<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<p class="poem">
Well, lord, we have not got that which we have;<br/>
’Tis not enough our foes are this time fled,<br/>
Being opposites of such repairing nature.<br/>
<br/>
Henry VI. Part II.</p>
<p>In the gorge of a pass or mountain glen, ascending from the fertile plains of
East Lothian, there stood in former times an extensive castle, of which only
the ruins are now visible. Its ancient proprietors were a race of powerful and
warlike barons, who bore the same name with the castle itself, which was
Ravenswood. Their line extended to a remote period of antiquity, and they had
intermarried with the Douglasses, Humes, Swintons, Hays, and other families of
power and distinction in the same country. Their history was frequently
involved in that of Scotland itself, in whose annals their feats are recorded.
The Castle of Ravenswood, occupying, and in some measure commanding, a pass
betweixt Berwickshire, or the Merse, as the southeastern province of Scotland
is termed, and the Lothians, was of importance both in times of foreign war and
domestic discord. It was frequently beseiged with ardour, and defended with
obstinacy, and, of course, its owners played a conspicuous part in story. But
their house had its revolutions, like all sublunary things: it became greatly
declined from its splendour about the middle of the 17th century; and towards
the period of the Revolution, the last proprietor of Ravenswood Castle saw
himself compelled to part with the ancient family seat, and to remove himself
to a lonely and sea-beaten tower, which, situated on the bleak shores between
St. Abb’s Head and the village of Eyemouth, looked out on the lonely and
boisterous German Ocean. A black domain of wild pasture-land surrounded their
new residence, and formed the remains of their property.</p>
<p>Lord Ravenswood, the heir of this ruined family, was far from bending his mind
to his new condition of life. In the civil war of 1689 he had espoused the
sinking side, and although he had escaped without the forfeiture of life or
land, his blood had been attainted, and his title abolished. He was now called
Lord Ravenswood only in courtesy.</p>
<p>This forfeited nobleman inherited the pride and turbulence, though not the
fortune, of his house, and, as he imputed the final declension of his family to
a particular individual, he honoured that person with his full portion of
hatred. This was the very man who had now become, by purchase, proprietor of
Ravenswood, and the domains of which the heir of the house now stood
dispossessed. He was descended of a family much less ancient than that of Lord
Ravenswood, and which had only risen to wealth and political importance during
the great civil wars. He himself had been bred to the bar, and had held high
offices in the state, maintaining through life the character of a skilful
fisher in the troubled waters of a state divided by factions, and governed by
delegated authority; and of one who contrived to amass considerable sums of
money in a country where there was but little to be gathered, and who equally
knew the value of wealth and the various means of augmenting it and using it as
an engine of increasing his power and influence.</p>
<p>Thus qualified and gifted, he was a dangerous antagonist to the fierce and
imprudent Ravenswood. Whether he had given him good cause for the enmity with
which the Baron regarded him, was a point on which men spoke differently. Some
said the quarrel arose merely from the vindictive spirit and envy of Lord
Ravenswood, who could not patiently behold another, though by just and fair
purchase, become the proprietor of the estate and castle of his forefathers.
But the greater part of the public, prone to slander the wealthy in their
absence as to flatter them in their presence, held a less charitable opinion.
They said that the Lord Keeper (for to this height Sir William Ashton had
ascended) had, previous to the final purchase of the estate of Ravenswood, been
concerned in extensive pecuniary transactions with the former proprietor; and,
rather intimating what was probable than affirming anything positively, they
asked which party was likely to have the advantage in stating and enforcing the
claims arising out of these complicated affairs, and more than hinted the
advantages which the cool lawyer and able politician must necessarily possess
over the hot, fiery, and imprudent character whom he had involved in legal
toils and pecuniary snares.</p>
<p>The character of the times aggravated these suspicions. “In those days
there was no king in Israel.” Since the departure of James VI. to assume
the richer and more powerful crown of England, there had existed in Scotland
contending parties, formed among the aristocracy, by whom, as their intrigues
at the court of St. James’s chanced to prevail, the delegated powers of
sovereignty were alternately swayed. The evils attending upon this system of
government resembled those which afflict the tenants of an Irish estate, the
property of an absentee. There was no supreme power, claiming and possessing a
general interest with the community at large, to whom the oppressed might
appeal from subordinate tyranny, either for justice or for mercy. Let a monarch
be as indolent, as selfish, as much disposed to arbitrary power as he will,
still, in a free country, his own interests are so clearly connected with those
of the public at large, and the evil consequences to his own authority are so
obvious and imminent when a different course is pursued, that common policy, as
well as common feeling, point to the equal distribution of justice, and to the
establishment of the throne in righteousness. Thus, even sovereigns remarkable
for usurpation and tyranny have been found rigorous in the administration of
justice among their subjects, in cases where their own power and passions were
not compromised.</p>
<p>It is very different when the powers of sovereignty are delegated to the head
of an aristocratic faction, rivalled and pressed closely in the race of
ambition by an adverse leader. His brief and precarious enjoyment of power must
be employed in rewarding his partizans, in extending his influence, in
oppressing and crushing his adversaries. Even Abou Hassan, the most
disinterested of all viceroys, forgot not, during his caliphate of one day, to
send a douceur of one thousand pieces of gold to his own household; and the
Scottish vicegerents, raised to power by the strength of their faction, failed
not to embrace the same means of rewarding them.</p>
<p>The administration of justice, in particular, was infected by the most gross
partiality. A case of importance scarcely occurred in which there was not some
ground for bias or partiality on the part of the judges, who were so little
able to withstand the temptation that the adage, “Show me the man, and I
will show you the law,” became as prevalent as it was scandalous. One
corruption led the way to others still more gross and profligate. The judge who
lent his sacred authority in one case to support a friend, and in another to
crush an enemy, and whose decisions were founded on family connexions or
political relations, could not be supposed inaccessible to direct personal
motives; and the purse of the wealthy was too often believed to be thrown into
the scale to weigh down the cause of the poor litigant. The subordinate
officers of the law affected little scruple concerning bribery. Pieces of plate
and bags of money were sent in presents to the king’s counsel, to
influence their conduct, and poured forth, says a contemporary writer, like
billets of wood upon their floors, without even the decency of concealment.</p>
<p>In such times, it was not over uncharitable to suppose that the statesman,
practised in courts of law, and a powerful member of a triumphant cabal, might
find and use means of advantage over his less skilful and less favoured
adversary; and if it had been supposed that Sir William Ashton’s
conscience had been too delicate to profit by these advantages, it was believed
that his ambition and desire of extending his wealth and consequence found as
strong a stimulus in the exhortations of his lady as the daring aim of Macbeth
in the days of yore.</p>
<p>Lady Ashton was of a family more distinguished than that of her lord, an
advantage which she did not fail to use to the uttermost, in maintaining and
extending her husband’s influence over others, and, unless she was
greatly belied, her own over him. She had been beautiful, and was stately and
majestic in her appearance. Endowed by nature with strong powers and violent
passions, experience had taught her to employ the one, and to conceal, if not
to moderate, the other. She was a severe and strict observer of the external
forms, at least, of devotion; her hospitality was splendid, even to
ostentation; her address and manners, agreeable to the pattern most valued in
Scotland at the period, were grave, dignified, and severely regulated by the
rules of etiquette. Her character had always been beyond the breath of slander.
And yet, with all these qualities to excite respect, Lady Ashton was seldom
mentioned in the terms of love or affection. Interest—the interest of her
family, if not her own—seemed too obviously the motive of her actions;
and where this is the case, the sharp-judging and malignant public are not
easily imposed upon by outward show. It was seen and ascertained that, in her
most graceful courtesies and compliments, Lady Ashton no more lost sight of her
object than the falcon in his airy wheel turns his quick eyes from his destined
quarry; and hence, something of doubt and suspicion qualified the feelings with
which her equals received her attentions. With her inferiors these feelings
were mingled with fear; an impression useful to her purposes, so far as it
enforced ready compliance with her requests and implicit obedience to her
commands, but detrimental, because it cannot exist with affection or regard.</p>
<p>Even her husband, it is said, upon whose fortunes her talents and address had
produced such emphatic influence, regarded her with respectful awe rather than
confiding attachment; and report said, there were times when he considered his
grandeur as dearly purchased at the expense of domestic thraldom. Of this,
however, much might be suspected, but little could be accurately known: Lady
Ashton regarded the honour of her husband as her own, and was well aware how
much that would suffer in the public eye should he appear a vassal to his wife.
In all her arguments his opinion was quoted as infallible; his taste was
appealed to, and his sentiments received, with the air of deference which a
dutiful wife might seem to owe to a husband of Sir William Ashton’s rank
and character. But there was something under all this which rung false and
hollow; and to those who watched this couple with close, and perhaps malicious,
scrutiny it seemed evident that, in the haughtiness of a firmer character,
higher birth, and more decided views of aggrandisement, the lady looked with
some contempt on her husband, and that he regarded her with jealous fear,
rather than with love or admiration.</p>
<p>Still, however, the leading and favourite interests of Sir William Ashton and
his lady were the same, and they failed not to work in concert, although
without cordiality, and to testify, in all exterior circumstances, that respect
for each other which they were aware was necessary to secure that of the
public.</p>
<p>Their union was crowned with several children, of whom three survived. One, the
eldest son, was absent on his travels; the second, a girl of seventeen, and the
third, a boy about three years younger, resided with their parents in Edinburgh
during the sessions of the Scottish Parliament and Privy Council, at other
times in the old Gothic castle of Ravenswood, to which the Lord Keeper had made
large additions in the style of the 17th century.</p>
<p>Allan Lord Ravenswood, the late proprietor of that ancient mansion and the
large estate annexed to it, continued for some time to wage ineffectual war
with his successor concerning various points to which their former transactions
had given rise, and which were successively determined in favour of the wealthy
and powerful competitor, until death closed the litigation, by summoning
Ravenswood to a higher bar. The thread of life, which had been long wasting,
gave way during a fit of violent and impotent fury with which he was assailed
on receiving the news of the loss of a cause, founded, perhaps, rather in
equity than in law, the last which he had maintained against his powerful
antagonist. His son witnessed his dying agonies, and heard the curses which he
breathed against his adversary, as if they had conveyed to him a legacy of
vengeance. Other circumstances happened to exasperate a passion which was, and
had long been, a prevalent vice in the Scottish disposition.</p>
<p>It was a November morning, and the cliffs which overlooked the ocean were hung
with thick and heavy mist, when the portals of the ancient and half-ruinous
tower, in which Lord Ravenswood had spent the last and troubled years of his
life, opened, that his mortal remains might pass forward to an abode yet more
dreary and lonely. The pomp of attendance, to which the deceased had, in his
latter years, been a stranger, was revived as he was about to be consigned to
the realms of forgetfulness.</p>
<p>Banner after banner, with the various devices and coats of this ancient family
and its connexions, followed each other in mournful procession from under the
low-browed archway of the courtyard. The principal gentry of the country
attended in the deepest mourning, and tempered the pace of their long train of
horses to the solemn march befitting the occasion. Trumpets, with banners of
crape attached to them, sent forth their long and melancholy notes to regulate
the movements of the procession. An immense train of inferior mourners and
menials closed the rear, which had not yet issued from the castle gate when the
van had reached the chapel where the body was to be deposited.</p>
<p>Contrary to the custom, and even to the law, of the time, the body was met by a
priest of the Scottish Episcopal communion, arrayed in his surplice, and
prepared to read over the coffin of the deceased the funeral service of the
church. Such had been the desire of Lord Ravenswood in his last illness, and it
was readily complied with by the Tory gentlemen, or Cavaliers, as they affected
to style themselves, in which faction most of his kinsmen were enrolled. The
Presbyterian Church judicatory of the bounds, considering the ceremony as a
bravading insult upon their authority, had applied to the Lord Keeper, as the
nearest privy councillor, for a warrant to prevent its being carried into
effect; so that, when the clergyman had opened his prayer-book, an officer of
the law, supported by some armed men, commanded him to be silent. An insult
which fired the whole assembly with indignation was particularly and instantly
resented by the only son of the deceased, Edgar, popularly called the Master of
Ravenswood, a youth of about twenty years of age. He clapped his hand on his
sword, and bidding the official person to desist at his peril from farther
interruption, commanded the clergyman to proceed. The man attempted to enforce
his commission; but as an hundred swords at once glittered in the air, he
contented himself with protesting against the violence which had been offered
to him in the execution of his duty, and stood aloof, a sullen and moody
spectator of the ceremonial, muttering as one who should say:
“You’ll rue the day that clogs me with this answer.”</p>
<p>The scene was worthy of an artist’s pencil. Under the very arch of the
house of death, the clergyman, affrighted at the scene, and trembling for his
own safety, hastily and unwillingly rehearsed the solemn service of the church,
and spoke “dust to dust and ashes to ashes,” over ruined pride and
decayed prosperity. Around stood the relations of the deceased, their
countenances more in anger than in sorrow, and the drawn swords which they
brandished forming a violent contrast with their deep mourning habits. In the
countenance of the young man alone, resentment seemed for the moment
overpowered by the deep agony with which he beheld his nearest, and almost his
only, friend consigned to the tomb of his ancestry. A relative observed him
turn deadly pale, when, all rites being now duly observed, it became the duty
of the chief mourner to lower down into the charnel vault, where mouldering
coffins showed their tattered velvet and decayed plating, the head of the
corpse which was to be their partner in corruption. He stept to the youth and
offered his assistance, which, by a mute motion, Edgar Ravenswood rejected.
Firmly, and without a tear, he performed that last duty. The stone was laid on
the sepulchre, the door of the aisle was locked, and the youth took possession
of its massive key.</p>
<p>As the crowd left the chapel, he paused on the steps which led to its Gothic
chancel. “Gentlemen and friends,” he said, “you have this day
done no common duty to the body of your deceased kinsman. The rites of due
observance, which, in other countries, are allowed as the due of the meanest
Christian, would this day have been denied to the body of your
relative—not certainly sprung of the meanest house in Scotland—had
it not been assured to him by your courage. Others bury their dead in sorrow
and tears, in silence and in reverence; our funeral rites are marred by the
intrusion of bailiffs and ruffians, and our grief—the grief due to our
departed friend—is chased from our cheeks by the glow of just
indignation. But it is well that I know from what quiver this arrow has come
forth. It was only he that dug the grave who could have the mean cruelty to
disturb the obsequies; and Heaven do as much to me and more, if I requite not
to this man and his house the ruin and disgrace he has brought on me and
mine!”</p>
<p>A numerous part of the assembly applauded this speech, as the spirited
expression of just resentment; but the more cool and judicious regretted that
it had been uttered. The fortunes of the heir of Ravenswood were too low to
brave the farther hostility which they imagined these open expressions of
resentment must necessarily provoke. Their apprehensions, however, proved
groundless, at least in the immediate consequences of this affair.</p>
<p>The mourners returned to the tower, there, according to a custom but recently
abolished in Scotland, to carouse deep healths to the memory of the deceased,
to make the house of sorrow ring with sounds of joviality and debauch, and to
diminish, by the expense of a large and profuse entertainment, the limited
revenues of the heir of him whose funeral they thus strangely honoured. It was
the custom, however, and on the present occasion it was fully observed. The
tables swam in wine, the populace feasted in the courtyard, the yeomen in the
kitchen and buttery; and two years’ rent of Ravenswood’s remaining
property hardly defrayed the charge of the funeral revel. The wine did its
office on all but the Master of Ravenswood, a title which he still retained,
though forfeiture had attached to that of his father. He, while passing around
the cup which he himself did not taste, soon listened to a thousand
exclamations against the Lord Keeper, and passionate protestations of
attachment to himself, and to the honour of his house. He listened with dark
and sullen brow to ebullitions which he considered justly as equally evanescent
with the crimson bubbles on the brink of the goblet, or at least with the
vapours which its contents excited in the brains of the revellers around him.</p>
<p>When the last flask was emptied, they took their leave with deep
protestations—to be forgotten on the morrow, if, indeed, those who made
them should not think it necessary for their safety to make a more solemn
retractation.</p>
<p>Accepting their adieus with an air of contempt which he could scarce conceal,
Ravenswood at length beheld his ruinous habitation cleared of this confluence
of riotous guests, and returned to the deserted hall, which now appeared doubly
lonely from the cessation of that clamour to which it had so lately echoed. But
its space was peopled by phantoms which the imagination of the young heir
conjured up before him—the tarnished honour and degraded fortunes of his
house, the destruction of his own hopes, and the triumph of that family by whom
they had been ruined. To a mind naturally of a gloomy cast here was ample room
for meditation, and the musings of young Ravenswood were deep and unwitnessed.</p>
<p>The peasant who shows the ruins of the tower, which still crown the beetling
cliff and behold the war of the waves, though no more tenanted saved by the
sea-mew and cormorant, even yet affirms that on this fatal night the Master of
Ravenswood, by the bitter exclamations of his despair, evoked some evil fiend,
under whose malignant influence the future tissue of incidents was woven. Alas!
what fiend can suggest more desperate counsels than those adopted under the
guidance of our own violent and unresisted passions?</p>
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