Several long summer days were now passed in wandering
by hill and loch, or in drives about the country; but, chiefly, it
was the river- side we sought for enjoyment, as it seemed a
never-ceasing delight to fish and sketch on its wild and beautiful
banks, the more so as each one tried to be pleasant and useful for
the others. But, meanwhile, the grouse were being sadly neglected,
and the salmon-fishing was not prosecuted with the pertinacious zeal
which this noble sport demands. True enough, we always got fish of
some sort, and Mesdames Peyton and Clive were becoming keen anglers;
indeed, Miss Clive had hooked, and very nearly landed, a grilse—an
event drolly sketched by Ward, in pronounced colour and caricature,
to that young lady’s intense horror and to Mrs. Peyton’s infinite
amusement. But, this rose-water sort of thing could not go on, at
least so thought one of the party.
“Really, this will never do!” exclaimed Ward, as one
fine scenting morning we smoked the morning pipe on the fir
brae—“never do at all. Some thirty brace of grouse in the best part
of a week; the north beats not even touched, and the birds daily
becoming wilder.”
“What of that, thou forlorn Hope,” Major Duncan
laughingly said; “there is wide time to kill half the grouse in the
country, if you keep cool and haud straicht, as Archie advises;
besides, we can’t leave our friends quite alone.”
“Nonsense, Major. My aunt, and girls too, for that
matter, would be miserable, if they suspected that the shooting was
going to pigs and whistles on their account; they would go off at
once, I can assure you.’’
“Well, well, I suppose you must temporise; and pray
manage it with your gentle diplomacy.”
“Oh, you need not laugh, Abbott,” said Ward, on
seeing me smile; “I can arrange it all easily, and with perfect fair
play to them, too. Why, look at their resources—pony-phaeton, kilted
Jehu, lovely scenery, burn-fishing, inartistic sketching, and the
last batch of magazines,—endless resources.”
“A.strong case for the client, Hope,” the Major said;
“and, besides, it is possible we may not be so requisite as we
fancy. Say Wednesday for the great beat; but see you carry it off
nicely.”
“Ha! military decision at last,” said Hope; and on
meeting the ladies he did do his mission with a quiet tact for which
I had hardly given him credit. Still, he did somewhat risk
compromising us by promising blackcock feathers for the maidens’
hats; this was rash, for. it is not at all child’s play to put salt
on the tails of the full-grown Tetrao tetrix, the old cocks of this
family being swift of wing, and as wary as red deer.
On the morning arranged we drove off, and by an early
hour dismounted at an old shealing on the hill-side above Loch-na-Seachin;
and, having stabled the horses in a shed and provided for their
comfort, we walked down to the side of the loch, and found men and
dogs all ready.
The weather aspects were not promising—a dull gloomy
sky and not a breath of wind; but, looking over the ranges of rugged
brae, bog, and moor around us, there seemed little doubt of seeing
plenty of game, as the ground was hitherto untouched; so we at once
buckled-to for work, and started.
Major Duncan and Ward went round by the south end of
the loch to try for teal, and then to beat over the black moss;
while Fred and I proceeded to hunt the slopes to the north, and we
saw nothing more of the other party for four or five hours, when we
met, as agreed upon, on the hill close to the black game country.
We soon found grouse: they were somewhat wild, and
the scent indifferent, still, the sport was excellent; and, when we
met our friends, Fred and I counted for eighteen brace of grouse,
five golden plovers, and a hare; while they had twenty-' three and
a-half brace of grouse, three hares, a teal, and (great luck) two
curlews. We rested a quarter of an hour on a rising ground facing
the ranges for black game, looking on a wide expanse of' choice
cover. In the hollow a brawling burn runs down the glen, the foaming
water glinting here' and there between the birch and alders
fringing' its banks, beyond which, the hills on right and left slope
gradually up to the top; in some parts open moor, and in others
varied with birch, juniper,
great stones, and patches of gorse; while higher up
spread the larch woods, and beyond that, we could see the dark edge
of the pine' forest that extends far away on the other side of the
hill.
After a short survey of this new land we wrent down
hill, and crossed the bum as we best could, and were presently on
the open moor beyond. The dogs found some coveys here, and still
higher up hill, where the juniper and fern afforded closer cover, we
hit off covey after covey, and had a great deal of shooting; but,
after all, the pursuit of black game, when young and half-feathered,
is but tame sport, as they sit so close that they must almost be
kicked up, while the old cocks are seldom at home in these domestic
parties, but are away somewhere on their own selfish intents and
purposes; still, two or three venerables were circumvented higher up
in the birch wood; but, on the whole, even with plenty of shooting,
the bagging of young black game was pronounced to be unsatisfactory,
and we turned back for the grouse moors. It is very different later
in the season, when they are in full feather, and strong and rapid
in flight; then it is real excitement to have a pack of these fine
birds driven overhead, and to single out and bring down the glossy
old blackcocks with a thud on the heather. This is sport for
princes.
On coming down to the bum, a lave of hands and face
in its sparkling water was refreshing after the close heat of the
covers; and here we lunched, smoked a pipe, and arranged how the
moor was to be taken on the way back. There was by this time a fresh
cool breeze, and the general voice was for no loitering, so we again
divided and went on.
All afternoon the sport was excellent; still, no one
was sorry when we at last came to the shealing, felt travel was
over, and no walking home to be done. The horses harnessed, the bulk
of the game was put into the carriage to lighten Punch’s hampers, in
consideration of his feelings, he having done a long day’s work
without a grumble, or even hinting at a strike, which is saying a
good deal for his sense in these times. No one had today seen any
capercailzie or roe deer, but this is hardly to be wondered at, the
outskirts of the covers merely having been gone through; besides, it
is necessary to beat the woods systematically for the larger kinds
of game, and this later on, after the fern and undergrowths have
somewhat died down.
On arriving at the Lodge, although past six o’clock,
everybody was out. By-and-by Mrs. Peyton came in and said she had
enjoyed so much a long quiet stroll up the glen; but it was near
seven before the girls returned from burn-fishing, pictures of
health and youthful beauty; although (as Miss Peyton mirthfully
related) her boots were soaked, and all day she had been severely
exercised with gadflies, and Miss Clive likewise, to say nothing of
having left half her skirt on a thorn-bush; but when by-and-by those
young ladies came down to dinner, their appearance would have
satisfied any exigencies of town criticism. Nor did Mrs. Peyton
object to such independent ramblings. So far from it, she observed
that being herself country bred, and used to much walking and
riding, she attributed her after health greatly to this, and always
had pitied girls who were kept too close to the chimney; and more
so, when they showed a languid indifference to wholesome exercise:
the same langour was to be looked for in their work and studies she
feared.
The blackcock were exhibited in the evening, the
feathers being yet far from perfect. We promised they should have
regal cockades by-and-by.
When nearly dusk we went out to the open air, as the
evening was still and warm.
Although naturally of retired habits, and quite happy
and content on the hillside alone, still I fully appreciate the
amenities of social life. True enough, there are certain unpleasant
phases, such as public speechifying, private prosing, and occasional
balaam and bumptuousness; so one must learn to tolerate some things
as a necessary consequence of mixing freely in the world and sharing
its many pleasures; and is it not pleasant to meet sociably with the
travelled and accomplished, or to listen to the home truths of hard
practical ability ? How pleasant is a “twa-handed crack” with a man
of sense and good feeling, how charming the society of unaffected
women of the world, and how very nice a mild flirtation with one at
a time!
And so is this very pleasant, I thought as I now
reclined on the soft turf on this fair summer’s gloamin, while
dreamily consuming an unexceptionable Cabana, and now and again
joining in the cheerful conversation, or listening to the gentle
laughter of the girls, my mind occasionally wandering far awa}T,
even to the polished Greek and luxurious Roman, whose social customs
deprived them of such easy, yet reverential freedom as we now
enjoyed; or, again, thinking of how little in common have the
literary displays or Watteau-like garden scenes of the Continent
with our freer intercourse.
“Pooh!” says some sensible youth; “what a palaver is
this, about having a cigar out of doors with the girls; can’t see
what it is all about.” Well, don’t you try, young Solomon—it is not
given to every one to see a problem or solve a joke (do not reverse
the terms); and believe me, my young friend, that if snipe shooting
be a special faculty, so is logical acumen, and so, also, is the
mental chemistry required in distilling the ethereal spirit of the
gloamin.
Mrs. Peyton was comfortably placed in an armchair,
with a large shawl over her head and shoulders, the others grouped
around reclining on plaids, &c., spread on the turf.
As usual in these outdoor parties, there was much
merriment; but gradually, as the light decreased, quietness
succeeded; at last, silence in all but the rippling sound of the
brook.
“Dear me! how contemplative we are becoming,”
remarked Miss Clive, after a pause of silence;
“this awful stillness seems to depress your spirits,
good people.”
“Express, not depress,” said Hope; “I am under that
sort of dreamy ecstasy that opium eaters are said to seek, when mere
thinking is a bore, let alone speaking; it may be Abbott’s Eoman
punch and my second pipe, eh, Miss Clive ? surely not silence
alone.”
“I hope only the last—‘ Usci la notte e sotlo V ali
meno ll silentio,’ says Tasso; suppose you take a nap and dream out
the poem.”
“Why, I seem to dream now,” he said; “and how is it
that times in our lives leave the odd impression of being shadows,
while others, not of a bit greater moment, are so emphatically
real?”
“Ha, Mr. Philosopher,” said the Major, “you are not
going to give the ladies a dose of metaphysics, are you? But you are
right enough; and, more curious still, there are individuals now and
then seen, whose whole lives seem not to belong to this stern world,
but who come and go like spirits. I was just now thinking of two
such visionary beings.”
“Oh, do tell us about them, ” said Mrs. Peyton.
“I was only thinking of my brother’s wife and child,
Mrs. Peyton; a sad but quite a simple story,” he replied.
“Forgive my asking you; I have unintentionally pained
you, I fear?”
“No, no, no; it was years ago; I often think of it,
and shall tell you about them, if you care to hear it.”
“Yes, very much, if you will be so kind.”
And so Major Duncan related :—
“My brother Robert had died when I was abroad; and
four years after his death, when home on leave at my mother’s place
in Lanarkshire, she told me one morning that my brother’s widow and
child were on their way from England to visit us, and I was glad, as
I had not yet seen them.
“How well I remember that time. They arrived late,
and scarcely showed; but next morning, on going down to breakfast,
there they were in the room. before me, the. quaintest little widow
and child in the world. The mother very fair, with deep blue eyes
and silky brown hair braided below her widow’s cap; but such a
slight girlish figure —a flower in mourning. And her wee mite of a
daughter just as striking a picture, robed in some Indian gauzy
thing of a buff colour, with strange devices of green and blue all
over the dress ; still the image of her mother—a miniature of a
miniature.
“Well, these fairy-like creatures got presently
domesticated with us all; but the curious devotion of that mother
and child to each other was at once their peculiar distinction. Not
that either was self-willed or uncompanionable, far from it, and
both were to my mother’s side at a whisper, and they would go
anywhere or do anything in the cheeriest, bird-like way; but it was
when alone together they seemed happiest. And what rambles they had
over the moors and through the woods, only to come back late, tired,
and sleepy like children, as children they both were; although my
poor little sister-in-law was religious, pure principled, and had
the usual lady-like accomplishments, still she was a baby.
To the time I left for India, in a week or so, it was
always the same; and you may think how grieved I was not many months
afterwards, to get a letter telling me that little Lucy had died
suddenly after their return home. I much feared her mother would not
survive it, but she did; and, as I heard, soon became composed and
often even cheerful, and spoke freely of her daughter to my mother
and those she liked. 'How I wish Lucy had seen this' or 'How I wish
she were here!’ she would often remark on seeing anything fair in
art or nature. It was, however, plain that her whole hopes and
thoughts were in the future; yet she lived for two years more.
“Although apparently in good enough health, a slight
cold had confined her to bed, and it was clearly seen that she was
dying. Yet her spirits seemed to rise as she became weaker, as she
faded away; and just before she died she lifted her head from the
pillow, and distinctly said, in her pure, sweet voice, ‘Coming,
darling, coming!' and fell asleep like a child.”
“How very sad,” Mrs. Peyton said, as the Major gave
her an arm to go into the house. “Yes, your fairy relatives do not
seem to have been made for this rough world. I shall not easily
forget this, your dreamlike story among the Highland hills." |