p>
+
+<p>His entertainers were silent -- the gentleman in the
+consciousness of deserved rebuke, the lady in offence.</p>
+
+<p>Just then the latter bethought herself that their guest,
+belonging to the Scotch Church, was, if no Episcopalian, yet no
+dissenter, and that seemed to clear up to her the spirit of his
+disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>"By all means, Mr Marshal," she said, "let your friend speak
+on the Wednesday evening. It would not be to his advantage to
+have it said that he occupied a dissenting pulpit. It will not be
+nearly such an exertion either; and if he is unaccustomed to
+speak to large congregations, he will find himself more
+comfortable with our usual week evening one."</p>
+
+<p>"I have never attempted to speak in public but once," rejoined
+Mr Graham, "and then I failed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! that accounts for it," said his friend's wife and the
+simplicity of his confession, while it proved him a simpleton,
+mollified her.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it came that he spent the days between Sunday and
+Thursday in their house, and so made the acquaintance of young
+Marshal.</p>
+
+<p>When his mother perceived their growing intimacy, she warned
+her son that their visitor belonged to an unscriptural and
+worldly community, and that notwithstanding his apparent
+guilelessness -- deficiency indeed -- he might yet use cunning
+arguments to draw him aside from the faith of his fathers. But
+the youth replied that, although in the firmness of his own
+position as a Congregationalist, he had tried to get the
+Scotchman into a conversation upon church government, he had
+failed; the man smiled queerly and said nothing. But when a
+question of New Testament criticism arose, he came awake at once,
+and his little blue eyes gleamed like glowworms.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, Frederick," said his mother. "The Scriptures are
+not to be treated like common books and subjected to human
+criticism."</p>
+
+<p>"We must find out what they mean, I suppose, mother," said the
+youth.</p>
+
+<p>"You're to take just the plain meaning that he that runneth
+may read," answered his mother. -- "More than that no one has any
+business with. You've got to save your own soul first, and then
+the souls of your neighbours if they will let you; and for that
+reason you must cultivate, not a spirit of criticism, but the
+talents that attract people to the hearing of the Word. You have
+got a fine voice, and it will improve with judicious use. Your
+father is now on the outlook for a teacher of elocution to
+instruct you how to make the best of it, and speak with power on
+God's behalf"</p>
+
+<p>When the afternoon of Wednesday began to draw towards the
+evening, there came on a mist, not a London fog, but a low wet
+cloud, which kept slowly condensing into rain; and as the hour of
+meeting drew nigh with the darkness, it grew worse. Mrs Marshal
+had forgotten all about the meeting and the schoolmaster: her
+husband was late, and she wanted her dinner. At twenty minutes
+past six, she came upon her guest in the hall, kneeling on the
+doormat, first on one knee, then on the other, turning up the
+feet of his trousers.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Mr Graham," she said kindly, as he rose and proceeded to
+look for his cotton umbrella, easily discernible in the stand
+among the silk ones of the house, "you're never going out on a
+night like this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to the prayer meeting, ma'am," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense! You'll be wet to the skin before you get half
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"I promised, you may remember, ma'am, to talk a little to
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"You only said so to my husband. You may be very glad, seeing
+it has turned out so wet, that I would not allow him to have it
+announced from the pulpit. There is not the slightest occasion
+for your going. Besides, you have not had your dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"That's not of the slightest consequence, ma'am. A bit of
+bread and cheese before I go to bed is all I need to sustain
+nature, and fit me for understanding my proposition in Euclid. I
+have been in the habit, for the last few years, of reading one
+every night before I go to bed."</p>
+
+<p>"We dissenters consider a chapter of the Bible the best thing
+to read before going to bed," said the lady, with a sustained
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I keep that for the noontide of my perceptions -- for mental
+high water," said the schoolmaster, "Euclid is good enough after
+supper. Not that I deny myself a small portion of the Word," he
+added with a smile, as he proceeded to open the door -- "when I
+feel very hungry for it."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no one expecting you," persisted the lady, who could
+ill endure not to have her own way, even when she did not care
+for the matter concerned. "Who will be the wiser or the worse if
+you stay at home?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear lady," returned the schoolmaster, "when I have on
+good grounds made up my mind to a thing, I always feel as if I
+had promised God to do it; and indeed it amounts to the same
+thing very nearly. Such a resolve then is not to be unmade except
+on equally good grounds with those upon which it was made. Having
+resolved to try whether I could not draw a little water of
+refreshment for souls which if not thirsting are but fainting the
+more, shall I allow a few drops of rain to prevent me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray don't let me persuade you against your will," said his
+hostess, with a stately bend of her neck over her shoulder, as
+she turned into the drawing room.</p>
+
+<p>Her guest went out into the rain, asking himself by what
+theory of the will his hostess could justify such a phrase --
+-too simple to see that she had only thrown it out, as the
+cuttlefish its ink, to cover her retreat.</p>
+
+<p>But the weather had got a little into his brain: into his soul
+it was seldom allowed to intrude. He felt depressed and feeble
+and dull. But at the first corner he turned, he met a little
+breath of wind. It blew the rain in his face, and revived him a
+little, reminding him at the same time that he had not yet opened
+his umbrella. As he put it up he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Here I am," he said to himself, "lance in hand, spurring to
+meet my dragon!"</p>
+
+<p>Once when he used a similar expression, Malcolm had asked him
+what he meant by his dragon; "I mean," replied the schoolmaster,
+"that huge slug, The Commonplace. It is the wearifulest dragon to
+fight in the whole miscreation. Wound it as you may, the jelly
+mass of the monster closes, and the dull one is himself again --
+feeding all the time so cunningly that scarce one of the victims
+whom he has swallowed suspects that he is but pabulum slowly
+digesting in the belly of the monster."</p>
+
+<p>If the schoolmaster's dragon, spread abroad as he lies, a
+vague dilution, everywhere throughout human haunts, has yet any
+headquarters, where else can they be than in such places as that
+to which he was now making his way to fight him? What can be
+fuller of the wearisome, depressing, beauty blasting commonplace
+than a dissenting chapel in London, on the night of the weekly
+prayer meeting, and that night a drizzly one? The few lights fill
+the lower part with a dull, yellow, steamy glare, while the vast
+galleries, possessed by an ugly twilight, yawn above like the
+dreary openings of a disconsolate eternity. The pulpit rises into
+the dim damp air, covered with brown holland, reminding one of
+desertion and charwomen, if not of a chamber of death and
+spiritual undertakers, who have shrouded and coffined the truth.
+Gaping, empty, unsightly, the place is the very skull of the
+monster himself -- the fittest place of all wherein to encounter
+the great slug, and deal him one of those death blows which every
+sunrise, every repentance, every childbirth, every true love
+deals him. Every hour he receives the blow that kills, but he
+takes long to die, for every hour he is right carefully fed and
+cherished by a whole army of purveyors, including every trade and
+profession, but officered chiefly by divines and men of
+science.</p>
+
+<p>When the dominie entered, all was still, and every light had a
+nimbus of illuminated vapour. There were hardly more than three
+present beyond the number Mr Marshal had given him to expect; and
+their faces, some grim, some grimy, most of them troubled, and
+none blissful, seemed the nervous ganglions of the monster whose
+faintly gelatinous bulk filled the place. He seated himself in a
+pew near the pulpit, communed with his own heart and was still.
+Presently the ministering deacon, a humbler one in the worldly
+sense than Mr Marshal, for he kept a small ironmongery shop in
+the next street to the chapel, entered, twirling the wet from his
+umbrella as he came along one of the passages intersecting the
+pews. Stepping up into the desk which cowered humbly at the foot
+of the pulpit, he stood erect, and cast his eyes around the small
+assembly. Discovering there no one that could lead in singing, he
+chose out and read one of the monster's favourite hymns, in which
+never a sparkle of thought or a glow of worship gave reason
+wherefore the holy words should have been carpentered together.
+Then he prayed aloud, and then first the monster found tongue,
+voice, articulation. If this was worship, surely it was the
+monster's own worship of itself! No God were better than one to
+whom such were fitting words of prayer. What passed in the man's
+soul, God forbid I should judge: I speak but of the words that
+reached the ears of men.</p>
+
+<p>And over all the vast of London lay the monster, filling it
+like the night -- not in churches and chapels only -- in almost
+all theatres, and most houses -- most of all in rich houses:
+everywhere he had a foot, a tail, a tentacle or two -- everywhere
+suckers that drew the life blood from the sickening and somnolent
+soul.</p>
+
+<p>When the deacon, a little brown man, about five-and-thirty,
+had ended his prayer, he read another hymn of the same sort --
+one of such as form the bulk of most collections, and then looked
+meaningly at Mr Graham, whom he had seen in the chapel on Sunday
+with his brother deacon, and therefore judged one of consequence,
+who had come to the meeting with an object, and ought to be
+propitiated: he had intended speaking himself. After having thus
+for a moment regarded him,</p>
+
+<p>"Would you favour us with a word of exhortation, sir?" he
+said, in a stage-like whisper.</p>
+
+<p>Now the monster had by this time insinuated a hair-like sucker
+into the heart of the schoolmaster, and was busy. But at the
+word, as the Red Cross Knight when he heard Orgoglio in the wood
+staggered to meet him, he rose at once, and although his umbrella
+slipped and fell with a loud discomposing clatter, calmly
+approached the reading desk. To look at his outer man, this
+knight of the truth might have been the very high priest of the
+monster which, while he was sitting there, had been twisting his
+slimy, semi-electric, benumbing tendrils around his heart. His
+business was nevertheless to fight him, though to fight him in
+his own heart and that of other people at one and the same
+moment, he might well find hard work. And the loathly worm had
+this advantage over the knight, that it was the first time he had
+stood up to speak in public since his failure thirty years ago.
+That hour again for a moment overshadowed his spirit. It was a
+wavy harvest morning in a village of the north. A golden wind was
+blowing, and little white clouds flying aloft in the sunny blue.
+The church was full of well known faces, upturned, listening,
+expectant, critical. The hour vanished in a slow mist of abject
+misery and shame. But had he not learned to rejoice over all dead
+hopes, and write Te Deums on their coffin lids? And now he stood
+in dim light, in the vapour from damp garments, in dinginess and
+ugliness, with a sense of spiritual squalor and destitution in
+his very soul. He had tried to pray his own prayer while the
+deacon prayed his; but there had come to him no reviving -- no
+message for this handful of dull souls -- there were nine of them
+in all -- and his own soul crouched hard and dull within his
+bosom. How to give them one deeper breath? How to make them know
+they were alive? Whence was his aid to come?</p>
+
+<p>His aid was nearer than he knew. There were no hills to which
+he could lift his eyes, but help may hide in the valley as well
+as come down from the mountain, and he found his under the coal
+scuttle bonnet of the woman that swept out and dusted the chapel.
+She was no interesting young widow. A life of labour and vanished
+children lay behind as well as before her. She was sixty years of
+age, seamed with the smallpox, and in every seam the dust and
+smoke of London had left a stain. She had a troubled eye, and a
+gaze that seemed to ask of the universe why it had given birth to
+her. But it was only her face that asked the question; her mind
+was too busy with the ever recurring enigma, which, answered this
+week, was still an enigma for the next -- how she was to pay her
+rent -- too busy to have any other question to ask. Or would she
+not rather have gone to sleep altogether, under the dreary
+fascination of the slug monster, had she not had a severe
+landlady, who would be paid punctually, or turn her out? Anyhow,
+every time and all the time she sat in the chapel, she was
+brooding over ways and means, calculating pence and shillings --
+the day's charing she had promised her, and the chances of more
+-- mingling faint regrets over past indulgences -- the extra half
+pint of beer she drank on Saturday -- the bit of cheese she
+bought on Monday. Of this face of care, revealing a spirit which
+Satan had bound, the schoolmaster caught sight, -- caught from
+its commonness, its grimness, its defeature, inspiration and
+uplifting, for there he beheld the oppressed, down trodden, mire
+fouled humanity which the man in whom he believed had loved
+because it was his father's humanity divided into brothers, and
+had died straining to lift back to the bosom of that Father. Oh
+tale of horror and dreary monstrosity, if it be such indeed as
+the bulk of its priests on the one hand, and its enemies on the
+other represent it! Oh story of splendrous fate, of infinite
+resurrection and uplifting, of sun and breeze, of organ blasts
+and exultation, for the heart of every man and woman, whatsoever
+the bitterness of its care or the weight of its care, if it be
+such as the Book itself has held it from age to age!</p>
+
+<p>It was the mere humanity of the woman, I say, and nothing in
+her individuality of what is commonly called the interesting,
+that ministered to the breaking of the schoolmaster's trance. "Oh
+ye of little faith!" were the first words that flew from his lips
+-- he knew not whether uttered concerning himself or the
+charwoman the more; and at once he fell to speaking of him who
+said the words, and of the people that came to him and heard him
+gladly; -- how this one, whom he described, must have felt, Oh,
+if that be true! how that one, whom also he described, must have
+said, Now he means me! and so laid bare the secrets of many
+hearts, until he had concluded all in the misery of being without
+a helper in the world, a prey to fear and selfishness and dismay.
+Then he told them how the Lord pledged himself for all their
+needs -- meat and drink and clothes for the body, and God and
+love and truth for the soul, if only they would put them in the
+right order and seek the best first.</p>
+
+<p>Next he spoke a parable to them -- of a house and a father and
+his children. The children would not do what their father told
+them, and therefore began to keep out of his sight. After a while
+they began to say to each other that he must have gone out, it
+was so long since they had seen him -- only they never went to
+look. And again after a time some of them began to say to each
+other that they did not believe they had ever had any father. But
+there were some who dared not say that -- who thought they had a
+father somewhere in the house, and yet crept about in misery,
+sometimes hungry and often cold, fancying he was not friendly to
+them, when all the time it was they who were not friendly to him,
+and said to themselves he would not give them anything. They
+never went to knock at his door, or call to know if he were
+inside and would speak to them. And all the time there he was
+sitting sorrowful, listening and listening for some little hand
+to come knocking, and some little voice to come gently calling
+through the keyhole; for sorely did he long to take them to his
+bosom and give them everything. Only if he did that without their
+coming to him, they would not care for his love or him, would
+only care for the things he gave them, and soon would come to
+hate their brothers and sisters, and turn their own souls into
+hells, and the earth into a charnel of murder.</p>
+
+<p>Ere he ended he was pleading with the charwoman to seek her
+father in his own room, tell him her troubles, do what he told
+her, and fear nothing. And while he spoke, lo! the dragon slug
+had vanished; the ugly chapel was no longer the den of the
+hideous monster; it was but the dusky bottom of a glory shaft,
+adown which gazed the stars of the coming resurrection.</p>
+
+<p>"The whole trouble is that we won't let God help us," said the
+preacher, and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>A prayer from the greengrocer followed, in which he did seem
+to be feeling after God a little; and then the ironmonger
+pronounced the benediction, and all went -- among the rest,
+Frederick Marshal, who had followed the schoolmaster, and now
+walked back with him to his father's, where he was to spend one
+night more.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII:
+THE PORTRAIT</h1>
+
+<p>Florimel had found her daring visit to Lenorme stranger and
+more fearful than she had expected: her courage was not quite so
+masterful as she had thought. The next day she got Mrs
+Barnardiston to meet her at the studio. - But she contrived to be
+there first by some minutes, and her friend found her seated, and
+the painter looking as if he had fairly begun his morning's work.
+When she apologised for being late, Florimel said she supposed
+her groom had brought round the horses before his time; being
+ready, she had not looked at her watch. She was sharp on other
+people for telling stories -- but had of late ceased to see any
+great harm in telling one to protect herself. The fact however
+had begun to present itself in those awful morning hours that
+seem a mingling of time and eternity, and she did not like the
+discovery that, since her intimacy with Lenorme, she had begun to
+tell lies: what would he say if he knew?</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm found it dreary waiting in the street while she sat to
+the painter. He would not have minded it on Kelpie, for she was
+always occupation enough, but with only a couple of quiet horses
+to hold, it was dreary. He took to scrutinizing the faces that
+passed him, trying to understand them. To his surprise he found
+that almost everyone reminded him of somebody he had known
+before, though he could not always identify the likeness.</p>
+
+<p>It was a pleasure to see his yacht lying so near him, and Davy
+on the deck, and to hear the blows of the hammer and the swish of
+the plane as the carpenter went on with the alterations to which
+he had set him, but he got tired of sharing in activity only with
+his ears and eyes. One thing he had by it, however, and that was
+-- a good lesson in quiescent waiting -- a grand thing for any
+man, and most of all for those in whom the active is strong.</p>
+
+<p>The next day Florimel did not ride until after lunch, but took
+her maid with her to the studio, and Malcolm had a long morning
+with Kelpie. Once again he passed the beautiful lady in Rotten
+Row, but Kelpie was behaving in a most exemplary manner, and he
+could not tell whether she even saw him. I believe she thought
+her lecture had done him good. The day after that Lord Liftore
+was able to ride, and for some days Florimel and he rode in the
+park before dinner, when, as Malcolm followed on the new horse,
+he had to see his lordship make love to his sister, without being
+able to find the least colourable pretext of involuntary
+interference.</p>
+
+<p>At length the parcel he had sent for from Lossie House
+arrived. He had explained to Mrs Courthope what he wanted the
+things for, and she had made no difficulty of sending them to the
+address he gave her. Lenorme had already begun the portrait, had
+indeed been working at it very busily, and was now quite ready
+for him to sit. The early morning being the only time a groom
+could contrive to spare -- and that involved yet earlier
+attention to his horses, they arranged that Malcolm should be at
+the study every day by seven o'clock, until the painter's object
+was gained. So he mounted Kelpie at half past six of a fine
+breezy spring morning, rode across Hyde Park and down Grosvenor
+Place, and so reached Chelsea, where he put up his mare in
+Lenorme's stable -- fortunately large enough to admit of an empty
+stall between her and the painter's grand screw, else a battle
+frightful to relate might have fallen to my lot.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could have been more to Malcolm's mind than such a
+surpassing opportunity of learning with assurance what sort of
+man Lenorme was; and the relation that arose between them
+extended the sittings far beyond the number necessary for the
+object proposed. How the first of them passed I must recount with
+some detail.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he arrived, he was shown into the painter's
+bedroom, where lay the portmanteau he had carried thither himself
+the night before: out of it, with a strange mingling of pleasure
+and sadness, he now took the garments of his father's vanished
+state -- the filibeg of the dark tartan of his clan, in which
+green predominated; the French coat of black velvet of Genoa,
+with silver buttons; the bonnet, which ought to have had an
+eagle's feather, but had only an aigrette of diamonds; the black
+sporran of long goat's hair, with the silver clasp; the silver
+mounted dirk, with its appendages, set all with pale cairngorms
+nearly as good as oriental topazes; and the claymore of the
+renowned Andrew's forging, with its basket hilt of silver, and
+its black, silver mounted sheath. He handled each with the
+reverence of a son. Having dressed in them, he drew himself up
+with not a little of the Celt's pleasure in fine clothes, and
+walked into the painting room.</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme started with admiration of his figure, and wonder at
+the dignity of his carriage, while, mingled with these feelings,
+he was aware of an indescribable doubt, something to which he
+could give no name. He almost sprang at his palette and brushes:
+whether he succeeded with the likeness of the late marquis or
+not, it would be his own fault if he did not make a good picture!
+He painted eagerly, and they talked little, and only about things
+indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>At length the painter said,</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Now walk about the room while I spread a spadeful
+of paint: you must be tired standing."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm did as he was told, and walked straight up to the
+Temple of Isis, in which the painter had now long been at work on
+the goddess. He recognised his sister at once, but a sudden pinch
+of prudence checked the exclamation that had almost burst from
+his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"What a beautiful picture!" he said. "What does it mean? --
+Surely it is Hermione coming to life, and Leontes dying of joy!
+But no; that would not fit. They are both too young, and --"</p>
+
+<p>"You read Shakspere, I see," said Lenorme, "as well as
+Epictetus."</p>
+
+<p>"I do -- a good deal," answered Malcolm. "But please tell me
+what you painted this for."</p>
+
+<p>Then Lenorme told him the parable of Novalis, and Malcolm saw
+what the poet meant. He stood staring at the picture, and Lenorme
+sat working away, but a little anxious -- he hardly knew why: had
+he bethought himself he would have put the picture out of sight
+before Malcolm came.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't be offended if I made a remark, would you, Mr
+Lenorme?" said Malcolm at length.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," replied Lenorme, something afraid
+nevertheless of what might be coming.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether I can express what I mean," said
+Malcolm, "but I'll try. I could do it better in Scotch, I
+believe, but then you wouldn't understand me."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I should," said Lenorme. "I spent six months in
+Edinburgh once."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow ay! but ye see they dinna thraw the words there jist the
+same gait they du at Portlossie. Na, na! I maunna attemp'
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold, hold!" cried Lenorme. "I want to have your criticism. I
+don't understand a word you are saying. You must make the best
+you can of the English."</p>
+
+<p>"I was only telling you in Scotch that I wouldn't try the
+Scotch," returned Malcolm. "Now I will try the English. -- In the
+first place, then -- but really it's very presumptuous of me, Mr
+Lenorme; and it may be that I am blind to something in the
+picture."</p>
+
+<p>"Go on," said Lenorme impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think then, that one of the first things you would
+look for in a goddess would be -- what shall I call it? -- an air
+of mystery?"</p>
+
+<p>"That was so much involved in the very idea of Isis, in her
+especially, that they said she was always veiled, and no man had
+ever seen her face."</p>
+
+<p>"That would greatly interfere with my notion of mystery," said
+Malcolm. "There must be revelation before mystery. I take it that
+mystery is what lies behind revelation; that which as yet
+revelation has not reached. You must see something -- a part of
+something, before you can feel any sense of mystery about it. The
+Isis for ever veiled is the absolutely Unknown, not the
+Mysterious."</p>
+
+<p>"But, you observe, the idea of the parable is different.
+According to that Isis is for ever unveiling, that is revealing
+herself, in her works, chiefly in the women she creates, and then
+chiefly in each of them to the man who loves her."</p>
+
+<p>"I see what you mean well enough; but not the less she remains
+the goddess, does she not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely she does."</p>
+
+<p>"And can a goddess ever reveal all she is and has!"</p>
+
+<p>"Never."</p>
+
+<p>"Then ought there not to be mystery about the face and form of
+your Isis on her pedestal?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not there? Is there not mystery in the face and form of
+every woman that walks the earth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless; but you desire -- do you not? -- to show -- that
+although this is the very lady the young man loved before ever he
+sought the shrine of the goddess, not the less is she the goddess
+Isis herself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do -- or at least I ought; only -- by Jove! you have
+already looked deeper into the whole thing than I!"</p>
+
+<p>"There may be things to account for that on both sides," said
+Malcolm. "But one word more to relieve my brain: -- if you would
+embody the full meaning of the parable, you must not be content
+that the mystery is there; you must show in your painting that
+you feel it there; you must paint the invisible veil that no hand
+can lift, for there it is, and there it ever will be, though Isis
+herself raise it from morning to morning."</p>
+
+<p>"How am I to do that?" said Lenorme, not that he did not see
+what Malcolm meant, or agree with it: he wanted to make him
+talk.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I, who never drew a stroke, or painted anything but
+the gunnel of a boat, tell you that?" rejoined Malcolm. "It is
+your business. You must paint that veil, that mystery in the
+forehead, and in the eyes, and in the lips -- yes, in the cheeks
+and the chin and the eyebrows and everywhere. You must make her
+say without saying it, that she knows oh! so much, if only she
+could make you understand it! -- that she is all there for you,
+but the all is infinitely more than you can know. As she stands
+there now,"</p>
+
+<p>"I must interrupt you," cried Lenorme, "just to say that the
+picture is not finished yet."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet I will finish my sentence, if you will allow me,"
+returned Malcolm. "-- As she stands there -- the goddess -- she
+looks only a beautiful young woman, with whom the young man
+spreading out his arms to her is very absolutely in love. There
+is the glow and the mystery of love in both their faces, and
+nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>"And is not that enough?" said Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Malcolm. "And yet it may be too much," he
+added, "if you are going to hang it up where people will see
+it."</p>
+
+<p>As he said this, he looked hard at the painter for a moment.
+The dark hue of Lenorme's cheek deepened; his brows lowered a
+little farther over the black wells of his eyes; and he painted
+on without answer.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove!" he said at length.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't swear, Mr Lenorme," said Malcolm. "-- Besides, that's
+my Lord Liftore's oath. -- If you do, you will teach my lady to
+swear."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that?" asked Lenorme, with offence plain
+enough in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Malcolm told him how on one occasion, himself being
+present, the marquis her father happening to utter an
+imprecation, Lady Florimel took the first possible opportunity of
+using the very same words on her own account, much to the
+marquis's amusement and Malcolm's astonishment. But upon
+reflection he had come to see that she only wanted to cure her
+father of the bad habit.</p>
+
+<p>The painter laughed heartily, but stopped all at once and
+said, "It's enough to make any fellow swear though, to hear a --
+groom talk as you do about art."</p>
+
+<p>"Have I the impudence? I didn't know it," said Malcolm, with
+some dismay. "I seemed to myself merely saying the obvious thing,
+the common sense, about the picture, on the ground of your own
+statement of your meaning in it. I am annoyed with myself if I
+have been talking of things I know nothing about."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary, MacPhail, you are so entirely right in what
+you say, that I cannot for the life of me understand where or how
+you can have got it."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Graham used to talk to me about everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but he was only a country schoolmaster."</p>
+
+<p>"A good deal more than that, sir," said Malcolm, solemnly. "He
+is a disciple of him that knows everything. And now I think of
+it, I do believe that what I've been saying about your picture, I
+must have got from hearing him talk about the revelation, in
+which is included Isis herself, with her brother and all their
+train."</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme held his peace. Malcolm had taken his place again
+unconsciously, and the painter was working hard, and looking very
+thoughtful. Malcolm went again to the picture.</p>
+
+<p>"Hillo!" cried Lenorme, looking up and finding no object in
+the focus of his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm returned directly.</p>
+
+<p>"There was just one thing I wanted to see," he said, "--
+whether the youth worshipping his goddess, had come into her
+presence clean."</p>
+
+<p>"And what is your impression of him?" half murmured Lenorme,
+without lifting his head.</p>
+
+<p>"The one that's painted there," answered Malcolm, "does look
+as if he might know that the least a goddess may claim of a
+worshipper is, that he should come into her presence pure enough
+to understand her purity. I came upon a fine phrase the other
+evening in your English prayer book. I never looked into it
+before, but I found one lying on a book stall, and it happened to
+open at the marriage service. There, amongst other good things,
+the bridegroom says: 'With my body I thee worship.' -- 'That's
+grand,' I said to myself. 'That's as it should be. The man whose
+body does not worship the woman he weds, should marry a harlot.'
+God bless Mr William Shakspere! -- he knew that. I remember Mr
+Graham telling me once, before I had read the play, that the
+critics condemn Measure for Measure as failing in poetic justice.
+I know little about the critics, and care less, for a man who has
+to earn his bread and feed his soul as well, has enough to do
+with the books themselves without what people say about them; and
+Mr Graham would not tell me whether he thought the critics right
+or wrong; he wanted me to judge for myself. But when I came to
+read the play, I found, to my mind, a most absolute and splendid
+justice in it. They think, I suppose, that my lord Angelo should
+have been put to death. It just reveals the low breed of them;
+they think death the worst thing, therefore the greatest
+punishment. But Angelo prays for death, that it may hide him from
+his shame: it is too good for him, and he shall not have it. He
+must live to remove the shame from Mariana. And then see how
+Lucio is served!"</p>
+
+<p>While Malcolm talked, Lenorme went on painting diligently,
+listening and saying nothing. When he had thus ended, a pause of
+some duration followed.</p>
+
+<p>"A goddess has a right to claim that one thing -- has she not,
+Mr Lenorme?" said Malcolm at length, winding up a silent train of
+thought aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"What thing?" asked Lenorme, still without lifting his
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"Purity in the arms a man holds out to her," answered
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," replied Lenorme, with a sort of mechanical
+absoluteness.</p>
+
+<p>"And according to your picture, every woman whom a man loves
+is a goddess -- the goddess of nature?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly; -- but what are you driving at? I can't paint for
+you. There you stand," he went on, half angrily, "as if you were
+Socrates himself, driving some poor Athenian buck into the corner
+of his deserts! I don't deserve any such insinuations, I would
+have you know."</p>
+
+<p>"I am making none, sir. I dare never insinuate except I were
+prepared to charge. But I have told you I was bred up a fisher
+lad, and partly among the fishers, to begin with. I half learned,
+half discovered things that tended to give me what some would
+count severe notions: I count them common sense. Then, as you
+know, I went into service, and in that position it is easy enough
+to gather that many people hold very loose and very nasty notions
+about some things; so I just wanted to see how you felt about
+such. If I had a sister now, and saw a man coming to woo her, all
+beclotted with puddle filth -- or if I knew that he had just left
+some woman as good as she, crying eyes and heart out over his
+child -- I don't know that I could keep my hands off him -- at
+least if I feared she might take him. What do you think now?
+Mightn't it be a righteous thing to throttle the scum and be
+hanged for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Lenorme, "I don't know why I should justify
+myself, especially where no charge is made, MacPhail; and I don't
+know why to you any more than another man; but at this moment I
+am weak, or egotistic, or sympathetic enough to wish you to
+understand that, so far as the poor matter of one virtue goes, I
+might without remorse act Sir Galahad in a play."</p>
+
+<p>"Now you are beyond me," said Malcolm. "I don't know what you
+mean."</p>
+
+<p>So Lenorme had to tell him the old Armoric tale which Tennyson
+has since rendered so lovelily, for, amongst artists at least, he
+was one of the earlier borrowers in the British legends. And as
+he told it, in a half sullen kind of way, the heart of the young
+marquis glowed within him, and he vowed to himself that Lenorme
+and no other should marry his sister. But, lest he should reveal
+more emotion than the obvious occasion justified, he restrained
+speech, and again silence fell, during which Lenorme was painting
+furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Confound it!" he cried at last, and sprang to his feet, but
+without taking his eyes from his picture, "what have I been doing
+all this time but making a portrait of you, MacPhail, and
+forgetting what you were there for! And yet," he went on,
+hesitating and catching up the miniature, "I have got a certain
+likeness! Yes, it must be so, for I see in it also a certain look
+of Lady Lossie. Well! I suppose a man can't altogether help what
+he paints any more than what he dreams. That will do for this
+morning, anyhow, I think, MacPhail. Make haste and put on your
+own clothes, and come into the next room to breakfast. You must
+be tired with standing so long.</p>
+
+<p>"It is about the hardest work I ever tried," answered Malcolm;
+"but I doubt if I am as tired as Kelpie. I've been listening for
+the last half hour to hear the stalls flying."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX: AN
+EVIL OMEN</h1>
+
+<p>Florimel was beginning to understand that the shield of the
+portrait was not large enough to cover many more visits to the
+studio. Still she must and would venture; and should anything be
+said, there at least was the portrait. For some weeks it had been
+all but finished, was never off its easel, and always showed a
+touch of wet paint somewhere -- he kept the last of it lingering,
+ready to prove itself almost yet not altogether finished. What
+was to follow its absolute completion, neither of them could
+tell. The worst of it was that their thoughts about it differed
+discordantly. Florimel not unfrequently regarded the rupture of
+their intimacy as a thing not undesirable -- this chiefly after
+such a talk with Lady Bellair as had been illustrated by some
+tale of misalliance or scandal between high or low, of which kind
+of provision for age the bold faced countess had a large store:
+her memory was little better than an ashpit of scandal. Amongst
+other biographical scraps one day she produced the case of a
+certain earl's daughter, who, having disgraced herself by
+marrying a low fellow -- an artist, she believed -- was as a
+matter of course neglected by the man whom, in accepting him, she
+had taught to despise her, and, before a twelvemonth was over --
+her family finding it impossible to hold communication with her
+-- was actually seen by her late maid scrubbing her own
+floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Why couldn't she leave it dirty?" said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"Why indeed," returned Lady Bellair, "but that people sink to
+their fortunes! Blue blood won't keep them out of the
+gutter."</p>
+
+<p>The remark was true, but of more general application than she
+intended, seeing she herself was in the gutter and did not know
+it. She spoke only of what followed on marriage beneath one's
+natal position, than which she declared there was nothing worse a
+woman of rank could do.</p>
+
+<p>"She may get over anything but that," she would say,
+believing, but not saying, that she spoke from experience.</p>
+
+<p>Was it part of the late marquis's purgatory to see now, as the
+natural result of the sins of his youth, the daughter whose
+innocence was dear to him exposed to all the undermining
+influences of this good natured but low moralled woman, whose
+ideas of the most mysterious relations of humanity were in no
+respect higher than those of a class which must not even be
+mentioned in my pages? At such tales the high born heart would
+flutter in Florimel's bosom, beat itself against its bars, turn
+sick at the sight of its danger, imagine it had been cherishing a
+crime, and resolve -- soon -- before very long -- at length --
+finally -- to break so far at least with the painter as to limit
+their intercourse to the radiation of her power across a dinner
+table, the rhythmic heaving of their two hearts at a dance, or
+the quiet occasional talk in a corner, when the looks of each
+would reveal to the other that they knew themselves the martyrs
+of a cruel and inexorable law. It must be remembered that she had
+had no mother since her childhood, that she was now but a girl,
+and that the passion of a girl to that of a woman is "as
+moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine." Of genuine love
+she had little more than enough to serve as salt to the passion;
+and passion, however bewitching, yea, entrancing a condition, may
+yet be of more worth than that induced by opium or hashish, and a
+capacity for it may be conjoined with anything or everything
+contemptible and unmanly or unwomanly. In Florimel's case,
+however, there was chiefly much of the childish in it. Definitely
+separated from Lenorme, she would have been merry again in a
+fortnight; and yet, though she half knew this herself, and at the
+same time was more than half ashamed of the whole affair, she did
+not give it up -- would not -- only intended by and by to let it
+go, and meantime gave -- occasionally -- pretty free flutter to
+the half grown wings of her fancy.</p>
+
+<p>Her liking for the painter had therefore, not unnaturally, its
+fits. It was subject in a measure to the nature of the
+engagements she had -- that is, to the degree of pleasure she
+expected from them; it was subject, as we have seen, to skilful
+battery from the guns of her chaperon's entrenchment; and more
+than to either was it subject to those delicate changes of
+condition which in the microcosm are as frequent, and as varied
+both in kind and degree, as in the macrocosm. The spirit has its
+risings and settings of sun and moon, its seasons, its clouds and
+stars, its solstices, its tides, its winds, its storms, its
+earthquakes -- infinite vitality in endless fluctuation. To rule
+these changes, Florimel had neither the power that comes of love,
+nor the strength that comes of obedience. What of conscience she
+had was not yet conscience toward God, which is the guide to
+freedom, but conscience toward society, which is the slave of a
+fool. It was no wonder then that Lenorme, believing -- hoping she
+loved him, should find her hard to understand. He said hard; but
+sometimes he meant impossible. He loved as a man loves who has
+thought seriously, speculated, tried to understand; whose love
+therefore is consistent with itself, harmonious with its nature
+and history, changing only in form and growth, never in substance
+and character. Hence the idea of Florimel became in his mind the
+centre of perplexing thought; the unrest of her being
+metamorphosed on the way, passed over into his, and troubled him
+sorely. Neither was his mind altogether free of the dread of
+reproach. For self reproach he could find little or no ground,
+seeing that to pity her much for the loss of consideration her
+marriage with him would involve, would be to undervalue the
+honesty of his love and the worth of his art; and indeed her
+position was so independently based that she could not lose it
+even by marrying one who had not the social standing of a brewer
+or a stockbroker; but his pride was uneasy under the foreseen
+criticism that his selfishness had taken advantage of her youth
+and inexperience to work on the mind of an ignorant girl -- a
+criticism not likely to be the less indignant that those who
+passed it would, without a shadow of compunction, have handed her
+over, body, soul, and goods, to one of their own order, had he
+belonged to the very canaille of the race.</p>
+
+<p>The painter was not merely in love with Florimel: he loved
+her. I will not say that he was in no degree dazzled by her rank,
+or that he felt no triumph, as a social nomad camping on the No
+Man's Land of society, at the thought of the justification of the
+human against the conventional, in his scaling of the giddy
+heights of superiority, and, on one of its topmost peaks, taking
+from her nest that rare bird in the earth, a landed and titled
+marchioness. But such thoughts were only changing hues on the
+feathers of his love, which itself was a mighty bird with great
+and yet growing wings.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two passed before Florimel went again to the studio
+accompanied, notwithstanding Lenorme's warning and her own doubt,
+yet again by her maid, a woman, unhappily, of Lady Bellair's
+finding. At Lossie House, Malcolm had felt a repugnance to her,
+both moral and physical. When first he heard her name, one of the
+servants speaking of her as Miss Caley, he took it for Scaley,
+and if that was not her name, yet scaly was her nature.</p>
+
+<p>This time Florimel rode to Chelsea with Malcolm, having
+directed Caley to meet her there; and, the one designing to be a
+little early, and the other to be a little late, two results
+naturally followed -- first, that the lovers had a few minutes
+alone; and second, that when Caley crept in, noiseless and
+unannounced as a cat, she had her desire, and saw the painter's
+arm round Florimel's waist, and her head on his bosom. Still more
+to her contentment, not hearing, they did not see her, and she
+crept out again quietly as she had entered: it would of course be
+to her advantage to let them know that she had seen, and that
+they were in her power, but it might be still more to her
+advantage to conceal the fact so long as there was a chance of
+additional discovery in the same direction. Through the success
+of her trick it came about that Malcolm, chancing to look up from
+Honour's back to the room where he always breakfasted with his
+new friend, saw in one of the windows, as in a picture, a face
+radiant with such an expression as that of the woman headed snake
+might have worn when he saw Adam take the apple from the hand of
+Eve.</p>
+
+<p>Caley was of the common class of servants in this, that she
+considered service servitude, and took her amends in selfishness;
+she was unlike them in this, that while false to her employers,
+she made no common cause with her fellows against them --
+regarded and sought none but her own ends. Her one thought was to
+make the most of her position; for that, to gain influence with,
+and, if it might be, power over her mistress; and, thereto, first
+of all, to find out whether she had a secret: she had now
+discovered not merely that she had one, but the secret itself!
+She was clever, greedy, cunning; equally capable, according to
+the faculty with which she might be matched, of duping or of
+being duped. She rather liked her mistress, but watched her in
+the interests of Lady Bellair. She had a fancy for the earl, a
+natural dislike for Malcolm which she concealed in distant
+politeness, and for all the rest of the house, indifference. As
+to her person, she had a neat oval face, thin and sallow, in
+expression subacid; a lithe, rather graceful figure, and hands
+too long, with fingers almost too tapering -- of which hands and
+fingers she was very careful, contemplating them in secret with a
+regard amounting almost to reverence: they were her sole
+witnesses to a descent in which she believed, but of which she
+had no other shadow of proof.</p>
+
+<p>Caley's face, then, with its unsaintly illumination, gave
+Malcolm something to think about as he sat there upon Honour, the
+new horse. Clearly she had had a triumph: what could it be? The
+nature of the woman was not altogether unknown to him even from
+the first, and he could not for months go on meeting her
+occasionally in passages and on stairs without learning to
+understand his own instinctive dislike: it was plain the triumph
+was not in good. It was plain too that it was in something which
+had that very moment occurred, and could hardly have to do with
+anyone but her mistress. Then her being in that room revealed
+more. They would never have sent her out of the study, and so put
+themselves in her power. She had gone into the house but a moment
+before, a minute or two behind her mistress, and he knew with
+what a cat-like step she went about: she had surprised them --
+-discovered how matters stood between her mistress and the
+painter! He saw everything -- almost as it had taken place. She
+had seen without being seen, and had retreated with her prize!
+Florimel was then in the woman's power: what was he to do? He
+must at least let her gather what warning she could from the tale
+of what he had seen.</p>
+
+<p>Once arrived at a resolve, Malcolm never lost time. They had
+turned but one corner on their way home, when he rode up to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Please, my lady," he began.</p>
+
+<p>But the same instant Florimel was pulling up.</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm," she said, "I have left my pocket handkerchief. I
+must go back for it."</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, she turned her horse's head. But Malcolm,
+dreading lest Caley should yet be lingering, would not allow her
+to expose herself to a greater danger than she knew.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you go, my lady, I must tell you something I happened
+to see while I waited with the horses," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The earnestness of his tone struck Florimel. She looked at him
+with eyes a little wider, and waited to hear.</p>
+
+<p>"I happened to look up at the drawing room windows, my lady,
+and Caley came to one of them with such a look on her face! I
+can't exactly describe it to you, my lady, but --"</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you tell me?" interrupted his mistress, with absolute
+composure, and hard, questioning eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But she had drawn herself up in the saddle. Then, before he
+could reply, a flash of thought seemed to cross her face with a
+quick single motion of her eyebrows, and it was instantly altered
+and thoughtful. She seemed to have suddenly perceived some cause
+for taking a mild interest in his communication.</p>
+
+<p>"But it cannot be, Malcolm," she said, in quite a changed
+tone. "You must have taken some one else for her. She never left
+the studio all the time I was there."</p>
+
+<p>"It was immediately after her arrival, my lady. She went in
+about two minutes after your ladyship, and could not have had
+much more than time to go upstairs when I saw her come to the
+window. I felt bound to tell your ladyship."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Malcolm," returned Florimel kindly. "You did right
+to tell me, -- but -- it's of no consequence. Mr Lenorme's
+housekeeper and she must have been talking about something."</p>
+
+<p>But her eyebrows were now thoughtfully contracted over her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"There had been no time for that, I think, my lady," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned again and rode on, saying no more about the
+handkerchief. Malcolm saw that he had succeeded in warning her,
+and was glad. But had he foreseen to what it would lead, he would
+hardly have done it.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was indeed very uneasy. She could not help strongly
+suspecting that she had betrayed herself to one who, if not an
+intentional spy, would yet be ready enough to make a spy's use of
+anything she might have picked up. What was to be done? It was
+now too late to think of getting rid of her: that would be but
+her signal to disclose whatever she had seen, and so not merely
+enjoy a sweet revenge, but account with clear satisfactoriness
+for her dismissal. What would not Florimel now have given for
+some one who could sympathise with her and yet counsel her! She
+was afraid to venture another meeting with Lenorme, and besides
+was not a little shy of the advantage the discovery would give
+him in pressing her to marry him. And now first she began to feel
+as if her sins were going to find her out.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two passed in alternating psychical flaws and fogs --
+with poor glints of sunshine between. She watched her maid, but
+her maid knew it, and discovered no change in her manner or
+behaviour. Weary of observation she was gradually settling into
+her former security, when Caley began to drop hints that alarmed
+her. Might it not be altogether the safest thing to take her into
+confidence? It would be such a relief, she thought, to have a
+woman she could talk to! The result was that she began to lift a
+corner of the veil that hid her trouble; the woman encouraged
+her, and at length the silly girl threw her arms round the scaly
+one's neck, much to that person's satisfaction, and told her that
+she loved Mr Lenorme. She knew of course, she said, that she
+could not marry him. She was only waiting a fit opportunity to
+free herself from a connection which, however delightful, she was
+unable to justify. How the maid interpreted her confession, I do
+not care to enquire very closely, but anyhow it was in a manner
+that promised much to her after influence. I hasten over this
+part of Florimel's history, for that confession to Caley was
+perhaps the one thing in her life she had most reason to be
+ashamed of, for she was therein false to the being she thought
+she loved best in the world. Could Lenorme have known her capable
+of unbosoming herself to such a woman, it would almost have slain
+the love he bore her. The notions of that odd and end sort of
+person, who made his livelihood by spreading paint, would have
+been too hideously shocked by the shadow of an intimacy between
+his love and such as she.</p>
+
+<p>Caley first comforted the weeping girl, and then began to
+insinuate encouragement. She must indeed give him up -- there was
+no help for that; but neither was there any necessity for doing
+so all at once. Mr Lenorme was a beautiful man, and any woman
+might be proud to be loved by him. She must take her time to it.
+She might trust her. And so on and on -- for she was as vulgar
+minded as the worst of those whom ladies endure about their
+persons, handling their hair, and having access to more of their
+lock fast places than they would willingly imagine.</p>
+
+<p>The first result was that, on the pretext of bidding him
+farewell, and convincing him that he and she must meet no more,
+fate and fortune, society and duty being all alike against their
+happiness -- I mean on that pretext to herself, the only one to
+be deceived by it -- Florimel arranged with her woman one evening
+to go the next morning to the studio: she knew the painter to be
+an early riser, and always at his work before eight o'clock. But
+although she tried to imagine she had persuaded herself to say
+farewell, certainly she had not yet brought her mind to any
+ripeness of resolve in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>At seven o'clock in the morning, the marchioness habited like
+a housemaid, they slipped out by the front door, turned the
+corners of two streets, found a hackney coach waiting for them,
+and arrived in due time at the painter's abode.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX: A
+QUARREL</h1>
+
+<p>When the door opened and Florimel glided in, the painter
+sprang to his feet to welcome her, and she flew softly, soundless
+as a moth, into his arms; for the study being large and full of
+things, she was not aware of the presence of Malcolm. From behind
+a picture on an easel, he saw them meet, but shrinking from being
+an open witness to their secret, and also from being discovered
+in his father's clothes by the sister who knew him only as a
+servant, he instantly sought escape. Nor was it hard to find, for
+near where he stood was a door opening into a small intermediate
+chamber, communicating with the drawing room, and by it he fled,
+intending to pass through to Lenorme's bedroom, and change his
+clothes. With noiseless stride he hurried away, but could not
+help hearing a few passionate words that escaped his sister's
+lips before Lenorme could warn her that they were not alone --
+words which, it seemed to him, could come only from a heart whose
+very pulse was devotion.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I live without you, Raoul?" said the girl as she
+clung to him.</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme gave an uneasy glance behind him, saw Malcolm
+disappear, and answered,</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will never try, my darling."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but you know this can't last," she returned, with
+playfully affected authority. "It must come to an end. They will
+interfere."</p>
+
+<p>"Who can? Who will dare?" said the painter with
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"People will. We had better stop it ourselves -- before it all
+comes out, and we are shamed," said Florimel, now with perfect
+seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>"Shamed!" cried Lenorme. "-- Well, if you can't help being
+ashamed of me -- and perhaps, as you have been brought up, you
+can't -- do you not then love me enough to encounter a little
+shame for my sake? I should welcome worlds of such for
+yours!"</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was silent. She kept her face hidden on his shoulder,
+but was already halfway to a quarrel.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't love me, Florimel!" he said, after a pause, little
+thinking how nearly true were the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, suppose I don't!" she cried, half defiantly, half
+merrily; and drawing herself from him, she stepped back two
+paces, and looked at him with saucy eyes, in which burned two
+little flames of displeasure, that seemed to shoot up from the
+red spots glowing upon her cheeks. Lenorme looked at her. He had
+often seen her like this before, and knew that the shell was
+charged and the fuse lighted. But within lay a mixture even more
+explosive than he suspected; for not merely was there more of
+shame and fear and perplexity mingled with her love than he
+understood, but she was conscious of having now been false to
+him, and that rendered her temper dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme had already suffered severely from the fluctuations of
+her moods. They had been almost too much for him. He could endure
+them, he thought, to all eternity, if he had her to himself, safe
+and sure; but the confidence to which he rose every now and then
+that she would one day be his, just as often failed him, rudely
+shaken by some new symptom of what almost seemed like cherished
+inconstancy. If after all she should forsake him! It was
+impossible, but she might. If even that should come, he was too
+much of a man to imagine anything but a stern encounter of the
+inevitable, and he knew he would survive it; but he knew also
+that life could never be the same again; that for a season work
+would be impossible -- the kind of work he had hitherto believed
+his own rendered for ever impossible perhaps, and his art
+degraded to the mere earning of a living. At best he would have
+to die and be buried and rise again before existence could become
+endurable under the new squalid condition of life without her. It
+was no wonder then if her behaviour sometimes angered him; for
+even against a Will o' the Wisp that has enticed us into a swamp,
+a glow of foolish indignation will spring up. And now a black
+fire in his eyes answered the blue flash in hers; and the
+difference suggests the diversity of their loves: hers might
+vanish in fierce explosion, his would go on burning like a coal
+mine. A word of indignant expostulation rose to his lips, but a
+thought came that repressed it. He took her hand, and led her --
+the wonder was that she yielded, for she had seen the glow in his
+eyes, and the fuse of her own anger burned faster; but she did
+yield, partly from curiosity, and followed where he pleased --
+her hand lying dead in his. It was but to the other end of the
+room he led her, to the picture of her father, now all but
+finished. Why he did so, he would have found it hard to say.
+Perhaps the Genius that lies under the consciousness forefelt a
+catastrophe, and urged him to give his gift ere giving should be
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm stepped into the drawing room, where the table was
+laid as usual for breakfast: there stood Caley, helping herself
+to a spoonful of honey from Hymettus. At his entrance she started
+violently, and her sallow face grew earthy. For some seconds she
+stood motionless, unable to take her eyes off the apparition, as
+it seemed to her, of the late marquis, in wrath at her
+encouragement of his daughter in disgraceful courses. Malcolm,
+supposing only she was ashamed of herself, took no farther notice
+of her, and walked deliberately towards the other door. Ere he
+reached it she knew him. Burning with the combined ires of fright
+and shame, conscious also that, by the one little contemptible
+act of greed in which he had surprised her, she had justified the
+aversion which her woman instinct had from the first recognized
+in him, she darted to the door, stood with her back against it,
+and faced him flaming.</p>
+
+<p>"So!" she cried, "this is how my lady's kindness is abused!
+The insolence! Her groom goes and sits for his portrait in her
+father's court dress!"</p>
+
+<p>As she ceased, all the latent vulgarity of her nature broke
+loose, and with a contracted pff she seized her thin nose between
+her thumb and forefinger, to the indication that an evil odour of
+fish interpenetrated her atmosphere, and must at the moment be
+defiling the garments of the dead marquis.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady shall know of this," she concluded, with a vicious
+clenching of her teeth, and two or three nods of her neat
+head.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm stood regarding her with a coolness that yet inflamed
+her wrath. He could not help smiling at the reaction of shame in
+indignation. Had her anger been but a passing flame, that smile
+would have turned it into enduring hate. She hissed in his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"Go and have the first word," he said; "only leave the door
+and let me pass."</p>
+
+<p>"Let you pass indeed! What would you pass for? -- The bastard
+of old Lord James and a married woman! -- I don't care that for
+you." And she snapped her fingers in his face.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm turned from her and went to the window, taking a
+newspaper from the breakfast table as he passed, and there sat
+down to read until the way should be clear. Carried beyond
+herself by his utter indifference, Caley darted from the room and
+went straight into the study.</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme led Florimel in front of the picture. She gave a great
+start, and turned and stared pallid at the painter. The effect
+upon her was such as he had not foreseen, and the words she
+uttered were not such as he could have hoped to hear.</p>
+
+<p>"What would he think of me if he knew?" she cried, clasping
+her hands in agony.</p>
+
+<p>That moment Caley burst into the room, her eyes lamping like a
+cat's.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady!" she shrieked, "there's MacPhail, the groom, my
+lady, dressed up in your honoured father's bee-utiful clo'es as
+he always wore when he went to dine with the Prince! And, please,
+my lady, he's that rude I could 'ardly keep my 'ands off
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel flashed a dagger of question in Lenorme's eyes. The
+painter drew himself up.</p>
+
+<p>"It was at my request, Lady Lossie," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" returned Florimel, in high scorn, and glanced again
+at the picture.</p>
+
+<p>"I see!" she went on. "How could I be such an idiot! It was my
+groom's, not my father's likeness you meant to surprise me
+with!"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes flashed as if she would annihilate him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have worked hard in the hope of giving you pleasure, Lady
+Lossie," said the painter, with wounded dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"And you have failed," she adjoined cruelly.</p>
+
+<p>The painter took the miniature after which he had been
+working, from a table near, handed it to her with a proud
+obeisance, and the same moment dashed a brushful of dark paint
+across the face of the picture.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said Florimel, and for a moment felt as if
+she hated him.</p>
+
+<p>She turned away and walked from the study. The door of the
+drawing room was open, and Caley stood by the side of it.
+Florimel, too angry to consider what she was about, walked in:
+there sat Malcolm in the window, in her father's clothes, and his
+very attitude, reading the newspaper. He did not hear her enter.
+He had been waiting till he could reach the bedroom unseen by
+her, for he knew from the sound of the voices that the study door
+was open. Her anger rose yet higher at the sight.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave the room," she said.</p>
+
+<p>He started to his feet, and now perceived that his sister was
+in the dress of a servant. He took one step forward and stood --
+a little mazed -- gorgeous in dress and arms of price, before his
+mistress in the cotton gown of a housemaid.</p>
+
+<p>"Take those clothes off instantly," said Florimel slowly,
+replacing wrath with haughtiness as well as she might. Malcolm
+turned to the door without a word. He saw that things had gone
+wrong where most he would have wished them go right.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see to them being well aired, my lady," said Caley, with
+sibilant indignation.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm went to the study. The painter sat before the picture
+of the marquis, with his elbows on his knees, and his head
+between his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Lenorme," said Malcolm, approaching him gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, go away," said Lenorme, without raising his head. "I
+can't bear the sight of you yet."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm obeyed, a little smile playing about the corners of
+his mouth. Caley saw it as he passed, and hated him yet worse. He
+was in his own clothes, booted and belted, in two minutes. Three
+sufficed to replace his father's garments in the portmanteau, and
+in three more he and Kelpie went plunging past his mistress and
+her maid as they drove home in their lumbering vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>"The insolence of the fellow!" said Caley, loud enough for her
+mistress to hear notwithstanding the noise of the rattling
+windows. "A pretty pass we are come to!"</p>
+
+<p>But already Florimel's mood had begun to change. She felt that
+she had done her best to alienate men on whom she could depend,
+and that she had chosen for a confidante one whom she had no
+ground for trusting.</p>
+
+<p>She got safe and unseen to her room; and Caley believed she
+had only to improve the advantage she had now gained.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI: THE
+TWO DAIMONS</h1>
+
+<p>Things had taken a turn that was not to Malcolm's
+satisfaction, and his thoughts were as busy all the way home as
+Kelpie would allow. He had ardently desired that his sister
+should be thoroughly in love with Lenorme, for that seemed to
+open a clear path out of his worst difficulties; now they had
+quarrelled; and besides were both angry with him. The main fear
+was that Liftore would now make some progress with her. Things
+looked dangerous. Even his warning against Caley had led to a
+result the very opposite of his intent and desire. And now it
+recurred to him that he had once come upon Liftore talking to
+Caley, and giving her something that shone like a sovereign.</p>
+
+<p>Earlier on the same morning of her visit to the studio,
+Florimel had awaked and found herself in the presence of the
+spiritual Vehmgericht. Every member of the tribunal seemed
+against her. All her thoughts were busy accusing, none of them
+excusing one another. So hard were they upon her that she fancied
+she had nearly come to the conclusion that, if only she could do
+it pleasantly, without pain or fear, the best thing would be to
+swallow something and fall asleep; for like most people she was
+practically an atheist, and therefore always thought of death as
+the refuge from the ills of life. But although she was often very
+uncomfortable, Florimel knew nothing of such genuine downright
+misery as drives some people to what can be no more to their
+purpose than if a man should strip himself naked because he is
+cold. When she returned from her unhappy visit, and had sent her
+attendant to get her some tea, she threw herself upon her bed,
+and found herself yet again in the dark chambers of the spiritual
+police. But already even their company was preferable to that of
+Caley, whose officiousness began to enrage her. She was yet
+tossing in the Nessus tunic of her own disharmony, when Malcolm
+came for orders. To get rid of herself and Caley both, she
+desired him to bring the horses round at once.</p>
+
+<p>It was more than Malcolm had expected. He ran: he might yet
+have a chance of trying to turn her in the right direction. He
+knew that Liftore was neither in the house nor at the stable.
+With the help of the earl's groom, he was round in ten minutes.
+Florimel was all but ready: like some other ladies she could
+dress quickly when she had good reason. She sprang from Malcolm's
+hand to the saddle, and led as straight northward as she could
+go, never looking behind her till she drew rein on the top of
+Hampstead Heath. When he rode up to her "Malcolm," she said,
+looking at him half ashamed, "I don't think my father would have
+minded you wearing his clothes."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, my lady," said Malcolm. "At least he would have
+forgiven anything meant for your pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"I was too hasty," she said. "But the fact was, Mr Lenorme had
+irritated me, and I foolishly mixed you up with him."</p>
+
+<p>"When I went into the studio, after you left it, this morning,
+my lady," Malcolm ventured, "he had his head between his hands
+and would not even look at me."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned her face aside, and Malcolm thought she was
+sorry; but she was only hiding a smile: she had not yet got
+beyond the kitten stage of love, and was pleased to find she gave
+pain.</p>
+
+<p>"If your ladyship never had another true friend, Mr Lenorme is
+one," added Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"What opportunity can you have had for knowing?" said
+Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been sitting to him every morning for a good many
+days," answered Malcolm. "he is something like a man!"</p>
+
+<p>Florimel's face flushed with pleasure. She liked to hear him
+praised, for he loved her.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have seen, my lady, the pains he took with that
+portrait! He would stare at the little picture you lent him of my
+lord for minutes, as if he were looking through it at something
+behind it; then he would get up and go and gaze at your ladyship
+on the pedestal, as if you were the goddess herself able to tell
+him everything about your father; and then he would hurry back to
+his easel, and give a touch or two to the face, looking at it all
+the time as if he loved it. It must have been a cruel pain that
+drove him to smear it as he did!"</p>
+
+<p>Florimel began to feel a little motion of shame somewhere in
+the mystery of her being. But to show that to her servant, would
+be to betray herself -- the more that he seemed the painter's
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>"I will ask Lord Liftore to go and see the portrait, and if he
+thinks it like, I will buy it," she said. "Mr Lenorme is
+certainly very clever with his brush."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm saw that she said this not to insult Lenorme, but to
+blind her groom, and made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>"I will ride there with you tomorrow morning," she added in
+conclusion, and moved on.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm touched his hat, and dropped behind. But the next
+moment he was by her side again.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, my lady, but would you allow me to say one
+word more?"</p>
+
+<p>She bowed her head.</p>
+
+<p>"That woman Caley, I am certain, is not to be trusted. She
+does not love you, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know that?" asked Florimel, speaking steadily, but
+writhing inwardly with the knowledge that the warning was too
+late.</p>
+
+<p>"I have tried her spirit," answered Malcolm, "and know that it
+is of the devil. She loves herself too much to be true."</p>
+
+<p>After a little pause Florimel said,</p>
+
+<p>"I know you mean well, Malcolm; but it is nothing to me
+whether she loves me or not. We don't look for that nowadays from
+servants."</p>
+
+<p>"It is because I love you, my lady," said Malcolm, "that I
+know Caley does not. If she should get hold of anything your
+ladyship would not wish talked about, --"</p>
+
+<p>"That she cannot," said Florimel, but with an inward shudder.
+"She may tell the whole world all she can discover."</p>
+
+<p>She would have cantered on as the words left her lips, but
+something in Malcolm's looks held her. She turned pale; she
+trembled: her father was looking at her as only once had she seen
+him -- in doubt whether his child lied. The illusion was
+terrible. She shook in her saddle. The next moment she was
+galloping along the grassy border of the heath in wild flight
+from her worst enemy, whom yet she could never by the wildest of
+flights escape; for when, coming a little to herself as she
+approached a sand pit, she pulled up, there was her enemy --
+neither before nor behind, neither above nor beneath nor within
+her: it was the self which had just told a lie to the servant of
+whom she had so lately boasted that he never told one in his
+life. Then she grew angry. What had she done to be thus
+tormented? She a marchioness, thus pestered by her own menials --
+pulled in opposing directions by a groom and a maid. She would
+turn them both away, and have nobody about her, either to trust
+or suspect.</p>
+
+<p>She might have called them her good and her evil demon; for
+she knew, that is, she had it somewhere about her, but did not
+look it out, that it was her own cowardice and concealment, her
+own falseness to the traditional, never failing courage of her
+house, her ignobility, and unfitness to represent the Colonsays
+-- her double dealing in short, that had made the marchioness in
+her own right the slave of her woman, the rebuked of her
+groom!</p>
+
+<p>She turned and rode back, looking the other way as she passed
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the top of the heath, riding along to meet
+them came Liftore -- this time to Florimel's consolation and
+comfort: she did not like riding unprotected with a good angel at
+her heels. So glad was she that she did not even take the trouble
+to wonder how he had discovered the road she went. She never
+suspected that Caley had sent his lordship's groom to follow her
+until the direction of her ride should be evident, but took his
+appearance without question, as a loverlike attention, and rode
+home with him, talking the whole way, and cherishing a feeling of
+triumph over both Malcolm and Lenorme. Had she not a protector of
+her own kind? Could she not, when they troubled her, pass from
+their sphere into one beyond their ken? For the poor moment, the
+weak lord who rode beside her seemed to her foolish heart a tower
+of refuge. She was particularly gracious to her lover as they
+rode, and fancied again and again that perhaps the best way out
+of her troubles would be to encourage and at last accept him, so
+getting rid of honeyed delights and rankling stings together, of
+good and evil angels and low bred lover at one sweep. Quiet would
+console for dulness, innocence for weariness. She would fain have
+a good conscience toward Society -- that image whose feet are of
+gold and its head a bag of chaff and sawdust.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm followed sick at heart that she should prove herself
+so shallow. Riding Honour, he had plenty of leisure to brood.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII: A
+CHASTISEMENT</h1>
+
+<p>When she went to her room, there was Caley taking from a
+portmanteau the Highland dress which had occasioned so much. A
+note fell, and she handed it to her mistress. Florimel opened it,
+grew pale as she read it, and asked Caley to bring her a glass of
+water. No sooner had her maid left the room than she sprang to
+the door and bolted it. Then the tears burst from her eyes, she
+sobbed despairingly, and but for the help of her handkerchief
+would have wailed aloud. When Caley returned, she answered to her
+knock that she was lying down, and wanted to sleep. She was,
+however, trying to force further communication from the note. In
+it the painter told her that he was going to set out the next
+morning for Italy, and that her portrait was at the shop of
+certain carvers and gliders, being fitted with a frame for which
+he had made drawings. Three times she read it, searching for some
+hidden message to her heart; she held it up between her and the
+light; then before the fire till it crackled like a bit of old
+parchment; but all was in vain: by no device, intellectual or
+physical, could she coax the shadow of a meaning out of it,
+beyond what lay plain on the surface. She must, she would see him
+again.</p>
+
+<p>That night she was merrier than usual at dinner; after it,
+sang ballad after ballad to please Liftore; then went to her room
+and told Caley to arrange for yet a visit, the next morning, to
+Mr Lenorme's studio. She positively must, she said, secure her
+father's portrait ere the ill tempered painter -- all men of
+genius were hasty and unreasonable -- should have destroyed it
+utterly, as he was certain to do before leaving -- and with that
+she showed her Lenorme's letter. Caley was all service, only said
+that this time she thought they had better go openly. She would
+see Lady Bellair as soon as Lady Lossie was in bed, and explain
+the thing to her.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning therefore they drove to Chelsea in the
+carriage. When the door opened, Florimel walked straight up to
+the study. There she saw no one, and her heart, which had been
+fluttering strangely, sank, and was painfully still, while her
+gaze went wandering about the room. It fell upon the pictured
+temple of Isis: a thick dark veil had fallen and shrouded the
+whole figure of the goddess, leaving only the outline; and the
+form of the worshipping youth had vanished utterly: where he had
+stood, the tesselated pavement, with the serpent of life twining
+through it, and the sculptured walls of the temple, shone out
+clear and bare, as if Hyacinth had walked out into the desert to
+return no more. Again the tears gushed from the heart of
+Florimel: she had sinned against her own fame -- had blotted out
+a fair memorial record that might have outlasted the knight of
+stone under the Norman canopy in Lossie church. Again she sobbed,
+again she choked down a cry that had else become a scream.</p>
+
+<p>Arms were around her. Never doubting whose the embrace, she
+leaned her head against his bosom, stayed her sobs with the one
+word "Cruel!" and slowly opening her tearful eyes, lifted them to
+the face that bent over hers. It was Liftore's. She was dumb with
+disappointment and dismay. It was a hateful moment. He kissed her
+forehead and eyes, and sought her mouth. She shrieked aloud. In
+her very agony at the loss of one to be kissed by another! -- and
+there! It was too degrading! too horrid!</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of her cry someone started up at the other end of
+the room. An easel with a large canvas on it fell, and a man came
+forward with great strides. Liftore let her go, with a muttered
+curse on the intruder, and she darted from the room into the arms
+of Caley, who had had her ear against the other side of the door.
+The same instant Malcolm received from his lordship a well
+planted blow between the eyes, which filled them with flashes and
+darkness. The next, the earl was on the floor. The ancient fury
+of the Celt had burst up into the nineteenth century, and
+mastered a noble spirit. All Malcolm could afterwards remember
+was that he came to himself dealing Liftore merciless blows, his
+foot on his back, and his weapon the earl's whip. His lordship,
+struggling to rise, turned up a face white with hate and impotent
+fury.</p>
+
+<p>"You damned flunkie!" he panted. "I'll have you shot like a
+mangy dog."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanwhile I will chastise you like an insolent nobleman,"
+said Malcolm, who had already almost recovered his self
+possession. "You dare to touch my mistress!"</p>
+
+<p>And with the words he gave him one more stinging cut with the
+whip.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand off, and let it be man to man," cried Liftore, with a
+fierce oath, clenching his teeth in agony and rage.</p>
+
+<p>"That it cannot be, my lord; but I have had enough, and so I
+hope has your lordship," said Malcolm; and as he spoke he threw
+the whip to the other end of the room, and stood back. Liftore
+sprang to his feet, and rushed at him. Malcolm caught him by the
+wrist with a fisherman's grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, I don't want to kill you. Take a warning, and let
+ill be, for fear of worse," he said, and threw his hand from him
+with a swing that nearly dislocated his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>The warning sufficed. His lordship cast him one scowl of
+concentrated hate and revenge, and leaving the room hurried also
+from the house.</p>
+
+<p>At the usual morning hour, Malcolm had ridden to Chelsea,
+hoping to find his friend in a less despairing and more
+companionable mood than when he left him. To his surprise and
+disappointment he learned that Lenorme had sailed by the packet
+to Ostend the night before. He asked leave to go into the study.
+There on its easel stood the portrait of his father as he had
+last seen it -- disfigured with a great smear of brown paint
+across the face. He knew that the face was dry, and he saw that
+the smear was wet: he would see whether he could not, with
+turpentine and a soft brush, remove the insult. In this endeavour
+he was so absorbed, and by the picture itself was so divided from
+the rest of the room, that he neither saw nor heard anything
+until Florimel cried out.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally, those events made him yet more dissatisfied with
+his sister's position. Evil influences and dangers were on all
+sides of her -- the worst possible outcome being that, loving one
+man, she should marry another, and him such a man as Liftore.
+Whatever he heard in the servants' hall, both tone and substance,
+only confirmed the unfavourable impression he had had from the
+first of the bold faced countess. The oldest of her servants had,
+he found, the least respect for their mistress, although all had
+a certain liking for her, which gave their disrespect the heavier
+import. He must get Florimel away somehow. While all was right
+between her and the painter he had been less anxious about her
+immediate surroundings, trusting that Lenorme would ere long
+deliver her. But now she had driven him from the very country,
+and he had left no clue to follow him up by. His housekeeper
+could tell nothing of his purposes. The gardener and she were
+left in charge as a matter of course. He might be back in a week,
+or a year; she could not even conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>Seeming possibilities, in varied mingling with rank
+absurdities passing through Malcolm's mind, as, after Liftore's
+punishment, he lifted the portrait, set it again upon its easel,
+and went on trying to clean the face of it -- with no small
+promise of success. But as he made progress he grew anxious --
+lest with the defilement, he should remove some of the colour as
+well: the painter alone, he concluded at length could be trusted
+to restore the work he had ruined.</p>
+
+<p>He left the house, walked across the road to the riverbank,
+and gave a short sharp whistle. In an instant Davy was in the
+dinghy, pulling for the shore. Malcolm went on board the yacht,
+saw that all was right, gave some orders, went ashore again, and
+mounted Kelpie.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII:
+LIES</h1>
+
+<p>In pain, wrath, and mortification, Liftore rode home. What
+would the men at his club say if they knew that he had been
+thrashed by a scoundrel of a groom for kissing his mistress? The
+fact would soon be out: he must do his best to have it taken for
+what it ought to be -- namely, fiction. It was the harder upon
+him that he knew himself no coward. He must punish the rascal
+somehow -- he owed it to society to punish him; but at present he
+did not see how, and the first thing was to have the first word
+with Florimel; he must see her before she saw the ruffian. He
+rode as hard as he dared to Curzon Street, sent his groom to the
+stables, telling him he should want the horses again before
+lunch, had a hot bath, of which he stood in dire need, and some
+brandy with his breakfast, and then, all unfit for exercise as he
+was, walked to Portland Place.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress and maid rode home together in silence. The moment
+Florimel heard Malcolm's voice she had left the house. Caley
+following had heard enough to know that there was a scuffle at
+least going on in the study, and her eye witnessed against her
+heart that Liftore could have no chance with the detested groom
+if the respect of the latter gave way: would MacPhail thrash his
+lordship? If he did, it would be well she should know it. In the
+hoped event of his lordship's marrying her mistress, it was
+desirable, not only that she should be in favour with both of
+them, but that she should have some hold upon each of a more
+certainly enduring nature: if she held secrets with husband and
+wife separately, she would be in clover for the period of her
+natural existence. As to Florimel, she was enraged at the
+liberties Liftore had taken with her. But alas! was she not in
+some degree in his power? He had found her there, and in tears!
+How did he come to be there? If Malcolm's judgment of her was
+correct, Caley might have told him. Was she already false? She
+pondered within herself, and cast no look upon her maid until she
+had concluded how best to carry herself towards the earl. Then
+glancing at the hooded cobra beside her -- "What an awkward thing
+that Lord Liftore, of all moments, should appear just then!" she
+said. "How could it be?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I haven't an idea, my lady," returned Caley. "My
+lord has been always kind to Mr Lenorme, and I suppose he has
+been in the way of going to see him at work. Who would have
+thought my lord had been such an early riser! There are not many
+gentlemen like him nowadays, my lady! Did your ladyship hear the
+noise in the studio after you left it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard high words," answered her mistress, "-- nothing more.
+How on earth did MacPhail come to be there as well? -- From you,
+Caley, I will not conceal that his lordship behaved indiscreetly;
+in fact he was rude; and I can quite imagine that MacPhail
+thought it his duty to defend me. It is all very awkward for me.
+Who could have imagined him there, and sitting behind amongst the
+pictures! It almost makes me doubt whether Mr Lenorme be really
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me, my lady," returned Caley, "that the man is
+always just where he ought not to be, always meddling with
+something he has no business with. I beg your pardon, my lady,"
+she went on, "but wouldn't it be better to get some staid elderly
+man for a groom, one who has been properly bred up to his duties
+and taught his manners in a gentleman's stable? It is so odd to
+have a groom from a rough seafaring set -- one who behaves like
+the rude fisherman he is, never having had to obey orders of lord
+or lady! The worst of it is, your ladyship will soon be the
+town's talk if you have such a groom on such a horse after you
+everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel's face flushed. Caley saw she was angry, and held her
+peace.</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast was hardly over, when Liftore walked in, looking
+pale, and, in spite of his faultless get up, somewhat
+disreputable: for shame, secret pain, and anger do not favour a
+good carriage or honest mien. Florimel threw herself back in her
+chair -- an action characteristic of the bold faced countess, and
+held out her left hand to him in an expansive, benevolent sort of
+way.</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you come into my presence, looking so well pleased
+with yourself, my lord, after giving me such a fright this
+morning?" she said. "You might at least have made sure that there
+was -- that we were --"</p>
+
+<p>She could not bring herself to complete the sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"My dearest girl!" said his lordship, not only delighted to
+get off so pleasantly, but profoundly flattered by the implied
+understanding, "I found you in tears, and how could I think of
+anything else? It may have been stupid, but I trust you will
+think it pardonable."</p>
+
+<p>Caley had not fully betrayed her mistress to his lordship, and
+he had, entirely to his own satisfaction, explained the liking of
+Florimel for the society of the painter as the mere fancy of a
+girl for the admiration of one whose employment, although nothing
+above the servile, yet gave him a claim something beyond that of
+a milliner or hair dresser, to be considered a judge in matters
+of appearance. As to anything more in the affair -- and with him
+in the field -- of such a notion he was simply incapable: he
+could not have wronged the lady he meant to honour with his hand,
+by regarding it as within the bounds of the possible.</p>
+
+<p>"It was no wonder I was crying," said Florimel. "A seraph
+would have cried to see the state my father's portrait was
+in."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father's portrait!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Did you not know? Mr Lenorme has been painting one from
+a miniature I lent him -- under my supervision, of course; and
+just because I let fall a word that showed I was not altogether
+satisfied with the likeness, what should the wretched man do but
+catch up a brush full of filthy black paint, and smudge the face
+all over!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lenorme will soon set it to rights again. He's not a bad
+fellow though he does belong to the genus irritabile. I will go
+about it this very day."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll not find him, I'm sorry to say. There's a note I had
+from him yesterday. And the picture's quite unfit to be seen --
+utterly ruined. But I can't think how you could miss it!"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell you the truth, Florimel, I had a bit of a scrimmage
+after you left me in the studio." Here his lordship did his best
+to imitate a laugh. "Who should come rushing upon me out of the
+back regions of paint and canvas but that mad groom of yours! I
+don't suppose you knew he was there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not I. I saw a man's feet -- that was all."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there he was, for what reason the devil knows, perdu
+amongst the painter's litter; and when he heard your little
+startled cry -- most musical, most melancholy -- what should he
+fancy but that you were frightened, and he must rush to the
+rescue! And so he did with a vengeance: I don't know when I shall
+quite forget the blow he gave me." And again Liftore laughed, or
+thought he did.</p>
+
+<p>"He struck you!" exclaimed Florimel, rather astonished, but
+hardly able for inward satisfaction to put enough of indignation
+into her tone.</p>
+
+<p>"He did, the fellow! -- But don't say a word about it, for I
+thrashed him so unmercifully that, to tell the truth, I had to
+stop because I grew sorry for him. I am sorry now. So I hope you
+will take no notice of it. In fact, I begin to like the rascal:
+you know I was never favourably impressed with him. By Jove! it
+is not every mistress that can have such a devoted attendant. I
+only hope his over zeal in your service may never get you into
+some compromising position. He is hardly, with all his virtues,
+the proper servant for a young lady to have about her; he has had
+no training -- no proper training at all, you see. But you must
+let the villain nurse himself for a day or two anyhow. It would
+be torture to make him ride, after what I gave him."</p>
+
+<p>His lordship spoke feelingly, with heroic endurance indeed;
+and if Malcolm should dare give his account of the fracas, he
+trusted to the word of a gentleman to outweigh that of a
+groom.</p>
+
+<p>Not all to whom it may seem incredible that a nobleman should
+thus lie, are themselves incapable of doing likewise. Any man may
+put himself in training for a liar by doing things he would be
+ashamed to have known. The art is easily learned, and to practise
+it well is a great advantage to people with designs. Men of
+ability, indeed, if they take care not to try hard to speak the
+truth, will soon become able to lie as truthfully as any sneak
+that sells grease for butter to the poverty of the New Cut.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth remarking to him who can from the lie factual
+carry his thought deeper to the lie essential, that all the power
+of a lie comes from the truth; it has none in itself. So strong
+is the truth that a mere resemblance to it is the source of
+strength to its opposite -- until it be found that like is not
+the same.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel had already made considerable progress in the art,
+but proficiency in lying does not always develop the power of
+detecting it. She knew that her father had on one occasion struck
+Malcolm, and that he had taken it with the utmost gentleness,
+confessing himself in the wrong. Also she had the impression that
+for a menial to lift his hand against a gentleman, even in self
+defence, was a thing unheard of. The blow Malcolm had struck
+Liftore was for her, not himself. Therefore, while her confidence
+in Malcolm's courage and prowess remained unshaken, she was yet
+able to believe that Liftore had done as he said, and supposed
+that Malcolm had submitted. In her heart she pitied without
+despising him.</p>
+
+<p>Caley herself took him the message that he would not be
+wanted. As she delivered it, she smiled an evil smile and dropped
+a mocking courtesy, with her gaze well fixed on his two black
+eyes and the great bruise between them.</p>
+
+<p>When Liftore mounted to accompany Lady Lossie, it took all the
+pluck that belonged to his high breed to enable him to smile and
+smile, with twenty counsellors in different parts of his body
+feelingly persuading him that he was at least a liar. As they
+rode, Florimel asked him how he came to be at the studio that
+morning. He told her that he had wanted very much to see her
+portrait before the final touches were given it. He could have
+made certain suggestions, he believed, that no one else could. He
+had indeed, he confessed -- and felt absolutely virtuous in doing
+so, because here he spoke a fact -- heard from his aunt that
+Florimel was to be there that morning for the last time: it was
+therefore his only chance; but he had expected to be there hours
+before she was out of bed. For the rest, be hoped he had been
+punished enough, seeing her rascally groom -- and once more his
+lordship laughed peculiarly -- had but just failed of breaking
+his arm; it was all he could do to hold the reins.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV: AN
+OLD ENEMY</h1>
+
+<p>One Sunday evening -- it must have been just while Malcolm and
+Blue Peter stood in the Strand listening to a voluntary that
+filled and overflowed an otherwise empty church -- a short,
+stout, elderly woman was walking lightly along the pavement of a
+street of small houses, not far from a thoroughfare which,
+crowded like a market the night before, had now two lively
+borders only -- of holiday makers mingled with church goers. The
+bells for evening prayers were ringing. The sun had vanished
+behind the smoke and steam of London; indeed he might have set --
+it was hard to say without consulting the almanac: but it was not
+dark yet. The lamps in the street were lighted, however, and also
+in the church she passed. She carried a small bible in her hand,
+folded in a pocket handkerchief and looked a decent woman from
+the country. Her quest was a place where the minister said his
+prayers and did not read them out of a book: she had been brought
+up a Presbyterian, and had prejudices in favour of what she took
+for the simpler form of worship. Nor had she gone much farther
+before she came upon a chapel which seemed to promise all she
+wanted. She entered, and a sad looking woman showed her to a
+seat. She sat down square, fixing her eyes at once on the pulpit,
+rather dimly visible over many pews, as if it were one of the
+mountains that surrounded her Jerusalem. The place was but
+scantily lighted, for the community at present could ill afford
+to burn daylight. When the worship commenced, and the
+congregation rose to sing, she got up with a jerk that showed the
+duty as unwelcome as unexpected, but seemed by the way she
+settled herself in her seat for the prayer, already thereby
+reconciled to the differences between Scotch church customs and
+English chapel customs. She went to sleep softly, and woke warily
+as the prayer came to a close.</p>
+
+<p>While the congregation again sang, the minister who had
+officiated hitherto left the pulpit, and another ascended to
+preach. When he began to read the text, the woman gave a little
+start, and leaning forward, peered very hard to gain a
+satisfactory sight of his face between the candles on each side
+of it, but without success; she soon gave up her attempted
+scrutiny, and thence forward seemed to listen with marked
+attention. The sermon was a simple, earnest, at times impassioned
+appeal to the hearts and consciences of the congregation. There
+was little attempt in it at the communication of knowledge of any
+kind, but the most indifferent hearer must have been aware that
+the speaker was earnestly straining after something. To those who
+understood, it was as if he would force his way through every
+stockade of prejudice, ditch of habit, rampart of indifference,
+moat of sin, wall of stupidity, and curtain of ignorance, until
+he stood face to face with the conscience of his hearer.</p>
+
+<p>"Rank Arminianism!" murmured the woman. "Whaur's the gospel o'
+that?" But still she listened with seeming intentness, while
+something of wonder mingled with the something else that set in
+motion every live wrinkle in her forehead, and made her eyebrows
+undulate like writhing snakes.</p>
+
+<p>At length the preacher rose to eloquence, an eloquence
+inspired by the hunger of his soul after truth eternal, and the
+love he bore to his brethren who fed on husks -- an eloquence
+innocent of the tricks of elocution or the arts of rhetoric: to
+have discovered himself using one of them would have sent him
+home to his knees in shame and fear -- an eloquence not devoid of
+discords, the strings of his instrument being now slack with
+emotion, now tense with vision, yet even in those discords
+shrouding the essence of all harmony. When he ceased, the silence
+that followed seemed instinct with thought, with that speech of
+the spirit which no longer needs the articulating voice.</p>
+
+<p>"It canna be the stickit minister!" said the woman to herself.
+The congregation slowly dispersed, but she sat motionless until
+all were gone, and the sad faced woman was putting out the
+lights. Then she rose, drew near through the gloom, and asked her
+the name of the gentleman who had given them such a grand sermon.
+The woman told her, adding that, although he had two or three
+times spoken to them at the prayer meeting -- such words of
+comfort, the poor soul added, as she had never in her life heard
+before -- this was the first time he had occupied the pulpit. The
+woman thanked her, and went out into the street.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless me!" she said to herself, as she walked away; "it
+is the stickit minister! Weel, won'ers 'ill never cease. The age
+o' mirracles 'ill be come back, I'm thinkin'!" And she laughed an
+oily contemptuous laugh in the depths of her profuse person.</p>
+
+<p>What caused her astonishment need cause none to the thoughtful
+mind. The man was no longer burdened with any anxiety as to his
+reception by his hearers; he was hampered by no necromantic agony
+to raise the dead letter of the sermon buried in the tail pocket
+of his coat; he had thirty years more of life, and a whole
+granary filled with such truths as grow for him who is ever
+breaking up the clods of his being to the spiritual sun and wind
+and dew; and above all he had an absolute yet expanding
+confidence in his Father in heaven, and a tender love for
+everything human. The tongue of the dumb had been in training for
+song. And first of all he had learned to be silent while he had
+nought to reveal. He had been trained to babble about religion,
+but through God's grace had failed in his babble, and that was in
+itself a success. He would have made one of the swarm that year
+after year cast themselves like flies on the burning sacrifice
+that they may live on its flesh, with evil odours extinguishing
+the fire that should have gone up in flame; but a burning coal
+from off the altar had been laid on his lips, and had silenced
+them in torture. For thirty years he had held his peace, until
+the word of God had become as a fire in his bones: it was now
+breaking forth in flashes.</p>
+
+<p>On the Monday, Mrs Catanach sought the shop of the deacon that
+was an ironmonger, secured for herself a sitting in the chapel
+for the next half year, and prepaid the sitting.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha kens," she said to herself "what birds may come to gether
+worms an' golachs (beetles) aboot the boody craw (scarecrow),
+Sanny Grame!"</p>
+
+<p>She was one to whom intrigue, founded on the knowledge of
+private history, was as the very breath of her being: she could
+not exist in composure without it. Wherever she went, therefore
+-- and her changes of residence had not been few -- it was one of
+her first cares to enter into connection with some religious
+community, first that she might have scope for her calling --
+that of a midwife, which in London would probably be straightened
+towards that of mere monthly nurse -- and next that thereby she
+might have good chances for the finding of certain weeds of
+occult power that spring mostly in walled gardens, and are rare
+on the roadside -- poisonous things mostly, called generically
+secrets.</p>
+
+<p>At this time she had been for some painful months in
+possession of a most important one -- painful, I say, because all
+those months she had discovered no possibility of making use of
+it. The trial had been hard. Her one passion was to drive the
+dark horses of society, and here she had been sitting week after
+week on the coach box over the finest team she had ever handled,
+ramping and "foming tarre," unable to give them their heads
+because the demon grooms had disappeared and left the looped
+traces dangling from their collars. She had followed Florimel
+from Portlossie -- to Edinburgh, and then to London, but not yet
+had seen how to approach her with probable advantage. In the
+meantime she had renewed old relations with a certain herb doctor
+in Kentish Town, at whose house she was now accommodated. There
+she had already begun to entice the confidences of maid servants,
+by use of what evil knowledge she had, and pretence to more,
+giving herself out as a wise woman. Her faith never failed her
+that, if she but kept handling the fowls of circumstance, one or
+other of them must at length drop an egg of opportunity in her
+lap. When she stumbled upon the schoolmaster, preaching in a
+chapel near her own haunts, she felt something more like a gust
+of gratitude to the dark power that sat behind and pulled the
+strings of events -- for thus she saw through her own projected
+phantom the heart of the universe -- than she had ever yet
+experienced. If there were such things as special providences,
+here, she said, was one; if not, then it was better luck than she
+had looked for. The main point in it was that the dominie seemed
+likely after all to turn out a popular preacher; then beyond a
+doubt other Scotch people would gather to him; this or that
+person might turn up, and anyone might turn out useful; one
+thread might be knotted to another, until all together had made a
+clue to guide her straight through the labyrinth to the centre,
+to lay her hand on the collar of the demon of the house of
+Lossie. It was the biggest game of her life, and had been its
+game long before the opening of my narrative.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV: THE
+EVIL GENIUS</h1>
+
+<p>When Malcolm first visited Mr Graham, the schoolmaster had
+already preached two or three times in the pulpit of Hope Chapel.
+His ministrations at the prayer meetings had led to this. For
+every night on which he was expected to speak, there were more
+people present than on the last; and when the deacons saw this,
+they asked him to preach on the Sundays. After two Sundays they
+came to him in a body, and besought him to become a candidate for
+the vacant pulpit, assuring him of success if he did so. He gave
+a decided refusal, however, nor mentioned his reasons. His friend
+Marshal urged him, pledging himself for his income to an amount
+which would have been riches to the dominie, but in vain.
+Thereupon the silk mercer concluded that he must have money, and,
+kind man as he was, grew kinder in consequence, and congratulated
+him on his independence.</p>
+
+<p>"I depend more on the fewness of my wants than on any earthly
+store for supplying them," said the dominie.</p>
+
+<p>Marshal's thermometer fell a little, but not his anxiety to
+secure services which, he insisted, would be for the glory of God
+and the everlasting good of perishing souls. The schoolmaster
+only smiled queerly and held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>He consented, however, to preach the next Sunday, and on the
+Monday, consented to preach the next again. For several weeks the
+same thing occurred. But he would never promise on a Sunday, or
+allow the briefest advertisement to be given concerning him. All
+said he was feeling his way.</p>
+
+<p>Neither had he, up to this time, said a word to Malcolm about
+the manner in which his Sundays were employed, while yet he
+talked much about a school he had opened in a room occupied in
+the evenings by a debating club, where he was teaching such
+children of small shopkeepers and artisans as found their way to
+him -- in part through his connection with the chapel folk. When
+Malcolm had called on a Sunday, his landlady had been able to
+tell him nothing more than that Mr Graham had gone out at such
+and such an hour -- she presumed to church; and when he had once
+or twice expressed a wish to accompany him wherever he went to
+worship, Mr Graham had managed somehow to let him go without
+having made any arrangement for his doing so.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening after his encounter with Liftore, Malcolm
+visited the schoolmaster, and told him everything about the
+affair. He concluded by saying that Lizzie's wrongs had loaded
+the whip far more than his sister's insult; but that he was very
+doubtful whether he had had any right to constitute himself the
+avenger of either after such a fashion. Mr Graham replied that a
+man ought never to be carried away by wrath, as he had so often
+sought to impress upon him, and not without success: but that, in
+the present case, as the rascal deserved it so well, he did not
+think he need trouble himself much. At the same time he ought to
+remind himself that the rightness or wrongness of any particular
+act was of far less consequence than the rightness or wrongness
+of the will whence sprang the act; and that, while no man could
+be too anxious as to whether a contemplated action ought or ought
+not to be done, at the same time no man could do anything
+absolutely right until he was one with him whose was the only
+absolute self generated purity -- that is, until God dwelt in him
+and he in God.</p>
+
+<p>Before he left, the schoolmaster had acquainted him with all
+that portion of his London history which he had hitherto kept
+from him, and told him where he was preaching.</p>
+
+<p>When Caley returned to her mistress after giving Malcolm the
+message that she did not require his services, and reported the
+condition of his face, Florimel informed her of the chastisement
+he had received from Liftore, and desired her to find out for her
+how he was, for she was anxious about him. Somehow Florimel felt
+sorrier for him than she could well understand, seeing he was but
+a groom -- a great lumbering fellow, all his life used to hard
+knocks, which probably never hurt him. That her mistress should
+care so much about him added yet an acrid touch to Caley's spite;
+but she put on her bonnet and went to the mews, to confer with
+the wife of his lordship's groom, who, although an honest woman,
+had not yet come within her dislike. She went to make her
+inquiries, however, full of grave doubt as to his lordship's
+statement to her mistress; and the result of them was a
+conviction that, beyond his facial bruises, of which Mrs Merton
+had heard no explanation, Malcolm had had no hurt. This confirmed
+her suspicion that his lordship had received what he professed to
+have given: from a window she had seen him mount his horse; and
+her woman's fancy for him; while it added to her hate of Malcolm,
+did not prevent her from thinking of the advantage the discovery
+might bring in the prosecution of her own schemes. But now she
+began to fear Malcolm a little as well as hate him. And indeed he
+was rather a dangerous person to have about, where all but
+himself had secrets more or less bad, and one at least had
+dangerous ones -- as Caley's conscience, or what poor monkey
+rudiment in her did duty for one, in private asserted.
+Notwithstanding her hold upon her mistress, she would not have
+felt it quite safe to let her know all her secrets. She would not
+have liked to say, for instance, how often she woke suddenly with
+a little feeble wail sounding in the ears that fingers cannot
+stop, or to confess that it cried out against a double injustice,
+that of life and that of death: she had crossed the border of the
+region of horror, and went about with a worm coiled in her heart,
+like a centipede in the stone of a peach.</p>
+
+<p>"Merton's wife knows nothing, my lady," she said on her
+return. "I saw the fellow in the yard going about much as usual.
+He will stand a good deal of punishing, I fancy, my lady -- like
+that brute of a horse he makes such a fuss with. I can't help
+wishing, for your ladyship's sake, we had never set eyes on him.
+He 'll do us all a mischief yet before we get rid of him. I've
+had a hinstinc' of it, my lady; from the first moment I set eyes
+on him," Caley's speech was never classic. When she was excited
+it was low. -- "And when I 'ave a hinstinc' of anythink, he's not
+a dog as barks for nothink. Mark my words -- and I'm sure I beg
+your pardon, my lady -- but that man will bring shame on the
+house. He's that arrergant an' interferin' as is certain sure to
+bring your ladyship into public speech an' a scandal: things will
+come to be spoke, my lady, that hadn't ought to be mentioned.
+Why, my lady, he must ha' struck his lordship, afore he'd ha'
+give him two such black eyes as them! And him that good natured
+an' condescendin'! -- I'm sure I don't know what's to come on it,
+but your ladyship might cast a thought on the rest of us females
+as can't take the liberties of born ladies without sufferin' for
+it. Think what the world will say of us. It's hard, my lady, on
+the likes of us."</p>
+
+<p>But Florimel was not one to be talked into doing what she did
+not choose. Neither would she to her maid render her reasons for
+not choosing. She had repaired her fortifications, strengthened
+herself with Liftore, and was confident.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is, Caley," she said, "I have fallen in love with
+Kelpie, and never mean to part with her -- at least till I can
+ride her -- or she kills me. So I can't do without MacPhail. And
+I hope she won't kill him before he has persuaded her to let me
+mount her. The man must go with the mare. Besides, he is such a
+strange fellow, if I turned him away I should quite expect him to
+poison her before he left."</p>
+
+<p>The maid's face grew darker. That her mistress had the
+slightest intention of ever mounting that mare she did not find
+herself fool enough to believe, but of other reasons she could
+spy plenty behind. And such there truly were, though none of the
+sort which Caley's imagination, swift to evil, now supplied. The
+kind of confidence she reposed in her groom, Caley had no faculty
+for understanding, and was the last person to whom her mistress
+could impart the fact of her father's leaving her in charge to
+his young henchman. To the memory of her father she clung, and so
+far faithfully that, even now when Malcolm had begun to occasion
+her a feeling of awe and rebuke, she did not the less confidently
+regard him as her good genius that he was in danger of becoming
+an unpleasant one.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI:
+CONJUNCTIONS</h1>
+
+<p>As the days passed on, and Florimel heard nothing of Lenorme,
+the uneasiness that came with the thought of him gradually
+diminished, and all the associations of opposite complexion
+returned. Untrammelled by fear, the path into a scaring future
+seeming to be cut off, her imagination began to work in the
+quarry of her late experience, shaping its dazzling material into
+gorgeous castles, with foundations deep dug in the air, wherein
+lorded the person and gifts and devotion of the painter. When
+lost in such blissful reveries, not seldom moments arrived in
+which she imagined herself -- even felt as if she were capable,
+if not of marrying Lenorme in the flushed face of outraged
+society, yet of fleeing with him from the judgment of the all but
+all potent divinity to the friendly bosom of some blessed isle of
+the southern seas, whose empty luxuriance they might change into
+luxury, and there living a long harmonious idyll of wedded love,
+in which old age and death should be provided against by never
+taking them into account. This mere fancy, which, poor in courage
+as it was in invention, she was far from capable of carrying into
+effect, yet seemed to herself the outcome and sign of a whole
+world of devotion in her bosom. If one of the meanest of human
+conditions is conscious heroism, paltrier yet is heroism before
+the fact, incapable of self realization! But even the poorest
+dreaming has its influences, and the result of hers was that the
+attentions of Liftore became again distasteful to her. And no
+wonder, for indeed his lordship's presence in the actual world
+made a poor show beside that of the painter in the ideal world of
+the woman who, if she could not with truth be said to love him,
+yet certainly had a powerful fancy for him: the mean phrase is
+good enough, even although the phantom of Lenorme roused in her
+all the twilight poetry of her nature, and the presence of
+Liftore set her whole consciousness in the perpendicular
+shadowless gaslight of prudence and self protection.</p>
+
+<p>The pleasure of her castle building was but seldom interrupted
+by any thought of the shamefulness of her behaviour to him. That
+did not matter much! She could so easily make up for all he had
+suffered! Her selfishness closed her eyes to her own falsehood.
+Had she meant it truly she would have been right both for him and
+for herself. To have repented and become as noble a creature as
+Lenorme was capable of imagining her -- not to say as God had
+designed her, would indeed have been to make up for all he had
+suffered. But the poor blandishment she contemplated as amends,
+could render him blessed only while its intoxication blinded him
+to the fact that it meant nothing of what it ought to mean, that
+behind it was no entire, heart filled woman. Meantime, as the
+past, with its delightful imprudences, its trembling joys, glided
+away, swiftly widening the space between her and her false fears
+and shames, and seeming to draw with it the very facts
+themselves, promising to obliterate at length all traces of them,
+she gathered courage; and as the feeling of exposure that had
+made the covert of Liftore's attentions acceptable, began to
+yield, her variableness began to re-appear, and his lordship to
+find her uncertain as ever. Assuredly, as his aunt said, she was
+yet but a girl incapable of knowing her own mind, and he must not
+press his suit. Nor had he the spur of jealousy or fear to urge
+him: society regarded her as his; and the shadowy repute of the
+bold faced countess intercepted some favourable rays which would
+otherwise have fallen upon the young, and beautiful marchioness
+from fairer luminaries even than Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>But there was one good process, by herself little regarded,
+going on in Florimel: notwithstanding the moral discomfort
+oftener than once occasioned her by Malcolm, her confidence in
+him was increasing; and now that the kind of danger threatening
+her seemed altered, she leaned her mind upon him not a little --
+and more than she could well have accounted for to herself on the
+only grounds she could have adduced -- namely that he was an
+attendant authorized by her father, and, like herself loyal to
+his memory and will; and that, faithful as a dog, he would fly at
+the throat of anyone who dared touch her -- of which she had had
+late proof, supplemented by his silent endurance of consequent
+suffering. Demon sometimes looked angry -- when she teased him --
+had even gone so far as to bare his teeth; but Malcolm had never
+shown temper. In a matter of imagined duty, he might presume --
+but that was a small thing beside the sense of safety his very
+presence brought with it. She shuddered indeed at the remembrance
+of one look he had given her, but that had been for no behaviour
+to himself; and now that the painter was gone, she was clear of
+all temptation to the sort of thing that had caused it; and
+never, never more would she permit herself to be drawn into
+circumstances the least equivocal -- If only Lenorme would come
+back, and allow her to be his friend -- his best friend -- his
+only young lady friend, leaving her at perfect liberty to do just
+as she liked, then all would be well -- absolutely comfortable!
+In the meantime, life was endurable without him -- and would be,
+provided Liftore did not make himself disagreeable. If he did,
+there were other gentlemen who might be induced to keep him in
+check: she would punish him -- she knew how. She liked him
+better, however, than any of those.</p>
+
+<p>It was out of pure kindness to Malcolm, upon Liftore's
+representation of how he had punished him, that for the rest of
+the week she dispensed with his attendance upon herself. But he,
+unaware of the lies Liftore had told her, and knowing nothing,
+therefore, of her reason for doing so, supposed she resented the
+liberty he had taken in warning her against Caley, feared the
+breach would go on widening, and went about, if not quite
+downcast, yet less hopeful still. Everything seemed going counter
+to his desires. A whole world of work lay before him: -- a
+harbour to build; a numerous fisher clan to house as they ought
+to be housed; justice to do on all sides; righteous servants to
+appoint in place of oppressors; and, all over, to show the
+heavens more just than his family had in the past allowed them to
+appear; he had mortgages and other debts to pay off -- clearing
+his feet from fetters and his hands from manacles, that he might
+be the true lord of his people; he had Miss Horn to thank, and
+the schoolmaster to restore to the souls and hearts of
+Portlossie; and, next of all to his sister, he had old Duncan,
+his first friend and father, to find and minister to. Not a day
+passed, not a night did he lay down his head, without thinking of
+him. But the old man, whatever his hardships, and even the
+fishermen, with no harbour to run home to from the wild elements,
+were in no dangers to compare with such as threatened his sister.
+To set her free was his first business, and that business as yet
+refused to be done. Hence he was hemmed in, shut up, incarcerated
+in stubborn circumstance, from a long reaching range of duties,
+calling aloud upon his conscience and heart to hasten with the
+first, that he might reach the second. What rendered it the more
+disheartening was, that, having discovered, as he hoped, how to
+compass his first end, the whole possibility had by his sister's
+behaviour, and the consequent disappearance of Lenorme, been
+swept from him, leaving him more resourceless than ever.</p>
+
+<p>When Sunday evening came, he found his way to Hope Chapel, and
+walking in, was shown to a seat by a grimy faced pew opener. It
+was with strange feelings he sat there, thinking of the past, and
+looking for the appearance of his friend on the pulpit stair. But
+his feelings would have been stranger still had he seen who sat
+immediately in the pew behind him, watching him like a cat
+watching a mouse, or rather like a half grown kitten watching a
+rat, for she was a little frightened at him, even while resolved
+to have him. But how could she doubt her final success, when her
+plans were already affording her so much more than she had
+expected? Who would have looked for the great red stag himself to
+come browsing so soon about the scarecrow! He was too large game,
+however, to be stalked without due foresight.</p>
+
+<p>When the congregation was dismissed, after a sermon the power
+of whose utterance astonished Malcolm, accustomed as he was to
+the schoolmaster's best moods, he waited until the preacher was
+at liberty from the unwelcome attentions and vulgar
+congratulations of the richer and more forward of his hearers,
+and then joined him to walk home with him. -- He was followed to
+the schoolmaster's lodging, and thence, an hour after, to his
+own, by a little boy far too little to excite suspicion, the
+grandson of Mrs Catanach's friend, the herb doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Until now the woman had not known that Malcolm was in London.
+When she learned that he was lodged so near Portland Place, she
+concluded that he was watching his sister, and chuckled over the
+idea of his being watched in turn by herself.</p>
+
+<p>Every day for weeks after her declaration concerning the birth
+of Malcolm, had the mind of Mrs Catanach been exercised to the
+utmost to invent some mode of undoing her own testimony. She
+would have had no scruples, no sense of moral disgust, in eating
+every one of her words; but a magistrate and a lawyer had both
+been present at the uttering of them, and she feared the risk.
+Malcolm's behaviour to her after his father's death had
+embittered the unfriendly feelings she had cherished towards him
+for many years. While she believed him base born, and was even
+ignorant as to his father, she had thought to secure power over
+him for the annoyance of the blind old man to whom she had
+committed him, and whom she hated with the hatred of a wife with
+whom for the best of reasons he had refused to live; but she had
+found in the boy a rectitude over which although she had assailed
+it from his childhood, she could gain no influence. Either a
+blind repugnance in Malcolm's soul, or a childish instinct of and
+revulsion from embodied evil, had held them apart. Even then it
+had added to her vile indignation that she regarded him as owing
+her gratitude for not having murdered him at the instigation of
+his uncle; and when at length, to her endless chagrin, she had
+herself unwittingly supplied the only lacking link in the
+testimony that should raise him to rank and wealth, she imagined,
+that by making affidavit to the facts she had already divulged,
+she enlarged the obligation infinitely, and might henceforth hold
+him in her hand a tool for further operations. When, therefore,
+he banished her from Lossie House, and sought to bind her to
+silence as to his rank by the conditional promise of a small
+annuity, she hated him with her whole huge power of hating. And
+now she must make speed, for his incognito in a great city
+afforded a thousandfold facility for doing him a mischief. And
+first she must draw closer a certain loose tie she had already
+looped betwixt herself and the household of Lady Bellair. This
+tie was the conjunction of her lying influence with the credulous
+confidence of a certain very ignorant and rather wickedly
+romantic scullery maid with whom, having in espial seen her come
+from the house she had scraped acquaintance, and to whom, for the
+securing of power over her through her imagination, she had made
+the strangest and most appalling disclosures. Amongst other
+secret favours, she had promised to compound for her a horrible
+mixture -- some of whose disgusting ingredients, as potent as
+hard to procure, she named in her awe stricken hearing -- which,
+administered under certain conditions and with certain
+precautions, one of which was absolute secrecy in regard to the
+person who provided it, must infallibly secure for her the
+affections of any man on whom she might cast a loving eye, and
+whom she could either with or without his consent, contrive to
+cause partake of the same. This girl she now sought, and from her
+learned all she knew about Malcolm. Pursuing her enquiries into
+the nature and composition of the household, however, Mrs
+Catanach soon discovered a far more capable and indeed less
+scrupulous associate and instrument in Caley. I will not
+introduce my reader to any of their evil councils, although, for
+the sake of my own credit, it might be well to be less
+considerate, seeing that many, notwithstanding the superabundant
+evidence of history, find it all but impossible to believe in the
+existence of such moral abandonment as theirs. I will merely
+state concerning them, and all the relations of the two women,
+that Mrs Catanach assumed and retained the upper hand, in virtue
+of her superior knowledge, invention, and experience, gathering
+from Caley, as she had hoped much valuable information, full of
+reactions, and tending to organic development of scheme in the
+brain of the arch plotter. But their designs were so mutually
+favourable as to promise from the first a final coalescence in
+some common plan for their attainment.</p>
+
+<p>Those who knew that Miss Campbell, as Portlossie regarded her,
+had been in reality Lady Lossie, and was the mother of Malcolm,
+knew as well that Florimel had no legal title even to the family
+cognomen; but if his mother, and therefore the time of his
+mother's death, remained unknown, the legitimacy of his sister
+would remain unsuspected even upon his appearance as the heir.
+Now there were but three besides Mrs Catanach and Malcolm who did
+know who was his mother, namely, Miss Horn, Mr Graham, and a
+certain Mr Morrison, a laird and magistrate near Portlossie, an
+elderly man, and of late in feeble health. The lawyers the
+marquis had employed on his death bed did not know: he had, for
+Florimel's sake taken care that they should not. Upon what she
+knew and what she guessed of these facts regarded in all their
+relations according to her own theories of human nature the
+midwife would found a scheme of action.</p>
+
+<p>Doubtless she saw, and prepared for it, that after a certain
+point should be reached the very similarity of their designs must
+cause a rupture between her and Caley; neither could expect the
+other to endure such a rival near her hidden throne of influence;
+for the aim of both was power in a great family, with consequent
+money, and consideration, and midnight councils, and the wielding
+of all the weapons of hint and threat and insinuation. There was
+one difference, indeed, that in Caley's eye money was the chief
+thing, while power itself was the Swedenborgian hell of the
+midwife's bliss.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII:
+AN INNOCENT PLOT</h1>
+
+<p>Florimel and Lady Clementina Thornicroft, the same who in the
+park rebuked Malcolm for his treatment of Kelpie, had met several
+times during the spring, and had been mutually attracted --
+Florimel as to a nature larger, more developed, more self
+supporting than her own, and Lady Clementina as to one who, it
+was plain, stood in sore need of what countenance and
+encouragement to good and free action the friendship of one more
+experienced might afford her. Lady Clementina was but a few years
+older than Florimel, it is true, but had shown a courage which
+had already wrought her an unquestionable influence, and that
+chiefly with the best. The root of this courage was compassion.
+Her rare humanity of heart would, at the slightest appearance of
+injustice, drive her like an angel with a flaming sword against
+customs regarded, consciously or unconsciously, as the very
+buttresses of social distinction. Anything but a wise woman, she
+had yet so much in her of what is essential to all wisdom -- love
+to her kind, that, if as yet she had done little but blunder, she
+had at least blundered beautifully. On every society that had for
+its declared end the setting right of wrong or the alleviation of
+misery, she lavished, and mostly wasted, her money. Every misery
+took to her the shape of a wrong. Hence to every mendicant that
+could trump up a plausible story, she offered herself a willing
+prey. Even when the barest faced imposition was brought home to
+one of the race parasitical, her first care was to find all
+possible excuse for his conduct: it was matter of pleasure to her
+friends when she stopped there, and made no attempt at absolute
+justification.</p>
+
+<p>Left like Florimel an orphan, but at a yet earlier age, she
+had been brought up with a care that had gone over into severity,
+against which her nature had revolted with an energy that
+gathered strength from her own repression of its signs; and when
+she came of age, and took things into her own hands, she carried
+herself in its eyes so oddly, yet with such sweetness and dignity
+and consistency in her oddest extravagances, that society
+honoured her even when it laughed at her, loved her, listened to
+her, applauded, approved -- did everything except imitate her --
+which indeed was just as well, for else confusion would have been
+worse confounded. She was always rushing to defence -- with
+money, with indignation, with refuge. It would look like a
+caricature did I record the number of charities to which she
+belonged, and the various societies which, in the exuberance of
+her passionate benevolence, she had projected and of necessity
+abandoned. Yet still the fire burned, for her changes were from
+no changeableness: through them all the fundamental operation of
+her character remained the same. The case was that, for all her
+headlong passion for deliverance, she could not help discovering
+now and then, through an occasional self assertion of that real
+good sense which her rampant and unsubjected benevolence could
+but overlay, not finally smother, that she was either doing
+nothing at all, or more evil than good.</p>
+
+<p>The lack of discipline in her goodness came out in this, at
+times amusingly, that she would always at first side with the
+lower or weaker or worse. If a dog had torn a child, and was
+going to be killed in consequence, she would not only intercede
+for the dog, but absolutely side with him, mentioning this and
+that provocation which the naughty child must have given him ere
+he could have been goaded to the deed. Once when the schoolmaster
+in her village was going to cane a boy for cruelty to a cripple,
+she pleaded for his pardon on the ground that it was worse to be
+cruel than to be a cripple, and therefore more to be pitied.
+Everything painful was to her cruel, and softness and indulgence,
+moral honey and sugar and nuts to all alike, was the panacea for
+human ills. She could not understand that infliction might be
+loving kindness. On one occasion when a boy was caught in the act
+of picking her pocket, she told the policeman he was doing
+nothing of the sort -- he was only searching for a lozenge for
+his terrible cough; and in proof of her asserted conviction, she
+carried him home with her, but lost him before morning, as well
+as the spoon with which he had eaten his gruel.</p>
+
+<p>As to her person I have already made a poor attempt at
+describing it. She might have been grand but for loveliness. When
+she drew herself up in indignation, however, she would look grand
+for the one moment ere the blood rose to her cheek, and the water
+to her eyes. She would have taken the whole world to her infinite
+heart, and in unwisdom coddled it into corruption. Praised be the
+grandeur of the God who can endure to make and see his children
+suffer. Thanks be to him for his north winds and his poverty, and
+his bitterness that falls upon the spirit that errs: let those
+who know him thus praise the Lord for his goodness. But Lady
+Clementina had not yet descried the face of the Son of Man
+through the mists of Mount Sinai, and she was not one to justify
+the ways of God to men. Not the less was it the heart of God in
+her that drew her to the young marchioness, over whom was cast
+the shadow of a tree that gave but baneful shelter. She liked her
+frankness, her activity, her daring, and fancied that, like
+herself she was at noble feud with that infernal parody of the
+kingdom of heaven, called Society. She did not well understand
+her relation to Lady Bellair, concerning whom she was in doubt
+whether or not she was her legal guardian, but she saw plainly
+enough that the countess wanted to secure her for her nephew, and
+this nephew had about him a certain air of perdition, which even
+the catholic heart of Lady Clementina could not brook. She saw
+too that, being a mere girl, and having no scope of choice in the
+limited circle of their visitors, she was in great danger of
+yielding without a struggle, and she longed to take her in charge
+like a poor little persecuted kitten, for the possession of which
+each of a family of children was contending. What if her father
+had belonged to a rowdy set, was that any reason why his innocent
+daughter should be devoured, body and soul and possessions, by
+those of the same set who had not yet perished in their sins?
+Lady Clementina thanked Heaven that she came herself of decent
+people, who paid their debts, dared acknowledge themselves in the
+wrong, and were as honest as if they had been born peasants; and
+she hoped a shred of the mantle of their good name had dropped
+upon her, big enough to cover also this poor little thing who had
+come of no such parentage. With her passion for redemption
+therefore, she seized every chance of improving her acquaintance
+with Florimel, and it was her anxiety to gain such a standing in
+her favour as might further her coveted ministration, that had
+prevented her from bringing her charge of brutality against
+Malcolm as soon as she discovered whose groom he was: when she
+had secured her footing on the peak of her friendship, she would
+unburden her soul, and meantime the horse must suffer for his
+mistress -- a conclusion in itself a great step in advance, for
+it went dead against one of her most confidently argued
+principles, namely, that the pain of any animal is, in every
+sense, of just as much consequence as the pain of any other,
+human or inferior: pain is pain, she said; and equal pains are
+equal wherever they sting; -- in which she would have been right,
+I think, if pain and suffering were the same thing; but, knowing
+well that the same degree and even the same kind of pain means
+two very different things in the foot and in the head, I refuse
+the proposition.</p>
+
+<p>Happily for Florimel, she had by this time made progress
+enough to venture a proposal -- namely, that she should accompany
+her to a small estate she had on the south coast, with a little
+ancient house upon it -- a strange place altogether, she said --
+to spend a week or two in absolute quiet -- only she must come
+alone -- without even a maid: she would take none herself. This
+she said because, with the instinct, if not quite insight, of a
+true nature, she could not endure the woman Caley.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come with me there for a fortnight?" she
+concluded.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be delighted," returned Florimel, without a moment s
+hesitation. "I am getting quite sick of London. There's no room
+in it. And there's the spring all outside, and can't get in here!
+I shall be only too glad to go with you, you dear creature!"</p>
+
+<p>"And on those hard terms -- no maid, you know?" insisted
+Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"The only thing wanted to make the pleasure complete! I shall
+be charmed to be rid of her."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you so independent."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't imagine me such a baby as not to be able to get on
+without a maid! You should have seen me in Scotland! I hated
+having a woman about me then. And indeed I don't like it a bit
+better now -- only everybody has one, and your clothes want
+looking after," added Florimel, thinking what a weight it would
+be off her if she could get rid of Caley altogether. "-- But I
+should like to take my horse," she said. "I don't know what I
+should do in the country without Abbot."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; we must have our horses," returned Clementina.
+"And -- yes -- you had better bring your groom."</p>
+
+<p>"Please. You will find him very useful. He can do anything and
+everything- -- and is so kind and helpful!"</p>
+
+<p>"Except to his horse," Clementina was on the point of saying,
+but thought again she would first secure the mistress, and bide
+her time to attack the man.</p>
+
+<p>Before they parted, the two ladies had talked themselves into
+ecstasies over the anticipated enjoyments of their scheme. It
+must be carried out at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us tell nobody," said Lady Clementina, "and set off
+tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Enchanting!" cried Florimel, in full response.</p>
+
+<p>Then her brow clouded.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one difficulty, though," she said. "-- No man could
+ride Kelpie with a led horse; and if we had to employ another,
+Liftore would be sure to hear where we had gone."</p>
+
+<p>"That would spoil all," said Clementina. "But how much better
+it would be to give that poor creature a rest, and bring the
+other I see him on sometimes!"</p>
+
+<p>"And by the time we came back, there would not be a living
+creature, horse or man, anything bigger than a rat, about the
+stable. Kelpie herself would be dead of hunger, if she hadn't
+been shot. No, no; where Malcolm goes Kelpie must go. Besides,
+she's such fun -- you can't think!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll tell you what!" cried Clementina, after a moment's
+pause of perplexity: "we'll ride down! It's not a hundred miles,
+and we can take as many days on the road as we please."</p>
+
+<p>"Better and better!" cried Florimel. "We'll run away with each
+other. -- But what will dear old Bellair say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind her," rejoined Clementina. "She will have nothing
+to say. You can write and tell her as much as will keep her from
+being really alarmed. Order your man to get everything ready, and
+I will instruct mine. He is such a staid old fellow, you know, he
+will be quite protection. Tomorrow morning we shall set out
+together for a ride in Richmond Park -- that lying in our way.
+You can leave a letter on the breakfast table, saying you are
+gone with me for a little quiet. You're not in chancery -- are
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," answered Florimel. "I suppose I'm all right.
+-- Any how, whether I'm in chancery or not, here I am, and going
+with you; and if chancery don't like it, chancery may come and
+fetch me."</p>
+
+<p>"Send anything you think you may want to my house. I shall get
+a box ready, and we will write from some town on our way to have
+it sent there, and then we can write for it from The Gloom. We
+shall find all mere necessaries there."</p>
+
+<p>So the thing was arranged: they would start quite early the
+next morning; and that there might be no trouble in the streets,
+Malcolm should go before with Kelpie, and wait them in the
+park.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII:
+THE JOURNEY</h1>
+
+<p>Malcolm was overjoyed at the prospect of an escape to the
+country -- and yet more to find that his mistress wanted to have
+him with her -- more still to understand, that the journey was to
+be kept a secret. Perhaps now, far from both Caley and Liftore,
+he might say something to open her eyes; yet how should he avoid
+the appearance of a tale bearer?</p>
+
+<p>It was a sweet fresh morning, late in the spring -- those
+loveliest of hours that unite the seasons, like the shimmering
+question of green or blue in the feathers of a peacock. He had
+set out an hour before the rest, and now, a little way within the
+park, was coaxing Kelpie to stand, that he might taste the
+morning in peace. The sun was but a few degrees above the
+horizon, shining with all his heart, and the earth was taking the
+shine with all hers. "I too am light," she was saying, "although
+I can but receive it." The trees were covered with baby leaves,
+half wrapped in their swaddling clothes, and their breath was a
+warm aromatic odour in the glittering air. The air and the light
+seemed one, and Malcolm felt as if his soul were breathing the
+light into its very depths, while his body was drinking the soft
+spicy wind. For Kelpie, she was as full of life as if she had
+been meant for a winged horse, but by some accident of nature the
+wing cases had never opened, and the wing life was for ever
+trying to get out at her feet. The consequent restlessness, where
+there was plenty of space as here, caused Malcolm no more
+discomposure than, in his old fishing days, a gale with plenty of
+sea room. And the song of the larks was one with the light and
+the air. The budding of the trees was their way of singing; but
+the larks beat them at that. "What a power of joy," thought
+Malcolm, "there must be in God, to be able to keep so many larks
+so full of bliss!" He was going to say -- "without getting
+tired;" but he saw that it was the eternal joy itself that
+bubbled from their little fountains: weariness there would be the
+silence of all song, would be death, utter vanishment to the
+gladness of the universe. The sun would go out like a spark upon
+burnt paper, and the heart of man would forget the sound of
+laughter. Then he said to himself: "The larks do not make their
+own singing; do mortals make their own sighing?" And he saw that
+at least they might open wider the doors of their hearts to the
+Perseus Joy that comes to slay the grief monsters. Then he
+thought how his life had been widening out with the years. He
+could not say that it was now more pleasant than it had been; he
+had Stoicism enough to doubt whether it would ever become so from
+any mere change of circumstances. Dangers and sufferings that one
+is able for, are not misfortunes or even hardships -- so far from
+such, that youth delights in them. Indeed he sorely missed the
+adventure of the herring fishing. Kelpie, however, was as good as
+a stiff gale. If only all were well with his sister! Then he
+would go back to Portlossie and have fishing enough. But he must
+be patient and follow as he was led. At three and twenty, he
+reflected, Milton was content to seem to himself but a poor
+creature, and was careful only to be ready for whatever work
+should hereafter be required of him: such contentment, with such
+hope and resolve at the back of it, he saw to be the right and
+the duty both of every man. He whose ambition is to be ready when
+he is wanted, whatever the work may be, may wait not the less
+watchful that he is content. His heart grew lighter, his head
+clearer, and by the time the two ladies with their attendant
+appeared, he felt such a masterdom over Kelpie as he had never
+felt before.</p>
+
+<p>They rode twenty miles that day with ease, putting up at the
+first town. The next day they rode about the same distance. They
+next day they rode nearly thirty miles. On the fourth, with an
+early start, and a good rest in the middle, they accomplished a
+yet greater distance, and at night arrived at The Gloom,
+Wastbeach -- after a journey of continuous delight to three at
+least of the party, Florimel and Malcolm having especially
+enjoyed that portion of it which led through Surrey, where
+England and Scotland meet and mingle in waste, heathery moor, and
+rich valley. Much talk had passed between the ladies, and
+Florimel had been set thinking about many things, though
+certainly about none after the wisest fashion.</p>
+
+<p>A young half moon was still up when, after riding miles
+through pine woods, they at length drew near the house. Long
+before they reached it, however, a confused noise of dogs met
+them in the forest. Clementina had written to the housekeeper,
+and every dog about the place, and the dogs were multitudinous,
+had been expecting her all day, had heard the sound of their
+horses' hoofs miles off and had at once begun to announce her
+approach. Nor were the dogs the only cognisant or expectant
+animals. Most of the creatures about the place understood that
+something was happening, and probably associated it with their
+mistress; for almost every live thing knew her -- from the
+rheumatic cart horse, forty years of age, and every whit as
+respectable in Clementina's eyes as her father's old butler, to
+the wild cats that haunted the lofts and garrets of the old
+Elizabethan hunting lodge.</p>
+
+<p>When they dismounted, the ladies could hardly get into the
+house for dogs; those which could not reach their mistress,
+turned to Florimel, and came swarming about her and leaping upon
+her, until, much as she liked animal favour, she would gladly
+have used her whip -- but dared not, because of the presence of
+their mistress. If the theories of that mistress allowed them
+anything of a moral nature, she was certainly culpable in
+refusing them their right to a few cuts of the whip.</p>
+
+<p>Mingled with all the noises of dogs and horses, came a soft
+nestling murmur that filled up the interspaces of sound which
+even their tumult could not help leaving. Florimel was too tired
+to hear it, but Malcolm heard it, and it filled all the
+interspaces of his soul with a speechless delight. He knew it for
+the still small voice of the awful sea.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel scarcely cast a glance around the dark old fashioned
+room into which she was shown, but went at once to bed, and when
+the old housekeeper carried her something from the supper table
+at which she had been expected, she found her already fast
+asleep. By the time Malcolm had put Kelpie to rest, he also was a
+little tired, and lay awake no moment longer than his sister.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX:
+DISCIPLINE</h1>
+
+<p>What with rats and mice, and cats and owls, and creaks and
+cracks, there was no quiet about the place from night to morning;
+and what with swallows and rooks, and cocks and kine, and horses
+and foals, and dogs and pigeons and peacocks, and guinea fowls
+and turkeys and geese, and every farm creature but pigs, which,
+with all her zootrophy, Clementina did not like, no quiet from
+morning to night. But if there was no quiet, there was plenty of
+calm, and the sleep of neither brother nor sister was
+disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel awoke in the sweetest concert of pigeon murmuring,
+duck diplomacy, fowl foraging, foal whinnering -- the word wants
+an r in it -- and all the noises of rural life. The sun was
+shining into the room by a window far off at the further end,
+bringing with him strange sylvan shadows, not at once to be
+interpreted. He must have been shining for hours, so bright and
+steady did he shine. She sprang out of bed -- with no lazy London
+resurrection of the old buried, half sodden corpse, sleepy and
+ashamed, but with the new birth of the new day, refreshed and
+strong, like a Hercules baby. A few aching remnants of stiffness
+was all that was left of the old fatigue. It was a heavenly joy
+to think that no Caley would come knocking at her door. She
+glided down the long room to the sunny window, drew aside the
+rich old faded curtain, and peeped out. Nothing but pines and
+pines -- Scotch firs all about and everywhere! They came within a
+few yards of the window. She threw it open. The air was still,
+the morning sun shone hot upon them, and the resinous odour
+exhaled from their bark and their needles and their fresh buds,
+filled the room -- sweet and clean. There was nothing, not even a
+fence, between this wing of the house and the wood.</p>
+
+<p>All through his deep sleep, Malcolm heard the sound of the sea
+-- whether of the phantom sea in his soul, or of the world sea to
+whose murmurs he had listened with such soft delight as he fell
+asleep, matters little the sea was with him in his dreams. But
+when he awoke it was to no musical crushing of water drops, no
+half articulated tones of animal speech, but to tumult and out
+cry from the stables. It was but too plain that he was wanted.
+Either Kelpie had waked too soon, or he had overslept himself:
+she was kicking furiously. Hurriedly induing a portion of his
+clothing, he rushed down and across the yard, shouting to her as
+he ran, like a nurse as she runs up the stair to a screaming
+child. She stopped once to give an eager whinny, and then fell to
+again. Griffiths, the groom, and the few other men about the
+place, were looking on appalled. He darted to the corn bin, got a
+great pottleful of oats, and shot into her stall. She buried her
+nose in them like the very demon of hunger, and he left her for
+the few moments of peace that would follow. He must finish his
+dressing as fast as he could: already, after four days of travel,
+which with her meant anything but a straight forward jog trot
+struggle with space, she needed a good gallop! When he returned,
+he found her just finishing her oats, and beginning to grow angry
+with her own nose for getting so near the bottom of the manger.
+While yet there was no worse sign, however, than the fidgetting
+of her hind quarters, and she was still busy, he made haste to
+saddle her. But her unusually obstinate refusal of the bit, and
+his difficulty in making her open her unwilling jaws, gave
+unmistakable indication of coming conflict. Anxiously he asked
+the bystanders after some open place where he might let her go --
+fields or tolerably smooth heath, or sandy beach. He dared not
+take her through the trees, he said, while she was in such a
+humour; she would dash herself to pieces. They told him there was
+a road straight from the stables to the shore, and there miles of
+pure sand without a pebble. Nothing could be better. He mounted
+and rode away.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel was yet but half dressed, when the door of her room
+opened suddenly, and Lady Clementina darted in -- the lovely
+chaos of her night not more than half as far reduced to order as
+that of Florimel's. Her moonlight hair, nearly as long as that of
+the fabled Godiva, was flung wildly about her in heavy masses.
+Her eyes were wild also; she looked like a holy Maenad. With a
+glide like the swoop of an avenging angel, she pounced upon
+Florimel, caught her by the wrist and pulled her towards the
+door. Florimel was startled, but made no resistance. She half
+led, half dragged her up a stair that rose from a corner of the
+hall gallery to the battlements of a little square tower, whence
+a few yards of the beach, through a chain of slight openings
+amongst the pines, was visible. Upon that spot of beach, a
+strange thing was going on -- at which afresh Clementina gazed
+with indignant horror, but Florimel eagerly stared with the
+forward borne eyes of a spectator of the Roman arena. She saw
+Kelpie reared on end, striking out at Malcolm with her fore
+hoofs, and snapping with angry teeth -- then upon those teeth
+receive such a blow from his fist that she swerved, and wheeling,
+flung her hind hoofs at his head. But Malcolm was too quick for
+her; she spent her heels in the air, and he had her by the bit.
+Again she reared, and would have struck at him, but he kept well
+by her side, and with the powerful bit forced her to rear to her
+full height. Just as she was falling backwards, he pushed her
+head from him, and bearing her down sideways, seated himself on
+it the moment it touched the ground. Then first the two women
+turned to each other. An arch of victory bowed Florimel's lip;
+her eyebrows were uplifted; the blood flushed her cheek, and
+darkened the blue in her wide opened eyes. Lady Clementina's
+forehead was gathered in vertical wrinkles over her nose, and all
+about her eyes was contracted as if squeezing from them the flame
+of indignation, while her teeth and lips were firmly closed. The
+two made a splendid contrast. When Clementina's gaze fell on her
+visitor, the fire in her eyes burned more angry still: her soul
+was stirred by the presence of wrong and cruelty, and here, her
+guest, and looking her straight in the eyes, was a young woman,
+one word from whom would stop it all, actually enjoying the
+sight!</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Lossie, I am ashamed of you!" she said, with severest
+reproof; and turning from her, she ran down the stair.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned again towards the sea. Presently she caught
+sight of Clementina glimpsing though the pines, "now in glimmer
+and now in gloom," as she sped swiftly to the shore, and, after a
+few short minutes of disappearance, saw her emerge upon the space
+of sand where sat Malcolm on the head of the demoness. But alas!
+she could only see. She could hardly even hear the sound of the
+tide.</p>
+
+<p>"MacPhail, are you a man?" cried Clementina, startling him so
+that in another instant the floundering mare would have been on
+her feet. With a right noble anger in her face, and her hair
+flying like a wind torn cloud, she rushed out of the wood upon
+him, where he sat quietly tracing a proposition of Euclid on the
+sand with his whip.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, and a bold one," was on Malcolm's lips for reply, but he
+bethought himself in time.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry what I am compelled to do should annoy your
+ladyship," he said.</p>
+
+<p>What with indignation and breathless -- she had run so fast --
+Clementina had exhausted herself in that one exclamation, and
+stood panting and staring. The black bulk of Kelpie lay
+outstretched on the yellow sand, giving now and then a sprawling
+kick or a wamble like a lumpy snake, and her soul commiserated
+each movement as if it had been the last throe of dissolution,
+while the grey fire of the mare's one visible fierce eye, turned
+up from the shadow of Malcolm's superimposed bulk, seemed to her
+tender heart a mute appeal for woman's help.</p>
+
+<p>As Malcolm spoke, he cautiously shifted his position, and,
+half rising, knelt with one knee where he had sat before, looking
+observant at Lady Clementina. The champion of oppressed animality
+soon recovered speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Get off the poor creature's head instantly," she said, with
+dignified command. "I will permit no such usage of living thing
+on my ground."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry to seem rude, my lady," answered Malcolm,
+"but to obey you would perhaps be to ruin my mistress's property.
+If the mare were to break away, she would dash herself to pieces
+in the wood."</p>
+
+<p>"You have goaded her to madness."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm the more bound to take care of her then," said Malcolm.
+"But indeed it is only temper -- such temper, however, that I
+almost believe she is at times possessed of a demon."</p>
+
+<p>"The demon is in yourself. There is nothing in her but what
+your cruelty has put there. Let her up, I command you."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare not, my lady. If she were to get loose she would tear
+your ladyship to pieces."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take my chance."</p>
+
+<p>"But I will not my lady. I know the danger, and have to take
+care of you who do not. There is no occasion to be uneasy about
+the mare. She is tolerably comfortable. I am not hurting her --
+not much. Your ladyship does not reflect how strong a horse's
+skull is. And you see what great powerful breaths she draws!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is in agony," cried Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least, my lady. She is only balked of her own way,
+and does not like it."</p>
+
+<p>"And what right have you to balk her of her own way? Has she
+no right to a mind of her own?"</p>
+
+<p>"She may of course have her mind, but she can't have her way.
+She has got a master."</p>
+
+<p>"And what right have you to be her master?"</p>
+
+<p>"That my master, my Lord Lossie, gave me the charge of
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean that sort of right; that goes for nothing. What
+right in the nature of things can you have to tyrannize over any
+creature?"</p>
+
+<p>"None, my lady. But the higher nature has the right to rule
+the lower in righteousness. Even you can't have your own way
+always, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly cannot now, so long as you keep in that position.
+Pray, is it in virtue of your being the higher nature that you
+keep my way from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady. But it is in virtue of right. If I wanted to
+take your ladyship's property, your dogs would be justified in
+refusing me my way. -- I do not think I exaggerate when I say
+that, if my mare here had her way, there would not be a living
+creature about your house by this day week."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina had never yet felt upon her the power of a
+stronger nature than her own. She had had to yield to authority,
+but never to superiority. Hence her self will had been abnormally
+developed. Her very compassion was self willed. Now for the first
+time, she continuing altogether unaware of it, the presence of
+such a nature began to operate upon her. The calmness of
+Malcolm's speech and the immovable decision of his behaviour
+told.</p>
+
+<p>"But," she said, more calmly, "your mare has had four long
+journeys, and she should have rested today."</p>
+
+<p>"Rest is just the one thing beyond her, my lady. There is a
+volcano of life and strength in her you have no conception of. I
+could not have dreamed of horse like her. She has never in her
+life had enough to do. I believe that is the chief trouble with
+her. What we all want, my lady, is a master -- a real right
+master. I've got one myself; and"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you want one yourself," said Lady Clementina.
+"You've only got a mistress, and she spoils you."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not what I meant, my lady," returned Malcolm. "But
+one thing I know, is, that Kelpie would soon come to grief
+without me. I shall keep her here till her half hour is out, and
+then let her take another gallop."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina turned away. She was defeated. Malcolm knelt
+there on one knee, with a hand on the mare's shoulder, so calm,
+so imperturbable, so ridiculously full of argument, that there
+was nothing more for her to do or say. Indignation,
+expostulation, were powerless upon him as mist upon a rock. He
+was the oddest, most incomprehensible of grooms.</p>
+
+<p>Going back to the house, she met Florimel, and turned again
+with her to the scene of discipline. Ere they reached it,
+Florimel's delight with all around her had done something to
+restore Clementina's composure: the place was precious to her,
+for there she had passed nearly the whole of her childhood. But
+to anyone with a heart open to the expressions of Nature's
+countenance, the place could not but have a strange as well as
+peculiar charm.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel had lost her way. I would rather it had been in the
+moonlight, but slant sunlight was next best. It shone through a
+slender multitude of mast-like stems, whose shadows complicated
+the wonder, while the light seemed amongst them to have gathered
+to itself properties appreciable by other organs besides the
+eyes, and to dwell bodily with the trees. The soil was mainly of
+sand, the soil to delight the long tap roots of the fir trees,
+covered above with a thick layer of slow forming mould, in the
+gradual odoriferous decay of needles and cones and flakes of bark
+and knots of resinous exudation. It grew looser and sandier, and
+its upper coat thinner, as she approached the shore. The trees
+shrunk in size, stood farther apart, and grew more individual,
+sending out knarled boughs on all sides of them, and asserting
+themselves as the tall slender branchless ones in the social
+restraint of the thicker wood dared not do. They thinned and
+thinned, and the sea and the shore came shining through, for the
+ground sloped to the beach without any intervening abruption of
+cliff or even bank; they thinned and thinned until all were gone,
+and the bare long yellow sands lay stretched out on both sides
+for miles, gleaming and sparkling in the sun, especially at one
+spot where the water of a little stream wandered about over them,
+as if it had at length found its home, but was too weary to enter
+and lose its weariness, and must wait for the tide to come up and
+take it. But when Florimel reached the strand, she could see
+nothing of the group she sought: the shore took a little bend,
+and a tongue of forest came in between.</p>
+
+<p>She was on her way back to the house when she met Clementina,
+also returning discomfited. Pleased as she was with them, her
+hostess soon interrupted her ecstasies by breaking out in
+accusation of Malcolm, not untempered, however, with a touch of
+dawning respect. At the same time her report of his words was
+anything but accurate, for as no one can be just without love, so
+no one can truly report without understanding. But they had not
+time to discuss him now, as Clementina insisted on Florimel's
+putting an immediate stop to his cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the spot, there was the groom again seated
+on his animal's head, with a new proposition in the sand before
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm," said his mistress, "let the mare get up. You must
+let her off the rest of her punishment this time."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm rose again to his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady," he said. "But perhaps your ladyship wouldn't
+mind helping me to unbuckle her girths before she gets to her
+feet. I want to give her a bath -- Come to this side," he went
+on, as Florimel advanced to his request, "-- round here by her
+head. If your ladyship would kneel upon it, that would be best.
+But you mustn't move till I tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will do anything you bid me -- exactly as you say, Malcolm,"
+responded Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"There's the Colonsay blood! I can trust that!" cried Malcolm,
+with a pardonable outbreak of pride in his family. Whether most
+of his ancestors could so well have appreciated the courage of
+obedience, is not very doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina was shocked at the insolent familiarity of her poor
+little friend's groom, but Florimel saw none, and kneeled, as if
+she had been in church, on the head of the mare, with the fierce
+crater of her fiery brain blazing at her knee. Then Malcolm
+lifted the flap of the saddle, undid the buckles of the girths,
+and drawing them a little from under her, laid the saddle on the
+sand, talking all the time to Florimel, lest a sudden word might
+seem a direction, and she should rise before the right moment had
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"Please, my lady Clementina, will you go to the edge of the
+wood. I can't tell what she may do when she gets up. And please,
+my lady Florimel, will you run there too, the moment you get off
+her head."</p>
+
+<p>When he got her rid of the saddle, he gathered the reins
+together in his bridle hand, took his whip in the other, and
+softly and carefully straddled across her huge barrel without
+touching her.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, my lady!" he said. "Run for the wood."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel rose and fled, heard a great scrambling behind her,
+and turning at the first tree, which was only a few yards off,
+saw Kelpie on her hind legs, and Malcolm, whom she had lifted
+with her, sticking by his knees on her bare back. The moment her
+fore feet touched the ground, he gave her the spur severely, and
+after one plunging kick, off they went westward over the sands,
+away from the sun; nor did they turn before they had dwindled to
+such a speck that the ladies could not have told by their eyes
+whether it was moving or not. At length they saw it swerve a
+little; by and by it began to grow larger; and after another
+moment or two they could distinguish what it was, tearing along
+towards them like a whirlwind, the lumps of wet sand flying
+behind like an upward storm of clods. What a picture it was only
+neither of the ladies was calm enough to see it picturewise: the
+still sea before, type of the infinite always, and now of its
+repose; the still straight solemn wood behind, like a past world
+that had gone to sleep -- out of which the sand seemed to come
+flowing down, to settle in the long sand lake of the beach; that
+flameless furnace of life tearing along the shore, betwixt the
+sea and the land, between time and eternity, guided, but only
+half controlled, by the strength of a higher will; and the two
+angels that had issued -- whether out of the forest of the past
+or the sea of the future, who could tell? -- and now stood, with
+hand shaded eyes, gazing upon that fierce apparition of terrene
+life.</p>
+
+<p>As he came in front of them, Malcolm suddenly wheeled Kelpie,
+so suddenly and in so sharp a curve that he made her "turne close
+to the ground, like a cat, when scratchingly she wheeles about
+after a mouse," as Sir Philip Sidney says, and dashed her
+straight into the sea. The two ladies gave a cry, Florimel of
+delight, Clementina of dismay, for she knew the coast, and that
+there it shelved suddenly into deep water. But that was only the
+better to Malcolm: it was the deep water he sought, though he got
+it with a little pitch sooner than he expected. He had often
+ridden Kelpie into the sea at Portlossie, even in the cold autumn
+weather when first she came into his charge, and nothing pleased
+her better or quieted her more. He was a heavy weight to swim
+with, but she displaced much water. She carried her head bravely,
+he balanced sideways, and they swam splendidly. To the eyes of
+Clementina the mare seemed to be labouring for her life.</p>
+
+<p>When Malcolm thought she had had enough of it, he turned her
+head to the shore. But then came the difficulty. So steeply did
+the shore shelve that Kelpie could not get a hold with her hind
+hoofs to scramble up into the shallow water. The ladies saw the
+struggle, and Clementina, understanding it, was running in an
+agony right into the water, with the vain idea of helping them,
+when Malcolm threw himself off, drawing the reins over Kelpie's
+head as he fell, and swimming but the length of them shorewards,
+felt the ground with his feet, and stood, Kelpie, relieved of his
+weight, floated a little farther on to the shelf, got a better
+hold with her fore feet, some hold with her hind ones, and was
+beside him in a moment. The same moment Malcolm was on her back
+again, and they were tearing off eastward at full stretch. So far
+did the lessening point recede in the narrowing distance, that
+the two ladies sat down on the sand, and fell a-talking about
+Florimel's most uncategorical groom, as Clementina, herself the
+most uncategorical of women, to use her own scarcely justifiable
+epithet, called him. She asked if such persons abounded in
+Scotland. Florimel could but answer that this was the only one
+she had met with. Then she told her about Richmond Park and Lord
+Liftore and Epictetus.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that accounts for him!" said Clementina. "Epictetus was a
+Cynic, a very cruel man: he broke his slave's leg once, I
+remember."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Lenorme told me that he was the slave, and that his master
+broke his leg," said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes! I daresay. -- That was it. But it is of little
+consequence: his principles were severe, and your groom has been
+his too ready pupil. It is a pity he is such a savage: he might
+be quite an interesting character. -- Can he read?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have just told you of his reading Greek over Kelpie's
+head," said Florimel, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! but I meant English," said Clementina, whose thoughts
+were a little astray. Then laughing at herself she explained "I
+mean, can he read aloud? I put the last of the Waverley novels in
+the box we shall have tomorrow, or the next day at latest, I
+hope: and I was wondering whether he could read the Scotch -- as
+it ought to be read. I have never heard it spoken, and I don't
+know how to imagine it."</p>
+
+<p>"We can try him," said Florimel. "It will be great fun anyhow.
+He is such a character! You will be so amused with the remarks he
+will make!"</p>
+
+<p>"But can you venture to let him talk to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you ask him to read, how will you prevent him?
+Unfortunately he has thoughts, and they will out."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no danger of his being rude?"</p>
+
+<p>"If speaking his mind about anything in the book be rudeness,
+he will most likely be rude. Any other kind of rudeness is as
+impossible to Malcolm as to any gentleman in the land."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you be so sure of him?" said Clementina, a little
+anxious as to the way in which her friend regarded the young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"My father was -- yes, I may say so -- attached to him -- so
+much so that he -- I can't quite say what -- but something like
+made him promise never to leave my service. And this I know for
+myself, that not once, ever since that man came to us, has he
+done a selfish thing or one to be ashamed of. I could give you
+proof after proof of his devotion."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel's warmth did not reassure Clementina; and her
+uneasiness wrought to the prejudice of Malcolm. She was never
+quite so generous towards human beings as towards animals. She
+could not be depended on for justice except to people in trouble,
+and then she was very apt to be unjust to those who troubled
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not have you place too much confidence in your
+Admirable Crichton of menials, Florimel," she said. "There is
+something about him I cannot get at the bottom of. Depend upon
+it, a man who can be cruel would betray on the least
+provocation."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel smiled superior -- as she had good reason to do; but
+Clementina did not understand the smile, and therefore did not
+like it. She feared the young fellow had already gained too much
+influence over his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel, my love," she said, "listen to me. Your experience
+is not so ripe as mine. That man is not what you think him. One
+day or other he will, I fear, make himself worse than
+disagreeable. How can a cruel man be unselfish?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think him cruel at all. But then I haven't such a
+soft heart for animals as you. We should think it silly in
+Scotland. You wouldn't teach a dog manners at the expense of a
+howl. You would let him be a nuisance rather than give him a cut
+with a whip. What a nice mother of children you will make,
+Clementina! That's how the children of good people are so often a
+disgrace to them."</p>
+
+<p>"You are like all the rest of the Scotch I ever knew," said
+Lady Clementina: "the Scotch are always preaching! I believe it
+is in their blood. You are a nation of parsons. Thank goodness!
+my morals go no farther than doing as I would be done by. I want
+to see creatures happy about me. For my own sake even, I would
+never cause pang to person -- it gives me such a pang
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the way you are made, I suppose, Clementina," returned
+Florimel. "For me, my clay must be coarser. I don't mind a little
+pain myself, and I can't break my heart for it when I see it --
+except it be very bad -- such as I should care about myself --
+But here comes the tyrant."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was pulling up his mare some hundred yards off. Even
+now she was unwilling to stop -- but it was at last only from
+pure original objection to whatever was wanted of her. When she
+did stand she stood stock still, breathing hard.</p>
+
+<p>"I have actually succeeded in taking a little out of her at
+last, my lady," said Malcolm as he dismounted. "Have you got a
+bit of sugar in your pocket, my lady? She would take it quite
+gently now."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel had none, but Clementina had, for she always carried
+sugar for her horse. Malcolm held the demoness very watchfully,
+but she took the sugar from Florimel's palm as neatly as an
+elephant, and let her stroke her nose over her wide red nostrils
+without showing the least of her usual inclination to punish a
+liberty with death. Then Malcolm rode her home, and she was at
+peace till the evening -- when he took her out again.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XL"></a>CHAPTER XL:
+MOONLIGHT</h1>
+
+<p>And now followed a pleasant time. Wastbeach was the quietest
+of all quiet neighbourhoods; it was the loveliest of spring
+summer weather; and the variety of scenery on moor, in woodland,
+and on coast, within easy reach of such good horsewomen, was
+wonderful. The first day they rested the horses that would rest,
+but the next day were in the saddle immediately after an early
+breakfast. They took the forest way. In many directions were
+tolerably smooth rides cut, and along them they had good gallops,
+to the great delight of Florimel after the restraints of Rotten
+Row, where riding had seemed like dancing a minuet with a waltz
+in her heart. Malcolm, so far as human companionship went, found
+it dull, for Lady Clementina's groom regarded him with the
+contempt of superior age, the most contemptible contempt of all,
+seeing years are not the wisdom they ought to bring, and the
+first sign of that is modesty. Again and again his remarks
+tempted Malcolm to incite him to ride Kelpie, but conscience, the
+thought of the man's family, and the remembrance that it required
+all his youthful strength, and that it would therefore be the
+challenge of the strong to the weak, saved him from the sin, and
+he schooled himself to the endurance of middle aged arrogance.
+For the learning of the lesson he had practice enough: they rode
+every day, and Griffith did not thaw; but the one thundering
+gallop he had every morning along the sands with Kelpie, whom *
+no ordinary day's work was enough to save from the heart burning
+ferment of repressed activity, was both preparation and amends
+for the annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>* [<i>According to the grammars, I ought to have written
+which, but it will not do. I could, I think, tell why, but prefer
+leaving the question to the reader</i>.]</p>
+
+<p>When his mistress mentioned the proposal of her friend with
+regard to the new novel, he at once expressed his willingness to
+attempt compliance, fearing only, he said, that his English would
+prove offensive and his Scotch unintelligible. The task was
+nowise alarming to him, for he had read aloud much to the
+schoolmaster, who had also insisted that he should read aloud
+when alone, especially verse, in order that he might get all the
+good of its outside as well as inside -- its sound as well as
+thought, the one being the ethereal body of the other. And he had
+the best primary qualifications for the art, namely, a delight in
+the sounds of human speech, a value for the true embodiment of
+thought, and a good ear, mental as well as vocal, for the
+assimilation of sound to sense. After these came the quite
+secondary, yet valuable gift of a pleasant voice, manageable for
+reflection; and with such an outfit, the peculiarities of his
+country's utterance, the long drawn vowels, and the outbreak of
+feeling in chant-like tones and modulations, might be forgiven,
+and certainly were forgiven by Lady Clementina, who, even in his
+presence, took his part against the objections of his mistress.
+On the whole, they were so much pleased with his first reading,
+which took place the very day the box arrived, that they
+concluded to restrain the curiosity of their interest in persons
+and events, for the sake of the pleasure of meeting them always
+in the final fulness of local colour afforded them by his
+utterance. While he read, they busied their fingers with their
+embroidery; for as yet that graceful work, so lovelily described
+by Cowper in his Task, had not begun to vanish before the crude
+colours and mechanical vulgarity of Berlin wool, now happily in
+its turn vanishing like a dry dust cloud into the limbo of the
+art universe:</p>
+
+<pre>
+The well depicted flower,
+Wrought patiently into the snowy lawn
+Unfolds its bosom; buds, and leaves, and sprigs,
+And curling tendrils, gracefully disposed,
+Follow the nimble finger of the fair;
+A wreath, that cannot fade, of flowers that blow
+With most success when all besides decay. *
+</pre>
+
+<p>* [<i>"The Winter Evening."</i>]</p>
+
+<p>There was not much of a garden about the place, but there was
+a little lawn amongst the pines, in the midst of which stood a
+huge old patriarch, with red stem and grotesquely contorted
+branches: beneath it was a bench, and there, after their return
+from their two hours' ride, the ladies sat, while the sun was at
+its warmest, on the mornings of their first and second readings:
+Malcolm sat on a wheelbarrow. After lunch on the second day,
+which they had agreed from the first, as ladies so often do, when
+free of the more devouring sex, should be their dinner, and after
+due visits paid to a multitude of animals, the desire awoke
+simultaneously in them for another portion of "St. Ronan's Well."
+They resolved therefore to send for their reader as soon as they
+had had tea. But when they sent he was nowhere to be found, and
+they concluded on a stroll.</p>
+
+<p>Anticipating no further requirement of his service that day,
+Malcolm had gone out. Drawn by the sea, he took his way through
+the dim solemn boughless wood, as if to keep a moonlight tryst
+with his early love. But the sun was not yet down, and among the
+dark trees, shot through by the level radiance, he wandered, his
+heart swelling in his bosom with the glory and the mystery. Again
+the sun was in the wood, its burning centre, the marvel of the
+home which he left in the morning only to return thither at
+night, and it was now a temple of red light, more gorgeous, more
+dream woven than the morning. How he glowed on the red stems of
+the bare pines, fit pillars for that which seemed temple and
+rite, organ and anthem in one -- the worship of the earth,
+uplifted to its Hyperion! It was a world of faery; anything might
+happen in it. Who, in that region of marvel, would start to see
+suddenly a knight on a great sober warhorse come slowly pacing
+down the torrent of carmine splendour, flashing it, like the
+Knight of the Sun himself in a flood from every hollow, a gleam
+from every flat, and a star from every round and knob of his
+armour? As the trees thinned away, and his feet sank deeper in
+the looser sand, and the sea broke blue out of the infinite,
+talking quietly to itself of its own solemn swell into being out
+of the infinite thought unseen, Malcolm felt as if the world with
+its loveliness and splendour were sinking behind him, and the
+cool entrancing sweetness of the eternal dreamland of the soul,
+where the dreams are more real than any sights of the world, were
+opening wide before his entering feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall not death be like this?" he said, and threw himself
+upon the sand, and hid his face and his eyes from it all. For
+there is this strange thing about all glory embodied in the
+material, that, when the passion of it rises to its height, we
+hurry from its presence that its idea may perfect itself in
+silent and dark and deaf delight. Of its material self we want no
+more: its real self we have, and it sits at the fountain of our
+tears. Malcolm hid his face from the source of his gladness, and
+worshipped the source of that source.</p>
+
+<p>Rare as they are at any given time, there have been, I think,
+such youths in all ages of the world -- youths capable of
+glorying in the fountain whence issues the torrent of their
+youthful might. Nor is the reality of their early worship blasted
+for us by any mistral of doubt that may blow upon their spirit
+from the icy region of the understanding. The cold fevers, the
+vital agues that such winds breed, can but prove that not yet has
+the sun of the perfect arisen upon them; that the Eternal has not
+yet manifested himself in all regions of their being; that a
+grander, more obedient, therefore more blissful, more absorbing
+worship yet, is possible, nay, is essential to them. These chills
+are but the shivers of the divine nature, unsatisfied, half
+starved, banished from its home, divided from its origin, after
+which it calls in groanings it knows not how to shape into sounds
+articulate. They are the spirit wail of the holy infant after the
+bosom of its mother. Let no man long back to the bliss of his
+youth -- but forward to a bliss that shall swallow even that, and
+contain it, and be more than it. Our history moves in cycles, it
+is true, ever returning toward the point whence it started; but
+it is in the imperfect circles of a spiral it moves; it returns
+-- but ever to a point above the former: even the second
+childhood, at which the fool jeers, is the better, the truer, the
+fuller childhood, growing strong to cast off altogether, with the
+husk of its own enveloping age, that of its family, its country,
+its world as well. Age is not all decay: it is the ripening, the
+swelling of the fresh life within, that withers and bursts the
+husk.</p>
+
+<p>When Malcolm lifted his head, the sun had gone down. He rose
+and wandered along the sand towards the moon -- at length
+blooming out of the darkening sky, where she had hung all day
+like a washed out rag of light, to revive as the sunlight faded.
+He watched the banished life of her day swoon returning, until,
+gathering courage, she that had been no one, shone out fair and
+clear, in conscious queendom of the night. Then, in the friendly
+infolding of her dreamlight and the dreamland it created,
+Malcolm's soul revived as in the comfort of the lesser, the
+mitigated glory, and, as the moon into radiance from the darkened
+air, and the nightingale into music from the sleep stilled world
+of birds, blossomed from the speechlessness of thought and
+feeling into a strange kind of brooding song. If the words were
+half nonsense, the feeling was not the less real. Such as they
+were, they came almost of themselves, and the tune came with
+them.</p>
+
+<pre>
+Rose o' my hert,
+Open yer leaves to the lampin' mune;
+Into the curls lat her keek an' dert;
+She'll tak' the colour but gi'e ye tune.
+
+Buik o' my brain,
+Open yer neuks to the starry signs;
+Lat the een o' the holy luik an' strain
+An' glimmer an' score atween the lines.
+
+Cup o' my sowl,
+Gowd an' diamond an' ruby cup,
+Ye're noucht ava but a toom dry bowl,
+Till the wine o' the kingdom fill ye up,
+
+Conscience glass,
+Mirror the infinite all in thee;
+Melt the bounded and make it pass
+Into the tideless, shoreless sea.
+
+World of my life,
+Swing thee round thy sunny track;
+Fire and wind and water and strife --
+Carry them all to the glory back.
+</pre>
+
+<p>Ever as he halted for a word, the moonlight, and the low sweet
+waves on the sands, filled up the pauses to his ear; and there he
+lay, looking up to the sky and the moon and the rose diamond
+stars, his thoughts half dissolved in feeling, and his feeling
+half crystallised to thought.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the dim wood came two lovely forms into the moonlight,
+and softly approached him -- so softly that he knew nothing of
+their nearness until Florimel spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that MacPhail?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady," answered Malcolm, and bounded to his feet</p>
+
+<p>"What were you singing?"</p>
+
+<p>"You could hardly call it singing, my lady. We should call it
+crooning in Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Croon it again then."</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't, my lady. It's gone."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to pretend that you were extemporising?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was crooning what came -- like the birds, my lady. I
+couldn't have done it if I had thought anyone was near."</p>
+
+<p>Then, half ashamed, and anxious to turn the talk from the
+threshold of his secret chamber, he said, "Did you ever see a
+lovelier night, ladies?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not often, certainly," answered Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>She was not quite pleased and not altogether offended at his
+addressing them dually. A curious sense of impropriety in the
+state of things bewildered her -- she and her friend talking
+thus, in the moonlight, on the seashore, doing nothing, with her
+friend's groom -- and such a groom, his mistress asking him to
+sing again, and he addressing them both with a remark on the
+beauty of the night! She had braved the world a good deal, but
+she did not choose to brave it where nothing was to be had, and
+she was too honest to say to herself that the world would never
+know -- that there was nothing to brave: she was not one to do
+that in secret to which she would not hold her face. Yet all the
+time she had a doubt whether this young man, whom it would
+certainly be improper to encourage by addressing from any level
+but one of lofty superiority, did not belong to a higher sphere
+than theirs; while certainly no man could be more unpresuming, or
+less forward even when opposing his opinion to theirs. Still --
+if an angel were to come down and take charge of their horses,
+would ladies be justified in treating him as other than a
+servant?</p>
+
+<p>"This is just the sort of night," Malcolm resumed, "when I
+could almost persuade myself I was not quite sure I wasn't
+dreaming. It makes a kind of border land betwixt waking and
+sleeping, knowing and dreaming, in our brain. In a night like
+this I fancy we feel something like the colour of what God feels
+when he is making the lovely chaos of a new world, a new kind of
+world, such as has never been before."</p>
+
+<p>"I think we had better go in," said Clementina to Florimel,
+and turned away.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel made no objection, and they walked towards the
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>"You really must get rid of him as soon as you can," said
+Clementina, when again the moonless night of the pines had
+received them: "he is certainly more than half a lunatic. It is
+almost full moon now," she added, looking up. "I have never seen
+him so bad."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel's clear laugh rang through the wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be alarmed, Clementina," she said. "He has talked like
+that ever since I knew him; and if he is mad, at least he is no
+worse than he has always been. It is nothing but poetry -- yeast
+on the brain, my father used to say. We should have a fish poet
+of him -- a new thing in the world, he said. He would never be
+cured till he broke out in a book of poetry. I should be afraid
+my father would break the catechism and not rest in his grave
+till the resurrection, if I were to send Malcolm away."</p>
+
+<p>For Malcolm, he was at first not a little mazed at the utter
+blankness of the wall against which his words had dashed
+themselves. Then he smiled queerly to himself, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"I used to think ilka bonny lassie bude to be a poetess -- for
+hoo sud she be bonnie but by the informin' hermony o' her bein'?
+-- an' what's that but the poetry o' the Poet, the Makar, as they
+ca'd a poet i' the auld Scots tongue? -- but haith! I ken better
+an' waur noo! There's gane the twa bonniest I ever saw, an' I s'
+lay my heid there's mair poetry in auld man faced Miss Horn nor
+in a dizzin like them. Ech! but it's some sair to bide. It's sair
+upon a man to see a bonny wuman 'at has nae poetry, nae inward
+lichtsome hermony in her. But it's dooms sairer yet to come upo'
+ane wantin' cowmon sense! Saw onybody ever sic a gran' sicht as
+my Leddy Clementina! -- an' wha can say but she's weel named frae
+the hert oot? -- as guid at the hert, I'll sweir, as at the een!
+but eh me! to hear the blether o' nonsense 'at comes oot atween
+thae twa bonny yetts o' music -- an' a' cause she winna gi'e her
+hert rist an' time eneuch to grow bigger, but maun aye be settin'
+at things richt afore their time, an' her ain fitness for the
+job! It's sic a faithless kin' o' a w'y that! I could jist fancy
+I saw her gaein' a' roon' the trees o' a simmer nicht, pittin'
+hiney upo' the peers an' the peaches, 'cause she cudna lippen to
+natur' to ripe them sweet eneuch -- only 'at she wad never tak
+the hiney frae the bees. She's jist the pictur' o' Natur' hersel'
+turnt some dementit. I cud jist fancy I saw her gaein' aboot amo'
+the ripe corn, on sic a nicht as this o' the mune, happin' 't
+frae the frost. An' I s' warran' no ae mesh in oor nets wad she
+lea' ohn clippit open gien the twine had a herrin' by the gills.
+She's e'en sae pitifu' owre the sinner 'at she winna gi'e him a
+chance o' growin' better. I won'er gien she believes 'at there's
+ae great thoucht abune a', an' aneth a', an' roon' a', an' in
+a'thing. She cudna be in sic a mist o' benevolence and parritch
+hertitness gien she cud lippen till a wiser. It's na'e won'er she
+kens naething aboot poetry but the meeserable sids an' sawdist
+an' leavin's the gran' leddies sing an' ca' sangs! Nae mair is 't
+ony won'er she sud tak' me for dementit, gien she h'ard what I
+was singin'! only I canna think she did that, for I was but
+croonin' till mysel'." -- Malcolm was wrong there, for he was
+singing out loud and clear. -- "That was but a kin' o' an unknown
+tongue atween Him an' me an' no anither."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLI_"></a>CHAPTER XLI: THE
+SWIFT</h1>
+
+<p>Florimel succeeded so far in reassuring her friend as to the
+safety if not sanity of her groom, that she made no objection to
+yet another reading from "St Ronan's Well" -- upon which occasion
+an incident occurred that did far more to reassure her than all
+the attestations of his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina, in consenting, had proposed, it being a warm sunny
+afternoon, that they should that time go down to the lake, and
+sit with their work on the bank, while Malcolm read. This lake,
+like the whole place, and some of the people in it, was rather
+strange -- not resembling any piece of water that Malcolm at
+least had ever seen. More than a mile in length, but quite
+narrow, it lay on the seashore -- a lake of deep fresh water,
+with nothing between it and the sea but a bank of sand, up which
+the great waves came rolling in southwesterly winds, one now and
+then toppling over -- to the disconcerting no doubt of the pikey
+multitude within.</p>
+
+<p>The head only of the mere came into Clementina's property, and
+they sat on the landward side of it, on a sandy bank, among the
+half exposed roots of a few ancient firs, where a little stream
+that fed the lake had made a small gully, and was now trotting
+over a bed of pebbles in the bottom of it. Clementina was
+describing to Florimel the peculiarities of the place, how there
+was no outlet to the lake, how the water went filtering through
+the sand into the sea, how in some parts it was very deep, and
+what large pike there were in it. Malcolm sat a little aside as
+usual, with his face towards the ladies, and the book open in his
+hand, waiting a sign to begin, but looking at the lake, which
+here was some fifty yards broad, reedy at the edge, dark and deep
+in the centre. All at once he sprang to his feet, dropping the
+book, ran down to the brink of the water, undoing his buckled
+belt and pulling off his coat as he ran, threw himself over the
+bordering reeds into the pool, and disappeared with a great
+plash.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina gave a scream, and started up with distraction in
+her face: she made no doubt that in the sudden ripeness of his
+insanity he had committed suicide. But Florimel, though startled
+by her friend's cry, laughed, and crowded out assurances that
+Malcolm knew well enough what he was about. It was longer,
+however, than she found pleasant, before a black head appeared --
+yards away, for he had risen at a great slope, swimming towards
+the other side. What could he be after? Near the middle he swam
+more softly, and almost stopped. Then first they spied a small
+dark object on the surface. Almost the same moment it rose into
+the air. They thought Malcolm had flung it up. Instantly they
+perceived that it was a bird -- a swift. Somehow it had dropped
+into the water, but a lift from Malcolm's hand had restored it to
+the air of its bliss.</p>
+
+<p>But instead of turning and swimming back, Malcolm held on, and
+getting out on the farther side, ran down the beach and rushed
+into the sea, rousing once more the apprehensions of Clementina.
+The shore sloped rapidly, and in a moment he was in deep water.
+He swam a few yards out, swam ashore again, ran round the end of
+the lake, found his coat, and got from it his pocket
+handkerchief. Having therewith dried his hands and face, he wrang
+out the sleeves of his shirt a little, put on his coat, returned
+to his place, and said, as he took up the book and sat down,</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, my ladies; but just as I heard my Lady
+Clementina say pikes, I saw the little swift in the water. There
+was no time to lose. Swiftie had but a poor chance."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he proceeded to find the place in the book.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't imagine we are going to have you read in such a
+plight as that!" cried Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take good care, my lady. I have books of my own, and I
+handle them like babies."</p>
+
+<p>"You foolish man! It is of you in your wet clothes, not of the
+book I am thinking," said Clementina indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm much obliged to you, my lady, but there's no fear of me.
+You saw me wash the fresh water out. Salt water never hurts."</p>
+
+<p>"You must go and change nevertheless," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm looked to his mistress. She gave him a sign to obey,
+and he rose. He had taken three steps towards the house when
+Clementina recalled him.</p>
+
+<p>"One word, if you please," she said. "How is it that a man who
+risks his life for that of a little bird, can be so heartless to
+a great noble creature like that horse of yours? I cannot
+understand it!"</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," returned Malcolm with a smile, "I was no more
+risking my life than you would be in taking a fly out of the milk
+jug. And for your question, if your ladyship will only think, you
+cannot fail to see the difference. Indeed I explained my
+treatment of Kelpie to your ladyship that first morning in the
+park, when you so kindly rebuked me for it, but I don't think
+your ladyship listened to a word I said."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina's face flushed, and she turned to her friend with a
+"Well!" in her eyes. But Florimel kept her head bent over her
+embroidery; and Malcolm, no further notice being taken of him
+walked away.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLII"></a>CHAPTER XLII: ST
+RONAN'S WELL</h1>
+
+<p>The next day the reading was resumed, and for several days was
+regularly continued. Each day, as their interest grew, longer
+time was devoted to it. They were all simple enough to accept
+what the author gave them, nor, had a critic of the time been
+present to instruct them that in this last he had fallen off,
+would they have heeded him much: for Malcolm, it was the first
+story by the Great Unknown he had seen. A question however
+occurring, not of art but of morals, he was at once on the alert.
+It arose when they reached that portion of the tale in which the
+true heir to an earldom and its wealth offers to leave all in the
+possession of the usurper, on the one condition of his ceasing to
+annoy a certain lady, whom, by villainy of the worst, he had
+gained the power of rendering unspeakably miserable. Naturally
+enough, at this point Malcolm's personal interest was suddenly
+excited: here were elements strangely correspondent with the
+circumstances of his present position. Tyrrel's offer of
+acquiescence in things as they were, and abandonment of his
+rights, which, in the story, is so amazing to the man of the
+world to whom it is first propounded, drew an exclamation of
+delight from both ladies -- from Clementina because of its
+unselfishness, from Florimel because of its devotion: neither of
+them was at any time ready to raise a moral question, and least
+of all where the heart approved. But Malcolm was interested after
+a different fashion from theirs. Often during the reading he had
+made remarks and given explanations -- not so much to the
+annoyance of Lady Clementina as she had feared, for since his
+rescue of the swift, she had been more favourably disposed
+towards him, and had judged him a little more justly -- not that
+she understood him, but that the gulf between them had
+contracted. He paused a moment, then said:</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think it was right, my ladies? Ought Mr Tyrrel to have
+made such an offer?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was most generous of him," said Clementina, not without
+indignation -- and with the tone of one whose answer should
+decide the question.</p>
+
+<p>"Splendidly generous," replied Malcolm; "-- but -- I so well
+remember when Mr Graham first made me see that the question of
+duty does not always lie between a good thing and a bad thing:
+there would be no room for casuistry then, he said. A man has
+very often to decide between one good thing and another. But
+indeed I can hardly tell without more time to think, whether that
+comes in here. If a man wants to be generous, it must at least be
+at his own expense."</p>
+
+<p>"But surely," said Florimel, not in the least aware that she
+was changing sides, "a man ought to hold by the rights that birth
+and inheritance give him."</p>
+
+<p>"That is by no means so clear, my lady," returned Malcolm, "as
+you seem to think. A man may be bound to hold by things that are
+his rights, but certainly not because they are rights. One of the
+grandest things in having rights is that, being your rights, you
+may give them up -- except, of course, they involve duties with
+the performance of which the abnegation would interfere."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been trying to think," said Lady Clementina, "what can
+be the two good things here to choose between."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the right question, and logically put, my lady,"
+rejoined Malcolm, who, from his early training, could not help
+sometimes putting on the schoolmaster. "The two good things are
+-- let me see -- yes -- on the one hand the protection of the
+lady to whom he owed all possible devotion of man to woman, and
+on the other what he owed to his tenants, and perhaps to society
+in general -- yes -- as the owner of wealth and position. There
+is generosity on the one side and dry duty on the other."</p>
+
+<p>"But this was no case of mere love to the lady, I think," said
+Clementina. "Did Mr Tyrrel not owe Miss Mowbray what reparation
+lay in his power? Was it not his tempting of her to a secret
+marriage, while yet she was nothing more than a girl, that
+brought the mischief upon her?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the point," said Malcolm, "that makes the one
+difficulty. Still, I do not see how there can be much of a
+question. He could have no right to do fresh wrong for the
+mitigation of the consequences of preceding wrong -- to sacrifice
+others to atone for injuries done by himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Where would be the wrong to others?" said Florimel, now back
+to her former position. "Why could it matter to tenants or
+society which of the brothers happened to be an earl?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only this, that, in the one case, the landlord of his
+tenants, the earl in society, would be an honourable man, in the
+other, a villain -- a difference which might have
+consequences."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Lady Clementina, "is not generosity something more
+than duty -- something higher, something beyond it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Malcolm, "so long as it does not go against
+duty, but keeps in the same direction, is in harmony with it. I
+doubt much, though, whether, as we grow in what is good, we shall
+not come soon to see that generosity is but our duty, and nothing
+very grand and beyond it. But the man who chooses to be generous
+at the expense of justice, even if he give up at the same time
+everything of his own, is but a poor creature beside him who, for
+the sake of the right, will not only consent to appear selfish in
+the eyes of men, but will go against his own heart and the
+comfort of those dearest to him. The man who accepts a crown may
+be more noble than he who lays one down and retires to the
+desert. Of the worthies who do things by faith, some are sawn
+asunder, and some subdue kingdoms. The look of the thing is
+nothing."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel made a neat little yawn over her work. Clementina's
+hands rested a moment in her lap, and she looked thoughtful. But
+she resumed her work, and said no more. Malcolm began to read
+again. Presently Clementina interrupted him. She had not been
+listening.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should a man want to be better than his neighbours, any
+more than to be richer?" she said, as if uttering her thoughts
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, indeed," responded Malcolm, "except he wants to become a
+hypocrite?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then, why do you talk for duty against generosity?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Malcolm, for a moment perplexed. He did not at once
+catch the relation of her ideas. "Does a man ever do his duty,"
+he rejoined at length, "in order to be better than his
+neighbours." If he does, he won't do it long. A man does his duty
+because he must. He has no choice but do it."</p>
+
+<p>"If a man has no choice, how is it that so many men choose to
+do wrong?" asked Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"In virtue of being slaves and stealing the choice," replied
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"You are playing with words," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"If I am, at least I am not playing with things," returned
+Malcolm. "If you like it better, my lady, I will say that, in
+declaring he has no choice, the man with all his soul chooses the
+good, recognizing it as the very necessity of his nature."</p>
+
+<p>"If I know in myself that I have a choice, all you say goes
+for nothing," persisted Clementina. "I am not at all sure I would
+not do wrong for the sake of another. The more one preferred what
+was right, the greater would be the sacrifice."</p>
+
+<p>"If it was for the grandeur of it, my lady, that would be for
+the man's own sake, not his friend's."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave that out then," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"The more a man loved another, then -- say a woman, as here in
+the story -- it seems to me, the more willing would he be that
+she should continue to suffer rather than cease by wrong. Think,
+my lady: the essence of wrong is injustice: to help another by
+wrong is to do injustice to somebody you do not know well enough
+to love for the sake of one you do know well enough to love. What
+honest man could think of that twice? The woman capable of
+accepting such a sacrifice would be contemptible."</p>
+
+<p>"She need not know of it."</p>
+
+<p>"He would know that she needed but to know of it to despise
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then might it not be noble in him to consent for her sake to
+be contemptible in her eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"If no others were concerned. And then there would be no
+injustice, therefore nothing wrong, and nothing
+contemptible."</p>
+
+<p>"Might not what he did be wrong in the abstract, without
+having reference to any person?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is no wrong man can do but is a thwarting of the living
+Right. Surely you believe, my lady, that there is a living Power
+of right, whose justice is the soul of our justice, who will have
+right done, and causes even our own souls to take up arms against
+us when we do wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"In plain language, I suppose you mean -- Do I believe in a
+God?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is what I mean, if by a God you mean a being who cares
+about us, and loves justice -- that is, fair play -- one whom
+therefore we wrong to the very heart when we do a thing that is
+not just."</p>
+
+<p>"I would gladly believe in such a being, if things were so
+that I could. As they are, I confess it seems to me the best
+thing to doubt it. I do doubt it very much. How can I help
+doubting it, when I see so much suffering, oppression, and
+cruelty in the world? If there were such a being as you say,
+would he permit the horrible things we hear of on every
+hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I used to find that a difficulty. Indeed it troubled me
+sorely until I came to understand things better. I remember Mr
+Graham saying once something like this -- I did not understand it
+for months after: 'Every kind hearted person who thinks a great
+deal of being comfortable, and takes prosperity to consist in
+being well off must be tempted to doubt the existence of a God.
+-- And perhaps it is well they should be so tempted,' he
+added."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did he add that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think because such are in danger of believing in an evil
+God. And if men believed in an evil God, and had not the courage
+to defy him, they must sink to the very depths of savagery. At
+least that is what I ventured to suppose he meant."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina opened her eyes wide, but said nothing. Religious
+people, she found, could think as boldly as she.</p>
+
+<p>"I remember all about it so well!" Malcolm added,
+thoughtfully. "We had been talking about the Prometheus of
+AEschylus -- how he would not give in to Jupiter."</p>
+
+<p>"I am trying to understand," said Clementina, and ceased --
+and a silence fell which for a few moments Malcolm could not
+break. For suddenly he felt as if he had fallen under the power
+of a spell. Something seemed to radiate from her silence which
+invaded his consciousness. It was as if the wind which dwells in
+the tree of life had waked in the twilight of heaven, and blew
+upon his spirit. It was not that now first he saw that she was
+beautiful; the moment his eyes fell upon her that morning in the
+park, he saw her beautiful as he had never seen woman before.
+Neither was it that now first he saw her good, even in that first
+interview her heart had revealed itself to him as very lovely.
+But the foolishness which flowed from her lips, noble and
+unselfish as it was, had barred the way betwixt his feelings and
+her individuality as effectually as if she had been the loveliest
+of Venuses lying uncarved in the lunar marble of Carrara. There
+are men to whom silliness is an absolute freezing mixture; to
+whose hearts a plain, sensible woman at once appeals as a woman,
+while no amount of beauty can serve as sweet oblivious antidote
+to counteract the nausea produced by folly. Malcolm had found
+Clementina irritating, and the more irritating that she was so
+beautiful. But at the first sound from her lips that indicated
+genuine and truthful thought, the atmosphere had begun to change;
+and at the first troubled gleam in her eyes, revealing that she
+pursued some dim seen thing of the world of reality, a nameless
+potency throbbed into the spiritual space betwixt her and him,
+and embraced them in an aether of entrancing relation. All that
+had been needed to awake love to her was, that her soul, her self
+should look out of its windows -- and now he had caught a glimpse
+of it. Not all her beauty, not all her heart, not all her
+courage, could draw him while she would ride only a hobby horse,
+however tight its skin might be stuffed with emotions. But now
+who could tell how soon she might be charging in the front line
+of the Amazons of the Lord -- on as real a horse as any in the
+heavenly army? For was she not thinking -- the rarest human
+operation in the world?</p>
+
+<p>"I will try to speak a little more clearly, my lady," said
+Malcolm. "If ease and comfort, and the pleasures of animal and
+intellectual being, were the best things to be had, as they are
+the only things most people desire, then that maker who did not
+care that his creatures should possess or were deprived of such,
+could not be a good God. But if the need with the lack of such
+things should be the means, the only means, of their gaining
+something in its very nature so much better that --"</p>
+
+<p>"But," interrupted Clementina, "if they don't care about
+anything better -- if they are content as they are?"</p>
+
+<p>"Should he then who called them into existence be limited in
+his further intents for the perfecting of their creation, by
+their notions concerning themselves who cannot add to their life
+one cubit? -- such notions being often consciously dishonest? If
+he knows them worthless without something that he can give, shall
+he withhold his hand because they do not care that he should
+stretch it forth? Should a child not be taught to ride because he
+is content to run on foot?"</p>
+
+<p>"But the means, according to your own theory, are so
+frightful!" said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose he knows that the barest beginnings of the good
+he intends them would not merely reconcile them to those means,
+but cause them to choose his will at any expense of suffering! I
+tell you, Lady Clementina," continued Malcolm, rising, and
+approaching her a step or two, "if I had not the hope of one day
+being good like God himself, if I thought there was no escape out
+of the wrong and badness I feel within me and know I am not able
+to rid myself of without supreme help, not all the wealth and
+honours of the world could reconcile me to life."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not know what you are talking of," said Clementina,
+coldly and softly, without lifting her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I do," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you would kill yourself but for your belief in
+God?"</p>
+
+<p>"By life, I meant being, my lady. If there were no God, I
+dared not kill myself, lest worse should be waiting me in the
+awful voids beyond. If there be a God, living or dying is all one
+-- so it be what he pleases."</p>
+
+<p>"I have read of saints," said Clementina, with cool
+dissatisfaction in her tone, "uttering such sentiments --"</p>
+
+<p>"Sentiments!" said Malcolm to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"-- and I do not doubt such were felt or at least imagined by
+them; but I fail to understand how, even supposing these things
+true, a young man like yourself should, in the midst of a busy
+world, and with an occupation which, to say the least, --"</p>
+
+<p>Here she paused. After a moment Malcolm ventured to help
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is so far from an ideal one -- would you say, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Something like that," answered Clementina, and concluded, "I
+wonder how you can have arrived at such ideas."</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing wonderful in it, my lady," returned Malcolm.
+"Why should not a youth, a boy, a child, for as a child I thought
+about what the kingdom of heaven could mean, desire with all his
+might that his heart and mind should be clean, his will strong,
+his thoughts just, his head clear, his soul dwelling in the place
+of life? Why should I not desire that my life should be a
+complete thing, and an outgoing of life to my neighbour? Some
+people are content not to do mean actions: I want to become
+incapable of a mean thought or feeling; and so I shall be before
+all is done."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, how did you come to begin so much earlier than
+others?"</p>
+
+<p>"All I know as to that, my lady, is that I had the best man in
+the world to teach me."</p>
+
+<p>"And why did not I have such a man to teach me? I could have
+learned of such a man too."</p>
+
+<p>"If you are able now, my lady, it does not follow that it
+would have been the best thing for you sooner. Some children
+learn far better for not being begun early, and will get before
+others who have been at it for years. As you grow ready for it,
+somewhere or other you will find what is needful for you -- in a
+book, or a friend, or, best of all in your own thoughts -- the
+eternal thought speaking in your thought."</p>
+
+<p>It flashed through her mind, "Can it be that I have found it
+now -- on the lips of a groom?"</p>
+
+<p>Was it her own spirit or another that laughed strangely within
+her?</p>
+
+<p>"Well, as you seem to know so much better than other people,"
+she said, "I want you to explain to me how the God in whom you
+profess to believe can make use of such cruelties. It seems to me
+more like the revelling of a demon."</p>
+
+<p>"My lady!" remonstrated Malcolm, "I never pretended to
+explain. All I say is, that, if I had reason for hoping there was
+a God, and if I found, from my own experience and the testimony
+of others, that suffering led to valued good, I should think,
+hope, expect to find that he caused suffering for reasons of the
+highest, purest and kindest import, such as when understood must
+be absolutely satisfactory to the sufferers themselves. If a man
+cannot believe that, and if he thinks the pain the worst evil of
+all, then of course he cannot believe there is a good God. Still,
+even then, if he would lay claim to being a lover of truth, he
+ought to give the idea -- the mere idea of God fair play, lest
+there should be a good God after all, and he all his life doing
+him the injustice of refusing him his trust and obedience."</p>
+
+<p>"And how are we to give the mere idea of him fair play?"
+asked Clementina, rather contemptuously. But I think she was
+fighting emotion, confused and troublesome.</p>
+
+<p>"By looking to the heart of whatever claims to be a revelation
+of him."</p>
+
+<p>"It would take a lifetime to read the half of such."</p>
+
+<p>"I will correct myself, and say -- whatever of the sort has
+best claims on your regard -- whatever any person you look upon
+as good, believes and would have you believe -- at the same time
+doing diligently what you know to be right; for, if there be a
+God, that must be his will, and, if there be not, it remains our
+duty."</p>
+
+<p>All this time, Florimel was working away at her embroidery, a
+little smile of satisfaction flickering on her face. She was
+pleased to hear her clever friend talking so with her strange
+vassal. As to what they were saying, she had no doubt it was all
+right, but to her it was not interesting. She was mildly debating
+with herself whether she should tell her friend about
+Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina's work now lay on her lap and her hands on her
+work, while her eyes at one time gazed on the grass at her feet,
+at another searched Malcolm's face with a troubled look. The
+light of Malcolm's candle was beginning to penetrate into her
+dusky room, the power of his faith to tell upon the weakness of
+her unbelief. There is no strength in unbelief. Even the unbelief
+of what is false is no source of might. It is the truth shining
+from behind that gives the strength to disbelieve. But into the
+house where the refusal of the bad is followed by no embracing of
+the good -- the house empty and swept and garnished -- the bad
+will return, bringing with it seven evils that are worse.</p>
+
+<p>If something of that sacred mystery, holy in the heart of the
+Father, which draws together the souls of man and woman, was at
+work between them, let those scoff at the mingling of love and
+religion who know nothing of either; but man or woman who, loving
+woman or man, has never in that love lifted the heart to the
+Father, and everyone whose divine love has not yet cast at least
+an arm round the human love, must take heed what they think of
+themselves, for they are yet but paddlers in the tide of the
+eternal ocean. Love is a lifting no less than a swelling of the
+heart, What changes, what metamorphoses, transformations,
+purifications, glorifications, this or that love must undergo ere
+it take its eternal place in the kingdom of heaven, through all
+its changes yet remaining, in its one essential root, the same,
+let the coming redemption reveal. The hope of all honest lovers
+will lead them to the vision. Only let them remember that love
+must dwell in the will as well as in the heart.</p>
+
+<p>But whatever the nature of Malcolm's influence upon Lady
+Clementina, she resented it, thinking towards and speaking to him
+repellently. Something in her did not like him. She knew he did
+not approve of her, and she did not like being disapproved of.
+Neither did she approve of him. He was pedantic -- and far too
+good for an honest and brave youth: not that she could say she
+had seen dishonesty or cowardice in him, or that she could have
+told which vice she would prefer to season his goodness withal,
+and bring him to the level of her ideal. And then, for all her
+theories of equality, he was a groom -- therefore to a lady ought
+to be repulsive -- at least when she found him intruding into the
+chambers of her thoughts -- personally intruding -- yes, and met
+there by some traitorous feelings whose behaviour she could not
+understand. She resented it all, and felt towards Malcolm as if
+he were guilty of forcing himself into the sacred presence of her
+bosom's queen -- whereas it was his angel that did so, his Idea,
+over which he had no control. Clementina would have turned that
+Idea out, and when she found she could not, her soul started up
+wrathful, in maidenly disgust with her heart, and cast resentment
+upon everything in him whereon it would hang. She had not yet,
+however, come to ask herself any questions; she had only begun to
+fear that a woman to whom a person from the stables could be
+interesting, even in the form of an unexplained riddle, must be
+herself a person of low tastes; and that, for all her pride in
+coming of honest people, there must be a drop of bad blood in her
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>For a time her eyes had been fixed on her work, and there had
+been silence in the little group.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady!" said Malcolm, and drew a step nearer to
+Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up. How lovely she was with the trouble in her
+eyes! Thought Malcolm, "If only she were what she might be! If
+the form were but filled with the spirit! the body with
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>"My lady!" he repeated, just a little embarrassed, "I should
+like to tell you one thing that came to me only lately -- came to
+me when thinking over the hard words you spoke to me that day in
+the park. But it is something so awful that I dare not speak of
+it except you will make your heart solemn to hear it."</p>
+
+<p>He stopped, with his eyes questioning hers. Clementina's first
+thought once more was madness, but as she steadily returned his
+look, her face grew pale, and she gently bowed her head in
+consent.</p>
+
+<p>"I will try then," said Malcolm. "-- Everybody knows what few
+think about, that once there lived a man who, in the broad face
+of prejudiced respectability, truth hating hypocrisy, commonplace
+religion, and dull book learning, affirmed that he knew the
+secret of life, and understood the heart and history of men --
+who wept over their sorrows, yet worshipped the God of the whole
+earth, saying that he had known him from eternal days. The same
+said that he came to do what the Father did, and that he did
+nothing but what he had learned of the Father. They killed him,
+you know, my lady, in a terrible way that one is afraid even to
+think of. But he insisted that he laid down his life; that he
+allowed them to take it. Now I ask whether that grandest thing,
+crowning his life, the yielding of it to the hand of violence, he
+had not learned also from his Father. Was his death the only
+thing he had not so learned? If I am right, and I do not say if
+in doubt, then the suffering of those three terrible hours was a
+type of the suffering of the Father himself in bringing sons and
+daughters through the cleansing and glorifying fires, without
+which the created cannot be made the very children of God,
+partakers of the divine nature and peace. Then from the lowest,
+weakest tone of suffering, up to the loftiest pitch, the divinest
+acme of pain, there is not one pang to which the sensorium of the
+universe does not respond; never an untuneful vibration of nerve
+or spirit but thrills beyond the brain or the heart of the
+sufferer to the brain, the heart of the universe; and God, in the
+simplest, most literal, fullest sense, and not by sympathy alone,
+suffers with his creatures."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but he is able to bear it; they are not: I cannot bring
+myself to see the right of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor will you, my lady, so long as you cannot bring yourself
+to see the good they get by it. -- My lady, when I was trying my
+best with poor Kelpie, you would not listen to me."</p>
+
+<p>"You are ungenerous," said Clementina, flushing.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," persisted Malcolm, "you would not understand me.
+You denied me a heart because of what seemed in your eyes
+cruelty. I knew that I was saving her from death at the least,
+probably from a life of torture: God may be good, though to you
+his government may seem to deny it. There is but one way God
+cares to govern -- the way of the Father King -- and that way is
+at hand. -- But I have yet given you only the one half of my
+theory: If God feels pain, then he puts forth his will to bear
+and subject that pain; if the pain comes to him from his
+creature, living in him, will the endurance of God be confined to
+himself, and not, in its turn, pass beyond the bounds of his
+individuality, and react upon the sufferer to his sustaining? I
+do not mean that sustaining which a man feels from knowing his
+will one with God's and God with him, but such sustaining as
+those his creatures also may have who do not or cannot know
+whence the sustaining comes. I believe that the endurance of God
+goes forth to uphold, that his patience is strength to his
+creatures, and that, while the whole creation may well groan, its
+suffering is more bearable therefore than it seems to the
+repugnance of our regard."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a dangerous doctrine," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Will it then make the cruel man more cruel to be told that
+God is caring for the tortured creature from the citadel of whose
+life he would force an answer to save his own from the sphinx
+that must at last devour him, let him answer ever so wisely? Or
+will it make the tender less pitiful to be consoled a little in
+the agony of beholding what they cannot alleviate? Many hearts
+are from sympathy as sorely in need of comfort as those with whom
+they suffer. And to such I have one word more -- to your heart,
+my lady, if it will consent to be consoled: The animals, I
+believe, suffer less than we, because they scarcely think of the
+past, and not at all of the future. It is the same with children,
+Mr Graham says they suffer less than grown people, and for the
+same reason. To get back something of this privilege of theirs,
+we have to be obedient and take no thought for the morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina took up her work. Malcolm walked away.</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm," cried his mistress, "are you not going on with the
+book?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope your ladyship will excuse me," said Malcolm. "I would
+rather not read more just at present."</p>
+
+<p>It may seem incredible that one so young as Malcolm should
+have been able to talk thus, and indeed my report may have given
+words more formal and systematic than his really were. For the
+matter of them, it must be remembered that he was not young in
+the effort to do and understand; and that the advantage to such a
+pupil of such a teacher as Mr Graham is illimitable.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLIII"></a>CHAPTER XLIII: A
+PERPLEXITY</h1>
+
+<p>After Malcolm's departure, Clementina attempted to find what
+Florimel thought of the things her strange groom had been saying:
+she found only that she neither thought at all about them, nor
+had a single true notion concerning the matter of their
+conversation. Seeking to interest her in it and failing, she
+found however that she had greatly deepened its impression upon
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel had not yet quite made up her mind whether or not she
+should open her heart to Clementina, but she approached the door
+of it in requesting her opinion upon the matter of marriage
+between persons of social conditions widely parted --
+"frightfully sundered," she said. Now Clementina was a radical of
+her day, a reformer, a leveller -- one who complained bitterly
+that some should be so rich, and some so poor. In this she was
+perfectly honest. Her own wealth, from a vague sense of
+unrighteousness in the possession of it, was such a burden to
+her, that she threw it away where often it made other people
+stumble if not fall. She professed to regard all men as equal,
+and believed that she did so. She was powerful in her contempt of
+the distinctions made between certain of the classes, but had
+signally failed in some bold endeavours to act as if they had no
+existence except in the whims of society. As yet no man had
+sought her nearer regard for whom she would deign to cherish even
+friendship. As to marriage, she professed, right honestly, an
+entire disinclination, even aversion to it, saying to herself
+that if ever she should marry it must be, for the sake of protest
+and example, one notably beneath her in social condition. He must
+be a gentleman, but his claims to that rare distinction should
+lie only in himself, not his position, in what he was, not what
+he had. But it is one thing to have opinions, and another to be
+called upon to show them beliefs; it is one thing to declare all
+men equal, and another to tell the girl who looks up to you for
+advice, that she ought to feel herself at perfect liberty to
+marry -- say a groom; and when Florimel proposed the general
+question, Clementina might well have hesitated. And indeed she
+did hesitate -- but in vain she tried to persuade herself that it
+was solely for the sake of her young and inexperienced friend
+that she did so. As little could she honestly say that it was
+from doubt of the principles she had so long advocated. Had
+Florimel been open with her, and told her what sort of inferior
+was in her thoughts, instead of representing the gulf between
+them as big enough to swallow the city of Rome; had she told her
+that he was a gentleman, a man of genius and gifts, noble and
+large hearted, and indeed better bred than any other man she
+knew, the fact of his profession would only have clenched Lady
+Clementina's decision in his favour; and if Florimel had been
+honest enough to confess the encouragement she had given him --
+nay, the absolute love passages there had been, Clementina would
+at once have insisted that her friend should write an apology for
+her behaviour to him, should dare the dastard world, and offer to
+marry him when he would. But, Florimel putting the question as
+she did, how should Clementina imagine anything other than that
+it referred to Malcolm? and a strange confusion of feeling was
+the consequence. Her thoughts heaved in her like the half shaped
+monsters of a spiritual chaos, and amongst them was one she could
+not at all identify. A direct answer she found impossible. She
+found also that in presence of Florimel, so much younger than
+herself, and looking up to her for advice, she dared not even let
+the questions now pressing for entrance appear before her
+consciousness. She therefore declined giving an answer of any
+sort -- was not prepared with one, she said; much was to be
+considered; no two cases were just alike.</p>
+
+<p>They were summoned to tea, after which she retired to her
+room, shut the door, and began to think -- an operation which,
+seldom easy if worth anything, was in the present case peculiarly
+difficult, both because Clementina was not used to it, and the
+subject object of it was herself. I suspect that self examination
+is seldom the most profitable, certainly it is sometimes the most
+unpleasant, and always the most difficult of moral actions --
+that is, to perform after a genuine fashion. I know that very
+little of what passes for it has the remotest claim to reality;
+and I will not say it has never to be done; but I am certain that
+a good deal of the energy spent by some devout and upright people
+on trying to understand themselves and their own motives, would
+be expended to better purpose, and with far fuller attainment
+even in regard to that object itself, in the endeavour to
+understand God, and what he would have us to do.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina's attempt was as honest as she dared make it.
+It went something after this fashion:</p>
+
+<p>"How is it possible I should counsel a young creature like
+that, with all her gifts and privileges, to marry a groom -- to
+bring the stable into her chamber? If I did -- if she did, has
+she the strength to hold her face to it? -- Yes, I know how
+different he is from any other groom that ever rode behind a
+lady! but does she understand him? Is she capable of such a
+regard for him as could outlast a week of closer intimacy? At her
+age it is impossible she should know what she was doing in daring
+such a thing. It would be absolute ruin to her. And how could I
+advise her to do what I could not do myself? -- But then if she's
+in love with him?"</p>
+
+<p>She rose and paced the room -- not hurriedly -- she never did
+anything hurriedly -- but yet with unleisurely steps, until,
+catching sight of herself in the glass, she turned away as from
+an intruding and unwelcome presence, and threw herself on her
+couch, burying her face in the pillow. Presently, however, she
+rose again, her face glowing, and again walked up and down the
+room -- almost swiftly now. I can but indicate the course of her
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"If what he says be true! -- It opens another and higher life.
+-- What a man he is! and so young! -- Has he not convicted me of
+feebleness and folly, and made me ashamed of myself? -- What
+better thing could man or woman do for another than lower her in
+her own haughty eyes, and give her a chance of becoming such as
+she had but dreamed of the shadow of? -- He is a gentleman --
+every inch! Hear him talk! -- Scotch, no doubt, -- and -- well --
+a little long winded -- a bad fault at his age! But see him ride!
+-- see him swim! -- and to save a bird! -- But then he is hard --
+severe at best! All religious people are so severe! They think
+they are safe themselves, and so can afford to be hard on others!
+He would serve his wife the same as his mare if he thought she
+required it! -- And I have known women for whom it might be the
+best thing. I am a fool! a soft hearted idiot! He told me I would
+give a baby a lighted candle if it cried for it -- Or didn't he?
+I believe he never uttered a word of the sort; he only thought
+it" -- As she said this, there came a strange light in her eyes,
+and the light seemed to shine from all around them as well as
+from the orbs themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she stood still as a statue in the middle of the
+room, and her face grew white as the marble of one. For a minute
+she stood thus -- without a definite thought in her brain. The
+first that came was something like this: "Then Florimel does love
+him! -- and wants help to decide whether she shall marry him or
+not! Poor weak little wretch! -- Then if I were in love with him,
+I would marry him -- would I? -- It is well, perhaps, that I'm
+not! -- But she! he is ten times too good for her! He would be
+utterly thrown away on her! But I am her counsel, not his; and
+what better could come to her than have such a man for a husband;
+and instead of that contemptible Liftore, with his grand earldom
+ways and proud nose! He has little to be proud of that must take
+to his rank for it! Fancy a right man condescending to be proud
+of his own rank! Pooh! But this groom is a man! all a man! grand
+from the centre out, as the great God made him! -- Yes, it must
+be a great God that made such a man as that! -- that is, if he is
+the same he looks -- the same all through! -- Perhaps there are
+more Gods than one, and one of them is the devil, and made
+Liftore! But am I bound to give her advice? Surely not! I may
+refuse. And rightly too! A woman that marries from advice,
+instead of from a mighty love, is wrong. I need not speak. I
+shall just tell her to consult her own heart -- and conscience,
+and follow them. -- But, gracious me! Am I then going to fall in
+love with the fellow? -- this stable man who pretends to know his
+maker!</p>
+
+<p>Certainly not. There is nothing of the kind in my thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, how should I know what falling in love means? I never
+was in love in my life, and don't mean to be. If I were so
+foolish as imagine myself in any danger, would I be such a fool
+as be caught in it? I should think not indeed! What if I do think
+of this man in a way I never thought of anyone before, is there
+anything odd in that? How should I help it when he is unlike
+anyone I ever saw before? One must think of people as one finds
+them. Does it follow that I have power over myself no longer, and
+must go where any chance feeling may choose to lead me?</p>
+
+<p>Here came a pause. Then she started, and once more began
+walking up and down the room, now hurriedly indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not have it!" she cried aloud -- and checked herself,
+dashed at the sound of her own voice. But her soul went on loud
+enough for the thought universe to hear. "There can't be a God,
+or he would never subject his women to what they don't choose. If
+a God had made them, he would have them queens over themselves at
+least -- and I will be queen, and then perhaps a God did make me.
+A slave to things inside myself! -- thoughts and feelings I
+refuse, and which I ought to have control over! I don't want this
+in me, yet I can't drive it out! I will drive it out. It is not
+me. A slave on my own ground! worst slavery of all! -- It will
+not go. -- That must be because I do not will it strong enough.
+And if I don't will it -- my God! -- what does that mean? -- That
+I am a slave already?"</p>
+
+<p>Again she threw herself on her couch, but only to rise and yet
+again pace the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense! it is not love. It is merely that nobody could help
+thinking about one who had been so much before her mind for so
+long -- one too who had made her think. Ah! there, I do believe,
+lies the real secret of it all! -- There's the main cause of my
+trouble -- and nothing worse! I must not be foolhardy though, and
+remain in danger, especially as, for anything I can tell, he may
+be in love with that foolish child. People, they say, like people
+that are not at all like themselves. Then I am sure he might like
+me! -- She seems to be in love with him! I know she cannot be
+half a quarter in real love with him: it's not in her."</p>
+
+<p>She did not rejoin Florimel that evening: it was part of the
+understanding between the ladies that each should be at absolute
+liberty. She slept little during the night, starting awake as
+often as she began to slumber, and before the morning came was a
+good deal humbled. All sorts of means are kept at work to make
+the children obedient and simple and noble. Joy and sorrow are
+servants in God's nursery; pain and delight, ecstasy and despair
+minister in it; but amongst them there is none more marvellous in
+its potency than that mingling of all pains and pleasures to
+which we specially give the name of Love.</p>
+
+<p>When she appeared at breakfast, her countenance bore traces of
+her suffering, but a headache, real enough, though little heeded
+in the commotion upon whose surface it floated, gave answer to
+the not very sympathetic solicitude of Florimel. Happily the day
+of their return was near at hand. Some talk there had been of
+protracting their stay, but to that Clementina avoided any
+farther allusion. She must put an end to an intercourse which she
+was compelled to admit was, at least, in danger of becoming
+dangerous. This much she had with certainty discovered concerning
+her own feelings, that her heart grew hot and cold at the thought
+of the young man belonging more to the mistress who could not
+understand him than to herself who imagined she could; and it
+wanted no experience in love to see that it was therefore time to
+be on her guard against herself, for to herself she was growing
+perilous.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLIV"></a>CHAPTER XLIV: THE
+MIND OF THE AUTHOR</h1>
+
+<p>The next was the last day of the reading. They must finish the
+tale that morning, and on the following set out to return home,
+travelling as they had come. Clementina had not the strength of
+mind to deny herself that last indulgence -- a long four days'
+ride in the company of this strangest of attendants. After that,
+if not the deluge, yet a few miles of Sahara.</p>
+
+<p>"' It is the opinion of many that he has entered into a
+Moravian mission, for the use of which he had previously drawn
+considerable sums,'" read Malcolm, and paused, with book half
+closed.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?" asked Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"Not quite, my lady," he answered. "There isn't much more, but
+I was just thinking whether we hadn't come upon something worth a
+little reflection -- whether we haven't here a window into the
+mind of the author of Waverley, whoever he may be, Mr Scott, or
+another."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean?" said Clementina, interrogatively, and looked up
+from her work, but not at the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean, my lady, that perhaps we here get a glimpse of the
+author's own opinions, or feelings rather, perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see what of the sort you can find there," returned
+Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither should I, my lady, if Mr Graham had not taught me how
+to find Shakspere in his plays. A man's own nature, he used to
+say, must lie at the heart of what he does, even though not
+another man should be sharp enough to find him there. Not a
+hypocrite, the most consummate, he would say, but has his
+hypocrisy written in every line of his countenance and motion of
+his fingers. The heavenly Lavaters can read it, though the
+earthly may not be able."</p>
+
+<p>"And you think you can find him out?" said Clementina,
+dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not the hypocrite, my lady, but Mr Scott here. He is only
+round a single corner. And one thing is -- he believes in a
+God."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you make that out?"</p>
+
+<p>"He means this Mr Tyrrel for a fine fellow, and on the whole
+approves of him -- does he not, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course all that duelling is wrong. But then Mr Scott only
+half disapproves of it. -- And it is almost a pity it is wrong,"
+remarked Malcolm with a laugh; "it is such an easy way of
+settling some difficult things. Yet I hate it. It's so cowardly.
+I may be a better shot than the other, and know it all the time.
+He may know it too, and have twice my courage. And I may think
+him in the wrong, when he knows himself in the right. -- There is
+one man I have felt as if I should like to kill. When I was a boy
+I killed the cats that ate my pigeons."</p>
+
+<p>A look of horror almost distorted Lady Clementina's
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what to say next, my lady," he went on, with a
+smile, "because I have no way of telling whether you looked
+shocked for the cats I killed, or the pigeons they killed, or the
+man I would rather see killed than have him devour more of my --
+white doves," he concluded sadly, with a little shake of the
+head. -- "But, please God," he resumed, "I shall manage to keep
+them from him, and let him live to be as old as Methuselah if he
+can, even if he should grow in cunning and wickedness all the
+time. I wonder how he will feel when he comes to see what a
+sneaking cat he is. But this is not what we set out for. -- Mr
+Tyrrel, then, the author's hero, joins the Moravians at
+last."</p>
+
+<p>"What are they?" questioned Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Simple, good, practical Christians, I believe," answered
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"But he only does it when disappointed in love."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady; he is not disappointed. The lady is only
+dead."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina stared a moment -- then dropped her head as if she
+understood. Presently she raised it again and said,</p>
+
+<p>"But, according to what you said the other day, in doing so he
+was forsaking altogether the duties of the station in which God
+had called him."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true. It would have been a far grander thing to do
+his duty where he was, than to find another place and another
+duty. An earldom allotted is better than a mission
+preferred."</p>
+
+<p>"And at least you must confess," interrupted Clementina, "that
+he only took to religion because he was unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, my lady, it is the nobler thing to seek God in the
+days of gladness, to look up to him in trustful bliss when the
+sun is shining. But if a man be miserable, if the storm is coming
+down on him, what is he to do? There is nothing mean in seeking
+God then, though it would have been nobler to seek him before. --
+But to return to the matter in hand: the author of Waverley makes
+his noble hearted hero, whom assuredly he had no intention of
+disgracing, turn Moravian; and my conclusion from it is that, in
+his judgment, nobleness leads in the direction of religion; that
+he considers it natural for a noble mind to seek comfort there
+for its deepest sorrows."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it may be so; but what is religion without consistency
+in action?" said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Then how can you, professing to believe as you do, cherish
+such feelings towards any man as you have just been
+confessing?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't cherish them, my lady. But I succeed in avoiding hate
+better than suppressing contempt, which perhaps is the worse of
+the two. There may be some respect in hate."</p>
+
+<p>Here he paused, for here was a chance that was not likely to
+recur. He might say before two ladies what he could not say
+before one. If he could but rouse Florimel's indignation! Then at
+any suitable time only a word more would be needful to direct it
+upon the villain. Clementina's eyes continued fixed upon him. At
+length he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I will try to make two pictures in your mind, my lady, if you
+will help me to paint them. In my mind they are not painted
+pictures -- A long seacoast, my lady, and a stormy night; -- the
+sea horses rushing in from the northeast, and the snowflakes
+beginning to fall. On the margin of the sea a long dune or
+sandbank, and on the top of it, her head bare, and her thin
+cotton dress nearly torn from her by the wind, a young woman,
+worn and white, with an old faded tartan shawl tight about her
+shoulders, and the shape of a baby inside it, upon her arm."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! she doesn't mind the cold," said Florimel. "When I was
+there, I didn't mind it a bit."</p>
+
+<p>"She does not mind the cold," answered Malcolm; "she is far
+too miserable for that."</p>
+
+<p>"But she has no business to take the baby out on such a
+night," continued Florimel, carelessly critical. "You ought to
+have painted her by the fireside. They have all of them firesides
+to sit at. I have seen them through the windows many a time."</p>
+
+<p>"Shame or cruelty had driven her from it," said Malcolm, "and
+there she was."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean you saw her yourself wandering about?" asked
+Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty times, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what comes next?" said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"Next comes a young gentleman; -- but this is a picture in
+another frame, although of the same night; -- a young gentleman
+in evening dress, sipping his madeira, warm and comfortable, in
+the bland temper that should follow the best of dinners, his face
+beaming with satisfaction after some boast concerning himself, or
+with silent success in the concoction of one or two compliments
+to have at hand when he joins the ladies in the drawing
+room."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody can help such differences," said Florimel. "If there
+were nobody rich, who would there be to do anything for the poor?
+It's not the young gentleman's fault that he is better born and
+has more money than the poor girl."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Malcolm; "but what if the poor girl has the young
+gentleman's child to carry about from morning to night."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, well! I suppose she's paid for it," said Florimel, whose
+innocence must surely have been supplemented by some stupidity,
+born of her flippancy.</p>
+
+<p>"Do be quiet, Florimel," said Clementina. "You don't know what
+you are talking about."</p>
+
+<p>Her face was in a glow, and one glance at it set Florimel's in
+a flame. She rose without a word, but with a look of mingled
+confusion and offence, and walked away. Clementina gathered her
+work together. But ere she followed her, she turned to Malcolm,
+looked him calmly in the face, and said,</p>
+
+<p>"No one can blame you for hating such a man."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, my lady, but some one would -- the only one for whose
+praise or blame we ought to care more than a straw or two. He
+tells us we are neither to judge nor to hate. But --"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot stay and talk with you," said Clementina. "You must
+pardon me if I follow your mistress."</p>
+
+<p>Another moment and he would have told her all, in the hope of
+her warning Florimel. But she was gone.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLV"></a>CHAPTER XLV: THE
+RIDE HOME</h1>
+
+<p>Florimel was offended with Malcolm: he had put her confidence
+in him to shame, speaking of things to which he ought not once to
+have even alluded. But Clementina was not only older than
+Florimel, but in her loving endeavours for her kind, had heard
+many a pitiful story, and was now saddened by the tale, not
+shocked at the teller. Indeed, Malcolm's mode of acquainting her
+with the grounds of the feeling she had challenged pleased both
+her heart and her sense of what was becoming; while, as a
+partisan of women, finding a man also of their part, she was
+ready to offer him the gratitude of all womankind -- in her one
+typical self.</p>
+
+<p>"What a rough diamond is here!" she thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Rough!" echoed her heart: "how is he rough? What fault could
+the most fastidious find with his manners? True, he speaks as a
+servant -- and where would be his manners if he did not? But
+neither in tone, expression, nor way of thinking, is he in the
+smallest degree servile. He is like a great pearl, clean out of
+the sea -- bred, it is true, in the midst of strange
+surroundings, but pure as the moonlight; and if a man, so
+environed, yet has grown so grand, what might he not become with
+such privileges as --"</p>
+
+<p>Good Clementina -- what did she mean? Did she imagine that
+such mere gifts as she might give him, could do more for him than
+the great sea, with the torment and conquest of its winds and
+tempests? more than his own ministrations of love, and victories
+over passion and pride? What the final touches of the shark skin
+are to the marble that stands lord of the flaming bow, that only
+can wealth and position be to the man who has yielded neither to
+the judgments of the world nor the drawing of his own
+inclinations, and so has submitted himself to the chisel and
+mallet of his maker. Society is the barber who trims a man's
+hair, often very badly too -- and pretends he made it grow. If
+her owner should take her, body and soul, and make of her being a
+gift to his -- ah, then, indeed! But Clementina was not yet
+capable of perceiving that, while what she had in her thought to
+offer might hurt him, it could do him little good. Her feeling
+concerning him, however, was all the time far indeed from folly.
+Not for a moment did she imagine him in love with her. Possibly
+she admired him too much to attribute to him such an intolerable
+and insolent presumption as that would have appeared to her own
+inferior self. Still, she was far indeed from certain, were she,
+as befits the woman so immeasurably beyond even the aspiration of
+the man, to make him offer implicit of hand and havings, that he
+would reach out his to take them. And certainly that she was not
+going to do -- in which determination, whether she knew it or
+not, there was as much modesty and gracious doubt of her own
+worth as there was pride and maidenly recoil. In one resolve she
+was confident, that her behaviour towards him should be such as
+to keep him just where he was, affording him no smallest excuse
+for taking one step nearer: and they would soon be in London,
+where she would see nothing, or next to nothing more of him. But
+should she ever cease to thank God, that was, if ever she came to
+find him, that in this groom he had shown her what he could do in
+the way of making a man! Heartily she wished she knew a nobleman
+or two like him. In the meantime she meant to enjoy -- with
+carefulness -- the ride to London, after which things should be
+as before.</p>
+
+<p>The morning arrived; they finished breakfast; the horses came
+round and stood at the door -- all but Kelpie. The ladies
+mounted. Ah, what a morning to leave the country and go back to
+London! The sun shone clear on the dark pine woods; the birds
+were radiant in song; all under the trees the ferns were
+unrolling each its mystery of ever generating life; the soul of
+the summer was there whose mere idea sends the heart into the
+eyes, while itself flits mocking from the cage of words. A
+gracious mystery it was -- in the air, in the sun, in the earth,
+in their own hearts. The lights of heaven mingled and played with
+the shadows of the earth, which looked like the souls of the
+trees, that had been out wandering all night, and had been
+overtaken by the sun ere they could re-enter their dark cells.
+Every motion of the horses under them was like a throb of the
+heart of the earth, every bound like a sigh of her bliss.
+Florimel shouted almost like a boy with ecstasy, and Clementina's
+moonlight went very near changing into sunlight as she gazed, and
+breathed, and knew that she was alive.</p>
+
+<p>They started without Malcolm, for he must always put his
+mistress up, and then go back to the stable for Kelpie. In a
+moment they were in the wood, crossing its shadows. It was like
+swimming their horses through a sea of shadows. Then came a
+little stream and the horses splashed it about like children from
+very gamesomeness. Half a mile more and there was a sawmill, with
+a mossy wheel, a pond behind, dappled with sun and shade, a dark
+rush of water along a brown trough, and the air full of the sweet
+smell of sawn wood. Clementina had not once looked behind, and
+did not know whether Malcolm had yet joined them or not. All at
+once the wild vitality of Kelpie filled the space beside her, and
+the voice of Malcolm was in her ears. She turned her head. He was
+looking very solemn.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you let me tell you, my lady, what this always makes me
+think of?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What in particular do you mean?" returned Clementina
+coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"This smell of new sawn wood that fills the air, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>She bowed her head.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes me think of Jesus in his father's workshop," said
+Malcolm "-- how he must have smelled the same sweet scent of the
+trees of the world broken for the uses of men, that is now so
+sweet to me. Oh, my lady! it makes the earth very holy and very
+lovely to think that as we are in the world, so was he in the
+world. Oh, my lady I think: -- if God should be so nearly one
+with us that it was nothing strange to him thus to visit his
+people! that we are not the offspring of the soulless tyranny of
+law that knows not even its own self, but the children of an
+unfathomable wonder, of which science gathers only the foambells
+on the shore -- children in the house of a living Father, so
+entirely our Father that he cares even to death that we should
+understand and love him!"</p>
+
+<p>He reined Kelpie back, and as she passed on, his eyes caught a
+glimmer of emotion in Clementina's. He fell behind, and all that
+day did not come near her again.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel asked her what he had been saying, and she compelled
+herself to repeat a part of it.</p>
+
+<p>"He is always saying such odd out of the way things!" remarked
+Florimel. "I used sometimes, like you, to fancy him a little
+astray, but I soon found I was wrong. I wish you could have heard
+him tell a story he once told my father and me. It was one of the
+wildest you ever heard. I can't tell to this day whether he
+believed it himself or not. He told it quite as if he did."</p>
+
+<p>"Could you not make him tell it again, as we ride along? It
+would shorten the way."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want the way shortened? -- I don't. But indeed it
+would not do to tell it so. It ought to be heard just where I
+heard it -- at the foot of the ruined castle where the dreadful
+things in it took place. You must come and see me at Lossie House
+in the autumn, and then he shall tell it you. Besides, it ought
+to be told in Scotch, and there you will soon learn enough to
+follow it: half the charm depends on that."</p>
+
+<p>Although Malcolm did not again approach Clementina that day,
+he watched almost her every motion as she rode. Her lithe
+graceful back and shoulders -- for she was a rebel against the
+fashion of the day in dress as well as in morals, and, believing
+in the natural stay of the muscles, had found them responsive to
+her trust -- the noble poise of her head, and the motions of her
+arms, easy yet decided, were ever present to him, though
+sometimes he could hardly have told whether his sight or his mind
+-- now in the radiance of the sun, now in the shadow of the wood,
+now against the green of the meadow, now against the blue of the
+sky, and now in the faint moonlight, through which he followed,
+as a ghost in the realms of Hades might follow the ever flitting
+phantom of his love. Day glided after day. Adventure came not
+near them. Soft and lovely as a dream the morning dawned, the
+noon flowed past, the evening came and the death that followed
+was yet sweeter than the life that had gone before. Through it
+all, daydream and nightly trance, radiant air and moony mist,
+before him glode the shape of Clementina, its every motion a
+charm. After that shape he could have been content, oh, how
+content! to ride on and on through the ever unfolding vistas of
+an eternal succession. Occasionally his mistress would call him
+to her, and then he would have one glance of the day side of the
+wondrous world he had been following. Somewhere within it must be
+the word of the living One. Little he thought that all the time
+she was thinking more of him who had spoken that word in her
+hearing. That he was the object of her thoughts not a suspicion
+crossed the mind of the simple youth. How could he imagine a lady
+like her taking a fancy to what, for all his marquisate, he was
+still in his own eyes, a raw young fisherman, only just learning
+how to behave himself decently! No doubt, ever since she began to
+listen to reason, the idea of her had been spreading like a sweet
+odour in his heart, but not because she had listened to him. The
+very fulness of his admiration had made him wrathful with the
+intellectual dishonesty, for in her it could not be stupidity,
+that quenched his worship, and the first dawning sign of a
+reasonable soul drew him to her feet, where, like Pygmalion
+before his statue, he could have poured out his heart in thanks,
+that she consented to be a woman. But even the intellectual
+phantom, nay, even the very phrase of being in love with her, had
+never risen upon the dimmest verge of his consciousness -- and
+that although her being had now become to him of all but
+absorbing interest. I say all but, because Malcolm knew something
+of One whose idea she was, who had uttered her from the immortal
+depths of his imagination. The man to whom no window into the
+treasures of the Godhead has yet been opened, may well scoff at
+the notion of such a love, for he has this advantage, that, while
+one like Malcolm can never cease to love, he, gifted being, can
+love today and forget tomorrow -- or next year -- where is the
+difference? Malcolm's main thought was -- what a grand thing it
+would be to rouse a woman like Clementina to lift her head into
+the regions mild of</p>
+
+<pre>
+'calm and serene air,
+Above the smoke and stir of this dim spot
+Which men call Earth.'
+</pre>
+
+<p>If anyone think that love has no right to talk religion, I
+answer for Malcolm at least, asking, Whereof shall a man speak,
+if not out of the abundance of his heart? That man knows little
+either of love or of religion who imagines they ought to be kept
+apart. Of what sort, I ask, is either, if unfit to approach the
+other? Has God decreed, created a love that must separate from
+himself? Is Love then divided? Or shall not love to the heart
+created, lift up the heart to the Heart creating? Alas for the
+love that is not treasured in heaven! for the moth and the rust
+will devour it. Ah, these pitiful old moth eaten loves!</p>
+
+<p>All the journey then Malcolm was thinking how to urge the
+beautiful lady into finding for herself whether she had a father
+in heaven or not. A pupil of Mr Graham, he placed little value in
+argument that ran in any groove but that of persuasion, or any
+value in persuasion that had any end but action.</p>
+
+<p>On the second day of the journey, he rode up to his mistress,
+and told her, taking care that Lady Clementina should hear, that
+Mr Graham was now preaching in London, adding that for his part
+he had never before heard anything fit to call preaching.
+Florimel did not show much interest, but asked where, and Malcolm
+fancied he could see Lady Clementina make a mental note of the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>"If only," he thought, "she would let the power of that man's
+faith have a chance of influencing her, all would be well."</p>
+
+<p>The ladies talked a good deal, but Florimel was not in earnest
+about anything, and for Clementina to have turned the
+conversation upon those possibilities, dim dawning through the
+chaos of her world, which had begun to interest her, would have
+been absurd -- especially since such was her confusion and
+uncertainty, that she could not tell whether they were clouds or
+mountains, shadows or continents. Besides, why give a child
+sovereigns to play with when counters or dominoes would do as
+well? Clementina's thoughts could not have passed into Florimel,
+and become her thoughts. Their hearts, their natures must come
+nearer first. Advise Florimel to disregard rank, and marry the
+man she loved! As well counsel the child to give away the cake he
+would cry for with intensified selfishness the moment he had
+parted with it! Still, there was that in her feeling for Malcolm
+which rendered her doubtful in Florimel's presence.</p>
+
+<p>Between the grooms little passed. Griffith's contempt for
+Malcolm found its least offensive expression in silence, its most
+offensive in the shape of his countenance. He could not make him
+the simplest reply without a sneer. Malcolm was driven to keep
+mostly behind. If by any chance he got in front of his fellow
+groom, Griffith would instantly cross his direction and ride
+between him and the ladies. His look seemed to say he had to
+protect them.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLVI"></a>CHAPTER XLVI:
+PORTLAND PLACE</h1>
+
+<p>The latter part of the journey was not so pleasant: it rained.
+It was not cold, however, and the ladies did not mind it much. It
+accorded with Clementina's mood; and as to Florimel, but for the
+thought of meeting Caley, her fine spirits would have laughed the
+weather to scorn. Malcolm was merry. His spirits always rose at
+the appearance of bad weather, as indeed with every show of
+misfortune a response antagonistic invariably awoke in him. On
+the present occasion he had even to repress the constantly
+recurring impulse to break out in song. His bosom's lord sat
+lightly in his throne. Griffith was the only miserable one of the
+party. He was tired, and did not relish the thought of the work
+to be done before getting home. They entered London in a wet fog,
+streaked with rain, and dyed with smoke. Florimel went with
+Clementina for the night, and Malcolm carried a note from her to
+Lady Bellair, after which, having made Kelpie comfortable, he
+went to his lodgings.</p>
+
+<p>When he entered the curiosity shop, the woman received him
+with evident surprise, and when he would have passed through to
+the stair, stopped him with the unwelcome information that,
+finding he did not return, and knowing nothing about himself or
+his occupation, she had, as soon as the week for which he had
+paid in advance was out, let the room to an old lady from the
+country.</p>
+
+<p>"It is no great matter to me," said Malcolm, thoughtful over
+the woman's want of confidence in him, for he had rather liked
+her, "only I am sorry you could not trust me a little."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all you know, young man," she returned. "People as lives
+in London must take care of theirselves -- not wait for other
+people to do it. They'd soon find theirselves nowheres in
+partic'lar. I've took care on your things, an' laid 'em all
+together, an' the sooner you find another place for 'em the
+better, for they do take up a deal o' room."</p>
+
+<p>His personal property was not so bulky, however, but that in
+ten minutes he had it all in his carpet bag and a paper parcel,
+carrying which he re-entered the shop.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you oblige me by allowing these to lie here till I come
+for them?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>The woman was silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather see the last on 'em," she answered. "To tell the
+truth, I don't like the look on 'em. You acts a part, young man.
+I'm on the square myself. But you'll find plenty to take you in.
+-- No, I can't do it. Take 'em with you."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm turned from her, and with his bag in one hand and the
+parcel under the other arm, stepped from the shop into the dreary
+night. There he stood in the drizzle. It was a bystreet into
+which gas had not yet penetrated, and the oil lamps shone red and
+dull through the fog. He concluded to leave the things with
+Merton, while he went to find a lodging.</p>
+
+<p>Merton was a decent sort of fellow -- not in his master's
+confidence, and Malcolm found him quite as sympathetic as the
+small occasion demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"It ain't no sort o' night," he said, "to go lookin' for a
+bed. Let's go an' speak to my old woman: she's a oner at
+contrivin'."</p>
+
+<p>He lived over the stable, and they had but to go up the stair.
+Mrs Merton sat by the fire. A cradle with a baby was in front of
+it. On the other side sat Caley, in suppressed exultation, for
+here came what she had been waiting for -- the first fruits of
+certain arrangements between her and Mrs Catanach. She greeted
+Malcolm distantly, but neither disdainfully nor spitefully.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust you've brought me back my lady, MacPhail," she said;
+then added, thawing into something like jocularity, "I shouldn't
+have looked to you to go running away with her."</p>
+
+<p>"I left my lady at Lady Clementina Thornicroft's an hour ago"
+answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course! Lady Clem's everything now."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe my lady's not coming home till tomorrow," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"All the better for us," returned Caley. "Her room ain't ready
+for her. -- But I didn't know you lodged with Mrs Merton,
+MacPhail," she said, with a look at the luggage he had placed on
+the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawks, miss!" cried the good woman, "wherever should we put
+him up, as has but the next room?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have to find that out, mother," said Merton. "Sure
+you've got enough to shake down for him! With a truss of straw to
+help, you'll manage it somehow -- eh, old lady? -- I'll be
+bound!" And with that he told Malcolm's condition.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I suppose we must manage it somehow," answered his
+wife, "but I'm afraid we can't make him over comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see but we could take him in at the house," said
+Caley, reflectively. "There is a small room empty in the garret,
+I know. It ain't much more than a closet, to be sure, but if he
+could put up with it for a night or two, just till he found a
+better, I would run across and see what they say."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm wondered at the change in her, but could not hesitate.
+The least chance of getting settled in the house was a thing not
+to be thrown away. He thanked her heartily. She rose and went,
+and they sat and talked till her return. She had been delayed,
+she said, by the housekeeper; "the cross old patch" had objected
+to taking in anyone from the stables.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure," she went on, "there ain't the ghost of a reason
+why you shouldn't have the room, except that it ain't good
+enough. Nobody else wants it, or is likely to. But it's all right
+now, and if you'll come across in about an hour, you'll find it
+ready for you. One of the girls in the kitchen -- I forget her
+name -- -- offered to make it tidy for you. Only take care -- I
+give you warning: she's a great admirer of Mr MacPhail."</p>
+
+<p>Therewith she took her departure, and at the appointed time
+Malcolm followed her. The door was opened to him by one of the
+maids whom he knew by sight, and in her guidance he soon found
+himself in that part of a house he liked best -- immediately
+under the roof. The room was indeed little more than a closet in
+the slope of the roof with only a skylight. But just outside the
+door was a storm window, from which, over the top of a lower
+range of houses, he had a glimpse of the mews yard. The place
+smelt rather badly of mice, while, as the skylight was
+immediately above his bed, and he had no fancy for drenching that
+with an infusion of soot, he could not open it. These, however,
+were the sole faults he had to find with the place. Everything
+looked nice and clean, and his education had not tended to
+fastidiousness. He took a book from his bag, and read a good
+while; then went to bed, and fell fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning he woke early, as was his habit, sprang at once
+on the floor, dressed, and went quietly down. The household was
+yet motionless. He had begun to descend the last stair, when all
+at once he turned deadly sick, and had to sit down, grasping the
+balusters. In a few minutes he recovered, and made the best speed
+he could to the stable, where Kelpie was now beginning to demand
+her breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm had never in his life before felt sick, and it
+seemed awful to him. Something that had appeared his own, a
+portion -- hardly a portion, rather an essential element of
+himself; had suddenly deserted him, left him a prey to the inroad
+of something that was not of himself, bringing with it faintness
+of heart, fear and dismay. He found himself for the first time in
+his life trembling; and it was to him a thing as appalling as
+strange. While he sat on the stair he could not think; but as he
+walked to the mews he said to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"Am I then the slave of something that is not myself --
+something to which my fancied freedom and strength are a mockery?
+Was my courage, my peace, all the time dependent on something not
+me, which could be separated from me, and but a moment ago was
+separated from me, and left me as helplessly dismayed as the
+veriest coward in creation? I wonder what Alexander would have
+thought if, as he swung himself on Bucephalus, he had been taken
+as I was on the stair."</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards, talking the thing over with Mr Graham, he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"I saw that I had no hand in my own courage. If I had any
+courage, it was simply that I was born with it. If it left me, I
+could not help it: I could neither prevent nor recall it; I could
+only wait until it returned. Why, then, I asked myself, should I
+feel ashamed that, for five minutes, as I sat on the stair,
+Kelpie was a terror to me, and I felt as if I dared not go near
+her? I had almost reached the stable before I saw into it a
+little. Then I did see that if I had had nothing to do with my
+own courage, it was quite time I had something to do with it. If
+a man had no hand in his own nature, character, being, what could
+he be better than a divine puppet -- a happy creature, possibly
+-- a heavenly animal, like the grand horses and lions of the book
+of the Revelation -- but not one of the gods that the sons of
+God, the partakers of the divine nature, are? For this end came
+the breach in my natural courage -- that I might repair it from
+the will and power God had given me, that I might have a hand in
+the making of my own courage, in the creating of myself.
+Therefore I must see to it."</p>
+
+<p>Nor had he to wait for his next lesson, namely, the
+opportunity of doing what he had been taught in the first. For
+just as he reached the stable, where he heard Kelpie clamouring
+with hoofs and teeth, after her usual manner when she judged
+herself neglected, the sickness returned, and with it such a fear
+of the animal he heard thundering and clashing on the other side
+of the door, as amounted to nothing less than horror. She was a
+man eating horse! -- a creature with bloody teeth, brain
+spattered hoofs, and eyes of hate! A flesh loving devil had
+possessed her and was now crying out for her groom that he might
+devour him.</p>
+
+<p>He gathered, with agonized effort, every power within him to
+an awful council, and thus he said to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"Better a thousand times my brain plastered the stable wall
+than I should hold them in the head of a dastard. How can God
+look at me with any content if I quail in the face of his four
+footed creature! Does he not demand of me action according to
+what I know, not what I may chance at any moment to feel? God is
+my strength, and I will lay hold of that strength and use it, or
+I have none, and Kelpie may take me and welcome."</p>
+
+<p>Therewith the sickness abated so far that he was able to open
+the stable door; and, having brought them once into the presence
+of their terror, his will arose and lorded it over his shrinking
+quivering nerves, and like slaves they obeyed him. Surely the
+Father of his spirit was most in that will when most that will
+was Malcolm's own! It is when a man is most a man, that the cause
+of the man, the God of his life, the very Life himself the
+original life-creating Life, is closest to him, is most within
+him. The individual, that his individuality may blossom, and not
+soon be "massed into the common clay," must have the vital
+indwelling of the primary Individuality which is its origin. The
+fire that is the hidden life of the bush will not consume it.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm tottered to the corn bin, staggered up to Kelpie, fell
+up against her hind quarters as they dropped from a great kick,
+but got into the stall beside her. She turned eagerly, darted at
+her food, swallowed it greedily, and was quiet as a lamb while he
+dressed her.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLVII"></a>CHAPTER XLVII:
+PORTLOSSIE AND SCAURNOSE</h1>
+
+<p>Meantime things were going rather badly at Portlossie and
+Scaurnose; and the factor was the devil of them. Those who had
+known him longest said he must be fey, that is doomed, so
+strangely altered was his behaviour. Others said he took more
+counsel with his bottle than had been his wont, and got no good
+from it. Almost all the fishers found him surly, and upon some he
+broke out in violent rage, while to certain whom he regarded as
+Malcolm's special friends, he carried himself with cruel
+oppression. The notice to leave at midsummer clouded the destiny
+of Joseph Mair and his family, and every householder in the two
+villages believed that to take them in would be to call down the
+like fate upon himself. But Meg Partan at least was not to be
+intimidated. Her outbursts of temper were but the hurricanes of a
+tropical heart -- not much the less true and good and steadfast
+that it was fierce. Let the factor rage as he would, Meg was
+absolute in her determination that, if the cruel sentence was
+carried out, which she hardly expected, her house should be the
+shelter of those who had received her daughter when her severity
+had driven her from her home. That would leave her own family and
+theirs three months to look out for another abode. Certain of
+Blue Peter's friends ventured a visit of intercession to the
+factor, and were received with composure and treated with
+consideration until their object appeared, when his wrath burst
+forth so wildly that they were glad to escape without having to
+defend their persons: only the day before had he learned with
+certainty from Miss Horn that Malcolm was still in the service of
+the marchioness, and in constant attendance upon her when she
+rode. It almost maddened him. He had for some time taken to
+drinking more toddy after his dinner, and it was fast ruining his
+temper: his wife, who had from the first excited his indignation
+against Malcolm, was now reaping her reward. To complete the
+troubles of the fisher folk, the harbour at Portlossie had, by a
+severe equinoctial storm, been so filled with sand as to be now
+inaccessible at lower than half tide, nobody as yet having made
+it his business to see it attended to.</p>
+
+<p>But, in the midst of his anxieties about Florimel and his
+interest in Clementina, Malcolm had not been forgetting them. As
+soon as he was a little settled in London, he had written to Mr
+Soutar, and he to architects and contractors, on the subject of a
+harbour at Scaurnose. But there were difficulties, and the matter
+had been making but slow progress. Malcolm, however, had
+insisted, and in consequence of his determination to have the
+possibilities of the thing thoroughly understood, three men
+appeared one morning on the rocks at the bottom of the cliff on
+the west side of the Nose. The children of the village discovered
+them, and carried the news; whereupon, the men being all out in
+the bay, the women left their work and went to see what the
+strangers were about. The moment they were satisfied that they
+could make nothing of their proceedings, they naturally became
+suspicious. To whom the fancy first occurred, nobody ever knew,
+but such was the unhealthiness of the moral atmosphere of the
+place, caused by the injustice and severity of Mr Crathie, that,
+once suggested, it was universally received that they were sent
+by the factor -- and that for a purpose only too consistent with
+the treatment Scaurnose, they said, had invariably received ever
+since first it was the dwelling of fishers! Had not their fathers
+told them how unwelcome they were to the lords of the land? And
+what rents had they not to pay! and how poor was the shelter for
+which they did so much -- without a foot of land to grow a potato
+in! To crown all, the factor was at length about to drive them in
+a body from the place -- Blue Peter first, one of the best as
+well as the most considerable men among them! His notice to quit
+was but the beginning of a clearance. It was easy to see what
+those villains were about -- on that precious rock, their only
+friend, the one that did its best to give them the sole shadow of
+harbourage they had, cutting off the wind from the northeast a
+little, and breaking the eddy round the point of the Nose! What
+could they be about but marking the spots where to bore the holes
+for the blasting powder that should scatter it to the winds, and
+let death and destruction, and the wild sea howling in upon
+Scaurnose, that the cormorant and the bittern might possess it,
+the owl and the raven dwell in it? But it would be seen what
+their husbands and fathers would say to it when they came home!
+In the meantime they must themselves do what they could. What
+were they men's wives for, if not to act for their husbands when
+they happened to be away?</p>
+
+<p>The result was a shower of stones upon the unsuspecting
+surveyors, who forthwith fled, and carried the report of their
+reception to Mr Soutar at Duff Harbour. He wrote to Mr Crathie,
+who till then had heard nothing of the business; and the news
+increased both his discontent with his superiors, and his wrath
+with those whom he had come to regard as his rebellious subjects.
+The stiff necked people of the Bible was to him always now, as
+often he heard the words, the people of Scaurnose and the Seaton
+of Portlossie. And having at length committed this overt outrage,
+would he not be justified by all in taking more active measures
+against them?</p>
+
+<p>When the fishermen came home and heard how their women had
+conducted themselves, they accepted their conjectures, and
+approved of their defence of the settlement. It was well for the
+land loupers, they said, that they had only the women to deal
+with.</p>
+
+<p>Blue Peter did not so soon hear of the affair as the rest, for
+his Annie had not been one of the assailants. But when the
+hurried retreat of the surveyors was described to him in somewhat
+graphic language by one of those concerned in causing it, he
+struck his clenched fist in the palm of his other hand, and
+cried,</p>
+
+<p>"Weel saired! There! that's what comes o' yer new --"</p>
+
+<p>He had all but broken his promise, as he had already broken
+his faith to Malcolm, when his wife laid her hand on his mouth
+and stopped the issuing word. He started with sudden conviction
+and stood for a moment in absolute terror at sight of the
+precipice down which he had been on the point of falling, then
+straightway excusing himself to his conscience on the ground of
+non intent, was instantly angrier with Malcolm than before. He
+could not reflect that the disregarded cause of the threatened
+sin was the greater sin of the two. The breach of that charity
+which thinketh no evil maybe a graver fault than a hasty breach
+of promise.</p>
+
+<p>Peter had not been improving since his return from London. He
+found less satisfaction in his religious exercises; was not
+unfrequently clouded in temper, occasionally even to sullenness;
+referred things oftener than formerly to the vileness of the
+human nature, but was far less willing than before to allow that
+he might himself be wrong; while somehow the Bible had no more
+the same plenitude of relation to the wants of his being, and he
+rose from the reading of it unrefreshed. Men asked each other
+what had come to Blue Peter, but no one could answer the
+question. For himself, he attributed the change, which he could
+not but recognise, although he did not understand it, to the
+withdrawing of the spirit of God, in displeasure that he had not
+merely allowed himself to be inveigled into a playhouse, but, far
+worse, had enjoyed the wickedness he saw there. When his wife
+reasoned that God knew he had gone in ignorance, trusting his
+friend, he cried,</p>
+
+<p>"What 's that to him wha judges richteous judgment? What's a'
+oor puir meeserable excuzes i' the een 'at can see throu' the
+wa's o' the hert! Ignorance is no innocence."</p>
+
+<p>Thus he lied for God! pleading his cause on the principles of
+hell. But the eye of his wife was single, and her body full of
+light; therefore to her it was plain that neither the theatre nor
+his conscience concerning it was the cause of the change: it had
+to do with his feelings towards Malcolm. He wronged his Friend in
+his heart, half knew it, but would not own it. Fearing to search
+himself, he took refuge in resentment, and to support his hard
+judgment, put false and cruel interpretations on whatever befell.
+So that, with love and anger and wrong acknowledged, his heart
+was full of bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>"It 's a' the drumblet (muddied, troubled) luve o' 'im!" said
+Annie to herself. "Puir fallow! gien only Ma'colm wad come hame,
+an' lat him ken he 's no the villain he taks him for. I'll no
+believe mysel' 'at the laad I kissed like my ain mither's son
+afore he gaed awa' wad turn like that upo' 's 'maist the meenute
+he was oot o' sicht, an' a' for a feow words aboot a fulish play
+actin'. Lord bliss us a'! markises is men.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll see, Peter, my man," she said, when the neighbour took
+her leave, "whether the wife, though she hasna' been to the ill
+place, an' that's surely Lon'on, canna tell the true frae the
+Cause full better nor her man, 'at kens sae muckle mair nor she
+wants to ken? Lat sit an' lat see."</p>
+
+<p>Blue Peter made no reply; but perhaps the deepest depth in his
+fall was that he feared his wife might be right, and he have one
+day to stand ashamed before both her and his friend. But there
+are marvellous differences in the quality of the sins of
+different men, and a noble nature like Peter's would have to sink
+far indeed to be beyond redemption. Still there was one element
+mingling with his wrongness whose very triviality increased the
+difficulty of long delaying repentance: he had been not a little
+proud at finding himself the friend of a marquis. From the first
+they had been friends, when the one was a youth and the other a
+child, and had been out together in many a stormy and dangerous
+sea. More than once or twice, driven from the churlish ocean to
+the scarce less inhospitable shore, they had lain all night in
+each other's arms to keep the life awake within their frozen
+garments. And now this marquis spoke English to him! It
+rankled!</p>
+
+<p>All the time Blue Peter was careful to say nothing to injure
+Malcolm in the eyes of his former comrades. His manner when his
+name was mentioned, however, he could not honestly school to the
+conveyance of the impression that things were as they had been
+betwixt them. Folk marked the difference, and it went to swell
+the general feeling that Malcolm had done ill to forsake a
+seafaring life for one upon which all fishermen must look down
+with contempt. Some in the Seaton went so far in their enmity as
+even to hint at an explanation of his conduct in the truth of the
+discarded scandal which had laid Lizzy's child at his door.</p>
+
+<p>But amongst them was one who, having wronged him thus, and
+been convinced of her error, was now so fiercely his partisan as
+to be ready to wrong the whole town in his defence: that was Meg
+Partan, properly Mistress Findlay, Lizzy's mother. Although the
+daughter had never confessed, the mother had yet arrived at the
+right conclusion concerning the father of her child -- how, she
+could hardly herself have told, for the conviction had grown by
+accretion; a sign here and a sign there, impalpable save to
+maternal sense, had led her to the truth; and now, if anyone had
+a word to say against Malcolm, he had better not say it in the
+hearing of the Partaness.</p>
+
+<p>One day Blue Peter was walking home from the upper town of
+Portlossie, not with the lazy gait of the fisherman off work,
+poised backwards, with hands in trouser pocket, but stooping care
+laden with listless swinging arms. Thus Meg Partan met him -- and
+of course attributed his dejection to the factor.</p>
+
+<p>"Deil ha'e 'im for an upsettin' rascal 'at hasna pride eneuch
+to haud him ohn lickit the gentry's shune! The man maun be fey! I
+houp he may, an' I wuss I saw the beerial o' 'im makin' for the
+kirkyaird. It's nae ill to wuss weel to a' body 'at wad be left!
+His nose is turnt twise the colour i' the last twa month. He'll
+be drinkin' byous. Gien only Ma'colm MacPhail had been at hame to
+haud him in order!"</p>
+
+<p>Peter said nothing, and his silence, to one who spake out
+whatever came, seemed fuller of restraints and meanings than it
+was. She challenged it at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Noo, what mean ye by sayin' naething, Peter? Guid kens it's
+the warst thing man or woman can say o' onybody to haud their
+tongue. It's a thing I never was blamed wi' mysel', an' I wadna
+du't."</p>
+
+<p>"That's verra true," said Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"The mair weicht's intill't whan I lay 't to the door o'
+anither," persisted Meg. "Peter, gien ye ha'e onything again' my
+freen' Ma'colm MacPhail, oot wi' 't like a man, an' no playac'
+the gunpoother plot ower again. Ill wull's the warst poother ye
+can lay i' the boddom o' ony man's boat. But say at ye like, I s'
+uphaud Ma'colm again' the haill poustie o' ye. Gien he was but
+here! I say't again, honest laad!"</p>
+
+<p>But she could not rouse Peter to utterance, and losing what
+little temper she had, she rated him soundly, and sent him home
+saying with the prophet Jonah, "Do I not well to be angry?" for
+that also he placed to Malcolm's account. Nor was his home any
+more a harbour for his riven boat, seeing his wife only longed
+for the return of him with whom his spirit chode: she regarded
+him as an exiled king, one day to reappear, and justify himself
+in the eyes of all, friends and enemies.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLVIII"></a>CHAPTER XLVIII:
+TORTURE</h1>
+
+<p>Though unable to eat any breakfast, Malcolm persuaded himself
+that he felt nearly as well as usual when he went to receive his
+mistress's orders. Florimel had had enough of horseback -- for
+several days to come indeed -- and would not ride. So he saddled
+Kelpie, and rode to Chelsea to look after his boat. To get rid of
+the mare, he rang the stable bell at Mr Lenorme's, and the
+gardener let him in. As he was putting her up, the man told him
+that the housekeeper had heard from his master. Malcolm went to
+the house to learn what he might, and found to his surprise that,
+if he had gone on the continent, he was there no longer, for the
+letter, which contained only directions concerning some of his
+pictures, was dated from Newcastle, and bore the Durham postmark
+of a week ago. Malcolm remembered that he had heard Lenorme speak
+of Durham cathedral, and in the hope that he might be spending
+some time there, begged the housekeeper to allow him to go to the
+study to write to her master. When he entered, however, he saw
+something that made him change his plan, and, having written,
+instead of sending the letter, as he had intended, inclosed to
+the postmaster at Durham, he left it upon an easel. It contained
+merely an earnest entreaty to be made and kept acquainted with
+his movements, that he might at once let him know if anything
+should occur that he ought to be informed concerning.</p>
+
+<p>He found all on board the yacht in shipshape, only Davy was
+absent. Travers explained that he sent him on shore for a few
+hours every day. He was a sharp boy, he said, and the more he
+saw, the more useful he would be, and as he never gave him any
+money, there was no risk of his mistaking his hours.</p>
+
+<p>"When do you expect him?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"At four o'clock," answered Travers.</p>
+
+<p>"It is four now," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>A shrill whistle came from the Chelsea shore.</p>
+
+<p>"And there's Davy," said Travers.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm got into the dinghy and rowed ashore.</p>
+
+<p>"Davy," he said "I don't want you to be all day on board, but
+I can't have you be longer away than an hour at a time,"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir," said Davy.</p>
+
+<p>"Now attend to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know Lady Lossie's house?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; but I ken hersel'."</p>
+
+<p>"How is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ha'e seen her mair nor twa or three times, ridin' wi'
+yersel', to yon hoose yon'er."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you know her again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay wad I -- fine that. What for no, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good way to see a lady across the Thames and know her
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow! but I tuik the spy glaiss till her," answered Davy,
+reddening.</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure of her, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am that, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Then come with me, and I will show you where she lives. I
+will not ride faster than you can run. But mind you don't look as
+if you belonged to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na, sir. There's fowk takin' nottice."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a wee laddie been efter mysel' twise or thrice."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you do anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"He wasna big eneuch to lick, sae I jist got him the last time
+an' pu'd his niz, an' I dinna think he'll come efter me
+again."</p>
+
+<p>To see what the boy could do, Malcolm let Kelpie go at a good
+trot: but Davy kept up without effort, now shooting ahead, now
+falling behind, now stopping to look in at a window, and now to
+cast a glance at a game of pitch and toss. No mere passerby could
+have suspected that the sailor boy belonged to the horseman. He
+dropped him not far from Portland Place, telling him to go and
+look at the number, but not stare at the house.</p>
+
+<p>All the time he had had no return of the sickness, but,
+although thus actively occupied, had felt greatly depressed. One
+main cause of this was, however, that he had not found his
+religion stand him in such stead as he might have hoped. It was
+not yet what it must be to prove its reality. And now his eyes
+were afresh opened to see that in his nature and thoughts lay
+large spaces wherein God ruled not supreme -- desert places,
+where who could tell what might appear? For in such regions wild
+beasts range, evil herbs flourish, and demons go about. If in
+very deed he lived and moved and had his being in God, then
+assuredly there ought not to be one cranny in his nature, one
+realm of his consciousness, one well spring of thought, where the
+will of God was a stranger. If all were as it should be, then
+surely there would be no moment, looking back on which he could
+not at least say,</p>
+
+<pre>
+Yet like some sweet beguiling melody,
+So sweet, we know not we are listening to it,
+Thou, the meanwhile, wast blending with my thought,
+Yea, with my life and life's own secret joy.
+</pre>
+
+<p>"In that agony o' sickness, as I sat upo' the stair," he said
+to himself, for still in his own thoughts he spoke his native
+tongue, "whaur was my God in a' my thouchts? I did cry till 'im,
+I min' weel, but it was my reelin' brain an' no my trustin' hert
+'at cried. Aih me! I doobt gien the Lord war to come to me noo,
+he wadna fin' muckle faith i' my pairt o' the yerth. Aih! I wad
+like to lat him see something like lippenin'! I wad fain trust
+him till his hert's content. But I doobt it's only speeritual
+ambeetion, or better wad hae come o' 't by this time. Gien that
+sickness come again, I maun see, noo 'at I'm forewarned o' my ain
+wakeness, what I can du. It maun be something better nor last
+time, or I'll tine hert a'thegither. Weel, maybe I need to be
+heumblet. The Lord help me!"</p>
+
+<p>In the evening he went to the schoolmaster, and gave him a
+pretty full account of where he had been and what had taken place
+since last he saw him, dwelling chiefly on his endeavours with
+Lady Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>From Mr Graham's lodging to the northeastern gate of the
+Regent's Park, the nearest way led through a certain passage,
+which, although a thoroughfare to persons on foot, was little
+known. Malcolm had early discovered it, and always used it. Part
+of this short cut was the yard and back premises of a small
+public house. It was between eleven and twelve as he entered it
+for the second time that night. Sunk in thought and suspecting no
+evil, he was struck down from behind, and lost his consciousness.
+When he came to himself he was lying in the public house, with
+his head bound up, and a doctor standing over him, who asked him
+if he had been robbed. He searched his pockets, and found that
+his old watch was gone, but his money left. One of the men
+standing about said he would see him home. He half thought he had
+seen him before, and did not like the look of him, but accepted
+the offer, hoping to get on the track of something thereby. As
+soon as they entered the comparative solitude of the park he
+begged his companion, who had scarcely spoken all the way, to
+give him his arm, and leaned upon it as if still suffering, but
+watched him closely. About the middle of the park, where not a
+creature was in sight, he felt him begin to fumble in his coat
+pocket, and draw something from it. But when, unresisted, he
+snatched away his other arm, Malcolm's fist followed it, and the
+man fell, nor made any resistance while he took from him a short
+stick, loaded with lead, and his own watch, which he found in his
+waistcoat pocket. Then the fellow rose with apparent difficulty,
+but the moment he was on his legs, ran like a hare, and Malcolm
+let him run, for he felt unable to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he reached home, he went to bed, for his head ached
+severely; but he slept pretty well, and in the morning flattered
+himself he felt much as usual. But it was as if all the night
+that horrible sickness had been lying in wait on the stair to
+spring upon him, for, the moment he reached the same spot on his
+way down, he almost fainted. It was worse than before. His very
+soul seemed to turn sick. But although his heart died within him,
+somehow, in the confusion of thought and feeling occasioned by
+intense suffering, it seemed while he clung to the balusters as
+if with both hands he were clinging to the skirts of God's
+garment; and through the black smoke of his fainting, his soul
+seemed to be struggling up towards the light of his being.
+Presently the horrible sense subsided as before, and again he
+sought to descend the stair and go to Kelpie. But immediately the
+sickness returned, and all he could do after a long and vain
+struggle, was to crawl on hands and knees up the stairs and back
+to his room. There he crept upon his bed, and was feebly
+committing Kelpie to the care of her maker, when consciousness
+forsook him.</p>
+
+<p>It returned, heralded by frightful pains all over his body,
+which by and by subsiding, he sank again to the bottom of the
+black Lethe.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime Kelpie had got so wildly uproarious that Merton
+tossed her half a truss of hay, which she attacked like an enemy,
+and ran to the house to get somebody to call Malcolm. After what
+seemed endless delay, the door was opened by his admirer, the
+scullery maid, who, as soon as she heard what was the matter,
+hastened to his room.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_XLIX"></a>CHAPTER XLIX: THE
+PHILTRE</h1>
+
+<p>Before he again came to himself, Malcolm had a dream, which,
+although very confused, was in parts more vivid than any he had
+ever had. His surroundings in it were those in which he actually
+lay, and he was ill, but he thought it the one illness he had
+before. His head ached, and he could rest in no position he
+tried. Suddenly he heard a step he knew better than any other
+approaching the door of his chamber: it opened, and his
+grandfather in great agitation entered, not following his hands,
+however, in the fashion usual to blindness, but carrying himself
+like any sight gifted man. He went straight to the wash stand,
+took up the water bottle, and with a look of mingled wrath and
+horror dashed it on the floor. The same instant a cold shiver ran
+through the dreamer, and his dream vanished. But instead of
+waking in his bed, he found himself standing in the middle of the
+floor, his feet wet, the bottle in shivers about them, and,
+strangest of all, the neck of the bottle in his hand. He lay down
+again, grew delirious, and tossed about in the remorseless
+persecution of centuries. But at length his tormentors left him,
+and when he came to himself, he knew he was in his right
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>It was evening, and some one was sitting near his bed. By the
+light of the long snuffed tallow candle, he saw the glitter of
+two great black eyes watching him, and recognised the young woman
+who had admitted him to the house the night of his return, and
+whom he had since met once or twice as he came and went. The
+moment she perceived that he was aware of her presence, she threw
+herself on her knees at his bedside, hid her face, and began to
+weep. The sympathy of his nature rendered yet more sensitive by
+weakness and suffering, Malcolm laid his hand on her head, and
+sought to comfort her.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be alarmed about me," he said, "I shall soon be all
+right again."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't bear it," she sobbed. "I can't bear to see you like
+that, and all my fault."</p>
+
+<p>"Your fault! What can you mean?" said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"But I did go for the doctor, for all it may be the hanging of
+me," she sobbed. "Miss Caley said I wasn't to, but I would and I
+did. They can't say I meant it -- can they?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand," said Malcolm, feebly.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor says somebody's been an' p'isoned you," said the
+girl, with a cry that sounded like a mingled sob and howl; "an'
+he's been a-pokin' of all sorts of things down your poor
+throat."</p>
+
+<p>And again she cried aloud in her agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, never mind; I'm not dead you see; and I'll take better
+care of myself after this. Thank you for being so good to me;
+you've saved my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you won't be so kind to me when you know all, Mr
+MacPhail," sobbed the girl. "It was myself gave you the horrid
+stuff, but God knows I didn't mean to do you no harm no more than
+your own mother."</p>
+
+<p>"What made you do it then?" asked Malcolm:</p>
+
+<p>"The witch woman told me to. She said that -- that -- if I
+gave it you -- you would -- you would"</p>
+
+<p>She buried her face in the bed, and so stifled a fresh howl of
+pain and shame.</p>
+
+<p>"And it was all lies -- lies!" she resumed, lifting her face
+again, which now flashed with rage, "for I know you'll hate me
+worse than ever now."</p>
+
+<p>"My poor girl, I never hated you," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but you did as bad: you never looked at me. And now
+you'll hate me out and out. And the doctor says if you die, he'll
+have it all searched into, and Miss Caley she look at me as if
+she suspect me of a hand in it; and they won't let alone till
+they've got me hanged for it; and it's all along of love of you;
+and I tell you the truth, Mr MacPhail, and you can do anything
+with me you like -- I don't care -- only you won't let them hang
+me -- will you? -- Oh, please don't."</p>
+
+<p>She said all this with clasped hands, and the tears streaming
+down her face.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's impulse was of course to draw her to him and comfort
+her, but something warned him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see I'm not going to die just yet," he said as
+merrily as he could; "and if I find myself going, I shall take
+care the blame falls on the right person. What was the witch
+woman like? Sit down on the chair there, and tell me all about
+her."</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed with a sigh, and gave him such a description as he
+could not mistake. He asked where she lived, but the girl had
+never met her anywhere but in the street, she said.</p>
+
+<p>Questioning her very carefully as to Caley's behaviour to her,
+Malcolm was convinced that she had a hand in the affair. Indeed,
+she had happily, more to do with it than even Mrs Catanach knew,
+for she had traversed her treatment to the advantage of Malcolm.
+The midwife had meant the potion to work slowly, but the lady's
+maid had added to the pretended philtre a certain ingredient in
+whose efficacy she had reason to trust; and the combination,
+while it wrought more rapidly, had yet apparently set up a
+counteraction favourable to the efforts of the struggling
+vitality which it stung to an agonised resistance.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm's strength was now exhausted. He turned faint, and
+the girl had the sense to run to the kitchen and get him some
+soup. As he took it, her demeanour and regards made him anxious,
+uncomfortable, embarrassed. It is to any true man a hateful thing
+to repel a woman -- it is such a reflection upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"I've told you everything, Mr MacPhail, and it's gospel truth
+I've told you," said the girl, after a long pause. -- It was a
+relief when first she spoke, but the comfort vanished as she went
+on, and with slow, perhaps unconscious movements approached him.
+-- "I would have died for you, and here that devil of a woman has
+been making me kill you! Oh, how I hate her! Now you will never
+love me a bit -- -not one tiny little bit for ever and ever!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a tone of despairful entreaty in her words that
+touched Malcolm deeply.</p>
+
+<p>"I am more indebted to you than I can speak or you imagine,"
+he said. "You have saved me from my worst enemy. Do not tell any
+other what you have told me, or let anyone know that we have
+talked together. The day will come when I shall be able to show
+you my gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>Something in his tone struck her, even through the folds of
+her passion. She looked at him a little amazed, and for a moment
+the tide ebbed. Then came a rush that overmastered her. She flung
+her hands above her head, and cried,</p>
+
+<p>"That means you will do anything but love me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot love you as you mean," said Malcolm. "I promise to
+be your friend, but more is out of my power."</p>
+
+<p>A fierce light came into the girl's eyes. But that instant a
+terrible cry, such as Malcolm had never heard, but which he knew
+must be Kelpie's, rang through the air, followed by the shouts of
+men, the tones of fierce execration, and the clash and clang of
+hoofs.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" he exclaimed, and forgetting everything else,
+sprang from the bed, and ran to the window outside his door.</p>
+
+<p>The light of their lanterns dimly showed a confused crowd in
+the yard of the mews, and amidst the hellish uproar of their
+coarse voices he could hear Kelpie plunging and kicking. Again
+she uttered the same ringing scream. He threw the window open and
+cried to her that he was coming, but the noise was far too great
+for his enfeebled voice. Hurriedly he added a garment or two to
+his half dress, rushed to the stair, passing his new friend, who
+watched anxiously at the head of it, without seeing her, and shot
+from the house.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_L"></a>CHAPTER L: THE
+DEMONESS AT BAY</h1>
+
+<p>When he reached the yard of the mews, the uproar had nothing
+abated. But when he cried out to Kelpie, through it all came a
+whinny of appeal, instantly followed by a scream. When he got up
+to the lanterns, he found a group of wrathful men with stable
+forks surrounding the poor animal, from whom the blood was
+streaming before and behind. Fierce as she was, she dared not
+move, but stood trembling, with the sweat of terror pouring from
+her. Yet her eye showed that not even terror had cowed her. She
+was but biding her time. Her master's first impulse was to
+scatter the men right and left, but on second thoughts, of which
+he was even then capable, he saw that they might have been driven
+to apparent brutality in defence of their lives, and besides he
+could not tell what Kelpie might do if suddenly released. So he
+caught her by the broken halter, and told them to fall back. They
+did so carefully -- it seemed unwillingly. But the mare had eyes
+and ears only for her master. What she had never done before, she
+nosed him over face and shoulders, trembling all the time.
+Suddenly one of her tormentors darted forward, and gave her a
+terrible prod in the off hind quarter. But he paid dearly for it.
+Ere he could draw back, she lashed out, and shot him half across
+the yard with his knee joint broken. The whole set of them rushed
+at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave her alone," shouted Malcolm, "or I will take her part.
+Between us we'll do for a dozen of you."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil's in her," said one of them.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll find more of him in that rascal groaning yonder. You
+had better see to him. He'll never do such a thing again, I
+fancy. Where is Merton?"</p>
+
+<p>They drew off and went to help their comrade, who lay
+senseless.</p>
+
+<p>When Malcolm would have led Kelpie in, she stopped suddenly at
+the stable-door, and started back shuddering, as if the memory of
+what she had endured there overcame her. Every fibre of her
+trembled. He saw that she must have been pitifully used before
+she broke loose and got out. But she yielded to his coaxing, and
+he led her to her stall without difficulty. He wished Lady
+Clementina herself could have been his witness how she knew her
+friend and trusted him. Had she seen how the poor bleeding thing
+rejoiced over him, she could not have doubted that his treatment
+had been in part at least a success.</p>
+
+<p>Kelpie had many enemies amongst the men of the mews. Merton
+had gone out for the evening, and they had taken the opportunity
+of getting into her stable and tormenting her. At length she
+broke her fastenings; they fled, and she rushed out after
+them.</p>
+
+<p>They carried the maimed man to the hospital, where his leg was
+immediately amputated.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm washed and dried his poor animal, handling her as
+gently as possible, for she was in a sad plight. It was plain he
+must not have her here any longer: worse to her at least was sure
+to follow. He went up, trembling himself now, to Mrs Merton. She
+told him she was just running to fetch him when he arrived: she
+had no idea how ill he was. But he felt all the better for the
+excitement, and after he had taken a cup of strong tea, wrote to
+Mr Soutar to provide men on whom he could depend, if possible the
+same who had taken her there before, to await Kelpie's arrival at
+Aberdeen. There he must also find suitable housing and attention
+for her at any expense until further directions, or until, more
+probably, he should claim her himself. He added many instructions
+to be given as to her treatment.</p>
+
+<p>Until Merton returned he kept watch, then went back to the
+chamber of his torture, which, like Kelpie, he shuddered to
+enter. The cook let him in, and gave him his candle, but hardly
+had he closed his door when a tap came to it, and there stood
+Rose, his preserver. He could not help feeling embarrassed when
+he saw her.</p>
+
+<p>"I see you don't trust me," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I do trust you," he answered. "Will you bring me some water.
+I dare not drink anything that has been standing."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with inquiring eyes, nodded her head, and
+went. When she returned, he drank the water.</p>
+
+<p>"There! you see I trust you," he said with a laugh. "But there
+are people about who for certain reasons want to get rid of me:
+will you be on my side?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I will," she answered eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not got my plans laid yet; but will you meet me
+somewhere near this tomorrow night? I shall not be at home,
+perhaps, all day."</p>
+
+<p>She stared at him with great eyes, but agreed at once, and
+they appointed time and place. He then bade her good night, and
+the moment she left him lay down on the bed to think. But he did
+not trouble himself yet to unravel the plot against him, or
+determine whether the violence he had suffered had the same
+origin with the poisoning. Nor was the question merely how to
+continue to serve his sister without danger to his life; for he
+had just learned what rendered it absolutely imperative that she
+should be removed from her present position. Mrs Merton had told
+him that Lady Lossie was about to accompany Lady Bellair and Lord
+Liftore to the continent. That must not be, whatever means might
+be necessary to prevent it. Before he went to sleep things had
+cleared themselves up considerably.</p>
+
+<p>He woke much better, and rose at his usual hour. Kelpie
+rejoiced him by affording little other sign of the cruelty she
+had suffered than the angry twitching of her skin when hand or
+brush approached a wound. The worst fear was that some few white
+hairs might by and by in consequence fleck her spotless black.
+Having urgently committed her to Merton's care, he mounted
+Honour, and rode to the Aberdeen wharf. There to his relief, time
+growing precious, he learned that the same smack in which Kelpie
+had come was to sail the next morning for Aberdeen. He arranged
+at once for her passage, and, before he left, saw to every
+contrivance he could think of for her safety and comfort. He
+warned the crew concerning her temper, but at the same time
+prejudiced them in her favour by the argument of a few
+sovereigns. He then rode to the Chelsea Reach, where the Psyche
+had now grown to be a feature of the river in the eyes of the
+dwellers upon its banks.</p>
+
+<p>At his whistle, Davy tumbled into the dinghy like a round ball
+over the gunwale, and was rowing for the shore ere his whistle
+had ceased ringing in Malcolm's own ears. He left him with his
+horse, went on board, and gave various directions to Travers;
+then took Davy with him, and bought many things at different
+shops, which he ordered to be delivered to Davy when he should
+call for them. Having next instructed him to get everything on
+board as soon as possible, and appointed to meet him at the same
+place and hour he had arranged with Rose, he went home.</p>
+
+<p>A little anxious lest Florimel might have wanted him, for it
+was now past the hour at which he usually waited her orders, he
+learned to his relief that she was gone shopping with Lady
+Bellair, upon which he set out for the hospital, whither they had
+carried the man Kelpie had so terribly mauled. He went, not
+merely led by sympathy, but urged by a suspicion also which he
+desired to verify or remove. On the plea of identification, he
+was permitted to look at him for a moment, but not to speak to
+him. It was enough: he recognised him at once as the same whose
+second attack he had foiled in the Regent's Park. He remembered
+having seen him about the stable, but had never spoken to him.
+Giving the nurse a sovereign, and Mr Soutar's address, he
+requested her to let that gentleman know as soon as it was
+possible to conjecture the time of his leaving. Returning, he
+gave Merton a hint to keep his eye on the man, and some money to
+spend for him as he judged best. He then took Kelpie for an
+airing. To his surprise she fatigued him so much that when he had
+put her up again he was glad to go and lie down.</p>
+
+<p>When it came near the time for meeting Rose and Davy, he got
+his things together in the old carpetbag, which held all he cared
+for, and carried it with him. As he drew near the spot, he saw
+Davy already there, keeping a sharp look out on all sides.
+Presently Rose appeared, but drew back when she saw Davy. Malcolm
+went to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Rose," he said, "I am going to ask you to do me a great
+favour. But you cannot except you are able to trust me."</p>
+
+<p>"I do trust you," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"All I can tell you now is that you must go with that boy
+tomorrow. Before night you shall know more. Will you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will," answered Rose. "I dearly love a secret."</p>
+
+<p>"I promise to let you understand it, if you do just as I tell
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will."</p>
+
+<p>"Be at this very spot then tomorrow morning, at six o'clock.
+Come here, Davy. This boy will take you where I shall tell
+him."</p>
+
+<p>She looked from the one to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll risk it," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Put on a clean frock, and take a change of linen with you and
+your dressing things. No harm shall come to you."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not afraid," she answered, but looked as if she would
+cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you will not tell anyone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not, Mr MacPhail."</p>
+
+<p>"You are trusting me a great deal, Rose; but I am trusting you
+too -- more than you think. -- Be off with that bag, Davy, and be
+here at six tomorrow morning, to carry this young woman's for
+her."</p>
+
+<p>Davy vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Rose," continued Malcolm, "you had better go and make
+your preparations."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all, sir?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I shall see you tomorrow. Be brave."</p>
+
+<p>Something in Malcolm's tone and manner seemed to work
+strangely on the girl. She gazed up at him half frightened, but
+submissive, and went at once, looking, however, sadly
+disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm had intended to go and tell Mr Graham of his plans
+that same night, but he found himself too much exhausted to walk
+to Camden Town. And thinking over it, he saw that it might be as
+well if he took the bold measure he contemplated without
+revealing it to his friend, to whom the knowledge might be the
+cause of inconvenience. He therefore went home and to bed, that
+he might be strong for the next day.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LI"></a>CHAPTER LI: THE
+PSYCHE</h1>
+
+<p>He rose early the next morning, and having fed and dressed
+Kelpie, strapped her blanket behind her saddle, and, by all the
+macadamized ways he could find, rode her to the wharf -- near
+where the Thames tunnel had just been commenced. He had no great
+difficulty with her on the way, though it was rather nervous work
+at times. But of late her submission to her master had been
+decidedly growing. When he reached the wharf he rode her straight
+along the gangway on to the deck of the smack, as the easiest if
+not perhaps the safest way of getting her on board. As soon as
+she was properly secured, and he had satisfied himself as to the
+provision they had made for her, impressed upon the captain the
+necessity of being bountiful to her, and brought a loaf of sugar
+on board for her use, he left her with a lighter heart than he
+had had ever since first he fetched her from the same deck.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long way to walk home, but he felt much better, and
+thought nothing of it. And all the way, to his delight, the wind
+met him in the face. A steady westerly breeze was blowing. If God
+makes his angels winds, as the Psalmist says, here was one sent
+to wait upon him. He reached Portland Place in time to present
+himself for orders at the usual hour. On these occasions, his
+mistress not unfrequently saw him herself; but to make sure, he
+sent up the request that she would speak with him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear that you have been ill, Malcolm," she said
+kindly, as he entered the room, where happily he found her
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well now, thank you, my lady," he returned. "I
+thought your ladyship would like to hear something I happened to
+come to the knowledge of the other day."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? What was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I called at Mr Lenorme's to learn what news there might be of
+him. The housekeeper let me go up to his painting room; and what
+should I see there, my lady, but the portrait of my lord marquis
+more beautiful than ever, the brown smear all gone, and the
+likeness, to my mind, greater than before!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then Mr Lenorme is come home!" cried Florimel, scarce
+attempting to conceal the pleasure his report gave her.</p>
+
+<p>"That I cannot say," said Malcolm. "His housekeeper had a
+letter from him a few days ago from Newcastle. If he is come
+back, I do not think she knows it. It seems strange, for who
+would touch one of his pictures but himself? -- except, indeed,
+he got some friend to set it to rights for your ladyship. Anyhow,
+I thought you would like to see it again."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go at once," Florimel said, rising hastily. "Get the
+horses, Malcolm, as fast as you can."</p>
+
+<p>"If my Lord Liftore should come before we start?" he
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Make haste," returned his mistress, impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm did make haste, and so did Florimel. What precisely
+was in her thoughts who shall say, when she could not have told
+herself? But doubtless the chance of seeing Lenorme urged her
+more than the desire to see her father's portrait. Within twenty
+minutes they were riding down Grosvenor Place, and happily heard
+no following hoofbeats. When they came near the river, Malcolm
+rode up to her and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Would your ladyship allow me to put up the horses in Mr
+Lenorme's stable? I think I could show your ladyship a point or
+two that may have escaped you."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel thought for a moment, and concluded it would be less
+awkward, would indeed tend rather to her advantage with Lenorme,
+should he really be there, to have Malcolm with her.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," she answered. "I see no objection. I will ride
+round with you to the stable, and we can go in the back way."</p>
+
+<p>They did so. The gardener took the horses, and they went up to
+the study. Lenorme was not there, and everything was just as when
+Malcolm was last in the room. Florimel was much disappointed, but
+Malcolm talked to her about the portrait, and did all he could to
+bring back vivid the memory of her father. At length with a
+little sigh she made a movement to go.</p>
+
+<p>"Has your ladyship ever seen the river from the next room?"
+said Malcolm, and, as he spoke, threw open the door of
+communication, near which they stood.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel, who was always ready to see, walked straight into
+the drawing room, and went to a window.</p>
+
+<p>"There is that yacht lying there still!" remarked Malcolm.
+"Does she not remind you of the Psyche, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Every boat does that," answered his mistress. "I dream about
+her. But I couldn't tell her from many another."</p>
+
+<p>"People used to boats, my lady, learn to know them like the
+faces of their friends. -- What a day for a sail!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose that one is for hire?" said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"We can ask," replied Malcolm; and with that went to another
+window, raised the sash, put his head out, and whistled. Over
+tumbled Davy into the dinghy at the Psyche's stern, unloosed the
+painter, and was rowing for the shore ere the minute was out.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, they're answering your whistle already!" said
+Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"A whistle goes farther, and perhaps is more imperative than
+any other call," returned Malcolm evasively, "Will your ladyship
+come down and hear what they say?"</p>
+
+<p>A wave from the slow silting lagoon of her girlhood came
+washing over the sands between, and Florimel flew merrily down
+the stair and across ball and garden and road to the riverbank,
+where was a little wooden stage or landing place, with a few
+steps, at which the dinghy was just arriving.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you take us on board and show us your boat?" said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir," answered Davy.</p>
+
+<p>Without a moment's hesitation, Florimel took Malcolm's offered
+hand, and stepped into the boat. Malcolm took the oars, and shot
+the little tub across the river. When they got alongside the
+cutter, Travers reached down both his hands for hers, and Malcolm
+held one of his for her foot, and Florimel sprang on deck.</p>
+
+<p>"Young woman on board, Davy?" whispered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, sir -- doon i' the fore," answered Davy, and Malcolm
+stood by his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"She is like the Psyche," said Florimel, turning to him, "only
+the mast is not so tall."</p>
+
+<p>"Her topmast is struck, you see my lady -- to make sure of her
+passing clear under the bridges."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask them if we couldn't go down the river a little way," said
+Florimel. "I should so like to see the houses from it!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm conferred a moment with Travers and returned.</p>
+
+<p>"They are quite willing, my lady," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What fun!" cried Florimel, her girlish spirit all at the
+surface. "How I should like to run away from horrid London
+altogether, and never hear of it again! -- Dear old Lossie House!
+and the boats! and the fishermen!" she added meditatively.</p>
+
+<p>The anchor was already up, and the yacht drifting with the
+falling tide. A moment more and she spread a low treble reefed
+mainsail behind, a little jib before, and the western breeze
+filled and swelled and made them alive, and with wind and tide
+she went swiftly down the smooth stream. Florimel clapped her
+hands with delight. The shores and all their houses fled up the
+river. They slid past rowboats, and great heavy barges loaded to
+the lip, with huge red sails and yellow, glowing and gleaming in
+the hot sun. For one moment the shadow of Vauxhall Bridge gloomed
+like a death cloud, chill and cavernous, over their heads; then
+out again they shot into the lovely light and heat of the summer
+world.</p>
+
+<p>"It's well we ain't got to shoot Putney or Battersea," said
+Travers with a grim smile, as he stood shaping her course by
+inches with his magic-like steering, in the midst of a little
+covey of pleasure boats: "with this wind we might ha' brought
+either on 'em about our ears like an old barn."</p>
+
+<p>"This is life!" cried Florimel, as the river bore them nearer
+and nearer to the vortex -- deeper and deeper into the tumult of
+London.</p>
+
+<p>How solemn the silent yet never resting highway! -- almost
+majestic in the stillness of its hurrying might as it rolled
+heedless past houses and wharfs that crowded its brinks. They
+darted through under Westminster Bridge, and boats and barges
+more and more numerous covered the stream. Waterloo Bridge,
+Blackfriars' Bridge they passed. Sunlight all, and flashing
+water, and gleaming oars, and gay boats, and endless motion! out
+of which rose calm, solemn, reposeful, the resting yet hovering
+dome of St Paul's, with its satellite spires, glittering in the
+tremulous hot air that swathed in multitudinous ripples the
+mighty city.</p>
+
+<p>Southwark Bridge -- and only London Bridge lay between them
+and the open river, still widening as it flowed to the aged
+ocean. Through the centre arch they shot, and lo! a world of
+masts, waiting to woo with white sails the winds that should bear
+them across deserts of water to lands of wealth and mystery.
+Through the labyrinth led the highway of the stream, and downward
+they still swept -- past the Tower, and past the wharf where that
+morning Malcolm had said goodbye for a time to his four footed
+subject and friend. The smack's place was empty. With her hugest
+of sails, she was tearing and flashing away, out of their sight,
+far down the river before them.</p>
+
+<p>Through dingy dreary Limehouse they sank, and coasted the
+melancholy, houseless Isle of Dogs; but on all sides were ships
+and ships, and when they thinned at last, Greenwich rose before
+them. London and the parks looked unendurable from this more
+varied life, more plentiful air, and above all more abundant
+space. The very spirit of freedom seemed to wave his wings about
+the yacht, fanning full her sails.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel breathed as if she never could have enough of the
+sweet wind; each breath gave her all the boundless region whence
+it blew; she gazed as if she would fill her soul with the
+sparkling gray of the water, the sun melted blue of the sky, and
+the incredible green of the flat shores. For minutes she would be
+silent, her parted lips revealing her absorbed delight, then
+break out in a volley of questions, now addressing Malcolm, now
+Travers. She tried Davy too, but Davy knew nothing except his
+duty here. The Thames was like an unknown eternity to the
+creature of the Wan Water -- about which, however, he could have
+told her a thousand things.</p>
+
+<p>Down and down the river they flew, and not until miles and
+miles of meadows had come between her and London, not indeed
+until Gravesend appeared, did it occur to Florimel that perhaps
+it might be well to think by and by of returning. But she trusted
+everything to Malcolm, who of course would see that everything
+was as it ought to be.</p>
+
+<p>Her excitement began to flag a little. She was getting tired.
+The bottle had been strained by the ferment of the wine. She
+turned to Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Had we not better be putting about?" she said. "I should like
+to go on for ever -- but we must come another day, better
+provided. We shall hardly be in time for lunch."</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly four o'clock, but she rarely looked at her
+watch, and indeed wound it up only now and then.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you go below and have some lunch, my lady?" said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"There can't be anything on board!" she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and see, my lady," rejoined Malcolm, and led the way to
+the companion.</p>
+
+<p>When she saw the little cabin, she gave a cry of delight.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it is just like our own cabin in the Psyche," she said,
+"only smaller! Is it not, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is smaller, my lady," returned Malcolm, "but then there is
+a little state room beyond."</p>
+
+<p>On the table was a nice meal -- cold, but not the less
+agreeable in the summer weather. Everything looked charming.
+There were flowers; the linen was snowy; and the bread was the
+very sort Florimel liked best.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a perfect fairy tale!" she cried. "And I declare here
+is our crest on the forks and spoons! -- What does it all mean,
+Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm had slipped away, and gone on deck again, leaving
+her to food and conjecture, while he brought Rose up from the
+fore cabin for a little air. Finding her fast asleep, however, he
+left her undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel finished her meal, and set about examining the cabin
+more closely. The result was bewilderment. How could a yacht,
+fitted with such completeness, such luxury, be lying for hire in
+the Thames? As for the crest on the plate, that was a curious
+coincidence: many people had the same crest. But both materials
+and colours were like those of the Pysche! Then the pretty
+bindings on the book shelves attracted her: every book was either
+one she knew or one of which Malcolm had spoken to her! He must
+have had a hand in the business! Next she opened the door of the
+stateroom; but when she saw the lovely little white berth, and
+the indications of every comfort belonging to a lady's chamber,
+she could keep her pleasure to herself no longer. She hastened to
+the companionway, and called Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it all mean?" she said, her eyes and cheeks glowing
+with delight.</p>
+
+<p>"It means, my lady, that you are on board your own yacht, the
+Pysche. I brought her with me from Portlossie, and have had her
+fitted up according to the wish you once expressed to my lord,
+your father, that you could sleep on board. Now you might make a
+voyage of many days in her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Malcolm!" was all Florimel could answer. She was too
+pleased to think as yet of any of the thousand questions that
+might naturally have followed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you've got the Arabian Nights, and all my favourite
+books there!" she said at length. -- "How long shall we have
+before we get among the ships again?"</p>
+
+<p>She fancied she had given orders to return, and that the boat
+had been put about.</p>
+
+<p>"A good many hours, my lady," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, of course!" she returned; "it takes much longer against
+wind and tide. -- But my time is my own," she added, rather in
+the manner of one asserting a freedom she did not feel, "and I
+don't see why I should trouble myself. It will make some to do, I
+daresay, if I don't appear at dinner; but it won't do anybody any
+harm. They wouldn't break their hearts if they never saw me
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Not one of them, my lady," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her head sharply, but took no farther notice of his
+remark.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't be plagued any more," she said, holding counsel with
+herself, but intending Malcolm to hear. "I will break with them
+rather. Why should I not be as free as Clementina? She comes and
+goes when and where she likes, and does what she pleases."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, indeed?" said Malcolm; and a pause followed, during
+which Florimel stood apparently thinking, but in reality growing
+sleepy.</p>
+
+<p>"I will lie down a little," she said, "with one of those
+lovely books."</p>
+
+<p>The excitement, the air, and the pleasure generally had
+wearied her. Nothing could have suited Malcolm better. He left
+her. She went to her berth, and fell fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When she awoke, it was some time before she could think where
+she was. A strange ghostly light was about her, in which she
+could see nothing plain; but the motion helped her to understand.
+She rose, and crept to the companion ladder, and up on deck.
+Wonder upon wonder! A clear full moon reigned high in the
+heavens, and below there was nothing but water, gleaming with her
+molten face, or rushing past the boat lead coloured, gray, and
+white. Here and there a vessel -- a snow cloud of sails -- would
+glide between them and the moon, and turn black from truck to
+waterline.</p>
+
+<p>The mast of the Psyche had shot up to its full height; the
+reef points of the mainsail were loose, and the gaff was crowned
+with its topsail; foresail and jib were full; and she was flying
+as if her soul thirsted within her after infinite spaces. Yet
+what more could she want? All around her was wave rushing upon
+wave, and above her blue heaven and regnant moon. Florimel gave a
+great sigh of delight.</p>
+
+<p>But what did it -- what could it mean? What was Malcolm about?
+Where was he taking her? What would London say to such an
+escapade extraordinary? Lady Bellair would be the first to
+believe she had run away with her groom -- she knew so many
+instances of that sort of thing! and Lord Liftore would be the
+next. It was too bad of Malcolm! But she did not feel very angry
+with him, notwithstanding, for had he not done it to give her
+pleasure? And assuredly he had not failed. He knew better than
+anyone how to please her -- better even than Lenorme.</p>
+
+<p>She looked around her. No one was to be seen but Davie, who
+was steering. The mainsail hid the men, and Rose, having been on
+deck for two or three hours, was again below. She turned to Davy.
+But the boy had been schooled, and only answered,</p>
+
+<p>"I maunna sae naething sae lang's I'm steerin', mem."</p>
+
+<p>She called Malcolm. He was beside her ere his name had left
+her lips. The boy's reply had irritated her, and, coming upon
+this sudden and utter change in her circumstances, made her feel
+as one no longer lady of herself and her people, but a
+prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>"Once more, what does this mean, Malcolm?" she said, in high
+displeasure. "You have deceived me shamefully! You left me to
+believe we were on our way back to London -- and here we are out
+at sea! Am I no longer your mistress? Am I a child, to be taken
+where you please? -- And what, pray, is to become of the horses
+you left at Mr Lenorme's?"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was glad of a question he was prepared to answer.</p>
+
+<p>"They are in their own stalls by this time, my lady. I took
+care of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it was all a trick to carry me off against my will!" she
+cried, with growing indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly against your will, my lady," said Malcolm, embarrassed
+and thoughtful, in a tone deprecating and apologetic.</p>
+
+<p>"Utterly against my will!" insisted Florimel. "Could I ever
+have consented to go to sea with a boatful of men, and not a
+woman on board? You have disgraced me, Malcolm."</p>
+
+<p>Between anger and annoyance she was on the point of
+crying.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not so bad as that, my lady. -- Here, Rose!"</p>
+
+<p>At his word, Rose appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"I've brought one of Lady Bellair's maids for your service, my
+lady," Malcolm went on. "She will do the best she can to wait on
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel gave her a look.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't remember you," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady. I was in the kitchen."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can't be of much use to me."</p>
+
+<p>"A willing heart goes a long way, my lady," said Rose,
+prettily.</p>
+
+<p>"That is fine," returned Florimel, rather pleased. "Can you
+get me some tea?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned, and, much to Malcolm's content vouchsafing
+him not a word more, went below.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a little silver lamp appeared in the roof of the
+cabin, and in a few minutes Davy came, carrying the tea tray, and
+followed by Rose with the teapot. As soon as they were alone,
+Florimel began to question Rose; but the girl soon satisfied her
+that she knew little or nothing.</p>
+
+<p>When Florimel pressed her how she could go she knew not where
+at the desire of a fellow servant, she gave such confused and
+apparently contradictory answers, that Florimel began to think
+ill of both her and Malcolm, and to feel more uncomfortable and
+indignant; and the more she dwelt upon Malcolm's presumption, and
+speculated as to his possible design in it, she grew the
+angrier.</p>
+
+<p>She went again on deck. By this time she was in a passion --
+little mollified by the sense of her helplessness.</p>
+
+<p>"MacPhail," she said, laying the restraint of dignified
+utterance upon her words, "I desire you to give me a good reason
+for your most unaccountable behaviour. Where are you taking
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"To Lossie House, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" she returned with scornful and contemptuous
+surprise. "Then I order you to change your course at once and
+return to London."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Cannot! Whose orders but mine are you under, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your father's, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard more than enough of that unfortunate --
+statement, and the measureless assumptions founded on it. I shall
+heed it no longer."</p>
+
+<p>"I am only doing my best to take care of you, my lady, as I
+promised him. You will know it one day if you will but trust
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"I have trusted you ten times too much, and have gained
+nothing in return but reasons for repenting it. Like all other
+servants made too much of you have grown insolent. But I shall
+put a stop to it. I cannot possibly keep you in my service after
+this. Am I to pay a master where I want a servant?"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"You must have some reason for this strange conduct," she went
+on. "How can your supposed duty to my father justify you in
+treating me with such disrespect. Let me know your reasons. I
+have a right to know them."</p>
+
+<p>"I will answer you, my lady," said Malcolm. "-- Davy, go
+forward; I will take the helm. -- Now, my lady, if you will sit
+on that cushion. -- Rose, bring my lady a fur cloak you will find
+in the cabin. -- Now, my lady, if you will speak low that neither
+Davy nor Rose shall hear us. -- Travers is deaf -- I will answer
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I ask you," said Florimel, "why you have dared to bring me
+away like this. Nothing but some danger threatening me could
+justify it."</p>
+
+<p>"There you say it, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"And what is the danger, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>'You were going on the continent with Lady Bellair and Lord
+Liftore -- and without me to do as I had promised."</p>
+
+<p>"You insult me!" cried Florimel. "Are my movements to be
+subject to the approbation of my groom? Is it possible my father
+could give his henchman such authority over his daughter? I ask
+you again, where was the danger?"</p>
+
+<p>"In your company, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"So!" exclaimed Florimel, attempting to rise in sarcasm as she
+rose in wrath, lest she should fall into undignified rage. "And
+what may be your objection to my companions?"</p>
+
+<p>"That Lady Bellair is not respected in any circle where her
+history is known; and that her nephew is a scoundrel."</p>
+
+<p>"It but adds to the wrong you heap on me, that you compel me
+to hear such wicked abuse of my father's friends," said Florimel,
+struggling with tears of anger. But for regard to her dignity she
+would have broken out in fierce and voluble rage.</p>
+
+<p>"If your father knew Lord Liftore as I do, he would be the
+last man my lord marquis would see in your company."</p>
+
+<p>"Because he gave you a beating, you have no right to slander
+him," said Florimel spitefully.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm laughed. He must either laugh or be angry.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask how your ladyship came to hear of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"He told me himself," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, my lady, he is a liar, as well as worse. It was I who
+gave him the drubbing he deserved for his insolence to my --
+mistress. I am sorry to mention the disagreeable fact, but it is
+absolutely necessary you should know what sort of man he is."</p>
+
+<p>"And, if there be a lie, which of the two is more likely to
+tell it?"</p>
+
+<p>"That question is for you, my lady, to answer."</p>
+
+<p>"I never knew a servant who would not tell a lie," said
+Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"I was brought up a fisherman," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"And," Florimel went on, "I have heard my father say no
+gentleman ever told a lie."</p>
+
+<p>"Then Lord Liftore is no gentleman," said Malcolm. "But I am
+not going to plead my own cause even to you, my lady. If you can
+doubt me, do. I have only one thing more to say: that when I told
+you and my Lady Clementina about the fisher girl and the
+gentleman --"</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you refer to that again? Even you ought to know
+there are things a lady cannot hear. It is enough you affronted
+me with that before Lady Clementina -- and after foolish boasts
+on my part of your good breeding! Now you bring it up again, when
+I cannot escape your low talk!"</p>
+
+<p>"My lady, I am sorrier than you think; but which is worse --
+that you should hear such a thing spoken of, or make a friend of
+the man who did it -- and that is Lord Liftore?"</p>
+
+<p>Florimel turned away, and gave her seeming attention to the
+moonlit waters, sweeping past the swift sailing cutter.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's heart ached for her: he thought she was deeply
+troubled. But she was not half so shocked as he imagined.
+Infinitely worse would have been the shock to him could he have
+seen how little the charge against Liftore had touched her. Alas!
+evil communications had already in no small degree corrupted her
+good manners. Lady Bellair had uttered no bad words in her
+hearing: had softened to decency every story that required it;
+had not unfrequently tacked a worldly wise moral to the end of
+one; and yet, and yet, such had been the tone of her telling,
+such the allotment of laughter and lamentation, such the
+acceptance of things as necessary, and such the repudiation of
+things as Quixotic, puritanical, impossible, that the girl's
+natural notions of the lovely and the clean had got dismally
+shaken and confused.</p>
+
+<p>Happily it was as yet more her judgment than her heart that
+was perverted. But had she spoken out what was in her thoughts as
+she looked over the great wallowing water, she would have merely
+said that for all that Liftore was no worse than other men. They
+were all the same. It was very unpleasant; but how could a lady
+help it? If men would behave so, were by nature like that, women
+must not make themselves miserable about it. They need ask no
+questions. They were not supposed to be acquainted with the least
+fragment of the facts, and they must cleave to their ignorance,
+and lay what blame there might be on the women concerned. The
+thing was too indecent even to think about.</p>
+
+<p>Ostrich-like they must hide their heads -- close their eyes
+and take the vice in their arms -- to love, honour, and obey, as
+if it were virtue's self, and men as pure as their demands on
+their wives.</p>
+
+<p>There are thousands that virtually reason thus: Only ignore
+the thing effectually, and for you it is not. Lie right
+thoroughly to yourself, and the thing is gone. The lie destroys
+the fact. So reasoned Lady Macbeth -- until conscience at last
+awoke, and she could no longer keep even the smell of the blood
+from her. What need Lady Lossie care about the fisher girl, or
+any other concerned with his past, so long as he behaved like a
+gentleman to her! Malcolm was a foolish meddling fellow, whose
+interference was the more troublesome that it was honest.</p>
+
+<p>She stood thus gazing on the waters that heaved and swept
+astern, but without knowing that she saw them, her mind full of
+such nebulous matter as, condensed, would have made such thoughts
+as I have set down. And still and ever the water rolled and
+tossed away behind in the moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my lady!" said Malcolm, "what it would be to have a soul
+as big and as clean as all this!"</p>
+
+<p>She made no reply, did not turn her head, or acknowledge that
+she heard him, a few minutes more she stood, then went below in
+silence, and Malcolm saw no more of her that night.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LII"></a>CHAPTER LII: HOPE
+CHAPEL</h1>
+
+<p>It was Sunday, during which Malcolm lay at the point of death
+some three stories above his sister's room. There, in the
+morning, while he was at the worst, she was talking with
+Clementina, who had called to see whether she would not go and
+hear the preacher of whom he had spoken with such fervour.
+Florimel laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to take everything for gospel Malcolm says,
+Clementina!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," returned Clementina, rather annoyed. "Gospel
+nowadays is what nobody disputes and nobody heeds; but I do heed
+what Malcolm says, and intend to find out, if I can, whether
+there is any reality in it. I thought you had a high opinion of
+your groom!"</p>
+
+<p>"I would take his word for anything a man's word can be taken
+for," said Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't set much store by his judgment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I daresay he's right. But I don't care for the things you
+like so much to talk with him about. He's a sort of poet, anyhow,
+and poets must be absurd. They are always either dreaming or
+talking about their dreams. They care nothing for the realities
+of life. No -- if you want advice, you must go to your lawyer or
+clergyman, or some man of common sense, neither groom nor
+poet."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Florimel, it comes to this -- that this groom of yours
+is one of the truest of men, and one who possessed your father's
+confidence, but you are so much his superior that you are capable
+of judging him, and justified in despising his judgment."</p>
+
+<p>"Only in practical matters, Clementina."</p>
+
+<p>"And duty towards God is with you such a practical matter that
+you cannot listen to anything he has got to say about it."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"For my part, I would give all I have to know there was a God
+worth believing in."</p>
+
+<p>"Clementina!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course there is a God. It is very horrible to deny
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Which is worse -- to deny it, or to deny him? Now, I confess
+to doubting it -- that is, the fact of a God; but you seem to me
+to deny God himself, for you admit there is a God -- think it
+very wicked to deny that, and yet you don't take interest enough
+in him to wish to learn anything about him. You won't think,
+Florimel. I don't fancy you ever really think."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel again laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad," she said, "that you don't judge me incapable of
+that high art. But it is not so very long since Malcolm used to
+hint something much the same about yourself, my lady!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then he was quite right," returned Clementina. "I am only
+just beginning to think, and if I can find a teacher, here I am,
+his pupil."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I suppose I can spare my groom quite enough to teach
+you all he knows," Florimel said, with what Clementina took for a
+marked absence of expression. She reddened. But she was not one
+to defend herself before her principles.</p>
+
+<p>"If he can, why should he not?" she said. "But it was of his
+friend Mr Graham I was thinking- -- not himself."</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot tell whether he has got anything to teach
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Your groom's testimony gives likelihood enough to make it my
+duty to go and see. I intend to find the place this evening."</p>
+
+<p>"It must be some little ranting methodist conventicle. He
+would not be allowed to preach in a church, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not! The church of England is like the apostle that
+forbade the man casting out devils, and got forbid himself for it
+-- with this difference that she won't be forbid. Well, she
+chooses her portion with Dives and not Lazarus. She is the most
+arrant respecter of persons I know, and her Christianity is worse
+than a farce. It was that first of all that drove me to doubt. If
+I could find a place where everything was just the opposite, the
+poorer it was the better I should like it. It makes me feel quite
+wicked to hear a smug parson reading the gold ring and the goodly
+apparel, while the pew openers beneath are illustrating in dumb
+show the very thing the apostle is pouring out the vial of his
+indignation upon over their heads; -- doing it calmly and without
+a suspicion, for the parson, while he reads, is rejoicing in his
+heart over the increasing aristocracy of his congregation. The
+farce is fit to make a devil in torment laugh."</p>
+
+<p>Once more, Florimel laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"Another revolution, Clementina, and we shall have you heading
+the canaille to destroy Westminster Abbey."</p>
+
+<p>"I would follow any leader to destroy falsehood," said
+Clementina. "No canaille will take that up until it meddles with
+their stomachs or their pew rents."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Clementina, you are the worst Jacobin I ever heard
+talk. My groom is quite an aristocrat beside you."</p>
+
+<p>"Not an atom more than I am. I do acknowledge an aristocracy
+-- but it is one neither of birth nor of intellect nor of
+wealth."</p>
+
+<p>"What is there besides to make one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Something I hope to find before long. What if there be indeed
+a kingdom and an aristocracy of life and truth! -- Will you or
+will you not go with me to hear this schoolmaster?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will go anywhere with you, if it were only to be seen with
+such a beauty," said Florimel, throwing her arms round her neck
+and kissing her.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina gently returned the embrace, and the thing was
+settled.</p>
+
+<p>The sound of their wheels, pausing in swift revolution with
+the clangor of iron hoofs on rough stones at the door of the
+chapel, refreshed the diaconal heart like the sound of water in
+the desert. For the first time in the memory of the oldest, the
+dayspring of success seemed on the point of breaking over Hope
+Chapel. The ladies were ushered in by Mr Marshal himself, to
+Clementina's disgust and Florimel's amusement, with much the same
+attention as his own shop walker would have shown to carriage
+customers -- How could a man who taught light and truth be found
+in such a mean entourage? But the setting was not the jewel. A
+real stone might be found in a copper ring. So said Clementina to
+herself as she sat waiting her hoped for instructor.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs Catanach settled her broad back into its corner, chuckling
+over her own wisdom and foresight. Her seat was at the pulpit end
+of the chapel, at right angles to almost all the rest of the pews
+-- chosen because thence, if indeed she could not well see the
+preacher, she could get a good glimpse of nearly everyone that
+entered. Keen sighted both physically and intellectually, she
+recognized Florimel the moment she saw her.</p>
+
+<p>"Twa doos mair to the boody craw!" she laughed to herself. "Ae
+man thrashin', an' twa birdies pickin'!" she went on, quoting the
+old nursery nonsense. Then she stooped, and let down her veil.
+Florimel hated her, and therefore might know her.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the day o' the Lord wi' auld Sanny Grame!" she resumed
+to herself, as she lifted her head. "He's stickit nae mair, but a
+chosen trumpet at last! Foul fa' 'im for a wearifu' cratur for a'
+that! He has nowther balm o' grace nor pith o' damnation.</p>
+
+<p>"Yon laad Flemin', 'at preached i' the Baillies' Barn aboot
+the dowgs gaein' roon' an' roon' the wa's o' the New Jeroozlem,
+gien he had but hauden thegither an' no gean to the worms sae
+sune, wad hae dung a score o' 'im. But Sanny angers me to that
+degree 'at but for rizons -- like yon twa -- I wad gang oot i'
+the mids o' ane o' 's palahvers, an' never come back, though I
+ha'e a haill quarter o' my sittin' to sit oot yet, an' it cost me
+dear, an' fits the auld back o' me no that ill."</p>
+
+<p>When Mr Graham rose to read the psalm, great was Clementina's
+disappointment: he looked altogether, as she thought, of a sort
+with the place -- mean and dreary -- of the chapel very chapelly,
+and she did not believe it could be the man of whom Malcolm had
+spoken. By a strange coincidence however, a kind of occurrence as
+frequent as strange, he read for his text that same passage about
+the gold ring and the vile raiment, in which we learn how exactly
+the behaviour of the early Jewish churches corresponded to that
+of the later English ones, and Clementina soon began to alter her
+involuntary judgment of him when she found herself listening to
+an utterance beside which her most voluble indignation would have
+been but as the babble of a child.</p>
+
+<p>Sweeping, incisive, withering, blasting denunciation, logic
+and poetry combining in one torrent of genuine eloquence, poured
+confusion and dismay upon head and heart of all who set
+themselves up for pillars of the church without practising the
+first principles of the doctrine of Christ -- men who, professing
+to gather their fellows together in the name of Christ, conducted
+the affairs of the church on the principles of hell -- men so
+blind and dull and slow of heart, that they would never know what
+the outer darkness meant until it had closed around them -- men
+who paid court to the rich for their money, and to the poor for
+their numbers -- men who sought gain first, safety next, and the
+will of God not at all -- men whose presentation of Christianity
+was enough to drive the world to a preferable infidelity.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina listened with her very soul. All doubt as to
+whether this was Malcolm's friend, vanished within two minutes of
+his commencement. If she rejoiced a little more than was humble
+or healthful in finding that such a man thought as she thought,
+she gained this good notwithstanding -- the presence and power of
+a man who believed in righteousness the doctrine he taught. Also
+she perceived that the principles of equality he held, were
+founded on the infinite possibilities of the individual -- and of
+the race only through the individual; and that he held these
+principles with an absoluteness, an earnestness, a simplicity,
+that dwarfed her loudest objurgation to the uneasy murmuring of a
+sleeper. She could not but trust him, and her hope grew great
+that perhaps for her he held the key of the kingdom of heaven.
+She saw that if what this man said was true, then the gospel was
+represented by men who knew nothing of its real nature, and by
+such she bad been led into a false judgment of it.</p>
+
+<p>"If such a man," said the schoolmaster in conclusion, "would
+but once represent to himself that the man whom he regards as
+beneath him, may nevertheless be immeasurably above him -- and
+that after no arbitrary judgment, but according to the absolute
+facts of creation, the scale of the kingdom of God, in which
+being is rank; if he could persuade himself of the possibility
+that he may yet have to worship before the feet of those on whom
+he looks down as on the creatures of another and meaner order of
+creation, would it not sting him to rise, and, lest this should
+be one of such, make offer of his chair to the poor man in the
+vile raiment? Would he ever more, all his life long, dare to say,
+'Stand thou there, or sit here under my footstool?'"</p>
+
+<p>During the week that followed, Clementina reflected with
+growing delight on what she had heard, and looked forward to
+hearing more of a kind correspondent on the approaching Sunday.
+Nor did the shock of the disappearance of Florimel with Malcolm
+abate her desire to be taught by Malcolm's friend.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Bellair was astounded, mortified, enraged. Liftore turned
+grey with passion, then livid with mortification, at the news.
+Not one of all their circle, as Florimel had herself foreseen,
+doubted for a moment that she had run away with that groom of
+hers. Indeed, upon examination, it became evident that the scheme
+had been for some time in hand: the yacht they had gone on board
+had been lying there for months; and although she was her own
+mistress, and might marry whom she pleased, it was no wonder she
+had run away, for how could she have held her face to it, or up
+after it?</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina accepted the general conclusion, but judged it
+individually. She had more reason to be distressed at what seemed
+to have taken place than anyone else; indeed it stung her to the
+heart, wounding her worse than in its first stunning effects she
+was able to know; yet she thought better rather than worse of
+Florimel because of it. What she did not like in her with
+reference to the affair was the depreciatory manner in which she
+had always spoken of Malcolm. If genuine, it was quite
+inconsistent with due regard for the man for whom she was yet
+prepared to sacrifice so much; if, on the other hand, her slight
+opinion of his judgment was a pretence, then she had been
+disloyal to the just prerogatives of friendship.</p>
+
+<p>The latter part of that week was the sorest time Clementina
+had ever passed. But, like a true woman, she fought her own
+misery and sense of loss, as well as her annoyance and anxiety,
+-- constantly saying to herself that, be the thing as it might,
+she could never cease to be glad that she had known Malcolm
+MacPhail.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LIII"></a>CHAPTER LIII: A NEW
+PUPIL</h1>
+
+<p>The sermon Lady Clementina heard with such delight had
+followed one levelled at the common and right worldly idea of
+success harboured by each, and unquestioned by one of the chief
+men of the community: together they caused a strange uncertain
+sense of discomfort in the mind diaconal. Slow to perceive that
+that idea, nauseous in his presentment of it, was the very same
+cherished and justified by themselves; unwilling also to believe
+that in his denunciation of respecters of persons they themselves
+had a full share, they yet felt a little uneasy from the vague
+whispers of their consciences on the side of the neglected
+principles enounced, clashing with the less vague conviction that
+if those whispers were encouraged and listened to, the ruin of
+their hopes for their chapel, and their influence in connection
+with it, must follow. They eyed each other doubtfully, and there
+appeared a general tendency amongst them to close pressed lips
+and single shakes of the head. But there were other forces at
+work -- tending in the same direction.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been the influence of the schoolmaster upon
+the congregation gathered in Hope Chapel, there was one on whom
+his converse, supplemented by his preaching, had taken genuine
+hold. Frederick Marshal had begun to open his eyes to the fact
+that, regarded as a profession, the ministry, as they called it
+in their communion, was the meanest way of making a living in the
+whole creation, one deserving the contempt of every man honest
+enough to give honourable work, that is, work worth the money,
+for the money paid him. Also he had a glimmering insight, on the
+other hand, into the truth of what the dominie said -- that it
+was the noblest of martyrdoms to the man who, sent by God, loved
+the truth with his whole soul, and was never happier than when
+bearing witness of it, except, indeed, in those blessed moments
+when receiving it of the Father. In consequence of this opening
+of his eyes the youth recoiled with dismay from the sacrilegious
+mockery of which he had been guilty in meditating the presumption
+of teaching holy things of which the sole sign that he knew
+anything was now afforded by this same recoil. At last he was not
+far from the kingdom of heaven, though whether he was to be sent
+to persuade men that that kingdom was amongst them, and must be
+in them, remained a question.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning after the latter of those two sermons,
+Frederick, as they sat at breakfast, succeeded, with no small
+effort, for he feared his mother, in blurting out to his father
+the request that he might be taken into the counting house; and
+when indignantly requested, over the top of the teapot, to
+explain himself, declared that he found it impossible to give his
+mind to a course of education which could only end in the
+disappointment of his parents, seeing he was at length satisfied
+that he had no call to the ministry. His father was not
+displeased at the thought of having him at the shop; but his
+mother was for some moments speechless with angry tribulation.
+Recovering herself, with scornful bitterness she requested to
+know to what tempter he had been giving ear -- for tempted he
+must have been ere son of hers would have been guilty of
+backsliding from the cause; of taking his hand from the plough
+and looking behind him. The youth returned such answers as, while
+they satisfied his father he was right, served only to convince
+his mother, where yet conviction was hardly needed, that she had
+to thank the dominie for his defection, his apostasy from the
+church to the world.</p>
+
+<p>Incapable of perceiving that now first there was hope of a
+genuine disciple in the child of her affection, she was filled
+with the gall of disappointment, and with spite against the man
+who had taught her son how worse than foolish it is to aspire to
+teach before one has learned; nor did she fail to cast scathing
+reflections on her husband, in that he had brought home a viper
+in his bosom, a wolf into his fold, the wretched minion of a
+worldly church to lead her son away captive at his will; and
+partly no doubt from his last uncomfortable sermons, but mainly
+from the play of Mrs Marshal's tongue on her husband's tympanum,
+the deacons in full conclave agreed that no further renewal of
+the invitation to preach "for them" should be made to the
+schoolmaster -- just the end of the business Mr Graham had
+expected, and for which he had provided. On Tuesday morning he
+smiled to himself, and wondered whether, if he were to preach in
+his own schoolroom the next Sunday evening, anyone would come to
+hear him. On Saturday he received a cool letter of thanks for his
+services, written by the ironmonger in the name of the deacons,
+enclosing a cheque, tolerably liberal as ideas went, in
+acknowledgment of them. The cheque Mr Graham returned, saying
+that, as he was not a preacher by profession, he had no right to
+take fees. It was a half holiday: he walked up to Hampstead
+Heath, and was paid for everything, in sky and cloud, fresh air,
+and a glorious sunset.</p>
+
+<p>When the end of her troubled week came, and the Sunday of her
+expectation brought lovely weather, with a certain vague
+suspicion of peace, into the regions of Mayfair and Spitalfields,
+Clementina walked across the Regent's Park to Hope Chapel, and
+its morning observances; but thought herself poorly repaid for
+her exertions by having to listen to a dreadful sermon and worse
+prayers from Mr Masquar -- one of the chief priests of
+Commonplace -- a comfortable idol to serve, seeing he accepts as
+homage to himself all that any man offers to his own person,
+opinions, or history. But Clementina contrived to endure it,
+comforting herself that she had made a mistake in supposing Mr
+Graham preached in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening her carriage once again drew up with clang and
+clatter at the door of the chapel. But her coachman was out of
+temper at having to leave the bosom of his family circle -- as he
+styled the table that upheld his pot of beer and jar of tobacco
+-- of a Sunday, and sought relief to his feelings in giving his
+horses a lesson in crawling; the result of which was fortunate
+for his mistress: when she entered, the obnoxious Mr Masquar was
+already reading the hymn. She turned at once and made for the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>But her carriage was already gone. A strange sense of
+loneliness and desolation seized her. The place had grown hateful
+to her, and she would have fled from it. Yet she lingered in the
+porch. The eyes of the man in the pulpit, with his face of false
+solemnity and low importance -- she seemed to feel the look of
+them on her back, yet she lingered. Now that Malcolm was gone,
+how was she to learn when Mr Graham would be preaching?</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, ma'am," said a humble and dejected voice.</p>
+
+<p>She turned and saw the seamed and smoky face of the pew
+opener, who had been watching her from the lobby, and had crept
+out after her. She dropped a courtesy, and went on hurriedly,
+with an anxious look now and then over her shoulder -- "Oh,
+ma'am! we shan't see 'im no more. Our people here -- they're very
+good people, but they don't like to be told the truth. It seems
+to me as if they knowed it so well they thought as how there was
+no need for them to mind it."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean that Mr Graham has given up preaching
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>"They've given up askin' of 'im to preach, lady. But if ever
+there was a good man in that pulpit, Mr Graham he do be that
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know where he lives?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ma'am; but it would be hard to direct you." Here she
+looked in at the door of the chapel with a curious half
+frightened glance, as if to satisfy herself that the inner door
+was closed. "But," she went on, "they won't miss me now the
+service is begun, and I can be back before it's over. I'll show
+you where, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be greatly obliged to you," said Clementina, "only I
+am sorry to give you the trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I'm only too glad to get away," she
+returned, "for the place it do look like a cementery, now he's
+out of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he so kind to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"He never spoke word to me, as to myself like, no, nor never
+gave me sixpence, like Mr Masquar do; but he give me strength in
+my heart to bear up, and that's better than meat or money."</p>
+
+<p>It was a good half hour's walk, and during it Clementina held
+what conversation she might with her companion. It was not much
+the woman had to say of a general sort. She knew little beyond
+her own troubles and the help that met them, but what else are
+the two main forces whose composition results in upward motion?
+Her world was very limited -- the houses in which she went
+charing, the chapel she swept and dusted, the neighbours with
+whom she gossipped, the little shops where she bought the barest
+needs of her bare life; but it was at least large enough to leave
+behind her; and if she was not one to take the kingdom of heaven
+by force, she was yet one to creep quietly into it. The earthly
+life of such as she -- immeasurably less sordid than that of the
+poet who will not work for his daily bread, or that of the
+speculator who, having settled money on his wife, risks that of
+his neighbour -- passing away like a cloud, will hang in their
+west, stained indeed, but with gold, blotted, but with roses.
+Dull as it all was now, Clementina yet gained from her unfoldings
+a new outlook upon life, its needs, its sorrows, its
+consolations, and its hopes; nor was there any vulgar pity in the
+smile of the one, or of degrading acknowledgment in the tears of
+the other, when a piece of gold passed from hand to hand, as they
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>The Sunday sealed door of the stationer's shop -- for there
+was no private entrance to the house -- was opened by another sad
+faced woman. What a place to seek the secret of life in! Lovelily
+enfolds the husk its kernel; but what the human eye turns from as
+squalid and unclean may enfold the seed that clasps, couched in
+infinite withdrawment, the vital germ of all that is lovely and
+graceful, harmonious and strong, all without which no poet would
+sing, no martyr burn, no king rule in righteousness, no
+geometrician pore over the marvellous must.</p>
+
+<p>The woman led her through the counter into a little dingy room
+behind the shop, looking out on a yard a few feet square, with a
+water butt, half a dozen flower pots, and a maimed plaster Cupid
+perched on the windowsill. There sat the schoolmaster, in
+conversation with a lady, whom the woman of the house, awed by
+her sternness and grandeur, had, out of regard to her lodger's
+feelings, shown into her parlour and not into his bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>Cherishing the hope that the patent consequences of his line
+of action might have already taught him moderation, Mrs Marshal,
+instead of going to chapel to hear Mr Masquar, had paid Mr Graham
+a visit, with the object of enlisting his sympathies if she
+could, at all events his services, in the combating of the
+scruples he had himself aroused in the bosom of her son. What had
+passed between them I do not care to record, but when Lady
+Clementina -- unannounced of the landlady -- entered, there was
+light enough, notwithstanding the non reflective properties of
+the water butt, to reveal Mrs Marshal flushed and flashing, Mr
+Graham grave and luminous, and to enable the chapel business eye
+of Mrs Marshal, which saw every stranger that entered "Hope," at
+once to recognise her as having made one of the congregation the
+last Sunday evening.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently one of Mr Graham's party, she was not prejudiced in
+her favour. But there was that in her manner which impressed her
+-- that something ethereal and indescribable which she herself
+was constantly aping, and, almost involuntarily, she took upon
+herself such honours as the place, despicable in her eyes, would
+admit of. She rose, made a sweeping courtesy, and addressed Lady
+Clementina with such a manner as people of Mrs Marshal's
+ambitions put off and on like their clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, take a seat, ma'am, such as it is," she said, with a
+wave of her hand. "I believe I have had the pleasure of seeing
+you at our place."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina sat down: the room was too small to stand in,
+and Mrs Marshal seemed to take the half of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not aware of the honour," she returned, doubtful what
+the woman meant -- perhaps some shop or dressmaker's. Clementina
+was not one who delighted in freezing her humbler fellow
+creatures, as we know; but there was something altogether
+repulsive in the would be grand but really arrogant behaviour of
+her fellow visitor.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean," said Mrs Marshal, a little abashed, for ambition is
+not strength, "at our little Bethel in Kentish Town! Not that we
+live there!" she explained with a superior smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I think I understand. You must mean the chapel where this
+gentleman was preaching."</p>
+
+<p>"That is my meaning," assented Mrs Marshal.</p>
+
+<p>"I went there tonight," said Clementina, turning with some
+timidity to Mr Graham. "That I did not find you there, sir, will,
+I hope, explain --" Here she paused, and turned again to Mrs
+Marshal. "I see you think with me, ma'am, that a true teacher is
+worth following."</p>
+
+<p>As she said this she turned once more to Mr Graham, who sat
+listening with a queer, amused, but right courteous smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will pardon me," she continued, "for venturing to
+call upon you, and, as I have the misfortune to find you
+occupied, allow me to call another day. If you would set me a
+time, I should be more obliged than I can tell you," she
+concluded, her voice trembling a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay now, if you will, madam," returned the schoolmaster,
+with a bow of oldest fashioned courtesy. "This lady has done
+laying her commands upon me, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>"As you think proper to call them commands, Mr Graham, I
+conclude you intend to obey them," said Mrs Marshal, with a
+forced smile and an attempt at pleasantry.</p>
+
+<p>"Not for the world, madam," he answered. "Your son is acting
+the part of a gentleman -- yes, I make bold to say, of one who is
+very nigh the kingdom of heaven, if not indeed within its gate,
+and before I would check him I would be burnt at the stake --
+even were your displeasure the fire, madam," he added, with a
+kindly bow. "Your son is a fine fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"He would be, if he were left to himself. Good evening, Mr
+Graham. Goodbye, rather, for I think we are not likely to meet
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"In heaven, I hope, madam; for by that time we shall be able
+to understand each other," said the schoolmaster, still
+kindly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs Marshal made no answer beyond a facial flash as she turned
+to Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Good evening, ma'am," she said. "To pay court to the earthen
+vessel because of the treasure it may happen to hold, is to be a
+respecter of persons as bad as any."</p>
+
+<p>An answering flash broke from Clementina's blue orbs, but her
+speech was more than calm as she returned,</p>
+
+<p>"I learned something of that lesson last Sunday evening, I
+hope, ma'am. But you have left me far behind, for you seem to
+have learned disrespect even to the worthiest of persons. Good
+evening, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>She looked the angry matron full in the face, with an icy
+regard, from which, as from the Gorgon eye, she fled.</p>
+
+<p>The victor turned to the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, sir," she said, "for presuming to take
+your part, but a gentleman is helpless with a vulgar woman."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, madam. I hope the sharpness of your rebuke --
+but indeed the poor woman can hardly help her rudeness, for she
+is very worldly, and believes herself very pious. It is the old
+story -- hard for the rich."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina was struck.</p>
+
+<p>"I too am rich and worldly," she said. "But I know that I am
+not pious, and if you would but satisfy me that religion is
+common sense, I would try to be religious with all my heart and
+soul."</p>
+
+<p>"I willingly undertake the task. But let us know each other a
+little first. And lest I should afterwards seem to have taken an
+advantage of you, I hope you have no wish to be nameless to me,
+for my friend Malcolm MacPhail had so described you that I
+recognized your ladyship at once."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina said that, on the contrary, she had given her name
+to the woman who opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>"It is because of what Malcolm said of you that I ventured to
+come to you," she added.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen Malcolm lately?" he asked, his brow clouding a
+little. "It is more than a week since he has been to me."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon, with embarrassment, such as she would never have
+felt except in the presence of pure simplicity, she told of his
+disappearance with his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"And you think they have run away together?" said the
+schoolmaster, his face beaming with what, to Clementina's
+surprise, looked almost like merriment.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so," she answered. "Why not, if they
+choose?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will say this for my friend Malcolm," returned Mr Graham
+composedly, "that whatever he did I should expect to find not
+only all right in intention, but prudent and well devised also.
+The present may well seem a rash, ill considered affair for both
+of them, but --"</p>
+
+<p>"I see no necessity either for explanation or excuse," said
+Clementina, too eager to mark that she interrupted Mr Graham. "In
+making up her mind to marry him, Lady Lossie has shown greater
+wisdom and courage than, I confess, I had given her credit
+for."</p>
+
+<p>"And Malcolm?" rejoined the schoolmaster softly. "Should you
+say of him that he showed equal wisdom?"</p>
+
+<p>"I decline to give an opinion upon the gentleman's part in the
+business," answered Clementina, laughing, but glad there was so
+little light in the room, for she was painfully conscious of the
+burning of her cheeks. "Besides, I have no measure to apply to
+Malcolm," she went on, a little hurriedly. "He is like no one
+else I have ever talked with, and I confess there is something
+about him I cannot understand. Indeed, he is beyond me
+altogether."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, having known him from infancy, I might be able to
+explain him," returned Mr Graham, in a tone that invited
+questioning.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, then," said Clementina, "I may be permitted, in
+jealousy for the teaching I have received of him, to confess my
+bewilderment that one so young should be capable of dealing with
+such things as he delights in. The youth of the prophet makes me
+doubt his prophecy."</p>
+
+<p>"At least," rejoined Mr Graham, "the phenomenon coincides with
+what the master of these things said of them -- that they were
+revealed to babes and not to the wise and prudent. As to
+Malcolm's wonderful facility in giving them form and utterance,
+that depends so immediately on the clear sight of them, that,
+granted a little of the gift poetic, developed through reading
+and talk, we need not wonder much at it."</p>
+
+<p>"You consider your friend a genius?" suggested Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"I consider him possessed of a kind of heavenly common sense,
+equally at home in the truths of divine relation, and the facts
+of the human struggle with nature and her forces. I should never
+have discovered my own ignorance in certain points of the
+mathematics but for the questions that boy put to me before he
+was twelve years of age. A thing not understood lay in his mind
+like a fretting foreign body. But there is a far more important
+factor concerned than this exceptional degree of insight.
+Understanding is the reward of obedience. Peter says 'the Holy
+Ghost, whom God hath given them that obey him.' Obedience is the
+key to every door. I am perplexed at the stupidity of the
+ordinary religious being. In the most practical of all matters,
+he will talk, and speculate, and try to feel, but he will not set
+himself to do. It is different with Malcolm. From the first he
+has been trying to obey. Nor do I see why it should be strange
+that even a child should understand these things, if they are the
+very elements of the region for which we were created and to
+which our being holds essential relations, as a bird to the air,
+or a fish to the sea. If a man may not understand the things of
+God whence he came, what shall he understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"How, then, is it that so few do understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because where they know, so few obey. This boy, I say, did.
+If you had seen, as I have, the almost superhuman struggles of
+his will to master the fierce temper his ancestors gave him, you
+would marvel less at what he has so early become. I have seen
+him, white with passion, cast himself on his face on the shore,
+and cling with his hands to the earth as if in a paroxysm of
+bodily suffering; then after a few moments rise and do a service
+to the man who had wronged him. Were it any wonder if the light
+should have soon gone up in a soul like that? When I was a
+younger man I used to go out with the fishing boats now and then,
+drawn chiefly by my love for the boy, who earned his own bread
+that way before he was in his teens. One night we were caught in
+a terrible storm, and had to stand out to sea in the pitch dark.
+He was then not fourteen. 'Can you let a boy like that steer?' I
+said to the captain of the boat. 'Yes; just a boy like that,' he
+answered. 'Ma'colm 'ill steer as straucht's a porpus.' When he
+was relieved, he crept over the thwarts to where I sat. 'Is there
+any true definition of a straight line, sir?' he said. 'I can't
+take the one in my Euclid.' -- 'So you're not afraid, Malcolm?' I
+returned, heedless of his question, for I wanted to see what he
+would answer. 'Afraid, sir!' he rejoined with some surprise, 'I
+wad ill like to hear the Lord say, 0 thou o' little faith!' --
+'But,' I persisted, 'God may mean to drown you!' -- 'An' what for
+no?' he returned. 'Gien ye war to tell me 'at I micht be droon't
+ohn him meant it, I wad be fleyt eneuch.' I see your ladyship
+does not understand: I will interpret the dark saying: 'And why
+should he not drown me? If you were to tell me I might be drowned
+without his meaning it, I should be frightened enough.' Believe
+me, my lady, the right way is simple to find, though only they
+that seek it first can find it. But I have allowed myself,"
+concluded the schoolmaster, "to be carried adrift in my laudation
+of Malcolm. You did not come to hear praises of him, my
+lady."</p>
+
+<p>"I owe him much," said Clementina. "-- But tell me then, Mr
+Graham, how is it that you know there is a God, and one -- one --
+fit to be trusted as you trust him?"</p>
+
+<p>"In no way that I can bring to bear on the reason of another
+so as to produce conviction."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what is to become of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can do for you what is far better. I can persuade you to
+look and see whether before your own door stands not a gate --
+lies not a path to walk in. Entering by that gate, walking in
+that path, you shall yourself arrive at the conviction, which no
+man can give you, that there is a living Love and Truth at the
+heart of your being, and pervading all that surrounds you. The
+man who seeks the truth in any other manner will never find it.
+Listen to me a moment, my lady. I loved that boy's mother.
+Naturally she did not love me -- how could she? I was very
+unhappy. I sought comfort from the unknown source of my life. He
+gave me to understand his Son, and so I understood himself, knew
+that I came of God, and was comforted."</p>
+
+<p>"But how do you know that it was not all a delusion -- the
+product of your own fervid imagination? Do not mistake me; I want
+to find it true."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a right and honest question, my lady. I will tell
+you.</p>
+
+<p>"Not to mention the conviction which a truth beheld must carry
+with itself and concerning which there can be no argument either
+with him who does or him who does not see it, this experience
+goes far with me, and would with you if you had it, as you may --
+namely, that all my difficulties and confusions have gone on
+clearing themselves up ever since I set out to walk in that way.
+My consciousness of life is threefold what it was; my perception
+of what is lovely around me, and my delight in it, threefold; my
+power of understanding things and of ordering my way, threefold
+also; the same with my hope and my courage, my love to my kind,
+my power of forgiveness. In short, I cannot but believe that my
+whole being and its whole world are in process of rectification
+for me. Is not that something to set against the doubt born of
+the eye and ear, and the questions of an intellect that can
+neither grasp nor disprove? I say nothing of better things still.
+To the man who receives such as I mean, they are the heart of
+life; to the man who does not, they exist not. But I say -- if I
+thus find my whole being enlightened and redeemed, and know that
+therein I fare according to the word of the man of whom the old
+story tells: if I find that his word, and the result of action
+founded upon that word, correspond and agree, opening a heaven
+within and beyond me, in which I see myself delivered from all
+that now in myself is to myself despicable and unlovely; if I can
+reasonably -- reasonably to myself not to another -- cherish
+hopes of a glory of conscious being, divinely better than all my
+imagination when most daring could invent -- a glory springing
+from absolute unity with my creator, and therefore with my
+neighbour; if the Lord of the ancient tale, I say, has thus held
+word with me, am I likely to doubt much or long whether there be
+such a lord or no?"</p>
+
+<p>"What, then, is the way that lies before my own door? Help me
+to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"It is just the old way -- as old as the conscience -- that of
+obedience to any and every law of personal duty. But if you have
+ever seen the Lord, if only from afar -- if you have any vaguest
+suspicion that the Jew Jesus, who professed to have come from
+God, was a better man than other men, one of your first duties
+must be to open your ears to his words, and see whether they
+commend themselves to you as true; then, if they do, to obey them
+with your whole strength and might, upheld by the hope of the
+vision promised in them to the obedient. This is the way of life,
+which will lead a man out of the miseries of the nineteenth
+century, as it led Paul out of the miseries of the first."</p>
+
+<p>There followed a little pause, and then a long talk about what
+the schoolmaster had called the old story; in which he spoke with
+such fervid delight of this and that point in the tale; removing
+this and that stumbling-block by giving the true reading - - or
+the right interpretation; showing the what and why and how -- the
+very intent of our Lord in the thing he said or did, that, for
+the first time in her life, Clementina began to feel as if such a
+man must really have lived, that his blessed feet must really
+have walked over the acres of Palestine, that his human heart
+must indeed have thought and felt, worshipped and borne, right
+humanly. Even in the presence of her new teacher, and with his
+words in her ears, she began to desire her own chamber that she
+might sit down with the neglected story and read for herself.</p>
+
+<p>The schoolmaster walked with her to the chapel door. There her
+carriage was already waiting. He put her in, and, while the
+Reverend Jacob Masquar was still holding forth upon the
+difference between adoption and justification, Clementina drove
+away, never more to delight the hearts of the deacons with the
+noise of the hoofs of her horses, staying the wheels of her
+yellow chariot.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LIV"></a>CHAPTER LIV: THE FEY
+FACTOR</h1>
+
+<p>When Mr Crathie heard of the outrage the people of Scaurnose
+had committed upon the surveyors, he vowed be would empty every
+house in the place at Michaelmas. His wife warned him that such a
+wholesale proceeding must put him in the wrong with the country,
+seeing they could not all have been guilty. He replied it would
+be impossible, the rascals hung so together, to find out the
+ringleaders even. She returned that they all deserved it, and
+that a correct discrimination was of no consequence; it would be
+enough to the purpose if he made a difference. People would then
+say he had done his best to distinguish. The factor was persuaded
+and made out a list of those who were to leave, in which he took
+care to include all the principal men, to whom he gave warning
+forthwith to quit their houses at Michaelmas. I do not know
+whether the notice was in law sufficient, but exception was not
+taken on that score.</p>
+
+<p>Scaurnose, on the receipt of the papers, all at the same time,
+by the hand of the bellman of Portlossie, was like a hive about
+to swarm. Endless and complicated were the comings and goings
+between the houses, the dialogues, confabulations, and
+consultations, in the one street and its many closes. In the
+middle of it, in front of the little public house, stood, all
+that day and the next, a group of men and women, for no five
+minutes in its component parts the same, but, like a cloud, ever
+slow dissolving, and as continuously reforming, some dropping
+away, others falling to. Such nid nodding, such uplifting and
+fanning of palms among the women, such semi-revolving side shakes
+of the head, such demonstration of fists, and such cursing among
+the men, had never before been seen and heard in Scaurnose. The
+result was a conclusion to make common cause with the first
+victim of the factor's tyranny, namely Blue Peter, whose
+expulsion would arrive three months before theirs, and was
+unquestionably head and front of the same cruel scheme for
+putting down the fisher folk altogether.</p>
+
+<p>Three of them, therefore, repaired to Joseph's house,
+commissioned with the following proposal and condition of
+compact: that Joseph should defy the notice given him to quit,
+they pledging themselves that he should not be expelled. Whether
+he agreed or not, they were equally determined, they said, when
+their turn came, to defend the village; but if he would cast in
+his lot with them, they would, in defending him, gain the
+advantage of having the question settled three months sooner for
+themselves. Blue Peter sought to dissuade them, specially
+insisting on the danger of bloodshed. They laughed. They had
+anticipated objection, but being of the youngest and roughest in
+the place, the idea of a scrimmage was, neither in itself nor in
+its probable consequences, at all repulsive to them. They
+answered that a little blood letting would do nobody any harm,
+neither would there be much of that, for they scorned to use any
+weapon sharper than their fists or a good thick rung: the women
+and children would take stones of course. Nobody would be killed,
+but every meddlesome authority taught to let Scaurnose and
+fishers alone. Peter objected that their enemies could easily
+starve them out. Dubs rejoined that, if they took care to keep
+the sea door open, their friends at Portlossie would not let them
+starve. Grosert said he made no doubt the factor would have the
+Seaton to fight as well as Scaurnose, for they must see plainly
+enough that their turn would come next. Joseph said the factor
+would apply to the magistrates, and they would call out the
+militia.</p>
+
+<p>"An' we'll call out Buckie," answered Dubs.</p>
+
+<p>"Man," said Fite Folp, the eldest of the three, "the haill
+shore, frae the Brough to Fort George, 'll be up in a jiffie, an'
+a' the cuintry, frae John o' Groat's to Berwick, 'ill hear hoo
+the fisher fowk 's misguidit; an' at last it'll come to the king,
+an' syne we'll get oor richts, for he'll no stan' to see't, an'
+maitters 'll sane be set upon a better futtin' for puir fowk 'at
+has no freen' but God an' the sea."</p>
+
+<p>The greatness of the result represented laid hold of Peter's
+imagination, and the resistance to injustice necessary to reach
+it stirred the old tar in him. When they took their leave, he
+walked halfway up the street with them, and then returned to tell
+his wife what they had been saying, all the way murmuring to
+himself as he went, "The Lord is a man of war." And ever as he
+said the words, he saw as in a vision the great man of war in
+which he had served, sweeping across the bows of a Frenchman, and
+raking him, gun after gun, from stem to stern. Nor did the
+warlike mood abate until he reached home and looked his wife in
+the eyes. He told her all, ending with the half repudiatory, half
+tentative words.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what they say, ye see, Annie."</p>
+
+<p>"And what say ye, Joseph?" returned his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow! I'm no sayin'," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"What are ye thinkin' than, Joseph?" she pursued. "Ye canna
+say ye're no thinkin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Na; I'll no say that, lass," he replied, but said no
+more.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, gien ye winna say," resumed Annie, "I wull; an' my say
+is, 'at it luiks to me unco like takin' things intil yer ain
+han'."</p>
+
+<p>"An' whase han' sud we tak them intil but oor ain?" said
+Peter, with a falseness which in another would have roused his
+righteous indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"That's no the p'int. It's whase han' ye're takin' them oot
+o'," returned she, and spoke with solemnity and significance.</p>
+
+<p>Peter made no answer, but the words Vengeance is mine began to
+ring in his mental ears instead of The Lord is a man of war.</p>
+
+<p>Before Mr Graham left them, and while Peter's soul was
+flourishing, he would have simply said that it was their part to
+endure, and leave the rest to the God of the sparrows. But now
+the words of men whose judgment had no weight with him, threw him
+back upon the instinct of self defence -- driven from which by
+the words of his wife, he betook himself, not alas! to the
+protection, but to the vengeance of the Lord!</p>
+
+<p>The next day he told the three commissioners that he was sorry
+to disappoint them, but he could not make common cause with them,
+for he could not see it his duty to resist, much as it would
+gratify the natural man. They must therefore excuse him if he
+left Scaurnose at the time appointed. He hoped he should leave
+friends behind him.</p>
+
+<p>They listened respectfully, showed no offence, and did not
+even attempt to argue the matter with him. But certain looks
+passed between them.</p>
+
+<p>After this Blue Peter was a little happier in his mind, and
+went more briskly about his affairs.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LV"></a>CHAPTER LV: THE
+WANDERER</h1>
+
+<p>It was a lovely summer evening, and the sun, going down just
+beyond the point of the Scaurnose, shone straight upon the
+Partan's door. That it was closed in such weather had a
+significance -- general as well as individual. Doors were oftener
+closed in the Seaton now. The spiritual atmosphere of the place
+was less clear and open than hitherto. The behaviour of the
+factor, the trouble of their neighbours, the conviction that the
+man who depopulated Scaurnose would at least raise the rents upon
+them, had brought a cloud over the feelings and prospects of its
+inhabitants -- which their special quarrel with the oppressor for
+Malcolm's sake, had drawn deeper around the Findlays; and hence
+it was that the setting sun shone upon the closed door of their
+cottage.</p>
+
+<p>But a shadow darkened it, cutting off the level stream of rosy
+red. An aged man, in Highland garments, stood and knocked. His
+overworn dress looked fresher and brighter in the friendly rays,
+but they shone very yellow on the bare hollows of his old knees.
+It was Duncan MacPhail, the supposed grandfather of Malcolm. He
+was older and feebler, I had almost said blinder, but that could
+not be, certainly shabbier than ever. The glitter of dirk and
+broadsword at his sides, and the many coloured ribbons adorning
+the old bagpipes under his arms, somehow enhanced the look of
+more than autumnal, of wintry desolation in his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Before he left the Seaton, the staff he carried was for show
+rather than use, but now he was bent over it, as if but for it he
+would fall into his grave. His knock was feeble and doubtful, as
+if unsure of a welcoming response. He was broken, sad, and
+uncomforted.</p>
+
+<p>A moment passed. The door was unlatched, and within stood the
+Partaness, wiping her hands in her apron, and looking thunderous.
+But when she saw who it was, her countenance and manner changed
+utterly.</p>
+
+<p>"Preserve's a'! Ye're a sicht for sair e'en, Maister
+MacPhail!" she cried, holding out her hand, which the blind man
+took as if he saw as well as she. "Come awa' but the hoose. Wow!
+but ye're walcome."</p>
+
+<p>"She thanks your own self, Mistress Partan," said Duncan, as
+he followed her in; "and her heart will pe thanking you for ta
+coot welcome; and it will pe a long time since she'll saw you
+howefer."</p>
+
+<p>"Noo, noo!" exclaimed Meg, stopping in the middle of her
+little kitchen, as she was getting a chair for the old man, and
+turning upon him to revive on the first possible chance what had
+been a standing quarrel between them, "what can be the rizon 'at
+gars ane like you, 'at never saw man or wuman i' yer lang life,
+the verra meenute ye open yer mou', say it's lang sin' ye saw me.
+A mensefu' body like you, Maister MacPhail, sud speyk mair to the
+p'int."</p>
+
+<p>"Ton't you'll pe preaking her heart with ta one hand while
+you'll pe clapping her head with ta other," said the piper.
+"Ton't be taking her into your house to pe telling her she can't
+see. Is it that old Tuncan is not a man as much as any woman in
+ta world, tat you'll pe telling her she can't see? I tell you she
+can see, and more tan you'll pe think. And I will tell it to you,
+tere iss a pape in this house, and tere was pe none when Tuncan
+she'll co away."</p>
+
+<p>"We a' ken ye ha'e the second sicht," said Mrs Findlay, who
+had not expected such a reply; "an' it was only o' the first I
+spak. Haith! it wad be ill set o' me to anger ye the moment ye
+come back to yer ain. Sit ye doon there by the chimla neuk, till
+I mask ye a dish o' tay. Or maybe ye wad prefar a drap o'
+parritch an' milk? It's no muckle I ha'e to offer ye, but ye
+cudna be mair walcome."</p>
+
+<p>As easily appeased as irritated, the old man sat down with a
+grateful, placid look, and while the tea was drawing Mrs Findlay,
+by judicious questions, gathered from him the history of his
+adventures.</p>
+
+<p>Unable to rise above the disappointment and chagrin of finding
+that the boy he loved as his own soul, and had brought up as his
+own son was actually the child of a Campbell woman, one of the
+race to which belonged the murderer of his people in Glencoe, and
+which therefore he hated with an absolute passion of hatred,
+unable also to endure the terrible schism in his being occasioned
+by the conflict between horror at the Campbell blood, and
+ineffaceable affection for the youth in whose veins it ran, and
+who so fully deserved all the love he had lavished upon him, he
+had concluded to rid himself of all the associations of place and
+people and event now grown so painful, to make his way back to
+his native Glencoe, and there endure his humiliation as best he
+might, beheld of the mountains which had beheld the ruin of his
+race. He would end the few and miserable days of his pilgrimage
+amid the rushing of the old torrents, and the calling of the old
+winds about the crags and precipices that had hung over his
+darksome yet blessed childhood. These were still his friends. But
+he had not gone many days' journey before a farmer found him on
+the road insensible, and took him home. As he recovered, his
+longing after his boy Malcolm grew, until it rose to agony, but
+he fought with his heart, and believed he had overcome it. The
+boy was a good boy, he said to himself; the boy had been to him
+as the son of his own heart; there was no fault to find with him
+or in him; he was as brave as he was kind, as sincere as he was
+clever, as strong as he was gentle; he could play on the
+bagpipes, and very nearly talk Gaelic, but his mother was a
+Campbell, and for that there was no help. To be on loving terms
+with one in whose veins ran a single drop of the black pollution
+was a thing no MacDhonuill must dream of. He had lived a man of
+honour, and he would die a man of honour, hating the Campbells to
+their last generation. How should the bard of his clan ever talk
+to his own soul if he knew himself false to the name of his
+fathers! Hard fate for him! As if it were not enough that he had
+been doomed to save and rear a child of the brood abominable, he
+was yet further doomed, worst fate of all, to love the evil
+thing! he could not tear the lovely youth from his heart. But he
+could go further and further from him.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he was able, he resumed his journey westward, and
+at length reached his native glen, the wildest spot in all the
+island. There he found indeed the rush of the torrents and the
+call of the winds unchanged, but when his soul cried out in its
+agonies, they went on with the same song that had soothed his
+childhood; for the heart of the suffering man they had no
+response. Days passed before he came upon a creature who
+remembered him; for more than twenty years were gone, and a new
+generation had come up since he forsook the glen. Worst of all,
+the clan spirit was dying out, the family type of government all
+but extinct, the patriarchal vanishing in a low form of the
+feudal, itself already in abject decay. The hour of the Celt was
+gone by, and the long wandering raven, returning at last, found
+the ark it had left afloat on the waters dry and deserted and
+rotting to dust. There was not even a cottage in which he could
+hide his head. The one he had forsaken when cruelty and crime
+drove him out, had fallen to ruins, and now there was nothing of
+it left but its foundations. The people of the inn at the mouth
+of the valley did their best for him, but he learned by accident
+that they had Campbell connections, and, rising that instant,
+walked from it for ever. He wandered about for a time, playing
+his pipes, and everywhere hospitably treated; but at length his
+heart could endure its hunger no more: he must see his boy, or
+die. He walked therefore straight to the cottage of his
+quarrelsome but true friend, Mrs Partan -- to learn that his
+benefactor, the marquis, was dead, and Malcolm gone. But here
+alone could he hope ever to see him again, and the same night he
+sought his cottage in the grounds of Lossie House, never doubting
+his right to re-occupy it. But the door was locked, and he could
+find no entrance. He went to the House, and there was referred to
+the factor. But when he knocked at his door, and requested the
+key of the cottage, Mr Crathie, who was in the middle of his
+third tumbler, came raging out of his dining room, cursed him for
+an old Highland goat, and heaped insults on him and his grandson
+indiscriminately. It was well he kept the door between him and
+the old man, for otherwise he would never have finished the said
+third tumbler. That door carried in it thenceforth the marks of
+every weapon that Duncan bore, and indeed the half of his sgian
+dhu was the next morning found sticking in it, like the sting
+which the bee is doomed to leave behind her. He returned to
+Mistress Partan white and trembling, in a mountainous rage with
+"ta low pred hount of a factor." Her sympathy was enthusiastic,
+for they shared a common wrath. And now came the tale of the
+factor's cruelty to the fishers, his hatred of Malcolm, and his
+general wildness of behaviour. The piper vowed to shed the last
+drop of his blood in defence of his Mistress Partan. But when, to
+strengthen the force of his asseveration, he drew the dangerous
+looking dirk from its sheath, she threw herself upon him,
+wrenched it from his hand, and testified that "fules sudna hae
+chappin' sticks, nor yet teylors guns." It was days before Duncan
+discovered where she had hidden it. But not the less heartily did
+she insist on his taking up his abode with her; and the very next
+day he resumed his old profession of lamp cleaner to the
+community.</p>
+
+<p>When Miss Horn heard that he had come and where he was, old
+feud with Meg Partan rendering it imprudent to call upon him, she
+watched for him in the street, and welcomed him home, assuring
+him that, if ever he should wish to change his quarters, her
+house was at his service.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm nae Cam'ell, ye ken, Duncan," she concluded, "an' what an
+auld wuman like mysel' can du to mak ye coamfortable sail no
+fail, an' that I promise ye."</p>
+
+<p>The old man thanked her with the perfect courtesy of the Celt,
+confessed that he was not altogether at ease where he was, but
+said he must not hurt the feelings of Mistress Partan, "for
+she'll not pe a paad womans," he added, "but her house will pe
+aalways in ta flames, howefer."</p>
+
+<p>So he remained where he was, and the general heart of the
+Seaton was not a little revived by the return of one whose
+presence reminded them of a better time, when no such cloud as
+now threatened them heaved its ragged sides above their
+horizon.</p>
+
+<p>The factor was foolish enough to attempt inducing Meg to send
+her guest away.</p>
+
+<p>"We want no landloupin' knaves, old or young, about Lossie,"
+he said. "If the place is no keepit dacent, we'll never get the
+young marchioness to come near's again."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, factor," returned Meg, enhancing the force of her
+utterance by a composure marvellous from it's rarity, "the first
+thing to mak' the place -- I'll no say dacent, sae lang there's
+sae mony claverin' wives in't, but mair dacent nor it has been
+for the last ten year, wad be to sen' factors back whaur they
+cam' frae."</p>
+
+<p>"And whaur may that be?" asked Mr Crathie.</p>
+
+<p>"That's mair nor I richtly can say," answered Meg Partan, "but
+auld farand fouk threepit it was somewhaur 'ithin the swing o'
+Sawtan's tail."</p>
+
+<p>The reply on the factor's lips as he left the house, tended to
+justify the rude sarcasm.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LVI"></a>CHAPTER LVI: MID
+OCEAN</h1>
+
+<p>There came a breath of something in the east. It was neither
+wind nor warmth. It was light before it is light to the eyes of
+men. Slowly and slowly it grew, until, like the dawning soul in
+the face of one who lies in a faint, the life of light came back
+to the world, and at last the whole huge hollow hemisphere of
+rushing sea and cloud flecked sky lay like a great empty heart,
+waiting, in conscious glory of the light, for the central glory,
+the coming lord of day. And in the whole crystalline hollow,
+gleaming and flowing with delight, yet waiting for more, the
+Psyche was the only lonely life bearing thing -- the one cloudy
+germ spot afloat in the bosom of the great roc egg of sea and
+sky, whose sheltering nest was the universe with its walls of
+flame.</p>
+
+<p>Florimel woke, rose, went on deck, and for a moment was fresh
+born. It was a forescent -- even this could not be called a
+foretaste, of the kingdom of heaven; but Florimel never thought
+of the kingdom of heaven, the ideal of her own existence. She
+could however half appreciate this earthly outbreak of its glory,
+this incarnation of truth invisible. Round her, like a thousand
+doves, clamoured with greeting wings the joyous sea wind. Up came
+a thousand dancing billows, to shout their good morning. Like a
+petted animal, importunate for play, the breeze tossed her hair
+and dragged at her fluttering garments, then rushed in the
+Psyche's sails, swelled them yet deeper, and sent her dancing
+over the dancers. The sun peered up like a mother waking and
+looking out on her frolicking children. Black shadows fell from
+sail to sail, slipping and shifting, and one long shadow of the
+Psyche herself shot over the world to the very gates of the west,
+but held her not, for she danced and leaned and flew as if she
+had but just begun her corantolavolta fresh with the morning, and
+had not been dancing all the livelong night over the same floor.
+Lively as any newborn butterfly, not like a butterfly's, flitting
+and hovering, was her flight, for still, like one that longed,
+she sped and strained and flew. The joy of bare life swelled in
+Florimel's bosom. She looked up, she looked around, she breathed
+deep. The cloudy anger that had rushed upon her like a watching
+tiger the moment she waked, fell back, and left her soul a clear
+minor to reflect God's dream of a world. She turned, and saw
+Malcolm at the tiller, and the cloudy wrath sprang upon her. He
+stood composed and clear and cool as the morning, without sign of
+doubt or conscience of wrong, now peeping into the binnacle, now
+glancing at the sunny sails, where swayed across and back the
+dark shadows of the rigging, as the cutter leaned and rose, like
+a child running and staggering over the multitudinous and
+unstable hillocks. She turned from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, my lady! What a good morning it is!" As in all
+his address to his mistress, the freedom of the words did not
+infect the tone; that was resonant of essential honour. "Strange
+to think," he went on, "that the sun himself there is only a
+great fire, and knows nothing about it! There must be a sun to
+that sun, or the whole thing is a vain show. There must be one to
+whom each is itself, yet the all makes a whole -- one who is at
+once both centre and circumference to all."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel cast on him a scornful look. For not merely was he
+talking his usual unintelligible rubbish of poetry, but he had
+the impertinence to speak as if he had done nothing amiss, and
+she had no ground for being offended with him. She made him no
+answer. A cloud came over Malcolm's face; and until she went
+again below, he gave his attention to his steering.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Rose, who happily had turned out as good a
+sailor as her new mistress, had tidied the little cabin; and
+Florimel found, if not quite such a sumptuous breakfast laid as
+at Portland Place, yet a far better appetite than usual to meet
+what there was; and when she had finished, her temper was better,
+and she was inclined to think less indignantly of Malcolm's share
+in causing her so great a pleasure. She was not yet quite
+spoiled. She was still such a lover of the visible world and of
+personal freedom, that the thought of returning to London and its
+leaden footed hours, would now have been unendurable. At this
+moment she could have imagined no better thing than thus to go
+tearing through the water -- home to her home. For although she
+had spent little of her life at Lossie House, she could not but
+prefer it unspeakably to the schools in which she had passed
+almost the whole of the preceding portion of it. There was little
+or nothing in the affair she could have wished otherwise except
+its origin. She was mischievous enough to enjoy even the thought
+of the consternation it would cause at Portland Place. She did
+not realize all its awkwardness. A letter to Lady Bellair when
+she reached home would, she said to herself, set everything
+right; and if Malcolm had now repented and put about, she would
+instantly have ordered him to hold on for Lossie. But it was
+mortifying that she should have come at the will of Malcolm, and
+not by her own -- worse than mortifying that perhaps she would
+have to say so. If she were going to say so, she must turn him
+away as soon as she arrived. There was no help for it. She dared
+not keep him after that in the face of society. But she might
+take the bold, and perhaps a little dangerous measure of adopting
+the flight as altogether her own madcap idea. Her thoughts went
+floundering in the bog of expediency, until she was tired, and
+declined from thought to reverie.</p>
+
+<p>Then dawning out of the dreamland of her past, appeared the
+image of Lenorme. Pure pleasure, glorious delight, such as she
+now felt, could not long possess her mind, without raising in its
+charmed circle the vision of the only man except her father whom
+she had ever -- something like loved. Her behaviour to him had
+not yet roused in her shame or sorrow or sense of wrong. She had
+driven him from her; she was ashamed of her relation to him; she
+had caused him bitter suffering; she had all but promised to
+marry another man; yet she had not the slightest wish for that
+man's company there and then: with no one of her acquaintance but
+Lenorme could she have shared this conscious splendour of
+life.</p>
+
+<p>"Would to God he had been born a gentleman instead of a
+painter!" she said to herself when her imagination had brought
+him from the past, and set him in the midst of the present.</p>
+
+<p>"Rank," she said, "I am above caring about. In that he might
+be ever so far my inferior, and welcome, if only he had been of a
+good family, a gentleman born!"</p>
+
+<p>She was generosity, magnanimity itself in her own eyes! Yet he
+was of far better family than she knew, for she had never taken
+the trouble to inquire into his history. And now she was so much
+easier in her mind since she had so cruelly broken with him, that
+she felt positively virtuous because she had done it, and he was
+not at that moment by her side. And yet if he had that moment
+stepped from behind the mainsail, she would in all probability
+have thrown herself into his arms.</p>
+
+<p>The day passed on: Florimel grew tired and went to sleep; woke
+and had her dinner; took a volume of the "Arabian Nights," and
+read herself again to sleep; woke again; went on deck; saw the
+sun growing weary in the west. And still the unwearied wind blew,
+and still the Psyche danced on, as unwearied as the wind.</p>
+
+<p>The sunset was rather an assumption than a decease, a
+reception of him out of their sight into an eternity of gold and
+crimson; and when he was gone, and the gorgeous bliss had
+withered into a dove hued grief, then the cool, soft twilight,
+thoughtful of the past and its love, crept out of the western
+caves over the breast of the water, and filled the dome and made
+of itself a great lens royal, through which the stars and their
+motions were visible; and the ghost of Aurora with both hands
+lifted her shroud above her head and made a dawn for the moon on
+the verge of the watery horizon -- a dawn as of the past, the
+hour of inverted hope.</p>
+
+<p>Not a word all day had been uttered between Malcolm and his
+mistress: when the moon appeared, with the waves sweeping up
+against her face, he approached Florimel where she sat in the
+stern. Davy was steering.</p>
+
+<p>"Will your ladyship come forward and see how the Psyche goes?"
+he said. "At the stern, you can see only the passive part of her
+motion. It is quite another thing to see the will of her at work
+in the bows."</p>
+
+<p>At first she was going to refuse; but she changed her mind, or
+her mind changed her: she was not much more of a living and
+acting creature yet than the Psyche herself. She said nothing,
+but rose, and permitted Malcolm to help her forward.</p>
+
+<p>It was the moon's turn now to be level with the water, and as
+Florimel stood on the larboard side, leaning over and gazing
+down, she saw her shine through the little feather of spray the
+cutwater sent curling up before it, and turn it into pearls and
+semiopals.</p>
+
+<p>"She's got a bone in her mouth, you see, my lady," said old
+Travers.</p>
+
+<p>"Go aft till I call you, Travers," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Rose was in Florimel's cabin, and they were now quite
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," said Malcolm, "I can't bear to have you angry with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you ought not to deserve it," returned Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady, if you knew all, you would not say I deserved
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me all then, and let me judge."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you all yet, but I will tell you something
+which may perhaps incline you to feel merciful. Did your ladyship
+ever think what could make me so much attached to your
+father?"</p>
+
+<p>"No indeed. I never saw anything peculiar in it. Even nowadays
+there are servants to be found who love their masters. It seems
+to me natural enough. Besides he was very kind to you."</p>
+
+<p>"It was natural indeed, my lady -- more natural than you
+think. Kind to me he was, and that was natural too."</p>
+
+<p>"Natural to him, no doubt, for he was kind to everybody."</p>
+
+<p>"My grandfather told you something of my early history -- did
+he not, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes -- at least I think I remember his doing so."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you recall it, and see whether it suggests nothing?"</p>
+
+<p>But Florimel could remember nothing in particular, she said.
+She had in truth, for as much as she was interested at the time,
+forgotten almost everything of the story.</p>
+
+<p>"I really cannot think what you mean," she added. "If you are
+going to be mysterious, I shall resume my place by the tiller.
+Travers is deaf, and Davy is dumb: I prefer either."</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," said Malcolm, "your father knew my mother, and
+persuaded her that he loved her."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel drew herself up, and would have looked him to ashes
+if wrath could burn. Malcolm saw he must come to the point at
+once or the parley would cease.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," he said, "your father was my father too. I am a son
+of the Marquis of Lossie, and your brother -- your ladyship's
+half brother, that is."</p>
+
+<p>She looked a little stunned. The gleam died out of her eyes,
+and the glow out of her cheek. She turned and leaned over the
+bulwark. He said no more, but stood watching her. She raised
+herself suddenly, looked at him, and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Do I understand you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am your brother," Malcolm repeated.</p>
+
+<p>She made a step forward, and held out her hand. He took the
+little thing in his great grasp tenderly. Her lip trembled. She
+gazed at him for an instant, full in the face, with a womanly,
+believing expression.</p>
+
+<p>"My poor Malcolm!" she said, "I am sorry for you."</p>
+
+<p>She withdrew her hand, and again leaned over the bulwark. Her
+heart was softened towards her groom brother, and for a moment it
+seemed to her that some wrong had been done. Why should the one
+be a marchioness and the other a groom? Then came the thought
+that now all was explained. Every peculiarity of the young man,
+every gift extraordinary of body, mind, or spirit, his strength,
+his beauty, his courage, and honesty, his simplicity, nobleness,
+and affection, yes, even what in him was mere doggedness and
+presumption, all, everything explained itself to Florimel in the
+fact that the incomprehensible fisherman groom, that talked like
+a parson, was the son of her father. She never thought of the
+woman that was his mother, and what share she might happen to
+have in the phenomenon -- thought only of her father, and a
+little pitifully of the half honour and more than half disgrace
+infolding the very existence of her attendant. As usual her
+thoughts were confused. The one moment the poor fellow seemed to
+exist only on sufferance, having no right to be there at all, for
+as fine a fellow as he was; the next she thought how immeasurably
+he was indebted to the family of the Colonsays.</p>
+
+<p>Then arose the remembrance of his arrogance and presumption in
+assuming on such a ground something more than guardianship --
+absolute tyranny over her, and with the thought pride and injury
+at once got the upper hand. Was she to be dictated to by a low
+born, low bred fellow like that -- a fellow whose hands were
+harder than any leather, not with doing things for his amusement
+but actually with earning his daily bread -- one that used to
+smell so of fish -- on the ground of right too -- and such a
+right as ought to exclude him for ever from her presence! -- She
+turned to him again.</p>
+
+<p>"How long have you known this -- this -- painful -- indeed I
+must confess to finding it an awkward and embarrassing fact? I
+presume you do know it?" she said, coldly and searchingly.</p>
+
+<p>"My father confessed it on his deathbed."</p>
+
+<p>"Confessed!" echoed Florimel's pride, but she restrained her
+tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"It explains much," she said, with a sort of judicial relief.
+"There has been a great change upon you since then. Mind I only
+say explains. It could never justify such behaviour as yours --
+no, not if you had been my true brother. There is some excuse, I
+daresay, to be made for your ignorance and inexperience. No doubt
+the discovery turned your head. Still I am at a loss to
+understand how you could imagine that sort of -- of -- that sort
+of thing gave you any right over me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Love has its rights, my lady," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Again her eyes flashed and her cheek flushed. "I cannot permit
+you to talk so to me. You must not fancy such things are looked
+upon in our position with the same indifference as in yours. You
+must not flatter yourself that you can be allowed to cherish the
+same feelings towards me as if -- as if -- you were really my
+brother. I am sorry for you, Malcolm, as I said already; but you
+have altogether missed your mark if you think that can alter
+facts, or shelter you from the consequences of presumption."</p>
+
+<p>Again she turned away. Malcolm's heart was sore for her. How
+grievously she had sunk from the Lady Florimel of the old days!
+It was all from being so constantly with that wretched woman and
+her vile nephew. Had he been able to foresee such a rapid
+declension, he would have taken her away long ago, and let come
+of her feelings what might. He had been too careful over
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," Florimel resumed, but this time without turning
+towards him, "I do not see how things can possibly, after what
+you have told me, remain as they are. I should not feel at all
+comfortable in having one about me who would be constantly
+supposing he had rights, and reflecting on my father for fancied
+injustice, and whom I fear nothing could prevent from taking
+liberties. It is very awkward indeed, Malcolm -- very awkward!
+But it is your own fault that you are so changed, and I must say
+I should not have expected it of you. I should have thought you
+had more good sense and regard for me. If I were to tell the
+world why I wanted to keep you, people would but shrug their
+shoulders and tell me to get rid of you; and if I said nothing,
+there would always be something coming up that required
+explanation. Besides, you would for ever be trying to convert me
+to one or other of your foolish notions. I hardly know what to
+do. I will consult -- my friends on the subject. And yet I would
+rather they knew nothing of it, My father you see --" She paused.
+"If you had been my real brother it would have been
+different."</p>
+
+<p>"I am your real brother, my lady, and I have tried to behave
+like one ever since I knew it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; you have been troublesome. I have always understood that
+brothers were troublesome. I am told they are given to taking
+upon them the charge of their sisters conduct. But I would not
+have even you think me heartless. If you had been a real brother,
+of course I should have treated you differently."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't doubt it, my lady, for everything would have been
+different then. I should have been the Marquis of Lossie, and you
+would have been Lady Florimel Colonsay. But it would have made
+little difference in one thing: I could not have loved you better
+than I do now -- if only you would believe it, my lady!"</p>
+
+<p>The emotion of Malcolm, evident in his voice as he said this,
+seemed to touch her a little.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it, my poor Malcolm," she returned, "quite as much
+as I want, or as it is pleasant to believe it. I think you would
+do a great deal for me, Malcolm. But then you are so rude! take
+things into your hands, and do things for me I don't want done!
+You will judge, not only for yourself, but for me! How can a man
+of your training and position judge for a lady of mine! Don't you
+see the absurdity of it? At times it has been very awkward
+indeed. Perhaps when I am married it might be arranged; but I
+don't know."</p>
+
+<p>Here Malcolm ground his teeth, but was otherwise irresponsive
+as block of stone.</p>
+
+<p>"How would a gamekeeper's place suit you? That is a half
+gentlemanly kind of post. I will speak to the factor, and see
+what can be done. -- But on the whole I think, Malcolm, it will
+be better you should go. I am very sorry. I wish you had not told
+me. It is very painful to me. You should not have told me. These
+things are not intended to be talked of -- Suppose you were to
+marry -- say --"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped abruptly, and it was well both for herself and
+Malcolm that she caught back the name that was on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>The poor girl must not be judged as if she had been more than
+a girl, or other than one with every disadvantage of evil
+training. Had she been four or five years older, she might have
+been a good deal worse, and have seemed better, for she would
+have kept much of what she had now said to herself, and would
+perhaps have treated her brother more kindly while she cared even
+less for him.</p>
+
+<p>"What will you do with Kelpie, my lady?" asked Malcolm
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"There it is, you see!" she returned. "So awkward! If you had
+not told me, things could have gone on as before, and for your
+sake I could have pretended I came this voyage of my own will and
+pleasure. Now, I don't know what I can do -- except indeed you --
+let me see -- if you were to hold your tongue, and tell nobody
+what you have just told me -- I don't know but you might stay
+till you got her so far trained that another man could manage
+her. I might even be able to ride her myself. -- Will you
+promise?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will promise not to let the fact come out so long as I am
+in your service, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"After all that has passed, I think you might promise me a
+little more! But I will not press it."</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask what it is, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not going to press it, for I do not choose to make a
+favour of it. Still, I do not see that it would be such a mighty
+favour to ask -- of one who owes respect at least to the house of
+Lossie. But I will not ask. I will only suggest, Malcolm, that
+you should leave this part of the country -- say this country
+altogether, and go to America, or New South Wales, or the Cape of
+Good Hope. If you will take the hint, and promise never to speak
+a word of this unfortunate -- yes, I must be honest, and allow
+there is a sort of relationship between us; but if you will keep
+it secret, I will take care that something is done for you --
+something, I mean, more than you could have any right to expect.
+And mind, I am not asking you to conceal anything that could
+reflect honour upon you or dishonour upon us."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"I scarcely thought you would. Only you hold such grand ideas
+about self denial, that I thought it might be agreeable to you to
+have an opportunity of exercising the virtue at a small expense
+and a great advantage."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was miserable. Who could have dreamed to find in her
+such a woman of the world! He must break off the hopeless
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, my lady," he said, "I suppose I am to give my chief
+attention to Kelpie, and things are to be as they have been."</p>
+
+<p>"For the present. And as to this last piece of presumption, I
+will so far forgive you as to take the proceeding on myself --
+mainly because it would have been my very choice had you
+submitted it to me. There is nothing I should have preferred to a
+sea voyage and returning to Lossie at this time of the year.</p>
+
+<p>"But you also must be silent on your insufferable share in the
+business. And for the other matter, the least arrogance or
+assumption I shall consider to absolve me at once from all
+obligation towards you of any sort. Such relationships are never
+acknowledged."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you -- sister," said Malcolm -- a last forlorn
+experiment; and as he said the word he looked lovingly in her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>She drew herself up like the princess Lucifera, "with loftie
+eyes, halfe loth to looke so lowe," and said, cold as ice,</p>
+
+<p>"If once I hear that word on your lips again, as between you
+and me, Malcolm, I shall that very moment discharge you from my
+service, as for a misdemeanour. You have no claim upon me, and
+the world will not blame me."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, my lady. I beg your pardon. But there is one
+who perhaps will blame you a little."</p>
+
+<p>"I know what you mean; but I don't pretend to any of your
+religious motives. When I do, then you may bring them to bear
+upon me."</p>
+
+<p>"I was not so foolish as you think me, my lady. I merely
+imagined you might be as far on as a Chinaman," said Malcolm,
+with a poor attempt at a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"What insolence do you intend now?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Chinese, my lady, pay the highest respect to their
+departed parents. When I said there was one who would blame you a
+little, I meant your father."</p>
+
+<p>He touched his cap, and withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>"Send Rose to me," Florimel called after him, and presently
+with her went down to the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>And still the Psyche soul-like flew. Her earthly birth held
+her to the earth, but the ocean upbore her, and the breath of God
+drove her on. Little thought Florimel to what she hurried her! A
+queen in her own self sufficiency and condescension, she could
+not suspect how little of real queendom, noble and self
+sustaining, there was in her being; for not a soul of man or
+woman whose every atom leans not upon its father fact in God, can
+sustain itself when the outer wall of things begins to tumble
+towards the centre, crushing it in on every side.</p>
+
+<p>During the voyage no further allusion was made by either to
+what had passed. By the next morning Florimel had yet again
+recovered her temper, and, nothing fresh occurring to irritate
+her, kept it and was kind.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was only too glad to accept whatever parings of heart
+she might offer. By the time their flight was over, Florimel
+almost felt as if it had indeed been undertaken at her own desire
+and motion, and was quite prepared to assert that such was the
+fact.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LVII"></a>CHAPTER LVII: THE
+SHORE</h1>
+
+<p>It was two days after the longest day of the year, when there
+is no night in those regions, only a long twilight, in which many
+dream and do not know it. There had been a week of variable
+weather, with sudden changes of wind to east and north, and round
+again by south to west, and then there had been a calm for
+several days.</p>
+
+<p>But now the little wind there was blew from the northeast; and
+the fervour of June was rendered more delicious by the films of
+flavouring cold that floated through the mass of heat. All
+Portlossie more and less, the Seaton especially, was in a state
+of excitement, for its little neighbour, Scaurnose, was more
+excited still. There the man most threatened, and with greatest
+injustice, was the only one calm amongst the men, and amongst the
+women his wife was the only one that was calmer than he. Blue
+Peter was resolved to abide the stroke of wrong, and not resist
+the powers that were, believing them in some true sense, which he
+found it hard to understand when he thought of the factor as the
+individual instance, ordained of God. He had a dim perception too
+that it was better that one, that one he, should suffer, than
+that order should be destroyed and law defied. Suffering, he
+might still in patience possess his soul, and all be well with
+him; but what would become of the country if everyone wronged
+were to take the law into his own hands? Thousands more would be
+wronged by the lawless in a week than by unjust powers in a year.
+But the young men were determined to pursue their plan of
+resistance, and those of the older and soberer who saw the
+uselessness of it, gave themselves little trouble to change the
+minds of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>Peter, although he knew they were not for peace, neither
+inquired what their purpose might be, nor allowed any conjecture
+or suspicion concerning it to influence him in his preparations
+for departure. Not that he had found a new home. Indeed he had
+not heartily set about searching for one; in part because,
+unconsciously to himself he was buoyed up by the hope he read so
+clear in the face of his more trusting wife -- that Malcolm would
+come to deliver them. His plan was to leave her and his children
+with certain friends at Port Gordon; he would not hear of going
+to the Partans to bring them into trouble. He would himself set
+out immediately after for the Lewis fishing.</p>
+
+<p>Few had gone to the Hebrides that year from Scaurnose or
+Portlossie. The magnitude of the events that were about to take
+place, yet more the excitement and interest they occasioned, kept
+the most of the men at home -- to content themselves with fishing
+the waters of the Moray Frith. And they had notable success. But
+what was success with such a tyrant over them as the factor,
+threatening to harry their nests, and turn the sea birds and
+their young out of their heritage of rock and sand and shingle?
+They could not keep house on the waves, any more than the gulls!
+Those who still held their religious assemblies in the cave
+called the Baillies' Barn, met often, read and sang the
+comminatory psalms more than any others, and prayed much against
+the wiles and force of their enemies both temporal and spiritual;
+while Mr Crathie went every Sunday to Church, grew redder in the
+nose, and hotter in the temper.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Horn was growing more and more uncomfortable concerning
+events, and dissatisfied with Malcolm. She had not for some time
+heard from him, and here was his most important duty unattended
+to -- she would not yet say neglected -- the well being of his
+tenantry, namely, left in the hands of an unsympathetic, self
+important underling, who was fast losing all the good sense he
+had once possessed! Was the life and history of all these brave
+fishermen and their wives and children to be postponed to the
+pampered feelings of one girl, and that because she was what she
+had no right to be, his half sister forsooth? said Miss Horn to
+herself -- that bosom friend to whom some people, and those not
+the worst, say oftener what they do not mean than what they do.
+She had written to him within the last month a very hot letter
+indeed, which had afforded no end of amusement to Mrs Catanach,
+as she sat in his old lodging over the curiosity shop, but, I
+need hardly say, had not reached Malcolm: and now there was but
+one night, and the best of all the fisher families would have
+nowhere to lie down! Miss Horn, with Joseph Mair, thought she did
+well to be angry with Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>The blind piper had been very restless all day. Questioned
+again and again by Meg Partan as to what was amiss with him, he
+had always returned her odd and evasive answers. Every few
+minutes he got up -- even from cleaning her lamp -- to go to the
+shore. He had but to cross the threshold, and take a few steps
+through the close, to reach the road that ran along the sea front
+of the village: on the one side were the cottages, scattered and
+huddled, on the other the shore and ocean wide outstretched. He
+would walk straight across this road until he felt the sand under
+his feet; there stand for a few moments facing the sea, and, with
+nostrils distended, breathing deep breaths of the air from the
+northeast; then turn and walk back to Meg Partan's kitchen, to
+resume his ministration of light. These his sallies were so
+frequent, and his absences so short, that a more serene temper
+than hers might have been fretted by them. But there was
+something about his look and behaviour that, while it perplexed,
+restrained her; and instead of breaking out upon him, she eyed
+him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>She had found that it would not do to stare at him. The
+instant she began to do so, he began to fidget, and turned his
+back to her. It had made her lose her temper for a moment, and
+declare aloud as her conviction that he was after all an
+impostor, and saw as well as any of them.</p>
+
+<p>"She has told you so, Mistress Partan, one hundred thousand
+times," replied Duncan with an odd smile: "and perhaps she will
+pe see a little petter as any of you, no matter."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon she murmured to herself "The cratur 'ill be seein'
+something!" and with mingled awe and curiosity sought to lay
+restraint upon her unwelcome observation of him.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it went on the whole day, and as the evening approached,
+he grew still more excited. The sun went down, and the twilight
+began; and, as the twilight deepened, still his excitement
+grew.</p>
+
+<p>Straightway it seemed as if the whole Seaton had come to share
+in it. Men and women were all out of doors; and, late as it was
+when the sun set, to judge by the number of red legs and feet
+that trotted in and out with a little shadowy flash, with a dull
+patter pat on earthen floor and hard road, and a scratching and
+hustling among the pebbles, there could not have been one older
+than a baby in bed; while of the babies even not a few were awake
+in their mothers' arms, and out with them on the sea front.</p>
+
+<p>The men, with their hands in their trouser pockets, were
+lazily smoking pigtail, in short clay pipes with tin covers
+fastened to the stems by little chains, and some of the women, in
+short blue petticoats and worsted stockings, doing the same.</p>
+
+<p>Some stood in their doors, talking with neighbours standing in
+their doors; but these were mostly the elder women: the younger
+ones -- all but Lizzy Findlay -- were out in the road. One man
+half leaned, half sat on the window sill of Duncan's former
+abode, and round him were two or three more, and some women,
+talking about Scaurnose, and the factor, and what the lads would
+do tomorrow; while the hush of the sea on the pebbles mingled
+with their talk, like an unknown tongue of the infinite -- never
+articulating, only suggesting -- uttering in song and not in
+speech -- dealing not with thoughts, but with feelings and
+foretastes. No one listened: what to them was the Infinite with
+Scaurnose in the near distance! It was now almost as dark as it
+would be throughout the night if it kept as clear.</p>
+
+<p>Once more there was Duncan, standing as if looking out to sea,
+and shading his brows with his hand as if to protect his eyes
+from the glare of the sun, and enable his sight!</p>
+
+<p>"There's the auld piper again!" said one of the group, a young
+woman. "He's unco fule like to be stan'in that gait (way), makin'
+as gien he cudna weel see for the sun in 's e'en."</p>
+
+<p>"Haud ye yer tongue, lass," rejoined an elderly woman beside
+her. "There's mair things nor ye ken, as the Beuk says. There's
+een 'at can see an' een 'at canna, an' een 'at can see twise
+ower, an' een 'at can see steikit what nane can see open."</p>
+
+<p>"Ta poat! ta poat of my chief!" cried the seer. "She is coming
+like a tream of ta night, put one tat will not tepart with ta
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke as one suppressing a wild joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Wha'll that be, lucky deddy (grandfather)?" inquired, in a
+respectful voice, the woman who had last spoken, while those
+within hearing hushed each other and stood in silence. And all
+the time the ghost of the day was creeping round from west to
+east to put on its resurrection body, and rise new born. It
+gleamed faint like a cold ashy fire in the north.</p>
+
+<p>"And who will it pe than her own son, Mistress Reekie?"
+answered the piper, calling her by her husband's nickname, as was
+usual, but, as was his sole wont, prefixing the title of respect,
+where custom would have employed but her Christian name.</p>
+
+<p>"Who'll should it pe put her own Malcolm?" he went on. "I see
+his poat come round ta Tead Head. She flits over the water like a
+pale ghost over Morven. But it's ta young and ta strong she is
+pringing home to Tuncan. 0 m'anam, beannuich!"</p>
+
+<p>Involuntarily all eyes turned towards the point called the
+Death's Head, which bounded the bay on the east.</p>
+
+<p>"It's ower dark to see onything," said the man on the window
+sill. "There's a bit haar (fog) come up."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Duncan, "it'll pe too tark for you who haf cot no
+eyes only to speak of. Put your'll wait a few, and you'll pe
+seeing as well as herself. Och, her poy! her poy! 0 m'anam! Ta
+Lort pe praised! and she'll tie in peace, for he'll pe only ta
+one half of him a Cam'ell, and he'll pe safed at last, as sure as
+there's a heafen to co to and a hell to co from. For ta half
+tat's not a Cam'ell must pe ta strong half and it will trag ta
+other half into heafen -- where it will not pe ta welcome,
+howefer."</p>
+
+<p>As if to get rid of the unpleasant thought that his Malcolm
+could not enter heaven without taking half a Campbell with him,
+he turned from the sea and hurried into the house -- but only to
+catch up his pipes and hasten out again, filling the bag as he
+went. Arrived once more on the verge of the sand, he stood again
+facing the northeast, and began to blow a pibroch loud and
+clear.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the Partan had joined the same group, and they were
+talking in a low tone about the piper's claim to the second
+sight, for, although all were more or less inclined to put faith
+in Duncan, there was here no such unquestioning belief in the
+marvel as would have been found on the west coast in every glen
+from the Mull of Cantyre to Loch Eribol -- when suddenly Meg
+Partan, almost the only one hitherto remaining in the house,
+appeared rushing from the close.</p>
+
+<p>"Hech, sirs!" she cried, addressing the Seaton in general,
+"gien the auld man be i' the richt,"</p>
+
+<p>"She'll pe aal in ta right, Mistress Partan, and tat you'll pe
+seeing," said Duncan, who, hearing her first cry, had stopped his
+drone, and played softly, listening.</p>
+
+<p>But Meg went on without heeding him any more than was implied
+in the repetition of her exordium.</p>
+
+<p>"Gien the auld man be i' the richt, it'll be the marchioness
+hersel' 'at's h'ard o' the ill duin's o' her factor, an's comin'
+to see efter her fowk! An' it'll be Ma'colm's duin', an' that'll
+be seen. But the bonny laad winna ken the state o' the herbour,
+an' he'll be makin' for the moo' o't, an' he'll jist rin 's bonny
+boatie agrun' 'atween the twa piers, an' that'll no be a richt
+hame comin' for the leddy o' the lan', an' what's mair, Ma'colm
+'ill get the wyte (blame) o' 't, an' that'll be seen. Sae ye maun
+some o' ye to the pier-heid, an' luik oot to gie 'im
+warnin'."</p>
+
+<p>Her own husband was the first to start, proud of the foresight
+of his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Haith, Meg !" he cried, "ye're maist as guid at the lang
+sicht as the piper himsel'!"</p>
+
+<p>Several followed him, and as they ran, Meg cried after them,
+giving her orders as if she had been vice admiral of the red, in
+a voice shrill enough to pierce the worst gale that ever blew on
+northern shore.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll jist tell the bonnie laad to haud wast a bit an' rin
+her ashore, an' we'll a' be there an' hae her as dry's Noah's ark
+in a jiffie. Tell her leddyship we'll cairry the boat, an' her
+intil't, to the tap o' the Boar's Tail, gien she'll gie's her
+orders. -- Winna we, laads?"</p>
+
+<p>"We can but try!" said one. "-- But the Fisky 'ill be waur to
+get a grip o' nor Nancy here," he added, turning suddenly upon
+the plumpest girl in the place, who stood next to him. She foiled
+him however of the kiss he had thought to snatch, and turned the
+laugh from herself upon him, so cleverly avoiding his clutch that
+he staggered into the road, and nearly fell upon his nose.</p>
+
+<p>By the time the Partan and his companions reached the pier
+head, something was dawning in the vague of sea and sky that
+might be a sloop and standing for the harbour. Thereupon the
+Partan and Jamie Ladle jumped into a small boat and pulled out.
+Dubs, who had come from Scaurnose on the business of the
+conjuration, had stepped into the stern, not to steer but to show
+a white ensign -- somebody's Sunday shirt he had gathered, as
+they ran, from a furze bush, where it hung to dry, between the
+Seaton and the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoots! ye'll affront the marchioness," objected the
+Partan.</p>
+
+<p>"Man, i' the gloamin' she'll no ken 't frae buntin'," said
+Dubs, and at once displayed it, holding it by the two
+sleeves.</p>
+
+<p>The wind had now fallen to the softest breath, and the little
+vessel came on slowly. The men rowed hard, shouting, and waving
+their flag, and soon heard a hail which none of them could
+mistake for other than Malcolm's. In a few minutes they were on
+board, greeting their old friend with jubilation, but talking in
+a subdued tone, for they perceived by Malcolm's that the cutter
+bore their lady.</p>
+
+<p>Briefly the Partan communicated the state of the harbour, and
+recommended porting his helm, and running the Fisky ashore about
+opposite the brass swivel.</p>
+
+<p>"A' the men an' women i' the Seaton," he said, "'ill be there
+to haul her up."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm took the helm, gave his orders, and steered further
+westward. By this time the people on shore had caught sight of
+the cutter. They saw her come stealing out of the thin dark like
+a thought half thought, and go gliding along the shore like a sea
+ghost over the dusky water, faint, uncertain, noiseless,
+glimmering. It could be no other than the Fisky! Both their lady
+and their friend Malcolm must be on board, they were certain, for
+how could the one of them come without the other? and doubtless
+the marchioness, whom they all remembered as a good humoured
+handsome young lady, never shy of speaking to anybody, had come
+to deliver them from the hateful red nosed ogre, her factor! Out
+at once they all set along the shore to greet her arrival, each
+running regardless of the rest, so that from the Seaton to the
+middle of the Boar's Tail there was a long, straggling broken
+string of hurrying fisher folk, men and women, old and young,
+followed by all the current children, tapering to one or two
+toddlers, who felt themselves neglected and wept their way along.
+The piper, too asthmatic to run, but not too asthmatic to walk
+and play his bagpipes, delighting the heart of Malcolm, who could
+not mistake the style, believed he brought up the rear, but was
+wrong; for the very last came Mrs Findlay and Lizzy, carrying
+between them their little deal kitchen table, for her ladyship to
+step out of the boat upon, and Lizzy's child fast asleep on the
+top of it.</p>
+
+<p>The foremost ran and ran until they saw that the Psyche had
+chosen her couch, and was turning her head to the shore, when
+they stopped and stood ready with greased planks and ropes to
+draw her up.</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments the whole population was gathered, darkening,
+in the June midnight, the yellow sands between the tide and dune.
+The Psyche was well manned now with a crew of six. On she came
+under full sail till within a few yards of the beach, when, in
+one and the same moment, every sheet was let go, and she swept
+softly up like a summer wave, and lay still on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>The butterfly was asleep. But ere she came to rest, the
+instant indeed that her canvas went fluttering away, thirty
+strong men had rushed into the water and laid hold of the now
+broken winged thing. In a few minutes she was high and dry.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm leaped on the sand just as the Partaness came bustling
+up with her kitchen table between her two hands like a tray. She
+set it down, and across it shook hands with him violently; then
+caught it up and deposited it firm on its four legs beneath the
+cutter's waist.</p>
+
+<p>"Noo, my leddy," said Meg, looking up at the marchioness, "set
+ye yer bit fut upo' my table, an' we'll think the mair o't efter
+whan we tak' oor denner aff o' 't."</p>
+
+<p>Florimel thanked her, stepped lightly upon it, and sprang to
+the sand, where she was received with words of welcome from many,
+and shouts which rendered them inaudible from the rest. The men,
+their bonnets in their hands, and the women courtesying, made a
+lane for her to pass through, while the young fellows would
+gladly have begged leave to carry her, could they have
+extemporised any suitable sort of palanquin or triumphal
+litter.</p>
+
+<p>Followed by Malcolm, she led the way over the Boar's Tail --
+nor would accept any help in climbing it -- straight for the
+tunnel:</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm had never laid aside the key to the private doors his
+father had given him while he was yet a servant. They crossed by
+the embrasure of the brass swivel. That implement had now long
+been silent, but they had not gone many paces from the bottom of
+the dune when it went off with a roar. The shouts of the people
+drowned the startled cry with which Florimel, involuntarily
+mindful of old and for her better times, turned to Malcolm. She
+had not looked for such a reception, and was both flattered and
+touched by it. For a brief space the spirit of her girlhood came
+back. Possibly, had she then understood that hope rather than
+faith or love was at the heart of their enthusiasm, that her
+tenants looked upon her as their saviour from the factor, and
+sorely needed the exercise of her sovereignty, she might have
+better understood her position, and her duty towards them.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm unlocked the door of the tunnel, and she entered,
+followed by Rose, who felt as if she were walking in a dream. As
+he stepped in after them, he was seized from behind, and clasped
+close in an embrace he knew at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Daddy, daddy!" he said, and turning threw his arms round the
+piper.</p>
+
+<p>"My poy! my poy! Her nain son Malcolm!" cried the old man in a
+whisper of intense satisfaction and suppression. "You'll must pe
+forgifing her for coming pack to you. She cannot help lofing you,
+and you must forget tat you are a Cam'ell."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm kissed his cheek, and said, also in a whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"My ain daddy! I ha'e a heap to tell ye, but I maun see my
+leddy hame first."</p>
+
+<p>"Co, co, this moment co," cried the old man, pushing him away.
+"To your tuties to my leddyship first, and then come to her old
+daddy."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be wi' ye in half an hoor or less."</p>
+
+<p>"Coot poy! coot poy! Come to Mistress Partan's."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, daddy!" said Malcolm, and hurried through the
+tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>As Florimel approached the ancient dwelling of her race, now
+her own to do with as she would, her pleasure grew. Whether it
+was the twilight, or the breach in dulling custom, everything
+looked strange, the grounds wider, the trees larger, the house
+grander and more anciently venerable. And all the way the burn
+sang in the hollow. The spirit of her father seemed to hover
+about the place, and while the thought that her father's voice
+would not greet her when she entered the hall, cast a solemn
+funereal state over her simple return, her heart yet swelled with
+satisfaction and far derived pride.</p>
+
+<p>All this was hers to work her pleasure with, to confer as she
+pleased! No thought of her tenants, fishers or farmers, who did
+their strong part in supporting the ancient dignity of her house,
+had even an associated share in the bliss of the moment. She had
+forgotten her reception already, or regarded it only as the
+natural homage to such a position and power as hers. As to owing
+anything in return, the idea had indeed been presented to her
+when with Clementina and Malcolm she talked over "St Ronan's
+Well," but it had never entered her mind.</p>
+
+<p>The drawing room and the hall were lighted. Mrs Courthope was
+at the door as if she expected her, and Florimel was careful to
+take everything as a matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>"When will your ladyship please to want me?" asked
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"At the usual hour, Malcolm," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>He turned, and ran to the Seaton.</p>
+
+<p>His first business was the accommodation of Travers and Davy,
+but he found them already housed at the Salmon, with Jamie Ladle
+teaching Travers to drink toddy. They had left the Psyche snug:
+she was high above high water mark, and there were no tramps
+about; they had furled her sails, locked the companion door, and
+left her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs Findlay rejoiced over Malcolm as if he had been her own
+son from a far country; but the poor piper between politeness and
+gratitude on the one hand, and the urging of his heart on the
+other, was sorely tried by her loquacity: he could hardly get in
+a word. Malcolm perceived his suffering, and, as soon as seemed
+prudent, proposed that he should walk with him to Miss Horn's,
+where he was going to sleep, he said, that night. Mrs Partan
+snuffed, but held her peace. For the third or fourth time that
+day, wonderful to tell, she restrained herself!</p>
+
+<p>As soon as they were out of the house, Malcolm assured Duncan,
+to the old man's great satisfaction, that, had he not found him
+there, he would, within another month, have set out to roam
+Scotland in search of him.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Horn had heard of their arrival, and was wandering about
+the house, unable even to sit down until she saw the marquis. To
+herself she always called him the marquis; to his face he was
+always Malcolm. If he had not come, she declared she could not
+have gone to bed -- yet she received him with an edge to her
+welcome: he had to answer for his behaviour. They sat down, and
+Duncan told a long sad story; which finished, with the toddy that
+had sustained him during the telling, the old man thought it
+better, for fear of annoying his Mistress Partan, to go home. As
+it was past one o'clock, they both agreed.</p>
+
+<p>"And if she'll tie tonight, my poy," said Duncan, "she'll pe
+lie awake in her crave all ta long tarkness, to pe waiting to
+hear ta voice of your worrts in ta morning. And nefer you mind,
+Malcolm, she'll has learned to forgife you for peing only ta one
+half of yourself a cursed Cam'ell."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Horn gave Malcolm a wink, as much as to say, "Let the old
+man talk. It will hurt no Campbell," and showed him out with much
+attention. And then at last Malcolm poured forth his whole story,
+and his heart with it, to Miss Horn, who heard and received it
+with understanding, and a sympathy which grew ever as she
+listened. At length she declared herself perfectly satisfied, for
+not only had he done his best, but she did not see what else he
+could have done. She hoped, however, that now he would contrive
+to get this part over as quickly as possible, for which, in the
+morning, she would, she said, show him cogent reasons.</p>
+
+<p>"I ha'e no feelin's mysel', as ye weel ken, laddie," she
+remarked in conclusion, "an' I doobt, gien I had been i' your
+place, I wad na hae luikit to a' sides o' the thing at ance as ye
+hae dune. -- An' it was a man like you 'at sae near lost yer life
+for the hizzy!" she exclaimed. "I maunna think aboot it, or I
+winna sleep a wink. But we maun get that deevil Catanach (an' cat
+eneuch!) hangt. Weel, my man, ye may haud up yer heid afore the
+father o' ye, for ye're the first o' the race, I'm thinkin', 'at
+ever was near han' deein' for anither. But mak ye a speedy en'
+till 't noo, laad, an' fa' to the lave o' yer wark. There's a
+terrible heap to be dune. But I maun haud my tongue the nicht,
+for I wad fain ye had a guid sleep, an' I'm needin' ane sair
+mysel', for I'm no sae yoong as I ance was, an' I ha'e been that
+anxious aboot ye, Ma'colm, 'at though I never hed ony feelin's,
+yet, noo 'at a' 's gaein' richt, an' ye're a' richt, and like to
+be richt for ever mair, my heid's just like to split. Gang yer
+wa's to yer bed, and soon may ye sleep. It's the bed yer bonny
+mither got a soon' sleep in at last, and muckle was she i' the
+need o' 't! An' jist tak tent the morn what ye say whan Jean's i'
+the room, or maybe o' the ither side o' the door, for she's no
+mowse. I dinna ken what gars me keep the jaud. I believe 'at gien
+the verra deevil himsel' had been wi' me sae lang, I wadna ha'e
+the hert to turn him aboot his ill business. That's what comes o'
+haein' no feelin's. Ither fowk wad ha'e gotten rid o' her half a
+score years sin' syne."<br>
+</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LVIII"></a>CHAPTER LVIII: THE
+TRENCH</h1>
+
+<p>Malcolm had not yet, after all the health giving of the
+voyage, entirely recovered from the effects of the ill compounded
+potion. Indeed, sometimes the fear crossed his mind that never
+would he be the same man again, that the slow furnace of the
+grave alone would destroy the vile deposit left in his house of
+life. Hence it came that he was weary, and overslept himself the
+next day -- but it was no great matter; he had yet time enough.
+He swallowed his breakfast as a working man alone can, and set
+out for Duff Harbour. At Leith, where they had put in for
+provisions, he had posted a letter to Mr Soutar, directing him to
+have Kelpie brought on to his own town, whence he would fetch her
+himself. The distance was about ten miles, the hour eight, and he
+was a good enough walker, although boats and horses had combined
+to prevent him, he confessed, from getting over fond of Shanks'
+mare. To men who delight in the motions of a horse under them,
+the legs of a man are a tame, dull means of progression, although
+they too have their superiorities; and one of the disciplines of
+this world is to have to get out of the saddle and walk afoot. He
+who can do so with perfect serenity, must very nearly have
+learned with St Paul in whatsoever state he is therein to be
+content. It was the loveliest of mornings, however, to be abroad
+in upon any terms, and Malcolm hardly needed the resources of one
+who knew both how to be abased and how to abound -- enviable
+perfection- -- for the enjoyment of even a long walk. Heaven and
+earth were just settling to the work of the day after their
+morning prayer, and the whole face of things yet wore something
+of that look of expectation which one who mingled the vision of
+the poet with the faith of the Christian might well imagine to be
+their upward look of hope after a night of groaning and
+travailing -- the earnest gaze of the creature waiting for the
+manifestation of the sons of God and for himself, though the
+hardest thing was yet to come, there was a satisfaction in
+finding himself almost up to his last fence, with the heavy
+ploughed land through which he had been floundering nearly all
+behind him -- which figure means that he had almost made up his
+mind what to do.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the Duff Arms, he walked straight into the
+yard, where the first thing he saw was a stable boy in the air,
+hanging on to a twitch on the nose of the rearing Kelpie. In
+another instant he would have been killed or maimed for life, and
+Kelpie loose, and scouring the streets of Duff Harbour. When she
+heard Malcolm's voice and the sound of his running feet, she
+stopped as if to listen. He flung the boy aside and caught her
+halter. Once or twice more she reared, in the vain hope of so
+ridding herself of the pain that clung to her lip and nose, nor
+did she, through the mist of her anger and suffering, quite
+recognize her master in his yacht uniform. But the torture
+decreasing, she grew able to scent his presence, welcomed him
+with her usual glad whinny, and allowed him to do with her as he
+would.</p>
+
+<p>Having fed her, found Mr Soutar, and arranged several matters
+with him, he set out for home.</p>
+
+<p>That was a ride! Kelpie was mad with life. Every available
+field he jumped her into, and she tore its element of space at
+least to shreds with her spurning hoofs. But the distance was not
+great enough to quiet her before they got to hard turnpike and
+young plantations. He would have entered at the grand gate, but
+found no one at the lodge, for the factor, to save a little, had
+dismissed the old keeper. He had therefore to go on, and through
+the town, where, to the awe stricken eyes of the population
+peeping from doors and windows, it seemed as if the terrible
+horse would carry him right over the roofs of the fisher cottages
+below, and out to sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, but he's a terrible cratur that Ma'colm MacPhail!" said
+the old wives to each other, for they felt there must be
+something wicked in him to ride like that. But he turned her
+aside from the steep hill, and passed along the street that led
+to the town gate of the House. -- Whom should he see, as he
+turned into it, but Mrs Catanach! -- standing on her own
+doorstep, opposite the descent to the Seaton, shading her eyes
+with her hand, and looking far out over the water through the
+green smoke of the village below. As long as he could remember
+her, it had been her wont to gaze thus; though what she could at
+such times be looking for, except it were the devil in person, he
+found it hard to conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his approach she turned; and such an
+expression crossed her face in a momentary flash ere she
+disappeared in the house, as added considerably to his knowledge
+of fallen humanity. Before he reached her door she was out again,
+tying on a clean white apron as she came, and smiling like a dark
+pool in sunshine. She dropped him a low courtesy, and looked as
+if she had been occupying her house for months of his absence.
+But Malcolm would not meet even cunning with its own weapons, and
+therefore turned away his head, and took no notice of her. She
+ground her teeth with the fury of hate, and swore that she would
+yet disappoint him of his purpose, whatever it were, in this
+masquerade of service. Her heart being scarcely of the calibre to
+comprehend one like Malcolm's, her theories for the
+interpretation of the mystery were somewhat wild, and altogether
+of a character unfit to see the light.</p>
+
+<p>The keeper of the town gate greeted Malcolm, as he let him in,
+with a pleased old face and words of welcome; but added
+instantly, as if it was no time for the indulgence of friendship,
+that it was a terrible business going on at the Nose.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" asked Malcolm, in alarm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye ha'e been ower lang awa', I doobt," answered the man, "to
+ken hoo the factor -- But, Lord save ye! haud yer tongue," he
+interjected, looking fearfully around him. "Gien he kenned 'at I
+said sic a thing, he wad turn me oot o' hoose an' ha'."</p>
+
+<p>"You've said nothing yet," rejoined Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"I said factor, an' that same 's 'maist eneuch, for he's like
+a roarin' lion an' a ragin' bear amang the people, an' that sin'
+ever ye gaed. Bow o' Meal said i' the meetin' the ither nicht 'at
+he bude to be the verra man, the wickit ruler propheseed o' sae
+lang sin syne i' the beuk o' the Proverbs. Eh! it's an awfu'
+thing to be foreordeent to oonrichteousness!"</p>
+
+<p>"But you haven't told me what is the matter at Scaurnose,"
+said Malcolm impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, it's jist this -- at this same's midsimmer day, an' Blew
+Peter, honest fallow! he's been for the last three month un'er
+nottice frae the factor to quit. An' sae, ye see,"</p>
+
+<p>"To quit!" exclaimed Malcolm. "Sic a thing was never h'ard
+tell o'!"</p>
+
+<p>"Haith! it's h'ard tell o' noo," returned the gatekeeper.
+"Quittin' 's as plenty as quicken (couch grass). 'Deed there's
+maist naething ither h'ard tell o' bit quittin'; for the full
+half o' Scaurnose is un'er like nottice for Michaelmas, an' the
+Lord kens what it 'll a' en' in!"</p>
+
+<p>"But what's it for? Blue Peter's no the man to misbehave
+himsel'."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, ye ken mair yersel' nor ony ither as to the warst fau't
+there is to lay till's chairge; for they say -- that is, some
+say, it's a' yer ain wyte, Ma'colm."</p>
+
+<p>"What mean ye, man? Speyk oot," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"They say it's a' anent the abduckin' o' the markis's boat,
+'at you an' him gaed aff wi' thegither."</p>
+
+<p>"That'll hardly haud, seeing the marchioness hersel' cam' hame
+in her the last nicht."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye see the decree's gane oot, an' what the factor
+says is like the laws o' the Medes an' the Prussians, 'at they
+say's no to be altert; I kenna mysel'."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow weel! gien that be a', I'll see efter that wi' the
+marchioness."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye see there's a lot o' the laads there, as I'm
+tellt, 'at has vooed 'at factor nor factor's man s'all ever set
+fut in Scaurnose fine this day furth. Gang ye doon to the Seaton,
+an' see hoo mony o' yer auld freen's ye'll fin' there. Man,
+they're a' oot to Scaurnose to see the plisky. The factor he's
+there, I ken, an' some constables wi' 'im -- to see 'at his order
+'s cairried oot. An' the laads they ha'e been fortifeein' the
+place -- as they ca' 't -- for the last oor. They've howkit a
+trenk, they tell me, 'at nane but a hunter on 's horse cud win
+ower, an' they're postit alang the toon side o' 't wi' sticks an'
+stanes, an' boat heuks, an' guns an' pistils. An' gien there bena
+a man or twa killt a'ready,"</p>
+
+<p>Before he finished his sentence, Kelpie was levelling herself
+for the sea gate.</p>
+
+<p>Johnny Bykes was locking it on the other side, in haste to
+secure his eye share of what was going on, when he caught sight
+of Malcolm tearing up. Mindful of the old grudge, also that there
+was no marquis now to favour his foe, he finished the arrested
+act of turning the key, drew it from the lock, and to Malcolm's
+orders, threats, and appeals, returned for all answer that he had
+no time to attend to him, and so left him looking through the
+bars. Malcolm dashed across the burn, and round the base of the
+hill on which stood the little windgod blowing his horn,
+dismounted, unlocked the door in the wall, got Kelpie through,
+and was in the saddle again before Johnny was halfway from the
+gate. When the churl saw him, he trembled, turned, and ran for
+its shelter again in terror -- nor perceived until he reached it,
+that the insulted groom had gone off like the wind in the
+opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm soon left the high road and cut across the fields --
+over which the wind bore cries and shouts, mingled with laughter
+and the animal sounds of coarse jeering. When he came nigh the
+cart road which led into the village, he saw at the entrance of
+the street a crowd, and rising from it the well known shape of
+the factor on his horse. Nearer the sea, where was another
+entrance through the back yards of some cottages, was a smaller
+crowd. Both were now pretty silent, for the attention of all was
+fixed on Malcolm's approach. As he drew up Kelpie foaming and
+prancing, and the group made way for her, he saw a deep wide
+ditch across the road, on whose opposite side was ranged
+irregularly the flower of Scaurnose's younger manhood, calmly,
+even merrily prepared to defend their entrenchment. They had been
+chaffing the factor, and loudly challenging the constables to
+come on, when they recognised Malcolm in the distance, and
+expectancy stayed the rush of their bruising wit. For they
+regarded him as beyond a doubt come from the marchioness with
+messages of goodwill. When he rode up, therefore, they raised a
+great shout, everyone welcoming him by name. But the factor, who,
+to judge by appearances, had had his forenoon dram ere he left
+home, burning with wrath, moved his horse in between Malcolm and
+the assembled Scaurnoseans on the other side of the ditch. He had
+self command enough left, however, to make one attempt at the
+loftily superior.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray what is your business?" he said, as if he had never seen
+Malcolm in his life before, "I presume you come with a
+message."</p>
+
+<p>"I come to beg you, sir, not to go further with this business.
+Surely the punishment is already enough!" said Malcolm
+respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Who sends me the message?" asked the factor, his teeth
+clenched, and his eyes flaming.</p>
+
+<p>"One," answered Malcolm, "who has some influence for justice,
+and will use it, upon whichever side the justice may lie."</p>
+
+<p>"Go to hell," cried the Factor, losing utterly his slender
+self command, and raising his whip.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm took no heed of the gesture, for he was at the moment
+beyond his reach.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Crathie," he said calmly, "you are banishing the best man
+in the place."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt! no doubt! seeing he's a crony of yours," laughed
+the factor in mighty scorn. "A canting, prayer meeting rascal!"
+he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that ony waur nor a drucken elyer o' the kirk?" cried Dubs
+from the other side of the ditch, raising a roar of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>The very purple forsook the factor's face, and left it a
+corpse-like grey in the fire of his fury.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, my men! that's going too far," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"An' wha ir ye for a fudgie (truant) fisher, to gi'e coonsel
+ohn speired?" shouted Dubs, altogether disappointed in the poor
+part Malcolm seemed taking. "Haud to the factor there wi' yer
+coonsel."</p>
+
+<p>"Get out of my way," said Mr Crathie, still speaking through
+his set teeth, and came straight upon Malcolm. "Home with you!
+or-r-r"</p>
+
+<p>Again he raised his whip, this time plainly with intent.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, factor, min' the mere," cried Malcolm. "Ribs
+an' legs an' a' 'ill be to crack, gien ye anger her wi' yer
+whuppin."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, he drew a little aside that the factor might pass
+if he pleased. A noise arose in the smaller crowd, and Malcolm
+turned to see what it meant: off his guard, he received a
+stinging cut over the head from the factor's whip.
+Simultaneously, Kelpie stood up on end, and Malcolm tore the
+weapon from the treacherous hand.</p>
+
+<p>"If I gave you what you deserve, Mr Crathie, I should knock
+you and your horse together into that ditch. A touch of the spur
+would do it. I am not quite sure that I ought not. A nature like
+yours takes forbearance for fear."</p>
+
+<p>While he spoke, his mare was ramping and kicking, making a
+clean sweep all about her. Mr Crathie's horse turned restive from
+sympathy, and it was all his rider could do to keep his seat. As
+soon as he got Kelpie a little quieter, Malcolm drew near and
+returned him his whip. He snatched it from his outstretched hand,
+and essayed a second cut at him, which Malcolm rendered powerless
+by pushing Kelpie close up to him. Then suddenly wheeling, he
+left him.</p>
+
+<p>On the other side of the trench the fellows were shouting and
+roaring with laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Men," cried Malcolm, "you have no right to stop up this road.
+I want to go and see Blue Peter."</p>
+
+<p>"Come on," cried one of the young men, emulous of Dubs's
+humour, and spread out his arms as if to receive Kelpie to his
+bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand out of the way then," said Malcolm, "I am coming."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, he took Kelpie a little round, keeping out of the
+way of the factor, who sat trembling with rage on his still
+excited animal, and sent her at the trench.</p>
+
+<p>The Deevil's Jock, as they called him, kept jumping, with his
+arms outspread, from one place to another, as if to receive
+Kelpie's charge, but when he saw her actually coming, in short,
+quick bounds, straight to the trench, he was seized with terror,
+and, half paralysed, slipped as he turned to flee, and rolled
+into the ditch, just in time to let Kelpie fly over his head. His
+comrades scampered right and left, and Malcolm, rather disgusted,
+took no notice of them.</p>
+
+<p>A cart, loaded with their little all, the horse in the shafts,
+was standing at Peter's door, but nobody was near it. Hardly was
+Malcolm well into the close, however, when out rushed Annie, and,
+heedless of Kelpie's demonstrative repellence, reached up her
+hands like a child, caught him by the arm, while yet he was
+busied with his troublesome charge, drew him down towards her,
+and held him till, in spite of Kelpie, she had kissed him again
+and again.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Ma'colm! eh, my lord!" she said, "ye ha'e saved my faith.
+I kenned ye wad come!"</p>
+
+<p>"Haud yer tongue, Annie. I mauna be kenned," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"There's nae danger. They'll tak' it for sweirin'," answered
+Annie, laughing and crying both at once.</p>
+
+<p>Out next came Blue Peter, his youngest child in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Peter man! I'm blythe to see ye," cried Malcolm. "Gie's a
+grup o' yer honest han'."</p>
+
+<p>More than even the sight of his face beaming with pleasure,
+more than that grasp of the hand that would have squeezed the
+life out of a polecat, was the sound of the mother tongue from
+his lips. The cloud of Peter's long distrust broke and vanished,
+and the sky of his soul was straightway a celestial blue. He
+snatched his hand from Malcolm's, walked back into the empty
+house, ran into the little closet off the kitchen, bolted the
+door, fell on his knees in the void little sanctuary that had of
+late been the scene of so many foiled attempts to lift up his
+heart, and poured out speechless thanksgiving to the God of all
+grace and consolation, who had given him back his friend, and
+that in the time of his sore need. So true was his heart in its
+love, that, giving thanks for his friend, he forgot that friend
+was the Marquis of Lossie, before whom his enemy was but as a
+snail in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>When he rose from his knees, and went out again, his face
+shining and his eyes misty, his wife was on the top of the cart,
+tying a rope across the cradle.</p>
+
+<p>"Peter," said Malcolm, "ye was quite richt to gang, but I'm
+glaid they didna lat ye."</p>
+
+<p>"I wad ha'e been half w'y to Port Gordon or noo," said
+Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"But noo ye'll no gang to Port Gordon," said Malcolm. "Ye'll
+jist gang to the Salmon for a feow days, till we see hoo things
+gang."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll du onything ye like, Ma'colm," said Peter, and went into
+the house to fetch his bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>In the street arose the cry of a woman, and into the close
+rushed one of the fisherwives, followed by the factor. He had
+found a place on the eastern side of the village, where, jumping
+a low earth wail, he got into a little back yard, and was
+trampling over its few stocks of kail, and its one dusty miller
+and double daisy, when the woman to whose cottage it belonged
+caught sight of him through the window, and running out fell to
+abusing him in no measured language. He rode at her in his rage,
+and she fled shrieking into Peter's close, where she took refuge
+behind the cart, never ceasing her vituperation, but calling him
+every choice name in her vocabulary. Beside himself with the rage
+of murdered dignity, he rode up, and struck at her over the
+corner of the cart, whereupon, from the top of it, Annie Mair
+ventured to expostulate.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot, sir! It's no mainners to lat at a wuman like that."</p>
+
+<p>He turned upon her, and gave her a cut on the arm and hand, so
+stinging that she cried out, and nearly fell from the cart. Out
+rushed Peter and flew at the factor, who from his seat of vantage
+began to ply his whip about his head. But Malcolm, who, when the
+factor appeared, had moved aside to keep Kelpie out of mischief,
+and saw only the second of the two assaults, came forward with a
+scramble and a bound.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud awa, Peter," he cried. "This belangs to me. I ga'e him
+back 's whup, an' sae I'm accoontable. -- Mr Crathie,"-- and as
+he spoke he edged his mare up to the panting factor, "the man who
+strikes a woman must be taught that he is a scoundrel, and that
+office I take. I would do the same if you were the lord of Lossie
+instead of his factor."</p>
+
+<p>Mr Crathie, knowing himself now in the wrong, was a little
+frightened at the set speech, and began to bluster and stammer,
+but the swift descent of Malcolm's heavy riding whip on his
+shoulders and back made him voluble in curses. Then began a
+battle that could not last long with such odds on the side of
+justice. It was gazed at from the mouth of the close by many
+spectators, but none dared enter because of the capering and
+plunging and kicking of the horses. In less than a minute the
+factor turned to flee, and spurring out of the court, galloped up
+the street at full stretch.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud oot o' the gait," cried Malcolm, and rode after him. But
+more careful of the people, he did not get a good start, and the
+factor was over the trench and into the fields before he caught
+him up. Then again the stinging switch buckled about the
+shoulders of the oppressor, driven with all the force of
+Malcolm's brawny arm. The factor yelled and cursed and swore, and
+still Malcolm plied the whip, and still the horses flew -- over
+fields and fences and ditches. At length in the last field, from
+which they must turn into the high road, the factor groaned out
+-- "For God's sake, Ma'colm, ha'e mercy!"</p>
+
+<p>The youth's uplifted arm fell by his side. He turned his
+mare's head, and when the factor turned his, he saw the avenger
+already halfway back to Scaurnose, and the constables in full
+flight meeting him.</p>
+
+<p>While Malcolm was thus occupied, his sister was writing to
+Lady Bellair. She told her that, having gone out for a sail in
+her yacht, which she had sent for from Scotland, the desire to
+see her home had overpowered her to such a degree that of the
+intended sail she had made a voyage, and here she was, longing
+just as much now to see Lady Bellair; and if she thought proper
+to bring a gentleman to take care of her, he also should be
+welcomed for her sake. It was a long way for her to come, she
+said, and Lady Bellair knew what sort of a place it was; but
+there was nobody in London now, and if she had nothing more
+enticing on her tablets, &amp;c., &amp;c. She ended with begging
+her, if she was mercifully inclined to make her happy with her
+presence, to bring to her Caley and her hound Demon. She had
+hardly finished when Malcolm presented himself.</p>
+
+<p>She received him very coldly, and declined to listen to
+anything about the fishers. She insisted that, being one of their
+party, he was prejudiced in their favour; and that of course a
+man of Mr Crathie's experience must know better than he what
+ought to be done with such people, in view of protecting her
+rights, and keeping them in order. She declared that she was not
+going to disturb the old way of things to please him; and said
+that he had now done her all the mischief he could, except,
+indeed, he were to head the fishers and sack Lossie House.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm found that, by making himself known to her as her
+brother, he had but given her confidence in speaking her mind to
+him, and set her free from considerations of personal dignity
+when she desired to humiliate him. But he was a good deal
+surprised at the ability with which she set forth and defended
+her own view of her affairs, for she did not tell him that the
+Rev. Mr Cairns had been with her all the morning, flattering her
+vanity, worshipping her power, and generally instructing her in
+her own greatness -- also putting in a word or two anent his
+friend Mr Crathie and his troubles with her ladyship's fisher
+tenants. She was still, however, so far afraid of her brother --
+which state of feeling was, perhaps, the main cause of her
+insulting behaviour to him -- that she sat in some dread lest he
+might chance to see the address of the letter she had been
+writing.</p>
+
+<p>I may mention here that Lady Bellair accepted the invitation
+with pleasure for herself and Liftore, promised to bring Caley,
+but utterly declined to take charge of Demon, or allow him to be
+of the party. Thereupon Florimel, who was fond of the animal, and
+feared much, as he was no favourite, that something would happen
+to him, wrote to Clementina, praying her to visit her in her
+lovely loneliness -- good as The Gloom in its way, though not
+quite so dark -- and to add a hair to the weight of her
+obligations if she complied, by allowing her deerhound to
+accompany her. Clementina was the only one, she said, of her
+friends for whom the animal had ever shown a preference.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm retired from his sister's presence much depressed, saw
+Mrs Courthope, who was kind as ever, and betook himself to his
+own room, next to that in which his strange history began. There
+he sat down and wrote urgently to Lenorme, stating that he had an
+important communication to make, and begging him to start for the
+north the moment he received the letter. A messenger from Duff
+Harbour well mounted, he said, would ensure his presence within a
+couple of hours.</p>
+
+<p>He found the behaviour of his old acquaintances and friends in
+the Seaton much what he had expected: the few were as cordial as
+ever, while the many still resented, with a mingling of the
+jealousy of affection, his forsaking of the old life for a
+calling they regarded as unworthy of one bred at least if not
+born a fisherman. A few there were besides who always had been,
+for reasons perhaps best known to themselves, less than friendly.
+The women were all cordial.</p>
+
+<p>"Sic a mad-like thing," said old Futtocks, who was now the
+leader of the assembly at the barn, "to gang scoorin' the cuintry
+on that mad brute o' a mere! What guid, think ye, can come sic
+like?"</p>
+
+<p>"H'ard ye him ever tell the story aboot Colonsay Castel
+yon'er?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay hey!"</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, isna his mere 'at they ca' Kelpie jist the pictur' o'
+the deil's ain horse 'at lay at the door an' watched, whan he
+flaw oot an' tuik the wa' wi' 'im?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cudna say till I saw whether the deil himsel' cud gar her
+lie still."</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LIX"></a>CHAPTER LIX: THE
+PEACEMAKER</h1>
+
+<p>The heroes of Scaurnose expected a renewal of the attack, and
+in greater force, the next day, and made their preparations
+accordingly, strengthening every weak point around the village.
+They were put in great heart by Malcolm's espousal of their
+cause, as they considered his punishment of the factor; but most
+of them set it down in their wisdom as resulting from the popular
+condemnation of his previous supineness. It did not therefore add
+greatly to his influence with them. When he would have prevailed
+upon them to allow Blue Peter to depart, arguing that they had
+less right to prevent than the factor had to compel him, they
+once more turned upon him: what right had he to dictate to them?
+he did not belong to Scaurnose!</p>
+
+<p>He reasoned with them that the factor, although he had not
+justice, had law on his side, and could turn out whom he pleased.
+They said -- "Let him try it!" He told them that they had given
+great provocation, for he knew that the men they had assaulted
+came surveying for a harbour, and that they ought at least to
+make some apology for having maltreated them. It was all useless:
+that was the women's doing, they said; besides they did not
+believe him; and if what he said was true, what was the thing to
+them, seeing they were all under notice to leave?</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm said that perhaps an apology would be accepted. They
+told him, if he did not take himself off, they would serve him as
+he had served the factor. Finding expostulation a failure,
+therefore, he begged Joseph and Annie to settle themselves again
+as comfortably as they could, and left them.</p>
+
+<p>Contrary to the expectation of all, however, and considerably
+to the disappointment of the party of Dubs, Fite Folp, and the
+rest, the next day was as peaceful as if Scaurnose had been a
+halcyon nest floating on the summer waves; and it was soon
+reported that, in consequence of the punishment he had received
+from Malcolm, the factor was far too ill to be troublesome to any
+but his wife. This was true, but, severe as his chastisement was,
+it was not severe enough to have had any such consequences but
+for his late growing habit of drinking whisky. As it was, fever
+had followed upon the combination of bodily and mental suffering.
+But already it had wrought this good in him, that he was far more
+keenly aware of the brutality of the offence of which he had been
+guilty than he would otherwise have been all his life through. To
+his wife, who first learned the reason of Malcolm's treatment of
+him from his delirious talk in the night, it did not,
+circumstances considered, appear an enormity, and her indignation
+with the avenger of it, whom she had all but hated before, was
+furious.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm, on his part, was greatly concerned to hear the result
+of his severity. He refrained, however, from calling to inquire,
+knowing it would be interpreted as an insult, not accepted as a
+sign of sympathy. He went to the doctor instead -- who, to his
+consternation, looked very serious at first. But when he learned
+all about the affair, he changed his view considerably, and
+condescended to give good hopes of his coming through, even
+adding that it would lengthen his life by twenty years if it
+broke him of his habits of whisky drinking and rage.</p>
+
+<p>And now Malcolm had a little time of leisure, which he put to
+the best possible use in strengthening his relations with the
+fishers. For he had nothing to do about the House, except look
+after Kelpie; and Florimel, as if determined to make him feel
+that he was less to her than before, much as she used to enjoy
+seeing him sit his mare, never took him out with her -- always
+Stoat. He resolved therefore, seeing he must yet delay action a
+while in the hope of the appearance of Lenorme, to go out as in
+the old days after the herring, both for the sake of splicing, if
+possible, what strands had been broken between him and the
+fishers, and of renewing for himself the delights of elemental
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>With these views, he hired himself to the Partan, whose boat's
+crew was short handed. And now, night after night, he revelled in
+the old pleasure, enhanced by so many months of deprivation. Joy
+itself seemed embodied in the wind blowing on him out of the
+misty infinite while his boat rocked and swung on the waters,
+hanging between two worlds, that in which the wind blew, and that
+other dark swaying mystery whereinto the nets to which it was
+tied went away down and down, gathering the harvest of the
+ocean.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if nature called up all her motherhood to greet and
+embrace her long absent son. When it came on to blow hard, as it
+did once and again during those summer nights, instead of making
+him feel small and weak in the midst of the storming forces, it
+gave him a glorious sense of power and unconquerable life. And
+when his watch was out, and the boat lay quiet, like a horse
+tethered and asleep in his clover field, he too would fall asleep
+with a sense of simultaneously deepening and vanishing delight
+such as be had not at all in other conditions experienced.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since the poison had got into his system, and crept where
+it yet lay lurking in hidden corners and crannies, a noise at
+night would on shore startle him awake, and set his heart beating
+hard; but no loudest sea noise ever woke him; the stronger the
+wind flapped its wings around him, the deeper he slept. When a
+comrade called him by name, he was up at once and wide awake.</p>
+
+<p>It answered also all his hopes in regard to his companions and
+the fisher folk generally. Those who had really known him found
+the same old Malcolm, and those who had doubted him soon began to
+see that at least he had lost nothing in courage or skill or
+goodwill: ere long he was even a greater favourite than before.
+On his part, he learned to understand far better the nature of
+his people, as well as the individual characters of them, for his
+long (but not too long) absence and return enabled him to regard
+them with unaccustomed, and therefore in some respects more
+discriminating eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Duncan's former dwelling happening to be then occupied by a
+lonely woman, Malcolm made arrangements with her to take them
+both in; so that in relation to his grandfather too something
+very much like the old life returned for a time -- with this
+difference, that Duncan soon began to check himself as often as
+the name of his hate, with its accompanying curse, rose to his
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>The factor continued very ill. He had sunk into a low state,
+in which his former indulgence was greatly against him. Every
+night the fever returned, and at length his wife was worn out
+with watching, and waiting upon him.</p>
+
+<p>And every morning Lizzy Findlay, without fail, called to
+inquire how Mr Crathie had spent the night. To the last, while
+quarrelling with every one of her neighbours with whom he had
+anything to do, he had continued kind to her, and she was more
+grateful than one in other trouble than hers could have
+understood. But she did not know that an element in the
+origination of his kindness was the belief that it was by Malcolm
+she had been wronged and forsaken.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again she had offered, in the humblest manner, to
+ease his wife's burden by sitting with him at night; and at last,
+finding she could hold up no longer, Mrs Crathie consented. But
+even after a week she found herself still unable to resume the
+watching, and so, night after night, resting at home during a
+part of the day, Lizzy sat by the sleeping factor, and when he
+woke ministered to him like a daughter. Nor did even her mother
+object, for sickness is a wondrous reconciler.</p>
+
+<p>Little did the factor suspect, however, that it was partly for
+Malcolm's sake she nursed him, anxious to shield the youth from
+any possible consequences of his righteous vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>While their persecutor lay thus, gradually everything at
+Scaurnose, and consequently at the Seaton, lapsed into its old
+way, and the summer of such content as before they had possessed,
+returned to the fishers. I fear it would have proved hard for
+some of them, had they made effort in that direction, to join in
+the prayer, if prayer it may be called, put up in church for him
+every Sunday. What a fearful canopy the prayers that do not get
+beyond the atmosphere would make if they turned brown with age!
+Having so lately seen the factor going about like a maniac,
+raving at this piece of damage and that heap of dirt, the few
+fishers present could never help smiling when Mr Cairns prayed
+for him as "the servant of God and his church now lying
+grievously afflicted -- persecuted, but not forsaken, cast down,
+but not destroyed;" -- having found the fitting phrases he seldom
+varied them.</p>
+
+<p>Through her sorrow, Lizzy had grown tender, as through her
+shame she had grown wise. That the factor had been much in the
+wrong only rendered her anxious sympathy the more eager to serve
+him. Knowing so well what it was to have done wrong, she was
+pitiful over him, and her ministrations were none the less
+devoted that she knew exactly how Malcolm thought and felt about
+him; for the affair, having taken place in open village and wide
+field and in the light of midday, and having been reported by
+eyewitnesses many, was everywhere perfectly known, and Malcolm
+therefore talked of it freely to his friends, amongst them both
+to Lizzy and her mother.</p>
+
+<p>Sickness sometimes works marvellous changes, and the most
+marvellous on persons who to the ordinary observer seem the least
+liable to change. Much apparent steadfastness of nature, however,
+is but sluggishness, and comes from incapacity to generate change
+or contribute towards personal growth; and it follows that those
+whose nature is such can as little prevent or retard any change
+that has its initiative beyond them. The men who impress the
+world as the mightiest are those often who can the least -- never
+those who can the most in their natural kingdom; generally those
+whose frontiers lie openest to the inroads of temptation, whose
+atmosphere is most subject to moody changes and passionate
+convulsions, who, while perhaps they can whisper laws to a
+hemisphere, can utter no decree of smallest potency as to how
+things shall be within themselves. Place Alexander ille Magnus
+beside Malcolm's friend Epictetus, ille servorum servus; take his
+crutch from the slave and set the hero upon his Bucephalus -- but
+set them alone and in a desert: which will prove the great man?
+which the unchangeable? The question being what the man himself
+shall or shall not be, shall or shall not feel, shall or shall
+not recognize as of himself and troubling the motions of his
+being, Alexander will prove a mere earth bubble, Epictetus a
+cavern in which pulses the tide of the eternal and infinite
+Sea.</p>
+
+<p>But then first, when the false strength of the self imagined
+great man is gone, when the want or the sickness has weakened the
+self assertion which is so often mistaken for strength of
+individuality, when the occupations in which he formerly found a
+comfortable consciousness of being have lost their interest, his
+ambitions their glow, and his consolations their colour, when
+suffering has wasted away those upper strata of his factitious
+consciousness, and laid bare the lower, simpler, truer deeps, of
+which he has never known or has forgotten the existence, then
+there is a hope of his commencing a new and real life.</p>
+
+<p>Powers then, even powers within himself of which he knew
+nothing, begin to assert themselves, and the man commonly
+reported to possess a strong will, is like a wave of the sea
+driven with the wind and tossed. This factor, this man of
+business, this despiser of humbug, to whom the scruples of a
+sensitive conscience were a contempt, would now lie awake in the
+night and weep.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" I hear it answered, "but that was the weakness caused by
+his illness." True: but what then had become of his strength? And
+was it all weakness? What if this weakness was itself a sign of
+returning life, not of advancing death -- of the dawn of a new
+and genuine strength! For he wept because, in the visions of his
+troubled brain, he saw once more the cottage of his father the
+shepherd, with all its store of lovely nothings round which the
+nimbus of sanctity had gathered while he thought not of them;
+wept over the memory of that moment of delight when his mother
+kissed him for parting with his willow whistle to the sister who
+cried for it: he cried now in his turn, after five and fifty
+years, for not yet had the little fact done with him, not yet had
+the kiss of his mother lost its power on the man: wept over the
+sale of the pet lamb, though he had himself sold thousands of
+lambs, since; wept over even that bush of dusty miller by the
+door, like the one he trampled under his horse's feet in the
+little yard at Scaurnose that horrible day. And oh, that nest of
+wild bees with its combs of honey unspeakable! He used to laugh
+and sing then: he laughed still sometimes -- he could hear how he
+laughed, and it sounded frightful -- but he never sang! Were the
+tears that honoured such childish memories all of weakness? Was
+it cause of regret that he had not been wicked enough to have
+become impregnable to such foolish trifles? Unable to mount a
+horse, unable to give an order, not caring even for his toddy, he
+was left at the mercy of his fundamentals; his childhood came up
+and claimed him, and he found the childish things he had put away
+better than the manly things he had adopted. It is one thing for
+St Paul and another for Mr Worldly Wiseman to put away childish
+things. The ways they do it, and the things they substitute, are
+both so different? And now first to me, whose weakness it is to
+love life more than manners, and men more than their portraits,
+the man begins to grow interesting. Picture the dawn of innocence
+on a dull, whisky drinking, commonplace soul, stained by self
+indulgence, and distorted by injustice! Unspeakably more
+interesting and lovely is to me such a dawn than the honeymoon of
+the most passionate of lovers, except indeed I know them such
+lovers that their love will outlast all the moons.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a poor creature, Lizzy," he said, turning his heavy face
+one midnight towards the girl, as she sat half dozing, ready to
+start awake.</p>
+
+<p>"God comfort ye, sir!" said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"He'll take good care of that!" returned the factor. "What did
+I ever do to deserve it? -- There's that MacPhail, now -- to
+think of him! Didn't I do what man could for him? Didn't I keep
+him about the place when all the rest were dismissed? Didn't I
+give him the key of the library, that he might read and improve
+his mind? And look what comes of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye mean, sir," said. Lizzy, quite innocently, "'at that 's
+the w'y ye ha'e dune wi' God, an' sae he winna heed ye?"</p>
+
+<p>The factor had meant nothing in the least like it. He had
+merely been talking as the imps of suggestion tossed up. His
+logic was as sick and helpless as himself. So at that he held his
+peace -- stung in his pride at least -- perhaps in his conscience
+too, only he was not prepared to be rebuked by a girl like her,
+who had -- Well, he must let it pass: how much better was he
+himself?</p>
+
+<p>But Lizzy was loyal: she could not hear him speak so of
+Malcolm and hold her peace as if she agreed in his
+condemnation.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll ken Ma'colm better some day, sir," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Lizzy," returned the sick man, in a tone that but for
+feebleness would have been indignant, "I have heard a good deal
+of the way women will stand up for men that have treated them
+cruelly, but you to stand up for him passes!"</p>
+
+<p>"He's been the best friend I ever had," said Lizzy.</p>
+
+<p>"Girl! how can you sit there, and tell me so to my face?"
+cried the factor, his voice strengthened by the righteousness of
+the reproof it bore. "If it were not the dead of the night"</p>
+
+<p>"I tell ye naething but the trowth, sir," said Lizzy, as the
+contingent threat died away. "But ye maun lie still or I maun
+gang for the mistress. Gien ye be the waur the morn, it'll be a'
+my wyte, 'cause I cudna bide to hear sic things said o'
+Ma'colm."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me," persisted her charge, heedless of
+her expostulation, "that the fellow who brought you to disgrace,
+and left you with a child you could ill provide for -- and I well
+know never sent you a penny all the time he was away, whatever he
+may have done now, is the best friend you ever had?"</p>
+
+<p>"Noo God forgi'e ye, Maister Crathie, for threipin' sic a
+thing!" cried Lizzy, rising as if she would leave him; "Ma'colm
+MacPhail 's as clear o' ony sin like mine as my wee bairnie
+itsel'."</p>
+
+<p>"Do ye daur tell me he's no the father o' that same,
+lass?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, nor never will be the father a' ony bairn whase mither 's
+no his wife!" said. Lizzy, with burning cheeks and resolute
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>The factor, who had risen on his elbow to look her in the
+face, fell back in silence; and neither of them spoke for what
+seemed to the watcher a long time; When she ventured to look at
+him, he was asleep.</p>
+
+<p>He lay in one of those troubled slumbers into which weakness
+and exhaustion will sometimes pass very suddenly; and in that
+slumber he had a dream which he never forgot. He thought he had
+risen from his grave with an awful sound in his ears, and knew he
+was wanted at the judgment seat. But he did not want to go,
+therefore crept into the porch of the church, and hoped to be
+forgotten. But suddenly an angel appeared with a flaming sword
+and drove him out of the churchyard away to Scaurnose where the
+judge was sitting. And as he fled in terror before the angel, he
+fell, and the angel came and stood over him, and his sword
+flashed torture into his bones, but he could not and dared not
+rise. At last, summoning all his strength,. he looked up at him,
+and cried out, "Sir, ha'e mercy, for God's sake." Instantly all
+the flames drew back into the sword, and the blade dropped,
+burning like a brand, from the hilt, which the angel threw away.
+-- And lo! it was Malcolm MacPhail, and he was stooping to raise
+him. With that he awoke, and there was Lizzy looking down on him
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you looking like that for?" he asked crossly.</p>
+
+<p>She did not like to tell him that she had been alarmed by his
+dropping asleep: and in her confusion she fell back on the last
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"There maun be some mistak, Mr Crathie," she said. "I wuss ye
+wad tell me what gars ye hate Ma'colm MacPhail as ye du."</p>
+
+<p>The factor, although he seemed to himself to know well enough,
+was yet a little puzzled how to commence his reply; and therewith
+a process began that presently turned into something with which
+never in his life before had his inward parts been acquainted --
+a sort of self examination to wit. He said to himself, partly in
+the desire to justify his present dislike -- he would not call it
+hate, as Lizzy did -- that he used to get on with the lad well
+enough, and had never taken offence at his freedoms, making no
+doubt his manner came of his blood, and he could not help it,
+being a chip of the old block; but when he ran away with the
+marquis's boat, and went to the marchioness and told her lies
+against him -- then what could he do but dislike him?</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at this point, he opened his mouth and gave the
+substance of what preceded it for answer to Lizzy's question. But
+she replied at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody 'ill gar me believe, sir, 'at Ma'colm MacPhail ever
+tellt a lee again' you or onybody. I dinna believe he ever tellt
+a lee in 's life. Jist ye exem' him weel anent it, sir. An' for
+the boat, nae doobt it was makin' free to tak it; but ye ken,
+sir, 'at hoo he was maister o' the same. It was in his chairge,
+an' ye ken little aboot boats yersel,' or the sailin' o' them,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"But it was me that engaged him again, after all the servants
+at the House had been dismissed: he was my servant."</p>
+
+<p>"That maks the thing luik waur, nae doobt," allowed Lizzy, --
+with something of cunning. "Hoo was't 'at he cam to du 't ava'
+(of all; at all), sir? Can ye min'?" she pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"I discharged him."</p>
+
+<p>"An' what for, gien I may mak' hold to speir, sir?" she went
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"For insolence."</p>
+
+<p>"Wad ye tell me hoo he answert ye? Dinna think me meddlin',
+sir. I'm clear certain there's been some mistak. Ye cudna be sae
+guid to me, an' be ill to him, ohn some mistak."</p>
+
+<p>It was consoling to the conscience of the factor, in regard of
+his behaviour to the two women, to hear his own praise for
+kindness from woman's lips. He took no offence therefore at her
+persistent questioning, but told her as well and as truly as he
+could remember, with no more than the all but unavoidable
+exaggeration with which feeling will colour fact, the whole
+passage between Malcolm and himself concerning the sale of
+Kelpie, and closed with an appeal to the judgment of his
+listener, in which he confidently anticipated her verdict.</p>
+
+<p>"A most ridic'lous thing! ye can see yersel' as weel 's
+onybody, Lizzy! An' sic a thing to ca' an honest man like mysel'
+a hypocrete for! ha! ha! ha! There's no a bairn 'atween John o'
+Groat's an' the Lan's En' disna ken 'at the seller a horse is
+b'un' to reese (extol) him, an' the buyer to tak care o' himsel'.
+I'll no say it's jist allooable to tell a doonricht lee, but ye
+may come full nearer till't in horse dealin', ohn sinned, nor in
+ony ither kin' o' merchandeze. It's like luve an' war, in baith
+which, it's weel keened, a' thing's fair. The saw sud rin -- Luve
+an' war an' horse dealin'. -- Divna ye see, Lizzy?"</p>
+
+<p>But Lizzy did not answer, and the factor, hearing a stifled
+sob, started to his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"Lie still, sir," said Lizzy. "It's naething. I was only jist
+thinkin' 'at that wad be the w'y 'at the father o' my bairn
+rizoned wi' himsel' whan he lee'd to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Hey!" said the astonished factor, and in his turn held his
+peace, trying to think.</p>
+
+<p>Now Lizzy, for the last few months, had been going to school,
+the same school with Malcolm, open to all comers, the only school
+where one is sure to be led in the direction of wisdom, and there
+she had been learning to some purpose -- as plainly appeared
+before she had done with the factor.</p>
+
+<p>"Whase kirk are ye elder o', Maister Crathie?" she asked
+presently.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, the kirk o' Scotlan', of coorse!" answered the patient,
+in some surprise at her ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay," returned Lizzy; "but whase aucht (owning, property)
+is 't?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, whase but the Redeemer's!"</p>
+
+<p>"An' div ye think, Mr Craithie, 'at gien Jesus Christ had had
+a horse to sell, he wad ha'e hidden frae him 'at wad buy, ae hair
+a fau't 'at the beast hed? Wad he no ha'e dune till's neiper as
+he wad ha'e his neiper du to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lassie! lassie! tak care hoo ye even him to sic like as hiz
+(us). What wad he hae to du wi' horse flesh?"</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy held her peace. Here was no room for argument. He had
+flung the door of his conscience in the face of her who woke it.
+But it was too late, for the word was in already. Oh! that false
+reverence which men substitute for adoring obedience, and
+wherewith they reprove the childlike spirit that does not know
+another kingdom than that of God and that of Mammon! God never
+gave man thing to do concerning which it were irreverent to
+ponder how the son of God would have done it.</p>
+
+<p>But, I say, the word was in, and, partly no doubt from its
+following so close upon the dream the factor had had, was potent
+in its operation. He fell a thinking, and a thinking more
+honestly than he had thought for many a day. And presently it was
+revealed to him that, if he were in the horse market wanting to
+buy, and a man there who had to sell said to him -- "He wadna du
+for you, sir; ye wad be tired o' 'im in a week," he would never
+remark, "What a fool the fellow is!" but -- "Weel noo, I ca' that
+neibourly!" He did not get quite so far just then as to see that
+every man to whom he might want to sell a horse was as much his
+neighbour as his own brother; nor, indeed, if he had got as far,
+would it have indicated much progress in honesty, seeing he would
+at any time, when needful and possible, have cheated that brother
+in the matter of a horse, as certainly as he would a Patagonian
+or a Chinaman. But the warped glass of a bad maxim had at least
+been cracked in his window.</p>
+
+<p>The peacemaker sat in silence the rest of the night, but the
+factor's sleep was broken, and at times he wandered. He was not
+so well the next day, and his wife, gathering that Lizzy had been
+talking, and herself feeling better, would not allow her to sit
+up with him any more.</p>
+
+<p>Days and days passed, and still Malcolm had no word from
+Lenorme, and was getting hopeless in respect of that quarter of
+possible aid. But so long as Florimel could content herself with
+the quiet of Lossie House, there was time to wait, he said to
+himself. She was not idle, and that was promising. Every day she
+rode out with Stoat. Now and then she would make a call in the
+neighbourhood, and, apparently to trouble Malcolm, took care to
+let him know that on one of these occasions her call had been
+upon Mrs Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>One thing he did feel was that she made no renewal of her
+friendship with his grandfather: she had, alas! outgrown the
+girlish fancy. Poor Duncan took it much to heart. She saw more of
+the minister and his wife, who both flattered her, than anybody
+else, and was expecting the arrival of Lady Bellair and Lord
+Liftore with the utmost impatience. They, for their part, were
+making the journey by the easiest possible stages, tacking and
+veering, and visiting everyone of their friends that lay between
+London and Lossie: they thought to give Florimel the little
+lesson, that, though they accepted her invitation, they had
+plenty of friends in the world besides her ladyship, and were not
+dying to see her.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, Malcolm, as he left the grounds of Mr Morrison,
+on whom he had been calling, saw a travelling carriage pass
+towards Portlossie; and something liker fear laid hold of his
+heart than he had ever felt except when Florimel and he on the
+night of the storm took her father for Lord Gernon the wizard. As
+soon as he reached certain available fields, he sent Kelpie
+tearing across them, dodged through a fir wood, and came out on
+the road half a mile in front of the carriage: as again it passed
+him he saw that his fears were facts, for in it sat the bold
+faced countess, and the mean hearted lord. Something must be done
+at last, and until it was done good watch must be kept.</p>
+
+<p>I must here note that, during this time of hoping and waiting,
+Malcolm had attended to another matter of importance. Over every
+element influencing his life, his family, his dependents, his
+property, he desired to possess a lawful, honest command: where
+he had to render account, he would be head. Therefore, through Mr
+Soutar's London agent, to whom he sent up Davy, and whom he
+brought acquainted with Merton, and his former landlady at the
+curiosity shop, he had discovered a good deal about Mrs Catanach
+from her London associates, among them the herb doctor, and his
+little boy who had watched Davy, and he had now almost completed
+an outline of evidence, which, grounded on that of Rose, might be
+used against Mrs Catanach at any moment. He had also set
+inquiries on foot in the track of Caley's antecedents, and had
+discovered more than the acquaintance between her and Mrs
+Catanach. Also he had arranged that Hodges, the man who had lost
+his leg through his cruelty to Kelpie, should leave for Duff
+Harbour as soon as possible after his discharge from the
+hospital. He was determined to crush the evil powers which had
+been ravaging his little world.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LX"></a>CHAPTER LX: AN
+OFFERING</h1>
+
+<p>Clementina was always ready to accord any reasonable request
+Florimel could make of her; but her letter lifted such a weight
+from her heart and life that she would now have done whatever she
+desired, reasonable or unreasonable, provided only it was honest.
+She had no difficulty in accepting Florimel's explanation that
+her sudden disappearance was but a breaking of the social gaol,
+the flight of the weary bird from its foreign cage back to the
+country of its nest; and that same morning she called upon Demon.
+The hound, feared and neglected, was rejoiced to see her, came
+when she called him, and received her caresses: there was no
+ground for dreading his company. It was a long journey, but if it
+had been across a desert instead of through her own country, the
+hope that lay at the end of it would have made it more than
+pleasant. She, as well as Lady Bellair, had friends upon the way,
+but no desire to lengthen the journey or shorten its tedium by
+visiting them.</p>
+
+<p>The letter would have found her at Wastbeach instead of
+London, had not the society and instructions of the schoolmaster
+detained her a willing prisoner to its heat and glare and dust.
+Him only in all London must she see to bid goodbye. To Camden
+Town therefore she went that same evening, when his work would be
+over for the day. As usual now, she was shown into his room --
+his only one. As usual also, she found him poring over his Greek
+Testament. The gracious, graceful woman looked lovelily strange
+in that mean chamber -- like an opal in a brass ring.</p>
+
+<p>There was no such contrast between the room and its occupant.
+His bodily presence was too weak to "stick fiery off" from its
+surroundings, and to the eye that saw through the bodily presence
+to the inherent grandeur, that grandeur suggested no discrepancy,
+being of the kind that lifts everything to its own level, casts
+the mantle of its own radiance around its surroundings. Still to
+the eye of love and reverence it was not pleasant to see him in
+such entourage, and now that Clementina was going to leave him,
+the ministering spirit that dwelt in the woman was troubled.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" he said, and rose as she entered; "this is then the
+angel of my deliverance!" But with such a smile he did not look
+as if he had much to be delivered from. "You see," he went on,
+"old man as I am, and peaceful, the summer will lay hold upon me.
+She stretches out a long arm into this desert of houses and
+stones, and sets me longing after the green fields and the living
+air -- it seems dead here -- and the face of God -- as much as
+one may behold of the Infinite through the revealing veil of
+earth and sky and sea. Shall I confess my weakness, my poverty of
+spirit, my covetousness after the visual? I was even getting a
+little tired of that glorious God and man lover, Saul of Tarsus
+-- no, not of him, never of him, only of his shadow in his words.
+Yet perhaps, yes I think so, it is God alone of whom a man can
+never get tired. Well, no matter; tired I was; when lo! here
+comes my pupil, with more of God in her face than all the worlds
+and their skies he ever made!"</p>
+
+<p>"I would my heart were as full of him, too, then, sir!"
+answered Clementina. "But if I am anything of a comfort to you, I
+am more than glad, -- therefore the more sorry to tell you that I
+am going to leave you -- though for a little while only, I
+trust."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not take me by surprise, my lady. I have of course
+been looking forward for some time to my loss and your gain. The
+world is full of little deaths, deaths of all sorts and sizes,
+rather let me say. For this one I was prepared. The good summer
+land calls you to its bosom, and you must go."</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me," cried Clementina, her eyes eager with the
+light of the sudden thought, while her heart reproached her
+grievously that only now first had it come to her.</p>
+
+<p>"A man must not leave the most irksome work for the most
+peaceful pleasure," answered the schoolmaster. "I am able to live
+-- yes, and do my work, without you, my lady," he added with a
+smile, "though I shall miss you sorely."</p>
+
+<p>"But you do not know where I want you to come," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"What difference can that make, my lady, except indeed in the
+amount of pleasure to be refused, seeing this is not a matter of
+choice? I must be with the children whom I have engaged to teach,
+and whose parents pay me for my labour -- not with those who,
+besides, can do well without me."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot, sir -- not for long, at least."</p>
+
+<p>"What! not with Malcolm to supply my place?"</p>
+
+<p>Clementina blushed, but only like a white rose. She did not
+turn her head aside; she did not lower their lids to veil the
+light she felt mount into her eyes; she looked him gently in the
+face as before, and her aspect of entreaty did not change.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! do not be unkind, master," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Unkind!" he repeated. "You know I am not. I have more
+kindness in my heart than my lips can tell. You do not know, you
+could not yet imagine the half of what I hope of and for and from
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to see Malcolm," she said, with a little sigh.
+"That is, I am going to visit Lady Lossie at her place in
+Scotland -- your own old home, where so many must love you. --
+Can't you come? I shall be travelling alone, quite alone, except
+my servants."</p>
+
+<p>A shadow came over the schoolmaster's face.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not think, my lady, or you would not press me. It
+pains me that you do not see at once it would be dishonest to go
+without timely notice to my pupils, and to the public too. But,
+beyond that quite, I never do anything of myself. I go, not where
+I wish, but where I seem to be called or sent. I never even wish
+much -- except when I pray to him in whom are hid all the
+treasures of wisdom and knowledge. After what he wants to give me
+I am wishing all day long. I used to build many castles, not
+without a beauty of their own -- that was when I had less
+understanding: now I leave them to God to build for me -- he does
+it better and they last longer. See now, this very hour, when I
+needed help -- could I have contrived a more lovely annihilation
+of the monotony that threatened to invade my weary spirit, than
+this inroad of light in the person of my lady Clementina? Nor
+will he allow me to get over wearied with vain efforts. I do not
+think he will keep me here long, for I find I cannot do much for
+these children. They are but some of his many pagans -- not yet
+quite ready to receive Christianity, I think -- not like children
+with some of the old seeds of the truth buried in them, that want
+to be turned up nearer to the light. This ministration I take to
+be more for my good than theirs -- a little trial of faith and
+patience for me -- a stony corner of the lovely valley of
+humiliation to cross. True, I might be happier where I could hear
+the larks, but I do not know that anywhere have I been more
+peaceful than in this little room, on which I see you so often
+cast round your eyes curiously -- perhaps pitifully, my
+lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not at all a fit place for you," said Clementina, with
+a touch of indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Softly, my lady -- -- lest, without knowing it, your love
+should make you sin! Who set thee, I pray, for a guardian angel
+over my welfare? I could scarce have a lovelier -- true! but
+where is thy brevet? No, my lady! it is a greater than thou that
+sets me the bounds of my habitation. Perhaps he may give me a
+palace one day. If I might choose, it would be the things that
+belong to a cottage -- the whiteness and the greenness and the
+sweet odours of cleanliness. But the father has decreed for his
+children that they shall know the thing that is neither their
+ideal nor his. Who can imagine how in this respect things looked
+to our Lord when he came and found so little faith on the earth!
+But, perhaps, my lady, you would not pity my present condition so
+much, if you had seen the cottage in which I was born, and where
+my father and my mother loved each other, and died happier than
+on their wedding day. There I was happy too until their loving
+ambition decreed that I should be a scholar and a clergyman. Not
+before then did I ever know anything worthy of the name of
+trouble. A little cold and a little hunger at times, and not a
+little restlessness always was all. But then -- ah then, my
+troubles began! Yet God, who bringeth light out of darkness, hath
+brought good even out of my weakness and presumption and half
+unconscious falsehood! -- When do you go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow morning -- as I purpose."</p>
+
+<p>"Then God be with thee. He is with thee, only my prayer is
+that thou mayest know it. He is with me and I know it. He does
+not find this chamber too mean or dingy or unclean to let me know
+him near me in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me one thing before I go," said Clementina: "are we not
+commanded to bear each other's burdens and so fulfil the law of
+Christ? I read it today."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why ask me?"</p>
+
+<p>"For another question: does not that involve the command to
+those who have burdens that they should allow others to bear
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, my lady. But I have no burden to let you bear."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I have everything, and you nothing? -- Answer me
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lady, I have millions more than you, for I have been
+gathering the crumbs under my master's table for thirty
+years."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a king," answered Clementina. "But a king needs a
+handmaiden somewhere in his house: that let me be in yours. No, I
+will be proud, and assert my rights. I am your daughter. If I am
+not, why am I here? Do you not remember telling me that the
+adoption of God meant a closer relation than any other
+fatherhood, even his own first fatherhood could signify? You
+cannot cast me off if you would. Why should you be poor when I am
+rich? -- You are poor. You cannot deny it," she concluded with a
+serious playfulness.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not deny my privileges," said the schoolmaster, with a
+smile such as might have acknowledged the possession of some
+exquisite and envied rarity.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe," insisted Clementina, "you are just as poor as the
+apostle Paul when he sat down to make a tent -- or as our Lord
+himself after he gave up carpentering."</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong there, my lady. I am not so poor as they must
+often have been."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't know how long I may be away, and you may fall
+ill, or -- or -- see some -- some book you want very much,
+or"</p>
+
+<p>"I never do," said the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"What! never see a book you want to have?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; not now. I have my Greek Testament, my Plato, and my
+Shakspere -- and one or two little books besides, whose wisdom I
+have not yet quite exhausted."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't bear it!" cried Clementina, almost on the point of
+weeping. "You will not let me near you. You put out an arm as
+long as the summer's and push me away from you. Let me be your
+servant."</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, she rose, and walking softly up to him where he
+sat kneeled at his knees, and held out suppliantly a little bag
+of white silk, tied with crimson.</p>
+
+<p>"Take it -- father," she said, hesitating, and bringing the
+word out with an effort; "take your daughter's offering -- a poor
+thing to show her love, but something to ease her heart."</p>
+
+<p>He took it, and weighed it up and down in his hand with an
+amused smile, but his eyes full of tears. It was heavy. He opened
+it. A chair was within his reach, he emptied it on the seat of
+it, and laughed with merry delight as its contents came tumbling
+out.</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw so much gold in my life, if it were all taken
+together," he said. "What beautiful stuff it is! But I don't want
+it, my dear. It would but trouble me." And as he spoke, he began
+to put it in the bag again. "You will want it for your journey,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I have plenty in my reticule," she answered. "That is a mere
+nothing to what I could have tomorrow morning for writing a
+cheque. I am afraid I am very rich. It is such a shame! But I
+can't well help it. You must teach me how to become poor. -- Tell
+me true: how much money have you?"</p>
+
+<p>She said this with such an earnest look of simple love that
+the schoolmaster made haste to rise, that he might conceal his
+growing emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Rise, my dear lady," he said, as he rose himself, "and I will
+show you."</p>
+
+<p>He gave her his hand, and she obeyed, but troubled and
+disappointed, and so stood looking after him, while he went to a
+drawer. Thence, searching in a corner of it, he brought a half
+sovereign, a few shillings, and some coppers, and held them out
+to her on his hand, with the smile of one who has proved his
+point.</p>
+
+<p>"There!" he said; "do you think Paul would have stopped
+preaching to make a tent so long as he had as much as that in his
+pocket? I shall have more on Saturday, and I always carry a
+month's rent in my good old watch, for which I never had much
+use, and now have less than ever."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina had been struggling with herself; now she burst
+into tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what a misspending of precious sorrow!" exclaimed the
+schoolmaster. "Do you think because a man has not a gold mine he
+must die of hunger? I once heard of a sparrow that never had a
+worm left for the morrow, and died a happy death
+notwithstanding."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he took her handkerchief from her hand and dried
+her tears with it. But he had enough ado to keep his own
+back.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I won't take a bagful of gold from you when I don't
+want it," he went on, "do you think I should let myself starve
+without coming to you? I promise you I will let you know -- come
+to you if I can, the moment I get too hungry to do my work well,
+and have no money left. Should I think it a disgrace to take
+money from you? That would show a poverty of spirit such as I
+hope never to fall into. My sole reason for refusing it now is
+that I do not need it."</p>
+
+<p>But for all his loving words and assurances Clementina could
+not stay her tears. She was not ready to weep, but now her eyes
+were as a fountain.</p>
+
+<p>"See, then, for your tears are hard to bear, my daughter," he
+said, "I will take one of these golden ministers, and if it has
+flown from me ere you come, seeing that, like the raven, it will
+not return if once I let it go, I will ask you for another. It
+may be God's will that you should feed me for a time."</p>
+
+<p>"Like one of Elijah's ravens," said Clementina, with an
+attempted laugh that was really a sob.</p>
+
+<p>"Like a dove whose wings are covered with silver, and her
+feathers with yellow gold," said the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>A moment of silence followed, broken only by Clementina's
+failures in quieting herself.</p>
+
+<p>"To me," he resumed, "the sweetest fountain of money is the
+hand of love, but a man has no right to take it from that
+fountain except he is in want of it. I am not. True, I go
+somewhat bare, my lady; but what is that when my Lord would have
+it so?"</p>
+
+<p>He opened again the bag, and slowly, reverentially indeed,
+drew from it one of the new sovereigns with which it was filled.
+He put it into a waistcoat pocket, and laid the bag on the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"But your clothes are shabby, sir," said Clementina, looking
+at him with a sad little shake of the head.</p>
+
+<p>"Are they?" he returned, and looked down at his lower
+garments, reddening and anxious. "-- I did not think they were
+more than a little rubbed, but they shine somewhat," he said. "--
+They are indeed polished by use," he went on, with a troubled
+little laugh; "but they have no holes yet -- at least none that
+are visible," he corrected. "If you tell me, my lady, if you
+honestly tell me that my garments" -- and he looked at the sleeve
+of his coat, drawing back his head from it to see it better --
+"are unsightly, I will take of your money and buy me a new
+suit."</p>
+
+<p>Over his coat sleeve he regarded her, questioning.</p>
+
+<p>"Everything about you is beautiful!" she burst out "You want
+nothing but a body that lets the light through!"</p>
+
+<p>She took the hand still raised in his survey of his sleeve,
+pressed it to her lips, and walked, with even more than her
+wonted state, slowly from the room. He took the bag of gold from
+the table, and followed her down the stair. Her chariot was
+waiting her at the door. He handed her in, and laid the bag on
+the little seat in front.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell him to drive home," she said, with a firm
+voice, and a smile which if anyone care to understand, let him
+read Spenser's fortieth sonnet. And so they parted. The coachman
+took the queer shabby un-London-like man for a fortune teller his
+lady was in the habit of consulting, and paid homage to his power
+with the handle of his whip as he drove away. The schoolmaster
+returned to his room, not to his Plato, not even to Saul of
+Tarsus, but to the Lord himself.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXI"></a>CHAPTER LXI:
+THOUGHTS</h1>
+
+<p>When Malcolm took Kelpie to her stall the night of the arrival
+of Lady Bellair and her nephew, he was rushed upon by Demon, and
+nearly prostrated between his immoderate welcome and the startled
+rearing of the mare. The hound had arrived a couple of hours
+before, while Malcolm was out. He wondered he had not seen him
+with the carriage he had passed, never suspecting he had had
+another conductress, or dreaming what his presence there
+signified for him.</p>
+
+<p>I have not said much concerning Malcolm's feelings with regard
+to Lady Clementina, but all this time the sense of her existence
+had been like an atmosphere surrounding and pervading his
+thought. He saw in her the promise of all he could desire to see
+in woman. His love was not of the blind little boy sort, but of a
+deeper, more exacting, keen eyed kind, that sees faults where
+even a true mother will not, so jealous is it of the perfection
+of the beloved.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing was plain even to this seraphic dragon that
+dwelt sleepless in him, and there was eternal content in the
+thought, that such a woman, once started on the right way, would
+soon leave fault and weakness behind her, and become as one of
+the grand women of old, whose religion was simply what religion
+is -- life -- neither more nor less than life. She would be a
+saint without knowing it, the only grand kind of sainthood.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever can think of religion as an addition to life, however
+glorious -- a starry crown, say, set upon the head of humanity,
+is not yet the least in the kingdom of heaven. Whoever thinks of
+life as a something that could be without religion, is in deathly
+ignorance of both. Life and religion are one, or neither is
+anything: I will not say neither is growing to be anything.
+Religion is no way of life, no show of life, no observance of any
+sort. It is neither the food nor the medicine of being. It is
+life essential. To think otherwise is as if a man should pride
+himself on his honesty, or his parental kindness, or hold up his
+head amongst men because he never killed one: were he less than
+honest or kind or free from blood, he would yet think something
+of himself! The man to whom virtue is but the ornament of
+character, something over and above, not essential to it, is not
+yet a man.</p>
+
+<p>If I say then, that Malcolm was always thinking about Lady
+Clementina when he was not thinking about something he had to
+think about, have I not said nearly enough on the matter? Should
+I ever dream of attempting to set forth what love is, in such a
+man for such a woman? There are comparatively few that have more
+than the glimmer of a notion of what love means. God only knows
+how grandly, how passionately yet how calmly, how divinely the
+man and the woman he has made, might, may, shall love each other.
+One thing only I will dare to say: that the love that belonged to
+Malcolm's nature was one through the very nerves of which the
+love of God must rise and flow and return, as its essential life.
+If any man think that such a love could no longer be the love of
+the man for the woman, he knows his own nature, and that of the
+woman he pretends or thinks he adores, but in the darkest of
+glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's lowly idea of himself did not at all interfere with
+his loving Clementina, for at first his love was entirely
+dissociated from any thought of hers. When the idea -- the mere
+idea of her loving him presented itself, from whatever quarter
+suggested, he turned from it with shame and self reproof: the
+thought was in its own nature too unfit! That splendour regard
+him!</p>
+
+<p>From a social point of view there was of course little
+presumption in it. The Marquis of Lossie bore a name that might
+pair itself with any in the land; but Malcolm did not yet feel
+that the title made much difference to the fisherman. He was what
+he was, and that was something very lowly indeed. Yet the thought
+would at times dawn up from somewhere in the infinite matrix of
+thought, that perhaps, if he went to college, and graduated, and
+dressed like a gentleman, and did everything as gentlemen do, in
+short, claimed his rank, and lived as a marquis should, as well
+as a fisherman might, -- then -- then -- was it not -- might it
+not be within the bounds of possibility -- just within them --
+that the great hearted, generous, liberty loving Lady Clementina,
+groom as he had been, menial as he had heard himself called, and
+as, ere yet he knew his birth, he had laughed to hear, knowing
+that his service was true, -- that she, who despised nothing
+human, would be neither disgusted nor contemptuous nor wrathful,
+if, from a great way off, at an awful remove of humility and
+worship, he were to wake in her a surmise that he dared feel
+towards her as he had never felt and never could feel towards any
+other?</p>
+
+<p>For would it not be altogether counter to the principles he
+had so often heard her announce and defend, to despise him
+because he had earned his bread by doing honourable work -- work
+hearty, and up to the worth of his wages? Was she one to say and
+not see -- to opine and not believe? or was she one to hold and
+not practise -- to believe for the heart and not for the hand --
+to say I go, and not go -- I love, and not help? If such she
+were, then there were for him no further searchings of the heart
+upon her account; he could but hold up her name in the common
+prayer for all men, only praying besides not to dream about her
+when he slept.</p>
+
+<p>At length, such thoughts rising again and again, and ever
+accompanied by such reflections concerning the truth of her
+character, and by the growing certainty that her convictions were
+the souls of actions to be born them, his daring of belief in
+her strengthened until he began to think that perhaps it would be
+neither his early history, nor his defective education, nor his
+clumsiness, that would prevent her from listening to such words
+wherewith he burned to throw open the gates of his world, and
+pray her to enter and sit upon its loftiest throne -- its
+loftiest throne but one. And with the thought he felt as if he
+must run to her, calling aloud that he was the Marquis of Lossie,
+and throw himself at her feet.</p>
+
+<p>But the wheels of his thought chariot, self moved, were
+rushing, and here was no goal at which to halt or turn! -- for,
+feeling thus, where was his faith in her principles? How now was
+he treating the truth of her nature? where now were his
+convictions of the genuineness of her professions? Where were
+those principles, that truth, those professions, if after all she
+would listen to a marquis and would not listen to a groom? To
+suppose such a thing was to wrong her grievously. To herald his
+suit with his rank would be to insult her, declaring that he
+regarded her theories of humanity as wordy froth. And what a
+chance of proving her truth would he not deprive her of, if, as
+he approached her, he called on the marquis to supplement the
+man! -- But what then was the man, fisherman or marquis, to dare
+even himself to such a glory as the Lady Clementina? -- This much
+of a man at least, answered his waking dignity, that he could not
+condescend to be accepted as Malcolm, Marquis of Lossie, knowing
+he would have been rejected as Malcolm MacPhail, fisherman and
+groom.</p>
+
+<p>Accepted as marquis, he would for ever be haunted with the
+channering question whether she would have accepted him as groom?
+And if in his pain he were one day to utter it, and she in her
+honesty were to confess she would not, must she not then fall
+prone from her pedestal in his imagination? Could he then, in
+love for the woman herself condescend as marquis to marry one who
+might not have married him as any something else he could
+honestly have been, under the all enlightening sun: but again!
+was that fair to her yet? Might she not see in the marquis the
+truth and worth which the blinding falsehoods of society
+prevented her from seeing in the groom? Might not a lady -- he
+tried to think of a lady in the abstract -- might not a lady, in
+marrying a marquis, a lady to whom from her own position a
+marquis was just a man on the level, marry in him the man he was,
+and not the marquis he seemed? Most certainly, he answered: he
+must not be unfair. -- Not the less however did he shrink from
+the thought of taking her prisoner under the shield of his
+marquisate, beclouding her nobility, and depriving her of the
+rare chance of shining forth as the sun in the splendour of
+womanly truth. No; he would choose the greater risk of losing
+her, for the chance of winning her greater.</p>
+
+<p>So far Malcolm got with his theories; but the moment he began
+to think in the least practically, he recoiled altogether from
+the presumption. Under no circumstances could he ever have the
+courage to approach Lady Clementina with a thought of himself in
+his mind. How could he have dared even to raise her imagined
+eidolon for his thoughts to deal withal. She had never shown him
+personal favour. He could not tell whether she had listened to
+what he had tried to lay before her. He did not know that she had
+gone to hear his master; Florimel had never referred to their
+visit to Hope Chapel; his surprise would have equalled his
+delight at the news that she had already become as a daughter to
+the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>And what had been Clementina's thoughts since learning that
+Florimel had not run away with her groom? It were hard to say
+with completeness. Accuracy however may not be equally
+unattainable. Her first feeling was an utterly inarticulate,
+undefined pleasure that Malcolm was free to be thought about. She
+was clear next that it would be matter for honest rejoicing if
+the truest man she had ever met except his master, was not going
+to marry such an unreality as Florimel -- one concerning whom, as
+things had been going of late, it was impossible to say that she
+was not more likely to turn to evil than to good.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina with all her generosity could not help being
+doubtful of a woman who could make a companion of such a man as
+Liftore, a man to whom every individual particle of Clementina's
+nature seemed for itself to object. But she was not yet past
+befriending.</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to grow more curious about Malcolm. She had
+already much real knowledge of him, gathered both from himself
+and from Mr Graham; -- as to what went to make the man, she knew
+him indeed, not thoroughly, but well; and just therefore, she
+said to herself, there were some points in his history and
+condition concerning which she had curiosity. The principal of
+these was whether he might not be engaged to some young woman in
+his own station of life. It was not merely possible, but was it
+likely he could have escaped it? In the lower ranks of society,
+men married younger -- they had no false aims to prevent them
+that implied earlier engagements. On the other hand, was it
+likely that in a fishing village there would be any choice of
+girls who could understand him when he talked about Plato and the
+New Testament? If there was one however, that might be -- worse
+-- Yes, worse; she accepted the word. Neither was it absolutely
+necessary in a wife that she should understand more of a husband
+than his heart. Many learned men had had mere housekeepers for
+wives, and been satisfied, at least never complained.</p>
+
+<p>And what did she know about the fishers, men or women -- there
+were none at Wastbeach? For anything she knew to the contrary,
+they might all be philosophers together, and a fitting match for
+Malcolm might be far more easy to find amongst them than in the
+society to which she herself belonged, where in truth the
+philosophical element was rare enough. Then arose in her mind,
+she could not have told how, the vision, half logical, half
+pictorial, of a whole family of brave, believing, daring, saving
+fisher folk, father, mother, boys and girls, each sacrificing to
+the rest, each sacrificed to by all, and all devoted to their
+neighbours.</p>
+
+<p>Grand it was and blissful, and the borders of the great sea
+alone seemed fit place for such beings amphibious of time and
+eternity! Their very toils and dangers were but additional
+atmospheres to press their souls together! It was glorious! Why
+had she been born an earl's daughter, -- never to look a danger
+in the face -- never to have a chance of a true life -- that is,
+a grand, simple, noble one? -- Who then denied her the chance?
+Had she no power to order her own steps, to determine her own
+being? Was she nailed to her rank? Or who was there that could
+part her from it? Was she a prisoner in the dungeons of the House
+of Pride?</p>
+
+<p>When the gates of paradise closed behind Adam and Eve, they
+had this consolation left, that "the world was all before them
+where to choose." Was she not a free woman -- without even a
+guardian to trouble her with advice? She had no excuse to act
+ignobly! -- But had she any for being unmaidenly? -- Would it
+then be -- would it be a very unmaidenly thing if? The rest of
+the sentence did not take even the shape of words. But she
+answered it nevertheless in the words: "Not so unmaidenly as
+presumptuous." And alas there was little hope that he would ever
+presume to? He was such a modest youth with all his directness
+and fearlessness! If he had no respect for rank, -- and that was
+-- yes, she would say the word, hopeful -- he had, on the other
+hand, the profoundest respect for the human, and she could not
+tell how that might, in the individual matter, operate.</p>
+
+<p>Then she fell a-thinking of the difference between Malcolm and
+any other servant she had ever known. She hated the servile. She
+knew that it was false as well as low: she had not got so far as
+to see that it was low through its being false. She knew that
+most servants, while they spoke with the appearance of respect in
+presence, altered their tone entirely when beyond the circle of
+the eye -- theirs was eye service -- they were men pleasers --
+they were servile. She had overheard her maid speak of her as
+Lady Clem, and that not without a streak of contempt in the
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>But here was a man who touched no imaginary hat while he stood
+in the presence of his mistress, neither swore at her in the
+stable yard. He looked her straight in the face, and would upon
+occasion speak -- not his mind -- but the truth to her. Even his
+slight mistress had the conviction that if one dared in his
+presence but utter her name lightly, whoever he were he would
+have to answer to him for it. What a lovely thing was true
+service -- Absolutely divine!</p>
+
+<p>But, alas, such a youth would never, could never dare offer
+other than such service! Were she even to encourage him as a
+maiden might, he would but serve her the better -- would but
+embody his recognition of her favour, in fervour of ministering
+devotion. -- Was it not a recognized law, however, in the
+relation of superiors and inferiors, that with regard to such
+matters as well as others of no moment, the lady?</p>
+
+<p>Ah, but! for her to take the initiative, would provoke the
+conclusion -- as revolting to her as unavoidable to him -- that
+she judged herself his superior -- so greatly his superior as to
+be absolved from the necessity of behaving to him on the ordinary
+footing of man and woman. What a ground to start from with a
+husband! The idea was hateful to her. She tried the argument that
+such a procedure arrogated merely a superiority in social
+standing; but it made her recoil from it the more. He was so
+immeasurably her superior, that the poor little advantage on her
+side vanished like a candle in the sunlight, and she laughed
+herself to scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy," she laughed, "a midge, on the strength of having
+wings, condescending to offer marriage to a horse !" It would
+argue the assumption of equality in other and more important
+things than rank, or at least the confidence that her social
+superiority not only counterbalanced the difference, but left
+enough over to her credit to justify her initiative. And what a
+miserable fiction that money and position had a right to the
+first move before greatness of living fact! that having had the
+precedence of being! That Malcolm should imagine such her
+judgment -- No -- let all go -- let himself go rather! And then
+he might not choose to accept her munificent offer! Or worse --
+far worse! -- what if he should be tempted by rank and wealth,
+and, accepting her, be shorn of his glory and proved of the
+ordinary human type after all! A thousand times rather would she
+see the bright particular star blazing unreachable above her!
+What! would she carry it about a cinder in her pocket? -- And yet
+if he could be "turned to a coal," why should she go on
+worshipping him? -- alas! the offer itself was the only test
+severe enough to try him withal, and if he proved a cinder, she
+would by the very use of the test be bound to love, honour, and
+obey her cinder.</p>
+
+<p>She could not well reject him for accepting her -- neither
+could she marry him if he rose grandly superior to her
+temptations. No; he could be nothing to her nearer than the
+bright particular star.</p>
+
+<p>Thus went the thoughts to and fro in the minds of each.
+Neither could see the way. Both feared the risk of loss. Neither
+could hope greatly for gain.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXII"></a>CHAPTER LXII: THE
+DUNE</h1>
+
+<p>Having put Kelpie up, and fed and bedded her, Malcolm took his
+way to the Seaton, full of busily anxious thought. Things had
+taken a bad turn, and he was worse off for counsel than before.
+The enemy was in the house with his sister, and he had no longer
+any chance of judging how matters were going, as now he never
+rode out with her. But at least he could haunt the house. He
+would run therefore to his grandfather, and tell him that he was
+going to occupy his old quarters at the House that night.</p>
+
+<p>Returning directly and passing, as had been his custom,
+through the kitchen to ascend the small corkscrew stair the
+servants generally used, he encountered Mrs Courthope, who told
+him that her ladyship had given orders that her maid, who had
+come with Lady Bellair, should have his room.</p>
+
+<p>He was at once convinced that Florimel had done so with the
+intention of banishing him from the house, for there were dozens
+of rooms vacant, and many of them more suitable. It was a hard
+blow! How he wished for Mr Graham to consult! And yet Mr Graham
+was not of much use where any sort of plotting was wanted. He
+asked Mrs Courthope to let him have another room; but she looked
+so doubtful that he withdrew his request, and went back to his
+grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>It was Saturday, and not many of the boats would go fishing.
+Findlay's would not leave the harbour till Sunday was over, and
+therefore Malcolm was free. But he could not rest, and would go
+line fishing.</p>
+
+<p>"Daddy," he said, "I'm gaein oot to catch a haddick or sae to
+oor denner the morn. Ye micht jist sit doon upo' ane o' the
+Boar's Taes, an' tak a play o' yer pipes. I'll hear ye fine, an'
+it'll du me guid."</p>
+
+<p>The Boar's Toes were two or three small rocks that rose out of
+the sand near the end of the dune. Duncan agreed right willingly,
+and Malcolm, borrowing some lines, and taking the Psyche's
+dinghy, rowed out into the bay.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was down, the moon was up, and he had caught more fish
+than he wanted. His grandfather had got tired, and gone home, and
+the fountain of his anxious thoughts began to flow more rapidly.
+He must go ashore. He must go up to the House: who could tell
+what might not be going on there? He drew in his line, purposing
+to take the best of the fish to Miss Horn, and some to Mrs
+Courthope, as in the old days.</p>
+
+<p>The Psyche still lay on the sands, and he was rowing the
+dinghy towards her, when, looking round to direct his course, he
+thought he caught a glimpse of some one seated on the slope of
+the dune. Yes, there was some one there, sure enough. The old
+times rushed back on his memory: could it be Florimel? Alas! it
+was not likely she would now be wandering about alone! But if it
+were? Then for one endeavour more to rouse her slumbering
+conscience! He would call up all the associations of the last few
+months she had spent in the place, and, with the spirit of her
+father, as it were, hovering over her, conjure her, in his name,
+to break with Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>He rowed swiftly to the Psyche -- beached and drew up the
+dinghy, and climbed the dune. Plainly enough it was a lady who
+sat there. It might be one from the upper town, enjoying the
+lovely night; it might be Florimel, but how could she have got
+away, or wished to get away from her newly arrived guests? The
+voices of several groups of walkers came from the high road
+behind the dune, but there was no other figure to be seen all
+along the sands. He drew nearer. The lady did not move. If it
+were Florimel, would she not know him as he came, and would she
+wait for him?</p>
+
+<p>He drew nearer still. His heart gave a throb. Could it be? Or
+was the moon weaving some hallucination in his troubled brain? If
+it was a phantom, it was that of Lady Clementina; if but modelled
+of the filmy vapours of the moonlight, and the artist his own
+brain, the phantom was welcome as joy! His spirit seemed to soar
+aloft in the yellow air, and hang hovering over and around her,
+while his body stood rooted to the spot, like one who fears by
+moving nigher to lose the lovely vision of a mirage. She sat
+motionless, her gaze on the sea. Malcolm bethought himself that
+she could not know him in his fisher dress, and must take him for
+some rude fisherman staring at her. He must go at once, or
+approach and address her. He came forward at once.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>She did not start. Neither did she speak. She did not even
+turn her face. She rose first, then turned, and held out her
+hand. Three steps more, and he had it in his, and his eyes looked
+straight into hers. Neither spoke. The moon shone full on
+Clementina's face. There was no illumination fitter for that face
+than the moonlight, and to Malcolm it was lovelier than ever. Nor
+was it any wonder it should seem so to him, for certainly never
+had the eyes in it rested on his with such a lovely and trusting
+light in them.</p>
+
+<p>A moment she stood, then slowly sank upon the sand, and drew
+her skirts about her with a dumb show of invitation. The place
+where she sat was a little terraced hollow in the slope, forming
+a convenient seat. Malcolm saw but could not believe she actually
+made room for him to sit beside her -- alone with her in the
+universe. It was too much; he dared not believe it. And now by
+one of those wondrous duplications which are not always at least
+born of the fancy, the same scene in which he had found Florimel
+thus seated on the slope of the dune, appeared to be passing
+again through Malcolm's consciousness, only instead of Florimel
+was Clementina, and instead of the sun was the moon. And creature
+of the sunlight as Florimel was, bright and gay and beautiful,
+she paled into a creature of the cloud beside this maiden of the
+moonlight, tall and stately, silent and soft and grand.</p>
+
+<p>Again she made a movement. This time he could not doubt her
+invitation. It was as if her soul made room in her unseen world
+for him to enter and sit beside her. But who could enter heaven
+in his work day garments?</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you sit by me, Malcolm?" seeing his more than
+hesitation, she said at last, with a slight tremble in the voice
+that was music itself in his ears.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been catching fish, my lady," he answered, "and my
+clothes must be unpleasant. I will sit here."</p>
+
+<p>He went a little lower on the slope, and laid himself down,
+leaning on his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"Do fresh water fishes smell the same as the sea fishes,
+Malcolm?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I am not certain, my lady. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because if they do, -- You remember what you said to me as we
+passed the sawmill in the wood?"</p>
+
+<p>It was by silence Malcolm showed he did remember.</p>
+
+<p>"Does not this night remind you of that one at Wastbeach when
+we came upon you singing?" said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"It is like it, my lady -- now. But a little ago, before I saw
+you, I was thinking of that night, and thinking how different
+this was."</p>
+
+<p>Again a moon filled silence fell; and once more it was the
+lady who broke it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know who are at the house?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, my lady," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I had not been there more than an hour or two," she went on,
+"when they arrived. I suppose Florimel -- Lady Lossie thought I
+would not come if she told me she expected them."</p>
+
+<p>"And would you have come, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot endure the earl."</p>
+
+<p>"Neither can I. But then I know more about him than your
+ladyship does, and I am miserable for my mistress."</p>
+
+<p>It stung Clementina as if her heart had taken a beat backward.
+But her voice was steadier than it had yet been as she returned
+-- "Why should you be miserable for Lady Lossie?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would die rather than see her marry that wretch," he
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>Again her blood stung her in the left side.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not want her to marry, then?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I do," answered Malcolm, emphatically, "but not that
+fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Whom then, if I may ask?" ventured Clementina, trembling.</p>
+
+<p>But Malcolm was silent He did not feel it would be right to
+say. Clementina turned sick at heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard there is something dangerous about the
+moonlight," she said. "I think it does not suit me tonight. I
+will go -- home."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm sprung to his feet and offered his hand. She did not
+take it, but rose more lightly, though more slowly than he.</p>
+
+<p>"How did you come from the park, my lady?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"By a gate over there," she answered, pointing. "I wandered
+out after dinner, and the sea drew me."</p>
+
+<p>"If your ladyship will allow me, I will take you a much nearer
+way back," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Do then," she returned.</p>
+
+<p>He thought she spoke a little sadly, and set it down to her
+hating to go back to her fellow guests. What if she should leave
+tomorrow morning! he thought He could never then be sure she had
+really been with him that night. He must then sometimes think it
+a dream. But oh, what a dream! He could thank God for it all his
+life, if he should never dream so again.</p>
+
+<p>They walked across the grassy sand towards the tunnel in
+silence, he pondering what he could say that might comfort her
+and keep her from going so soon.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady never takes me out with her now," he said at
+length.</p>
+
+<p>He was going to add that, if she pleased, he could wait upon
+her with Kelpie, and show her the country. But then he saw that,
+if she were not with Florimel, his sister would be riding
+everywhere alone with Liftore. Therefore he stopped short.</p>
+
+<p>"And you feel forsaken -- deserted?" returned Clementina,
+sadly still.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the tunnel. It looked very black when he
+opened the door, but there was just a glimmer through the trees
+at the other end.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the valley of the shadow of death," she said. "Do I
+walk straight through?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady. You will soon come out in the light again," he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"Are there no steps to fall down?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"None, my lady. But I will go first if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>"No, that would but cut off the little light I have," she
+said. "Come beside me."</p>
+
+<p>They passed through in silence, save for the rustle of her
+dress, and the dull echo that haunted their steps. In a few
+moments they came out among the trees, but both continued silent.
+The still, thoughtful moonlight seemed to press them close
+together, but neither knew that the other felt the same.</p>
+
+<p>They reached a point in the road where another step would
+bring them in sight of the house.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot go wrong now, my lady," said Malcolm. "If you
+please I will go no farther."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not live in the house?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I used to do as I liked, and could be there or with my
+grandfather. I did mean to be at the House tonight, but my lady
+has given my room to her maid."</p>
+
+<p>"What! that woman Caley?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose so, my lady. I must sleep tonight in the village.
+If you could, my lady," he added, after a pause, and faltered,
+hesitating. She did not help him, but waited. "If you could -- if
+you would not be displeased at my asking you," he resumed, "-- if
+you could keep my lady from going farther with that -- I shall
+call him names if I go on."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a strange request," Clementina replied, after a
+moment's reflection. "I hardly know, as the guest of Lady Lossie,
+what answer I ought to make to it. One thing I will say, however,
+that, though you may know more of the man than I, you can hardly
+dislike him more. Whether I can interfere is another matter.
+Honestly, I do not think it would be of any use. But I do not say
+I will not. Good night."</p>
+
+<p>She hurried away, and did not again offer her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm walked back through the tunnel, his heart singing and
+making melody. Oh how lovely, how more than lovely, how divinely
+beautiful she was! And so kind and friendly! Yet she seemed just
+the least bit fitful too. Something troubled her, he said to
+himself. But he little thought that he, and no one else, had
+spoiled the moonlight for her. He went home to glorious dreams --
+she to a troubled half wakeful night. Not until she had made up
+her mind to do her utmost to rescue Florimel from Liftore, even
+if it gave her to Malcolm, did she find a moment's quiet. It was
+morning then, but she fell fast asleep, slept late, and woke
+refreshed.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXIII"></a>CHAPTER LXIII:
+CONFESSION OF SIN</h1>
+
+<p>Mr Crathie was slowly recovering, but still very weak. He did
+not, after having turned the corner, get well so fast as his
+medical minister judged he ought, and the reason was plain to
+Lizzy, dimly perceptible to his wife: he was ill at ease. A man
+may have more mind and more conscience, and more discomfort in
+both or either, than his neighbours give him credit for. They may
+be in the right about him up to a certain point in his history,
+but then a crisis, by them unperceived, perhaps to them
+inappreciable, arrived, after which the man to all eternity could
+never be the same as they had known him. Such a change must
+appear improbable, and save on the theory of a higher operative
+power, is improbable because impossible. But a man who has not
+created himself can never secure himself against the inroad of
+the glorious terror of that Goodness which was able to utter him
+into being, with all its possible wrongs and repentances. The
+fact that a man has never, up to any point yet, been aware of
+aught beyond himself, cannot shut him out who is beyond him, when
+at last he means to enter. Not even the soul benumbing visits of
+his clerical minister could repress the swell of the slow
+mounting dayspring in the soul of the hard, commonplace, business
+worshipping man, Hector Crathie.</p>
+
+<p>The hireling would talk to him kindly enough -- of his
+illness, or of events of the day, especially those of the town
+and neighbourhood, and encourage him with reiterated expression
+of the hope that ere many days they would enjoy a tumbler
+together as of old, but as to wrong done, apology to make,
+forgiveness to be sought, or consolation to be found, the dumb
+dog had not uttered a bark.</p>
+
+<p>The sources of the factor's restless discomfort were now two;
+the first, that he had lifted his hand to women; the second, the
+old ground of his quarrel with Malcolm, brought up by Lizzy.</p>
+
+<p>All his life, since ever he had had business, Mr Crathie had
+prided himself on his honesty, and was therefore in one of the
+most dangerous moral positions a man could occupy -- ruinous even
+to the honesty itself. Asleep in the mud, he dreamed himself
+awake on a pedestal. At best such a man is but perched on a
+needle point when he thinketh he standeth. Of him who prided
+himself on his honour I should expect that one day, in the long
+run it might be, he would do some vile thing. Not, probably,
+within the small circle of illumination around his wretched
+rushlight, but in the great region beyond it, of what to him is a
+moral darkness, or twilight vague, he may be or may become
+capable of doing a deed that will stink in the nostrils of the
+universe -- and in his own when he knows it as it is. The honesty
+in which a man can pride himself must be a small one, for more
+honesty will ever reveal more defect, while perfect honesty will
+never think of itself at all. The limited honesty of the factor
+clave to the interests of his employers, and let the rights he
+encountered take care of themselves. Those he dealt with were to
+him rather as enemies than friends, not enemies to be prayed for,
+but to be spoiled. Malcolm's doctrine of honesty in horse dealing
+was to him ludicrously new. His notion of honesty in that kind
+was to cheat the buyer for his master if he could, proud to write
+in his book a large sum against the name of the animal. He would
+have scorned in his very soul the idea of making a farthing by it
+himself through any business quirk whatever, but he would not
+have been the least ashamed if, having sold Kelpie, he had heard
+-- let me say after a week of possession -- that she had dashed
+out her purchaser's brains. He would have been a little shocked,
+a little sorry perhaps, but nowise ashamed. "By this time," he
+would have said, "the man ought to have been up to her, and
+either taken care of himself -- or sold her again," -- to dash
+out another man's brains instead!</p>
+
+<p>That the bastard Malcolm, or the ignorant and indeed fallen
+fisher girl Lizzy, should judge differently, nowise troubled him:
+what could they know about the rights and wrongs of business? The
+fact which Lizzy sought to bring to bear upon him, that our Lord
+would not have done such a thing, was to him no argument at all.
+He said to himself with the superior smile of arrogated common
+sense, that "no mere man since the fall" could be expected to do
+like him; that he was divine, and had not to fight for a living;
+that he set us an example that we might see what sinners we were;
+that religion was one thing, and a very proper thing, but
+business was another, and a very proper thing also -- with
+customs and indeed laws of its own far more determinate, at least
+definite, than those of religion, and that to mingle the one with
+the other was not merely absurd -- it was irreverent and wrong,
+and certainly never intended in the Bible, which must surely be
+common sense.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Bible always with him, -- never the will of Christ.
+But although he could dispose of the question thus
+satisfactorily, yet, as he lay ill, supine, without any
+distracting occupation, the thing haunted him.</p>
+
+<p>Now in his father's cottage had lain, much dabbled in of the
+children, a certain boardless copy of the Pilgrim's Progress,
+round in the face and hollow in the back, in which, amongst other
+pictures was one of the Wicket Gate. This scripture of his
+childhood, given by inspiration of God, threw out, in one of his
+troubled and feverish nights, a dream bud in the brain of the
+man. He saw the face of Jesus looking on him over the top of the
+Wicket Gate, at which he had been for some time knocking in vain,
+while the cruel dog barked loud from the enemy's yard. But that
+face, when at last it came, was full of sorrowful displeasure.
+And in his heart he knew that it was because of a certain
+transaction in horse dealing, wherein he had hitherto lauded his
+own cunning -- adroitness, he considered it -- and success. One
+word only he heard from the lips of the Man -- "Worker of
+iniquity," -- and woke with a great start. From that moment
+truths began to be facts to him. The beginning of the change was
+indeed very small, but every beginning is small, and every
+beginning is a creation. Monad, molecule, protoplasm, whatever
+word may be attached to it when it becomes appreciable by men,
+being then, however many stages, I believe, upon its journey,
+beginning is an irrepressible fact; and however far from good or
+humble even after many days, the man here began to grow good and
+humble. His dull unimaginative nature, a perfect lumber room of
+the world and its rusting affairs, had received a gift in a dream
+-- a truth from the lips of the Lord, remodelled in the brain and
+heart of the tinker of Elstow, and sent forth in his wondrous
+parable to be pictured and printed, and lie in old Hector
+Crathie's cottage, that it might enter and lie in young Hector
+Crathie's brain until he grew old and had done wrong enough to
+heed it, when it rose upon him in a dream, and had its way.
+Henceforth the claims of his neighbour began to reveal
+themselves, and his mind to breed conscientious doubts and
+scruples, with which, struggle as he might against it, a certain
+respect for Malcolm would keep coming and mingling -- a feeling
+which grew with its returns, until, by slow changes, he began at
+length to regard him as the minister of God's vengeance -- for
+his punishment, -- and perhaps salvation -- who could tell?</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy's nightly ministrations had not been resumed, but she
+often called, and was a good deal with him; for Mrs Crathie had
+learned to like the humble, helpful girl still better when she
+found she had taken no offence at being deprived of her post of
+honour by his bedside. One day, when Malcolm was seated, mending
+a net, among the thin grass and great red daisies of the links by
+the bank of the burn, where it crossed the sands from the Lossie
+grounds to the sea, Lizzy came up to him and said,</p>
+
+<p>"The factor wad like to see ye, Ma'colm, as sune's ye can gang
+till 'im."</p>
+
+<p>She waited no reply. Malcolm rose and went</p>
+
+<p>At the factor's, the door was opened by Mrs Crathie herself,
+who, looking mysterious, led him to the dining room, where she
+plunged at once into business, doing her best to keep down all
+manifestation of the profound resentment she cherished against
+him. Her manner was confidential, almost coaxing.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, Ma'colm," she said, as if pursuing instead of
+commencing a conversation, "he's some sore about the little
+fraicass between him 'an you. Jest make your apoalogies till 'im
+and tell 'im you had a drop too much, and your soary for
+misbehavin' yerself to wann sae much your shuperrior. Tell him
+that, Ma'colm, an' there's a half croon to ye."</p>
+
+<p>She wished much to speak English, and I have tried to
+represent the thing she did speak, which was neither honest
+Scotch nor anything like English. Alas! the good, pithy, old
+Anglo Saxon dialect is fast perishing, and a jargon of corrupt
+English taking its place.</p>
+
+<p>"But, mem," said Malcolm, taking no notice either of the coin
+or the words that accompanied the offer of it, "I canna lee. I
+wasna in drink, an' I'm no sorry."</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot!" returned Mrs Crathie, blurting out her Scotch fast
+enough now, "I s' warran' ye can lee well eneuch whan ye ha'e
+occasion. Tak' yer siller, an' du as I tell ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Wad ye ha'e me damned, mem?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs Crathie gave a cry and held up her hands. She was too well
+accustomed to imprecations from the lips of her husband for any
+but an affected horror, but, regarding the honest word as a bad
+one, she assumed an air of injury.</p>
+
+<p>"Wad ye daur to sweir afore a leddy," she exclaimed, shaking
+her uplifted hands in pretence of ghasted astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"If Mr Crathie wishes to see me, ma'am," rejoined Malcolm,
+taking up the shield of English, "I am ready. If not, please
+allow me to go."</p>
+
+<p>The same moment the bell whose rope was at the head of the
+factor's bed, rang violently, and Mrs Crathie's importance
+collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>"Come this w'y," she said, and turning led him up the stair to
+the room where her husband lay.</p>
+
+<p>Entering, Malcolm stood astonished at the change he saw upon
+the strong man of rubicund countenance, and his heart filled with
+compassion. The factor was sitting up in bed, looking very white
+and worn and troubled. Even his nose had grown thin and white. He
+held out his hand to him, and said to his wife, "Tak the door to
+ye, Mistress Crathie," indicating which side he wished it closed
+from.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye was some sair upo' me, Ma'colm," he went on, grasping the
+youth's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I doobt I was ower sair," said Malcolm, who could hardly
+speak for a lump in his throat.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, I deserved it. But eh, Ma'colm! I canna believe it was
+me: it bude to be the drink."</p>
+
+<p>"It was the drink," rejoined Malcolm; "an' eh sir! afore ye
+rise frae that bed, sweir to the great God 'at ye'll never drink
+nae mair drams, nor onything 'ayont ae tum'ler at a sittin'."</p>
+
+<p>"I sweir't; I sweir't, Ma'colm!" cried the factor.</p>
+
+<p>"It's easy to sweir't noo, sir, but whan ye're up again it'll
+be hard to keep yer aith. -- O Lord!" spoke the youth, breaking
+out into almost involuntary prayer, "help this man to haud troth
+wi' thee. -- An' noo, Maister Crathie," he resumed, "I'm yer
+servan', ready to do onything I can. Forgi'e me, sir, for layin'
+on ower sair."</p>
+
+<p>"I forgi'e ye wi' a' my hert," returned the factor, inly
+delighted to have something to forgive.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank ye frae mine," answered Malcolm, and again they shook
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"But eh, Ma'colm, my man!" said the factor, "hoo will I ever
+shaw my face again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fine that!" returned Malcolm, eagerly. "Fowk's terrible guid
+natur'd whan ye alloo 'at ye're i' the wrang. I do believe 'at
+whan a man confesses till 's neebour, an' says he's sorry, he
+thinks mair o' 'im nor afore he did it. Ye see we a' ken we ha'e
+dune wrang, but we ha'ena a' confessed. An' it's a queer thing,
+but a man'll think it gran' o' 's neebour to confess, whan a' the
+time there's something he winna repent o' himsel' for fear o' the
+shame o' ha'ein' to confess 't. To me, the shame lies in no
+confessin' efter ye ken ye're wrang. Ye'll see, sir, the fisher
+fowk 'll min' what ye say to them a heap better noo."</p>
+
+<p>"Div ye railly think it, Ma'colm?" sighed the factor with a
+flush.</p>
+
+<p>"I div that, sir. Only whan ye grow better, gien ye'll alloo
+me to say't, sir, ye maunna lat Sawtan temp' ye to think 'at this
+same repentin' was but a wakeness o' the flesh, an' no an
+enlichtenment o' the speerit."</p>
+
+<p>"I s' tie mysel' up till 't," cried the factor, eagerly. "Gang
+an' tell them i' my name, 'at I tak' back ilka scart o' a nottice
+I ever ga'e ane o' them to quit, only we maun ha'e nae mair
+stan'in' o' honest fowk 'at comes to bigg herbours till them. --
+Div ye think it wad be weel ta'en gien ye tuik a poun' nott the
+piece to the twa women?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wadna du that, sir, gien I was you," answered Malcolm. "For
+yer ain sake, I wadna to Mistress Mair, for naething wad gar her
+tak' it -- it wad only affront her; an' for Nancy Tacket's sake,
+I wadna to her, for as her name so's her natur': she wad not only
+tak it, but she wad lat ye play the same as aften 's ye likit for
+less siller. Ye'll ha'e mony a chance o' makin' 't up to them
+baith, ten times ower, afore you an' them pairt, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I maun lea' the cuintry, Ma'colm."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, sir, ye'll du naething o' the kin'. The fishers
+themsel's wad rise, no to lat ye, as they did wi' Blew Peter! As
+sune's ye're able to be aboot again, ye'll see plain eneuch 'at
+there's no occasion for onything like that, sir. Portlossie wadna
+ken 'tsel' wantin' ye. Jist gie me a commission to say to the twa
+honest women 'at ye're sorry for what ye did, an' that's a' 'at
+need be said 'atween you an them, or their men aither."</p>
+
+<p>The result showed that Malcolm was right; for, the very next
+day, instead of looking for gifts from him, the two injured women
+came to the factor's door, first Annie Mair, with the offering of
+a few fresh eggs, scarce at the season, and after her Nancy
+Tacket, with a great lobster.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXIV"></a>CHAPTER LXIV: A
+VISITATION</h1>
+
+<p>Malcolm's custom was, first, immediately after breakfast, to
+give Kelpie her airing -- and a tremendous amount of air she
+wanted for the huge animal furnace of her frame, and the fiery
+spirit that kept it alight; then, returning to the Seaton, to
+change the dress of the groom, in which he always appeared about
+the house, lest by any chance his mistress should want him, for
+that of the fisherman, and help with the nets, or the boats, or
+in whatever was going on. As often as he might he did what seldom
+a man would -- went to the long shed where the women prepared the
+fish for salting, took a knife, and wrought as deftly as any of
+them, throwing a marvellously rapid succession of cleaned
+herrings into the preserving brine. It was no wonder he was a
+favourite with the women. Although, however, the place was
+malodorous and the work dirty, I cannot claim so much for Malcolm
+as may at first appear to belong to him, for he had been
+accustomed to the sight and smell from earliest childhood. Still,
+as I say, it was work the men would not do. He had such a
+chivalrous humanity that it was misery to him to see man or woman
+at anything scorned, except he bore a hand himself. He did it half
+in love, half in terror of being unjust.</p>
+
+<p>He had gone to Mr Crathie in his fisher clothes, thinking it
+better the sick man should not be reminded of the cause of his
+illness more forcibly than could not be helped. The nearest way
+led past a corner of the house overlooked by one of the drawing
+room windows, Clementina saw him, and, judging by his garb that
+he would probably return presently, went out in the hope of
+meeting him; and as he was going back to his net by the sea gate,
+he caught sight of her on the opposite side of the burn,
+accompanied only by a book. He walked through the burn, climbed
+the bank, and approached her.</p>
+
+<p>It was a hot summer afternoon. The burn ran dark and brown and
+cool in deep shade, but the sea beyond was glowing in light, and
+the laburnum blossoms hung like cocoons of sunbeams. No breath of
+air was stirring; no bird sang; the sun was burning high in the
+west. Clementina stood waiting him, like a moon that could hold
+her own in the face of the sun.</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm," she said, "I have been watching all day, but have
+not found a single opportunity of speaking to your mistress as
+you wished. But to tell the truth, I am not sorry, for the more I
+think about it, the less I see what to say. That another does not
+like a person, can have little weight with one who does, and I
+know nothing against him. I wish you would release me from my
+promise. It is such an ugly thing to speak to one's hostess to
+the disadvantage of a fellow guest!"</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," said Malcolm. "It was not a right thing to ask
+of you. I beg your pardon, my lady, and give you back your
+promise, if such you count it. But indeed I do not think you
+promised."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, I would rather be free. Had it been before you
+left London -- Lady Lossie is very kind, but does not seem to put
+the same confidence in me as formerly. She and Lady Bellair and
+that man make a trio, and I am left outside. I almost think I
+ought to go. Even Caley is more of a friend than I am. I cannot
+get rid of the suspicion that something not right is going on.
+There seems a bad air about the place. Those two are playing
+their game with the inexperience of that poor child, your
+mistress."</p>
+
+<p>"I know that very well, my lady, but I hope yet they will not
+win," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>By this time they were near the tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you let me through to the shore?" asked Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, my lady. -- I wish you could see the boats go out.
+From the Boar's Tail it is a pretty sight. They will all be
+starting together as soon as the tide turns."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Clementina began questioning him about the night
+fishing, and Malcolm described its pleasures and dangers, and the
+pleasures of its dangers, in such fashion that Clementina
+listened with delight. He dwelt especially on the feeling almost
+of disembodiment, and existence as pure thought, arising from the
+all pervading clarity and fluidity, the suspension, and the
+unceasing motion.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could once feel like that," exclaimed Clementina.
+"Could I not go with you -- for one night -- just for once,
+Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lady, it would hardly do, I am afraid. If you knew the
+discomforts that must assail one unaccustomed -- I cannot tell --
+but I doubt if you would go. All the doors to bliss have their
+defences of swamps and thorny thickets through which alone they
+can be gained. You would need to be a fisherman's sister -- or
+wife, I fear, my lady, to get through to this one."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina smiled gravely, but did not reply, and Malcolm too
+was silent, thinking.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said at last, "I see how we can manage it. You shall
+have a boat for your own use, my lady, and --"</p>
+
+<p>"But I want to see just what you see, and to feel, as nearly
+as I may, what you feel. I don't want a downy, rose leaf notion
+of the thing. I want to understand what you fishermen encounter
+and experience."</p>
+
+<p>"We must make a difference though, my lady. Look what clothes,
+what boots we fishers must wear to be fit for our work! But you
+shall have a true idea as far as it reaches, and one that will go
+a long way towards enabling you to understand the rest. You shall
+go in a real fishing boat, with a full crew and all the nets, and
+you shall catch real herrings; only you shall not be out longer
+than you please. -- But there is hardly time to arrange for it
+tonight, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Tomorrow then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I have no doubt I can manage it then."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you!" said Clementina. "It will be a great
+delight."</p>
+
+<p>"And now," suggested Malcolm, "would you like to go through
+the village, and see some of the cottages, and how the fishers
+live?"</p>
+
+<p>"If they would not think me inquisitive, or intrusive,"
+answered Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no danger of that," rejoined Malcolm. "If it were my
+Lady Bellair, to patronize, and deal praise and blame, as if what
+she calls poverty were fault and childishness, and she their
+spiritual as well as social superior, they might very likely be
+what she would call rude. She was here once before, and we have
+some notion of her about the Seaton. I venture to say there is
+not a woman in it who is not her moral superior, and many of them
+are her superiors in intellect and true knowledge, if they are
+not so familiar with London scandal. Mr Graham says that in the
+kingdom of heaven every superior is a ruler, for there to rule is
+to raise, and a man's rank is his power to uplift."</p>
+
+<p>"I would I were in the kingdom of heaven, if it be such as you
+and Mr Graham take it for," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"You must be in it, my lady, or you couldn't wish it to be
+such as it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Can one then be in it, and yet seem to be out of it,
+Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"So many are out of it that seem to be in it, my lady, that
+one might well imagine it the other way with some."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not uncharitable, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our Lord speaks of many coming up to his door confident of
+admission, whom yet he sends from him. Faith is obedience, not
+confidence."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I do well to fear."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady, so long as your fear makes you knock the
+louder."</p>
+
+<p>"But if I be in, as you say, how can I go on knocking?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are a thousand more doors to knock at after you are in,
+my lady. No one content to stand just inside the gate will be
+inside it long. But it is one thing to be in, and another to be
+satisfied that we are in. Such a satisfying as comes from our own
+feelings may, you see from what our Lord says, be a false one. It
+is one thing to gather the conviction for ourselves, and another
+to have it from God. What wise man would have it before he gives
+it? He who does what his Lord tells him, is in the kingdom, if
+every feeling of heart or brain told him he was out. And his Lord
+will see that he knows it one day. But I do not think, my lady,
+one can ever be quite sure, until the king himself has come in to
+sup with him, and has let him know that he is altogether one with
+him."</p>
+
+<p>During the talk of which this is the substance, they reached
+the Seaton, and Malcolm took her to see his grandfather.</p>
+
+<p>"Taal and faer and chentle and coot!" murmured the old man as
+he held her hand for a moment in his. With a start of suspicion
+he dropped it, and cried out in alarm -- "She'll not pe a
+Cam'ell, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na, daddy -- far frae that," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Then my laty will pe right welcome to Tuncan's heart," he
+replied, and taking her hand again led her to a chair.</p>
+
+<p>When they left, she expressed herself charmed with the piper,
+but when she learned the cause of his peculiar behaviour at
+first, she looked grave, and found his feeling difficult to
+understand.</p>
+
+<p>They next visited the Partaness, with whom she was far more
+amused than puzzled. But her heart was drawn to the young woman
+who sat in a corner, rocking her child in its wooden cradle, and
+never lifting her eyes from her needlework: she knew her for the
+fisher girl of Malcolm's picture.</p>
+
+<p>From house to house he took her, and where they went, they
+were welcomed. If the man was smoking, he put away his pipe, and
+the woman left her work and sat down to talk with her. They did
+the honours of their poor houses in a homely and dignified
+fashion. Clementina was delighted. But Malcolm told her he had
+taken her only to the best houses in the place to begin with. The
+village, though a fair sample of fishing villages, was no
+ex-sample, he said: there were all kinds of people in it as in
+every other. It was a class in the big life school of the world,
+whose special masters were the sea and the herrings.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you do now, if you were lord of the place?" asked
+Clementina, as they were walking back by the sea gate; "-- I
+mean, what would be the first thing you would do?"</p>
+
+<p>"As it would be my business to know my tenants that I might
+rule them," he answered, "I would first court the society and
+confidence of the best men among them. I should be in no hurry to
+make changes, but would talk openly with them, and try to be
+worthy of their confidence. Of course I would see a little better
+to their houses, and improve their harbour: and I would build a
+boat for myself that would show them a better kind; but my main
+hope for them would be the same as for myself -- the knowledge of
+him whose is the sea and all its store, who cares for every fish
+in its bosom, but for the fisher more than many herrings. I would
+spend my best efforts to make them follow him whose first
+servants were the fishermen of Galilee, for with all my heart I
+believe that that Man holds the secret of life, and that only the
+man who obeys him can ever come to know the God who is the root
+and crown of our being, and whom to know is freedom and
+bliss."</p>
+
+<p>A pause followed.</p>
+
+<p>"But do you not sometimes find it hard to remember God all
+through your work?" asked Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Not very hard, my lady. Sometimes I wake up to find that I
+have been in an evil mood and forgetting him, and then life is
+hard until I get near him again. But it is not my work that makes
+me forget him. When I go a-fishing, I go to catch God's fish;
+when I take Kelpie out, I am teaching one of God's wild
+creatures; when I read the Bible or Shakspere, I am listening to
+the word of God, uttered in each after its kind. When the wind
+blows on my face, what matter that the chymist pulls it to
+pieces! He cannot hurt it, for his knowledge of it cannot make my
+feeling of it a folly, so long as he cannot pull that to pieces
+with his retorts and crucibles: it is to me the wind of him who
+makes it blow, the sign of something in him, the fit emblem of
+his spirit, that breathes into my spirit the breath of life. When
+Mr Graham talks to me, it is a prophet come from God that teaches
+me, as certainly as if his fiery chariot were waiting to carry
+him back when he had spoken; for the word he utters at once
+humbles and uplifts my soul, telling it that God is all in all
+and my God -- that the Lord Christ is the truth and the life, and
+the way home to the Father."</p>
+
+<p>After a little pause,</p>
+
+<p>"And when you are talking to a rich, ignorant, proud lady?"
+said Clementina, "-- what do you feel then?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I would it were my lady Clementina instead," answered
+Malcolm with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>She held her peace.</p>
+
+<p>When he left her, Malcolm hurried to Scaurnose and arranged
+with Blue Peter for his boat and crew the next night. Returning
+to his grandfather, he found a note waiting him from Mrs
+Courthope, to the effect that, as Miss Caley, her ladyship's
+maid, had preferred another room, there was no reason why, if he
+pleased, he should not re-occupy his own.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXV"></a>CHAPTER LXV: THE EVE
+OF THE CRISIS</h1>
+
+<p>It was late in the sweetest of summer mornings when the
+Partan's boat slipped slowly back with a light wind to the
+harbour of Portlossie. Malcolm did not wait to land the fish, but
+having changed his clothes and taken breakfast with Duncan, who
+was always up early, went to look after Kelpie. When he had done
+with her, finding some of the household already in motion, he
+went through the kitchen, and up the old corkscrew stone stair to
+his room to have the sleep he generally had before his breakfast.
+Presently came a knock at his door, and there was Rose.</p>
+
+<p>The girl's behaviour to Malcolm was much changed. The
+conviction had been strengthened in her that he was not what he
+seemed, and she regarded him now with a vague awe. She looked
+this way and that along the passage, with fear in her eyes, then
+stepped timidly inside the room to tell him, in a hurried
+whisper, that she had seen the woman who gave her the poisonous
+philtre, talking to Caley the night before, at the foot of the
+bridge, after everybody else was in bed. She had been miserable
+till she could warn him. He thanked her heartily, and said he
+would be on his guard; he would neither eat nor drink in the
+house. She crept softly away. He secured the door, lay down, and
+trying to think fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When he woke his brain was clear. The very next day, whether
+Lenorme came or not, he would declare himself. That night he
+would go fishing with Lady Clementina, but not one day longer
+would he allow those people to be about his sister. Who could
+tell what might not be brewing, or into what abyss, with the help
+of her friends, the woman Catanach might not plunge Florimel?</p>
+
+<p>He rose, took Kelpie out, and had a good gallop. On his way
+back he saw in the distance Florimel riding with Liftore. The
+earl was on his father's bay mare. He could not endure the sight,
+and dashed home at full speed.</p>
+
+<p>Learning from Rose that Lady Clementina was in the flower
+garden, he found her at the swan basin, feeding the gold and
+silver fishes. An under gardener who had been about the place for
+thirty years, was at work not far off. The light splash of the
+falling column which the marble swan spouted from its upturned
+beak, prevented her from hearing his approach until he was close
+behind her. She turned, and her fair face took the flush of a
+white rose.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," he said, "I have got everything arranged for
+tonight."</p>
+
+<p>"And when shall we go?" she asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"At the turn of the tide, about half past seven. But seven is
+your dinner hour."</p>
+
+<p>"It is of no consequence. -- But could you not make it half an
+hour later, and then I should not seem rude?"</p>
+
+<p>"Make it any hour you please, my lady, so long as the tide is
+falling."</p>
+
+<p>"Let it be eight then, and dinner will be almost over. They
+will not miss me after that. Mr Cairns is going to dine with
+them. I think, except Liftore, I never disliked a man so much.
+Shall I tell them where I am going?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady. It will be better. -- They will look amazed --
+for all their breeding!"</p>
+
+<p>"Whose boat is it, that I may be able to tell them if they
+should ask me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Joseph Mair's. He and his wife will come and fetch you. Annie
+Mair will go with us -- if I may say us: will you allow me to go
+in your boat, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't go without you, Malcolm."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, my lady. Indeed I don't know how I could let you
+go without me! Not that there is anything to fear, or that I
+could make it the least safer; but somehow it seems my business
+to take care of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Like Kelpie?" said Clementina, with a merrier smile than he
+had ever seen on her face before.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady," answered Malcolm; "-- if to do for you all and
+the best you will permit me to do, be to take care of you like
+Kelpie, then so it is."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina gave a little sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Mind you don't scruple, my lady, to give what orders you
+please. It will be your fishing boat for tonight."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina bowed her head in acknowledgment.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, my lady," Malcolm went on, "just look about you for
+a moment. See this great vault of heaven, full of golden light
+raining on trees and flowers -- every atom of air shining. Take
+the whole into your heart, that you may feel the difference at
+night, my lady -- when the stars, and neither sun nor moon, will
+be in the sky, and all the flowers they shine on will be their
+own flitting, blinking, swinging, shutting and opening
+reflections in the swaying floor of the ocean, -- when the heat
+will be gone, and the air clean and clear as the thoughts of a
+saint."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina did as he said, and gazed above and around her on
+the glory of the summer day overhanging the sweet garden, and on
+the flowers that had just before been making her heart ache with
+their unattainable secret. But she thought with herself that if
+Malcolm and she but shared it with a common heart as well as
+neighboured eyes, gorgeous day and ethereal night, or snow clad
+wild and sky of stormy blackness, were alike welcome to her
+spirit.</p>
+
+<p>As they talked they wandered up the garden, and had drawn near
+the spot where, in the side of the glen, was hollowed the cave of
+the hermit. They now turned towards the pretty arbour of moss
+that covered its entrance, each thinking the other led, but
+Malcolm not without reluctance. For how horribly and
+unaccountably had he not been shaken, the only time he ever
+entered it, at the sight of the hermit! The thing was a foolish
+wooden figure, no doubt, but the thought that it still sat over
+its book in the darkest corner of the cave, ready to rise and
+advance with outstretched hand to welcome its visitor, had, ever
+since then, sufficed to make him shudder. He was on the point of
+warning Clementina lest she too should be worse than startled,
+when he was arrested by the voice of John Jack, the old gardener,
+who came stooping after them, looking a sexton of flowers.</p>
+
+<p>"Ma'colm, Ma'colm!" he cried, and crept up wheezing. "-- I beg
+yer leddyship's pardon, my leddy, but I wadna ha'e Ma'colm lat ye
+gang in there ohn tellt ye what there is inside."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, John. I was just going to tell my lady," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Because, ye see," pursued John, "I was ae day here i' the
+gairden -- an' I was jist graftin' a bonny wull rose buss wi' a
+Hector o' France -- an' it grew to be the bonniest rose buss in
+a' the haul gairden -- whan the markis, no the auld markis, but
+my leddy's father, cam' up the walk there, an' a bonny young
+leddy wi' his lordship, as it micht be yersel's twa -- an' I beg
+yer pardon, my leddy, but I'm an auld man noo, an' whiles forgets
+the differs 'atween fowk -- an' this yoong leddy 'at they ca'd
+Miss Cam'ell -- ye kenned her yersel' efterhin', I daursay,
+Ma'colm -- he was unco ta'en with her, the markis, as ilka body
+cud see ohn luikit that near, sae 'at some saich 'at hoo he hed
+no richt to gang on wi' her that gait, garrin' her believe, gien
+he wasna gaein' to merry her. That's naither here nor there,
+hooever, seein' it a' cam' to jist naething ava'. Sae up they
+gaed to the cave yon'er, as I was tellin' ye; an' hoo it was, was
+a won'er, for I s' warran' she had been aboot the place near a
+towmon (twelvemonth), but never had she been intil that cave, and
+kenned no more nor the bairn unborn what there was in 't. An' sae
+whan the airemite, as the auld minister ca'd him, though what for
+he ca'd a muckle block like yon an airy mite, I'm sure I never
+cud fathom -- whan he gat up, as I was sayin', an' cam' foret wi'
+his han' oot, she gae a scraich 'at jist garred my lugs dirl, an'
+doon she drappit, an' there, whan I ran up, was she lyin' i' the
+markis his airms, as white 's a cauk eemege, an' it was lang or
+he brought her till hersel', for he wadna lat me rin for the
+hoosekeeper, but sent me fleein' to the f'untain for watter, an'
+gied me a gowd guinea to haud my tongue aboot it a'. Sae noo, my
+leddy, ye're forewarnt, an' no ill can come to ye, for there's
+naething to be fleyt at whan ye ken what's gauin' to meet
+ye."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm had turned his head aside, and now moved on without
+remark. Struck by his silence, Clementina looked up, and saw his
+face very pale, and the tears standing in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You must tell me the sad story, Malcolm," she murmured. "I
+could scarcely understand a word the old man said."</p>
+
+<p>He continued silent, and seemed struggling with some emotion.
+But when they were within a few paces of the arbour, he stopped
+short, and said -- "I would rather not go in there today. You
+would oblige me, my lady, if you would not go."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him again, with wonder but more concern in
+her lovely face, put her hand on his arm, gently turned him away,
+and walked back with him to the fountain. Not a word more did she
+say about the matter.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXVI"></a>CHAPTER LXVI:
+SEA</h1>
+
+<p>The evening came; and the company at Lossie House was still
+seated at table, Clementina heartily weary of the vapid talk that
+had been going on all through the dinner, when she was informed
+that a fisherman of the name of Mair was at the door, accompanied
+by his wife, saying they had an appointment with her. She had
+already acquainted her hostess, when first they sat down, with
+her arrangements for going a-fishing that night, and much foolish
+talk and would be wit had followed; now, when she rose and
+excused herself, they all wished her a pleasant evening, in a
+tone indicating the conviction that she little knew what she was
+about, and would soon be longing heartily enough to be back with
+them in the drawing room, whose lighted windows she would see
+from the boat. But Clementina hoped otherwise, hurriedly changed
+her dress, hastened to join Malcolm's messengers, and almost in a
+moment had made the two childlike people at home with her, by the
+simplicity and truth of her manner, and the directness of her
+utterance. They had not talked with her five minutes before they
+said in their hearts that here was the wife for the marquis if he
+could get her.</p>
+
+<p>"She's jist like ane o' oorsel's," whispered Annie to her
+husband on the first opportunity, "only a hantle better an
+bonnier."</p>
+
+<p>They took the nearest way to the harbour -- through the town,
+and Lady Clementina and Blue Peter kept up a constant talk as
+they went. All in the streets and at the windows stared to see
+the grand lady from the House walking between a Scaurnose
+fisherman and his wife, and chatting away with them as if they
+were all fishers together.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the wordle comin' till!" cried Mrs Mellis, the
+draper's wife, as she saw them pass.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glaid to see the yoong wuman -- an' a bonny lass she is!
+-- in sic guid company," said Miss Horn, looking down from the
+opposite side of the way. "I'm thinkin' the han' o' the markis
+'ill be i' this, no'!"</p>
+
+<p>All was ready to receive her, but in the present bad state of
+the harbour, and the tide having now ebbed a little way, the boat
+could not get close either to quay or shore. Six of the crew were
+on board, seated on the thwarts with their oars shipped, for
+Peter had insisted on a certain approximation to man of war
+manners and discipline for the evening, or at least until they
+got to the fishing ground. The shore itself formed one side of
+the harbour, and sloped down into it, and on the sand stood
+Malcolm with a young woman, whom Clementina recognised at once as
+the girl she had seen at the Findlays'.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," he said, approaching, "would you do me the favour
+to let Lizzy go with you. She would like to attend your ladyship,
+because, being a fisherman's daughter, she is used to the sea,
+and Mrs Mair is not so much at home upon it, being a farmer's
+daughter from inland."</p>
+
+<p>Receiving Clementina's thankful assent, he turned to Lizzy and
+said --</p>
+
+<p>"Min' ye tell my lady what rizon ye ken whaurfor my mistress
+at the Hoose sudna be merried upo' Lord Liftore -- him 'at was
+Lord Meikleham. Ye may speyk to my lady there as ye wad to mysel'
+-- an' better, haein' the hert o' a wuman."</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy blushed a deep red, and dared but the glimmer of a
+glance at Clementina, but there was only shame, no annoyance in
+her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye winna repent it, Lizzy," concluded Malcolm, and turned
+away.</p>
+
+<p>He cherished a faint hope that, if she heard or guessed
+Lizzy's story, Clementina might yet find some way of bringing her
+influence to bear on his sister even at the last hour of her
+chance -- from which, for her sake, he shrunk the more the nearer
+it drew. Clementina held out her hand to Lizzy, and again
+accepted her offered service with kindly thanks.</p>
+
+<p>Now Blue Peter, having been ship's carpenter in his day, had
+constructed a little poop in the stern of his craft; thereon
+Malcolm had laid cushions and pillows and furs and blankets from
+the Psyche, -- a grafting of Cleopatra's galley upon the rude
+fishing boat -- and there Clementina was to repose in state.
+Malcolm gave a sign: Peter took his wife in his arms, and walking
+through the few yards of water between, lifted her into the boat,
+which lay with its stern to the shore. Malcolm and Clementina
+turned to each other: he was about to ask leave to do her the
+same service, but she spoke before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Put Lizzy on board first," she said.</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed, and when, returning, he again approached her --
+"Are you able, Malcolm?" she asked. "I am very heavy."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled for all reply, took her in his arms like a child,
+and had placed her on the cushions before she had time to realize
+the mode of her transference. Then taking a stride deeper into
+the water, he scrambled on board. The same instant the men gave
+way. They pulled carefully through the narrow jaws of the little
+harbour, and away with quivering oar and falling tide, went the
+boat, gliding out into the measureless north, where the horizon
+was now dotted with the sails that had preceded it.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner were they afloat than a kind of enchantment
+enwrapped and possessed the soul of Clementina. Everything seemed
+all at once changed utterly. The very ends of the harbour piers
+might have stood in the Divina Commedia instead of the Moray
+Frith. Oh that wonderful look everything wears when beheld from
+the other side! Wonderful surely will this world appear --
+strangely more, when, become children again by being gathered to
+our fathers -- joyous day! we turn and gaze back upon it from the
+other side! I imagine that, to him who has overcome it, the
+world, in very virtue of his victory, will show itself the lovely
+and pure thing it was created -- for he will see through the
+cloudy envelope of his battle to the living kernel below. The
+cliffs, the rocks, the sands, the dune, the town, the very clouds
+that hung over the hill above Lossie House, were in strange
+fashion transfigured. To think of people sitting behind those
+windows while the splendour and freedom of space with all its
+divine shows invited them -- lay bare and empty to them! Out and
+still out they rowed and drifted, till the coast began to open up
+beyond the headlands on either side.</p>
+
+<p>There a light breeze was waiting them. Up then went three
+short masts, and three dark brown sails shone red in the sun, and
+Malcolm came aft, over the great heap of brown nets, crept with
+apology across the poop, and got down into a little well behind,
+there to sit and steer the boat; for now, obedient to the wind in
+its sails, it went frolicking over the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The bonnie Annie bore a picked crew; for Peter's boat was to
+him a sort of church, in which he would not with his will carry
+any Jonah fleeing from the will of the lord of the sea. And that
+boat's crew did not look the less merrily out of their blue eyes,
+or carry themselves the less manfully in danger, that they
+believed a lord of the earth and the sea and the fountains of
+water cared for his children and would have them honest and
+fearless.</p>
+
+<p>And now came a scattering of rubies and topazes over the slow
+waves, as the sun reached the edge of the horizon, and shone with
+a glory of blinding red along the heaving level of green, dashed
+with the foam of their flight. Could such a descent as this be
+intended for a type of death? Clementina asked. Was it not rather
+as if, from a corner of the tomb behind, she saw the back parts
+of a resurrection and ascension: warmth, out shining, splendour;
+departure from the door of the tomb; exultant memory; tarnishing
+gold, red fading to russet; fainting of spirit, loneliness;
+deepening blue and green; pallor, grayness, coldness; out
+creeping stars; further reaching memory; the dawn of infinite
+hope and foresight; the assurance that under passion itself lay a
+better and holier mystery? Here was God's naughty child, the
+world, laid asleep and dreaming -- if not merrily, yet
+contentedly; and there was the sky with all the day gathered and
+hidden up in its blue, ready to break forth again in laughter on
+the morrow, bending over its skyey cradle like a mother! and
+there was the aurora, the secret of life, creeping away round to
+the north to be ready! Then first, when the slow twilight had
+fairly settled into night, did Clementina begin to know the
+deepest marvel of this facet of the rose diamond life! God's
+night and sky and sea were her's now, as they had been Malcolm's
+from childhood! And when the nets had been paid out, and sank
+straight into the deep, stretched betwixt leads below and floats
+and buoys above, extending a screen of meshes against the rush of
+the watery herd; when the sails were down, and the whole vault of
+stars laid bare to her eyes as she lay; when the boat was still,
+fast to the nets, anchored as it were by hanging acres of
+curtain, and all was silent as a church, waiting, and she might
+dream or sleep or pray as she would, with nothing about her but
+peace and love and the deep sea, and over her but still peace and
+love and the deeper sky, then the soul of Clementina rose and
+worshipped the soul of the universe; her spirit clave to the Life
+of her life, the Thought of her thought, the Heart of her heart;
+her will bowed itself to the creator of will, worshipping the
+supreme, original, only Freedom -- the Father of her love, the
+Father of Jesus Christ, the God of the hearts of the universe,
+the Thinker of all thoughts, the Beginner of all beginnings, the
+All in all. It was her first experience of speechless
+adoration.</p>
+
+<p>Most of the men were asleep in the bows of the boat; all were
+lying down but one. That one was Malcolm. He had come aft, and
+seated himself under the platform leaning against it.</p>
+
+<p>The boat rose and sank a little, just enough to rock the
+sleeping children a little deeper into their sleep; Malcolm
+thought all slept. He did not see how Clementina's eyes shone
+back to the heavens -- no star in them to be named beside those
+eyes. She knew that Malcolm was near her, but she would not
+speak; she would not break the peace of the presence. A minute or
+two passed. Then softly woke a murmur of sound, that strengthened
+and grew, and swelled at last into a song. She feared to stir
+lest she should interrupt its flow. And thus it flowed:</p>
+
+<pre>
+The stars are steady abune;
+I' the water they flichter an' flee;
+But steady aye luikin' doon,
+They ken themsel's i' the sea.
+
+A' licht, an' clear, an' free,
+God, thou shinest abune;
+Yet luik, an' see thysel' in me,
+God, whan thou luikest doon.
+</pre>
+
+<p>A silence followed, but a silence that seemed about to be
+broken. And again Malcolm sang:</p>
+
+<pre>
+There was an auld fisher -- he sat by the wa',
+An' luikit oot ower the sea;
+The bairnies war playin', he smilit on them a',
+But the tear stude in his e'e.
+
+An' it's oh to win awa', awa'!
+An' it's oh to win awa'
+Whaur the bairns come home, an' the wives they bide,
+An' God is the Father o' a'!
+
+Jocky an' Jeamy an' Tammy oot there,
+A' i' the boatie gaed doon;
+An' I'm ower auld to fish ony mair,
+An' I hinna the chance to droon.
+An' it's oh to win awa', awa'! &amp;c.
+
+An' Jeanie she grat to ease her hert,
+An' she easit hersel' awa'
+But I'm ower auld for the tears to stert,
+An' sae the sighs maun blaw.
+An' it's oh to win awa', awa'! &amp;c.
+
+Lord, steer me hame whaur my Lord has steerit,
+For I'm tired o' life's rockin' sea
+An' dinna be lang, for I'm nearhan' fearit
+'At I'm 'maist ower auld to dee.
+An' it's oh to win awa', awe'! &amp;c.
+</pre>
+
+<p>Again the stars and the sky were all, and there was no sound
+but the slight murmurous lipping of the low swell against the
+edges of the planks. Then Clementina said:</p>
+
+<p>"Did you make that song, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whilk o' them, my leddy? -- But it's a' ane -- they're baith
+mine, sic as they are."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she returned.</p>
+
+<p>"What for, my leddy?"</p>
+
+<p>"For speaking Scotch to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, my lady. I forgot your ladyship was
+English."</p>
+
+<p>"Please forget it," she said. "But I thank you for your songs
+too. It was the second I wanted to know about; the first I was
+certain was your own. I did not know you could enter like that
+into the feelings of an old man."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not, my lady? I never can see living thing without asking
+it how it feels. Often and often, out here at such a time as
+this, have I tried to fancy myself a herring caught by the gills
+in the net down below, instead of the fisherman in the boat above
+going to haul him out."</p>
+
+<p>"And did you succeed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I fancy I came to understand as much of him as he does
+himself. It's a merry enough life down there. The flukes --
+plaice, you call them, my lady, -- bother me, I confess. I never
+contemplate one without feeling as if I had been sat upon when I
+was a baby. But for an old man! -- Why, that's what I shall be
+myself one day most likely, and it would be a shame not to know
+pretty nearly how he felt -- near enough at least to make a song
+about him."</p>
+
+<p>"And shan't you mind being an old man, then, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least, my lady. I shall mind nothing so long as I
+can trust in the maker of me. If my faith should give way -- why
+then there would be nothing worth minding either! I don't know
+but I should kill myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm!"</p>
+
+<p>"Which is worse, my lady -- to distrust God, or to think life
+worth having without him?"</p>
+
+<p>"But one may hope in the midst of doubt -- at least that is
+what Mr Graham -- and you -- have taught me to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, surely, my lady. I won't let anyone beat me at that, if
+I can help it. And I think that so long as I kept my reason, I
+should be able to cry out, as that grandest and most human of all
+the prophets did -- 'Though he slay me yet will I trust in him.'
+But would you not like to sleep, my lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Malcolm. I would much rather hear you talk, -- Could you
+not tell me a story now? Lady Lossie mentioned one you once told
+her about an old castle somewhere not far from here."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, my leddy!" broke in Annie Mair, who had waked up while
+they were speaking, "I wuss ye wad gar him tell ye that story,
+for my man he's h'ard 'im tell't, an' he says it's unco gruesome:
+I wad fain hear 't. -- Wauk up, Lizzy," she went on, in her
+eagerness waiting for no answer; "Ma'colm's gauin' to tell 's the
+tale o' the auld castel o' Colonsay. -- It's oot by yon'er, my
+leddy -- 'no that far frae the Deid Heid. -- Wauk up, Lizzy."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm no sleepin', Annie," said Lizzy, "-- though like
+Ma'colm's auld man," she added with a sigh, "I wad whiles fain
+be."</p>
+
+<p>Now there were reasons why Malcolm should not be unwilling to
+tell the strange wild story requested of him, and he commenced it
+at once, but modified the Scotch of it considerably for the sake
+of the unaccustomed ears. When it was ended Clementina said
+nothing; Annie Mair said "Hech, sirs!" and Lizzy with a great
+sigh, remarked,</p>
+
+<p>"The deil maun be in a'thing whaur God hasna a han', I'm
+thinkin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may tak yer aith upo' that," rejoined Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>It was a custom in Peter's boat never to draw the nets without
+a prayer, uttered now by one and now by another of the crew. Upon
+this occasion, whether it was in deference to Malcolm, who, as he
+well understood, did not like long prayers, or that the presence
+of Clementina exercised some restraint upon his spirit, out of
+the bows of the boat came now the solemn voice of its master,
+bearing only this one sentence:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh Thoo, wha didst tell thy dissiples to cast the net upo'
+the side whaur swam the fish, gien it be thy wull 'at we catch
+the nicht, lat 's catch; gien it binna thy wull, lat 's no catch.
+-- Haul awa', my laads."</p>
+
+<p>Up sprang the men, and went each to his place, and straight a
+torrent of gleaming fish was pouring in over the gunwale of the
+boat. Such a take it was ere the last of the nets was drawn, as
+the oldest of them had seldom seen. Thousands of fish there were
+that had never got into the meshes at all.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot understand it," said Clementina. "There are
+multitudes more fish than there are meshes in the nets to catch
+them: if they are not caught, why do they not swim away?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because they are drowned, my lady," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by that? How can you drown a fish?"</p>
+
+<p>"You may call it suffocated if you like, my lady; it is all
+the same. You have read of panic stricken people, when a church
+or a theatre is on fire, rushing to the door all in a heap, and
+crowding each other to death? It is something like that with the
+fish. They are swimming along in a great shoal, yards thick; and
+when the first can get no farther, that does not at once stop the
+rest, any more than it would in a crowd of people; those that are
+behind come pressing up into every corner, where there is room,
+till they are one dense mass. Then they push and push to get
+forward, and can't get through, and the rest come still crowding
+on behind and above and below, till a multitude of them are
+jammed so tight against each other that they can't open their
+gills; and even if they could, there would not be air enough for
+them. You've seen the goldfish in the swan basin, my lady, how
+they open and shut their gills constantly: that's their way of
+getting air out of the water by some wonderful contrivance nobody
+understands, for they need breath just as much as we do: and to
+close their gills is to them the same as closing a man's mouth
+and nose. That's how the most of those herrings are taken."</p>
+
+<p>All were now ready to seek the harbour. A light westerly wind
+was still blowing, with the aid of which, heavy laden, they crept
+slowly to the land. As she lay snug and warm, with the cool
+breath of the sea on her face, a half sleep came over Clementina,
+and she half dreamed that she was voyaging in a ship of the air,
+through infinite regions of space, with a destination too
+glorious to be known. The herring boat was a living splendour of
+strength and speed, its sails were as the wings of a will, in
+place of the instruments of a force, and softly as mightily it
+bore them through the charmed realms of dreamland towards the
+ideal of the soul. And yet the herring boat but crawled over the
+still waters with its load of fish, as the harvest waggon creeps
+over the field with its piled up sheaves; and she who imagined
+its wondrous speed was the only one who did not desire it should
+move faster.</p>
+
+<p>No word passed between her and Malcolm all their homeward way.
+Each was brooding over the night and its joy that enclosed them
+together, and hoping for that which was yet to be shaken from the
+lap of the coming time.</p>
+
+<p>Also Clementina had in her mind a scheme for attempting what
+Malcolm had requested of her; the next day must see it carried
+into effect; and ever and anon, like a cold blast of doubt
+invading the bliss of confidence, into the heart of that sea
+borne peace darted the thought, that, if she failed, she must
+leave at once for England, for she would not again meet
+Liftore.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXVII"></a>CHAPTER LXVII:
+SHORE</h1>
+
+<p>At last they glided once more through the stony jaws of the
+harbour, as if returning again to the earth from a sojourn in the
+land of the disembodied. When Clementina's foot touched the shore
+she felt like one waked out of a dream, from whom yet the dream
+has not departed -- but keeps floating about him, waved in
+thinner and yet thinner streams from the wings of the vanishing
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed almost as if her spirit, instead of having come back
+to the world of its former abode, had been borne across the
+parting waters and landed on the shore of the immortals. There
+was the ghostlike harbour of the spirit land, the water gleaming
+betwixt its dark walls, one solitary boat motionless upon it, the
+men moving about like shadows in the star twilight! Here stood
+three women and a man on the shore, and save the stars no light
+shone, and from the land came no sound of life. Was it the dead
+of the night, or a day that had no sun? It was not dark, but the
+light was rayless. Or, rather, it was as if she had gained the
+power of seeing in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>Suppressed sleep wove the stuff of a dream around her, and the
+stir at her heart kept it alive with dream forms. Even the voice
+of Peter's Annie, saying, "I s' bide for my man. Gude nicht, my
+leddy," did not break the charm. Her heart shaped that also into
+the dream. Turning away with Malcolm and Lizzy, she passed along
+the front of the Seaton.</p>
+
+<p>How still, how dead, how empty like cenotaphs, all the
+cottages looked! How the sea which lay like a watcher at their
+doors, murmured in its sleep! Arrived at the entrance to her own
+close, Lizzy next bade them good night, and Clementina and
+Malcolm were left.</p>
+
+<p>And now drew near the full power, the culmination of the
+mounting enchantment of the night for Malcolm. When once the
+Scaurnose people should have passed them, they would be alone --
+alone as in the spaces between the stars. There would not be a
+living soul on the shore for hours. From the harbour the nearest
+way to the House was by the sea gate, but where was the haste --
+with the lovely night around them, private as a dream shared only
+by two? Besides, to get in by that, they would have had to rouse
+the cantankerous Bykes, and what a jar would not that bring into
+the music of the silence! Instead, therefore, of turning up by
+the side of the stream where it crossed the shore, he took
+Clementina once again in his arms unforbidden, and carried her
+over. Then the long sands lay open to their feet. Presently they
+heard the Scaurnose party behind them, coming audibly, merrily
+on. As by a common resolve they turned to the left, and crossing
+the end of the Boar's Tail, resumed their former direction, with
+the dune now between them and the sea. The voices passed on the
+other side, and they heard them slowly merge into the inaudible.
+At length, after an interval of silence, on the westerly air came
+one quiver of laughter -- by which Malcolm knew his friends were
+winding up the red path to the top of the cliff. And now the
+shore was bare of presence, bare of sound save the soft fitful
+rush of the rising tide. But behind the long sandhill, for all
+they could see of the sea, they might have been in the heart of a
+continent.</p>
+
+<p>"Who would imagine the ocean so near us, my lady!" said
+Malcolm, after they had walked for some time without word
+spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"Who can tell what may be near us?" she returned.</p>
+
+<p>"True, my lady. Our future is near us, holding thousands of
+things unknown. Hosts of thinking beings with endless myriads of
+thoughts may be around us. What a joy to know that, of all things
+and all thoughts, God is nearest to us -- so near that we cannot
+see him, but, far beyond seeing him, can know of him
+infinitely!"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke they came opposite the tunnel, but he turned from
+it and they ascended the dune. As their heads rose over the top,
+and the sky night above and the sea night beneath rolled
+themselves out and rushed silently together, Malcolm said, as if
+thinking aloud:</p>
+
+<p>"Thus shall we meet death and the unknown, and the new that
+breaks from the bosom of the invisible will be better than the
+old upon which the gates close behind us. The Son of man is
+content with my future, and I am content."</p>
+
+<p>There was a peace in the words that troubled Clementina: he
+wanted no more than he had -- this cold, imperturbable, devout
+fisherman! She did not see that it was the confidence of having
+all things that held his peace rooted. From the platform of the
+swivel, they looked abroad over the sea. Far north in the east
+lurked a suspicion of dawn, which seemed, while they gazed upon
+it, to "languish into life," and the sea was a shade less dark
+than when they turned from it to go behind the dune. They
+descended a few paces, and halted again.</p>
+
+<p>"Did your ladyship ever see the sun rise?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Never in open country," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Then stay and see it now, my lady. He'll rise just over
+yonder, a little nearer this way than that light from under his
+eyelids. A more glorious chance you could not have. And when he
+rises, just observe, one minute after he is up, how like a dream
+all you have been in tonight will look. It is to me strange even
+to awfulness how many different phases of things, and feelings
+about them, and moods of life and consciousness, God can tie up
+in the bundle of one world with one human soul to carry it."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina slowly sank on the sand of the slope, and like
+lovely sphinx of northern desert, gazed in immovable silence out
+on the yet more northern sea. Malcolm took his place a little
+below, leaning on his elbow, for the slope was steep, and looking
+up at her. Thus they waited the sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>Was it minutes or only moments passed in that silence -- whose
+speech was the soft ripple of the sea on the sand? Neither could
+have answered the question. At length said Malcolm,</p>
+
+<p>"I think of changing my service, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Malcolm!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady. My -- mistress does not like to turn me away,
+but she is tired of me, and does not want me any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"But you would never think of finally forsaking a fisherman's
+life for that of a servant, surely, Malcolm?"</p>
+
+<p>"What would become of Kelpie, my lady?" rejoined Malcolm,
+smiling to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Clementina, bewildered; "I had not thought of her.
+-- But you cannot take her with you," she added, coming a little
+to her senses.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nobody about the place who could, or rather, who
+would do anything with her. They would sell her. I have enough to
+buy her, and perhaps somebody might not object to the
+encumbrance, but hire me and her together. -- Your groom wants a
+coachman's place, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"0 Malcolm! do you mean you would be my groom?" cried
+Clementina, pressing her palms together.</p>
+
+<p>"If you would have me, my lady; but I have heard you say you
+would have none but a married man."</p>
+
+<p>"But -- Malcolm -- don't you know anybody that would? -- Could
+you not find some one -- some lady -- that? -- I mean, why
+shouldn't you be a married man?"</p>
+
+<p>"For a very good and to me rather sad reason, my lady; the
+only woman I could marry, or should ever be able to marry, --
+would not have me. She is very kind and very noble, but -- it is
+preposterous -- the thing is too preposterous. I dare not have
+the presumption to ask her."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's voice trembled as he spoke, and a few moments' pause
+followed, during which he could not lift his eyes. The whole
+heaven seemed pressing down their lids. The breath which he
+modelled into words seemed to come in little billows.</p>
+
+<p>But his words had raised a storm in Clementina's bosom. A cry
+broke from her, as if driven forth by pain. She called up all the
+energy of her nature, and stilled herself to speak. The voice
+that came was little more than a sob scattered whisper, but to
+her it seemed as if all the world must hear.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh Malcolm!" she panted, "I will try to be good and wise.
+Don't marry anybody else -- anybody, I mean; but come with Kelpie
+and be my groom, and wait and see if I don't grow better."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm leaped to his feet and threw himself at hers. He had
+heard but in part, and he must know all.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," he said, with intense quiet, "Kelpie and I will be
+your slaves. Take me for fisherman -- groom -- what you will. I
+offer the whole sum of service that is in me." He kissed her
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady, I would put your feet on my head," he went on, "only
+then what should I do when I see my Lord, and cast myself before
+Him?"</p>
+
+<p>But Clementina, again her own to give, rose quickly, and said
+with all the dignity born of her inward grandeur,</p>
+
+<p>"Rise, Malcolm; you misunderstand me."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm rose abashed, but stood erect before her, save that
+his head was bowed, for his heart was sunk in dismay. Then
+slowly, gently, Clementina knelt before him. He was bewildered,
+and thought she was going to pray. In sweet, clear, unshaken
+tones, for she feared nothing now, she said,</p>
+
+<p>"Malcolm, I am not worthy of you. But take me -- take my very
+soul if you will, for it is yours."</p>
+
+<p>Now Malcolm saw that he had no right to raise a kneeling lady;
+all he could do was to kneel beside her. When people kneel, they
+lift up their hearts; and the creating heart of their joy was
+forgotten of neither. And well for them, for the love where God
+is not, be the lady lovely as Cordelia, the man gentle as Philip
+Sidney, will fare as the overkept manna.</p>
+
+<p>When the huge tidal wave from the ocean of infinite delight
+had broken at last upon the shore of the finite, and withdrawn
+again into the deeps, leaving every cistern brimming, every
+fountain overflowing, the two entranced souls opened their bodily
+eyes, looked at each other, rose, and stood hand in hand,
+speechless.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my lady!" said Malcolm at length, "what is to become of
+this delicate smoothness in my great rough hand? Will it not be
+hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know how strong it is, Malcolm. There!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can scarcely feel it with my hand, my lady; it all goes
+through to my heart. It shall lie in mine as the diamond in the
+rock."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Malcolm! Now that I am going to be a fisherman's
+wife, it must be a strong hand -- it must work. What homage shall
+you require of me, Malcolm? What will you have me do to rise a
+little nearer your level? Shall I give away lands and money? And
+shall I live with you in the Seaton? or will you come and fish at
+Wastbeach?"</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, my lady; I can't think about things now -- even
+with you in them. There is neither past nor future to me now --
+only this one eternal morning. Sit here, and look up, Lady
+Clementina: -- see all those worlds: -- something in me
+constantly says that I shall know every one of them one day; that
+they are all but rooms in the house of my spirit, that is, the
+house of our Father. Let us not now, when your love makes me
+twice eternal, talk of time and places. Come, let us fancy
+ourselves two blessed spirits, lying full in the sight and light
+of our God, -- as indeed what else are we? -- warming our hearts
+in his presence and peace; and that we have but to rise and
+spread our wings to sear aloft and find -- what shall it be, my
+lady? Worlds upon worlds? No, no. What are worlds upon worlds in
+infinite show until we have seen the face of the Son of Man?"</p>
+
+<p>A silence fell. But he resumed.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us imagine our earthly life behind us, our hearts clean,
+love all in all. -- But that sends me back to the now. My lady, I
+know I shall never love you aright until you have helped me
+perfect. When the face of the least lovely of my neighbours needs
+but appear to rouse in my heart a divine tenderness, then it must
+be that I shall love you better than now. Now, alas! I am so
+pervious to wrong! so fertile of resentments and indignations!
+You must cure me, my divine Clemency. -- Am I a poor lover to
+talk, this first glorious hour, of anything but my lady love? Ah!
+but let it excuse me that this love is no new thing to me. It is
+a very old love. I have loved you a thousand years. I love every
+atom of your being, every thought that can harbour in your soul,
+and I am jealous of hurting your blossoms with the over jubilant
+winds of that very love. I would therefore behold you folded in
+the atmosphere of the Love eternal. My lady, if I were to talk of
+your beauty, I should but offend you, for you would think I
+raved, and spoke not the words of truth and soberness. But how
+often have I not cried to the God who breathed the beauty into
+you that it might shine out of you, to save my soul from the
+tempest of its own delight therein. And now I am like one that
+has caught an angel in his net, and fears to come too nigh, lest
+fire should flash from the eyes of the startled splendour, and
+consume the net and him who holds it. But I will not rave,
+because I would possess in grand peace that which I lay at your
+feet. I am yours, and would be worthy of your moonlight
+calm."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! I am beside you but a block of marble!" said
+Clementina. "You are so eloquent, my --"</p>
+
+<p>"New groom," suggested Malcolm gently.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"But my heart is so full," she went on, "that I cannot think
+the filmiest thought. I hardly know that I feel. I only know that
+I want to weep."</p>
+
+<p>"Weep then, my word ineffable!" cried Malcolm, and laid
+himself again at her feet, kissed them, and was silent.</p>
+
+<p>He was but a fisher poet; no courtier, no darling of society,
+no dealer in the fine speeches, no clerk of compliments. All the
+words he had were the living blossoms of thought rooted in
+feeling. His pure clear heart was as a crystal cup, through which
+shone the red wine of his love. To himself Malcolm stammered as a
+dumb man, the string of whose tongue has but just been loosed; to
+Clementina his speech was as the song of the Lady to Comus,
+"divine enchanting ravishment." The God of truth is surely
+present at every such marriage feast of two radiant spirits.
+Their joy was that neither had fooled the hope of the other.</p>
+
+<p>And so the herring boat had indeed carried Clementina over
+into paradise, and this night of the world was to her a twilight
+of heaven. God alone can tell what delights it is possible for
+him to give to the pure in heart who shall one day behold him.
+Like two that had died and found each other, they talked until
+speech rose into silence, they smiled until the dews which the
+smiles had sublimed claimed their turn and descended in
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>All at once they became aware that an eye was upon them. It
+was the sun. He was ten degrees up the slope of the sky, and they
+had never seen him rise.</p>
+
+<p>With the sun came a troublous thought, for with the sun came
+"a world of men." Neither they nor the simple fisher folk, their
+friends, had thought of the thing, but now at length it occurred
+to Clementina that she would rather not walk up to the door of
+Lossie House with Malcolm at this hour of the morning. Yet
+neither could she well appear alone. Ere she had spoken Malcolm
+rose.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't mind being left, my lady," he said, "for a quarter
+of an hour or so -- will you? I want to bring Lizzy to walk home
+with you."</p>
+
+<p>He went, and Clementina sat alone on the dune in a reposeful
+rapture, to which the sleeplessness of the night gave a certain
+additional intensity and richness and strangeness. She watched
+the great strides of her fisherman as he walked along the sands,
+and she seemed not to be left behind, but to go with him every
+step. The tide was again falling, and the sea shone and sparkled
+and danced with life, and the wet sand gleamed, and a soft air
+blew on her cheek, and the lordly sun was mounting higher and
+higher, and a lark over her head was sacrificing all nature in
+his song; and it seemed as if Malcolm were still speaking
+strange, half intelligible, altogether lovely things in her ears.
+She felt a little weary, and laid her head down upon her arm to
+listen more at her ease.</p>
+
+<p>Now the lark had seen all and heard all, and was telling it
+again to the universe, only in dark sayings which none but
+themselves could understand; therefore it is no wonder that, as
+she listened, his song melted into a dream, and she slept. And
+the dream was lovely as dream needs be, but not lovelier than the
+wakeful night. She opened her eyes, calm as any cradled child,
+and there stood her fisherman!</p>
+
+<p>"I have been explaining to Lizzy, my lady," he said, "that
+your ladyship would rather have her company up to the door than
+mine. Lizzy is to be trusted, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, my leddy," said Lizzy, "Ma'colm's been ower guid to
+me, no to gar me du onything he wad ha'e o' me, I can haud my
+tongue whan I like, my leddy. An' dinna doobt my thouchts, my
+leddy, for I ken Ma'colm as weel's ye du yersel', my leddy."</p>
+
+<p>While she was speaking, Clementina rose, and they went
+straight to the door in the bank. Through the tunnel and the
+young wood and the dew and the morning odours, along the lovely
+paths the three walked to the house together. And oh, how the
+larks of the earth and the larks of the soul sang for two of
+them! And how the burn rang with music, and the air throbbed with
+sweetest life! while the breath of God made a little sound as of
+a going now and then in the tops of the fir trees, and the sun
+shone his brightest and best, and all nature knew that the heart
+of God is the home of his creatures.</p>
+
+<p>When they drew near the house Malcolm left them. After they
+had rung a good many times, the door was opened by the
+housekeeper, looking very proper and just a little
+scandalized.</p>
+
+<p>"Please, Mrs Courthope," said Lady Clementina, "will you give
+orders that when this young woman comes to see me today she shall
+be shown up to my room?"</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned to Lizzy and thanked her for her kindness, and
+they parted -- Lizzy to her baby, and Clementina to yet a dream
+or two. Long before her dreams were sleeping ones, however,
+Malcolm was out in the bay in the Psyche's dinghy, catching
+mackerel: some should be for his grandfather, some for Miss Horn,
+some for Mrs Courthope, and some for Mrs Crathie.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXVIII"></a>CHAPTER LXVIII:
+THE CREW OF THE BONNIE ANNIE</h1>
+
+<p>Having caught as many fish as he wanted, Malcolm rowed to the
+other side of the Scaurnose. There he landed and left the dinghy
+in the shelter of the rocks, the fish covered with long broad
+leaved tangles, climbed the steep cliff, and sought Blue Peter.
+The brown village was quiet as a churchyard, although the sun was
+now growing hot. Of the men some were not yet returned from the
+night's fishing, and some were asleep in their beds after it. Not
+a chimney smoked. But Malcolm seemed to have in his own single
+being life and joy enough for a world; such an intense
+consciousness of bliss burned within him, that, in the sightless,
+motionless village, he seemed to himself to stand like an altar
+blazing in the midst of desert Carnac. But he was not the only
+one awake: on the threshold of Peter's cottage sat his little
+Phemy, trying to polish a bit of serpentine marble upon the
+doorstep, with the help of water, which stood by her side in a
+broken tea cup.</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her sweet gray eyes, and smiled him a welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"Are ye up a'ready, Phemy?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I ha'ena been doon yet," she answered. "My mither was oot
+last nicht wi' the boat, an' Auntie Jinse was wi' the bairn, an'
+sae I cud du as I likit."</p>
+
+<p>"An' what did ye like, Phemy?"</p>
+
+<p>"A'body kens what I like," answered the child: "I was oot an'
+aboot a' nicht. An' eh, Ma'colm! I hed a veesion."</p>
+
+<p>"What was that, Phemy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was upo' the tap o' the Nose, jist as the sun rase, luikin'
+aboot me, an' awa' upo' the Boar's Tail I saw twa angels sayin'
+their prayers. Nae doobt they war prayin' for the haill warl', i'
+the quaiet o' the mornin' afore the din begud. Maybe ane them was
+that auld priest wi' the lang name i' the buik o' Genesis, 'at
+hed naither father nor mither -- puir man! -- him 'at gaed aboot
+blissin' fowk."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm thought he might take his own time to set the child
+right, and asked her to go and tell her father that he wanted to
+see him. In a few minutes Blue Peter appeared, rubbing his eyes
+-- one of the dead called too early from the tomb of sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"Freen' Peter," said Malcolm, "I'm gaein' to speak oot the
+day."</p>
+
+<p>Peter woke up.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel," he said, "I am glaid o' that, Ma'colm, -- I beg yer
+pardon, my lord, I sud say. -- Annie!"</p>
+
+<p>"Haud a quaiet sough, man. I wadna hae 't come oot at
+Scaurnose first. I'm come noo 'cause I want ye to stan' by
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"I wull that, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, gang an' gether yer boat's crew, an' fess them doon to
+the cove, an' I'll tell them, an' maybe they'll stan' by me as
+weel."</p>
+
+<p>"There's little fear o' that, gien I ken my men," answered
+Peter, and went off, rather less than half clothed, the sun
+burning hot upon his back, through the sleeping village, to call
+them, while Malcolm went and waited beside the dinghy.</p>
+
+<p>At length six men in a body, and one lagging behind, appeared
+coming down the winding path -- all but Peter no doubt wondering
+why they were called so soon from their beds, on such a peaceful
+morning, after being out the night before. Malcolm went to meet
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Freen's," he said, "I'm in want o' yer help."</p>
+
+<p>"Onything ye like, Ma'colm, sae far 's I'm concernt, 'cep' it
+be to ride yer mere. That I wull no tak in han'," said Jeames
+Gentle.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no that," returned Malcolm. "It's naething freely sae
+hard's that, I'm thinkin'. The hard 'll be to believe what I'm
+gaein' to tell ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll no be gaein' to set up for a proaphet?" said Girnel,
+with something approaching a sneer.</p>
+
+<p>Girnel was the one who came down behind the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na; naething like it," said Blue Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"But first ye'll promise to haud yer tongues for half a day?"
+said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay; we'll no clype." -- "We s' haud ower tongues," cried
+one and another and another, and all seemed to assent.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel," said Malcolm, "My name 's no Ma'colm MacPhail, but
+--"</p>
+
+<p>"We a' ken that," said Girnel.</p>
+
+<p>"An' what mair du ye ken?" asked Blue Peter, with some anger
+at his interruption.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow, naething."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, ye ken little," said Peter, and the rest laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm the Markis o' Lossie," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>Every man but Peter laughed again: all took it for a joke
+precursive of some serious announcement. That which it would have
+least surprised them to hear, would have been that he was a
+natural son of the late marquis.</p>
+
+<p>"My name 's Ma'colm Colonsay," resumed Malcolm, quietly; "an'
+I'm the saxt Markis o' Lossie."</p>
+
+<p>A dead silence followed, and in doubt, astonishment,
+bewilderment, and vague awe, accompanied in the case of two or
+three by a strong inclination to laugh, with which they
+struggled, belief began. Always a curious observer of humanity,
+Malcolm calmly watched them. From discord of expression, most of
+their faces had grown idiotic. But after a few moments of
+stupefaction, first one and then another turned his eyes upon
+Blue Peter, and perceiving that the matter was to him not only
+serious but evidently no news, each began to come to his senses,
+the chaos within him slowly arranged itself, and his face
+gradually settled into an expression of sanity -- the foolishness
+disappearing while the wonder and pleasure remained.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye mauna tak it ill, my lord," said Peter, "gien the laads be
+ta'en aback wi' the news. It's a some suddent shift o' the win,
+ye see, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"I wuss yer lordship weel," thereupon said one, and held out
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Lang life to yer lordship," said another.</p>
+
+<p>Each spoke a hearty word, and shook hands with him -- all
+except Girnel, who held back, looking on, with his right hand in
+his trouser pocket. He was one who always took the opposite side
+-- a tolerably honest and trustworthy soul, with a good many
+knots and pieces of cross grain in the timber of him. His old
+Adam was the most essential and thorough of dissenters, always
+arguing and disputing, especially on theological questions.</p>
+
+<p>"Na," said Girnel; "ye maun saitisfee me first wha ye are, an'
+what ye want o' me. I'm no to be drawn into onything 'at I dinna
+ken a' aboot aforehan'. I s' no tie mysel' up wi' ony promises.
+Them 'at gangs whaur they kenna, may lan' at the widdie
+(gallows)."</p>
+
+<p>"Nae doobt," said Malcolm, "yer ain jeedgement 's mair to ye
+nor my word, Girnel; but saw ye ever onything in me 'at wad
+justifee ye in no lippenin' to that sae far 's it gaed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ow na! I'm no sayin' that naither. But what ha'e ye to shaw
+anent the privin' o' 't?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have papers signed by my father, the late marquis, and
+sealed and witnessed by well known gentlemen of the
+neighbourhood."</p>
+
+<p>"Whaur are they?" said Girnel, holding out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't carry such valuable things about me," answered
+Malcolm. "But if you go with the rest, you shall see them
+afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll du naething i' the dark," persisted Girnel. "Whan I see
+the peppers, I'll ken what to du."</p>
+
+<p>With a nod of the head as self important as decisive, he
+turned his back.</p>
+
+<p>"At all events," said Malcolm, "you will say nothing about it
+before you hear from one of us again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mak nae promises," answered Girnel, from behind his own
+back.</p>
+
+<p>A howl arose from the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye promised a'ready," said Blue Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, I didna that. I said never a word."</p>
+
+<p>"What right then had you to remain and listen to my
+disclosure?" said Malcolm. "If you be guilty of such a mean trick
+as betray me and ruin my plans, no honest man in Portlossie or
+Scaurnose but will scorn you."</p>
+
+<p>"There! tak ye that!" said Peter. "An' I s' promise ye, ye s'
+never lay leg ower the gunnel o' my boat again. I s' hae nane but
+Christian men i' my pey."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye hired me for the sizon, Blew Peter," said Girnel, turning
+defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! ye s' ha'e yer wauges. I'm no ane to creep oot o' a
+bargain, or say 'at I didna promise. Ye s' get yer reward, never
+fear. But into my boat ye s' no come. We'll ha'e nae Auchans i'
+oor camp. Eh, Girnel, man, but ye ha'e lost yersel' the day!
+He'll never loup far 'at winna lippen. The auld worthies tuik
+their life i' their han', but ye tak yer fit (foot) i' yours. I'm
+clean affrontit 'at ever I hed ye amo' my men."</p>
+
+<p>But with that there rushed over Peter the recollection of how
+he had himself mistrusted, not Malcolm's word indeed, but his
+heart. He turned, and clasping his hands in sudden self
+reproach,</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, I saired ye ill mysel' ance," he cried; "for I
+misdoobted 'at ye wasna the same to me efter ye cam to yer ain. I
+beg yer pardon, my lord, here i' the face o' my freen's. It was
+ill temper an' pride i' me, jist the same as it's noo in Girnel
+there; an' ye maun forgi'e him, as ye forga'e me, my lord, as
+sune 's ye can."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll du that, my Peter, the verra moment he wants to be
+forgi'en," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>But Girnel turned with a grunt, and moved away towards the
+cliff.</p>
+
+<p>"This 'll never du," said Peter. "A man 'at 's honest i' the
+main may play the verra dog afore he gets the deevil oot o' 'im
+ance he 's in like that. Gang efter 'im, laads, an' kep
+(intercept) 'im an' keep 'im. We'll ha'e to cast a k-not or twa
+aboot 'im, an' lay 'im i' the boddom o' the boat."</p>
+
+<p>The six had already started after him like one man. But
+Malcolm cried,</p>
+
+<p>"Let him go: he has done me no wrong yet, and I don't believe
+will do me any. But for no risk must we prevent wrong with
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>So Girnel was allowed to depart -- scarcely in peace, for he
+was already ashamed of himself. With the understanding that they
+were to be ready to his call, and that they should hear from him
+in the course of the day, Malcolm left them, and rowed back to
+the Psyche. There he took his basket of fish on his arm, which he
+went and distributed according to his purpose, ending with Mrs
+Courthope at the House. Then he fed and dressed Kelpie, saddled
+her and galloped to Duff Harbour, where he found Mr Soutar at
+breakfast, and arranged with him to be at Lossie House at two
+o'clock. On his way back he called on Mr Morrison, and requested
+his presence at the same hour. Skirting the back of the House,
+and riding as straight as he could, he then made for Scaurnose,
+and appointed his friends to be near the House at noon, so placed
+as not to attract observation and yet be within hearing of his
+whistle from door or window in the front.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the House, he put up Kelpie, rubbed her down and
+fed her; then, as there was yet some time to spare, paid a visit
+to the factor. He found his lady, for all his present of fish in
+the earlier morning, anything but friendly. She did all she could
+to humble him; insisted on paying him for the fish; and ordered
+him, because they smelt of the stable, to take off his boots
+before he went upstairs -- to his master's room, as she phrased
+it. But Mr Crathie was cordial, and, to Malcolm's great
+satisfaction, much recovered. He had better than pleasant talk
+with him.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXIX"></a>CHAPTER LXIX:
+LIZZY'S BABY</h1>
+
+<p>While they were out in the fishing boat together, Clementina
+had, with less difficulty than she had anticipated, persuaded
+Lizzy to tell Lady Lossie her secret. It was in the hope of an
+interview with her false lover that the poor girl had consented
+so easily.</p>
+
+<p>A great longing had risen within her to have the father of her
+child acknowledge him -- only to her, taking him once in his
+arms. That was all. She had no hope, thought indeed she had no
+desire for herself. But a kind word to him would be welcome as
+light. The love that covers sins had covered the multitude of
+his, and although hopelessness had put desire to sleep, she would
+gladly have given her life for a loving smile from him. But
+mingled with this longing to see him once with his child in his
+arms, a certain loyalty to the house of Lossie also influenced
+her to listen to the solicitation of Lady Clementina, and tell
+the marchioness the truth.</p>
+
+<p>She cherished no resentment against Liftore, but not therefore
+was she willing to allow a poor young thing like Lady Lossie,
+whom they all liked, to be sacrificed to such a man, who would
+doubtless at length behave badly enough to her also.</p>
+
+<p>With trembling hands, and heart now beating wildly, now
+failing for fear, she dressed her baby and herself as well as she
+could, and, about one o'clock, went to the House.</p>
+
+<p>Now nothing would have better pleased Lady Clementina than
+that Liftore and Lizzy should meet in Florimel's presence, but
+she recoiled altogether from the small stratagems, not to mention
+the lies, necessary to the effecting of such a confrontation. So
+she had to content herself with bringing the two girls together,
+and, when Lizzy was a little rested, and had had a glass of wine,
+went to look for Florimel.</p>
+
+<p>She found her in a little room adjoining the library, which,
+on her first coming to Lossie, she had chosen for her waking
+nest. Liftore had, if not quite the freedom of the spot, yet
+privileges there; but at that moment Florimel was alone in it.
+Clementina informed her that a fisher girl, with a sad story
+which she wanted to tell her, had come to the house; and
+Florimel, who was not only kind hearted, but relished the
+position she imagined herself to occupy as lady of the place, at
+once assented to her proposal to bring the young woman to her
+there.</p>
+
+<p>Now Florimel and the earl had had a small quarrel the night
+before, after Clementina left the dinner table, and for the
+pleasure of keeping it up Florimel had not appeared at breakfast,
+and had declined to ride with his lordship, who had therefore
+been all the morning on the watch for an opportunity of
+reconciling himself. It so happened that from the end of one of
+the long narrow passages in which the house abounded, he caught a
+glimpse of Clementina's dress vanishing through the library door,
+and took the lady for Florimel on her way to her boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>When Clementina entered with Lizzy carrying her child,
+Florimel instantly suspected the truth, both as to who she was
+and as to the design of her appearance. Her face flushed, for her
+heart filled with anger, chiefly indeed against Malcolm, but
+against the two women as well, who, she did not doubt, had lent
+themselves to his designs, whatever they might be. She rose, drew
+herself up, and stood prepared to act for both Liftore and
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely however had the poor girl, trembling at the evident
+displeasure the sight of her caused in Florimel, opened her mouth
+to answer her haughty inquiry as to her business, when Lord
+Liftore, daring an entrance without warning, opened the door
+behind her, and, almost as he opened it, began his apology.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his voice Lizzy turned with a cry, and her
+small remaining modicum of self possession vanished at sight of
+him round whose phantom in her bosom whirred the leaves of her
+withered life on the stinging blasts of her shame and sorrow. As
+much from inability to stand as in supplication for the coveted
+favour, she dropped on her knees before him, incapable of
+uttering a word, but holding up her child imploringly. Taken
+altogether by surprise, and not knowing what to say or do, the
+earl stood and stared for a moment, then, moved by a dull spirit
+of subterfuge, fell back on the pretence of knowing nothing about
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, young woman," he said, affecting cheerfulness, "what do
+you want with me? I didn't advertise for a baby. Pretty child,
+though!"</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy turned white as death, and her whole body seemed to give
+a heave of agony. Clementina had just taken the child from her
+arms when she sunk motionless at his feet. Florimel went to the
+bell. But Clementina prevented her from ringing.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take her away," she said. "Do not expose her to your
+servants. Lady Lossie, my Lord Liftore is the father of this
+child: and if you can marry him after the way you have seen him
+use its mother, you are not too good for him, and I will trouble
+myself no more about you."</p>
+
+<p>"I know the author of this calumny!" cried Florimel, panting
+and flushed. "You have been listening to the inventions of an
+ungrateful dependent! You slander my guest."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a calumny, my lord? Do I slander you?" said Lady
+Clementina, turning sharply upon the earl.</p>
+
+<p>His lordship made her a cool obeisance. Clementina ran into
+the library, laid the child in a big chair, and returned for the
+mother. She was already coming a little to herself; and feeling
+about blindly for her baby, while Florimel and Liftore were
+looking out of the window, with their backs towards her.
+Clementina raised and led her from the room. But in the doorway
+she turned and said -- "Goodbye, Lady Lossie. I thank you for
+your hospitality, but I can of course be your guest no
+longer."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not. There is no occasion for prolonged leave
+taking," returned Florimel, with the air of a woman of forty.</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel, you will curse the day you marry that man!" cried
+Clementina, and closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>She hurried Lizzy to the library, put the baby in her arms,
+and clasped them both in her own. A gush of tears lightened the
+oppressed heart of the mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Lat me oot o' the hoose, for God's sake!" she cried; and
+Clementina, almost as anxious to leave it as she, helped her down
+to the hall. When she saw the open door, she rushed out of it as
+if escaping from the pit.</p>
+
+<p>Now Malcolm, as he came from the factor's, had seen her go in
+with her baby in her arms, and suspected the hand of Clementina.
+Wondering and anxious, but not very hopeful as to what might come
+of it, he waited close by; and when now he saw Lizzy dart from
+the house in wild perturbation, he ran from the cover of the
+surrounding trees into the open drive to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>"Ma'colm!" groaned the poor girl, holding out her baby, "he
+winna own till't. He winna alloo 'at he kens oucht aboot me or
+the bairn aither!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm had taken the child from her, and was clasping him to
+his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"He's the warst rascal, Lizzy," he said, "'at ever God made
+an' the deevil blaudit."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na," cried Lizzy; "the likes o' him whiles kills the
+wuman, but he wadna du that. Na, he's nae the warst; there's a
+heap waur nor him."</p>
+
+<p>"Did ye see my mistress?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ow ay; but she luikit sae angry at me, I cudna speyk. Him an'
+her 's ower thrang for her to believe onything again' him. An'
+what ever the bairn 's to du wantin' a father!"</p>
+
+<p>"Lizzy," said Malcolm, clasping the child again to his bosom.
+"I s' be a father to yer bairn -- that is, as weel's ane 'at's no
+yer man can be."</p>
+
+<p>And he kissed the child tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>The same moment an undefined impulse -- the drawing of eyes
+probably -- made him lift his towards the house: half leaning
+from the open window of the boudoir above him, stood Florimel and
+Liftore; and just as he looked up, Liftore was turning to
+Florimel with a smile that seemed to say -- "There! I told you
+so! He is the father himself."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm replaced the infant in his mother's arm, and strode
+towards the house. Imagining he went to avenge her wrongs, Lizzy
+ran after him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ma'colm Ma'colm!" she cried; "-- for my sake! -- He's the
+father o' my bairn!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm turned.</p>
+
+<p>"Lizzy," he said solemnly, "I winna lay han' upon 'im."</p>
+
+<p>Lizzy pressed her child closer with a throb of relief.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in yersel' an' see," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"I daurna! I daurna!" she said. But she lingered about the
+door.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXX"></a>CHAPTER LXX: THE
+DISCLOSURE</h1>
+
+<p>When the earl saw Malcolm coming, although he was no coward,
+and had reason to trust his skill, yet knowing himself both in
+the wrong and vastly inferior in strength to his enemy, it may be
+pardoned him that for the next few seconds his heart doubled its
+beats. But of all things he must not show fear before
+Florimel!</p>
+
+<p>"What can the fellow be after now?" he said. "I must go down
+to him."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; don't go near him -- he may be violent," objected
+Florimel, and laid her hand on his arm with a beseeching look in
+her face. "He is a dangerous man."</p>
+
+<p>Liftore laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop here till I return," he said, and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>But Florimel followed, fearful of what might happen, and
+enraged with her brother.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's brief detention by Lizzy gave Liftore a little
+advantage, for just as Malcolm approached the top of the great
+staircase, Liftore gained it. Hastening to secure the command of
+the position, and resolved to shun all parley, he stood ready to
+strike. Malcolm, however, caught sight of him and his attitude in
+time, and, fearful of breaking his word to Lizzy, pulled himself
+up abruptly a few steps from the top -- just as Florimel
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"MacPhail," she said, sweeping to the stair like an indignant
+goddess, "I discharge you from my service. Leave the house
+instantly."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm turned, flew down, and ran to the servants' stair half
+the length of the house away. As he crossed the servants' hall he
+saw Rose. She was the only one in the house except Clementina to
+whom he could look for help.</p>
+
+<p>"Come after me, Rose," he said without stopping.</p>
+
+<p>She followed instantly, as fast as she could run, and saw him
+enter the drawing room. Florimel and Liftore were there. The earl
+had Florimel's hand in his.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, my lady!" cried Malcolm, "hear me one word
+before you promise that man anything."</p>
+
+<p>His lordship started back from Florimel, and turned upon
+Malcolm in a fury. But he had not now the advantage of the stair,
+and hesitated. Florimel's eyes dilated with wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you for the last time, my lady," said Malcolm, "if you
+marry that man, you will marry a liar and a scoundrel."</p>
+
+<p>Liftore laughed, and his imitation of scorn was wonderfully
+successful, for he felt sure of Florimel, now that she had thus
+taken his part.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I ring for the servants, Lady Lossie, to put the fellow
+out?" he said. "The man is as mad as a March hare."</p>
+
+<p>Meantime Lady Clementina, her maid having gone to send her man
+to get horses for her at once, was alone in her room, which was
+close to the drawing room: hearing Malcolm's voice, she ran to
+the door, and saw Rose in a listening attitude at that of the
+drawing room.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing there?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr MacPhail told me to follow him, my lady, and I am waiting
+here till he wants me."</p>
+
+<p>Clementina went into the drawing room, and was present during
+all that now follows. Lizzy also, hearing loud voices and still
+afraid of mischief had come peering up the stair, and now
+approached the other door; behind Florimel and the earl.</p>
+
+<p>"So!" cried Florimel, "this is the way you keep your promise
+to my father!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is, my lady. To associate the name of Liftore with his
+would be to blot the scutcheon of Lossie. He is not fit to walk
+the street with men: his touch is to you an utter degradation. My
+lady, in the name of your father, I beg a word with you in
+private."</p>
+
+<p>"You insult me."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg of you, my lady -- for your own dear sake."</p>
+
+<p>"Once more I order you to leave my house, and never set foot
+in it again."</p>
+
+<p>"You hear her ladyship?" cried Liftore. "Get out." He
+approached threateningly.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand back," said Malcolm. "If it were not that I promised
+the poor girl carrying your baby out there, I should soon --"</p>
+
+<p>It was unwisely said: the earl came on the bolder. For all
+Malcolm could do to parry, evade, or stop his blows, he had soon
+taken several pretty severe ones. Then came the voice of Lizzy in
+an agony from the door --</p>
+
+<p>"Haud aff o' yersel', Ma'colm. I canna bide it. I gi'e ye back
+yer word."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll manage yet Lizzy," answered Malcolm, and kept warily
+retreating towards a window. Suddenly he dashed his elbow through
+a pane, and gave a loud shrill whistle, the same instant
+receiving a blow over the eye which the blood followed. Lizzy
+made a rush forward, but the terror that the father would strike
+the child he had disowned, seized her, and she stood trembling.
+Already, however, Clementina and Rose had darted between, and,
+full of rage as he was, Liftore was compelled to restrain
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" he said, "if ladies want a share in the row, I must
+yield my place," and drew back.</p>
+
+<p>The few men servants now came hurrying all together into the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that rascal there, and put him under the pump," said
+Liftore. "He is mad."</p>
+
+<p>"My fellow servants know better than touch me," said
+Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>The men looked to their mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Do as my lord tells you," she said, "-- and instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"Men," said Malcolm, "I have spared that foolish lord there
+for the sake of this fisher girl and his child, but don't one of
+you touch me."</p>
+
+<p>Stoat was a brave enough man, and not a little jealous of
+Malcolm, but he dared not obey his mistress.</p>
+
+<p>And now came the tramp of many feet along the landing from the
+stair head, and the six fisherman entered, two and two. Florimel
+started forward.</p>
+
+<p>"My brave fisherman!" she cried. "Take that bad man MacPhail,
+and put him out of my grounds."</p>
+
+<p>"I canna du't, my leddy," answered their leader.</p>
+
+<p>"Take Lord Liftore," said Malcolm, "and hold him, while I make
+him acquainted with a fact or two which he may judge of
+consequence to him."</p>
+
+<p>The men walked straight up to the earl. He struck right and
+left, but was overpowered in a moment, and held fast.</p>
+
+<p>"Stan' still," said Peter, "or I ha'e a han'fu' o' twine i' my
+pooch 'at I'll jist cast a k-not aboot yer airms wi' in a
+jiffey."</p>
+
+<p>His lordship stood still, muttering curses.</p>
+
+<p>Then Malcolm stepped into the middle of the room approaching
+his sister.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you to leave the house," Florimel shrieked, beside
+herself with fury, yet pale as marble with a growing terror for
+which she could ill have accounted.</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel!" said Malcolm solemnly, calling her sister by name
+for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"You insolent wretch!" she cried, panting. "What right have
+you, if you be, as you say, my base born brother, to call me by
+my name."</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel!" repeated Malcolm, and the voice was like the voice
+of her father, "I have done what I could to serve you."</p>
+
+<p>"And I want no more such service!" she returned, beginning to
+tremble.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have driven me almost to extremities," he went on,
+heedless of her interruption. "Beware of doing so quite."</p>
+
+<p>"Will nobody take pity on me?" said Florimel, and looked round
+imploringly. Then, finding herself ready to burst into tears, she
+gathered all her pride, and stepping up to Malcolm, looked him in
+the face, and said,</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, sir! is this house yours or mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," answered Malcolm. "I am the Marquis of Lossie, and
+while I am your elder brother and the head of the family, you
+shall never with my consent marry that base man -- a man it would
+blast me to the soul to call brother."</p>
+
+<p>Liftore uttered a fierce imprecation.</p>
+
+<p>"If you dare give breath to another such word in my sister's
+presence, I will have you gagged," said Malcolm. "If my sister
+marries him," he continued, turning again to Florimel, "not one
+shilling shall she take with her beyond what she may happen to
+have in her purse at the moment. She is in my power, and I will
+use it to the utmost to protect her from that man."</p>
+
+<p>"Proof!" cried Liftore sullenly. But Florimel gazed with pale
+dilated eyes in the face of the speaker. She knew his words were
+true. Her soul assured her of it.</p>
+
+<p>"To my sister," answered Malcolm, "I will give all the proof
+she may please to require; to Lord Liftore I will not even repeat
+my assertion. To him I will give no shadow of proof. I will but
+cast him out of my house. Stoat, order horses for Lady
+Bellair."</p>
+
+<p>"Gien ye please, sir, my Lord," replied Stoat, "the Lossie
+Airms horses is ordered a'ready for Lady Clementina."</p>
+
+<p>"Will my Lady Clementina oblige me by yielding her horses to
+Lady Bellair?" said Malcolm, turning to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, my lord," answered Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"You, I trust, my lady," said Malcolm, "will stay a little
+longer with my sister."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Bellair came up.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," she said, "is this the marquis or the fisherman's
+way of treating a lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither. But do not drive me to give the rein to my tongue.
+Let it be enough to say that my house shall never be what your
+presence would make it."</p>
+
+<p>He turned to the fishermen.</p>
+
+<p>"Three of you take that lord to the town gate, and leave him
+on the other side of it. His servant shall follow as soon as the
+horses come."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go with you," said Florimel, crossing to Lady
+Bellair.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm took her by the arm. For one moment she struggled, but
+finding no one dared interfere, submitted, and was led from the
+room like a naughty child.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep my lord there till I return," he said as he went.</p>
+
+<p>He led her into the room which had been her mother's boudoir,
+and when he had shut the door,</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel," he said, "I have striven to serve you the best way
+I knew. Your father, when he confessed me his heir, begged me to
+be good to you, and I promised him. Would I have given all these
+months of my life to the poor labour of a groom, allowed my
+people to be wronged and oppressed, my grandfather to be a
+wanderer, and my best friend to sit with his lips of wisdom
+sealed, but for your sake? I can hardly say it was for my
+father's sake, for I should have done the same had he never said
+a word about you. Florimel, I loved my sister, and longed for her
+goodness. But she has foiled all my endeavours. She has not loved
+or followed the truth. She has been proud and disdainful, and
+careless of right. Yourself young and pure, and naturally
+recoiling from evil, you have yet cast from you the devotion of a
+noble, gifted, large hearted, and great souled man, for the
+miserable preference of the smallest, meanest, vilest of men. Nor
+that only! for with him you have sided against the woman he most
+bitterly wrongs: and therein you wrong the nature and the God of
+women. Once more, I pray you to give up this man; to let your
+true self speak and send him away."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir, I go with my Lady Bellair, driven from her father's
+house by one who calls himself my brother. My lawyer shall make
+inquiries."</p>
+
+<p>She would have left the room, but he intercepted her.</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel," he said, "you are casting the pearl of your
+womanhood before a swine. He will trample it under his feet and
+turn again and rend you. He will treat you worse still than poor
+Lizzy, whom he troubles no more with his presence."</p>
+
+<p>He had again taken her arm in his great grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go. You are brutal. I shall scream."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not go until you have heard all the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"What! more truth still? Your truth is anything but
+pleasant."</p>
+
+<p>"It is more unpleasant yet than you surmise. Florimel, you
+have driven me to it. I would have prepared you a shield against
+the shock which must come, but you compel me to wound you to the
+quick. I would have had you receive the bitter truth from lips
+you loved, but you drove those lips of honour from you, and now
+there are left to utter it only the lips you hate, yet the truth
+you shall receive: it may help to save you from weakness,
+arrogance, and falsehood. -- Sister, your mother was never Lady
+Lossie."</p>
+
+<p>"You lie. I know you lie. Because you wrong me, you would
+brand me with dishonour, to take from me as well the sympathy of
+the world. But I defy you."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! there is no help, sister. Your mother indeed passed as
+Lady Lossie, but my mother, the true Lady Lossie, was alive all
+the time, and in truth, died only last year. For twenty years my
+mother suffered for yours in the eye of the law. You are no
+better than the little child his father denied in your presence.
+Give that man his dismissal, or he will give you yours. Never
+doubt it. Refuse again, and I go from this room to publish in the
+next the fact that you are neither Lady Lossie nor Lady Florimel
+Colonsay. You have no right to any name but your mother's. You
+are Miss Gordon."</p>
+
+<p>She gave a great gasp at the word, but bravely fought the
+horror that was taking possession of her. She stood with one hand
+on the back of a chair, her face white, her eyes starting, her
+mouth a little open and rigid -- her whole appearance, except for
+the breath that came short and quick, that of one who had died in
+sore pain.</p>
+
+<p>"All that is now left you," concluded Malcolm, "is the choice
+between sending Liftore away, and being abandoned by him. That
+choice you must now make."</p>
+
+<p>The poor girl tried to speak, but could not. Her fire was
+burning out, her forced strength fast failing her.</p>
+
+<p>"Florimel," said Malcolm, and knelt on one knee and took her
+hand. It gave a flutter as if it would fly like a bird; but the
+net of his love held it, and it lay passive and cold. "Florimel,
+I will be your true brother. I am your brother, your very own
+brother, to live for you, love you, fight for you, watch and ward
+you, till a true man takes you for his wife." Her hand quivered
+like a leaf. "Sister, when you and I appear before our father, I
+shall hold up my face before him: will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Send him away," she breathed rather than said, and sank on
+the floor. He lifted her, laid her on a couch, and returned to
+the drawing room.</p>
+
+<p>"My lady Clementina," he said, "will you oblige me by going to
+my sister in the room at the top of the stair?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will, my lord," she answered, and went.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm walked up to Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," he said, "my sister takes leave of you."</p>
+
+<p>"I must have my dismissal from her own lips."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall have it from the hands of my fishermen. Take him
+away."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall hear from me, my lord marquis, if such you be,"
+said Liftore.</p>
+
+<p>"Let it be of your repentance, then, my lord," said Malcolm.
+"That I shall be glad to hear of."</p>
+
+<p>As he turned from him, he saw Caley gliding through the little
+group of servants towards the door. He walked after her, laid his
+hand on her shoulder, and whispered a word in her ear, she grew
+gray rather than white, and stood still.</p>
+
+<p>Turning again to go to Florimel, he saw the fishermen stopped
+with their charge in the doorway by Mr Morrison and Mr Soutar,
+entering together.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord! my lord!" said the lawyer, coming hastily up to him,
+"there can be surely no occasion for such -- such --
+measures!"</p>
+
+<p>Catching sight of Malcolm's wounded forehead, however, he
+supplemented the remark with a low exclamation of astonishment
+and dismay -- the tone saying almost as clearly as words, "How
+ill and foolishly everything is managed without a lawyer!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm only smiled, and went up to the magistrate, whom he
+led into the middle of the room, saying,</p>
+
+<p>"Mr Morrison, every one here knows you: tell them who I
+am."</p>
+
+<p>"The Marquis of Lossie, my lord," answered Mr Morrison; "and
+from my heart I congratulate your people that at length you
+assume the rights and honours of your position."</p>
+
+<p>A murmur of pleasure arose in response. Ere it ceased, Malcolm
+started and sprung to the door. There stood Lenorme! He seized
+him by the arm, and, without a word of explanation, hurried him
+to the room where his sister was. He called Clementina, drew her
+from the room, half pushed Lenorme in, and closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you meet me on the sand hill at sunset, my lady?" he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled assent. He gave her the key of the tunnel, hinted
+that she might leave the two to themselves for awhile, and
+returned to his friends in the drawing room.</p>
+
+<p>Having begged them to excuse him for a little while, and
+desired Mrs Courthope to serve luncheon for them, he ran to his
+grandfather, dreading lest any other tongue than his own should
+yield him the opened secret. He was but just in time, for already
+the town was in a tumult, and the spreading ripples of the news
+were fast approaching Duncan's ears.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm found him, expectant and restless. When he disclosed
+himself he manifested little astonishment, only took him in his
+arms and pressed him to his bosom, saying, "Ta Lort pe praised,
+my son! and she wouldn't pe at aal surprised." Then he broke out
+in a fervent ejaculation of Gaelic, during which he turned
+instinctively to his pipes, for through them lay the final and
+only sure escape for the prisoned waters of the overcharged
+reservoir of his feelings. While he played, Malcolm slipped out,
+and hurried to Miss Horn.</p>
+
+<p>One word to her was enough. The stern old woman burst into
+tears, crying,</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my Grisel! my Grisel! Luik doon frae yer bonny hoose amo'
+the stars, an' see the braw laad left ahint ye, an' praise the
+lord 'at ye ha'e sic a son o' yer boady to come hame to ye whan
+a' 's ower."</p>
+
+<p>She sobbed and wept for a while without restraint. Then
+suddenly she rose, dabbed her eyes indignantly, and cried,</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot! I'm an auld fule. A body wad think I hed feelin's efter
+a'!"</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm laughed, and she could not help joining him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye maun come the morn an' chise yer ain room i' the Hoose,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>"What mean ye by that, laddie?"</p>
+
+<p>"At ye'll ha'e to come an' bide wi' me noo."</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed an' I s' du naething o' the kin', Ma'colm! H'ard ever
+onybody sic nonsense! What wad I du wi' Jean? An' I cudna thole
+men fowk to wait upo' me. I wad be clean affrontit."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, weel! we'll see," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>On his way back to the House, he knocked at Mrs Catanach's
+door, and said a few words to her which had a remarkable effect
+on the expression of her plump countenance and deep set black
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached home, he ran up the main staircase, knocked at
+the first door, opened it, and peeped in. There sat Lenorme on
+the couch, with Florimel on his knees, nestling her head against
+his shoulder, like a child that had been very naughty but was
+fully forgiven. Her face was blotted with her tears, and her hair
+was everywhere; but there was a light of dawning goodness all
+about her, such as had never shone in her atmosphere before. By
+what stormy sweet process the fountain of this light had been
+unsealed, no one ever knew but themselves.</p>
+
+<p>She did not move when Malcolm entered -- more than just to
+bring the palms of her hands together, and look up in his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you told him all, Florimel?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Malcolm," she answered. "Tell him again yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Florimel. Once is enough."</p>
+
+<p>"I told him all," she said with a gasp; then gave a wild
+little cry, and, with subdued exultation, added, "and he loves me
+yet! He has taken the girl without a name to his heart!"</p>
+
+<p>"No wonder," said Malcolm, "when she brought it with her."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Lenorme, "I but took the diamond casket that held
+my bliss, and now I could dare the angel Gabriel to match
+happinesses with me."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Florimel, for all her worldly ways, was but a child. Bad
+associates had filled her with worldly maxims and words and
+thoughts and judgments. She had never loved Liftore, she had only
+taken delight in his flatteries. And now had come the shock of a
+terrible disclosure, whose significance she read in remembered
+looks and tones and behaviours of the world. Her insolence to
+Malcolm when she supposed his the nameless fate, had recoiled in
+lurid interpretation of her own. She was a pariah -- without
+root, without descent, without fathers to whom to be gathered.
+She was nobody. From the courted and flattered and high seated
+and powerful, she was a nobody! Then suddenly to this poor
+houseless, wind beaten, rain wet nobody, a house -- no, a home
+she had once looked into with longing, had opened, and received
+her to its heart, that it might be fulfilled which was written of
+old, "A man shall be as an hiding place from the wind, and a
+covert from the tempest." Knowing herself a nobody, she now first
+began to be a somebody. She had been dreaming pleasant but bad
+dreams: she woke, and here was a lovely, unspeakably blessed and
+good reality, which had been waiting for her all the time on the
+threshold of her sleep! She was baptized into it with the tears
+of sorrow and shame. She had been a fool, but now she knew it,
+and was going to be wise.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you come to your brother, Florimel?" said Malcolm
+tenderly, holding out his arms.</p>
+
+<p>Lenorme raised her. She went softly to him, and laid herself
+on his bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, brother," she said, and held up her face.</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her forehead and lips, took her in his arms, and
+laid her again on Lenorme's knees.</p>
+
+<p>"I give her to you," he said, "for you are good."</p>
+
+<p>With that he left them, and sought Mr Morrison and Mr Soutar,
+who were waiting him over a glass of wine after their lunch. An
+hour of business followed, in which, amongst other matters, they
+talked about the needful arrangements for a dinner to his people,
+fishers and farmers and all.</p>
+
+<p>After the gentlemen took their leave, nobody saw him for
+hours. Till sunset approached he remained alone, shut up in the
+Wizard's Chamber, the room in which he was born. Part of the time
+he occupied in writing to Mr Graham.</p>
+
+<p>As the sun's orbed furnace fell behind the tumbling waters,
+Malcolm turned his face inland from the wet strip of shining
+shore on which he had been pacing, and ascended the sandhill.</p>
+
+<p>From the other side Clementina, but a moment later, ascended
+also. On the top they met, in the red light of the sunset. They
+clasped each the other's hand, and stood for a moment in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my lord!" said the lady, "how shall I thank you that you
+kept your secret from me! But my heart is sore to lose my
+fisherman."</p>
+
+<p>"My lady," returned Malcolm, "you have not lost your
+fisherman; you have only found your groom."</p>
+
+<p>And the sun went down, and the twilight came, and the night
+followed, and the world of sea and land and wind and vapour was
+around them, and the universe of stars and spaces over and under
+them, and eternity within them, and the heart of each for a
+chamber to the other, and God filling all -- nay, nay -- God's
+heart containing, infolding, cherishing all -- saving all, from
+height to height of intensest being, by the bliss of that love
+whose absolute devotion could utter itself only in death.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXXI"></a>CHAPTER LXXI: THE
+ASSEMBLY</h1>
+
+<p>That same evening, Duncan, in full dress, claymore and dirk at
+his sides, and carrying the great Lossie pipes, marched first
+through the streets of the upper, then through the closes of the
+lower town, followed by the bellman who had been appointed crier
+upon his disappearance. At the proper stations, Duncan blew a
+rousing pibroch, after which the bellman, who, for the dignity of
+his calling, insisted on a prelude of three strokes of his
+clapper, proclaimed aloud that Malcolm, Marquis of Lossie,
+desired the presence of each and every of his tenants in the
+royal burgh of Portlossie, Newton and Seaton, in the town hall of
+the same, at seven of the clock upon the evening next
+following.</p>
+
+<p>The proclamation ended, the piper sounded one note three
+times, and they passed to the next station. When they had gone
+through the Seaton, they entered a carriage waiting for them at
+the sea gate, and were driven to Scaurnose, and thence again to
+the several other villages on the coast belonging to the marquis,
+making at each in like manner the same announcement.</p>
+
+<p>Portlossie was in a ferment of wonder, satisfaction, and
+pleasure. There were few in it who were not glad at the accession
+of Malcolm, and with every one of those few the cause lay in
+himself. In the shops, among the nets, in the curing sheds, in
+the houses and cottages, nothing else was talked about; and
+stories and reminiscences innumerable were brought out, chiefly
+to prove that Malcolm had always appeared likely to turn out
+somebody, the narrator not seldom modestly hinting at a
+glimmering foresight on his own part of what had now been at
+length revealed to the world. His friends were jubilant as
+revellers. For Meg Partan, she ran from house to house like a
+maniac, laughing and crying. It was as if the whole Seaton had
+suddenly been translated. The men came crowding about Duncan,
+congratulating him and asking him a hundred questions. But the
+old man maintained a reticence whose dignity was strangely
+mingled of pomp and grace; sat calm and stately as feeling the
+glow of reflected honour; would not, by word, gesture, tone, or
+exclamation, confess to any surprise; behaved as if he had known
+it all the time; made no pretence however of having known it,
+merely treated the fact as not a whit more than might have been
+looked for by one who had known Malcolm as he had known him.</p>
+
+<p>Davy, in his yacht uniform, was the next morning appointed the
+marquis's personal attendant, and a running time he had of it for
+a fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>Almost the first thing that fell to him in his office was to
+show into the room on the ground floor where his master sat --
+the same in which for ages the lords of Lossie had been wont to
+transact what little business any of them ever attended to -- a
+pale, feeble man, bowed by the weight of a huge brass clasped
+volume under each arm. His lordship rose and met him with
+outstretched hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad indeed to see you, Mr Crathie," he said, "but I
+fear you are out too soon."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well since yesterday, my lord," returned the
+factor, his face shining with pleasure. "Your lordship's
+accession has made a young man of me again. Here I am to render
+account of my stewardship."</p>
+
+<p>"I want none, Mr Crathie -- nothing, that is, beyond a summary
+statement of how things stand with me."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to satisfy your lordship that I have dealt
+honestly" -- here the factor paused for a moment, then with an
+effort added -- "by you, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"One word," said Malcolm "-- the last of the sort, I believe,
+that will ever pass between us. Thank God! we had made it up
+before yesterday. -- If you have ever been hard upon any of my
+tenants, not to say unfair, you have wronged me infinitely more
+than if you had taken from me. God be with me as I prefer ruin to
+wrong. Remember, besides, that my tenants are my charge and care.
+For you, my representative, therefore, to do one of them an
+injury is to do me a double injury -- to wrong my tenant, and to
+wrong him in my name."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my lord! you don't know how they would take advantage of
+you, if there were nobody to look after your interests."</p>
+
+<p>"Then do look after them, sir. It would be bad for them to
+succeed, as well as crippling to me. Only be sure, with the
+thought of the righteous God to elevate your sense of justice,
+that you are in the right. If doubtful, then give in. -- And now,
+if any man thinks he has cause of complaint, I leave it to you,
+with the help of the new light that has been given you, to
+reconsider the matter, and, where needful, to make reparation.
+You must be the friend of my tenant as much as of his landlord. I
+have no interests inimical to those of my tenants. If any man
+comes to me with complaint, I will send him to restate his case
+to you, with the understanding that, if you will not listen to
+him, he is to come to me again, when I shall hear both sides and
+judge between. If after six months you should desire me to go
+over the books with you, I will do so. As to your loyalty to my
+family and its affairs, of that I never had a shadow of
+suspicion."</p>
+
+<p>As he ended, Malcolm held out his hand. The factor's trembled
+in his strong grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Crathie is sorely vexed, my lord," he said, rising
+to take his leave, "at things both said and done in the
+dark."</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Give Mrs Crathie my compliments," he said, "and tell her a
+man is more than a marquis. If she will after this treat every
+honest fisherman as if he might possibly turn out a lord, she and
+I shall be more than quits."</p>
+
+<p>The next morning he carried her again a few mackerel he had
+just caught, and she never forgot the lesson given her. That
+morning, I may mention, he did not go fishing alone, but had a
+lady with him in the dinghy; and indeed they were together, in
+one place and another, the most of the day -- at one time flying
+along the fields, she on the bay mare, and he on Kelpie.</p>
+
+<p>When the evening came, the town hall was crammed -- men
+standing on all the window sills; and so many could not get in
+that Malcolm proposed they should occupy the square in front. A
+fisherman in garb and gesture, not the less a gentleman and a
+marquis, he stood on the steps of the town hall and spoke to his
+people. They received him with wild enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>"The open air is better for everything," he began. "Fishers, I
+have called you first, because you are my own people. I am, and
+shall be a fisherman, after such fashion, I trust, as will
+content my old comrades. How things have come about, I shall not
+now tell you. Come all of you and dine with me, and you shall
+hear enough to satisfy at least lawful curiosity. At present my
+care is that you should understand the terms upon which it is
+possible for us to live together as friends. I make no allusion
+to personal friendships. A true friend is for ever a friend. And
+I venture to say my old friends know best both what I am and what
+I shall be. As to them I have no shadow of anxiety. But I would
+gladly be a friend to all, and will do my endeavour to that
+end.</p>
+
+<p>"You of Portlossie shall have your harbour cleared without
+delay."</p>
+
+<p>In justice to the fishers I here interrupt my report to state
+that the very next day they set about clearing the harbour
+themselves. It was their business -- in part at least, they said,
+and they were ashamed of having left it so long. This did much
+towards starting well for a new order of things.</p>
+
+<p>"You of Scaurnose shall hear the blasting necessary for your
+harbour commence within a fortnight; and every house shall ere
+long have a small piece of land at a reasonable rate allotted to
+it. But I feel bound to mention that there are some among you
+upon whom, until I see that they carry themselves differently, I
+must keep an eye. That they have shown themselves unfriendly to
+myself in my attempts to persuade them to what they knew to be
+right, I shall endeavour to forget, but I give them warning that
+whoever shall hereafter disturb the peace or interfere with the
+liberty of my people, shall assuredly be cast out of my borders,
+and that as soon as the law will permit.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall take measures that all complaints shall be heard, and
+all save foolish ones heeded; for, as much as in me lies, I will
+to execute justice and judgment and righteousness in the land.
+Whoever oppresses or wrongs his neighbour shall have to do with
+me. And to aid me in doing justice, I pray the help of every
+honest man. I have not been so long among you without having in
+some measure distinguished between the men who have heart and
+brain, and the men who have merely a sense of their own
+importance -- which latter class unhappily, always takes itself
+for the former. I will deal with every man as I find him. I am
+set to rule, and rule I will. He who loves righteousness, will
+help me to rule; he who loves it not, shall be ruled, or
+depart."</p>
+
+<p>The address had been every now and then interrupted by a
+hearty cheer; at this point the cheering was greatly prolonged;
+after it there was no more. For thus he went on:</p>
+
+<p>"And now I am about to give you proof that I mean what I say,
+and that evil shall not come to the light without being noted and
+dealt with.</p>
+
+<p>"There are in this company two women -- my eyes are at this
+moment upon them where they stand together. One of them is
+already well known to you all by sight: now you shall know, not
+what she looks, but what she is. Her name, or at least that by
+which she goes among you, is Barbara Catanach. The other is an
+Englishwoman of whom you know nothing. Her name is Caley."</p>
+
+<p>All eyes were turned upon the two. Even Mrs Catanach was cowed
+by the consciousness of the universal stare, and a kind of numb
+thrill went through her from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"Well assured that if I brought a criminal action against
+them, it would hang them both, I trust you will not imagine it
+revenge that moves me thus to expose them. In refraining from
+prosecuting them, I bind myself of necessity to see that they
+work no more evil. In giving them time for repentance, I take the
+consequences upon myself. I am bound to take care that they do
+not employ the respite in doing mischief to their neighbours.
+Without precaution I could not be justified in sparing them.
+Therefore those women shall not go forth to pass for harmless
+members of society, and see the life and honour of others lie
+bare to their secret attack. They shall live here, in this town,
+thoroughly known; and absolutely distrusted. And that they may
+thus be known and distrusted, I publicly declare that I hold
+proof against these women of having conspired to kill me. From
+the effects of the poison they succeeded in giving me, I fear I
+shall never altogether recover. I can prove also, to the extreme
+of circumstantial evidence, that there is the blood of one child
+at least upon the hands of each; and that there are mischiefs
+innumerable upon their lying tongues, it were an easy task to
+convince you. If I wrong them, let them accuse me; and whether
+they lose or gain their suit, I promise before you for witnesses,
+I will pay all; only thereby they will compel me to bring my
+actions for murder and conspiracy. Let them choose.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear what I have determined concerning them. The woman
+Catanach shall take to her cottage the woman Caley. That cottage
+they shall have rent free: who could receive money from such
+hands? I will appoint them also a sufficiency for life and
+maintenance, bare indeed, for I would not have them comfortable.
+But they shall be free to work if they can find any to employ
+them. If, however, either shall go beyond the bounds I set, she
+shall be followed the moment she is missed, and that with a
+warrant for her apprehension. And I beg all honest people to keep
+an eye upon them. According as they live shall their life be. If
+they come to repentance, they will bless the day I resolved upon
+such severe measures on their behalf. Let them go to their
+place."</p>
+
+<p>I will not try to describe the devilish look, mingled of
+contempt and hate, that possessed the countenance of the midwife,
+as, with head erect, and eyes looking straight before her, she
+obeyed the command. Caley, white as death, trembled and tottered,
+nor dared once look up as she followed her companion to their
+appointed hell. Whether they made it pleasant for each other my
+reader may debate with himself. Before many months had gone by,
+stared at and shunned by all, even by Miss Horn's Jean, driven
+back upon her own memories, and the pictures that rose out of
+them, and deprived of every chance of indulging her dominant
+passion for mischievous influence, the midwife's face told such a
+different tale, that the schoolmaster began to cherish a feeble
+hope that within a few years Mrs Catanach might get so far as to
+begin to suspect she was a sinner -- that she had actually done
+things she ought not to have done. One of those things that same
+night Malcolm heard from the lips of Duncan, a tale of horror and
+dismay. Not until then did he know, after all he knew concerning
+her, what the woman was capable of.</p>
+
+<p>At his own entreaty, Duncan was formally recognized as piper
+to the Marquis of Lossie. His ambition reached no higher. Malcolm
+himself saw to his perfect equipment, heedful specially that his
+kilt and plaid should be of Duncan's own tartan of red and blue
+and green. His dirk and broadsword he had new sheathed, with
+silver mountings. A great silver brooch with a big cairngorm in
+the centre, took the place of the brass one, which henceforth was
+laid up among the precious things in the little armoury, and the
+badge of his clan in gold, with rubies and amethysts for the
+bells of the heather, glowed on his bonnet. And Malcolm's guests,
+as long as Duncan continued able to fill the bag, had to endure
+as best they might, between each course of every dinner without
+fail, two or three minutes of uproar and outcry from the treble
+throat of the powerful Lossie pipes. By his own desire, the piper
+had a chair and small table set for him behind and to the right
+of his chief, as he called him; there he ate with the family and
+guests, waited upon by Davy, part of whose business it was to
+hand him the pipes at the proper moment, whereupon he rose to his
+feet, for even he with all his experience and habitude was unable
+in a sitting posture to keep that stand of pipes full of wind,
+and raised such a storm of sound as made the windows tremble. A
+lady guest would now and then venture to hint that the custom was
+rather a trying one for English ears; but Clementina would never
+listen to a breath against Duncan's music. Her respect and
+affection for the old man were unbounded.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm was one of the few who understand the shelter of
+light, the protection to be gained against lying tongues by the
+discarding of needless reticence, and the open presentation of
+the truth. Many men who would not tell a lie, yet seem to have
+faith in concealment: they would rather not reveal the truth;
+darkness seems to offer them the cover of a friendly wing. But
+there is no veil like light -- no adamantine armour against hurt
+like the truth. To Malcolm it was one of the promises of the
+kingdom that there is nothing covered that shall not be revealed.
+He was anxious, therefore, to tell his people, at the coming
+dinner, the main points of his story, and certain that such
+openness would also help to lay the foundation of confidence
+between him and his people. The one difficulty in the way was the
+position of Florimel. But that could not fail to appear in any
+case, and he was satisfied that even for her sake it was far
+better to speak openly; for then the common heart would take her
+in and cover her. He consulted, therefore, with Lenorme, who went
+to find her. She came, threw her arms round his neck and begged
+him to say whatever he thought best.</p>
+
+<p>To add the final tinge to the rainbow of Malcolm's joy, on the
+morning of the dinner the schoolmaster arrived. It would be hard
+to say whether Malcolm or Clementina was the more delighted to
+see him. He said little with his tongue, but much with his eyes
+and face and presence.</p>
+
+<p>This time the tables were not set in different parts of the
+grounds, but gathered upon the level of the drive and the
+adjacent lawny spaces between the house and the trees. Malcolm,
+in full highland dress as chief of his clan, took the head of the
+central table, with Florimel in the place of honour at his right
+hand, and Clementina on his left. Lenorme sat next to Florimel,
+and Annie Mair next to Lenorme. On the other side, Mr Graham sat
+next to Clementina, Miss Horn next to Mr Graham, and Blue Peter
+next to Miss Horn. Except Mr Morrison, he had asked none who were
+not his tenants or servants or in some way connected with the
+estates, except indeed a few whom he counted old friends, amongst
+them some aged beggar folk, waiting their summons to Abraham's
+bosom -- in which there was no such exceptional virtue on the
+marquis's part, for, the poor law not having yet invaded
+Scotland, a man was not without the respect of his neighbours
+merely because he was a beggar. He set Mr Morrison to preside at
+the farmers' tables, and had all the fisher folk about
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>When the main part of the dinner was over, he rose, and with
+as much circumstance as he thought desirable, told his story,
+beginning with the parts in it his uncle and Mrs Catanach had
+taken. It was, however, he said, a principle in the history of
+the world, that evil should bring forth good, and his poor little
+cock boat had been set adrift upon an ocean of blessing. For had
+he not been taken to the heart of one of the noblest and simplest
+of men, who had brought him up in honourable poverty and
+rectitude? When he had said this, he turned to Duncan, who sat at
+his own table behind him, with his pipe on a stool covered with a
+rich cloth by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"You all know my grandfather," he went on, "and you all
+respect him."</p>
+
+<p>At this rose a great shout.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, my friends," he continued. "My desire is that
+every soul upon land of mine should carry himself to Duncan
+MacPhail as if he were in blood that which he is in deed and in
+truth, my grandfather."</p>
+
+<p>A second great shout arose, which wavered and sank when they
+saw the old man bow his head upon his hands.</p>
+
+<p>He went on to speak of the privileges he alone of all his race
+had ever enjoyed -- the privileges of toil and danger, with all
+their experiences of human dependence and divine aid; the
+privilege of the confidence and companionship of honourable
+labouring men, and the understanding of their ways and thoughts
+and feelings; and, above all, the privilege of the friendship and
+instruction of the schoolmaster, to whom he owed more than
+eternity could reveal.</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned again to his narrative, and told how his
+father, falsely informed that his wife and child were dead,
+married Florimel's mother; how his mother, out of compassion for
+both of them, held her peace; how for twenty years she had lived
+with her cousin Miss Horn, and held her peace even from her; how
+at last, when, having succeeded to the property, she heard he was
+coming to the House, the thought of his nearness yet
+unapproachableness -- in this way at least he, the child of
+both, interpreted the result -- so worked upon a worn and
+enfeebled frame, that she died.</p>
+
+<p>Then he told how Miss Horn, after his mother's death, came
+upon letters revealing the secret which she had all along known
+must exist, but after which, from love and respect for her
+cousin, she had never inquired.</p>
+
+<p>Last of all he told how, in a paroxysm of rage, Mrs Catanach
+had let the secret of his birth escape her; how she had
+afterwards made affidavit concerning it; and how his father had
+upon his death bed, with all necessary legal observances,
+acknowledged him his son and heir.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, to the mighty gladness of my soul," he said, looking
+on Florimel at his side, "my dearly loved and honoured sister,
+loved and honoured long before I knew she was my own, has
+accepted me as her brother, and I do not think she greatly
+regrets the loss of the headship of the house which she has
+passed over to me. She will lose little else. And of all women it
+may well be to her a small matter to lose a mere title, seeing
+she is so soon to change her name for one who will bring her
+honour of a more enduring reality. For he who is about to become
+her husband is not only one of the noblest of men, but a man of
+genius whose praises she will hear on all sides. One of his
+works, the labour and gift of love, you shall see when we rise
+from the table. It is a portrait of your late landlord, my
+father, painted partly from a miniature, partly from my sister,
+partly from the portraits of the family, and partly, I am happy
+to think, from myself. You must yourselves judge of the truth of
+it. And you will remember that Mr Lenorme never saw my father. I
+say this, not to excuse, but to enhance his work.</p>
+
+<p>"My tenants, I will do my best to give you fair play. My
+friend and factor, Mr Crathie, has confided to me his doubts
+whether he may not have been a little hard: he is prepared to
+reconsider some of your cases. Do not imagine that I am going to
+be a careless man of business. I want money, for I have enough to
+do with it, if only to set right much that is wrong. But let God
+judge between you and me.</p>
+
+<p>"My fishermen, every honest man of you is my friend, and you
+shall know it. Between you and me that is enough. But for the
+sake of harmony, and right, and order, and that I may keep near
+you, I shall appoint three men of yourselves in each village, to
+whom any man or woman may go with request or complaint. If two of
+those three men judge the matter fit to refer to me, the
+probability is that I shall see it as they do. If any man think
+them scant of justice towards him, let him come to me. Should I
+find myself in doubt, I have here at my side my beloved and
+honoured master to whom to apply for counsel, knowing that what
+oracle he may utter I shall receive straight from the innermost
+parts of a temple of the Holy Ghost. Friends, if we be honest
+with ourselves, we shall be honest with each other.</p>
+
+<p>"And, in conclusion, why should you hear from any lips but my
+own, that this lady beside me, the daughter of an English earl of
+ancient house, has honoured the house of Lossie by consenting to
+become its marchioness? Lady Clementina Thornicroft possesses
+large estates in the south of England, but not for them did I
+seek her favour -- as you will be convinced when you reflect what
+the fact involves which she has herself desired me to make known
+to you -- namely, that it was while yet she was unacquainted with
+my birth and position, and had never dreamed that I was other
+than only a fisherman and a groom, that she accepted me for her
+husband. -- I thank my God."</p>
+
+<p>With that he took his seat, and after hearty cheering, a glass
+or two of wine, and several speeches, all rose, and went to look
+at the portrait of the late marquis.</p>
+
+<h1 align="CENTER"><a name="CHAPTER_LXXII"></a>CHAPTER LXXII:
+KNOTTED STRANDS</h1>
+
+<p>Lady Clementina had to return to England to see her lawyers,
+and arrange her affairs. Before she went, she would gladly have
+gone with Malcolm over every spot where had passed any portion of
+his history, and at each heard its own chapter or paragraph; but
+Malcolm obstinately refused to begin such a narration before
+Clementina was mistress of the region to which it mainly
+belonged. After that, he said, he would, even more gladly, he
+believed, than she, occupy all the time that could be spared from
+the duties of the present in piecing together the broken
+reflections of the past in the pools of memory, until they had
+lived both their lives over again together, from earliest
+recollection to the time when the two streams flowed into one,
+thenceforth to mingle more and more inwardly to endless ages.</p>
+
+<p>So the Psyche was launched. Lady Clementina, Florimel, and
+Lenorme were the passengers, and Malcolm, Blue Peter, and Davy
+the crew. There was no room for servants, yet was there no lack
+of service. They had rough weather a part of the time, and
+neither Clementina nor Lenorme was altogether comfortable, but
+they made a rapid voyage, and were all well when they landed at
+Greenwich.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing nothing of Lady Bellair's proceedings, they sent Davy
+to reconnoitre in Portland Place. He brought back word that there
+was no one in the house but an old woman. So Malcolm took
+Florimel there. Everything belonging to their late visitors had
+vanished, and nobody knew where they had gone.</p>
+
+<p>Searching the drawers and cabinets, Malcolm, to his
+unspeakable delight, found a miniature of his mother, along with
+one of his father -- a younger likeness than he had yet seen.
+Also he found a few letters of his mother -- mostly mere notes in
+pencil; but neither these nor those of his father which Miss Horn
+had given him, would he read:</p>
+
+<p>"What right has life over the secrets of death?" he said. "Or
+rather, what right have we who sleep over the secrets of those
+who have waked from their sleep and left the fragments of their
+dreams behind them?"</p>
+
+<p>Lovingly he laid them together, and burned them to dust
+flakes.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother shall tell me what she pleases, when I find her,"
+he said. "She shall not reprove me for reading her letters to my
+father."</p>
+
+<p>They were married, at Wastbeach, both couples in the same
+ceremony. Immediately after the wedding, the painter and his
+bride set out for Rome, and the marquis and marchioness went on
+board the Psyche. For nothing would content Clementina, troubled
+at the experience of her first voyage, but she must get herself
+accustomed to the sea, as became the wife of a fisherman;
+therefore in no way would she journey but on board the Psyche;
+and as it was the desire of each to begin their married life at
+home, they sailed direct for Portlossie. After a good voyage,
+however, they landed, in order to reach home quietly, at Duff
+Harbour, took horses from there, and arrived at Lossie House late
+in the evening.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm had written to the housekeeper to prepare for them the
+Wizard's Chamber, but to alter nothing on walls or in furniture.
+That room, he had resolved, should be the first he occupied with
+his bride. Mrs Courthope was scandalized at the idea of taking an
+earl's daughter to sleep in the garret, not to mention that the
+room had for centuries had an ill name; but she had no choice,
+and therefore contented herself with doing all that lay in the
+power of woman, under such severe restrictions, to make the dingy
+old room cheerful.</p>
+
+<p>Alone at length in their somewhat strange quarters, concerning
+which Malcolm had merely told her that the room was that in which
+he was born -- what place fitter, thought Clementina, wherein to
+commence the long and wonderful story she hungered to hear.
+Malcolm would still have delayed it, but she asked question upon
+question till she had him fairly afloat. He had not gone far,
+however, before he had to make mention of the stair in the wall,
+which led from the place where they sat, straight from the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>"Can there be such a stair in this room?" she asked in
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>He rose, took a candle, opened a door, then another, and
+showed her the first of the steps down which the midwife had
+carried him, and descending which, twenty years after, his father
+had come by his death.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go down," said Clementina.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you not afraid? Look," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid, and you with me!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"But it is dark, and the steps are broken."</p>
+
+<p>"If it led to Hades, I would go with my fisherman. The only
+horror would be to be left behind."</p>
+
+<p>"Come then," said Malcolm, "Only you must be very careful." He
+laid a shawl on her shoulders, and down they went, Malcolm a few
+steps in front, holding the candle to every step for her, many
+being broken.</p>
+
+<p>They came at length where the stair ceased in ruin. He leaped
+down; she stooped, put her hands on his shoulder, and dropped
+into his arms. Then over the fallen rubbish, out by the groaning
+door, they went into the moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina was merry as a child. All was so safe and peaceful
+with her fisherman! She would not hear of returning. They must
+have a walk in the moonlight first! So down the steps and the
+winding path into the valley of the burn, and up to the flower
+garden they wandered, Clementina telling him how sick the
+moonlight had made her feel that night she met him first on the
+Boar's Tail, when his words concerning her revived the conviction
+that he loved Florimel. At the great stone basin Malcolm set the
+swan spouting, but the sweet musical jargon of the falling water
+seemed almost coarse in the soundless diapason of the moonlight.
+So he stopped it again, and they strolled farther up the
+garden.</p>
+
+<p>Clementina venturing to remind him of the sexton-like
+gardener's story of the lady and the hermit's cave, which because
+of its Scotch, she was unable to follow. Malcolm told her now
+what John Jack had narrated, adding that the lady was his own
+mother, and that from the gardener's tale he learned that morning
+at length how to account for the horror which had seized him on
+his first entering the cave, as also for his father's peculiar
+carriage on that occasion: doubtless he then caught a likeness in
+him to his mother. He then recounted the occurrence
+circumstantially.</p>
+
+<p>"I have ever since felt ashamed of the weakness," he
+concluded: "but at this moment I believe I could walk in with
+perfect coolness."</p>
+
+<p>"We won't try it tonight," said Clementina, and once more
+turned him from the place, reverencing the shadow he had brought
+with him from the spirit of his mother.</p>
+
+<p>They walked and sat and talked in the moonlight, for how long
+neither knew; and when the moon went behind the trees on the
+cliff, and the valley was left in darkness, but a darkness that
+seemed alive with the new day soon to be born, they sat yet, lost
+in a peaceful unveiling of hearts, till a sudden gust of wind
+roused Malcolm, and looking up he saw that the stars were
+clouded, and knew that the chill of the morning was drawing
+near.</p>
+
+<p>He kept that chamber just as it was ever after, and often
+retired to it for meditation. He never restored the ruinous parts
+of the stair, and he kept the door at the top carefully closed.
+But he cleared out the rubbish that choked the place where the
+stair had led lower down, came upon it again in tolerable
+preservation a little beneath, and followed it into a passage
+that ran under the burn, appearing to lead in the direction of
+the cave behind the Baillies' Barn. Doubtless there was some
+foundation for the legend of Lord Gernon.</p>
+
+<p>There however, he abandoned the work, thinking of the
+possibility of a time when employment would be scarce, and his
+people in want of all he could give them. And when such a time
+arrived, as arrive it did before they had been two years married,
+a far more important undertaking was found needful to employ the
+many who must earn or starve. Then it was that Clementina had the
+desire of her heart, and began to lay out the money she had been
+saving for the purpose, in rebuilding the ancient Castle of
+Colonsay. Its vaults were emptied of rubbish and ruin, the rock
+faced afresh, walls and towers and battlements raised, until at
+last, when the loftiest tower seemed to have reached its height,
+it rose yet higher, and blossomed in radiance; for, topmost crown
+of all, there, flaming far into the northern night, shone a
+splendid beacon lamp, to guide the fisherman when his way was
+hid.</p>
+
+<p>Every summer for years, Florimel and her husband spent weeks
+in the castle, and many a study the painter made there of the
+ever changing face of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm, as he well might, had such a strong feeling of the
+power for good of every high souled schoolmaster, that nothing
+would serve him but Mr Graham must be reinstated. He told the
+presbytery that if it were not done, he would himself build a
+school house for him, and the consequence, he said, needed no
+prediction. Finding, at the same time, that the young man they
+had put in his place was willing to act as his assistant, he
+proposed that he should keep the cottage, and all other
+emoluments of the office, on the sole condition that, when he
+found he could no longer conscientiously and heartily further the
+endeavours of Mr Graham, he should say so; whereupon the marquis
+would endeavour to procure him another appointment; and on these
+understandings the thing was arranged.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Graham thenceforward lived in the House, a spiritual father
+to the whole family, reverenced by all, ever greeted with
+gladness, ever obeyed. The spiritual dignity and simplicity, the
+fine sense and delicate feeling of the man, rendered him a saving
+presence in the place; and Clementina felt as if one of the
+ancient prophets, blossomed into a Christian, was the glory of
+their family and house. Like a perfect daughter, she watched him,
+tried to discover preferences of which he might not himself be
+aware, and often waited upon him with her own hands.</p>
+
+<p>There was an ancient building connected with the house,
+divided now for many years into barn and dairy, but evidently the
+chapel of the monastery: this Malcolm soon set about
+reconverting. It made a lovely chapel -- too large for the
+household, but not too large for its congregation upon Wednesday
+evenings, when many of the fishermen and their families, and not
+a few of the inhabitants of the upper town, with occasionally
+several farm servants from the neighbourhood, assembled to listen
+devoutly to the fervent and loving expostulations and rousings,
+or the tender consolings and wise instructions of the master, as
+every one called him. The hold he had of their hearts was firm,
+and his influence on their consciences far reaching.</p>
+
+<p>When there was need of conference, or ground for any wide
+expostulation, the marquis would call a meeting in the chapel;
+but this occurred very seldom. Now and then the master, sometimes
+the marquis himself, would use it for a course of lectures or a
+succession of readings from some specially interesting book; and
+in what had been the sacristy they gathered a small library for
+the use of the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>No meeting was held there of a Sunday, for although the
+clergyman was the one person to whom all his life the marquis
+never came any nearer, he was not the less careful to avoid
+everything that might rouse contention or encourage division.</p>
+
+<p>"I find the doing of the will of God," he would say, "leaves
+me no time for disputing about his plans -- I do not say for
+thinking about them."</p>
+
+<p>Not therefore, however, would he waive the exercise of the
+inborn right of teaching, and anybody might come to the house and
+see the master on Sunday evenings. As to whether people went to
+church or stayed away, he never troubled himself in the least;
+and no more did the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>The chapel had not been long finished when he had an organ
+built in it. Lady Lossie played upon it. Almost every evening, at
+a certain hour, she played for a while; the door was always open,
+and any one who pleased might sit down and listen.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the feeling of the community, from the strengthening
+and concentrating influence of the House, began to bear upon
+offenders; and any whose conduct had become in the least flagrant
+soon felt that the general eye was upon them, and that gradually
+the human tide was falling from them, and leaving them prisoned
+in a rocky basin on a barren shore. But at the same time, all
+three of the powers at the House were watching to come in the
+moment there was a chance; and what with the marquis's warnings,
+his wife's encouragements, and the master's expostulations, there
+was no little hope of the final recovery of several who would
+otherwise most likely have sunk deeper and deeper.</p>
+
+<p>The marchioness took Lizzy for her personal attendant, and had
+her boy much about her; so that by the time she had children of
+her own, she had some genuine and worthy notion of what a child
+was, and what could and ought to be done for the development of
+the divine germ that lay in the human egg; and had found that the
+best she could do for any child, or indeed anybody, was to be
+good herself.</p>
+
+<p>Rose married a young fisherman, and made a brave wife and
+mother. To the end of her days she regarded the marquis almost as
+a being higher than human, an angel that had found and saved
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Kelpie had a foal, and, apparently in consequence, grew so
+much more gentle that at length Malcolm consented that
+Clementina, who was an excellent horsewoman, should mount her.
+After a few attempts to unseat her, not of the most determined
+kind however, Kelpie, on her part, consented to carry her, and
+ever after seemed proud of having a mistress that could ride. Her
+foal turned out a magnificent horse. Malcolm did not allow him to
+do anything that could be called work before he was eight years
+old, and had the return at the other end, for when Goblin was
+thirty he rode him still, and to judge by appearances, might but
+for an accident have ridden him ten years more.</p>
+
+<p>It was not long ere people began to remark that no one now
+ever heard the piper utter the name Campbell. An ill bred youth
+once -- it was well for him that Malcolm was not near -- dared
+the evil word in his presence: a cloud swept across the old man's
+face, but he held his peace; and to the day of his death, which
+arrived in his ninety-first year, it never crossed his lips. He
+died with the Lossie pipes on his bed, Malcolm on one side of
+him, and Clementina on the other.</p>
+
+<p>Some of my readers may care to know that Phemy and Davy were
+married, and made the quaintest, oldest fashioned little couple,
+with hearts which king or beggar might equally have trusted.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm's relations with the fisher folk, founded as they were
+in truth and open uprightness, were not in the least injured by
+his change of position. He made it a point to be always at home
+during the herring fishing. Whatever might be going on in London,
+the marquis and marchioness, their family and household, were
+sure to leave in time for the commencement of that. Those who
+admired Malcolm, of whom there were not a few even in Vanity
+Fair, called him the fisher king: the wags called him the
+kingfisher, and laughed at the oddity of his taste in preferring
+what he called his duty to the pleasures of the season. But the
+marquis found even the hen pecked Partan a nobler and more
+elevating presence than any strutting platitude of Bond Street.
+And when he was at home, he was always about amongst the people.
+Almost every day he would look in at some door in the Seaton, and
+call out a salutation to the busy housewife -- perhaps go in and
+sit down for a minute. Now he would be walking with this one, now
+talking with that -- oftenest with Blue Peter; and sometimes both
+their wives would be with them, upon the shore, or in the
+grounds. Nor was there a family meal to which any one or all
+together of the six men whom he had set over the Seaton and
+Scaurnose would not have been welcomed by the marquis and his
+Clemency. The House was head and heart of the whole district.</p>
+
+<p>A conventional visitor was certain to feel very shruggish at
+first sight of the terms on which the marquis was with "persons
+of that sort;" but often such a one came to allow that it was no
+great matter: the persons did not seem to presume unpleasantly,
+and, notwithstanding his atrocious training, the marquis was
+after all a very good sort of fellow -- considering.</p>
+
+<p>In the third year he launched a strange vessel. Her tonnage
+was two hundred, but she was built like a fishing boat. She had
+great stowage forward and below: if there was a large take, boat
+after boat could empty its load into her, and go back and draw
+its nets again. But this was not the original design in her.</p>
+
+<p>The after half of her deck was parted off with a light rope
+rail, was kept as white as holystone could make it, and had a
+brass railed bulwark. She was steered with a wheel, for more
+room; the top of the binnacle was made sloping, to serve as a
+lectern; there were seats all round the bulwarks; and she was
+called the Clemency.</p>
+
+<p>For more than two years he had provided training for the
+fittest youths he could find amongst the fishers, and now he had
+a pretty good band playing on wind instruments, able to give back
+to God a shadow of his own music. The same formed the Clemency's
+crew. And every Sunday evening the great fishing boat with the
+marquis, and almost always the marchioness on board, and the
+latter never without a child or children, led out from the
+harbour such of the boats as were going to spend the night on the
+water.</p>
+
+<p>When they reached the ground, all the other boats gathered
+about the great boat, and the chief men came on board, and
+Malcolm stood up betwixt the wheel and the binnacle, and read --
+always from the gospel, and generally words of Jesus, and talked
+to them, striving earnestly to get the truth alive into their
+hearts. Then he would pray aloud to the living God, as one so
+living that they could not see him, so one with them that they
+could not behold him. When they rose from their knees; man after
+man dropped into his boat, and the fleet scattered wide over the
+waters to search them for their treasure.</p>
+
+<p>Then the little ones were put to bed; and Malcolm and
+Clementina would sit on the deck, reading and talking, till the
+night fell, when they too went below, and slept in peace. But if
+ever a boat wanted help, or the slightest danger arose, the first
+thing was to call the marquis, and he was on deck in a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning, when a few of the boats had gathered, they
+would make for the harbour again, but now with full blast of
+praising trumpets and horns, the waves seeming to dance to the
+well ordered noise divine. Or if the wind was contrary, or no
+wind blew, the lightest laden of the boats would take the
+Clemency in tow, and, with frequent change of rowers, draw her
+softly back to the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>For such Monday mornings, the marquis wrote a little song, and
+his Clemency made an air to it, and harmonized it for the band.
+Here is the last stanza of it:</p>
+
+<pre>
+Like the fish that brought the coin,
+We in ministry will join --
+Bring what pleases thee the best;
+Help from each to all the rest.
+</pre>
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Marquis of Lossie, by George MacDonald
+
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