As Butler entered, the old man was seated by the fire with his well-worn pocket Bible in his hands, the companion of the wanderings and dangers of his youth, and bequeathed to him on the scaffold by one of those, who, in the year 1686, sealed their enthusiastic principles with their blood. The sun sent its rays through a small window at the old mans back, and, shining motty through the reek, to use the expression of a bard of that time and country, illumined the grey hairs of the old man, and the sacred page which he studied. His features, far from handsome, and rather harsh and severe, had yet from their expression of habitual gravity, and contempt for earthly things, an expression of stoical dignity amidst their sternness. He boasted, in no small degree, the attributes which Southey ascribes to the ancient Scandinavians, whom he terms firm to inflict, and stubborn to endure. The whole formed a picture, of which the lights might have been given by Rembrandt, but the outline would have required the force and vigour of Michael Angelo.
Deans lifted his eye as Butler entered, and instantly withdrew it, as from an object which gave him at once surprise and sudden pain. He had assumed such high ground with this carnal-witted scholar, as he had in his pride termed Butler, that to meet him, of all men, under feelings of humiliation, aggravated his misfortune, and was a consummation like that of the dying chief in the old balladEarl Percy sees my fall!
Deans raised the Bible with his left hand, so as partly to screen his face, and putting back his right as far as he could, held it towards Butler in that position, at the same time turning his body from, him, as if to prevent his seeing the working of his countenance. Butler clasped the extended hand which had supported his orphan infancy, wept over it, and in vain endeavoured to say more than the wordsGod comfort youGod comfort you!
He willhe doth, my friend, said Deans, assuming firmness as he discovered the agitation of his guest; he doth now, and he will yet more in his own gude time. I have been ower proud of my sufferings in a gude cause, Reuben, and now I am to be tried with those whilk will turn my pride and glory into a reproach and a hissing. How muckle better I hae thought mysell than them that lay saft, fed sweet, and drank deep, when I was in the moss-haggs and moors, wi precious Donald Cameron, and worthy Mr. Blackadder, called Guess-again; and how proud I was o being made a spectacle to men and angels, having stood on their pillory at the Canongate afore I was fifteen years old, for the cause of a National Covenant! To think, Reuben, that I, wha hae been sae honoured and exalted in my youth, nay, when I was but a hafflins callant, and that hae borne testimony again the defections o the times yearly, monthly, daily, hourly, minutely, striving and testifying with uplifted hand and voice, crying aloud, and sparing not, against all great national snares, as the nation-wasting and church-sinking abomination of union, toleration, and patronage, imposed by the last woman of that unhappy race of Stuarts; also against the infringements and invasions of the just powers of eldership, whereanent, I uttered my paper, called a Cry of an Howl in the Desert, printed at the Bow-head, and sold by all flying stationers in town and countryand now
Here he paused. It may well be supposed that Butler, though not absolutely coinciding in all the good old mans ideas about church government, had too much consideration and humanity to interrupt him, while he reckoned up with conscious pride his sufferings, and the constancy of his testimony. On the contrary, when he paused under the influence of the bitter recollections of the moment, Butler instantly threw in his mite of encouragement.
You have been well known, my old and revered friend, a true and tried follower of the Cross; one who, as Saint Jerome hath it, per infamiam et bonam famam grassari ad immortalitatem, which may be freely rendered, who rusheth on to immortal life, through bad report and good report. You have been one of those to whom the tender and fearful souls cry during the midnight solitudeWatchman, what of the night?Watchman, what of the night?And, assuredly, this heavy dispensation, as it comes not without divine permission, so it comes not without its special commission and use.
I do receive it as such, said poor Deans, returning the grasp of Butlers hand; and if I have not been taught to read the Scripture in any other tongue but my native Scottish (even in his distress Butlers Latin quotation had not escaped his notice), I have nevertheless so learned them, that I trust to bear even this crook in my lot with submission. But, oh! Reuben Butler, the kirk, of whilk, though unworthy, I have yet been thought a polished shaft, and meet to be a pillar, holding, from my youth upward, the place of ruling elderwhat will the lightsome and profane think of the guide that cannot keep his own family from stumbling? How will they take up their song and their reproach, when they see that the children of professors are liable to as foul backsliding as the offspring of Belial! But I will bear my cross with the comfort, that whatever showed like goodness in me or mine, was but like the light that shines frae creeping insects, on the brae-side, in a dark nightit kythes bright to the ee, because all is dark around it; but when the morn comes on the mountains, it is, but a puir crawling kail-worm after a. And sae it shows, wi ony rag of human righteousness, or formal law-work, that we may pit round us to cover our shame.
As he pronounced these words, the door again opened, and Mr. Bartoline Saddletree entered, his three-pointed hat set far back on his head, with a silk handkerchief beneath it to keep it in that cool position, his gold-headed cane in his hand, and his whole deportment that of a wealthy burgher, who might one day look to have a share in the magistracy, if not actually to hold the curule chair itself.
Rochefoucault, who has torn the veil from so many foul gangrenes of the human heart, says, we find something not altogether unpleasant to us in the misfortunes of our best friends. Mr. Saddletree would have been very angry had any one told him that he felt pleasure in the disaster of poor Effie Deans, and the disgrace of her family; and yet there is great question whether the gratification of playing the person of importance, inquiring, investigating, and laying down the law on the whole affair, did not offer, to say the least, full consolation for the pain which pure sympathy gave him on account of his wifes kinswoman. He had now got a piece of real judicial business by the end, instead of being obliged, as was his common case, to intrude his opinion where it was neither wished nor wanted; and felt as happy in the exchange as a boy when he gets his first new watch, which actually goes when wound up, and has real hands and a true dial-plate. But besides this subject for legal disquisition, Bartolines brains were also overloaded with the affair of Porteous, his violent death, and all its probable consequences to the city and community. It was what the French call lembarras des richesses, the confusion arising from too much mental wealth. He walked in with a consciousness of double importance, full fraught with the superiority of one who possesses more information than the company into which he enters, and who feels a right to discharge his learning on them without mercy. Good morning, Mr. Deans,good-morrow to you, Mr. Butler,I was not aware that you were acquainted with Mr. Deans.
Butler made some slight answer; his reasons may be readily imagined for not making his connection with the family, which, in his eyes, had something of tender mystery, a frequent subject of conversation with indifferent persons, such as Saddletree.
Butler made some slight answer; his reasons may be readily imagined for not making his connection with the family, which, in his eyes, had something of tender mystery, a frequent subject of conversation with indifferent persons, such as Saddletree.
The worthy burgher, in the plenitude of self-importance, now sate down upon a chair, wiped his brow, collected his breath, and made the first experiment of the resolved pith of his lungs, in a deep and dignified sigh, resembling a groan in sound and intonationAwfu times these, neighbour Deans, awfu times!
Sinfu, shamefu, heaven-daring times! answered Deans, in a lower and more subdued tone.
For my part, continued Saddletree, swelling with importance, what between the distress of my friends, and my poor auld country, ony wit that ever I had may be said to have abandoned me, sae that I sometimes think myself as ignorant as if I were inter rusticos. Here when I arise in the morning, wi my mind just arranged touching whats to be done in puir Effies misfortune, and hae gotten the haill statute at my finger-ends, the mob maun get up and string Jock Porteous to a dyesters beam, and ding a thing out of my head again.
Deeply as he was distressed with his own domestic calamity, Deans could not help expressing some interest in the news. Saddletree immediately entered on details of the insurrection and its consequences, while Butler took the occasion to seek some private conversation with Jeanie Deans. She gave him the opportunity he sought, by leaving the room, as if in prosecution of some part of her morning labour. Butler followed her in a few minutes, leaving Deans so closely engaged by his busy visitor, that there was little chance of his observing their absence.
The scene of their interview was an outer apartment, where Jeanie was used to busy herself in arranging the productions of her dairy. When Butler found an opportunity of stealing after her into this place, he found her silent, dejected, and ready to burst into tears. Instead of the active industry with which she had been accustomed, even while in the act of speaking, to employ her hands in some useful branch of household business, she was seated listless in a corner, sinking apparently under the weight of her own thoughts. Yet the instant he entered, she dried her eyes, and, with the simplicity and openness of her character, immediately entered on conversation.
I am glad you have come in, Mr. Butler, said she, forforfor I wished to tell ye, that all maun be ended between you and meits best for baith our sakes.
Ended! said Butler, in surprise; and for what should it be ended?I grant this is a heavy dispensation, but it lies neither at your door nor mineits an evil of Gods sending, and it must be borne; but it cannot break plighted troth, Jeanie, while they that plighted their word wish to keep it.
But, Reuben, said the young woman, looking at him affectionately, I ken weel that ye think mair of me than yourself; and, Reuben, I can only in requital think mair of your weal than of my ain. Ye are a man of spotless name, bred to Gods ministry, and a men say that ye will some day rise high in the kirk, though poverty keep ye doun een now. Poverty is a bad back-friend, Reuben, and that ye ken ower weel; but ill-fame is a waur ane, and that is a truth ye sall never learn through my means.
What do you mean? said Butler, eagerly and impatiently; or how do you connect your sisters guilt, if guilt there be, which, I trust in God, may yet be disproved, with our engagement?how can that affect you or me?
How can you ask me that, Mr. Butler? Will this stain, dye think, ever be forgotten, as lang as our heads are abune the grund? Will it not stick to us, and to our bairns, and to their very bairns bairns? To hae been the child of an honest man, might hae been saying something for me and mine; but to be the sister of aO my God!With this exclamation her resolution failed, and she burst into a passionate fit of tears.
The lover used every effort to induce her to compose herself, and at length succeeded; but she only resumed her composure to express herself with the same positiveness as before. No, Reuben, Ill bring disgrace hame to nae mans hearth; my ain distresses I can bear, and I maun bear, but there is nae occasion for buckling them on other folks shouthers. I will bear my load alonethe back is made for the burden.
A lover is by charter wayward and suspicious; and Jeanies readiness to renounce their engagement, under pretence of zeal for his peace of mind and respectability of character, seemed to poor Butler to form a portentous combination with the commission of the stranger he had met with that morning. His voice faltered as he asked, whether nothing but a sense of her sisters present distress occasioned her to talk in that manner?
And what else can do sae? she replied with simplicity. Is it not ten long years since we spoke together in this way?
Ten years! said Butler. Its a long timesufficient perhaps for a woman to weary
To weary of her auld gown, said Jeanie, and to wish for a new ane if she likes to be brave, but not long enough to weary of a friendThe eye may wish change, but the heart never.
Never! said Reuben,thats a bold promise.
But not more bauld than true, said Jeanie, with the same quiet simplicity which attended her manner in joy and grief in ordinary affairs, and in those which most interested her feelings.
Butler paused, and looking at her fixedlyI am charged, he said, with a message to you, Jeanie.
Indeed! From whom? Or what can ony ane have to say to me?
It is from a stranger, said Butler, affecting to speak with an indifference which his voice beliedA young man whom I met this morning in the Park.
Mercy! said Jeanie, eagerly; and what did he say?
That he did not see you at the hour he expected, but required you should meet him alone at Muschats Cairn this night, so soon as the moon rises.
Tell him, said Jeanie, hastily, I shall certainly come.
May I ask, said Butler, his suspicions increasing at the ready alacrity of the answer, who this man is to whom you are so willing to give the meeting at a place and hour so uncommon?
Folk maun do muckle they have little will to do, in this world, replied Jeanie.
Granted, said her lover; but what compels you to this?who is this person? What I saw of him was not very favourablewho, or what is he?
I do not know, replied Jeanie, composedly.
You do not know! said Butler, stepping impatiently through the apartmentYou purpose to meet a young man whom you do not know, at such a time, and in a place so lonelyyou say you are compelled to do thisand yet you say you do not know the person who exercises such an influence over you!Jeanie, what am I to think of this?
Think only, Reuben, that I speak truth, as if I were to answer at the last day.I do not ken this manI do not even ken that I ever saw him; and yet I must give him the meeting he askstheres life and death upon it.
Will you not tell your father, or take him with you? said Butler.
I cannot, said Jeanie; I have no permission.
Will you let me go with you? I will wait in the Park till nightfall, and join you when you set out.
It is impossible, said Jeanie; there maunna be mortal creature within hearing of our conference.
Have you considered well the nature of what you are going to do?the timethe placean unknown and suspicious character?Why, if he had asked to see you in this house, your father sitting in the next room, and within call, at such an hour, you should have refused to see him.