<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<p class="poem">
As, to the Autumn breeze’s bugle sound,<br/>
Various and vague the dry leaves dance their round;<br/>
Or, from the garner-door, on ether borne,<br/>
The chaff flies devious from the winnow’d corn;<br/>
So vague, so devious, at the breath of heaven,<br/>
From their fix’d aim are mortal counsels driv’n.<br/>
<br/>
A<small>NONYMOUS</small>.</p>
<p>We left Caleb Balderstone in the extremity of triumph at the success of his
various achievements for the honour of the house of Ravenswood. When he had
mustered and marshalled his dishes of divers kinds, a more royal provision had
not been seen in Wolf’s Crag since the funeral feast of its deceased
lord. Great was the glory of the serving-man, as he <i>decored</i> the old
oaken table with a clean cloth, and arranged upon it carbonaded venison and
roasted wild-fowl, with a glance, every now and then, as if to upbraid the
incredulity of his master and his guests; and with many a story, more or less
true, was Lockhard that evening regaled concerning the ancient grandeur of
Wolf’s Crag, and the sway of its barons over the country in their
neighbourhood.</p>
<p>“A vassal scarce held a calf or a lamb his ain, till he had first asked
if the Lord of Ravenswood was pleased to accept it; and they were obliged to
ask the lord’s consent before they married in these days, and mony a
merry tale they tell about that right as weel as others. And although,”
said Caleb, “these times are not like the gude auld times, when authority
had its right, yet true it is, Mr. Lockhard, and you yoursell may partly have
remarked, that we of the house of Ravenswood do our endeavour in keeping up, by
all just and lawful exertion of our baronial authority, that due and fitting
connexion betwixt superior and vassal, whilk is in some danger of falling into
desuetude, owing to the general license and misrule of these present unhappy
times.”</p>
<p>“Umph!” said Mr. Lockhard; “and if I may inquire, Mr.
Balderstone, pray do you find your people at the village yonder amenable? for I
must needs say, that at Ravenswood Castle, now pertaining to my master the Lord
Keeper, ye have not left behind ye the most compliant set of tenantry.”</p>
<p>“Ah! but Mr. Lockhard,” replied Caleb, “ye must consider
there has been a change of hands, and the auld lord might expect twa turns frae
them, when the new-comer canna get ane. A dour and fractious set they were,
thae tenants of Ravenswood, and ill to live wi’ when they dinna ken their
master; and if your master put them mad ance, the whole country will not put
them down.”</p>
<p>“Troth,” said Mr. Lockhard, “an such be the case, I think the
wisest thing for us a’ wad be to hammer up a match between your young
lord and our winsome young leddy up-bye there; and Sir William might just
stitch your auld barony to her gown-sleeve, and he wad sune cuitle another out
o’ somebody else, sic a lang head as he has.”</p>
<p>Caleb shook his head. “I wish,” he said—“I wish that
may answer, Mr. Lockhard. There are auld prophecies about this house I wad like
ill to see fulfilled wi’ my auld een, that has seen evil eneugh
already.”</p>
<p>“Pshaw! never mind freits,” said his brother butler; “if the
young folk liked ane anither, they wad make a winsome couple. But, to say
truth, there is a leddy sits in our hall-neuk, maun have her hand in that as
weel as in every other job. But there’s no harm in drinking to their
healths, and I will fill Mrs. Mysie a cup of Mr. Girder’s canary.”</p>
<p>While they thus enjoyed themselves in the kitchen, the company in the hall were
not less pleasantly engaged. So soon as Ravenswood had determined upon giving
the Lord Keeper such hospitality as he had to offer, he deemed it incumbent on
him to assume the open and courteous brow of a well-pleased host. It has been
often remarked, that when a man commences by acting a character, he frequently
ends by adopting it in good earnest. In the course of an hour or two,
Ravenswood, to his own surprise, found himself in the situation of one who
frankly does his best to entertain welcome and honoured guests. How much of
this change in his disposition was to be ascribed to the beauty and simplicity
of Miss Ashton, to the readiness with which she accommodated herself to the
inconveniences of her situation; how much to the smooth and plausible
conversation of the Lord Keeper, remarkably gifted with those words which win
the ear, must be left to the reader’s ingenuity to conjecture. But
Ravenswood was insensible to neither.</p>
<p>The Lord Keeper was a veteran statesman, well acquainted with courts and
cabinets, and intimate with all the various turns of public affairs during the
last eventful years of the 17th century. He could talk, from his own knowledge,
of men and events, in a way which failed not to win attention, and had the
peculiar art, while he never said a word which committed himself, at the same
time to persuade the hearer that he was speaking without the least shadow of
scrupulous caution or reserve. Ravenswood, in spite of his prejudices and real
grounds of resentment, felt himself at once amused and instructed in listening
to him, while the statesman, whose inward feelings had at first so much impeded
his efforts to make himself known, had now regained all the ease and fluency of
a silver-tongued lawyer of the very highest order.</p>
<p>His daughter did not speak much, but she smiled; and what she did say argued a
submissive gentleness, and a desire to give pleasure, which, to a proud man
like Ravenswood, was more fascinating than the most brilliant wit. Above all,
he could not be observe that, whether from gratitude or from some other motive,
he himself, in his deserted and unprovided hall, was as much the object of
respectful attention to his guests as he would have been when surrounded by all
the appliances and means of hospitality proper to his high birth. All
deficiencies passed unobserved, or, if they did not escape notice, it was to
praise the substitutes which Caleb had contrived to supply the want of the
usual accommodations. Where a smile was unavoidable, it was a very
good-humoured one, and often coupled with some well-turned compliment, to show
how much the guests esteemed the merits of their noble host, how little they
thought of the inconveniences with which they were surrounded. I am not sure
whether the pride of being found to outbalance, in virtue of his own personal
merit, all the disadvantages of fortune, did not make as favourable an
impression upon the haughty heart of the Master of Ravenswood as the
conversation of the father and the beauty of Lucy Ashton.</p>
<p>The hour of repose arrived. The Keeper and his daughter retired to their
apartments, which were “decored” more properly than could have been
anticipated. In making the necessary arrangements, Mysie had indeed enjoyed the
assistance of a gossip who had arrived from the village upon an exploratory
expedition, but had been arrested by Caleb, and impressed into the domestic
drudgery of the evening; so that, instead of returning home to describe the
dress and person of the grand young lady, she found herself compelled to be
active in the domestic economy of Wolf’s Crag.</p>
<p>According to the custom of the time, the Master of Ravenswood attended the Lord
Keeper to his apartment, followed by Caleb, who placed on the table, with all
the ceremonials due to torches of wax, two rudely-framed tallow-candles, such
as in those days were only used by the peasantry, hooped in paltry clasps of
wire, which served for candlesticks. He then disappeared, and presently entered
with two earthen flagons (the china, he said, had been little used since my
lady’s time), one filled with canary wine, the other with brandy. The
canary sack, unheeding all probabilities of detection, he declared had been
twenty years in the cellars of Wolf’s Crag, “though it was not for
him to speak before their honours; the brandy—it was weel-kenn’d
liquor, as mild as mead and as strong as Sampson; it had been in the house ever
since the memorable revel, in which auld Micklestob had been slain at the head
of the stair by Jamie of Jenklebrae, on account of the honour of the worshipful
Lady Muirend, wha was in some sort an ally of the family;
natheless——”</p>
<p>“But to cut that matter short, Mr. Caleb,” said the Keeper,
“perhaps you will favour me with a ewer of water.”</p>
<p>“God forbid your lordship should drink water in this family,”
replied Caleb, “to the disgrace of so honourable an house!”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, if his lordship have a fancy,” said the Master,
smiling, “I think you might indulge him; for, if I mistake not, there has
been water drank here at no distant date, and with good relish too.”</p>
<p>“To be sure, if his lordship has a fancy,” said Caleb; and
re-entering with a jug of pure element—“He will scarce find such
water onywhere as is drawn frae the well at Wolf’s Crag;
nevertheless——”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, we must leave the Lord Keeper to his repose in this poor
chamber of ours,” said the Master of Ravenswood, interrupting his
talkative domestic, who immediately turning to the doorway, with a profound
reverence, prepared to usher his master from the secret chamber.</p>
<p>But the Lord Keeper prevented his host’s departure.—“I have
but one word to say to the Master of Ravenswood, Mr. Caleb, and I fancy he will
excuse your waiting.”</p>
<p>With a second reverence, lower than the former, Caleb withdrew; and his master
stood motionless, expecting, with considerable embarrassment, what was to close
the events of a day fraught with unexpected incidents.</p>
<p>“Master of Ravenswood,” said Sir William Ashton, with some
embarrassment, “I hope you understand the Christian law too well to
suffer the sun to set upon your anger.”</p>
<p>The Master blushed and replied, “He had no occasion that evening to
exercise the duty enjoined upon him by his Christian faith.”</p>
<p>“I should have thought otherwise,” said his guest,
“considering the various subjects of dispute and litigation which have
unhappily occurred more frequently than was desirable or necessary betwixt the
late honourable lord, your father, and myself.”</p>
<p>“I could wish, my lord,” said Ravenswood, agitated by suppressed
emotion, “that reference to these circumstances should be made anywhere
rather than under my father’s roof.”</p>
<p>“I should have felt the delicacy of this appeal at another time,”
said Sir William Ashton, “but now I must proceed with what I mean to say.
I have suffered too much in my own mind, from the false delicacy which
prevented my soliciting with earnestness, what indeed I frequently requested, a
personal communing with your father: much distress of mind to him and to me
might have been prevented.”</p>
<p>“It is true,” said Ravenswood, after a moment’s reflection,
“I have heard my father say your lordship had proposed a personal
interview.”</p>
<p>“Proposed, my dear Master? I did indeed propose it; but I ought to have
begged, entreated, beseeched it. I ought to have torn away the veil, which
interested persons had stretched betwixt us, and shown myself as I was, willing
to sacrifice a considerable part even of my legal rights, in order to
conciliate feelings so natural as his must be allowed to have been. Let me say
for myself, my young friend, for so I will call you, that had your father and I
spent the same time together which my good fortune has allowed me to-day to
pass in your company, it is possible the land might yet have enjoyed one of the
most respectable of its ancient nobility, and I should have been spared the
pain of parting in enmity from a person whose general character I so much
admired and honoured.”</p>
<p>He put his handkerchief to his eyes. Ravenswood also was moved, but awaited in
silence the progress of this extraordinary communication.</p>
<p>“It is necessary,” continued the Lord Keeper, “and proper
that you should understand, that there have been many points betwixt us, in
which, although I judged it proper that there should be an exact ascertainment
of my legal rights by the decree of a court of justice, yet it was never my
intention to press them beyond the verge of equity.”</p>
<p>“My lord,” said the Master of Ravenswood, “it is unnecessary
to pursue this topic farther. What the law will give you, or has given you, you
enjoy—or you shall enjoy; neither my father nor I myself would have
received anything on the footing of favour.”</p>
<p>“Favour! No, you misunderstand me,” resumed the Keeper; “or
rather you are no lawyer. A right may be good in law, and ascertained to be so,
which yet a man of honour may not in every case care to avail himself
of.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry for it, my lord,” said the Master.</p>
<p>“Nay, nay,” retorted his guest, “you speak like a young
counsellor; your spirit goes before your wit. There are many things still open
for decision betwixt us. Can you blame me, an old man desirous of peace, and in
the castle of a young nobleman who has saved my daughter’s life and my
own, that I am desirous, anxiously desirous, that these should be settled on
the most liberal principles?” The old man kept fast hold of the
Master’s passive hand as he spoke, and made it impossible for him, be his
predetermination what it would, to return any other than an acquiescent reply;
and wishing his guest goodnight, he postponed farther conference until the next
morning.</p>
<p>Ravenswood hurried into the hall, where he was to spend the night, and for a
time traversed its pavement with a disordered and rapid pace. His mortal foe
was under his roof, yet his sentiments towards him were neither those of a
feudal enemy nor of a true Christian. He felt as if he could neither forgive
him in the one character, nor follow forth his vengeance in the other, but that
he was making a base and dishonourable composition betwixt his resentment
against the father and his affection for his daughter. He cursed himself, as he
hurried to and fro in the pale moonlight, and more ruddy gleams of the expiring
wood-fire. He threw open and shut the latticed windows with violence, as if
alike impatient of the admission and exclusion of free air. At length, however,
the torrent of passion foamed off its madness, and he flung himself into the
chair which he proposed as his place of repose for the night.</p>
<p>“If, in reality,” such were the calmer thoughts that followed the
first tempest of his passion—“if, in reality, this man desires no
more than the law allows him—if he is willing to adjust even his
acknowledged rights upon an equitable footing, what could be my father’s
cause of complaint?—what is mine? Those from who we won our ancient
possessions fell under the sword of my ancestors, and left lands and livings to
the conquerors; we sink under the force of the law, now too powerful for the
Scottish cavalry. Let us parley with the victors of the day, as if we had been
besieged in our fortress, and without hope of relief. This man may be other
than I have thought him; and his daughter—but I have resolved not to
think of her.”</p>
<p>He wrapt his cloak around him, fell asleep, and dreamed of Lucy Ashton till
daylight gleamed through the lattices.</p>
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