of this
generousindignation; we cannot,
unfortunately, do our
work without the
assistance of those who act on baser motives
than our own. We cannot spare the
assistance of such fellows as
our friend the soldado. To use the canting
phrase of the saints
in the English Parliament, the sons of Zeruiah are still too many
for us."
"I must dissemble, then, as well as I can," said Lord Menteith,
"as I have
hitherto done, upon your hint. But I wish the fellow
at the devil with all my heart."
"Ay, but still you must remember, my lord," resumed Anderson,
"that to cure the bite of a scorpion, you must crush another
scorpion on the wound--But stop, we shall be overheard."
From a side-door in the hall glided a Highlander into the
apartment, whose lofty
stature and complete
equipment, as well as
the eagle's
feather in his
bonnet, and the confidence of his
demeanour, announced to be a person of superior rank. He walked
slowly up to the table, and made no answer to Lord Menteith, who,
addressing him by the name of Allan, asked him how he did.
"Ye manna speak to her e'en now," whispered the old
attendant.
The tall Highlander, sinking down upon the empty settle next the
fire, fixed his eyes upon the red embers and the huge heap of
turf, and seemed buried in
profound abstraction. His dark eyes,
and wild and
enthusiastic features, bore the air of one who,
deeply impressed with his own subjects of
meditation, pays little
attention to
exterior objects. An air of
gloomyseverity, the
fruit perhaps of ascetic and
solitary habits, might, in a
Lowlander, have been ascribed to religious fanaticism; but by
that disease of the mind, then so common both in England and the
Lowlands of Scotland, the Highlanders of this period were rarely
infected. They had, however, their own
peculiar superstitions,
which overclouded the mind with thick-coming fancies, as
completely as the puritanism of their neighbours.
"His
lordship's honour," said the Highland servant sideling up to
Lord Menteith, and
speaking in a very low tone, "his
lordshipmanna speak to Allan even now, for the cloud is upon his mind."
Lord Menteith nodded, and took no farther notice of the reserved
mountaineer.
"Said I not," asked the latter, suddenly raising his stately
person
upright, and looking at the
domestic--"said I not that
four were to come, and here stand but three on the hall floor?"
"In troth did ye say sae, Allan," said the old Highlander, "and
here's the fourth man coming clinking in at the yett e'en now
from the
stable, for he's shelled like a partan, wi' airn on back
and breast, haunch and shanks. And am I to set her chair up near
the Menteith's, or down wi' the honest gentlemen at the foot of
the table?"
Lord Menteith himself answered the enquiry, by pointing to a seat
beside his own.
"And here she comes," said Donald, as Captain Dalgetty entered
the hall; "and I hope gentlemens will all take bread and cheese,
as we say in the glens, until better meat be ready, until the
Tiernach comes back frae the hill wi' the southern gentlefolk,
and then Dugald Cook will show himself wi' his kid and hill
venison.''
In the
meantime, Captain Dalgetty had entered the
apartment, and
walking up to the seat placed next Lord Menteith, was leaning on
the back of it with his arms folded. Anderson and his
companionwaited at the bottom of the table, in a
respectful attitude,
until they should receive
permission to seat themselves; while
three or four Highlanders, under the direction of old Donald, ran
hither and
thither to bring
additional articles of food, or stood
still to give attendance upon the guests.
In the midst of these preparations, Allan suddenly started up,
and snatching a lamp from the hand of an
attendant, held it close
to Dalgetty's face, while he perused his features with the most
heedful and grave attention.
"By my honour," said Dalgetty, half displeased, as, mysteriously
shaking his head, Allan gave up the scrutiny--"I trow that lad
and I will ken each other when we meet again."
Meanwhile Allan
strode to the bottom of the table, and having, by
the aid of his lamp, subjected Anderson and his
companion to the
same
investigation, stood a moment as if in deep reflection;
then,
touching his
forehead, suddenly seized Anderson by the arm,
and before he could offer any effectual
resistance, half led and
half dragged him to the
vacant seat at the upper end, and having
made a mute intimation that he should there place himself, he
hurried the soldado with the same unceremonious precipitation to
the bottom of the table. The Captain,
exceedingly incensed at
this freedom, endeavoured to shake Allan from him with violence;
but, powerful as he was, he proved in the struggle
inferior to
the
giganticmountaineer, who threw him off with such violence,
that after reeling a few paces, he fell at full length, and the
vaulted hall rang with the clash of his
armour. When he arose,
his first action was to draw his sword and to fly at Allan, who,
with folded arms, seemed to await his onset with the most
scornful
indifference. Lord Menteith and his
attendants
interposed to
preserve peace, while the Highlanders, snatching
weapons from the wall, seemed
prompt to increase the broil.
"He is mad," whispered Lord Menteith, "he is
perfectly mad; there
is no purpose in quarrelling with him."
"If your
lordship is
assured that he is NON COMPOS MENTIS," said
Captain Dalgetty, "the whilk his
breeding and behaviour seem to
testify, the matter must end here,
seeing that a
madman can
neither give an
affront, nor render
honourable satisfaction.
But, by my saul, if I had my provstnt and a bottle of Rhenish
under my belt, I should hive stood otherways up to him. And yet
it's a pity he should be sae weak in the intellectuals, being a
strong proper man of body, fit to handle pike, morgenstern, or
any other military
implement whatsoever." [This was a sort of
club or mace, used in the earlier part of the seventeenth century
in the defence of breaches and walls. When the Germans insulted
a Scotch
regiment then besieged in Trailsund,
saying they heard
there was a ship come from Denmark to them laden with tobacco
pipes, "One of our soldiers," says Colonel Robert Munro, "showing
them over the work a morgenstern, made of a large stock banded
with iron, like the shaft of a halberd, with a round globe at the
end with cross iron pikes, saith, 'Here is one of the tobacco
pipes,
wherewith we will beat out your brains when you intend to
storm us.'"]
Peace was thus restored, and the party seated themselves
agreeably to their former
arrangement, with which Allan, who had
now returned to his settle by the fire, and seemed once more
immersed in
meditation, did not again
interfere. Lord Menteith,
addressing the
principaldomestic, hastened to start some theme
of conversation which might obliterate all
recollection of the
fray that had taken place. "The laird is at the hill then,
Donald, I understand, and some English strangers with him?"
"At the hill he is, an it like your honour, and two Saxon
calabaleros are with him sure eneugh; and that is Sir Miles
Musgrave and Christopher Hall, both from the Cumraik, as I think
they call their country."
"Hall and Musgrave?" said Lord Menteith, looking at his
attendants, "the very men that we wished to see."
"Troth," said Donald, "an' I wish I had never seen them between
the een, for they're come to herry us out o' house and ha'."
"Why, Donald," said Lord Menteith, "you did not use to be so
churlish of your beef and ale; southland though they be, they'll