<h2><SPAN name="chap33"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
This by his tongue should be a Montague!<br/>
Fetch me my rapier, boy;<br/>
Now, by the faith and honour of my kin,<br/>
To strike him dead I hold it not a sin.<br/>
<br/>
Romeo and Juliet.</p>
<p>Hardly had Miss Ashton dropped the pen, when the door of the apartment flew
open, and the Master of Ravenswood entered the apartment.</p>
<p>Lockhard and another domestic, who had in vain attempted to oppose his passage
through the gallery or antechamber, were seen standing on the threshold
transfixed with surprise, which was instantly communicated to the whole party
in the state-room. That of Colonel Douglas Ashton was mingled with resentment;
that of Bucklaw with haughty and affected indifference; the rest, even Lady
Ashton herself, showed signs of fear; and Lucy seemed stiffened to stone by
this unexpected apparition. Apparition it might well be termed, for Ravenswood
had more the appearance of one returned from the dead than of a living visitor.</p>
<p>He planted himself full in the middle of the apartment, opposite to the table
at which Lucy was seated, on whom, as if she had been alone in the chamber, he
bent his eyes with a mingled expression of deep grief and deliberate
indignation. His dark-coloured riding cloak, displaced from one shoulder, hung
around one side of his person in the ample folds of the Spanish mantle. The
rest of his rich dress was travel-soiled, and deranged by hard riding. He had a
sword by his side, and pistols in his belt. His slouched hat, which he had not
removed at entrance, gave an additional gloom to his dark features, which,
wasted by sorrow and marked by the ghastly look communicated by long illness,
added to a countenance naturally somewhat stern and wild a fierce and even
savage expression. The matted and dishevelled locks of hair which escaped from
under his hat, together with his fixed and unmoved posture, made his head more
resemble that of a marble bust than that of a living man. He said not a single
word, and there was a deep silence in the company for more than two minutes.</p>
<p>It was broken by Lady Ashton, who in that space partly recovered her natural
audacity. She demanded to know the cause of this unauthorised intrusion.</p>
<p>“That is a question, madam,” said her son, “which I have the
best right to ask; and I must request of the Master of Ravenswood to follow me
where he can answer it at leisure.”</p>
<p>Bucklaw interposed, saying, “No man on earth should usurp his previous
right in demanding an explanation from the Master. Craigengelt,” he
added, in an undertone, “d—n ye, why do you stand staring as if you
saw a ghost? fetch me my sword from the gallery.”</p>
<p>“I will relinquish to none,” said Colonel Ashton, “my right
of calling to account the man who has offered this unparalleled affront to my
family.”</p>
<p>“Be patient, gentlemen,” said Ravenswood, turning sternly towards
them, and waving his hand as if to impose silence on their altercation.
“If you are as weary of your lives as I am, I will find time and place to
pledge mine against one or both; at present, I have no leisure for the disputes
of triflers.”</p>
<p>“Triflers!” echoed Colonel Ashton, half unsheathing his sword,
while Bucklaw laid his hand on the hilt of that which Craigengelt had just
reached him.</p>
<p>Sir William Ashton, alarmed for his son’s safety, rushed between the
young men and Ravenswood, exclaiming: “My son, I command
you—Bucklaw, I entreat you—keep the peace, in the name of the Queen
and of the law!”</p>
<p>“In the name of the law of God,” said Bide-the-Bent, advancing also
with uplifted hands between Bucklaw, the Colonel, and the object of their
resentment—“in the name of Him who brought peace on earth and
good-will to mankind, I implore—I beseech—I command you to forbear
violence towards each other! God hateth the bloodthirsty man; he who striketh
with the sword shall perish with the sword.”</p>
<p>“Do you take me for a dog, sir” said Colonel Ashton, turning
fiercely upon him, “or something more brutally stupid, to endure this
insult in my father’s house? Let me go, Bucklaw! He shall account to me,
or, by Heavens, I will stab him where he stands!”</p>
<p>“You shall not touch him here,” said Bucklaw; “he once gave
me my life, and were he the devil come to fly away with the whole house and
generation, he shall have nothing but fair play.”</p>
<p>The passions of the two young men thus counteracting each other gave Ravenswood
leisure to exclaim, in a stern and steady voice: “Silence!—let him
who really seeks danger take the fitting time when it is to be found; my
mission here will be shortly accomplished. Is <i>that</i> your handwriting,
madam?” he added in a softer tone, extending towards Miss Ashton her last
letter.</p>
<p>A faltering “Yes” seemed rather to escape from her lips than to be
uttered as a voluntary answer.</p>
<p>“And is <i>this</i> also your handwriting?” extending towards her
the mutual engagement.</p>
<p>Lucy remained silent. Terror, and a yet stronger and more confused feeling, so
utterly disturbed her understanding that she probably scarcely comprehended the
question that was put to her.</p>
<p>“If you design,” said Sir William Ashton, “to found any legal
claim on that paper, sir, do not expect to receive any answer to an
extrajudicial question.”</p>
<p>“Sir William Ashton,” said Ravenswood, “I pray you, and all
who hear me, that you will not mistake my purpose. If this young lady, of her
own free will, desires the restoration of this contract, as her letter would
seem to imply, there is not a withered leaf which this autumn wind strews on
the heath that is more valueless in my eyes. But I must and will hear the truth
from her own mouth; without this satisfaction I will not leave this spot.
Murder me by numbers you possibly may; but I am an armed man—I am a
desperate man, and I will not die without ample vengeance. This is my
resolution, take it as you may. I <small>WILL</small> hear her determination
from her own mouth; from her own mouth, alone, and without witnesses, will I
hear it. Now, choose,” he said, drawing his sword with the right hand,
and, with the left, by the same motion taking a pistol from his belt and
cocking it, but turning the point of one weapon and the muzzle of the other to
the ground—“choose if you will have this hall floated with blood,
or if you will grant me the decisive interview with my affianced bride which
the laws of God and the country alike entitle me to demand.”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0353.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="Illustration" /><br/></div>
<p>All recoiled at the sound of his voice and the determined action by which it
was accompanied; for the ecstasy of real desperation seldom fails to overpower
the less energetic passions by which it may be opposed. The clergyman was the
first to speak. “In the name of God,” he said, “receive an
overture of peace from the meanest of His servants. What this honourable person
demands, albeit it is urged with over violence, hath yet in it something of
reason. Let him hear from Miss Lucy’s own lips that she hath dutifully
acceded to the will of her parents, and repenteth her of her covenant with him;
and when he is assured of this he will depart in peace unto his own dwelling,
and cumber us no more. Alas! the workings of the ancient Adam are strong even
in the regenerate; surely we should have long-suffering with those who, being
yet in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity, are swept forward by the
uncontrollable current of worldly passion. Let then, the Master of Ravenswood
have the interview on which he insisteth; it can but be as a passing pang to
this honourable maiden, since her faith is now irrevocably pledged to the
choice of her parents. Let it, I say, be this: it belongeth to my functions to
entreat your honours’ compliance with this headling overture.”</p>
<p>“Never!” answered Lady Ashton, whose rage had now overcome her
first surprise and terror—“never shall this man speak in private
with my daughter, the affianced bride of another! pass from this room who will,
I remain here. I fear neither his violence nor his weapons, though some,”
she said, glancing a look towards Colonel Ashton, “who bear my name
appear more moved by them.”</p>
<p>“For God’s sake, madam,” answered the worthy divine,
“add not fuel to firebrands. The Master of Ravenswood cannot, I am sure,
object to your presence, the young lady’s state of health being
considered, and your maternal duty. I myself will also tarry; peradventure my
grey hairs may turn away wrath.”</p>
<p>“You are welcome to do so, sir,” said Ravenswood; “and Lady
Ashton is also welcome to remain, if she shall think proper; but let all others
depart.”</p>
<p>“Ravenswood,” said Colonel Ashton, crossing him as he went out,
“you shall account for this ere long.”</p>
<p>“When you please,” replied Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“But I,” said Bucklaw, with a half smile, “have a prior
demand on your leisure, a claim of some standing.”</p>
<p>“Arrange it as you will,” said Ravenswood; “leave me but this
day in peace, and I will have no dearer employment on earth to-morrow than to
give you all the satisfaction you can desire.”</p>
<p>The other gentlemen left the apartment; but Sir William Ashton lingered.</p>
<p>“Master of Ravenswood,” he said, in a conciliating tone, “I
think I have not deserved that you should make this scandal and outrage in my
family. If you will sheathe your sword, and retire with me into my study, I
will prove to you, by the most satisfactory arguments, the inutility of your
present irregular procedure——”</p>
<p>“To-morrow, sir—to-morrow—to-morrow, I will hear you at
length,” reiterated Ravenswood, interrupting him; “this day hath
its own sacred and indispensable business.”</p>
<p>He pointed to the door, and Sir William left the apartment.</p>
<p>Ravenswood sheathed his sword, uncocked and returned his pistol to his belt;
walked deliberately to the door of the apartment, which he bolted; returned,
raised his hat from his forehead, and gazing upon Lucy with eyes in which an
expression of sorrow overcame their late fierceness, spread his dishevelled
locks back from his face, and said, “Do you know me, Miss Ashton? I am
still Edgar Ravenswood.” She was silent, and he went on with increasing
vehemence: “I am still that Edgar Ravenswood who, for your affection,
renounced the dear ties by which injured honour bound him to seek vengeance. I
am that Ravenswood who, for your sake, forgave, nay, clasped hands in
friendship with, the oppressor and pillager of his house, the traducer and
murderer of his father.”</p>
<p>“My daughter,” answered Lady Ashton, interrupting him, “has
no occasion to dispute the identity of your person; the venom of your present
language is sufficient to remind her that she speaks with the mortal enemy of
her father.”</p>
<p>“I pray you to be patient, madam,” answered Ravenswood; “my
answer must come from her own lips. Once more, Miss Lucy Ashton, I am that
Ravenswood to whom you granted the solemn engagement which you now desire to
retract and cancel.”</p>
<p>Lucy’s bloodless lips could only falter out the words, “It was my
mother.”</p>
<p>“She speaks truly,” said Lady Ashton, “it <i>was</i> I who,
authorised alike by the laws of God and man, advised her, and concurred with
her, to set aside an unhappy and precipitate engagement, and to annul it by the
authority of Scripture itself.”</p>
<p>“Scripture!” said Ravenswood, scornfully.</p>
<p>“Let him hear the text,” said Lady Ashton, appealing to the divine,
“on which you yourself, with cautious reluctance, declared the nullity of
the pretended engagement insisted upon by this violent man.”</p>
<p>The clergyman took his clasped Bible from his pocket, and read the following
words: “If a woman vow a vow unto the Lord, and bind herself by a bond,
being in her father’s house in her youth, and her father hear her vow,
and her bond wherewith she hath bound her soul, and her father shall hold his
peace at her; then all her vows shall stand, and every vow wherewith she hath
bound her soul shall stand.”</p>
<p>“And was it not even so with us?” interrrupted Ravenswood.</p>
<p>“Control thy impatience, young man,” answered the divine,
“and hear what follows in the sacred text: ‘But if her father
disallow her in the day that he heareth, not any of her vows, or of her bonds
wherewith she hath bound her soul, shall stand; and the Lord shall forgive her,
because her father disallowed her.”</p>
<p>“And was not,” said Lady Ashton, fiercely and triumphantly breaking
in—“was not ours the case stated in the Holy Writ? Will this person
deny, that the instant her parents heard of the vow, or bond, by which our
daughter had bound her soul, we disallowed the same in the most express terms,
and informed him by writing of our determination?”</p>
<p>“And is this all?” said Ravenswood, looking at Lucy. “Are you
willing to barter sworn faith, the exercise of free will, and the feelings of
mutual affection to this wretched hypocritical sophistry?”</p>
<p>“Hear him!” said Lady Ashton, looking to the
clergyman—“hear the blasphemer!”</p>
<p>“May God forgive him,” said Bide-the-Bent, “and enlighten his
ignorance!”</p>
<p>“Hear what I have sacrificed for you,” said Ravenswood, still
addressing Lucy, “ere you sanction what has been done in your name. The
honour of an ancient family, the urgent advice of my best friends, have been in
vain used to sway my resolution; neither the arguments of reason nor the
portents of superstition have shaken my fidelity. The very dead have arisen to
warn me, and their warning has been despised. Are you prepared to pierce my
heart for its fidelity with the very weapon which my rash confidence entrusted
to your grasp?”</p>
<p>“Master of Ravenswood,” said Lady Ashton, “you have asked
what questions you thought fit. You see the total incapacity of my daughter to
answer you. But I will reply for her, and in a manner which you cannot dispute.
You desire to know whether Lucy Ashton, of her own free will, desires to annul
the engagement into which she has been trepanned. You have her letter under her
own hand, demanding the surrender of it; and, in yet more full evidence of her
purpose, here is the contract which she has this morning subscribed, in
presence of this reverend gentleman, with Mr. Hayston of Bucklaw.”</p>
<p>Ravenswood gazed upon the deed as if petrified. “And it was without fraud
or compulsion,” said he, looking towards the clergyman, “that Miss
Ashton subscribed this parchment?”</p>
<p>“I couch it upon my sacred character.”</p>
<p>“This is indeed, madam, an undeniable piece of evidence,” said
Ravenswood, sternly; “and it will be equally unnecessary and
dishonourable to waste another word in useless remonstrance or reproach. There,
madam,” he said, laying down before Lucy the signed paper and the broken
piece of gold—“there are the evidences of your first engagement;
may you be more faithful to that which you have just formed. I will trouble you
to return the corresponding tokens of my ill-placed confidence; I ought rather
to say, of my egregious folly.”</p>
<p>Lucy returned the scornful glance of her lover with a gaze from which
perception seemed to have been banished; yet she seemed partly to have
understood his meaning, for she raised her hands as if to undo a blue ribbon
which she wore around her neck. She was unable to accomplish her purpose, but
Lady Ashton cut the ribbon asunder, and detached the broken piece of gold,
which Miss Ashton had till then worn concealed in her bosom; the written
counterpart of the lovers’ engagement she for some time had had in her
own possession. With a haughty courtesy, she delivered both to Ravenswood, who
was much softened when he took the piece of gold.</p>
<p>“And she could wear it thus,” he said, speaking to
himself—“could wear it in her very bosom—could wear it next
to her heart—even when—But complaint avails not,” he said,
dashing from his eye the tear which had gathered in it, and resuming the stern
composure of his manner. He strode to the chimney, and threw into the fire the
paper and piece of gold, stamping upon the coals with the heel of his boot, as
if to ensure their destruction. “I will be no longer,” he then
said, “an intruder here. Your evil wishes, and your worse offices, Lady
Ashton, I will only return by hoping these will be your last machinations
against your daughter’s honour and happiness. And to you, madam,”
he said, addressing Lucy, “I have nothing farther to say, except to pray
to God that you may not become a world’s wonder for this act of wilful
and deliberate perjury.” Having uttered these words, he turned on his
heel and left the apartment.</p>
<p>Sir William Ashton, by entreaty and authority, had detained his son and Bucklaw
in a distant part of the castle, in order to prevent their again meeting with
Ravenswood; but as the Master descended the great staircase, Lockhard delivered
him a billet, signed “Sholto Douglas Ashton,” requesting to know
where the Master of Ravenswood would be heard of four or five days from hence,
as the writer had business of weight to settle with him, so soon as an
important family event had taken place.</p>
<p>“Tell Colonel Ashton,” said Ravenswood, composedly, “I shall
be found at Wolf’s Crag when his leisure serves him.”</p>
<p>As he descended the outward stair which led from the terrace, he was a second
time interrupted by Craigengelt, who, on the part of his principal, the Laird
of Bucklaw, expressed a hope that Ravenswood would not leave Scotland within
ten days at least, as he had both former and recent civilities for which to
express his gratitude.</p>
<p>“Tell your master,” said Ravenswood, fiercely, “to choose his
own time. He will find me at Wolf’s Crag, if his purpose is not
forestalled.”</p>
<p>“<i>My</i> master!” replied Craigengelt, encouraged by seeing
Colonel Ashton and Bucklaw at the bottom of the terrace. “Give me leave
to say I know of no such person upon earth, nor will I permit such language to
be used to me!”</p>
<p>“Seek your master, then, in hell!” exclaimed Ravenswood, giving way
to the passion he had hitherto restrained, and throwing Craigengelt from him
with such violence that he rolled down the steps and lay senseless at the foot
of them. “I am a fool,” he instantly added, “to vent my
passion upon a caitiff so worthless.”</p>
<p>He then mounted his horse, which at his arrival he had secured to a balustrade
in front of the castle, rode very slowly past Bucklaw and Colonel Ashton,
raising his hat as he passed each, and looking in their faces steadily while he
offered this mute salutation, which was returned by both with the same stern
gravity. Ravenswood walked on with equal deliberation until he reached the head
of the avenue, as if to show that he rather courted than avoided interruption.
When he had passed the upper gate, he turned his horse, and looked at the
castle with a fixed eye; then set spurs to his good steed, and departed with
the speed of a demon dismissed by the exorcist.</p>
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