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STEPHEN KENNEDY.
The great comforts of Donal's life, next to those of the world in
which his soul lived--the eternal world, whose doors are ever open
to him who prays--were the society of his favourite books, the
fashioning of his thoughts into sweetly ordered sounds in the lofty
solitude of his chamber, and not infrequent communion with the
cobbler and his wife. To these he had as yet said nothing of what
went on at the castle: he had learned the lesson the cobbler himself
gave him. But many a lesson of greater value did he learn from the
philosopher of the lapstone. He who understands because he
endeavours, is a freed man of the realm of human effort. He who has
no experience of his own, to him the experience of others is a
sealed book. The convictions that in Donal rose vaporous were
rapidly condensed and shaped when he found his new friend thought
likewise.
By degrees he made more and more of a companion of Davie, and such
was the sweet relation between them that he would sometimes have him
in his room even when he was writing. When it was time to lay in
his winter-fuel, he said to him--
"Up here, Davie, we must have a good fire when the nights are long;
the darkness will be like solid cold. Simmons tells me I may have
as much coal and wood as I like: will you help me to get them up?"
Davie sprang to his feet: he was ready that very minute.
"I shall never learn my lessons if I am cold," added Donal, who
could not bear a low temperature so well as when he was always in
the open air.
"Do you learn lessons, Mr. Grant?"
"Yes indeed I do," replied Donal. "One great help to the
understanding of things is to brood over them as a hen broods over
her eggs: words are thought-eggs, and their chickens are truths; and
in order to brood I sometimes learn by heart. I have set myself to
learn, before the winter is over if I can, the gospel of John in the
Greek."
"What a big lesson!" exclaimed Davie.
"Ah, but how rich it will make me!" said Donal, and that set Davie
pondering.
They began to carry up the fuel, Donal taking the coals, and Davie
the wood. But Donal got weary of the time it took, and set himself
to find a quicker way. So next Saturday afternoon, the rudimentary
remnant of the Jewish Sabbath, and the schoolboy's weekly carnival
before Lent, he directed his walk to a certain fishing village, the
nearest on the coast, about three miles off, and there succeeded in
hiring a spare boat-spar with a block and tackle. The spar he ran
out, through a notch of the battlement, near the sheds, and having
stayed it well back, rove the rope through the block at the peak of
it, and lowered it with a hook at the end. A moment of Davie's help
below, and a bucket filled with coals was on its way up: this part
of the roof was over a yard belonging to the household offices, and
Davie filled the bucket from a heap they had there made. "Stand
back, Davie," Donal would cry, and up would go the bucket, to the
ever renewed delight of the boy. When it reached the block, Donal,
by means of a guy, swung the spar on its but-end, and the bucket
came to the roof through the next notch of the battlement. There he
would empty it, and in a moment it would be down again to be
re-filled. When he thought he had enough of coal, he turned to the
wood; and thus they spent an hour of a good many of the cool
evenings of autumn. Davie enjoyed it immensely; and it was no small
thing for a boy delicately nurtured to be helped out of the feeling
that he must have every thing done for him. When after a time he
saw the heap on the roof, he was greatly impressed with the amount
that could be done by little and little. In return Donal told him
that if he worked well through the week, he should every Saturday
evening spend an hour with him by the fire he had thus helped to
provide, and they would then do something together.
After his first visit Donal went again and again to the village: he
had made acquaintance with some of the people, and liked them.
There was one man, however, who, although, attracted by his look
despite its apparent sullenness, he had tried to draw him into
conversation, seemed to avoid, almost to resent his advances. But
one day as he was walking home, Stephen Kennedy overtook him, and
saying he was going in his direction, walked alongside of him--to
the pleasure of Donal, who loved all humanity, and especially the
portion of it acquainted with hard work. He was a middle-sized
young fellow, with a slouching walk, but a well shaped and well set
head, and a not uncomely countenance. He was brown as sun and salt
sea-winds could make him, and had very blue eyes and dark hair,
telling of Norwegian ancestry. He lounged along with his hands in
his pockets, as if he did not care to walk, yet got over the ground
as fast as Donal, who, with yet some remnant of the peasant's
stride, covered the ground as if he meant walking. After their
greeting a great and enduring silence fell, which lasted till the
journey was half-way over; then all at once the fisherman spoke.
"There's a lass at the castel, sir," he said, "they ca' Eppy Comin."
"There is," answered Donal.
"Do ye ken the lass, sir--to speak til her, I mean?"
"Surely," replied Donal. "I know her grandfather and grandmother
well."
"Dacent fowk!" said Stephen.
"They are that!" responded Donal, "--as good people as I know!"
"Wud ye du them a guid turn?" asked the fisherman.
"Indeed I would!"
"Weel, it's this, sir: I hae grit doobts gien a' be gaein' verra
weel wi' the lass at the castel."
As he said the words he turned his head aside, and spoke so low and
in such a muffled way that Donal could but just make out what he
said.
"You must be a little plainer if you would have me do anything," he
returned.
"I'll be richt plain wi' ye, sir," answered Stephen, and then fell
silent as if he would never speak again.
Donal waited, nor uttered a sound. At last he spoke once more.
"Ye maun ken, sir," he said "I hae had a fancy to the lass this mony
a day; for ye'll alloo she's baith bonny an' winsome!"
Donal did not reply, for although he was ready to grant her bonny,
he had never felt her winsome.
"Weel," he went on, "her an' me 's been coortin' this twa year; an'
guid freen's we aye was till this last spring, whan a' at ance she
turnt highty-tighty like, nor, du what I micht, could I get her to
say what it was 'at cheengt her: sae far as I kenned I had dune
naething, nor wad she say I had gi'en her ony cause o' complaint.
But though she couldna say I had ever gi'en mair nor a ceevil word
to ony lass but hersel', she appeart unco wullin' to fix me wi' this
ane an' that ane or ony ane! I couldna think what had come ower
her! But at last--an' a sair last it is!--I hae come to the
un'erstan'in o' 't: she wud fain hae a pretence for br'akin' wi' me!
She wad hae 't 'at I was duin' as she was duin' hersel'--haudin'
company wi' anither!"
"Are you quite sure of what you say?" asked Donal.
"Ower sure, sir, though I'm no at leeberty to tell ye hoo I cam to
be.--Dinna think, sir, 'at I'm ane to haud a lass til her word whan
her hert disna back it; I wud hae said naething aboot it, but jist
borne the hert-brak wi' the becomin' silence, for greitin' nor
ragin' men' no nets, nor tak the life o' nae dogfish. But it's
God's trowth, sir, I'm terrible feart for the lassie hersel'. She's
that ta'en up wi' him, they tell me, 'at she can think o' naething
but him; an' he's a yoong lord, no a puir lad like me--an' that's
what fears me!"
A great dread and a great compassion together laid hold of Donal,
but he did not speak.
"Gien it cam to that," resumed Stephen, "I doobt the fisher-lad wud
win her better breid nor my lord; for gien a' tales be true, he wud
hae to work for his ain breid; the castel 's no his, nor canna be
'cep' he merry the leddy o' 't. But it's no merryin' Eppy he'll be
efter, or ony the likes o' 'im!"
"You don't surely hint," said Donal, "that there's anything between
her and lord Forgue? She must be an idle girl to take such a thing
into her head!"
"I wuss weel she hae ta'en 't intil her heid! she'll get it the
easier oot o' her hert? But 'deed, sir, I'm sair feart! I speakna
o' 't for my ain sake; for gien there be trowth intil't, there can
never be mair 'atween her and me! But, eh, sir, the peety o' 't wi'
sic a bonny lass!--for he canna mean fair by her! Thae gran' fowk
does fearsome things! It's sma' won'er 'at whiles the puir fowk
rises wi' a roar, an' tears doon a', as they did i' France!"
"All you say is quite true; but the charge is such a serious one!"
"It is that, sir! But though it be true, I'm no gaein' to mak it
'afore the warl'."
"You are right there: it could do no good."
"I fear it may du as little whaur I am gaein' to mak it! I'm upo'
my ro'd to gar my lord gie an accoont o' himsel'. Faith, gien it
bena a guid ane, I'll thraw the neck o' 'im! It's better me to
hang, nor her to gang disgraced, puir thing! She can be naething
mair to me, as I say; but I wud like weel the wringin' o' a lord's
neck! It wud be like killin' a shark!"
"Why do you tell me this?" asked Donal.
"'Cause I look to you to get me to word o' the man."
"That you may wring his neck?--You should not have told me that: I
should be art and part in his murder!"
"Wud ye hae me lat the lassie tak her chance ohn dune onything?"
said the fisherman with scorn.
"By no means. I would do something myself whoever the girl was--and
she is the granddaughter of my best friends."
"Sir, ye winna surely fail me!"
"I will help you somehow, but I will not do what you want me. I
will turn the thing over in my mind. I promise you I will do
something--what, I cannot say offhand. You had better go home
again, and I will come to you to-morrow."
"Na, na, that winna do!" said the man, half doggedly, half fiercely.
"The hert ill be oot o' my body gien I dinna du something! This
verra nicht it maun be dune! I canna bide in hell ony langer. The
thoucht o' the rascal slaverin' his lees ower my Eppy 's killin' me!
My brain 's like a fire: I see the verra billows o' the ocean as
reid 's blude."
"If you come near the castle to-night, I will have you taken up. I
am too much your friend to see you hanged! But if you go home and
leave the matter to me, I will do my best, and let you know. She
shall be saved if I can compass it. What, man! you would not have
God against you?"
"He'll be upo' the side o' the richt, I'm thinkin'!"
"Doubtless; but he has said, 'Vengeance is mine!' He can't trust us
with that. He won't have us interfering. It's more his concern
than yours yet that the lassie have fair play. I will do my part."
They walked on in gloomy silence for some time. Suddenly the
fisherman put out his hand, seized Donal's with a convulsive grasp,
was possibly reassured by the strength with which Donal's responded,
turned, and without a word went back.
Donal had to think. Here was a most untoward affair! What could he
do? What ought he to attempt? From what he had seen of the young
lord, he could not believe he intended wrong to the girl; but he
might he selfishly amusing himself, and was hardly one to reflect
that the least idle familiarity with her was a wrong! The thing, if
there was the least truth in it, must be put a stop to at once! but
it might be all a fancy of the justly jealous lover, to whom the
girl had not of late been behaving as she ought! Or might there not
be somebody else? At the same time there was nothing absurd in the
idea that a youth, fresh from college and suddenly discompanioned at
home, without society, possessed by no love of literature, and with
almost no amusements, should, if only for very ennui, be attracted
by the pretty face and figure of Eppy, and then enthralled by her
coquetries of instinctive response. There was danger to the girl
both in silence and in speech: if there was no ground for the
apprehension, the very supposition was an injury--might even suggest
the thing it was intended to frustrate! Still something must be
risked! He had just been reading in sir Philip Sidney, that
"whosoever in great things will think to prevent all objections,
must lie still and do nothing." But what was he to do? The
readiest and simplest thing was to go to the youth, tell him what he
had heard, and ask him if there was any ground for it. But they
must find the girl another situation! in either case distance must
be put between them! He would tell her grandparents; but he feared,
if there was any truth in it, they would have no great influence
with her. If on the other hand, the thing was groundless, they
might make it up between her and her fisherman, and have them
married! She might only have been teasing him!--He would certainly
speak to the young lord! Yet again, what if he should actually put
the mischief into his thoughts! If there should be ever so slight a
leaning in the direction, might he not so give a sudden and fatal
impulse? He would take the housekeeper into his counsel! She must
understand the girl! Things would at once show themselves to her on
the one side or the other, which might reveal the path he ought to
take. But did he know mistress Brookes well enough? Would she be
prudent, or spoil everything by precipitation? She might ruin the
girl if she acted without sympathy, caring only to get the
appearance of evil out of the house!
The way the legally righteous act the policeman in the moral world
would be amusing were it not so sad. They are always making the
evil "move on," driving it to do its mischiefs to other people
instead of them; dispersing nests of the degraded to crowd them the
more, and with worse results, in other parts: why should such be
shocked at the idea of sending out of the world those to whom they
will not give a place in it to lay their heads? They treat them in
this world as, according to the old theology, their God treats them
in the next, keeping them alive for sin and suffering.
Some with the bright lamp of their intellect, others with the smoky
lamp of their life, cast a shadow of God on the wall of the
universe, and then believe or disbelieve in the shadow.
Donal was still in meditation when he reached home, and still
undecided what he should do. Crossing a small court on his way to
his aerie, he saw the housekeeper making signs to him from the
window of her room. He turned and went to her. It was of Eppy she
wanted to speak to him! How often is the discovery of a planet, of
a truth, of a scientific fact, made at once in different places far
apart! She asked him to sit down, and got him a glass of milk,
which was his favourite refreshment, little imagining the expression
she attributed to fatigue arose from the very thing occupying her
own thoughts.
"It's a queer thing," she began, "for an auld wife like me to come
til a yoong gentleman like yersel', sir, wi' sic a tale; but, as the
sayin' is, 'needs maun whan the deil drives'; an' here's like to be
an unco stramash aboot the place, gien we comena thegither upo' some
gait oot o' 't. Dinna luik sae scaret like, sir; we may be in time
yet er' the warst come to the warst, though it's some ill to say
what may be the warst in sic an ill coopered kin' o' affair!
There's thae twa fules o' bairns--troth, they're nae better; an'
the tane 's jist as muckle to blame as the tither--only the lass is
waur to blame nor the lad, bein' made sharper, an' kennin' better
nor him what comes o' sic!--Eh, but she is a gowk!"
Here Mrs. Brookes paused, lost in contemplation of the gowkedness of
Eppy.
She was a florid, plump, good-looking woman, over forty, with thick
auburn hair, brushed smooth--one of those women comely in soul as
well as body, who are always to the discomfiture of wrong and the
healing of strife. Left a young widow, she had refused many offers:
once was all that was required of her in the way of marriage! She
had found her husband good enough not to be followed by another, and
marriage hard enough to favour the same result. When she sat down,
smoothing her apron on her lap, and looking him in the face with
clear blue eyes, he must have been either a suspicious or an
unfortunate man who would not trust her. She was a general softener
of shocks, foiler of encounters, and soother of angers. She was not
one of those housekeepers always in black silk and lace, but was
mostly to be seen in a cotton gown--very clean, but by no means
imposing. She would put her hands to anything--show a young servant
how a thing ought to be done, or relieve cook or housemaid who was
ill or had a holiday. Donal had taken to her, as like does to like.
He did not hurry her, but waited.
"I may as weel gie ye the haill story, sir!" she recommenced. "Syne
ye'll be whaur I am mysel'.
"I was oot i' the yard to luik efter my hens--I never lat onybody
but mysel' meddle wi' them, for they're jist as easy sp'ilt as ither
fowk's bairns; an' the twa doors o' the barn stan'in open, I took
the straucht ro'd throuw the same to win the easier at my feathert
fowk, as my auld minnie used to ca' them. I'm but a saft kin' o' a
bein', as my faither used to tell me, an' mak but little din whaur I
gang, sae they couldna hae h'ard my fut as I gaed; but what sud I
hear--but I maun tell ye it was i' the gloamin' last nicht, an' I
wad hae tellt ye the same this mornin', sir, seekin' yer fair
coonsel, but ye was awa' 'afore I kenned, an' I was resolvt no to
lat anither gloamin' come ohn ta'en precautions--what sud I hear, I
say, as I was sayin', but a laich tshe--tshe--tshe, somewhaur, I
couldna tell whaur, as gien some had mair to say nor wud be spoken
oot! Weel, ye see, bein' ane accoontable tae ithers for them 'at's
accoontable to me, I stude still an' hearkent: gien a' was richt,
nane wad be the waur for me; an' gien a' wasna richt, a' sud be
wrang gien I could make it sae! Weel, as I say, I hearkent--but eh,
sir! jist gie a keek oot at that door, an' see gein there bena
somebody there hearkin', for that Eppy--I wudna lippen til her ae
hair! she's as sly as an edder! Naebody there? Weel, steek ye the
door, sir, an' I s' gang on wi' my tale. I stude an' hearkent, as I
was sayin', an' what sud I hear but a twasome toot-moot, as my auld
auntie frae Ebberdeen wud hae ca'd it--ae v'ice that o' a man, an'
the ither that o' a wuman, for it's strange the differ even whan
baith speyks their laichest! I was aye gleg i' the hearin', an' hae
reason for the same to be thankfu,' but I couldna, for a' my
sharpness, mak oot what they war sayin'. So, whan I saw 'at I wasna
to hear, I jist set aboot seein', an' as quaietly as my saft
fit--it's safter nor it's licht--wud carry me, I gaed aboot the
barnflure, luikin' whaur onybody could be hidden awa'.
"There was a great heap o' strae in ae corner, no hard again' the
wa'; an' 'atween the wa' an' that heap o' thrashen strae, sat the
twa. Up gat my lord wi' a spang, as gien he had been ta'en
stealin'. Eppy wud hae bidden, an' creepit oot like a moose ahint
my back, but I was ower sharp for her: 'Come oot o' that, my lass,'
says I. 'Oh, mistress Brookes!' says my lord, unco ceevil, 'for my
sake don't be hard upon her.' Noo that angert me! For though I say
the lass is mair to blame nor the lad, it's no for the lad, be he
lord or labourer, to lea' himsel' oot whan the blame comes. An'
says I, 'My lord,' says I, 'ye oucht to ken better! I s' say nae
mair i' the noo, for I'm ower angry. Gang yer ways--but na! no
thegither, my lord! I s' luik weel to that!--Gang up til yer ain
room, Eppy!' I said, 'an' gien I dinna see ye there whan I come in,
it's awa' to your grannie I gang this varra nicht!'
"Eppy she gaed; an' my lord he stude there, wi' a face 'at glowert
white throuw the gloamin'. I turned upon him like a wild beast, an'
says I, 'I winna speir what ye 're up til, my lord, but ye ken weel
eneuch what it luiks like! an' I wud never hae expeckit it o' ye!'
He began an' he stammert, an' he beggit me to believe there was
naething 'atween them, an' he wudna harm the lassie to save his
life, an' a' the lave o' 't, 'at I couldna i' my hert but pity them
baith--twa sic bairns, doobtless drawn thegither wi' nae thoucht o'
ill, ilk ane by the bonny face o' the ither, as is but nait'ral,
though it canna be allooed! He beseekit me sae sair 'at I foolishly
promised no to tell his faither gien he on his side wud promise no
to hae mair to du wi' Eppy. An' that he did. Noo I never had reason
to doobt my yoong lord's word, but in a case o' this kin' it's aye
better no to lippen. Ony gait, the thing canna be left this wise,
for gien ill cam o' 't, whaur wud we a' be! I didna promise no to
tell onybody; I'm free to tell yersel,' maister Grant; an' ye maun
contrive what's to be dune."
"I will speak to him," said Donal, "and see what humour he is in.
That will help to clear the thing up. We will try to do right, and
trust to be kept from doing wrong."
Donal left her to go to his room, but had not reached the top of the
stair when he saw clearly that he must speak to lord Forgue at once:
he turned and went down to a room that was called his.
When he reached it, only Davie was there, turning over the leaves of
a folio worn by fingers that had been dust for centuries. He said
Percy went out, and would not let him go with him.
Knowing mistress Brookes was looking after Eppy, Donal put off
seeking farther for Forgue till the morrow.
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