St. Ronan's Well by Walter Scott (top books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Walter Scott
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[Pg 275]
The new and noble guest, whose arrival so much illustrated these scenes of convalescence and of gaiety, was not at first seen so much at the ordinary, and other places of public resort, as had been the hope of the worthy company assembled. His health and his wound proved an excuse for making his visits to the society few and far between.
But when he did appear, his manners and person were infinitely captivating; and even the carnation-coloured silk handkerchief, which suspended his wounded arm, together with the paleness and languor which loss of blood had left on his handsome and open countenance, gave a grace to the whole person which many of the ladies declared irresistible. All contended for his notice, attracted at once by his affability, and piqued by the calm and easy nonchalance with which it seemed to be blended. The scheming and selfish Mowbray, the coarse-minded and brutal Sir Bingo, accustomed to consider themselves, and to be considered, as the first men of the party, sunk into comparative insignificance. But chiefly Lady Penelope threw out the captivations of her wit and her literature; while Lady Binks, trusting to her natural charms, endeavoured equally to attract his notice. The other nymphs of the Spa held a little back, upon the principle of that politeness, which, at continental hunting parties, affords the first shot at a fine piece of game, to the person of the highest rank present; but the thought throbbed in many a fair bosom, that their ladyships might miss their aim, in spite of the advantages thus allowed them, and that there might then be room for less exalted, but perhaps not less skilful, markswomen, to try their chance.
[Pg 276]
But while the Earl thus withdrew from public society, it was necessary, at least natural, that he should choose some one with whom to share the solitude of his own apartment; and Mowbray, superior in rank to the half-pay whisky-drinking Captain MacTurk; in dash to Winterblossom, who was broken down, and turned twaddler; and in tact and sense to Sir Bingo Binks, easily manĆuvred himself into his lordship's more intimate society; and internally thanking the honest footpad, whose bullet had been the indirect means of secluding his intended victim from all society but his own, he gradually began to feel the way, and prove the strength of his antagonist, at the various games of skill and hazard which he introduced, apparently with the sole purpose of relieving the tedium of a sick-chamber.
Meiklewham, who felt, or affected, the greatest possible interest in his patron's success, and who watched every opportunity to enquire how his schemes advanced, received at first such favourable accounts as made him grin from ear to ear, rub his hands, and chuckle forth such bursts of glee as only the success of triumphant roguery could have extorted from him. Mowbray looked grave, however, and checked his mirth.
âThere was something in it after all,â he said, âthat he could not perfectly understand. Etherington, an used handâdââd sharpâup to every thing, and yet he lost his money like a baby.â
âAnd what the matter how he loses it, so you win it like a man?â said his legal friend and adviser.
âWhy, hang it, I cannot tell,â replied Mowbrayââwere it not that I think he has scarce the impudenc[Pg 277]e to propose such a thing to succeed, curse me but I should think he was coming the old soldier over me, and keeping up his game.âBut noâhe can scarce have the impudence to think of that.âI find, however, that he has done Wolverineâcleaned out poor Tomâthough Tom wrote to me the precise contrary, yet the truth has since come outâWell, I shall avenge him, for I see his lordship is to be had as well as other folk.â
âWeel, Mr. Mowbray,â said the lawyer, in a tone of affected sympathy, âye ken your own ways bestâbut the heavens will bless a moderate mind. I would not like to see you ruin this poor lad, funditus, that is to say, out and out. To lose some of the ready will do him no great harm, and maybe give him a lesson he may be the better of as long as he livesâbut I wad not, as an honest man, wish you to go deeperâyou should spare the lad, Mr. Mowbray.â
âWho spared me, Meiklewham?â said Mowbray, with a look and tone of deep emphasisââNo, noâhe must go through the millâmoney and money's worth.âHis seat is called Oakendaleâthink of that, MickâOakendale! Oh, name of thrice happy augury!âSpeak not of mercy, Mickâthe squirrels of Oakendale must be dismounted, and learn to go a-foot.âWhat mercy can the wandering lord of Troy expect among the Greeks?âThe Greeks!âI am a very Sulioteâthe bravest of Greeks.
He neither must know who would serve the Vizier.â
And necessity, Mick,â he concluded, with a tone something altered, ânecessity is as unrelenting a leader as any Vizier or Pacha, whom Scanderbeg ever fought with, or Byron has [Pg 278]sung.â
Meiklewham echoed his patron's ejaculation with a sound betwixt a whine, a chuckle, and a groan; the first being designed to express his pretended pity for the destined victim; the second his sympathy with his patron's prospects of success; and the third being a whistle admonitory of the dangerous courses through which his object was to be pursued.
Suliote as he boasted himself, Mowbray had, soon after this conversation, some reason to admit that,
The light skirmishing betwixt the parties was ended, and the serious battle commenced with some caution on either side; each perhaps, desirous of being master of his opponent's system of tactics, before exposing his own. Piquet, the most beautiful game at which a man can make sacrifice of his fortune, was one with which Mowbray had, for his misfortune perhaps, been accounted, from an early age, a great proficient, and in which the Earl of Etherington, with less experience, proved no novice. They now played for such stakes as Mowbray's state of fortune rendered considerable to him, though his antagonist appeared not to regard the amount. And they played with various success; for, though Mowbray at times returned with a smile of confidence the enquiring looks of his friend Meiklewham, there were other occasions on which he seemed to evade them, as if his own had a sad confession to make in reply.
These alternations, though frequent, did no[Pg 279]t occupy, after all, many days; for Mowbray, a friend of all hours, spent much of his time in Lord Etherington's apartment, and these few days were days of battle. In the meantime, as his lordship was now sufficiently recovered to join the Party at Shaws-Castle, and Miss Mowbray's health being announced as restored, that proposal was renewed, with the addition of a dramatic entertainment, the nature of which we shall afterwards have occasion to explain. Cards were anew issued to all those who had been formerly included in the invitation, and of course to Mr. Touchwood, as formerly a resident at the Well, and now in the neighbourhood; it being previously agreed among the ladies, that a Nabob, though sometimes a dingy or damaged commodity, was not to be rashly or unnecessarily neglected. As to the parson, he had been asked, of course, as an old acquaintance of the Mowbray house, not to be left out when the friends of the family were invited on a great scale; but his habits were well known, and it was no more expected that he would leave his manse on such an occasion, than that the kirk should loosen itself from its foundations.
It was after these arrangements had been made, that the Laird of St. Ronan's suddenly entered Meiklewham's private apartment with looks of exultation. The worthy scribe turned his spectacled nose towards his patron, and holding in one hand the bunch of papers which he had been just perusing, and in the other the tape with which he was about to tie them up again, suspended that operation to await with open eyes and ears the communication of Mowbray.
âI have done him!â he said, exultingly, y[Pg 280]et in a tone of voice lowered almost to a whisper; âcapotted his lordship for this boutâdoubled my capital, Mick, and something more.âHush, don't interrupt meâwe must think of Clara nowâshe must share the sunshine, should it prove but a blink before a storm.âYou know, Mick, these two dââd women, Lady Penelope and the Binks, have settled that they will have something like a bal parĂ© on this occasion, a sort of theatrical exhibition, and that those who like it shall be dressed in character.âI know their meaningâthey think Clara has no dress fit for such foolery, and so they hope to eclipse her; Lady Pen, with her old-fashioned, ill-set diamonds, and my Lady Binks, with the new-fashioned finery which she swopt her character for. But Clara shan't borne down so, by ââ! I got that affected slut, Lady Binks's maid, to tell me what her mistress had set her mind on, and she is to wear a Grecian habit, forsooth, like one of Will Allan's Eastern subjects.âBut here's the rubâthere is only one shawl for sale in Edinburgh that is worth showing off in, and that is at the Gallery of Fashion.âNow, Mick, my friend, that shawl must be had for Clara, with the other trankums of muslin and lace, and so forth, which you will find marked in the paper there.âSend instantly and secure it, for, as Lady Binks writes by to-morrow's post, your order can go by to-night's mailâThere is a note for L.100.â
From a mechanical habit of never refusing any thing, Meiklewham readily took the note, but having looked at it through his spectacles, he continued to hold it in his hand as he remonstrated with his patron.ââThis is a' very [Pg 281]kindly meant, St. Ronan'sâvery kindly meant; and I wad be the last to say that Miss Clara does not merit respect and kindness at your hand; but I doubt mickle if she wad care a bodle for thae braw things. Ye ken yoursell, she seldom alters her fashions. Od, she thinks her riding-habit dress eneugh for ony company; and if you were ganging by good looks, so it isâif she had a thought mair colour, poor dear.â
âWell, well,â said Mowbray, impatiently, âlet me alone to reconcile a woman and a fine dress.â
âTo be sure, ye ken best,â said the writer; âbut, after a', now, wad it no be better to lay by this hundred pound in Tam Turnpenny's, in case the young lady should want it afterhend, just for a sair foot?â
âYou are a fool, Mick; what signifies healing a sore foot, when there will be a broken heart in the case?âNo, noâget the things as I desire youâwe will blaze them down for one day at least; perhaps it will be the beginning of a proper dash.â
âWeel, weel, I wish it may be so,â answered Meiklewham; âbut this young Earlâhae ye found the weak point?âCan ye get a decerniture against him, with expenses?âthat is the question.â
âI wish I could answer it,â said Mowbray, thoughtfully.ââConfound the fellowâhe is a cut above me in rank and in society tooâbelongs to the great clubs, and is in with the Superlatives and Inaccessibles, and all that sort of folk.âMy training has been a peg lowerâbut, hang it, there are better dogs bred in the kennel than in the parlour. I am up to him, I thinkâat least I will soon know, Mick, whether I am or no, and that is always one comfort. Never mindâdo you execute my commission, and take care you name no namesâI must save my little Abigail's reputation.â[Pg 282]
They parted, Meiklewham to execute his patron's commissionâhis patron to bring to the test those hopes, the uncertainty of which he could not disguise from his own sagacity.
Trusting to the continuance of his run of luck, Mowbray resolved to bring affairs to a crisis that same evening. Every thing seemed in the outset to favour his purpose. They had dined together in Lord Etherington's apartmentsâhis state of health interfered with the circulation of the bottle, and a drizzly autumnal evening rendered walking disagreeable, even had they gone no farther than the private stable where Lord Etherington's horses were kept, under
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