Why flames yon far summit--why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars
from the firmament cast? 'Tis the fire-shower of ruin, all dreadfully driven
From thine eyrie, that beacons the darkness of Heaven.
CAMPBELL.
THE circumstances announced in the conclusion of the last chapter will
account for the ready and cheerful reception of the Marquis of A---- and the
Master of Ravenswood in the village of Wolf's Hope. In fact, Caleb had no sooner
announced the conflagration of the tower than the whole hamlet were upon foot to
hasten to extinguish the flames. And although that zealous adherent diverted
their zeal by intimating the formidable contents of the subterranean apartments,
yet the check only turned their assiduity into another direction. Never had
there been such slaughtering of capons, and fat geese, and barndoor fowls; never
such boiling of "reested" hams; never such making of car-cakes and sweet scones,
Selkirk bannocks, cookies, and petticoat-tails--delicacies little known to the
present generation. Never had there been such a tapping of barrels, and such
uncorking of greybeards, in the village of Wolf's Hope. All the inferior houses
were thrown open for the reception of the Marquis's dependants, who came, it was
thought, as precursors of the shower of preferment which hereafter was to leave
the rest of Scotland dry, in order to distil its rich dews on the village of
Wolf's Hope under Lammermoor. The minister put in his claim to have the guests
of distinction lodged at the manse, having his eye, it was thought, upon a
neighbouring preferment, where the incumbent was sickly; but Mr. Balderstone
destined that honour to the cooper, his wife, and wife's mother, who danced for
joy at the preferences thus assigned them.
Many a beck and many a bow welcomed these noble guests to as good
entertainment as persons of such rank could set before such visitors; and the
old dame, who had formerly lived in Ravenswood Castle, and knew, as she said,
the ways of the nobility, was in no whit wanting in arranging matters, as well
as circumstances permitted, according to the etiquette of the times. The
cooper's house was so roomy that each guest had his separate retiring-room, to
which they were ushered with all due ceremony, while the plentiful supper was in
the act of being placed upon the table.
Ravenswood no sooner found himself alone than, impelled by a thousand
feelings, he left the apartment, the house, and the village, and hastily
retraced his steps to the brow of the hill, which rose betwixt the village and
screened it from the tower, in order to view the final fall of the house of his
fathers. Some idle boys from the hamlet had taken the same direction out of
curiosity, having first witnessed the arrival of the coach and six and its
attendants. As they ran one by one past the Master, calling to each other to
"Come and see the auld tower blaw up in the lift like the peelings of an ingan,"
he could not but feel himself moved with indignation. "And these are the sons of
my father's vassals," he said--"of men bound, both by law and gratitude, to
follow our steps through battle, and fire, and flood; and now the destruction of
their liege lord's house is but a holiday's sight to them"
These exasperating reflections were partly expresssed in the acrimony with
which he exclaimed, on feeling himself pulled by the cloak: "What do you want,
you dog?"
"I am a dog, and an auld dog too," answered Caleb, for it was he who had
taken the freedom, "and I am like to get a dog's wages; but it does not
signification a pinch of sneesing, for I am ower auld a dog to learn new tricks,
or to follow a new master."
As he spoke, Ravenswood attained the ridge of the hill from which Wolf's Crag
was visible; the flames had entirely sunk down, and, to his great surprise,
there was only a dusky reddening upon the clouds immediately over the castle,
which seemed the reflection of the embers of the sunken fire.
"The place cannot have blown up," said the Master; "we must have heard the
report: if a quarter of the gunpowder was there you tell me of, it would have
been heard twenty miles off."
"It've very like it wad," said Balderstone, composedly.
"Then the fire cannot have reached the vaults?"
"It's like no," answered Caleb, with the same impenetrable gravity.
"Hark ye, Caleb," said his master, "this grows a little too much for my
patience. I must go and examine how matters stand at Wolf's Crag myself."
"Your honour is ganging to gang nae sic gate," said Caleb, firmly.
"And why not?" said Ravenswood, sharply; "who or what shall prevent me?"
"Even I mysell," said Caleb, with the same determination.
"You, Balderstone!" replied the Master; "you are forgetting yourself, I
think."
"But I think no," said Balderstone; "for I can just tell ye a' about the
castle on this knowe-head as weel as if ye were at it. Only dinna pit yoursell
into a kippage, and expose yoursell before the weans, or before the Marquis,
when ye gang down-bye."
"Speak out, you old fool," replied his master, "and let me know the best and
the worst at once."
"Ou, the best and the warst is, just that the tower is standing hail and
feir, as safe and as empty as when ye left it."
"Indeed! and the fire?" said Ravenswood. "Not a gleed of fire, then, except
the bit kindling peat, and maybe a spunk in Mysie's cutty-pipe," replied Caleb.
"But the flame?" demanded Ravenswood--"the broad blaze which might have been
seen ten miles off--what occasioned that?"
"Hout awa'! it's an auld saying and a true--
Little's the light Will be seen far in a mirk night.
A wheen fern and horse little that I fired in the courtyard, after sending
back the loon of a footman; and, to speak Heaven's truth, the next time that ye
send or bring ony body here, let them ge gentles allenarly, without ony fremd
servants, like that chield Lockhard, to be gledging and gleeing about, and
looking upon the wrang side of ane's housekeeping, to the discredit of the
family, and forcing ane to damn their souls wi' telling ae lee after another
faster than I can count them: I wad rather set fire to the tower in gude
earnest, and burn it ower my ain head into the bargain, or I see the family
dishonoured in the sort."
"Upon my word, I am infinitely obliged by the proposal, Caleb," said his
master, scarce able to to restrain his laughter, though rather angry at the same
time. "But the gunpowder--is there such a thing in the tower? The Marquis seemed
to know of it." "The pouther, ha! ha! ha!--the Marquis, ha! ha! ha!" replied
Caleb,--"if your honour were to brain me, I behooved to laugh,-- the
Marquis--the pouther! Was it there? Ay, it was there. Did he ken o't? My certie!
the Marquis kenn'd o't, and it was the best o' the game; for, when I couldna
pacify your honour wi' a' that I could say, I aye threw out a word mair about
the gunpouther, and garr'd the Marquis tak the job in his ain hand."
"But you have not answered my question," said the Master, impatiently; "how
came the powder there, and where is it now?"
"Ou, it came there, an ye maun needs ken," said Caleb, looking mysteriously,
and whispering, "when there was like to be a wee bit rising here; and the
Marquis, and a' the great lords of the north, were a' in it, and mony a gudely
gun and broadsword were ferried ower frae Dunkirk forbye the pouther. Awfu' work
we had getting them into the tower under cloud o' night, for ye maun think it
wasna everybody could be trusted wi' sic kittle jobs. But if ye will gae hame to
your supper, I will tell you a' about it as ye gang down."
"And these wretched boys," said Ravenswood, "is it your pleasure they are to
sit there all night, to wait for the blowing up of a tower that is not even on
fire?"
"Surely not, if it is your honour's pleasure that they suld gang hame;
although," added Caleb, "it wadna do them a grain's damage: they wad screigh
less the next day, and sleep the sounder at e'en. But just as your honour
likes."
Stepping accordingly towards the urchins who manned the knolls near which
they stood, Caleb informed them, in an authoritative tone, that their honours
Lord Ravenswood and the Marquis of A---- had given orders that the tower was not
to be blow up till next day at noon. The boys dispersed upon this comfortable
assurance. One or two, however, followed Caleb for more information,
particularly the urchin whom he had cheated while officiating as turnspit, who
screamed, "Mr. Balderstone!-- Mr. Balderstone! then the castle's gane out like
an auld wife's spunk?"
"To be sure it is, callant," said the butler; "do ye think the castle of as
great a lord as Lord Ravenswood wad continue in a bleeze, and him standing
looking on wi' his ain very een? It's aye right," continued Caleb, shaking off
his ragged page, and closing in to his Master, "to train up weans, as the wise
man says, in the way they should go, and, aboon a', to teach them respect to
their superiors."
"But all this while, Caleb, you have never told me what became of the arms
and powder," said Ravenswood.
"Why, as for the arms," said Caleb, "it was just like the bairn's rhyme--
Some gaed east and some gaed west, And some gaed to the craw's nest.
And for the pouther, I e'en changed it, as occasion served, with the skippers
o' Dutch luggers and French vessels, for gin and brandy, and is served the house
mony a year--a gude swap too, between what cheereth the soul of man and that
which hingeth it clean out of his body; forbye, I keepit a wheen pounds of it
for yoursell when ye wanted to take the pleasure o' shooting: whiles, in these
latter days, I wad hardly hae kenn'd else whar to get pouther for your pleasure.
And now that your anger is ower, sir, wasna that weel managed o' me, and arena
ye far better sorted doun yonder than ye could hae been in your ain auld ruins
up-bye yonder, as the case stands wi' us now? the mair's the pity!"
"I believe you may be right, Caleb; but, before burning down my castle,
either in jest or in earnest," said Ravenswood, "I think I had a right to be in
the secret."
"Fie for shame, your honour!" replied Caleb; "it fits an auld carle like me
weel eneugh to tell lees for the credit of the family, but it wadna beseem the
like o' your honour's sell; besides, young folk are no judicious: they cannot
make the maist of a bit figment. Now this fire--for a fire it sall be, if I suld
burn the auld stable to make it mair feasible--this fire, besides that it will
be an excuse for asking ony thing we want through the country, or doun at the
haven--this fire will settle mony things on an honourable footing for the
family's credit, that cost me telling twenty daily lees to a wheen idle chaps
and queans, and, what's waur, without gaining credence." "That was hard indeed,
Caleb; but I do not see how this fire should help your veracity or your credit."
"There it is now?" said Caleb; "wasna I saying that young folk had a green
judgment? How suld it help me, quotha? It will be a creditable apology for the
honour of the family for this score of years to come, if it is weel guided.
'Where's the family pictures?' says ae meddling body. 'The great fire at Wolf's
Crag,' answers I. 'Where's the family plate?' says another. 'The great fire,'
says I; 'wha was to think of plate, when life and limb were in danger?' 'Where's
the wardrobe and the linens?- -where's the tapestries and the decorements?--beds
of state, twilts, pands and testors, napery and broidered wark?' 'The fire--the
fire--the fire.' Guide the fire weel, and it will serve ye for a' that ye suld
have and have not; and, in some sort, a gude excuse is better than the things
themselves; for they maun crack and wear out, and be consumed by time, whereas a
gude offcome, prudently and creditably handled, may serve a nobleman and his
family, Lord kens how lang!"
Ravenswood was too well acquainted with his butler's pertinacity and
self-opinion to dispute the point with him any farther. Leaving Caleb,
therefore, to the enjoyment of his own successful ingenuity, he returned to the
hamlet, where he found the Marquis and the good women of the mansion under some
anxiety- -the former on account of his absence, the others for the discredit
their cookery might sustain by the delay of the supper. All were now at ease,
and heard with pleasure that the fire at the castle had burned out of itself
without reaching the vaults, which was the only information that Ravenswood
thought it proper to give in public concerning the event of his butler's
strategem.
They sat down to an excellent supper. No invitation could prevail on Mr. and
Mrs. Girder, even in their own house, to sit down at table with guests of such
high quality. They remained standing in the apartment, and acted the part of
respectful and careful attendants on the company. Such were the manners of the
time. The elder dame, confident through her age and connexion with the
Ravenswood family, was less scrupulously ceremonious. She played a mixed part
betwixt that of the hostess of an inn and the mistress of a private house, who
receives guests above her own degree. She recommended, and even pressed, what
she thought best, and was herself easily entreated to take a moderate share of
the good cheer, in order to encourage her guests by her own example. Often she
interrupted herself, to express her regret that "my lord did not eat; that the
Master was pyking a bare bane; that, to be sure, there was naething there fit to
set before their honours; that Lord Allan, rest his saul, used to like a
pouthered guse, and said it was Latin for a tass o' brandy; that the brandy came
frae France direct; for, for a' the English laws and gaugers, the Wolf's Hope
brigs hadna forgotten the gate to Dunkirk."
Here the cooper admonished his mother-in-law with his elbow, which procured
him the following special notice in the progress of her speech:
"Ye needna be dunshin that gate, John [Gibbie]," continued the old lady;
"naebody says that YE ken whar the brandy comes frae; and it wadna be fitting ye
should, and you the Queen's cooper; and what signifies't," continued she,
addressing Lord Ravenswood, "to king, queen, or kaiser whar an auld wife like me
buys her pickle sneeshin, or her drap brandy-wine, to haud her heart up?"
Having thus extricated herself from her supposed false step, Dame
Loup-the-Dyke proceeded, during the rest of the evening, to supply, with great
animation, and very little assistance from her guests, the funds necessary for
the support of the conversation, until, declining any further circulation of
their glass, her guests requested her permission to retire to their apartments.
The Marquis occupied the chamber of dais, which, in every house above the
rank of a mere cottage, was kept sacred for such high occasions as the present.
The modern finishing with plaster was then unknown, and tapestry was confined to
the houses of the nobility and superior gentry. The cooper, therefore, who was a
man of some vanity, as well as some wealth, had imitated the fashion observed by
the inferior landholders and clergy, who usually ornamented their state
apartments with hangings of a sort of stamped leather, manufactured in the
Netherlands, garnished with trees and aminals executed in copper foil, and with
many a pithy sentence of morality, which, although couched in Low Dutch, were
perhaps as much attended to in practice as if written in broad Scotch. The whole
had somewhat of a gloomy aspect; but the fire, composed of old pitch-barrel
staves, blazed merrily up the chimney; the bed was decorated with linen of most
fresh and dazzling whiteness, which had never before been used, and might,
perhaps, have never been used at all, but for this high occasion. On the
toilette beside, stood an old-fashioned mirror, in a fillagree frame, part of
the dispersed finery of the neighbouring castle. It was flanked by a long-necked
bottle of Florence wine, by which stood a glass enarly as tall, resembling in
shape that which Teniers usually places in the hands of his own portrait, when
he paints himself as mingling in the revels of a country village. To
counterbalance those foreign sentinels, there mounted guard on the other side of
the mirror two stout warders of Scottish lineage; a jug, namely, of double ale,
which held a Scotch pint, and a quaigh, or bicker, of ivory and ebony, hooped
with silver, the work of John Girder's own hands, and the pride of his heart.
Besides these preparations against thirst, there was a goodly diet-loaf, or
sweet cake; so that, with such auxiliaries, the apartment seemed victualled
against a siege of two or three days.
It only remains to say, that the Marquis's valet was in attendance,
displaying his master's brocaded nightgown, and richly embroidered velvet cap,
lined and faced with Brussels lace, upon a huge leathern easy-chair, wheeled
round so as to have the full advantage of the comfortable fire which we have
already mentioned. We therefore commit that eminent person to his night's
repose, trusting he profited by the ample preparations made for his
accommodation--preparations which we have mentioned in detail, as illustrative
of ancient Scottish manners.
It is not necessary we should be equally minute in describing the sleeping
apartment of the Master of Ravenswood, which was that usually occupied by the
goodman and goodwife themselves. It was comfortably hung with a sort of
warm-coloured worsted, manufactured in Scotland, approaching in trexture to what
is now called shalloon. A staring picture of John [Gibbie] Girder himself
ornamented this dormiory, painted by a starving Frenchman, who had, God knows
how or why, strolled over from Flushing or Dunkirk to Wolf's Hope in a smuggling
dogger. The features were, indeed, those of the stubborn, opinionative, yet
sensible artisan, but Monsieur had contrived to throw a French grace into the
look and manner, so utterly inconsistent with the dogged gravity of the
original, that it was impossible to look at it without laughing. John and his
family, however, piqued themselves not a little upon this picture, and were
proportionably censured by the neighbourhood, who pronounced that the cooper, in
sitting for the same, and yet more in presuming to hang it up in his bedchamber,
had exceeded his privilege as the richest man of the village; at once stept
beyond the bounds of his own rank, and encroached upon those of the superior
orders; and, in fine, had been guilty of a very overweening act of vanity and
presumption. Respect for the memory of my deceased friend, Mr. Richard Tinto,
has obliged me to treat this matter at some length; but I spare the reader his
prolix though curious observations, as well upon the character of the French
school as upon the state of painting in Scotland at the beginning of the 18th
century.
The other preparations of the Master's sleeping apartment were similar to
those in the chamber of dais.
At the usual early hour of that period, the Marquis of A---- and his kinsman
prepared to resume their journey. This could not be done without an ample
breakfast, in which cold meat and hot meat, and oatmeal flummery, wine and
spirits, and milk varied by every possible mode of preparation, evinced the same
desire to do honour to their guests which had been shown by the hospitable
owners of the mansion upon the evening before. All the bustle of preparation for
departure now resounded through Wolf's Hope. There was paying of bills and
shaking of hands, and saddling of horses, and harnessing of carriages, and
distributing of drink- money. The Marquis left a broad piece for the
gratification of John Girder's household, which he, the said John, was for some
time disposed to convert to his own use; Dingwall, the writer, assuring him he
was justified in so doing, seeing he was the disburser of those expenses which
were the occasion of the gratification. But, notwithstanding this legal
authority, John could not find in his heart to dim the splendour of his late
hospitality by picketing anything in the nature of a gratuity. He only assured
his menials he would consider them as a damned ungrateful pack if they bought a
gill of brandy elsewhere than out of his own stores; and as the drink-money was
likely to go to its legitimate use, he comforted himself that, in this manner,
the Marquis's donative would, without any impeachment of credit and character,
come ultimately into his own exclusive possession.
While arrangements were making for departure, Ravenswood made blythe the
heart of his ancient butler by informing him, cautiously however (for he knew
Caleb's warmth of imagination), of the probably change which was about to take
place in his fortunes. He deposited with Balderstone, at the same time, the
greater part of his slender funds, with an assurance, which he was obliged to
reiterate more than once, that he himself had sufficient supplies in certain
prospect. He therefore enjoined Caleb, as he valued his favour, to desist from
all farther maneouvres against the inhabitants of Wolf's Hope, their cellars,
poultry-yards, and substance whatsoever. In this prohibition, the old domestic
acquiesced more readily than his master expected.
"It was doubtless," he said, "a shame, a discredit, and a sin to harry the
puir creatures, when the family were in circumstances to live honourably on
their ain means; and there might be wisdom," he added, "in giving them a while's
breathing- time at any rate, that they might be the more readily brougth forward
upon his honour's future occasions."
This matter being settled, and having taken an affectionate farewell of his
old domestic, the Master rejoined his noble relative, who was now ready to enter
his carriage. The two landladies, old and young, having received in all kindly
greeting a kiss from each of their noble guests, stood simpering at the door of
their house, as the coach and six, followed by its train of clattering horsemen,
thundered out of the village. John Girder also stood upon his threshold, now
looking at his honoured right hand, which had been so lately shaken by a marquis
and a lord, and now giving a glance into the interior of his mansion, which
manifested all the disarray of the late revel, as if balancing the distinction
which he had attained with the expenses of the entertainment.
At length he opened his oracular jaws. "Let every man and woman here set
about their ain business, as if there was nae sic thing as marquis or master,
duke or drake, laird or lord, in this world. Let the house be redd up, the
broken meat set bye, and if there is ony thing totally uneatable, let it be gien
to the puir folk; and, gude mother and wife, I hae just ae thing to entreat ye,
that ye will never speak to me a single word, good or bad, anent a' this
nonsense wark, but keep a' your cracks about it to yoursells and your kimmers,
for my head is weel-nigh dung donnart
wi' it already."
As John's authority was tolerably absolute, all departed to their usual
occupations, leaving him to build castles in the air, if he had a mind, upon the
court favour which he had acquired by the expenditure of his worldly substance.
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