<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p class="poem">
Ay, and when huntsmen wind the merry horn,<br/>
And from its covert starts the fearful prey,<br/>
Who, warm’d with youth’s blood in his swelling veins,<br/>
Would, like a lifeless clod, outstretched lie,<br/>
Shut out from all the fair creation offers?<br/>
<br/>
Ethwald, Act I. Scene 1.</p>
<p>Light meals procure light slumbers; and therefore it is not surprising that,
considering the fare which Caleb’s conscience, or his necessity,
assuming, as will sometimes happen, that disguise, had assigned to the guests
of Wolf’s Crag, their slumbers should have been short.</p>
<p>In the morning Bucklaw rushed into his host’s apartment with a loud
halloo, which might have awaked the dead.</p>
<p>“Up! up! in the name of Heaven! The hunters are out, the only piece of
sport I have seen this month; and you lie here, Master, on a bed that has
little to recommend it, except that it may be something softer than the stone
floor of your ancestor’s vault.”</p>
<p>“I wish,” said Ravenswood, raising his head peevishly, “you
had forborne so early a jest, Mr. Hayston; it is really no pleasure to lose the
very short repose which I had just begun to enjoy, after a night spent in
thoughts upon fortune far harder than my couch, Bucklaw.”</p>
<p>“Pschaw, pshaw!” replied his guest; “get up—get up; the
hounds are abroad. I have saddled the horses myself, for old Caleb was calling
for grooms and lackeys, and would never have proceeded without two hours’
apology for the absence of men that were a hundred miles off. Get up, Master; I
say the hounds are out—get up, I say; the hunt is up.” And off ran
Bucklaw.</p>
<p>“And I say,” said the Master, rising slowly, “that nothing
can concern me less. Whose hounds come so near to us?”</p>
<p>“The Honourable Lord Bittlebrains’,” answered Caleb, who
had followed the impatient Laird of Bucklaw into his master’s bedroom,
“and truly I ken nae title they have to be yowling and howling within the
freedoms and immunities of your lordship’s right of free forestry.”</p>
<p>“Nor I, Caleb,” replied Ravenswood, “excepting that they have
bought both the lands and the right of forestry, and may think themselves
entitled to exercise the rights they have paid their money for.”</p>
<p>“It may be sae, my lord,” replied Caleb; “but it’s no
gentleman’s deed of them to come here and exercise such-like right, and
your lordship living at your ain castle of Wolf’s Crag. Lord
Bittlebrains would weel to remember what his folk have been.”</p>
<p>“And what we now are,” said the Master, with suppressed bitterness
of feeling. “But reach me my cloak, Caleb, and I will indulge Bucklaw
with a sight of this chase. It is selfish to sacrifice my guest’s
pleasure to my own.”</p>
<p>“Sacrifice!” echoed Caleb, in a tone which seemed to imply the
total absurdity of his master making the least concession in deference to any
one—“sacrifice, indeed!—but I crave your honour’s
pardon, and whilk doublet is it your pleasure to wear?”</p>
<p>“Any one you will, Caleb; my wardrobe, I suppose, is not very
extensive.”</p>
<p>“Not extensive!” echoed his assistant; “when there is the
grey and silver that your lordship bestowed on Hew Hildebrand, your outrider;
and the French velvet that went with my lord your father—be gracious to
him!—my lord your father’s auld wardrobe to the puir friends of the
family; and the drap-de-Berry——”</p>
<p>“Which I gave to you, Caleb, and which, I suppose, is the only dress we
have any chance to come at, except that I wore yesterday; pray, hand me that,
and say no more about it.”</p>
<p>“If your honour has a fancy,” replied Caleb, “and doubtless
it’s a sad-coloured suit, and you are in mourning; nevertheless, I have
never tried on the drap-de-Berry—ill wad it become me—and your
honour having no change of claiths at this present—and it’s weel
brushed, and as there are leddies down yonder——”</p>
<p>“Ladies!” said Ravenswood; “and what ladies, pray?”</p>
<p>“What do I ken, your lordship? Looking down at them from the
Warden’s Tower, I could but see them glent by wi’ their bridles
ringing and their feathers fluttering, like the court of Elfland.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, Caleb,” replied the Master, “help me on with my
cloak, and hand me my sword-belt. What clatter is that in the courtyard?”</p>
<p>“Just Bucklaw bringing out the horses,” said Caleb, after a glance
through the window, “as if there werena men eneugh in the castle, or as
if I couldna serve the turn of ony o’ them that are out o’ the
gate.”</p>
<p>“Alas! Caleb, we should want little if your ability were equal to your
will,” replied the Master.</p>
<p>“And I hope your lordship disna want that muckle,” said Caleb;
“for, considering a’ things, I trust we support the credit of the
family as weel as things will permit of,—only Bucklaw is aye sae frank
and sae forward. And there he has brought out your lordship’s palfrey,
without the saddle being decored wi’ the broidered sumpter-cloth! and I
could have brushed it in a minute.”</p>
<p>“It is all very well,” said his master, escaping from him and
descending the narrow and steep winding staircase which led to the courtyard.</p>
<p>“It <i>may</i> be a’ very weel,” said Caleb, somewhat
peevishly; “but if your lordship wad tarry a bit, I will tell you what
will <i>not</i> be very weel.”</p>
<p>“And what is that?” said Ravenswood, impatiently, but stopping at
the same time.</p>
<p>“Why, just that ye suld speer ony gentleman hame to dinner; for I canna
mak anither fast on a feast day, as when I cam ower Bucklaw wi’ Queen
Margaret; and, to speak truth, if your lordship wad but please to cast yoursell
in the way of dining wi’ Lord Bittlebrains, I’se warrand I wad cast
about brawly for the morn; or if, stead o’ that, ye wad but dine
wi’ them at the change-house, ye might mak your shift for the awing: ye
might say ye had forgot your purse, or that the carline awed ye rent, and that
ye wad allow it in the settlement.”</p>
<p>“Or any other lie that came uppermost, I suppose?” said his master.
“Good-bye, Caleb; I commend your care for the honour of the
family.” And, throwing himself on his horse, he followed Bucklaw, who, at
the manifest risk of his neck, had begun to gallop down the steep path which
led from the Tower as soon as he saw Ravenswood have his foot in the stirrup.</p>
<p>Caleb Balderstone looked anxiously after them, and shook his thin grey locks:
“And I trust they will come to no evil; but they have reached the plain,
and folk cannot say but that the horse are hearty and in spirits.”</p>
<p>Animated by the natural impetuosity and fire of his temper, young Bucklaw
rushed on with the careless speed of a whirlwind. Ravenswood was scarce more
moderate in his pace, for his was a mind unwillingly roused from contemplative
inactivity, but which, when once put into motion, acquired a spirit of forcible
and violent progression. Neither was his eagerness proportioned in all cases to
the motive of impulse, but might be compared to the speed of a stone, which
rushes with like fury down the hill whether it was first put in motion by the
arm of a giant or the hand of a boy. He felt, therefore, in no ordinary degree,
the headlong impulse of the chase, a pastime so natural to youth of all ranks,
that it seems rather to be an inherent passion in our animal nature, which
levels all differences of rank and education, than an acquired habit of rapid
exercise.</p>
<p>The repeated bursts of the French horn, which was then always used for the
encouragement and direction of the hounds; the deep, though distant baying of
the pack; the half-heard cries of the huntsmen; the half-seen forms which were
discovered, now emerging from glens which crossed the moor, now sweeping over
its surface, now picking their way where it was impeded by morasses; and, above
all, the feeling of his own rapid motion, animated the Master of Ravenswood, at
last for the moment, above the recollections of a more painful nature by which
he was surrounded. The first thing which recalled him to those unpleasing
circumstances was feeling that his horse, notwithstanding all the advantages
which he received from his rider’s knowledge of the country, was unable
to keep up with the chase. As he drew his bridle up with the bitter feeling
that his poverty excluded him from the favourite recreation of his forefathers,
and indeed their sole employment when not engaged in military pursuits, he was
accosted by a well-mounted stranger, who, unobserved, had kept near him during
the earlier part of his career.</p>
<p>“Your horse is blown,” said the man, with a complaisance seldom
used in a hunting-field. “Might I crave your honour to make use of
mine?”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Ravenswood, more surprised than pleased at such a
proposal. “I really do not know how I have merited such a favour at a
stranger’s hands.”</p>
<p>“Never ask a question about it, Master,” said Bucklaw, who, with
great unwillingness, had hitherto reined in his own gallant steed, not to
outride his host and entertainer. “Take the goods the gods provide you,
as the great John Dryden says; or stay—here, my friend, lend me that
horse; I see you have been puzzled to rein him up this half-hour. I’ll
take the devil out of him for you. Now, Master, do you ride mine, which will
carry you like an eagle.”</p>
<p>And throwing the rein of his own horse to the Master of Ravenswood, he sprung
upon that which the stranger resigned to him, and continued his career at full
speed. “Was ever so thoughtless a being!” said the Master;
“and you, my friend, how could you trust him with your horse?”</p>
<p>“The horse,” said the man, “belongs to a person who will make
your honour, or any of your honourable friends, most welcome to him, flesh and
fell.”</p>
<p>“And the owner’s name is——?” asked Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“Your honour must excuse me, you will learn that from himself. If you
please to take your friend’s horse, and leave me your galloway, I will
meet you after the fall of the stag, for I hear they are blowing him at
bay.”</p>
<p>“I believe, my friend, it will be the best way to recover your good horse
for you,” answered Ravenswood; and mounting the nag of his friend
Bucklaw, he made all the haste in his power to the spot where the blast of the
horn announced that the stag’s career was nearly terminated.</p>
<p>These jovial sounds were intermixed with the huntsmen’s shouts of
“Hyke a Talbot! Hyke a Teviot! now, boys, now!” and similar
cheering halloos of the olden hunting-field, to which the impatient yelling of
the hounds, now close of the object of their pursuit, gave a lively and
unremitting chorus. The straggling riders began now to rally towards the scene
of action, collecting from different points as to a common centre.</p>
<p>Bucklaw kept the start which he had gotten, and arrived first at the spot,
where the stag, incapable of sustaining a more prolonged flight, had turned
upon the hounds, and, in the hunter’s phrase, was at bay. With his
stately head bent down, his sides white with foam, his eyes strained betwixt
rage and terror, the hunted animal had now in his turn become an object of
intimidation to his pursuers. The hunters came up one by one, and watched an
opportunity to assail him with some advantage, which, in such circumstances,
can only be done with caution. The dogs stood aloof and bayed loudly,
intimating at once eagerness and fear, and each of the sportsmen seemed to
expect that his comrade would take upon him the perilous task of assaulting and
disabling the animal. The ground, which was a hollow in the common or moor,
afforded little advantage for approaching the stag unobserved; and general was
the shout of triumph when Bucklaw, with the dexterity proper to an accomplished
cavalier of the day, sprang from his horse, and dashing suddenly and swiftly at
the stag, brought him to the ground by a cut on the hind leg with his short
hunting-sword. The pack, rushing in upon their disabled enemy, soon ended his
painful struggles, and solemnised his fall with their clamour; the hunters,
with their horns and voices, whooping and blowing a <i>mort</i>, or death-note,
which resounded far over the billows of the adjacent ocean.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0127.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Illustration" /><br/></div>
<p>The huntsman then withdrew the hounds from the throttled stag, and on his knee
presented his knife to a fair female form, on a white palfrey, whose terror, or
perhaps her compassion, had till then kept her at some distance. She wore a
black silk riding-mask, which was then a common fashion, as well for preserving
the complexion from the sun and rain, as from an idea of decorum, which did not
permit a lady to appear barefaced while engaged in a boisterous sport, and
attended by a promiscuous company. The richness of her dress, however, as well
as the mettle and form of her palfrey, together with the silvan compliment paid
to her by the huntsman, pointed her out to Bucklaw as the principal person in
the field. It was not without a feeling of pity, approaching even to contempt,
that this enthusiastic hunter observed her refuse the huntsman’s knife,
presented to her for the purpose of making the first incision in the
stag’s breast, and thereby discovering the venison. He felt more than
half inclined to pay his compliments to her; but it had been Bucklaw’s
misfortune, that his habits of life had not rendered him familiarly acquainted
with the higher and better classes of female society, so that, with all his
natural audacity, he felt sheepish and bashful when it became necessary to
address a lady of distinction.</p>
<p>Taking unto himself heart of grace (to use his own phrase), he did at length
summon up resolution enough to give the fair huntress good time of the day, and
trust that her sport had answered her expectation. Her answer was very
courteously and modestly expressed, and testified some gratitude to the gallant
cavalier, whose exploit had terminated the chase so adroitly, when the hounds
and huntsmen seemed somewhat at a stand.</p>
<p>“Uds daggers and scabbard, madam,” said Bucklaw, whom this
observation brought at once upon his own ground, “there is no difficulty
or merit in that matter at all, so that a fellow is not too much afraid of
having a pair of antlers in his guts. I have hunted at force five hundred
times, madam; and I never yet saw the stag at bay, by land or water, but I
durst have gone roundly in on him. It is all use and wont, madam; and
I’ll tell you, madam, for all that, it must be done with good heed and
caution; and you will do well, madam, to have your hunting-sword right sharp
and double-edged, that you may strike either fore-handed or back-handed, as you
see reason, for a hurt with a buck’s horn is a perilous and somewhat
venomous matter.”</p>
<p>“I am afraid, sir,” said the young lady, and her smile was scarce
concealed by her vizard, “I shall have little use for such careful
preparation.”</p>
<p>“But the gentleman says very right for all that, my lady,” said an
old huntsman, who had listened to Bucklaw’s harangue with no small
edification; “and I have heard my father say, who was a forester at the
Cabrach, that a wild boar’s gaunch is more easily healed than a hurt from
the deer’s horn, for so says the old woodman’s rhyme—</p>
<p class="poem">
If thou be hurt with horn of hart, it brings thee to they bier;<br/>
But tusk of boar shall leeches heal, thereof have lesser fear.”</p>
<p>“An I might advise,” continued Bucklaw, who was now in his element,
and desirous of assuming the whole management, “as the hounds are
surbated and weary, the head of the stag should be cabaged in order to reward
them; and if I may presume to speak, the huntsman, who is to break up the stag,
ought to drink to your good ladyship’s health a good lusty bicker of ale,
or a tass of brandy; for if he breaks him up without drinking, the venison will
not keep well.”</p>
<p>This very agreeable prescription received, as will be readily believed, all
acceptation from the huntsman, who, in requital, offered to Bucklaw the
compliment of his knife, which the young lady had declined.</p>
<p>This polite proffer was seconded by his mistress. “I believe, sir,”
she said, withdrawing herself from the circle, “that my father, for whose
amusement Lord Bittlebrain’s hounds have been out to-day, will readily
surrender all care of these matters to a gentleman of your experience.”</p>
<p>Then, bending gracefully from her horse, she wished him good morning, and,
attended by one or two domestics, who seemed immediately attached to her
service, retired from the scene of action, to which Bucklaw, too much delighted
with an opportunity of displaying his woodcraft to care about man or woman
either, paid little attention; but was soon stript to his doublet, with
tucked-up sleeves, and naked arms up to the elbows in blood and grease,
slashing, cutting, hacking, and hewing, with the precision of Sir Tristrem
himself, and wrangling and disputing with all around him concerning nombles,
briskets, flankards, and raven-bones, then usual terms of the art of hunting,
or of butchery, whichever the reader chooses to call it, which are now probably
antiquated.</p>
<p>When Ravenswood, who followed a short pace behind his friend, saw that the stag
had fallen, his temporary ardour for the chase gave way to that feeling of
reluctance which he endured at encountering in his fallen fortunes the gaze
whether of equals or inferiors. He reined up his horse on the top of a gentle
eminence, from which he observed the busy and gay scene beneath him, and heard
the whoops of the huntsmen, gaily mingled with the cry of the dogs, and the
neighing and trampling of the horses. But these jovial sounds fell sadly on the
ear of the ruined nobleman. The chase, with all its train of excitations, has
ever since feudal times been accounted the almost exclusive privilege of the
aristocracy, and was anciently their chief employment in times of peace. The
sense that he was excluded by his situation from enjoying the silvan sport,
which his rank assigned to him as a special prerogative, and the feeling that
new men were now exercising it over the downs which had been jealously reserved
by his ancestors for their own amusement, while he, the heir of the domain, was
fain to hold himself at a distance from their party, awakened reflections
calculated to depress deeply a mind like Ravenswood’s, which was
naturally contemplative and melancholy. His pride, however, soon shook off this
feeling of dejection, and it gave way to impatience upon finding that his
volatile friend Bucklaw seemed in no hurry to return with his borrowed steed,
which Ravenswood, before leaving the field, wished to see restored to the
obliging owner. As he was about to move towards the group of assembled
huntsmen, he was joined by a horseman, who, like himself, had kept aloof during
the fall of the deer.</p>
<p>This personage seemed stricken in years. He wore a scarlet cloak, buttoning
high upon his face, and his hat was unlooped and slouched, probably by way of
defence against the weather. His horse, a strong and steady palfrey, was
calculated for a rider who proposed to witness the sport of the day rather than
to share it. An attendant waited at some distance, and the whole equipment was
that of an elderly gentleman of rank and fashion. He accosted Ravenswood very
politely, but not without some embarrassment.</p>
<p>“You seem a gallant young gentleman, sir,” he said, “and yet
appear as indifferent to this brave sport as if you had my load of years on
your shoulders.”</p>
<p>“I have followed the sport with more spirit on other occasions,”
replied the Master; “at present, late events in my family must be my
apology; and besides,” he added, “I was but indifferently mounted
at the beginning of the sport.”</p>
<p>“I think,” said the stranger, “one of my attendants had the
sense to accommodate your friend with a horse.”</p>
<p>“I was much indebted to his politeness and yours,” replied
Ravenswood. “My friend is Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw, whom I dare say you
will be sure to find in the thick of the keenest sportsmen. He will return your
servant’s horse, and take my pony in exchange; and will add,” he
concluded, turning his horse’s head from the stranger, “his best
acknowledgments to mine for the accommodation.”</p>
<p>The Master of Ravenswood, having thus expressed himself, began to move
homeward, with the manner of one who has taken leave of his company. But the
stranger was not so to be shaken off. He turned his horse at the same time, and
rode in the same direction, so near to the Master that, without outriding him,
which the formal civility of the time, and the respect due to the
stranger’s age and recent civility, would have rendered improper, he
could not easily escape from his company.</p>
<p>The stranger did not long remain silent. “This, then,” he said,
“is the ancient Castle of Wolf’s Crag, often mentioned in the
Scottish records,” looking to the old tower, then darkening under the
influence of a stormy cloud, that formed its background; for at the distance of
a short mile, the chase, having been circuitous, had brought the hunters nearly
back to the point which they had attained when Ravenswood and Bucklaw had set
forward to join them.</p>
<p>Ravenswood answered this observation with a cold and distant assent. “It
was, as I have heard,” continued the stranger, unabashed by his coldness,
“one of the most early possessions of the honourable family of
Ravenswood.”</p>
<p>“Their earliest possession,” answered the Master, “and
probably their latest.”</p>
<p>“I—I—I should hope not, sir,” answered the stranger,
clearing his voice with more than one cough, and making an effort to overcome a
certain degree of hesitation; “Scotland knows what she owes to this
ancient family, and remembers their frequent and honourable achievements. I
have little doubt that, were it properly represented to her Majesty that so
ancient and noble a family were subjected to dilapidation—I mean to
decay—means might be found, <i>ad re-ædificandum antiquam
domum</i>——”</p>
<p>“I will save you the trouble, sir, of discussing this point
farther,” interrupted the Master, haughtily. “I am the heir of that
unfortunate house—I am the Master of Ravenswood. And you, sir, who seem
to be a gentleman of fashion and education, must be sensible that the next
mortification after being unhappy is the being loaded with undesired
commiseration.”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, sir,” said the elder horseman; “I did not
know—I am sensible I ought not to have mentioned—nothing could be
farther from my thoughts than to suppose——”</p>
<p>“There are no apologies necessary, sir,” answered Ravenswood,
“for here, I suppose, our roads separate, and I assure you that we part
in perfect equanimity on my side.”</p>
<p>As speaking these words, he directed his horse’s head towards a narrow
causeway, the ancient approach to Wolf’s Crag, of which it might be truly
said, in the words of the Bard of Hope, that</p>
<p class="poem">
Frequented by few was the grass-cover’d road,<br/>
Where the hunter of deer and the warrior trode,<br/>
To his hills that encircle the sea.</p>
<p>But, ere he could disengage himself from his companion, the young lady we have
already mentioned came up to join the stranger, followed by her servants.</p>
<p>“Daughter,” said the stranger to the unmasked damsel, “this
is the Master of Ravenswood.”</p>
<p>It would have been natural that the gentleman should have replied to this
introduction; but there was something in the graceful form and retiring modesty
of the female to whom he was thus presented, which not only prevented him from
inquiring to whom, and by whom, the annunciation had been made, but which even
for the time struck him absolutely mute. At this moment the cloud which had
long lowered above the height on which Wolf’s Crag is situated, and which
now, as it advanced, spread itself in darker and denser folds both over land
and sea, hiding the distant objects and obscuring those which were nearer,
turning the sea to a leaden complexion and the heath to a darker brown, began
now, by one or two distant peals, to announce the thunders with which it was
fraught; while two flashes of lightning, following each other very closely,
showed in the distance the grey turrets of Wolf’s Crag, and, more nearly,
the rollowing billows of the ocean, crested suddenly with red and dazzling
light.</p>
<p>The horse of the fair huntress showed symptoms of impatience and restiveness,
and it became impossible for Ravenswood, as a man or a gentleman, to leave her
abruptly to the care of an aged father or her menial attendants. He was, or
believed himself, obliged in courtesy to take hold of her bridle, and assist
her in managing the unruly animal. While he was thus engaged, the old gentleman
observed that the storm seemed to increase; that they were far from Lord
Bittlebrains’s, whose guests they were for the present; and that he would
be obliged to the Master of Ravenswood to point him the way to the nearest
place of refuge from the storm. At the same time he cast a wistful and
embarrassed look towards the Tower of Wolf’s Crag, which seemed to render
it almost impossible for the owner to avoid offering an old man and a lady, in
such an emergency, the temporary use of his house. Indeed, the condition of the
young huntress made this courtesy indispensable; for, in the course of the
services which he rendered, he could not but perceive that she trembled much,
and was extremely agitated, from her apprehensions, doubtless, of the coming
storm.</p>
<p>I know not if the Master of Ravenswood shared her terrors, but he was not
entirely free from something like a similar disorder of nerves, as he observed,
“The Tower of Wolf’s Crag has nothing to offer beyond the shelter
of its roof, but if that can be acceptable at such a
moment——” he paused, as if the rest of the invitation stuck
in his throat. But the old gentleman, his self-constituted companion, did not
allow him to recede from the invitation, which he had rather suffered to be
implied than directly expressed.</p>
<p>“The storm,” said the stranger, “must be an apology for
waiving ceremony; his daughter’s health was weak, she had suffered much
from a recent alarm; he trusted their intrusion on the Master of
Ravenswood’s hospitality would not be altogether unpardonable in the
circumstances of the case: his child’s safety must be dearer to him than
ceremony.”</p>
<p>There was no room to retreat. The Master of Ravenswood led the way, continuing
to keep hold of the lady’s bridle to prevent her horse from starting at
some unexpected explosion of thunder. He was not so bewildered in his own
hurried reflections but that he remarked, that the deadly paleness which had
occupied her neck and temples, and such of her features as the riding-mask left
exposed, gave place to a deep and rosy suffusion; and he felt with
embarrassment that a flush was by tacit sympathy excited in his own cheeks. The
stranger, with watchfulness which he disguised under apprehensions of the
safety of his daughter, continued to observe the expression of the
Master’s countenance as they ascended the hill to Wolf’s Crag. When
they stood in front of that ancient fortress, Ravenswood’s emotions were
of a very complicated description; and as he led the way into the rude
courtyard, and hallooed to Caleb to give attendance, there was a tone of
sternness, almost of fierceness, which seemed somewhat alien from the
courtesies of one who is receiving honoured guests.</p>
<p>Caleb came; and not the paleness of the fair stranger at the first approach of
the thunder, nor the paleness of any other person, in any other circumstances
whatever, equalled that which overcame the thin cheeks of the disconsolate
seneschal when he beheld this accession of guests to the castle, and reflected
that the dinner hour was fast approaching. “Is he daft?” he
muttered to himself;—“is he clean daft a’thegither, to bring
lords and leddies, and a host of folk behint them, and twal o’clock
chappit?” Then approaching the Master, he craved pardon for having
permitted the rest of his people to go out to see the hunt, observing, that
“They wad never think of his lordship coming back till mirk night, and
that he dreaded they might play the truant.”</p>
<p>“Silence, Balderstone!” said Ravenswood, sternly; “your folly
is unseasonable. Sir and madam,” he said, turning to his guests,
“this old man, and a yet older and more imbecile female domestic, form my
whole retinue. Our means of refreshing you are more scanty than even so
miserable a retinue, and a dwelling so dilapidated, might seem to promise you;
but, such as they may chance to be, you may command them.”</p>
<p>The elder stranger, struck with the ruined and even savage appearance of the
Tower, rendered still more disconsolate by the lowering and gloomy sky, and
perhaps not altogether unmoved by the grave and determined voice in which their
host addressed them, looked round him anxiously, as if he half repented the
readiness with which he had accepted the offered hospitality. But there was now
no opportunity of receding from the situation in which he had placed himself.</p>
<p>As for Caleb, he was so utterly stunned by his master’s public and
unqualified acknowledgment of the nakedness of the land, that for two minutes
he could only mutter within his hebdomadal beard, which had not felt the razor
for six days, “He’s daft—clean daft—red wud, and
awa’ wit! But deil hae Caleb Balderstone,” said he, collecting his
powers of invention and resource, “if the family shall lose credit, if he
were as mad as the seven wise masters!” He then boldly advanced, and in
spite of his master’s frowns and impatience, gravely asked, “If he
should not serve up some slight refection for the young leddy, and a glass of
tokay, or old sack—or——”</p>
<p>“Truce to this ill-timed foolery,” said the Master, sternly;
“put the horses into the stable, and interrupt us no more with your
absurdities.”</p>
<p>“Your honour’s pleasure is to be obeyed aboon a’
things,” said Caleb; “nevertheless, as for the sack and tokay which
it is not your noble guests’ pleasure to accept——”</p>
<p>But here the voice of Bucklaw, heard even above the clattering of hoofs and
braying of horns with which it mingled, announced that he was scaling the
pathway to the Tower at the head of the greater part of the gallant hunting
train.</p>
<p>“The deil be in me,” said Caleb, taking heart in spite of this new
invasion of Philistines, “if they shall beat me yet! The hellicat
ne’er-do-weel! to bring such a crew here, that will expect to find brandy
as plenty as ditch-water, and he kenning sae absolutely the case in whilk we
stand for the present! But I trow, could I get rid of thae gaping gowks of
flunkies that hae won into the courtyard at the back of their betters, as mony
a man gets preferment, I could make a’ right yet.”</p>
<p>The measures which he took to execute this dauntless resolution, the reader
shall learn in the next chapter.</p>
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