The chaise came to the door in a strong drenching mist. We took our leave in
silence: the house of Durrisdeer standing with dropping gutters and windows
closed, like a place dedicate to melancholy. I observed the Master kept his head
out, looking back on these splashed walls and glimmering roofs, till they were
suddenly swallowed in the mist; and I must suppose some natural sadness fell
upon the man at this departure; or was it some provision of the end? At least,
upon our mounting the long brae from Durrisdeer, as we walked side by side in
the wet, he began first to whistle and then to sing the saddest of our country
tunes, which sets folk weeping in a tavern, WANDERING WILLIE. The set of words
he used with it I have not heard elsewhere, and could never come by any copy;
but some of them which were the most appropriate to our departure linger in my
memory. One verse began -
Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces, Home was home then, my
dear, happy for the child.
And ended somewhat thus -
Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland, Lone stands the house, and
the chimney-stone is cold. Lone let it stand, now the folks are all departed,
The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
I could never be a judge of the merit of these verses; they were so hallowed
by the melancholy of the air, and were sung (or rather "soothed") to me by a
master-singer at a time so fitting. He looked in my face when he had done, and
saw that my eyes watered.
"Ah! Mackellar," said he, "do you think I have never a regret?"
"I do not think you could be so bad a man," said I, "if you had not all the
machinery to be a good one."
"No, not all," says he: "not all. You are there in error. The malady of not
wanting, my evangelist." But methought he sighed as he mounted again into the
chaise.
All day long we journeyed in the same miserable weather: the mist besetting
us closely, the heavens incessantly weeping on my head. The road lay over
moorish hills, where was no sound but the crying of moor-fowl in the wet heather
and the pouring of the swollen burns. Sometimes I would doze off in slumber,
when I would find myself plunged at once in some foul and ominous nightmare,
from the which I would awake strangling. Sometimes, if the way was steep and the
wheels turning slowly, I would overhear the voices from within, talking in that
tropical tongue which was to me as inarticulate as the piping of the fowls.
Sometimes, at a longer ascent, the Master would set foot to ground and walk by
my side, mostly without speech. And all the time, sleeping or waking, I beheld
the same black perspective of approaching ruin; and the same pictures rose in my
view, only they were now painted upon hillside mist. One, I remember, stood
before me with the colours of a true illusion. It showed me my lord seated at a
table in a small room; his head, which was at first buried in his hands, he
slowly raised, and turned upon me a countenance from which hope had fled. I saw
it first on the black window-panes, my last night in Durrisdeer; it haunted and
returned upon me half the voyage through; and yet it was no effect of lunacy,
for I have come to a ripe old age with no decay of my intelligence; nor yet (as
I was then tempted to suppose) a heaven-sent warning of the future, for all
manner of calamities befell, not that calamity - and I saw many pitiful sights,
but never that one.
It was decided we should travel on all night; and it was singular, once the
dusk had fallen, my spirits somewhat rose. The bright lamps, shining forth into
the mist and on the smoking horses and the hodding post-boy, gave me perhaps an
outlook intrinsically more cheerful than what day had shown; or perhaps my mind
had become wearied of its melancholy. At least, I spent some waking hours, not
without satisfaction in my thoughts, although wet and weary in my body; and fell
at last into a natural slumber without dreams. Yet I must have been at work even
in the deepest of my sleep; and at work with at least a measure of intelligence.
For I started broad awake, in the very act of crying out to myself
Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child,
stricken to find in it an appropriateness, which I had not yesterday
observed, to the Master's detestable purpose in the present journey.
We were then close upon the city of Glascow, where we were soon breakfasting
together at an inn, and where (as the devil would have it) we found a ship in
the very article of sailing. We took our places in the cabin; and, two days
after, carried our effects on board. Her name was the NONESUCH, a very ancient
ship and very happily named. By all accounts this should be her last voyage;
people shook their heads upon the quays, and I had several warnings offered me
by strangers in the street to the effect that she was rotten as a cheese, too
deeply loaden, and must infallibly founder if we met a gale. From this it fell
out we were the only passengers; the Captain, McMurtrie, was a silent, absorbed
man, with the Glascow or Gaelic accent; the mates ignorant rough seafarers, come
in through the hawsehole; and the Master and I were cast upon each other's
company.
THE NONESUCH carried a fair wind out of the Clyde, and for near upon a week
we enjoyed bright weather and a sense of progress. I found myself (to my wonder)
a born seaman, in so far at least as I was never sick; yet I was far from
tasting the usual serenity of my health. Whether it was the motion of the ship
on the billows, the confinement, the salted food, or all of these together, I
suffered from a blackness of spirit and a painful strain upon my temper. The
nature of my errand on that ship perhaps contributed; I think it did no more;
the malady (whatever it was) sprang from my environment; and if the ship were
not to blame, then it was the Master. Hatred and fear are ill bedfellows; but
(to my shame be it spoken) I have tasted those in other places, lain down and
got up with them, and eaten and drunk with them, and yet never before, nor
after, have I been so poisoned through and through, in soul and body, as I was
on board the NONESUCH. I freely confess my enemy set me a fair example of
forbearance; in our worst days displayed the most patient geniality, holding me
in conversation as long as I would suffer, and when I had rebuffed his civility,
stretching himself on deck to read. The book he had on board with him was Mr.
Richardson's famous CLARISSA! and among other small attentions he would read me
passages aloud; nor could any elocutionist have given with greater potency the
pathetic portions of that work. I would retort upon him with passages out of the
Bible, which was all my library - and very fresh to me, my religious duties (I
grieve to say it) being always and even to this day extremely neglected. He
tasted the merits of the word like the connoisseur he was; and would sometimes
take it from my hand, turn the leaves over like a man that knew his way, and
give me, with his fine declamation, a Roland for my Oliver. But it was singular
how little he applied his reading to himself; it passed high above his head like
summer thunder: Lovelace and Clarissa, the tales of David's generosity, the
psalms of his penitence, the solemn questions of the book of Job, the touching
poetry of Isaiah - they were to him a source of entertainment only, like the
scraping of a fiddle in a change- house. This outer sensibility and inner
toughness set me against him; it seemed of a piece with that impudent grossness
which I knew to underlie the veneer of his fine manners; and sometimes my gorge
rose against him as though he were deformed - and sometimes I would draw away as
though from something partly spectral. I had moments when I thought of him as of
a man of pasteboard - as though, if one should strike smartly through the
buckram of his countenance, there would be found a mere vacuity within. This
horror (not merely fanciful, I think) vastly increased my detestation of his
neighbourhood; I began to feel something shiver within me on his drawing near; I
had at times a longing to cry out; there were days when I thought I could have
struck him. This frame of mind was doubtless helped by shame, because I had
dropped during our last days at Durrisdeer into a certain toleration of the man;
and if any one had then told me I should drop into it again, I must have laughed
in his face. It is possible he remained unconscious of this extreme fever of my
resentment; yet I think he was too quick; and rather that he had fallen, in a
long life of idleness, into a positive need of company, which obliged him to
confront and tolerate my unconcealed aversion. Certain, at least, that he loved
the note of his own tongue, as, indeed, he entirely loved all the parts and
properties of himself; a sort of imbecility which almost necessarily attends on
wickedness. I have seen him driven, when I proved recalcitrant, to long
discourses with the skipper; and this, although the man plainly testified his
weariness, fiddling miserably with both hand and foot, and replying only with a
grunt.
After the first week out we fell in with foul winds and heavy weather. The
sea was high. The NONESUCH, being an old-fashioned ship and badly loaden, rolled
beyond belief; so that the skipper trembled for his masts, and I for my life. We
made no progress on our course. An unbearable ill-humour settled on the ship:
men, mates, and master, girding at one another all day long. A saucy word on the
one hand, and a blow on the other, made a daily incident. There were times when
the whole crew refused their duty; and we of the afterguard were twice got under
arms - being the first time that ever I bore weapons - in the fear of mutiny.
In the midst of our evil season sprang up a hurricane of wind; so that all
supposed she must go down. I was shut in the cabin from noon of one day till
sundown of the next; the Master was somewhere lashed on deck. Secundra had eaten
of some drug and lay insensible; so you may say I passed these hours in an
unbroken solitude. At first I was terrified beyond motion, and almost beyond
thought, my mind appearing to be frozen. Presently there stole in on me a ray of
comfort. If the NONESUCH foundered, she would carry down with her into the deeps
of that unsounded sea the creature whom we all so feared and hated; there would
be no more Master of Ballantrae, the fish would sport among his ribs; his
schemes all brought to nothing, his harmless enemies at peace. At first, I have
said, it was but a ray of comfort; but it had soon grown to be broad sunshine.
The thought of the man's death, of his deletion from this world, which he
embittered for so many, took possession of my mind. I hugged it, I found it
sweet in my belly. I conceived the ship's last plunge, the sea bursting upon all
sides into the cabin, the brief mortal conflict there, all by myself, in that
closed place; I numbered the horrors, I had almost said with satisfaction; I
felt I could bear all and more, if the NONESUCH carried down with her, overtook
by the same ruin, the enemy of my poor master's house. Towards noon of the
second day the screaming of the wind abated; the ship lay not so perilously
over, and it began to be clear to me that we were past the height of the
tempest. As I hope for mercy, I was singly disappointed. In the selfishness of
that vile, absorbing passion of hatred, I forgot the case of our innocent
shipmates, and thought but of myself and my enemy. For myself, I was already
old; I had never been young, I was not formed for the world's pleasures, I had
few affections; it mattered not the toss of a silver tester whether I was
drowned there and then in the Atlantic, or dribbled out a few more years, to
die, perhaps no less terribly, in a deserted sick-bed. Down I went upon my knees
- holding on by the locker, or else I had been instantly dashed across the
tossing cabin - and, lifting up my voice in the midst of that clamour of the
abating hurricane, impiously prayed for my own death. "O God!" I cried, "I would
be liker a man if I rose and struck this creature down; but Thou madest me a
coward from my mother's womb. O Lord, Thou madest me so, Thou knowest my
weakness, Thou knowest that any face of death will set me shaking in my shoes.
But, lo! here is Thy servant ready, his mortal weakness laid aside. Let me give
my life for this creature's; take the two of them, Lord! take the two, and have
mercy on the innocent!" In some such words as these, only yet more irreverent
and with more sacred adjurations, I continued to pour forth my spirit. God heard
me not, I must suppose in mercy; and I was still absorbed in my agony of
supplication when some one, removing the tarpaulin cover, let the light of the
sunset pour into the cabin. I stumbled to my feet ashamed, and was seized with
surprise to find myself totter and ache like one that had been stretched upon
the rack. Secundra Dass, who had slept off the effects of his drug, stood in a
corner not far off, gazing at me with wild eyes; and from the open skylight the
captain thanked me for my supplications.
"It's you that saved the ship, Mr. Mackellar," says he. "There is no craft of
seamanship that could have kept her floating: well may we say, 'Except the Lord
the city keep, the watchmen watch in vain!'"
I was abashed by the captain's error; abashed, also, by the surprise and fear
with which the Indian regarded me at first, and the obsequious civilities with
which he soon began to cumber me. I know now that he must have overheard and
comprehended the peculiar nature of my prayers. It is certain, of course, that
he at once disclosed the matter to his patron; and looking back with greater
knowledge, I can now understand what so much puzzled me at the moment, those
singular and (so to speak) approving smiles with which the Master honoured me.
Similarly, I can understand a word that I remember to have fallen from him in
conversation that same night; when, holding up his hand and smiling, "Ah!
Mackellar," said he, "not every man is so great a coward as he thinks he is -
nor yet so good a Christian." He did not guess how true he spoke! For the fact
is, the thoughts which had come to me in the violence of the storm retained
their hold upon my spirit; and the words that rose to my lips unbidden in the
instancy of prayer continued to sound in my ears: with what shameful
consequences, it is fitting I should honestly relate; for I could not support a
part of such disloyalty as to describe the sins of others and conceal my own.
The wind fell, but the sea hove ever the higher. All night the NONESUCH
rolled outrageously; the next day dawned, and the next, and brought no change.
To cross the cabin was scarce possible; old experienced seamen were cast down
upon the deck, and one cruelly mauled in the concussion; every board and block
in the old ship cried out aloud; and the great bell by the anchor-bitts
continually and dolefully rang. One of these days the Master and I sate alone
together at the break of the poop. I should say the NONESUCH carried a high,
raised poop. About the top of it ran considerable bulwarks, which made the ship
unweatherly; and these, as they approached the front on each side, ran down in a
fine, old- fashioned, carven scroll to join the bulwarks of the waist. From this
disposition, which seems designed rather for ornament than use, it followed
there was a discontinuance of protection: and that, besides, at the very margin
of the elevated part where (in certain movements of the ship) it might be the
most needful. It was here we were sitting: our feet hanging down, the Master
betwixt me and the side, and I holding on with both hands to the grating of the
cabin skylight; for it struck me it was a dangerous position, the more so as I
had continually before my eyes a measure of our evolutions in the person of the
Master, which stood out in the break of the bulwarks against the sun. Now his
head would be in the zenith and his shadow fall quite beyond the NONESUCH on the
farther side; and now he would swing down till he was underneath my feet, and
the line of the sea leaped high above him like the ceiling of a room. I looked
on upon this with a growing fascination, as birds are said to look on snakes. My
mind, besides, was troubled with an astonishing diversity of noises; for now
that we had all sails spread in the vain hope to bring her to the sea, the ship
sounded like a factory with their reverberations. We spoke first of the mutiny
with which we had been threatened; this led us on to the topic of assassination;
and that offered a temptation to the Master more strong than he was able to
resist. He must tell me a tale, and show me at the same time how clever he was
and how wicked. It was a thing he did always with affectation and display;
generally with a good effect. But this tale, told in a high key in the midst of
so great a tumult, and by a narrator who was one moment looking down at me from
the skies and the next up from under the soles of my feet - this particular
tale, I say, took hold upon me in a degree quite singular.
"My friend the count," it was thus that he began his story, "had for an enemy
a certain German baron, a stranger in Rome. It matters not what was the ground
of the count's enmity; but as he had a firm design to be revenged, and that with
safety to himself, he kept it secret even from the baron. Indeed, that is the
first principle of vengeance; and hatred betrayed is hatred impotent. The count
was a man of a curious, searching mind; he had something of the artist; if
anything fell for him to do, it must always be done with an exact perfection,
not only as to the result, but in the very means and instruments, or he thought
the thing miscarried. It chanced he was one day riding in the outer suburbs,
when he came to a disused by-road branching off into the moor which lies about
Rome. On the one hand was an ancient Roman tomb; on the other a deserted house
in a garden of evergreen trees. This road brought him presently into a field of
ruins, in the midst of which, in the side of a hill, he saw an open door, and,
not far off, a single stunted pine no greater than a currant-bush. The place was
desert and very secret; a voice spoke in the count's bosom that there was
something here to his advantage. He tied his horse to the pine- tree, took his
flint and steel in his hand to make a light, and entered into the hill. The
doorway opened on a passage of old Roman masonry, which shortly after branched
in two. The count took the turning to the right, and followed it, groping
forward in the dark, till he was brought up by a kind of fence, about
elbow-high, which extended quite across the passage. Sounding forward with his
foot, he found an edge of polished stone, and then vacancy. All his curiosity
was now awakened, and, getting some rotten sticks that lay about the floor, he
made a fire. In front of him was a profound well; doubtless some neighbouring
peasant had once used it for his water, and it was he that had set up the fence.
A long while the count stood leaning on the rail and looking down into the pit.
It was of Roman foundation, and, like all that nation set their hands to, built
as for eternity; the sides were still straight, and the joints smooth; to a man
who should fall in, no escape was possible. 'Now,' the count was thinking, 'a
strong impulsion brought me to this place. What for? what have I gained? why
should I be sent to gaze into this well?' when the rail of the fence gave
suddenly under his weight, and he came within an ace of falling headlong in.
Leaping back to save himself, he trod out the last flicker of his fire, which
gave him thenceforward no more light, only an incommoding smoke. 'Was I sent
here to my death?' says he, and shook from head to foot. And then a thought
flashed in his mind. He crept forth on hands and knees to the brink of the pit,
and felt above him in the air. The rail had been fast to a pair of uprights; it
had only broken from the one, and still depended from the other. The count set
it back again as he had found it, so that the place meant death to the first
comer, and groped out of the catacomb like a sick man. The next day, riding in
the Corso with the baron, he purposely betrayed a strong preoccupation. The
other (as he had designed) inquired into the cause; and he, after some fencing,
admitted that his spirits had been dashed by an unusual dream. This was
calculated to draw on the baron - a superstitious man, who affected the scorn of
superstition. Some rallying followed, and then the count, as if suddenly carried
away, called on his friend to beware, for it was of him that he had dreamed. You
know enough of human nature, my excellent Mackellar, to be certain of one thing:
I mean that the baron did not rest till he had heard the dream. The count, sure
that he would never desist, kept him in play till his curiosity was highly
inflamed, and then suffered himself, with seeming reluctance, to be overborne.
'I warn you,' says he, 'evil will come of it; something tells me so. But since
there is to be no peace either for you or me except on this condition, the blame
be on your own head! This was the dream:- I beheld you riding, I know not where,
yet I think it must have been near Rome, for on your one hand was an ancient
tomb, and on the other a garden of evergreen trees. Methought I cried and cried
upon you to come back in a very agony of terror; whether you heard me I know
not, but you went doggedly on. The road brought you to a desert place among
ruins, where was a door in a hillside, and hard by the door a misbegotten pine.
Here you dismounted (I still crying on you to beware), tied your horse to the
pine-tree, and entered resolutely in by the door. Within, it was dark; but in my
dream I could still see you, and still besought you to hold back. You felt your
way along the right-hand wall, took a branching passage to the right, and came
to a little chamber, where was a well with a railing. At this - I know not why -
my alarm for you increased a thousandfold, so that I seemed to scream myself
hoarse with warnings, crying it was still time, and bidding you begone at once
from that vestibule. Such was the word I used in my dream, and it seemed then to
have a clear significancy; but to-day, and awake, I profess I know not what it
means. To all my outcry you rendered not the least attention, leaning the while
upon the rail and looking down intently in the water. And then there was made to
you a communication; I do not think I even gathered what it was, but the fear of
it plucked me clean out of my slumber, and I awoke shaking and sobbing. And
now,' continues the count, 'I thank you from my heart for your insistency. This
dream lay on me like a load; and now I have told it in plain words and in the
broad daylight, it seems no great matter.' - 'I do not know,' says the baron.
'It is in some points strange. A communication, did you say? Oh! it is an odd
dream. It will make a story to amuse our friends.' - 'I am not so sure,' says
the count. 'I am sensible of some reluctancy. Let us rather forget it.' - 'By
all means,' says the baron. And (in fact) the dream was not again referred to.
Some days after, the count proposed a ride in the fields, which the baron (since
they were daily growing faster friends) very readily accepted. On the way back
to Rome, the count led them insensibly by a particular route. Presently he
reined in his horse, clapped his hand before his eyes, and cried out aloud. Then
he showed his face again (which was now quite white, for he was a consummate
actor), and stared upon the baron. 'What ails you?' cries the baron. 'What is
wrong with you?' - 'Nothing,' cries the count. 'It is nothing. A seizure, I know
not what. Let us hurry back to Rome.' But in the meanwhile the baron had looked
about him; and there, on the left-hand side of the way as they went back to
Rome, he saw a dusty by-road with a tomb upon the one hand and a garden of
evergreen trees upon the other. - 'Yes,' says he, with a changed voice. 'Let us
by all means hurry back to Rome. I fear you are not well in health.' - 'Oh, for
God's sake!' cries the count, shuddering, 'back to Rome and let me get to bed.'
They made their return with scarce a word; and the count, who should by rights
have gone into society, took to his bed and gave out he had a touch of country
fever. The next day the baron's horse was found tied to the pine, but himself
was never heard of from that hour. - And, now, was that a murder?" says the
Master, breaking sharply off.
"Are you sure he was a count?" I asked.
"I am not certain of the title," said he, "but he was a gentleman of family:
and the Lord deliver you, Mackellar, from an enemy so subtile!"
These last words he spoke down at me, smiling, from high above; the next, he
was under my feet. I continued to follow his evolutions with a childish fixity;
they made me giddy and vacant, and I spoke as in a dream.
"He hated the baron with a great hatred?" I asked.
His belly moved when the man came near him," said the Master.
"I have felt that same," said I.
"Verily!" cries the Master. "Here is news indeed! I wonder - do I flatter
myself? or am I the cause of these ventral perturbations?"
He was quite capable of choosing out a graceful posture, even with no one to
behold him but myself, and all the more if there were any element of peril. He
sat now with one knee flung across the other, his arms on his bosom, fitting the
swing of the ship with an exquisite balance, such as a featherweight might
overthrow. All at once I had the vision of my lord at the table, with his head
upon his hands; only now, when he showed me his countenance, it was heavy with
reproach. The words of my own prayer - I WERE LIKER A MAN IF I STRUCK THIS
CREATURE DOWN - shot at the same time into my memory. I called my energies
together, and (the ship then heeling downward toward my enemy) thrust at him
swiftly with my foot. It was written I should have the guilt of this attempt
without the profit. Whether from my own uncertainty or his incredible quickness,
he escaped the thrust, leaping to his feet and catching hold at the same moment
of a stay.
I do not know how long a time passed by. I lying where I was upon the deck,
overcome with terror and remorse and shame: he standing with the stay in his
hand, backed against the bulwarks, and regarding me with an expression
singularly mingled. At last he spoke.
"Mackellar," said he, "I make no reproaches, but I offer you a bargain. On
your side, I do not suppose you desire to have this exploit made public; on
mine, I own to you freely I do not care to draw my breath in a perpetual terror
of assassination by the man I sit at meat with. Promise me - but no," says he,
breaking off, "you are not yet in the quiet possession of your mind; you might
think I had extorted the promise from your weakness; and I would leave no door
open for casuistry to come in - that dishonesty of the conscientious. Take time
to meditate."
With that he made off up the sliding deck like a squirrel, and plunged into
the cabin. About half an hour later he returned - I still lying as he had left
me.
"Now,' says be, "will you give me your troth as a Christian, and a faithful
servant of my brother's, that I shall have no more to fear from your attempts?"
"I give it you," said I.
"I shall require your hand upon it," says he.
"You have the right to make conditions," I replied, and we shook hands.
He sat down at once in the same place and the old perilous attitude.
"Hold on!" cried I, covering my eyes. "I cannot bear to see you in that
posture. The least irregularity of the sea might plunge you overboard."
"You are highly inconsistent," he replied, smiling, but doing as I asked.
"For all that, Mackellar, I would have you to know you have risen forty feet in
my esteem. You think I cannot set a price upon fidelity? But why do you suppose
I carry that Secundra Dass about the world with me? Because he would die or do
murder for me to- morrow; and I love him for it. Well, you may think it odd, but
I like you the better for this afternoon's performance. I thought you were
magnetised with the Ten Commandments; but no - God damn my soul!" - he cries,
"the old wife has blood in his body after all! Which does not change the fact,"
he continued, smiling again, "that you have done well to give your promise; for
I doubt if you would ever shine in your new trade."
"I suppose," said I, "I should ask your pardon and God's for my attempt. At
any rate, I have passed my word, which I will keep faithfully. But when I think
of those you persecute - " I paused.
"Life is a singular thing," said he, "and mankind a very singular people. You
suppose yourself to love my brother. I assure you, it is merely custom.
Interrogate your memory; and when first you came to Durrisdeer, you will find
you considered him a dull, ordinary youth. He is as dull and ordinary now,
though not so young. Had you instead fallen in with me, you would to-day be as
strong upon my side."
"I would never say you were ordinary, Mr. Bally," I returned; "but here you
prove yourself dull. You have just shown your reliance on my word. In other
terms, that is my conscience - the same which starts instinctively back from
you, like the eye from a strong light."
"Ah!" says he, "but I mean otherwise. I mean, had I met you in my youth. You
are to consider I was not always as I am to-day; nor (had I met in with a friend
of your description) should I have ever been so."
"Hut, Mr. Bally," says I, "you would have made a mock of me; you would never
have spent ten civil words on such a Square-toes."
But he was now fairly started on his new course of justification, with which
he wearied me throughout the remainder of the passage. No doubt in the past he
had taken pleasure to paint himself unnecessarily black, and made a vaunt of his
wickedness, bearing it for a coat-of-arms. Nor was he so illogical as to abate
one item of his old confessions. "But now that I know you are a human being," he
would say, "I can take the trouble to explain myself. For I assure you I am
human, too, and have my virtues, like my neighbours." I say, he wearied me, for
I had only the one word to say in answer: twenty times I must have said it:
"Give up your present purpose and return with me to Durrisdeer; then I will
believe you."
Thereupon he would shake his head at me. "Ah! Mackellar, you might live a
thousand years and never understand my nature," he would say. "This battle is
now committed, the hour of reflection quite past, the hour for mercy not yet
come. It began between us when we span a coin in the hall of Durrisdeer, now
twenty years ago; we have had our ups and downs, but never either of us dreamed
of giving in; and as for me, when my glove is cast, life and honour go with it."
"A fig for your honour!" I would say. "And by your leave, these warlike
similitudes are something too high-sounding for the matter in hand. You want
some dirty money; there is the bottom of your contention; and as for your means,
what are they? to stir up sorrow in a family that never harmed you, to debauch
(if you can) your own nephew, and to wring the heart of your born brother! A
footpad that kills an old granny in a woollen mutch with a dirty bludgeon, and
that for a shilling-piece and a paper of snuff - there is all the warrior that
you are."
When I would attack him thus (or somewhat thus) he would smile, and sigh like
a man misunderstood. Once, I remember, he defended himself more at large, and
had some curious sophistries, worth repeating, for a light upon his character.
"You are very like a civilian to think war consists in drums and banners,"
said he. "War (as the ancients said very wisely) is ULTIMA RATIO. When we take
our advantage unrelentingly, then we make war. Ah! Mackellar, you are a devil of
a soldier in the steward's room at Durrisdeer, or the tenants do you sad
injustice!"
"I think little of what war is or is not," I replied. "But you weary me with
claiming my respect. Your brother is a good man, and you are a bad one - neither
more nor less."
"Had I been Alexander - " he began.
"It is so we all dupe ourselves," I cried. "Had I been St. Paul, it would
have been all one; I would have made the same hash of that career that you now
see me making of my own."
"I tell you," he cried, bearing down my interruption, "had I been the least
petty chieftain in the Highlands, had I been the least king of naked negroes in
the African desert, my people would have adored me. A bad man, am I? Ah! but I
was born for a good tyrant! Ask Secundra Dass; he will tell you I treat him like
a son. Cast in your lot with me to-morrow, become my slave, my chattel, a thing
I can command as I command the powers of my own limbs and spirit - you will see
no more that dark side that I turn upon the world in anger. I must have all or
none. But where all is given, I give it back with usury. I have a kingly nature:
there is my loss!"
"It has been hitherto rather the loss of others," I remarked, "which seems a
little on the hither side of royalty."
"Tilly-vally!" cried he. "Even now, I tell you, I would spare that family in
which you take so great an interest: yes, even now - to- morrow I would leave
them to their petty welfare, and disappear in that forest of cut-throats and
thimble-riggers that we call the world. I would do it to-morrow!" says he. "Only
- only - "
"Only what?" I asked.
"Only they must beg it on their bended knees. I think in public, too," he
added, smiling. "Indeed, Mackellar, I doubt if there be a hall big enough to
serve my purpose for that act of reparation."
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