“There are more things in
heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”—Hamlet.
I had passed the three
first milestones after leaving Forres, when the clouds began to lour on
every side of me, as if earth and sky were coming together, and the rain
to descend in torrents. The great forest of Darnaway looked shaggy and
brown through the haze, as if greeting the heavens with a scowl as angry
as their own; and a low, long wreath of vapour went creeping over the
higher lands to the left, like a huge snake. On the right, the locale of
Shakspere’s witch scene, half moor half bog, with the old ruinous castle
of Inshoch standing sentry over it, seemed ever and anon to lessen its
area as the heavily-laden clouds broke over its farther edge like waves
of the sea ; and the intervening morass—black and dismal at all times—
grew still blacker and more dismal with every fitful thickening of the
haze and the rain. And then, how the furze waved to the wind, and the
few scattered trees groaned and creaked ! The thunder and the witches
were alone wanting.
I passed on, and the
storm gradually sank. The evening, however, was dark and damp, and more
melancholy than even the day, and I was thoroughly wet, and somewhat
fatigued to boot. I could not, however, help turning a little out of my
way to pause for a few minutes amid the ruins of the old farmhouse of
Minitarf, just as I had paused in the middle of the storm to fill my
mind with the sublimities of the Harmoor, and do homage to the genius of
Shakspere. But why at Minitarf? Who is not acquainted with the legend of
the Heath near Forres”—who knows anything of the history of the
Farm-house? Both stories, however, are characteristic of the very
different ages to which they belong ; and the moral of the humbler story
is at once the more general in its application, and the more obvious of
the two.
Isabel Rose, the gudewife
of Minitarf, was a native of Easter-Ross, and having lost both her
parents in infancy, she had passed some of the earlier years of her life
with a married sister in the town of Cromarty. She had been famed for
her beauty, and for being the toast of three parishes ; and of all her
lovers, and few could reckon up more, she had been lucky enough to lose
her heart to one of the best. The favoured suitor was a handsome young
farmer of the province of Moray—a person somewhat less shrewd, perhaps,
than many of his countrymen, but inflexibly honest, and perseveringly
industrious ; and, as he was a namesake of her own, she became his wife
and the mistress of Minitarf, and yet remained Isabel Rose as before.
The wife became a mother—the mother of two boys. Years passed by; the
little drama of her life, like one of the dramas of antiquity, had
scarce any change of circumstance, and no shifting of scenes ; and her
two sons grew up to maturity, as unlike one another in character as if
they had not been bom to the same parents, nor brought up under the same
roof.
John, the elder son, was
cautious and sensible, and of great kindliness of disposition. There was
nothing bright or striking about him; but he united to his father’s
integrity and firmness of purpose much more than his father’s
shrewdness, and there was a homely massiveness in the character that
procured him respect. He was of a mechanical turn ; and making choice of
the profession of a house-carpenter—for he was as little ambitious as
may be—he removed to Glasgow, where his steadiness and skill recommended
him to the various contractors of the place, until in the course of
years he became, a good deal to his own surprise, a contractor himself.
Sandy, the younger son, was volatile and unsettled, and impatient of
labour and restraint, and yet no piece of good fortune could have
surprised Sandy. He had somehow come to the conclusion that he was born
to be a gentleman, and took rank accordingly, by being as little useful,
and dressing as showily as he could. His principles were of a more
conventional cast than those of his brother, and his heart less warm ;
still, however, there was no positive vice in the character; and as he
was decidedly cleverer than John, and a great deal more genteel, his
mother could not help sharing with him in the hope that he was born to
be the gentleman of the family—a hope which, of course, was not lessened
when she saw him bound apprentice in his seventeenth year to a draper in
a neighbouring town.
Sandy’s master w^s what
is termed a clever man of business ; one of those smart fellows who want
only honesty, and that soundness of judgment which seems its natural
accompaniment to make headway in the world. He had already threaded his
way through the difficulties of three highly respectable failures; he
had thrice paid his debts at the rate of fifteen shillings per pound,
and had thus realized on each occasion a profit of twenty-five per cent,
on the whole. And yet, from some inexplicable cause, he was not making
more money than traders much less fertile in expedient than himself. His
ordinary gains were perhaps the less considerable from the circumstance,
that men came to deal with him as completely on their guard as if they
had come to fight with him ; and, though a match for any single
individual, he was, somehow, no match for every body, even though, after
the Hianner of Captain Bobadil’s opponents, they came only one at a
time. His scheme, too, of occasionally suspending his payments, had this
disadvantage, that the oftener it was resorted to, the risk became
greater and the gain less.
The shop of such a person
could not be other than a rare school of ingenuity—a place of shifts and
expedients—and where, according to the favourite phrase of its master,
things were done in a business-like manner ; and Sandy Rose was no very
backward pupil. There are ingenious young men who are a great deal too
apt to confound the idea of talent itself with the knavish exercise of
it; and who, seeing nothing very knowing in simple honesty, exert their
ingenuity in the opposite tract, rather out of a desire of doing clever
things than from any very decided bias to knavery. And Sandy Rose was
unfortunately one of the number. It is undoubtedly an ingenious thing to
get possession of a neighbour’s money without running the risk of
stealing it; and there can be no question that it requires more of
talent to overreach another than to be overreached one’s-self. The three
years of Sandy’s apprenticeship came to their close, and with the
assistance of his father, who in a long course of patient industry had
succeeded in saving a few hundred pounds, he opened shop for himself in
one of the principal streets of the town.
Sandy’s shop, or
warehouse, as he termed it—for the latter name was deemed the more
respectable of the two—was decidedly the most showy in the street. He
dealt largely in fancy goods, and no other kind in the “soft way” show
equally well in a window. True, the risk was greater, for among the
ordinary chances of loss he had to reckon on the continual changes of
fashion ; but then, from the same cause, the profits were greater too,
and Sandy had a decided turn for the more adventurous walks of his
profession. Nothing so respectable as a large stock in trade; the
profits of a thousand pounds are necessarily greater than the profits of
five hundred. And so, what between the ready money advanced to him by
his father, and the degree of credit which the money procured for him,
Sandy succeeded in rendering his stock a large one. He had omitted only
two circumstances in his calculation—the proportion which one's stock
should bear to one’s capital, and the proportion which it should bear to
the trade of the place in which one has settled. When once fairly behind
his counter, however, no shopkeeper could be more attentive to his
customers, or to the appearance of his shop ; and all allowed that Sandy
Rose was a clever man of business. He wrote and figured with such
amazing facility, and made such dashes at the end of every word! He was
so indefatigable in his assertions, too, that he made it a rule in every
case to sell under prime cost! He was, besides, so amazingly active—a
squirrel in its cage was but a type of Sandy ! He was withal so
unexceptionably genteel! His finest cloths did not look half so well on
his shelves as they did on his dapper little person; and it was clear,
from his everyday appearance, that he was one of his own best customers.
Sandy’s first half year
of business convinced him that a large stock in trade may resemble a
showy equipage in more points than one : it may look as respectable in
its way, but then it may cost as much. Bills were now falling due almost
every week, and after paying away the money saved during the earlier
months, the everyday custom of the shop proved too little to meet the
everyday demand. Fortunately, however, there were banks in the country—“
more banks than one and his old master was content to lend him the use
of his name, simply on the condition of being accommodated with Sandy’s
name in turn. Bill, therefore, was met by bill, and the paper of one
bank pitted against the paper of another; and as Sandy was known to have
started in trade with a few hundreds, there was no demur for the first
twelvemonth or so on the part of the bankers. They then, however, began
to demand indorsations, and to hint that the farmer, his father, was a
highly respectable man. Sandy expressed his astonishment that any such
security should be deemed necessary ; his old master expressed his
astonishment too; nothing could be more unbusiness-like, he said but the
bankers, who were quite accustomed to the astonishment of all their more
doubtful customers, were inflexible notwithstanding, and the old man’s
name was procured. The indorsation was quite a matter of course, he was
told—a thing “ neither here nor there,” but necessary just for form’s
sake ; and from that day forward all the accommodation-bills of Sandy
and his master bore the name of the simple-minded old man.
I have said that Sandy
was one of the most indefatigable of shopkeepers. It was but for the
first few months, however, when all was smooth water and easy sailing;
in a few months more, when the tide had begun to set in against him, he
became less attentive. Some of his fancy goods were becoming
old-fashioned, and in consequence unsaleable, and his stock, large at
first, was continuing large still. What between the price of stamps,
too, the rate of discount, and the expense of travelling to the several
banks in which he did business, he found that the profits of his trade
were more than balanced by the expenditure. Sandy’s heart, therefore,
began to fail him ; and, setting himself to seek amusement elsewhere
than behind his counter, he got a smart young lad to take charge of the
shop in his absence; and, as it could not add very materially to the
inevitable expense, he provided himself with a horse. He was now every
day on the road doing business as his own traveller. He rode twenty
miles at a time to secure a five-shilling order, or crave payment of a
five-shilling debt. He attended every horse-race and fox-hunt in the
country, and paid the king’s duty for a half-starved greyhound : Sandy
was happy outside his shop, and his lad was thriving within. Matters
went on in this train for so long as two years, and the hapless
shopkeeper began to perceive that the few hundreds advanced him by his
father had totally disappeared in the time, and to wonder what had
become of them. Still, however, his stock in trade, though somewhat less
showy than at first, was nearly equal in value to one-third his
liabilities; the other two-thirds were debts incurred by his old master;
and at worst there lay no other obstacle between him and a highly
respectable settlement with his creditors than the unlucky indorsations
of his father. He rose, however, one morning to learn that his master
had absconded during the night, leaving the shop-key under the
door-sill; in a few days after, Sandy had absconded too ; and his poor
father, who had paid all his debts till now, and had taken a pride in
paying them, found that his unfortunate indorsations had involved him in
irretrievable ruin. Bankruptcy was a very different matter to the
rigidly honest old man from what it was to either Sandy or his master.
For the first few days
after the shock, he went wandering about his fields, muttering
ceaselessly to himself, and wringing his hands. His whole faculties
seemed locked up in a feeling of bewilderment and terror, and every
packet of letters which the postman brought him—letters urging the
claims of angry creditors, or intimating the dishonour of bills—added to
his distress. His son was in hiding no one knew where; and though it was
perhaps well that he should have kept out of the way at such a time,
poor Isabel could not help feeling that it was unkind. He might surely
be able to do something, she thought, to lighten the distress of which
he had been so entirely the cause, were it but to tell them what course
yet remained for them to pursue. It was in vain that, almost
broken-hearted herself, she strove by soothing the old man to restore
him to himself: he remained melancholy and abstracted as at first, as if
the suddenness of his ruin had deprived him of his faculties. He hardly
ever spoke, took scarce any food during the day, and scarce any sleep
during the night; and, finally, taking to his bed, he died after a few
days’ illness—died of a broken heart. On the evening after the
interment, his son John Rose, the carpenter, arrived from Glasgow, and
found his mother sitting alone in the farmhouse, wholly overwhelmed with
grief for the loss of her husband, and the utter ruin which she saw
closing around her.
Their meeting was a sad
one; but after the widow’s first burst of sorrow was over, her son
strove to comfort her, and in part succeeded. She might yet look
forward, he said, to better days. He was in rather easy circumstances,
employing about half-a-dozen workmen, and at times finding use for more.
And though he could not well be absent from them, he would remain with
her until he saw how far it was possible to wind up his father’s
affairs, and she would then go with him, and find what he trusted she
should deem a comfortable home in Glasgow. Isabel was soothed by his
kindness; but it did not escape the anxious eye of the mother, that her
son, at one time so robust and strong, had grown thin, and pale, and
hollow-eyed, like a person in the latter stages of consumption, and
that, though he seemed anxious to appear otherwise, he was evidently
much exhausted by his journey. He rallied, however, on the following
day. The sale of his father’s effects was coming on in about a week ;
and as the farmhouse at such a time could be no comfortable home for the
widow, he brought her with him across the Firth to her sister’s in
Cromarty, and then returned to Minitarf.
Her sister’s son was a
saddler, a sagacious, well-informed man, truthful and honest, and as
little imaginative as may be. He was employed at the time at the Mains
of Invergordon— some six or seven miles from Cromarty—and slept in an
apartment of the old castle, since burnt down. No one-could be less
influenced by superstitious beliefs of the period; and yet when, after
scaling the steep circular stair that led to his solitary room, he used
to shut the ponderous door and pass his eye along the half-lighted
walls, here and there perforated by a narrow arched window, there was
usually something in the tone of his feelings which served to remind him
that there is a dread of the supernatural too deeply implanted in man’s
nature to be ever wholly eradicated. On going to bed one evening, and
awakening as he supposed after a short slumber, he was much surprised to
see the room filled as with a greyish light, in which the walls and the
floor could be seen nearly as distinctly as by day. Suddenly the door
fell open and there entered a tall young man in black, his hat wrapped
up in crape, and with muslin weepers on his sleeves. Another and another
entered, attired after the same fashion, until their number might, as he
supposed, amount to about fifty. He lay gazing at them in astonishment,
conscious of a kind of indistinct wish to ascertain whether he was in
reality waking or asleep—a feeling of common enough experience in the
dreams of imperfect slumber— when the man who had first come in, gliding
up to his bedside, moved his lips as if addressing him, and passing off
entered the staircase and disappeared. A second then came up, and
heartily shaking him by the hand, also quitted the apartment, followed
by all the others in the order in which they had entered, but without
shutting the door; and the last recollection of the sleeper was of an
emotion of intense terror, which seemed wholly to overpower him when
gazing on the dark opening of the stair beyond. It was broad daylight
ere he awoke, and his first glance, as the dream of the previous evening
flashed on his mind, was at the door, which sure enough lay open. “I
must have missed slipping on the latch,” he said, “or some of the
servants must have entered during the night;—but how strange a
coincidence!” The particulars of his dream—and it cost him no slight
effort to deem it such—employed his thoughts until evening; when,
setting out for his mother’s, he found his aunt Isabel, in much grief
and dejection, seated beside the fire. He had taken his place beside
her, and was striving as he best could to lighten the melancholy which
he saw preying on her spirits, when a young man, bespattered with
travel, and apparently much fatigued, entered the apartment. Isabel
started from her seat, and clasping her hands with a fearful
presentiment of some overwhelming calamity, inquired of him what had
happened at Minitarf? He stood speechless for a few seconds as if
overcome by some fearful emotion, and then bursting into tears, “Your
son John,” he said, “died this morning !” The poor woman fainted away.
For the two last
days of the sale,” said the messenger, "there was a marked alteration in
John’s manner and appearance. There was a something so fixed-like in his
expression, and so mournful in his way of looking at things; and then
his face was deadly pale, and he took scarce any food. It was evident
that the misfortunes of his family preyed deeply on his mind. Yester
evening,” continued the lad, “he complained for the first time of being
unwell, and retired to bed before the usual hour. The two servant-maids
rose early in the morning to prepare for leaving the place, and were
surprised, on entering the ‘ha’,’ to find him sitting in the great
arm-chair fronting the fire. His countenance had changed during the
night; he looked much older, and very like his father; and he was so
weak that he could hardly sit up in the chair. The girls were alarmed,
and would have called for assistance, but he forbade them. ‘My watch,’
he said, 'hangs over my pillow ; go tell me what o’clock it is.’ It was
just twenty minutes past four. ‘Well,’ said he, when they had told him,
‘it is the last hour to me ! there is a crook in my lot; but it’s God’s
doing, not man’s.’ And, leaning back in the chair, he never spake more.”
The messenger had seen the corpse laid on the bed, and wrapped up in a
winding-sheet, before setting out on his melancholy journey. Need I say
aught of the feelings of Isabel ? The saddler and his mother strove to
persuade her to remain with them till at least after the funeral, but
she would not; she would go and take one last look of her son, she said
-—of her only son, for the other was a murderer. Early, therefore, on
the following morning, the saddler hired a small yawl to bring her
across the Firth, and, taking his place in the stem beside h6r, the
boatmen bent them to their oars, and the hill of Nigg soon lessened
behind them.
After clearing the bay,
however, their progress was much impeded by adverse currents; there came
on a chill drizzling rain, and the wind, which was evidently rising,
began, after veering about oftener than once, to blow right ahead, and
to raise a short tumbling sea. Grief of itself is cold and comfortless,
and the widow, wrapped up in her cloak, sat shivering in the bottom of
the yawl, drenched by the rain and the spray. But she thought only of
her son and her husband. The boatmen toiled incessantly till evening;
and when night came on, dark and boisterous, they were still two long
miles from their landing-place—the effluence of the Naim. Directly
across the mouth of the river there runs a low dangerous bar, and as
they approached they could hear the roaring of the breakers above all
the hoarse sighings of the wind, and the dash of the lesser waves that
were bursting around them. “There,” said the saddler, as his eye caught
a few faint lights that seemed twinkling along the beach; “there is the
town of Naim right abreast of us; but has not the tide fallen too low
for our attempting the bar?” The boatmen replied in the negative, and in
a minute after they were among the breakers. For a single instant the
skiff seemed riding on the crest of an immense wave, which came rolling
from the open sea, and which, as it folded over and burst into foam,
dashed her forward like an arrow from the string. She sank, however, as
it receded, till her keel grated against the bar beneath. Another huge
wave came rolling behind, and, curling its white head like the former,
rushed over her stem, filling her at once to the gunwale, and at the
same instant propelling her into the deep water within. The saddler
sprang from his seat, and raising his aunt to the hinder thwart, and
charging her to hold fast, he shouted to the boatmen to turn the boat’s
head to the shore. In a few minutes after, they had landed.
Poor Isabel, well-nigh
insensible—for grief and terror, added to cold and fatigue, had
prostrated all her energies, bodily and mental—was carried to the town
and lodged in the house of an acquaintance. When morning came she was
unable to leave her bed, and so the saddler had to set out for Minitarf
alone, which he reached about noon; and on being recognised as a cousin
of the deceased, he was ushered into the room where the body lay. He
seated himself on the edge of the bed, and raising the coffin-lid, gazed
for a few seconds on the face of the dead; on hearing a footstep
approaching the door, he replaced the cover. There entered a
genteel-looking young man dressed for the funeral; but not the
apparition of an inhabitant of the other world would have started the
saddler more. He recognised in the stranger the young man of his dream.
Another person entered, and him he also recognised as the man who had
shaken hands with him; and who now, on being introduced to him as a
relative of the deceased tacksman of Minitarf, sure enough, grasped him
warmly by the hand. As the room filled around him with the neighbouring
farmers attired in their soberest and best, he felt as if he still
dreamed, for these were the very men whom he had seen in the old castle;
and it was almost mechanically, when the coffin was carried out and laid
on the bier, that, as the nearest relative of the dead he took his place
as chief mourner. As the funeral proceeded, however, he collected his
scattered thoughts. “ Have I indeed had experience,” said he to himself,
“of one of those mysterious intimations of coming evil, the bare
possibility of which few thinking men, in these latter times, seem
disposed to credit on testimony alone. And little wonder, truly, that
they should be so sceptical; for, for what purpose could such a warning
have been given? It has enabled me to ward off no impending disaster;
—nay, it has told its story so darkly and doubtfully, that the event
alone has enabled me to interpret it. Could a purpose so idle have
employed an agent of the invisible world? And yet,” thought he again, as
the train of his cogitations found way into the deeper recesses of his
mind, “an end has been accomplished by it, and a not unimportant end
either. The evil has befallen as certainly and heavily as if there had
been no previous warning; but, is my mind in every respect the same?
Something has been accomplished. And surely He who in His providence
cares for all my bodily wants, without sinking, in the littleness of the
object cared for, aught of the greatness of His character, might,
without lessening in aught His character for wisdom, have taken this way
of making me see, more distinctly than in all my life before, that there
is indeed an invisible world, and that all the future is known to Him.”
There was seriousness in the thought, and never did he feel more
strongly that the present scene of things is not the last, than when
bending over the open grave he saw the corpse lowered down and heard the
earth falling hollow on the coffin-lid.
But why dwell longer on
the details of a story so mournful ! The saddler, on his return to Naim,
found the widow in the delirium of a fever, from which she never
recovered. Her younger son was seen in the West Indies ten years after,
a miserable slave-driver, with a broken constitution and an unquiet
mind. And there he died—no one caring where or how. I am not fond of
melancholy stories; but “to purge the heart by pity and terror ” is the
true end of tragedy—an end which the gorgeous creations of the poets are
not better suited to accomplish than the domestic tragedies which we see
every day enacting around us. It is well, too, to note how immensely the
folly and knavery of mankind add to the amount of human suffering ; and
how, according to the wise saying of the Preacher, “One sinner
destroyeth much good.” |