for any sums which I required as an extra advance; and thus may
be said to have insinuated himself into the
absolute management
and control of my property. Or, if all this
seeming friendship
was employed by Sir Edward for the purpose of obtaining a
complete command of my affairs, and acquiring the power of
ruining me at his pleasure, I feel myself, I must repeat, still
less bound by the alleged obligation.
"About the autumn of last year, as I understand, either his own
crazed
imagination, or the
accomplishment of some such
scheme as
I have hinted, brought him down to this country. His alleged
motive, it seems, was a desire of
seeing a
monument which he had
directed to be raised in the
chapel over the tomb of your mother.
Mr. Ratcliffe, who at this time had done me the honour to make my
house his own, had the complaisance to introduce him secretly
into the
chapel. The
consequence, as he informs me, was a frenzy
of several hours, during which he fled into the neighbouring
moors, in one of the wildest spots of which he chose, when he was
somewhat recovered, to fix his
mansion, and set up for a sort of
country empiric, a
character which, even in his best days, he was
fond of assuming. It is
remarkable, that, instead of informing
me of these circumstances, that I might have had the
relative of
my late wife taken such care of as his calamitous condition
required, Mr. Ratcliffe seems to have had such culpable
indulgence for his
irregular plans as to promise and even swear
secrecyconcerning them. He visited Sir Edward often, and
assisted in the
fantastic task he had taken upon him of
constructing a
hermitage. Nothing they appear to have dreaded
more than a discovery of their intercourse.
"The ground was open in every direction around, and a small
subterranean cave, probably sepulchral, which their researches
had detected near the great
granitepillar, served to conceal
Ratcliffe, when any one approached his master. I think you will
be of opinion, my love, that this
secrecy must have had some
strong
motive. It is also
remarkable, that while I thought my
unhappy friend was residing among the Monks of La Trappe, he
should have been
actually living, for many months, in this
bizarre
disguise, within five miles of my house, and obtaining
regular information of my most private movements, either by
Ratcliffe, or through Westburnflat or others, whom he had the
means to bribe to any
extent. He makes it a crime against me
that I endeavoured to establish your marriage with Sir Frederick.
I acted for the best; but if Sir Edward Mauley thought otherwise,
why did he not step manfully forward, express his own purpose of
becoming a party to the settlements, and take that interest which
he is entitled to claim in you as heir to his great property?
"Even now, though your rash and
eccentric relation is somewhat
tardy in announcing his purpose, I am far from opposing my
authority against his wishes, although the person he desires you
to regard as your future husband be young Earnscliff; the very
last whom I should have thought likely to be
acceptable to him,
considering a certain fatal event. But I give my free and hearty
consent, providing the settlements are drawn in such an
irrevocable form as may secure my child from
suffering by that
state of
dependence, and that sudden and causeless revocation of
allowances, of which I have so much reason to
complain. Of Sir
Frederick Langley, I augur, you will hear no more. He is not
likely to claim the hand of a dowerless
maiden. I therefore
commit you, my dear Isabella, to the
wisdom of Providence and to
your own
prudence, begging you to lose no time in securing those
advantages, which the fickleness of your kinsman has withdrawn
from me to
shower upon you.
"Mr. Ratcliffe mentioned Sir Edward's
intention to settle a
considerable sum upon me
yearly, for my
maintenance in foreign
parts; but this my heart is too proud to accept from him. I told
him I had a dear child, who, while in affluence herself, would
never suffer me to be in
poverty. I thought it right to intimate
this to him pretty roundly, that
whatever increase be settled
upon you, it may be calculated so as to cover this necessary and
natural encumbrance. I shall
willingly settle upon you the
castle and manor of Ellieslaw, to show my parental
affection and
disinterested zeal for promoting your settlement in life. The
annual interest of debts charged on the
estate somewhat exceeds
the
income, even after a
reasonable rent has been put upon the
mansion and mains. But as all the debts are in the person of Mr.
Ratcliffe, as your kinsman's
trustee, he will not be a
troublesome
creditor. And here I must make you aware, that
though I have to
complain of Mr. Ratcliffe's conduct to me
personally, I,
nevertheless, believe him a just and
upright man,
with whom you may
safelyconsult on your affairs, not to mention
that to
cherish his good opinion will be the best way to retain
that of your kinsman. Remember me to Marchie--I hope he will not
be troubled on
account of late matters. I will write more fully
from the Continent. Meanwhile, I rest your
loving father,
RICHARD VERE."
The above letter throws the only
additional light which we have
been able to
procure upon the earlier part of our story. It was
Hobbie's opinion, and may be that of most of our readers,that the
Recluse of Mucklestane-Moor had but a kind of a gleaming, or
twilight understanding; and that he had neither very clear views
as to what he himself wanted, nor was apt to
pursue his ends by
the clearest and most direct means; so that to seek the clew of
his conduct, was likened, by Hobbie, to looking for a straight
path through a common, over which are a hundred devious tracks,
but not one
distinct line of road.
When Isabella had perused the letter, her first enquiry was after
her father. He had left the castle, she was informed, early in
the morning, after a long
interview with Mr. Ratcliffe, and was
already far on his way to the next port, where he might expect to
find
shipping for the Continent.
"Where was Sir Edward Mauley?"
No one had seen the Dwarf since the eventful scene of the
preceding evening.
"Odd, if onything has befa'en puir Elshie," said Hobbie Elliot,
"I wad rather I were harried ower again."
He immediately rode to his
dwelling, and the remaining she-goat
came bleating to meet him, for her milking time was long past.
The Solitary was
nowhere to be seen; his door,
contrary to wont,
was open, his fire extinguished, and the whole hut was left in
the state which it exhibited on Isabella's visit to him. It was
pretty clear that the means of
conveyance which had brought the
Dwarf to Ellieslaw on the
preceding evening, had removed him from
it to some other place of abode. Hobbie returned disconsolate to
the castle.
"I am doubting we hae lost Canny Elshie for gude an' a'."
"You have indeed," said Ratcliffe, producing a paper, which he
put into Hobbie's hands; "but read that, and you will perceive
you have been no loser by having known him."
It was a short deed of gift, by which "Sir Edward Mauley,
otherwise called Elshender the Recluse, endowed Halbert or Hobbie
Elliot, and Grace Armstrong, in full property, with a
considerable sum borrowed by Elliot from him."
Hobbie's joy was mingled with feelings which brought tears down
his rough cheeks.
"It's a queer thing," he said; "but I canna joy in the gear,
unless I kend the puir body was happy that gave it me."
"Next to enjoying happiness ourselves," said Ratcliffe, "is the
consciousness of having bestowed it on others. Had all my
master's benefits been conferred like the present, what a
different return would they have produced! But the
indiscriminate profusion that would glut
avarice, or supply
prodigality, neither does good, nor is rewarded by
gratitude. It
is sowing the wind to reap the whirlwind."
"And that wad be a light har'st," said Hobbie; "but, wi' my young
leddie's leave, I wad fain take down Eishie's skeps o' bees, and
set them in Grace's bit flower yard at the Heugh-foot--they shall
ne'er be smeekit by ony o' huz. And the puir goat, she would be