"There are two hostelries in this Kirk-town," said Mysie, "but the
worst is best for our purpose; for it stands apart from the other
houses, and I ken the man weel, for he has dealt with my father for
malt."
This _causa scientiae_, to use a lawyer's phrase, was ill chosen
for Mysie's purpose; for Sir Piercie Shafton had, by dint of his own
loquacity, been talking himself all this while into a high esteem for
his fellow-traveller, and, pleased with the gracious reception which
she afforded to his powers of conversation, had well-nigh forgotten
that she was not herself one of those high-born beauties of whom he
was recounting so many stories, when this unlucky speech at once
placed the most disadvantageous circumstances attending her lineage
under his immediate recollection. He said nothing, however. What
indeed could he say? Nothing was so natural as that a miller's
daughter should be acquainted with publicans who dealt with her father
for malt, and all that was to be wondered at was the concurrence of
events which had rendered such a female the companion and guide of Sir
Piercie Shafton of Wilverton, kinsman of the great Earl of
Northumberland, whom princes and sovereigns themselves termed cousin,
because of the Piercie blood. [Footnote: Froissart tells us somewhere,
(the readers of romances are indifferent to accurate reference,) that
the King of France called one of the Piercies cousin, because of the
blood of Northumberland.] He felt the disgrace of strolling through
the country with a miller's maiden on the crupper behind him, and was
even ungrateful enough to feel some emotions of shame, when he halted
his horse at the door of the little inn.
But the alert intelligence of Mysie Happer spared him farther sense of
derogation, by instantly springing from his horse, and cramming the
ears of mine host, who came out with his mouth agape to receive a
guest of the knight's appearance, with an imagined tale, in which
circumstance on circumstance were huddled so fast, as to astonish Sir
Piercie Shafton, whose own invention was none of the most brilliant.
She explained to the publican that this was a great English knight
travelling from the Monastery to the court of Scotland, after having
paid his vows to Saint Mary, and that she had been directed to conduct
him so far on the road; and that Ball, her palfrey, had fallen by the
way, because he had been over-wrought with carrying home the last
melder of meal to the portioner of Langhope; and that she had turned
in Ball to graze in the Tasker's park, near Cripplecross, for he had
stood as still as Lot's wife with very weariness; and that the knight
had courteously insisted she should ride behind him, and that she had
brought him to her kend friend's hostelry rather than to proud Peter
Peddie's, who got his malt at the Mellerstane mills; and that he must
get the best that the house afforded, and that he must get it ready in
a moment of time, and that she was ready to help in the kitchen.
All this ran glibly off the tongue without pause on the part of Mysie
Happer, or doubt on that of the landlord. The guest's horse was
conducted to the stable, and he himself installed in the cleanest
corner and best seat which the place afforded. Mysie, ever active and
officious, was at once engaged in preparing food, in spreading the
table, and in making all the better arrangements which her experience
could suggest, for the honour and comfort of her companion. He would
fain have resisted this; for while it was impossible not to be
gratified with the eager and alert kindness which was so active in his
service, he felt an undefinable pain in seeing Mysinda engaged in
these menial services, and discharging them, moreover, as one to whom
they were but too familiar. Yet this jarring feeling was mixed with,
and perhaps balanced by, the extreme grace with which the neat-handed
maiden executed these tasks, however mean in themselves, and gave to
the wretched corner of a miserable inn of the period, the air of a
bower, in which an enamoured fairy, or at least a shepherdess of
Arcadia, was displaying, with unavailing solicitude, her designs on
the heart of some knight, destined by fortune to higher thoughts, and
a more splendid union.
The lightness and grace with which Mysie covered the little round
table with a snow-white cloth, and arranged upon it the
hastily-roasted capon, with its accompanying stoup of Bourdeaux, were
but plebeian graces in themselves; but yet there were very flattering
ideas excited by each glance. She was so very well made, agile at
once and graceful, with her hand and arm as white as snow, and her
face in which a smile contended with a blush, and her eyes which
looked ever at Shafton when he looked elsewhere, and were dropped at
once when they encountered his, that she was irresistible! In fine,
the affectionate delicacy of her whole demeanour, joined to the
promptitude and boldness she had so lately evinced, tended to ennoble
the services she had rendered, as if some
-----sweet engaging Grace
Put on some clothes to come abroad,
And took a waiter's place.
But, on the other hand, came the damning reflection, that these duties
were not taught her by Love, to serve the beloved only, but arose from
the ordinary and natural habits of a miller's daughter, accustomed,
doubtless, to render the same service to every wealthier churl who
frequented her father's mill. This stopped the mouth of vanity, and of
the love which vanity had been hatching, as effectually as a peck of
literal flour would have done.
Amidst this variety of emotions, Sir Piercie Shafton forgot not to ask
the object of them to sit down and partake the good cheer which she
had been so anxious to provide and to place in order. He expected that
this invitation would have been bashfully, perhaps, but certainly most
thankfully, accepted; but he was partly flattered, and partly piqued,
by the mixture of deference and resolution with which Mysie declined
his invitation. Immediately after, she vanished from the apartment,
leaving the Euphuist to consider whether he was most gratified or
displeased by her disappearance.
In fact, this was a point on which he would have found it difficult to
make up his mind, had there been any necessity for it. As there was
none, he drank a few cups of claret, and sang (to himself) a strophe
or two of the canzonettes of the divine Astrophel. But in spite both
of wine and of Sir Philip Sidney, the connexion in which he now stood,
and that which he was in future to hold, with the lovely Molinara, or
Mysinda, as he had been pleased to denominate Mysie Happer, recurred
to his mind. The fashion of the times (as we have already noticed)
fortunately coincided with his own natural generosity of disposition,
which indeed amounted almost to extravagance, in prohibiting, as a
deadly sin, alike against gallantry, chivalry, and morality, his
rewarding the good offices he had received from this poor maiden, by
abusing any of the advantages which her confidence in his honour had
afforded. To do Sir Piercie justice, it was an idea which never
entered into his head; and he would probably have dealt the most
scientific _imbroccata, stoccata_, or _punto reverso_, which
the school of Vincent Saviola had taught him, to any man who had dared
to suggest to him such selfish and ungrateful meanness. On the other
hand, he was a man, and foresaw various circumstances which might
render their journey together in this intimate fashion a scandal and a
snare. Moreover, he was a coxcomb and a courtier, and felt there was
something ridiculous in travelling the land with a miller's daughter
behind his saddle, giving rise to suspicions not very creditable to
either, and to ludicrous constructions, so far as he himself was
concerned.
"I would," he said half aloud, "that if such might be done without
harm or discredit to the too-ambitious, yet too-well-distinguishing
Molinara, she and I were fairly severed, and bound on our different
courses; even as we see the goodly vessel bound for the distant seas
hoist sails and bear away into the deep, while the humble fly-boat
carries to shore those friends, who, with wounded hearts and watery
eyes, have committed to their higher destinies the more daring
adventurers by whom the fair frigate is manned."
He had scarce uttered the wish when it was gratified; for the host
entered to say that his worshipful knighthood's horse was ready to be
brought forth as he had desired; and on his inquiry for "the--the
damsel--that is--the young woman--"
"Mysie Happer," said the landlord, "has returned to her father's; but
she bade me say, you could not miss the road for Edinburgh, in respect
it was neither far way nor foul gate."
It is seldom we are exactly blessed with the precise fulfilment of our
wishes at the moment when we utter them; perhaps, because Heaven
wisely withholds what, if granted, would be often received with
ingratitude. So at least it chanced in the present instance; for when
mine host said that Mysie was returned homeward, the knight was
tempted to reply, with an ejaculation of surprise and vexation, and a
hasty demand, whither and when she had departed? The first emotions
his prudence suppressed, the second found utterance.
"Where is she gane?" said the host, gazing on him, and repeating his
question--"She is gane hame to her father's, it is like--and she gaed
just when she gave orders about your worship's horse, and saw it well
fed, (she might have trusted me, but millers and millers' kin think a'
body as thief-like as themselves,) an' she's three miles on the gate
by this time."
"Is she gone then?" muttered Sir Piercie, making two or three hasty
strides through the narrow apartment--"Is she gone?--Well, then, let
her go. She could have had but disgrace by abiding by me, and I little
credit by her society. That I should have thought there was such
difficulty in shaking her off! I warrant she is by this time laughing
with some clown she has encountered; and my rich chain will prove a
good dowry.--And ought it not to prove so? and has she not deserved
it, were it ten times more valuable?--Piercie Shafton! Piercie
Shafton! dost thou grudge thy deliverer the guerdon she hath so dearly
won? The selfish air of this northern land hath infected thee, Piercie
Shafton! and blighted the blossoms of thy generosity, even as it is
said to shrivel the flowers of the mulberry.--Yet I thought," he
added, after a moment's pause, "that she would not so easily and
voluntarily have parted from me. But it skills not thinking of
it.--Cast my reckoning, mine host, and let your groom lead forth my
nag."
The good host seemed also to have some mental point to discuss, for he
answered not instantly, debating perhaps whether his conscience would
bear a double charge for the same guests. Apparently his conscience
replied in the negative, though not without hesitation, for he at
length replied--"It's daffing to lee; it winna deny that the lawing is
clean paid. Ne'ertheless, if your worshipful knighthood pleases to
give aught for increase of trouble--"
"How!" said the knight; "the reckoning paid? and by whom, I pray
you?"
"E'en by Mysie Happer, if truth maun be spoken, as I said before,"
answered the honest landlord, with as many compunctious visitings for
telling the verity as another might have felt for making a lie in the
circumstances--"And out of the moneys supplied for your honour's
journey by the Abbot, as she tauld to me. And laith were I to
surcharge any gentleman that darkens my doors." He added in the
confidence of honesty which his frank avowal entitled him to
entertain, "Nevertheless, as I said before, if it pleases your
knighthood of free good-will to consider extraordinary trouble--"
The knight cut short his argument, by throwing the landlord a
rose-noble, which probably doubled the value of a Scottish reckoning,
though it would have defrayed but a half one at the Three Cranes or
the Vintry. The bounty so much delighted mine host, that he ran to
fill the stirrup-cup (for which no charge was ever made) from a butt
yet charier than that which he had pierced for the former stoup. The
knight paced slowly to horse, partook of his courtesy, and thanked him
with the stiff condescension of the court of Elizabeth; then mounted
and followed the northern path, which was pointed out as the nearest
to Edinburgh, and which, though very unlike a modern highway, bore yet
so distinct a resemblance to a public and frequented road as not to be
easily mistaken.
"I shall not need her guidance it seems," said he to himself, as he
rode slowly onward; "and I suppose that was one reason of her abrupt
departure, so different from what one might have expected.--Well, I
am well rid of her. Do we not pray to be liberated from temptation?
Yet that she should have erred so much in estimation of her own
situation and mine, as to think of defraying the reckoning! I would I
saw her once more, but to explain to her the solecism of which her
inexperience hath rendered her guilty. And I fear," he added, as he
emerged from some straggling trees, and looked out upon a wild moorish
country, composed of a succession of swelling lumpish hills, "I fear I
shall soon want the aid of this Ariadne, who might afford me a clew
through the recesses of yonder mountainous labyrinth."
As the Knight thus communed with himself, his attention was caught by
the sound of a horse's footsteps; and a lad, mounted on a little gray
Scottish nag, about fourteen hands high, coming along a path which led
from behind the trees, joined him on the high-road, if it could be
termed such. The dress of the lad was completely in village fashion,
yet neat and handsome in appearance. He had a jerkin of gray cloth
slashed and trimmed, with black hose of the same, with deer-skin
rullions or sandals, and handsome silver spurs. A cloak of a dark
mulberry colour was closely drawn round the upper part of his person,
and the cape in part muffled his face, which was also obscured by his
bonnet of black velvet cloth, and its little plume of feathers.
Sir Piercie Shafton, fond of society, desirous also to have a guide,
and, moreover, prepossessed in favour of so handsome a youth, failed
not to ask him whence he came, and whither he was going. The youth
looked another way, as he answered, that he was going to Edinburgh,
"to seek service in some nobleman's family."
"I fear me you have run away from your last master," said Sir Piercie,
"since you dare not look me in the face while you answer my question."
"Indeed, sir, I have not," answered the lad, bashfully, while, as if
with reluctance, he turned round his face, and instantly withdrew it.
It was a glance, but the discovery was complete. There was no
mistaking the dark full eye, the cheek in which much embarrassment
could not altogether disguise an expression of comic humour, and the
whole figure at once betrayed, under her metamorphosis, the Maid of
the Mill. The recognition was joyful, and Sir Piercie Shafton was too
much pleased to have regained his companion to remember the very
good reasons which had consoled him for losing her.
To his questions respecting her dress, she answered that she had
obtained it in the Kirktown from a friend; it was the holiday suit of
a son of hers, who had taken the field with his liege-lord, the baron
of the land. She had borrowed the suit under pretence she meant to
play in some mumming or rural masquerade. She had left, she said, her
own apparel in exchange, which was better worth ten crowns than this
was worth four.
"And the nag, my ingenious Molinara," said Sir Piercie, "whence comes
the nag?"
"I borrowed him from our host at the Gled's-Nest," she replied; and
added, half stifling a laugh, "he has sent to get, instead of it, our
Ball, which I left in the Tasker's Park at Cripplecross. He will be
lucky if he find it there."
"But then the poor man will lose his horse, most argute Mysinda," said
Sir Piercie Shafton, whose English notions of property were a little
startled at a mode of acquisition more congenial to the ideas of a
miller's daughter (and he a Border miller to boot) than with those of
an English person of quality.
"And if he does lose his horse," said Mysie, laughing, "surely he is
not the first man on the marches who has had such a mischance. But he
will be no loser, for I warrant he will stop the value out of moneys
which he has owed my father this many a day."
"But then your father will be the loser," objected yet again the
pertinacious uprightness of Sir Piercie Shafton.
"What signifies it now to talk of my father?" said the damsel,
pettishly; then instantly changing to a tone of deep feeling, she
added, "my father has this day lost that which will make him hold
light the loss of all the gear he has left."
Struck with the accents of remorseful sorrow in which his companion
uttered these few words, the English knight felt himself bound both in
honour and conscience to expostulate with her as strongly as he could,
on the risk of the step which she had now taken, and on the propriety
of her returning to her father's house. The matter of his discourse,
though adorned with many unnecessary flourishes, was honourable both
to his head and heart.
The Maid of the Mill listened to his flowing periods with her head
sunk on her bosom as she rode, like one in deep thought or deeper
sorrow. When he had finished, she raised up her countenance, looked
full on the knight, and replied with great firmness--"If you are weary
of my company, Sir Piercie Shafton, you have but to say so, and the
Miller's daughter will be no farther cumber to you. And do not think I
will be a burden to you, if we travel together to Edinburgh; I have
wit enough and pride enough to be a willing burden to no man. But if
you reject not my company at present, and fear not it will be
burdensome to you hereafter, speak no more to me of returning back.
All that you can say to me I have said to myself; and that I am now
here, is a sign that I have said it to no purpose. Let this subject,
therefore, be forever ended betwixt us. I have already, in some small
fashion, been useful to you, and the time may come I may be more so;
for this is not your land of England, where men say justice is done
with little fear or favour to great and to small; but it is a land
where men do by the strong hand, and defend by the ready wit, and I
know better than you the perils you are exposed to."
Sir Piercie Shafton was somewhat mortified to find that the damsel
conceived her presence useful to him as a protectress as well as
guide, and said something of seeking protection of nought save his own
arm and his good sword. Mysie answered very quietly, that she nothing
doubted his bravery; but it was that very quality of bravery which was
most likely to involve him in danger. Sir Piercie Shafton, whose head
never kept very long in any continued train of thinking, acquiesced
without much reply, resolving in his own mind that the maiden only
used this apology to disguise her real motive, of affection to his
person. The romance of the situation flattered his vanity and elevated
his imagination, as placing him in the situation of one of those
romantic heroes of whom he had read the histories, where similar
transformations made a distinguished figure.
He took many a sidelong glance at his page, whose habits of country
sport and country exercise had rendered her quite adequate to sustain
the character she had assumed. She managed the little nag with
dexterity, and even with grace; nor did any thing appear that could
have betrayed her disguise, except when a bashful consciousness of her
companion's eye being fixed on her, gave her an appearance of
temporary embarrassment, which greatly added to her beauty.
The couple rode forward as in the morning, pleased with themselves and
with each other, until they arrived at the village where they were to
repose for the night, and where all the inhabitants of the little inn,
both male and female, joined in extolling the good grace and handsome
countenance of the English knight, and the uncommon beauty of his
youthful attendant.
It was here that Mysie Happer first made Sir Piercie Shafton sensible
of the reserved manner in which she proposed to live with him. She
announced him as her master, and, waiting upon him with the reverent
demeanour of an actual domestic, permitted not the least approach to
familiarity, not even such as the knight might with the utmost
innocence have ventured upon. For example, Sir Piercie, who, as we
know, was a great connoisseur in dress, was detailing to her the
advantageous change which he proposed to make in her attire as soon as
they should reach Edinburgh, by arraying her in his own colours of
pink and carnation. Mysie Happer listened with great complacency to
the unction with which he dilated upon welts, laces, slashes, and
trimmings, until, carried away by the enthusiasm with which he was
asserting the superiority of the falling band over the Spanish ruff,
he approached his hand, in the way of illustration, towards the collar
of his page's doublet. She instantly stepped back and gravely reminded
him that she was alone and under his protection.
"You cannot but remember the cause which has brought me here," she
continued; "make the least approach to any familiarity which you would
not offer to a princess surrounded by her court, and you have seen the
last of the Miller's daughter--She will vanish as the chaff disappears
from the shieling-hill [Footnote: The place where corn was winnowed,
while that operation was performed by the hand, was called in Scotland
the Shieling-hill.] when the west wind blows."
"I do protest, fair Molinara," said Sir Piercie Shafton--but the fair
Molinara had disappeared before his protest could be uttered. "A most
singular wench," said he to himself; "and by this hand, as discreet as
she is fair-featured--Certes, shame it were to offer her scathe or
dishonour! She makes similes too, though somewhat savouring of her
condition. Had she but read Euphues, and forgotten that accursed mill
and shieling-hill, it is my thought that her converse would be
broidered with as many and as choice pearls of compliment, as that of
the most rhetorical lady in the court of Feliciana. I trust she means
to return to bear me company."
But that was no part of Mysie's prudential scheme. It was then drawing
to dusk, and he saw her not again until the next morning, when the
horses were brought to the door that they might prosecute their
journey.
But our story here necessarily leaves the English knight and his page,
to return to the Tower of Glendearg.
Chapter the Thirtieth.
You call it an ill angel it may be so,
But sure I am, among the ranks which fell,
'Tis the first fiend e'er counsell'd man to rise,
And win the bliss the sprite himself had forfeited.
OLD PLAY.
We must resume our narrative at the period when Mary Avenel was
conveyed to the apartment which had been formerly occupied by the two
Glendinnings, and when her faithful attendant, Tibbie, had exhausted
herself in useless attempts to compose and to comfort her. Father
Eustace also dealt forth with well-meant kindness those apophthegms
and dogmata of consolation, which friendship almost always offers to
grief, though they are uniformly offered in vain. She was at length
left to indulge in the desolation of her own sorrowful feelings. She
felt as those who, loving for the first time, have lost what they
loved, before time and repeated calamity have taught them that every
loss is to a certain extent reparable or endurable.
Such grief may be conceived better than it can be described, as is
well known to those who have experienced it. But Mary Avenel had been
taught by the peculiarity of her situation, to regard herself as the
Child of Destiny; and the melancholy and reflecting turn of her
disposition gave to her sorrows a depth and breadth peculiar to her
character. The grave--and it was a bloody grave--had closed, as she
believed, over the youth to whom she was secretly, but most warmly
attached; the force and ardour of Halbert's character bearing a
singular correspondence to the energy of which her own was capable.
Her sorrow did not exhaust itself in sighs and tears, but when the
first shock had passed away, concentrated itself with deep and steady
meditation, to collect and calculate, like a bankrupt debtor, the full
amount of her loss. It seemed as if all that connected her with earth,
had vanished with this broken tie. She had never dared to anticipate
the probability of an ultimate union with Halbert, yet now his
supposed fall seemed that of the only tree which was to shelter her
from the storm. She respected the more gentle character, and more
peaceful attainments, of the younger Glendinning; but it had not
escaped her (what never indeed escaped woman in such circumstances)
that he was disposed to place himself in competition with what she,
the daughter of a proud and warlike race, deemed the more manly
qualities of his elder brother; and there is no time when a woman does
so little justice to the character of a surviving lover, as when
comparing him with the preferred rival of whom she has been recently
deprived.
The motherly, but coarse kindness of Dame Glendinning, and the doating
fondness of her old domestic, seemed now the only kind feeling of
which she formed the object; and she could not but reflect how little
these were to be compared with the devoted attachment of a high-souled
youth, whom the least glance of her eye could command, as the
high-mettled steed is governed by the bridle of the rider. It was when
plunged among these desolating reflections, that Mary Avenel felt the
void of mind, arising from the narrow and bigoted ignorance in which
Rome then educated the children of her church. Their whole religion
was a ritual, and their prayers were the formal iteration of unknown
words, which, in the hour of affliction, could yield but little
consolation to those who from habit resorted to them. Unused to the
practice of mental devotion, and of personal approach to the Divine
Presence by prayer, she could not help exclaiming in her distress,
"There is no aid for me on earth, and I know not how to ask it from
Heaven!"
As she spoke thus in an agony of sorrow, she cast her eyes into the
apartment, and saw the mysterious Spirit, which waited upon the
fortunes of her house, standing in the moonlight in the midst of the
room. The same form, as the reader knows, had more than once offered
itself to her sight; and either her native boldness of mind, or some
peculiarity attached to her from her birth, made her now look upon it
without shrinking. But the White Lady of Avenel was now more
distinctly visible, and more closely present, than she had ever before
seemed to be, and Mary was appalled by her presence. She would,
however, have spoken; but there ran a tradition, that though others
who had seen the White Lady had asked questions and received answers,
yet those of the house of Avenel who had ventured to speak to her, had
never long survived the colloquy. The figure, besides, as sitting up
in her bed, Mary Avenel gazed on it intently, seemed by its gestures
to caution her to keep silence, and at the same time to bespeak
attention.
The White Lady then seemed to press one of the planks of the floor
with her foot, while, in her usual low, melancholy, and musical chant,
she repeated the following verses:
"Maiden, whose sorrows wail the Living Dead,
Whose eyes shall commune with the Dead Alive,
Maiden, attend! Beneath my foot lies hid
The Word, the Law, the Path, which thou dost strive
To find and canst not find.--Could spirits shed
Tears for their lot, it were my lot to weep,
Showing the road which I shall never tread,
Though my foot points it.--Sleep, eternal sleep,
Dark, long, and cold forgetfulness my lot!--
But do not thou at human ills repine,
Secure there lies full guerdon in this spot
For all the woes that wait frail Adam's line--
Stoop, then, and make it yours--I may not make it mine!"
The phantom stooped towards the floor as she concluded, as if with the
intention of laying her hand on the board on which she stood. But ere
she had completed that gesture, her form became indistinct, was
presently only like the shade of a fleecy cloud, which passed betwixt
earth and the moon, and was soon altogether invisible.
A strong impression of fear, the first which she had experienced in
her life to any agitating extent, seized upon the mind of Mary Avenel,
and for a minute she felt a disposition to faint. She repelled it,
however, mustered her courage, and addressed herself to saints and
angels, as her church recommended. Broken slumbers at length stole on
her exhausted mind and frame, and she slept until the dawn was about
to rise, when she was awakened by the cry of "Treason! treason!
follow, follow!" which arose in the tower, when it was found that
Piercie Shafton had made his escape.
Apprehensive of some new misfortune, Mary Avenel hastily arranged the
dress which she had not laid aside, and, venturing to quit her
chamber, learned from Tibb, who, with her gray hairs dishevelled like
those of a sibyl, was flying from room to room, that the bloody
Southron villain had made his escape, and that Halbert Glendinning,
poor bairn, would sleep unrevenged and unquiet in his bloody grave. In
the lower apartments, the young men were roaring like thunder, and
venting in oaths and exclamations against the fugitives the rage which
they experienced in finding themselves locked up within the tower, and
debarred from their vindictive pursuit by the wily precautions of
Mysie Happer. The authoritative voice of the Sub-Prior commanding
silence was next heard; upon which Mary Avenel, whose tone of feeling
did not lead her to enter into counsel or society with the rest of the
party, again retired to her solitary chamber.
The rest of the family held counsel in the spence, Edward almost
beside himself with rage, and the Sub-Prior in no small degree
offended at the effrontery of Mysie Happer in attempting such a
scheme, as well as at the mingled boldness and dexterity with which it
had been executed. But neither surprise nor anger availed aught. The
windows, well secured with iron bars for keeping assailants out,
proved now as effectual for detaining the inhabitants within. The
battlements were open, indeed; but without ladder or ropes to act as a
substitute for wings, there was no possibility of descending from
them. They easily succeeded in alarming the inhabitants of the
cottages beyond the precincts of the court; but the men had been
called in to strengthen the guard for the night, and only women and
children remained who could contribute nothing in the emergency,
except their useless exclamations of surprise, and there were no
neighbours for miles around. Dame Elspeth, however, though drowned in
tears, was not so unmindful of external affairs, but that she could
find voice enough to tell the women and children without, to "leave
their skirling, and look after the cows that she couldna get minded,
what wi' the awfu' distraction of her mind, what wi' that fause slut
having locked them up in their ain tower as fast as if they had been
in the Jeddart tolbooth."
Meanwhile, the men finding other modes of exit impossible, unanimously
concluded to force the doors with such tools as the house afforded for
the purpose. These were not very proper for the occasion, and the
strength of the doors was great. The interior one, formed of oak,
occupied them for three mortal hours, and there was little prospect of
the iron door being forced in double the time.
While they were engaged in this ungrateful toil, Mary Avenel had with
much less labour acquired exact knowledge of what the Spirit had
intimated in her mystic rhyme. On examining the spot which the phantom
had indicated by her gestures, it was not difficult to discover that a
board had been loosened, which might be raised at pleasure. On
removing this piece of plank, Mary Avenel was astonished to find the
Black Book, well remembered by her as her mother's favourite study, of
which she immediately took possession, with as much joy as her present
situation rendered her capable of feeling.
Ignorant in a great measure of its contents, Mary Avenel had been
taught from her infancy to hold this volume in sacred veneration. It
is probable that the deceased Lady of Walter Avenel only postponed
initiating her daughter into the mysteries of the Divine Word, until
she should be better able to comprehend both the lessons which it
taught, and the risk at which, in those times, they were studied.
Death interposed, and removed her before the times became favourable
to the reformers, and before her daughter was so far advanced in age
as to be fit to receive religious instruction of this deep import. But
the affectionate mother had made preparations for the earthly work
which she had most at heart. There were slips of paper inserted in the
volume, in which, by an appeal to, and a comparison of, various
passages in holy writ, the errors and human inventions with which the
Church of Rome had defaced the simple edifice of Christianity, as
erected by its divine architect, were pointed out. These controversial
topics were treated with a spirit of calmness and Christian charity,
which might have been an example to the theologians of the period; but
they were clearly, fairly, and plainly argued, and supported by the
necessary proofs and references. Other papers there were which had no
reference whatever to polemics, but were the simple effusions of a
devout mind communing with itself. Among these was one frequently
used, as it seemed from the state of the manuscript, on which the
mother of Mary had transcribed and placed together those affecting
texts to which the heart has recourse, in affliction, and which
assures us at once of the sympathy and protection afforded to the
children of the promise. In Mary Avenel's state of mind, these
attracted her above all the other lessons, which, coming from a hand
so dear, had reached her at a time so critical, and in a manner so
touching. She read the affecting promise, "I will never leave thee
nor forsake thee," and the consoling exhortation, "Call upon me in the
day of trouble, and I will deliver thee." She read them, and her heart
acquiesced in the conclusion. Surely this is the word of God!
There are those to whom a sense of religion has come in storm and
tempest; there are those whom it has summoned amid scenes of revelry
and idle vanity; there are those, too, who have heard its "still small
voice" amid rural leisure and placid contentment. But perhaps the
knowledge which causeth not to err, is most frequently impressed upon
the mind during seasons of affliction; and tears are the softened
showers which cause the seed of Heaven to spring and take root in the
human breast. At least it was thus with Mary Avenel. She was
insensible to the discordant noise which rang below, the clang of bars
and the jarring symphony of the levers which they used to force them,
the measured shouts of the labouring inmates as they combined their
strength for each heave, and gave time with their voices to the
exertion of their arms, and their deeply muttered vows of revenge on
the fugitives who had bequeathed them at their departure a task so
toilsome and difficult. Not all this din, combined in hideous concert,
and expressive of aught but peace, love, and forgiveness, could divert
Mary Avenel from the new course of study on which she had so
singularly entered. "The serenity of Heaven," she said, "is above me;
the sounds which are around are but those of earth and earthly
passion."
Meanwhile the noon was passed, and little impression was made on the
iron grate, when they who laboured at it received a sudden
reinforcement by the unexpected arrival of Christie of the Clinthill.
He came at the head of a small party, consisting of four horsemen, who
bore in their caps the sprig of holly, which was the badge of Avenel.
"What, ho !--my masters," he said, "I bring you a prisoner."
"You had better have brought us liberty," said Dan of the
Howlet-hirst.
Christie looked at the state of affairs with great surprise. "An I
were to be hanged for it," he said, "as I may for as little a matter,
I could not forbear laughing at seeing men peeping through their own
bars like so many rats in a rat-trap, and he with the beard behind,
like the oldest rat in the cellar."
"Hush, thou unmannered knave," said Edward, "it is the Sub-Prior;
and this is neither time, place, nor company, for your ruffian jests."
"What, ho! is my young master malapert?" said Christie; "why, man,
were he my own carnal father, instead of being father to half the
world, I would have my laugh out. And now it is over, I must assist
you, I reckon, for you are setting very greenly about this gear--put
the pinch nearer the staple, man, and hand me an iron crow through the
grate, for that's the fowl to fly away with a wicket on its shoulders.
I have broke into as many grates as you have teeth in your young
head--ay, and broke out of them too, as the captain of the Castle of
Lochmaben knows full well."
Christie did not boast more skill than he really possessed; for,
applying their combined strength, under the direction of that
experienced engineer, bolt and staple gave way before them, and in
less than half an hour, the grate, which had so long repelled their
force, stood open before them.
"And now," said Edward, "to horse, my mates, and pursue the villain
Shafton!"
"Halt, there," said Christie of the Clinthill; "pursue your guest, my
master's friend and my own?--there go two words to that bargain. What
the foul fiend would you pursue him for?"
"Let me pass," said Edward, vehemently, "I will be staid by no
man--the villain has murdered my brother!"
"What says he?" said Christie, turning to the others; "murdered? who
is murdered, and by whom?"
"The Englishman, Sir Piercie Shafton," said Dan of the Howlet-hirst,
"has murdered young Halbert Glendinning yesterday morning, and we
have all risen to the fray."
"It is a bedlam business, I think," said Christie. "First I find you
all locked up in your own tower, and next I am come to prevent you
revenging a murder that was never committed!"
"I tell you," said Edward, "that my brother was slain and buried
yesterday morning by this false Englishman."
"And I tell you," answered Christie, "that I saw him alive and well
last night. I would I knew his trick of getting out of the grave; most
men find it more hard to break through a green sod than a grated
door."
Every body now paused, and looked on Christie in astonishment, until the
Sub-Prior, who had hitherto avoided communication with him, came up and
required earnestly to know, whether he meant really to maintain that
Halbert Glendinning lived.
"Father," he said, with, more respect than he usually showed to any
one save his master, "I confess I may sometimes jest with those of
your coat, but not with you; because, as you may partly recollect, I
owe you a life. It is certain as the sun is in heaven, that Halbert
Glendinning supped at the house of my master the Baron of Avenel last
night, and that he came thither in company with an old man, of whom
more anon."
"And where is he now?"
"The devil only can answer that question," replied Christie, "for the
devil has possessed the whole family, I think. He took fright, the
foolish lad, at something or other which our Baron did in his moody
humour, and so he jumped into the lake and swam ashore like a
wild-duck. Robin of Redcastle spoiled a good gelding in chasing him
this morning."
"And why did he chase the youth?" said the Sub-Prior; "what harm
had he done?"
"None that I know of," said Christie; "but such was the Baron's order,
being in his mood, and all the world having gone mad, as I have said
before."
"Whither away so fast, Edward?" said the monk.
"To Corri-nan-shian, Father," answered the youth.--"Martin and Dan,
take pickaxe and mattock, and follow me if you be men!"
"Right," said the monk, "and fail not to give us instant notice what
you find."
"If you find aught there like Halbert Glendinning," said Christie,
hallooing after Edward, "I will be bound to eat him unsalted.--'T is a
sight to see how that fellow takes the bent!--It is in the time of
action men see what lads are made of. Halbert was aye skipping up and
down like a roo, and his brother used to sit in the chimney nook with
his book and sic-like trash--But the lad was like a loaded hackbut,
which will stand in the corner as quiet as an old crutch until ye draw
the trigger, and then there is nothing but flash and smoke.--But here
comes my prisoner; and, setting other matters aside, I must pray a
word with you, Sir Sub-Prior, respecting him. I came on before to
treat about him, but I was interrupted with this fasherie."
As he spoke, two more of Avenel's troopers rode into the court-yard,
leading betwixt them a horse, on which, with his hands bound to his
side, sate the reformed preacher, Henry Warden.
Chapter the Thirty-First.
At school I knew him--a sharp-witted youth,
Grave, thoughtful, and reserved among his mates,
Turning the hours of sport and food to labour,
Starving his body to inform his mind.
OLD PLAY.
The Sub-Prior, at the Borderer's request, had not failed to
return to the tower, into which he was followed by Christie of
the Clinthill, who, shutting the door of the apartment, drew near,
and began his discourse with great confidence and familiarity.
"My master," he said, "sends me with his commendations to you, Sir
Sub-Prior, above all the community of Saint Mary's, and more specially
than even to the Abbot himself; for though he be termed my lord, and
so forth, all the world knows that you are the tongue of the trump."
"If you have aught to say to me concerning the community," said the
Sub-Prior, "it were well you proceeded in it without farther delay.
Time presses, and the fate of young Glendinnning dwells on my mind."
"I will be caution for him, body for body," said Christie. "I do
protest to you, as sure as I am a living man, so surely is he one."
"Should I not tell his unhappy mother the joyful tidings?" said Father
Eustace,--"and yet better wait till they return from searching the
grave. Well, Sir Jackman, your message to me from your master?"
"My lord and master," said Christie, "hath good reason to believe
that, from the information of certain back friends, whom he will
reward at more leisure, your reverend community hath been led to deem
him ill attached to Holy Church, allied with heretics and those who
favour heresy, and a hungerer after the spoils of your Abbey."
"Be brief, good henchman," said the Sub-Prior, "for the devil is ever
most to be feared when he preacheth."
"Briefly, then--my master desires your friendship; and to excuse
himself from the maligner's calumnies, he sends to your Abbot that
Henry Warden, whose sermons have turned the world upside down, to be
dealt with as Holy Church directs, and as the Abbot's pleasure may
determine."
The Sub-Prior's eyes sparkled at the intelligence; for it had been
accounted a matter of great importance that this man should be
arrested, possessed, as he was known to be, of so much zeal and
popularity, that scarcely the preaching of Knox himself had been more
awakening to the people, and more formidable to the Church of Rome.
In fact, that ancient system, which so well accommodated its doctrines
to the wants and wishes of a barbarous age, had, since the art of
printing, and the gradual diffusion of knowledge, lain floating like
some huge Leviathan, into which ten thousand reforming fishers were
darting their harpoons. The Roman Church of Scotland, in particular,
was at her last gasp, actually blowing blood and water, yet still with
unremitted, though animal exertions, maintaining the conflict with the
assailants, who on every side were plunging their weapons into her
bulky body. In many large towns, the monasteries had been suppressed
by the fury of the populace; in other places, their possessions had
been usurped by the power of the reformed nobles; but still the
hierarchy made a part of the common law of the realm, and might claim
both its property and its privileges wherever it had the means of
asserting them. The community of Saint Mary's of Kennaquhair was
considered as being particularly in this situation. They had retained,
undiminished, their territorial power and influence; and the great
barons in the neighbourhood, partly from their attachment to the party
in the state who still upheld the old system of religion, partly
because each grudged the share of the prey which the others must
necessarily claim, had as yet abstained from despoiling the Halidome.
The Community was also understood to be protected by the powerful
Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland, whose zealous attachment to
the Catholic faith caused at a later period the great rebellion of the
tenth of Elizabeth.
Thus happily placed, it was supposed by the friends of the decaying
cause of the Roman Catholic faith, that some determined example of
courage and resolution, exercised where the franchises of the church
were yet entire, and her jurisdiction undisputed, might awe the
progress of the new opinions into activity; and, protected by the laws
which still existed, and by the favour of the sovereign, might be the
means of securing the territory which Rome yet preserved in Scotland,
and perhaps of recovering that which she had lost.
The matter had been considered more than once by the northern
Catholics of Scotland, and they had held communication with those of
the south. Father Eustace, devoted by his public and private vows,
had caught the flame, and had eagerly advised that they should execute
the doom of heresy on the first reformed preacher, or, according to
his sense, on the first heretic of eminence, who should venture within
the precincts of the Halidome. A heart, naturally kind and noble, was,
in this instance, as it has been in many more, deceived by its own
generosity. Father Eustace would have been a bad administrator of the
inquisitorial power of Spain, where that power was omnipotent, and
where judgment was exercised without danger to those who inflicted it.
In such a situation his rigour might have relented in favour of the
criminal, whom it was at his pleasure to crush or to place at freedom.
But in Scotland, during this crisis, the case was entirely different.
The question was, whether one of the spirituality dared, at the hazard
of his own life, to step forward to assert and exercise the rights of
the church. Was there any who would venture to wield the thunder in
her cause, or must it remain like that in the hand of a painted
Jupiter, the object of derision instead of terror? The crisis was
calculated to awake the soul of Eustace; for it comprised the
question, whether he dared, at all hazards to himself, to execute with
stoical severity a measure which, according to the general opinion,
was to be advantageous to the church, and, according to ancient law,
and to his firm belief, was not only justifiable but meritorious.
While such resolutions were agitated amongst the Catholics, chance
placed a victim within their grasp. Henry Warden had, with the
animation proper to the enthusiastic reformers of the age,
transgressed, in the vehemence of his zeal, the bounds of the
discretional liberty allowed to his sect so far, that it was thought
the Queen's personal dignity was concerned in bringing him to justice.
He fled from Edinburgh, with recommendations, however, from Lord James
Stewart, afterwards the celebrated Earl of Murray, to some of the
Border chieftains of inferior rank, who were privately conjured to
procure him safe passage into England. One of the principal persons to
whom such recommendation was addressed, was Julian Avenel; for as yet,
and for a considerable time afterwards, the correspondence and
interest of Lord James lay rather with the subordinate leaders than
with the chiefs of great power, and men of distinguished influence
upon the Border. Julian Avenel had intrigued without scruple with both
parties--yet bad as he was, he certainly would not have practised
aught against the guest whom Lord James had recommended to his
hospitality, had it not been for what he termed the preacher's
officious inter-meddling in his family affairs. But when he had
determined to make Warden rue the lecture he had read him, and the
scene of public scandal which he had caused in his hall, Julian
resolved, with the constitutional shrewdness of his disposition, to
combine his vengeance with his interest. And therefore, instead of
doing violence on the person of Henry Warden within his own castle, he
determined to deliver him up to the Community of Saint Mary's, and at
once make them the instruments of his own revenge, and found a claim
of personal recompense, either in money, or in a grant of Abbey lands
at a low quit-rent, which last began now to be the established form in
which the temporal nobles plundered the spirituality.
The Sub-Prior, therefore, of Saint Mary's, unexpectedly saw the
steadfast, active, and inflexible enemy of the church delivered into
his hand, and felt himself called upon to make good his promises to
the friends of the Catholic faith, by quenching heresy in the blood of
one of its most zealous professors.
To the honour more of Father Eustace's heart than of his consistency,
the communication that Henry Warden was placed within his power,
struck him with more sorrow than triumph; but his next feelings were
those of exultation. "It is sad," he said to himself, "to cause human
suffering; it is awful to cause human blood to be spilled; but the
judge to whom the sword of Saint Paul, as well as the keys of Saint
Peter, are confided, must not flinch from his task. Our weapon returns
into our own bosom, if not wielded with a steady and unrelenting hand
against the irreconcilable enemies of the Holy Church. _Pereat
iste!_ It is the doom he has incurred, and were all the heretics in
Scotland armed and at his back, they should not prevent its being
pronounced, and, if possible, enforced.--Bring the heretic before me,"
he said, issuing his commands aloud, and in a tone of authority.