The Marriage Party were
to meet in a little lonesome dell, well known to all the dwellers round
St Mary’s Loch. A range of bright green hills goes southward from its
shores, arid between them and the high heathery mountains lies a
shapeless scene of cliffs, moss, and pasture, partaking both of the
beauty and the grandeur between which it so wildly lies. All these
cliffs are covered with native birch-trees, except a few of the loftiest
that shoot up their bare points in many fantastic forms; that moss, full
of what the shepherds call “hags," or hollows worn by the weather, or
dug out for fuel, waves, when the wind goes by, its high rich-blossomed
and fragrant heath ; and that pasturage, here and there in circular
spots of emerald verdure, affords the sweetest sustenance to the sheep
to be found among all that mountainous region. It was in one of these
circles of beautiful herbage, called by the Shepherds “The Queen-Fairy’s
Parlour,” that Mark Kerr and Christian Lindsay, who had been long
betrothed, were now to be made man and wife. It was nearly surrounded by
large masses, or ledges of loose rocks, piled to a considerable height
upon each other by some strong convulsion, and all adorned with the
budding and sweet breathing birches, while the circle was completed by
one overshadowing cuff that sheltered it from the north blast, and on
whose airy summit the young hawks were shrilly and wildly crying in
their nest.
The bridegroom was sitting there with his bride, and her bridesmaid; and
by and by, one friend after another appeared below the natural arch
that, all dropping with wild flowers, formed the only entrance into this
lonely Tabernacle. At last they all stood up in a circle-
together—shepherds decently apparelled,— shepherdesses all dressed in
raiment bleached whiter than the snow in the waters of the
mountain-spring, and the grey-headed Minister of God, who, driven from
his kirk by blood-thirsty persecution, prayed and preached in the
wilderness, baptized infants with the water of the running brook, and
joined in wedlock the hands of those whose hearts longed to be united in
those dark and deadly times. Few words were uttered by the gracious old
man; but these few were solemn and full of cheer, impressed upon the
hearts of the wedded pair, by the tremulous tones of a voice that was
not long for this world, by the sanctity of his long white locks unmoved
by a breath of air, and by the fatherly and apostolical motion of his
uplifted hand, that seemed to conduct down upon them who stood in awe
before him the blessing of that God who delighteth in a humble heart.
The short ceremony, was now closed,—and Mark Kerr and Christian Lindsay:
were united, till death should sunder, them on earth to reunite them in
heaven.
Greetings were, interchanged;—and I smiles went round, with rosy
blushes, and; murmuring arid whispering voices of irreproachable mirth..
What though the days were dark, and the oppressor strong?-Here was a
place unknown to his feet; and now was a time to let the clear sparkling
fountain of nature’s joy. well up in,all hearts. Sadness arid sorrow
overshadowed the land; but human life was riot yet wholly a waste; and
the sweet sunshine that now fell down through' a screen of fleecy clouds
upon the Queen-Fairy’s. Parlour, was it not to enliven and rejoice all
their souls? Was it not to make the. fair bride fairer, in her.
husband’s, eyes—her smile brighter, and the. ringlets more yellow as
they hung over a forehead that wore its silken snood no longer, but in
its changed covering gracefully showed that Marion Lindsay was now a
wife?. The tabor and the pipe were heard; and footsteps, that left no
print; on .the hard smooth verdant floor, kept time to the merry,
measures.' Perhaps the old man would have frowned on such pastime—
perhaps Covenanters ought not to have indulged in promiscuous
dancing—perhaps- it may be said to be false that they did so;—but the
Minister had gone now to his own hiding-place. These Covenanters .were
young, and this occasion was a happy one; and dance they did, most
assuredly, wicked as it may Have been, and improper as it may be to
record such wickedness. The young hawks were not a little alarmed; and
an old ram; who happened to put in his insisted horns below the arch got
a fright:, that made' him bound backwards out of the enchanted circle.
The hill blackbird wondered; but he himself joined the dance upon the
birchen spray—and although no great songster, he did-his best, and
chirped cheerfully his mellow notes in the din of the general happiness.
"But' as the evening hours were advancing, the Party kept dropping away
One by one, or in pairs, just as it had gathered; and the Fairy Queen
had her Parlour all to herself undisturbed, if she chose at night to
hold a court beneath the lamp of the Moon.
Where had the young married pair their bridal chamber? Mark Kerr had a
shealing on the mountain-side; from which was just visible one bay of St
Mary’s Loch. The walls were built of turf, and the roof of heather—and
surrounded as it was on all sides by large stones, wooded cliffs, knowes,
arid uneven eminences, it was' almost as likely to escape notice as the
nest of a bird, or tlie lair of a roe. Thither he took his bride. Her
little bridesmaid had a small covert of her own, distant only a few
roods, and the friends could see each other standing at the door of each
shealing, through the intercepting foliage of the waving birches that
hung down their thin and ineffectual veil till it swept the blooming
heather.
On a small seat, framed of the roots of decayed trees, Mark Kerr was now
sitting with his own sweet Christian; when he gently raised her head
from his bosom, and told her to go into the shealing, for he saw people
on the hillside,. whose appearance, even at that distance, he did not
like. Before a quarter of an hour had elapsed a party of soldiers were
at hand. Mark knew that he had been observed for some time and to
attempt escape with his bride was impossible. So he rose up at their
approach, and met them with a steady countenance, although there were
both fear and sorrow in his heart. Marion had obeyed him, and the
shealing was silent.
“Is your name Mark Kerr?” “Yes—that is my name.” “Were you at
Yarrow-Ford when a prisoner was rescued and a soldier murdered?” “ I
was—but did all I could to save that soldier’s life.” “you wolf, you
mangled his throat with your own bloody fangs— but we have traced you to
your den, and the ghost of Hugh Gemmel, who was as pleasant either with
lad or lass as any boy that ever emptied a cup or had a fall upon
heather, w ill shake hands with you by moonlight by and by. You may meet
either in the church-yard, down bj- the Loch, where your canting
Covenanters will bury you, or down at Yarrow-Kirk, where Hugh was put to
bed with the worms, in his red coat, like a soldier as he was. By the
Holy God of Israel—(is not that a lump of your own slang?)—this bayonet
shall drink a stoup of your heart’s blood.”
Mark Kerr knew, in a moment, that there was no hope of life. He had
confessed being present on the occasion charged against him; and a
sentence of death, which an angel’s intercession could not-have got
reversed, was glaring in the eyes of all the soldiers. Each man seemed
to kindle into fiercer fury as he caught the fiery eyes around him.
Their oaths and execrations exasperated them all into frenzy; and a wild
and perturbed sense of justice demanding expiation of their murdered
comrade’s blood, made them deaf and blind to every thing but the
suggestions of their own irritated and inflamed hearts. A horrid
sympathy possessed them all; and they were as implacable as a herd of
wolves famished and in sight of their prey. There was no mercy in any
one face there, else Mark Kept would have appealed to that man, for his
life was now sweet and precious, and it was a hard thing to die. “ I
know his face. He is the very man that stabbed Hugh when he was down
with his own bayonet. How do you like that, sirrah?”—and one of the
soldiers thrust his long bayonet through Mark’s shoulder, till the point
was seen at his back, and then drew it out smeared with blood, and
returned it to its sheath, with a grin of half-glutted vengeance. The
wounded man staggered at the blow and sat down, nearly fainting, upon
the seat where a few minutes before his bride had leant her head upon
his bosom. But he uttered not a word, and kept his eyes fixed, not
reproachfully, but somewhat sadly .and with a faint expression, of hope,
on die men who seemed determined to be his executioners. The pain, the
sickness, the sudden blasting of all his hopes, almost unmanned his
resolute heart; and Mark Kerr would have now. done much to save his
life,—and something, perhaps, even at the expence .of Conscious and
Faith. But that weak mood was of short duration,—and the good and brave
man braced up his heart to receive the doom of death.
Meanwhile one of the soldiers had entered the shealing, and brought out
Marion in his grasp. A loud shout of laughter and scornful exultation
followed, "Ho—ho:—my Heath-Cock, you have got your bonny hen!;—Catch a
Covenanter, without his comfort.—Is your name Grace, my bonny bairn?”
Marion looked around, and saw Mark sitting pale and speechless, with his
breast covered with clotted blood. She made no outcry, for grief, and
pity, and consternation, struck her dumb. She could hot move, for the
soldier held her in his arms. .But she looked in the ruffian’s face with
such an imploring countenance, that unconsciously he let her go, and
then she went up tottering to poor Mark, and with her white bridal gown
wiped off the gore from his breast, and kissed his clayey and quivering
lips. She then ran to the spring that lay sparkling among its cresses,
within a few yards of the shealing, and brought a handful of cold water,
which she sprinkled tenderly over his facie. The human soul is a wild
and terrible thing when inflamed with cruelty and revenge. The Soldiers
saw little more in all this than a subject for loathsome scurrility and
ferocious merriment; and as Christian looked wildly round upon them, one
asked, “Are you his sister— his cousin—or his drab?” “Oh!
soldiers—soldiers— I am his wife—this blessed day was I married to him.
If any of you are married men, think of your wives now at home—remember
the day they were brides, and do not murder us quite—if, indeed, my Mark
is not already murdered.” “Come, come, Mrs Sweetlips, no more
whining—you shall not want a husband. I will marry you myself and so I
daresay will the serjeant there, and also the corporal. Now you have had
indulgence enough—so stand back a bit; and do you, good Master Paleface,
come forward, "and down upon your marrow bones.” Mark, with great
difficulty, rose up, and knelt down as he was ordered.
He had no words to say to his bride; rior almost did he look at her—so
full was his soul of her image, and of holy grief for the desolation in
which she would be left by his death. The dewy breath of her gentle and
pure kisses was yet in his heart; and the happy sighs of maidenly
tendernesh were now to be changed into groans of incurable despair.
Therefore it was, that he said nothing as he knelt down, but his pallid
lips moved in prayer, and she heard her name indistinctly uttered
between those of God and Christ. Christian Lindsay had been betrothed to
him for several years, and .nothing but the fear of some terrible evil
like this had kept them so long separate. Dreadful, therefore, as this
hour was, their souls were not wholly unprepared for it, although there
is always a miserable difference between reality and mere imagination.
She now recalled to her mind, in one comprehensive thought, their years
of innocent arid youthful affection; and then the holy words so lately
uttered by the Old Man in that retired place, alas! called by too vain a
name, “The Queen-Fairy’s Parlour!” The tears began now to flow—-they
both wept—for this night was Mark Kerr’s head to lie, notion her bosom,
but in the grave, or unburied on the ground. In that agony, what
signified to her all the insulting, hideous, and inhuman language of
these licentious murderers? They fell off her soul, without a stain,
like polluted water off the plumage of some fair seabird. And as she
looked on her husband upon his knees, a waiting his doom, him the
temperate, the merciful, the gentle, and the just, and then upon those
wrathful, raging, fiery-eyed, and bloody-minded men, are they, thought
her fainting heart, of the same kind? are they framed by one God? and
hath Christ alike died for them all?
She lifted up her eyes, full of prayers, for one moment to heaven, and
then, with a cold shudder of desertion; turned them upon her husband
kneeling with a white fixed countenance, and half dead already with the
loss of blood. A dreadful silence had succeeded to that tumult; and she
dimly saw a number of men drawn up together without moving, and .their
determined eyes held fast upon their victim. “Think, my lads, that it is
Hugh Gemmel’s Ghost that commands you now,” said a deep hoarse voice—"no
mercy did the holy men of the mountains show to him when they smashed
his skull with large stones from the channel of the Yarrow". Now for
revenge.” The; soldiers presented their muskets—the word was given—and
they fired. At that moment Christian Lindsay had rushed forward and
flung herself down on her knees beside her husband, and they both fell,
and stretched themselves out mortally wounded upon the grass.
During all this scene, Marion Scott, the bridesmaid, a girl of fifteen,
had been lying affrighted among the brackens within a hundred yards of
the murder. The agony of grief now got the better of the agony of fear,
and, leaping up from her concealment, she rushed into the midst of the
soldiers, and, kneeling down beside her dear Christian Lindsay, lifted
up her head, and shaded the hair from her forehead. "Oh! Christian, your
eyes are opening—do you hear me— do you hear mo speaking?” “Yes, I hear
a voice—is it yours Mark?—speak again.” “Oh! Christian, it is only my
voice—poor Marion’s.” “Is Mark dead —quiter dead?” And there was no
reply; but Christian can't have heard the deep gasping sobs that were
rending the child's heart. Her eyes, too, opened more widely, and misty
- as they were, they saw, indeed, close by her, the huddled up, mangled,
and bloody body of her husband.
The soldiers stood, like so many beasts of prey, who had gorged their
fill of blood; their rage was abated -—and they offered no violence to
the affectionate child, as she continued to sit before them, with the
head of Christian Lindsay hr her lap, watering it with tears, and
moaning so as to touch, at last, some even of their hardened hearts.
When blood is shed it soon begins to appear a fearful sight to the
shedders—and the hand soon begins to tremble that has let out human
life. Cruelty cannot sustain itself in presence of that rueful colour,
and remorse sees it reddening into a more ghastly hue. Some of the
soldiers turned away in silence, or with a half-suppressed oath—others
strayed off among the trees, and sat down together; and none would now
have touched the head of pretty little Marion. The man whom they had
shot. deserved death—so they said to one another—and he had got it; but
the woman’s death was accidental, and they were not to blame because she
had run upon their fire. So, before the smell and the smoke of the
gunpowder had been carried away by the passing breeze from that place of
murder,. all were silent, and could hardly bear to look one another in
the face. Their
work had been lamentable indeed. For now they began to see that >these
murdered people were truly bridegroom and bride. She was lying there
dressed with her modest white bridal garments .and white ribbands, now
streaked with many streams of blood from mortal wounds. So, too, was she
who was >supporting her head. It was plain that a bridal party had been
this very day—and that their hands had prepared for a happy and
affectionate newly wedded pair that bloody bed, and a sleep from which
there was to be no awaking at the voice of morn. They stood looking
appalled on the bodies, while, on the wild flowers around them, which
the stain of blood had not yet reached, loudly and cheerfully were
murrairring the mountain bees.
Christian Lindsay was not quite dead, and she at last lifted herself up
a little way out of Marion s lap, and then falling down with her arms
over her husband's neck, uttered a few indistinct words of prayer, and
expired.
Marion Scott had never seen death before, and it was now presented to
her in its most ghastly and fearful shape. Every horror she had ever
heard talked of in the hiding places of her father and relations was now
realized before her eyes, and for anything she knew, it was flow her
turn to die. Had she dreamed in her sleep of such a trial, her soul
would have died within her,—and she would have convulsively shrieked
aloud on her bed. But the pale, placid, happy-looking face of’dea'd
Christian Lindsay, whom she had loved as an elder sister, and who had
always been so good to her from the time she was a little child,
inspired her now with an utter fearlessness—and she could have knelt
down to be shot by the soldiers without one quickened pulsation at her
heart. But now the soldiers were willing to leave the bloody green,' and
their leader told Marion she might go her ways and bring her friends to
take care of the dead bodies. No one, he said, would hurt her. And soon
after, the party disappeared.
Marion remained for a while beside the dead. Their wounds bled not now.
But she brought water from the little spring and washed them all
decently, and left not a single stain upon either of their faces. She
disturbed, as little as possible, the position in which they lay; nor
removed Christian’s arms from her husband’s neck. She lifted one of the
arms up for a moment to wipe away a spot of blood, but it fell down
again of itself, and moved no more.
During all this time the setting sunlight was giving a deeper tinge to
the purple heather, and as Marion lifted up her eyes to heaven she saw
in the golden west the last relics of the day. All the wild was silent
—not a sound was there but that of the night-hawk. And the darkening
stillness touched Marion’s’ young soul with a trembling superstition, as
she looked at the dead bodies, then up to the uncertain sky and over the
glimmering shades of the solitary glen. The poor girl was half .afraid
of the deepening hush, and the gathering darkness. Yet the spirits of
those she had so tenderly loved would not harm her; they had gone to
Heaven. Could she find heart to leave them thus lying
together?—Yes—there was nothing, she thought, to molest the dead. No
raven inhabited this glen; nothing but the dews would touch them, till
she went to the nearest hiding-place, and told her father or some other
friends of the murder.
Before the Moon had risen, the same party that on the morning had been
present at their marriage, had assembled on the hillside before the
shealing where Mark Kerr and Christian Lindsay were now lifted up
together on a heather-couch, and lying cold and still as in the grave.
The few maids and matrons who had been in that happy scene in the
Queen-Fairy’s Parlour had not yet laid aside their white dresses, and
the little starry ribband-knots, or bride’s favours, were yet upon their
breasts. The old Minister had come from his cave, and not for many years
had he wept till now; but this a\ as a case even for the tears of an old
religious man of fourscore.
To watch by the dead all night, and to wait for some days till they
could be coffined for burial, was not to be thought of in such times of
peril. That would have been to sacrifice the living foolishly for the
dead. The soldiers had gone. But they might—no doubt would return and
scatter the funeral. Therefore it was no sooner proposed than agreed to
the afflicted souls of them all, that the bridegroom and' his bride
should be buried even that very night in the abilities in which they had
that morning been wedded. A bier was soon formed of the birch tree
boughs; and witl their faces meekly looking' up to Heaven, now filled
with moonlight, they were borne along in sobbing silence, up the hills
and down along the glens, till the party stood together in the lone
burial-ground at the head of St Mary’s Loch. A grave was dug for them
there, but that .was not their own burial-place. For Mark Kerr’s father
and mother lay in the church-yard of Melrose, and the parents of
Christian Lindsay slept in that of Bothwell, near the flow of the
beautiful Clyde. The grave was half filled with Heather, and gently w
eve! they let down together, even as they were found lying on the green
before their shearing, into that mournful bed. The Old. Man afterwards
said a prayer—hot over, them—but with the living. ! Then sitting down on
the graves, and on the grave-stones, they spoke of the virtues of the
dead. They had, it is true, been cut off in their youthful prime; but
many: happy, days and years had been theirs—their affection for each
other had been a pleasant solace to them in toil, poverty, and
persecution; This would have been a perplexing day to those, who had not
faith-in God’s perfect holiness and mercy. - But all who mourned now
together were wholly resigned to his dispensations, and soon all eyes
were dried. In solemn silence they all quitted the church-yard, and then
the funeral party, which a few hours ago had been a marriage one,
dissolved among the hills and glens and rocks, and left Mark Kerr and
Christian Lindsay to everlasting rest. |