Mary Johnston - Foes
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Mary Johnston >> Foes
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"Wha is she?"
"Your granddaughter Elspeth."
Silence, while the shadows of the trees in the vale below grew longer
and longer. Then said White Farm:
"She isna what they call your equal in station. And she has nae tocher
or as good as nane."
"For the last I have enough for us both. For the first the springs of
Barrow and Jardine, back in Time's mountains, are much the same.
Scotland's not the country to bother overmuch if the one stream goes,
in a certain place, through a good farm, and the other by a not
over-rich laird's house."
"Are ye Whig and Kirk like your father?"
"I am Whig--until something more to the dawn than that comes up. For
the Kirk ... I will tell truth and say that I have my inner
differences. But they do not lean toward Pope or prelate.... I am
Christian, where Christ is taken very universally--the higher Self,
the mounting Wisdom of us all.... Some high things you and I may view
differently, but I believe that there are high things."
"And seek them?"
"And seek them."
"You always had the air to me," vouchsafed White Farm, "of one wha
hunted gowd elsewhaur than in the earthly mine." He looked at the red
west, and drew his plaid about him, and took firmer clutch upon his
staff. "But the lassie does not love you?"
"My trust is that she may come to do so."
The elder got to his feet. Alexander rose also.
"It's coming night! Ye will be gaeing on over the muir to the House?"
"Yes. Then, sir, I may come to White Farm, or meet her when I may, and
have my chance?"
"Aye. If so be I hear nae great thing against ye. If so be ye're
reasonable. If so be that in no way do ye try to hurt the lassie."
"I'll be reasonable," said the laird of Glenfernie. "And I'd not hurt
Elspeth if I could!" His face shone, his voice was a deep and happy
music. He was so bound, so at the feet of Elspeth, that he could not
but believe in joy and fortune. The sun had dipped; the land lay
dusk, but the sky was a rose. There was a skimming of swallows
overhead, a singing of the wind in the ling. He walked with White Farm
to the foot of the moor, then said good night and turned toward his
own house.
CHAPTER XII
Two days later Alexander rode to Black Hill. There had been in the
night a storm with thunder and lightning, wind and rain. Huge, ragged
banks of clouds yet hung sullen in the air, though with lakes of blue
between and shafts of sun. The road was wet and shone. Now Black Alan
must pick his way, and now there held long stretches of easy going.
The old laird's quarrel with Mr. Archibald Touris was not the young
laird's. The old laird's liking for Mrs. Alison was strongly the young
laird's. Glenfernie, in the months since his father's death, had
ridden often enough to Black Hill. Now as he journeyed, together with
the summer and melody of his thoughts Elspeth-toward, he was holding
with himself a cogitation upon the subject of Ian and Ian's last
letter. He rode easily a powerful steed, needing to be strong for so
strongly built a horseman. His riding-dress was blue; he wore his own
hair, unpowdered and gathered in a ribbon beneath a three-cornered
hat. There was perplexity and trouble, too, in the Ian complex, but
for all that he rode with the color and sparkle of happiness in his
face. In his gray eyes light played to great depths.
Black Hill appeared before him, the dark pine and crag of the hill
itself, and below that the house with its far-stretching, well-planted
policy. He passed the gates, rode under the green elm boughs of the
avenue, and was presently before the porch of the house. A man
presented himself to take Black Alan.
"Aye, sir, there's company. Mr. Touris and Mrs. Alison are with them
in the gardens."
Glenfernie went there, passing by a terrace walk around the house.
Going under the windows of the room that was yet Ian's when he came
home. Ian still in his mind, he recovered strongly the look of that
room the day Ian had taken him there, in boyhood, when they first met.
Out of that vividness started a nucleus more vivid yet--the picture in
the book-closet of the city of refuge, and the silver goblet drawn
from the hidden shelf of the aumry. The recaptured moment lost shape
and color, returned to the infinite past. He turned the corner of the
house and came into the gardens that Mr. Touris had had laid out after
the French style.
Here by the fountain he discovered the retired merchant, and with him
a guest, an old trade connection, now a power in the East India
Company. The laird of Black Hill, a little more withered, a little
more stooped than of old, but still fluent, caustic, and with now and
then to the surface a vague, cold froth of insincerity, made up much
to this magnate of commerce. He stood on his own heath, or by his own
fountain, but his neck had in it a deferential crook. Lacs--rupees--
factories--rajahs--ships--cottons--the words fell like the tinkle of a
golden fountain. Listening to these two stood, with his hands behind
his back, Mr. Wotherspoon, Black Hill's lawyer and man of business
down from Edinburgh. At a little distance Mrs. Alison showed her roses
to the wife of the East India man and to a kinsman, Mr. Munro Touris,
from Inverness way.
Mr. Touris addressed himself with his careful smile to Alexander.
"Good day, Glenfernie! This, Mr. Goodworth, is a good neighbor of
mine, Mr. Jardine of Glenfernie. Alexander, Mr. Goodworth is art and
part of the East India. You have met Mr. Wotherspoon before, I think?
There are Alison and Mrs. Goodworth and Munro Touris by the roses."
Glenfernie went over to the roses. Mrs. Alison, smiling upon him,
presented him to Mrs. Goodworth, a dark, bright, black-eyed, talkative
lady. He and Munro Touris nodded to each other. The laird of Black
Hill, the India merchant, and the lawyer now joined them, and all
strolled together along the very wide and straight graveled path. The
talk was chiefly upheld by Black Hill and the great trader, with the
lawyer putting in now and again a shrewd word, and the trader's wife
making aside to Mrs. Alison an embroidery of comment. There had now
been left trade in excelsis and host and guests were upon the state of
the country, an unpopular war, and fall of ministers. Came in phrases
compounded to meet Jacobite complications and dangers. The
Pretender--the Pretender and his son--French aid--French army that
might be sent to Scotland--position of defense--rumors everywhere you
go--disaffected and Stewart-mad--. Munro Touris had a biting word to
say upon the Highland chiefs. The lawyer talked of certain Lowland
lords and gentlemen. Mr. Touris vented a bitter gibe. He had a black
look in his small, sunken eyes. Alexander, reading him, knew that he
thought of Ian. In a moment the whole conversation had dragged that
way. Mrs. Goodworth spoke with vivacity.
"Lord, sir! I hope that your nephew, now that he wears the King's
coat, has left off talking as he did when he was a boy! He showed his
Highland strain with a warrant! You would have thought that he had
been _out_ himself thirty years ago!"
Her husband checked her. "You have not seen him since he was sixteen.
Boys like that have wild notions of romance and devotion. They change
when they're older."
The lawyer took the word. "Captain Rullock doubtless buried all that
years ago. His wearing the King's coat hauds for proof."
Munro Touris had been college-mate in Edinburgh. "He watered all that
gunpowder in him years ago, did he not, Glenfernie?"
"'To water gunpowder--to shut off danger.' That's a good figure of
yours, Munro!" said Alexander. Munro, who had been thought dull in the
old days, flushed with pleasure.
They had come to a kind of summer-house overrun with roses. Mr.
Archibald Touris stopped short and, with his back to this structure,
faced the company with him, brought thus to a halt. He looked at them
with a carefully composed countenance.
"I am sure, Munro, that Ian Rullock 'watered the gunpowder,' as you
cleverly say. Boys, ma'am"--to Mrs. Goodworth--"are, as your husband
remarks, romantic simpletons. No one takes them and their views of
life seriously. Certainly not their political views! When they come
men they laugh themselves. They are not boys then; they are men. Which
is, as it were, the preface to what I might as well tell you. My
nephew has resigned his captaincy and quitted the army. Apparently he
has come to feel that soldiering is not, after all, the life he
prefers. It may be that he will take to the law, or he may wander and
then laird it when I am gone. Or if he is very wise--I meant to speak
to you of this in private, Goodworth--he might be furnished with
shares and ventures in the East India. He has great abilities."
"Well, India's the field!" said the London merchant, placidly. "If a
man has the mind and the will he may make and keep and flourish and
taste power--"
"Left the King's forces!" cried Munro Touris. "Why--! And will he be
coming to Black Hill, sir?"
"Yes. Next week. We have," said Mr. Touris, and though he tried he
could not keep the saturnine out of his voice--"we have some things to
talk over."
As he spoke he moved from before the summer-house into a cross-path,
and the others followed him and his Company magnate. The Edinburgh
lawyer and Glenfernie found themselves together. The former lagged a
step and held the younger man back with him; he dropped his voice
"I've not been three hours in the house. I've had no talk with Mr.
Touris. What's all this about? I know that you and his nephew are as
close as brothers--not that brothers are always close!"
"He writes only that he is tired of martial life. He has the soldier
in him, but he has much besides. That 'much besides' often steps in to
change a man's profession."
"Well, I hope you'll persuade him to see the old gunpowder very damp!
I remember that, as a very young man, he talked imprudently. But he
has been," said the lawyer, "far and wide since those days."
"Yes, far and wide."
Mr. Wotherspoon with a long forefinger turned a crimson rose seen in
profile full toward him. "I met him--once--when I was in London a year
ago. I had not seen him for years." He let the rose swing back. "He
has a magnificence! Do you know I study a good deal? They say that so
do you. I have an inclination toward fifteenth-century Italian. I
should place him there." He spoke absently, still staring at the rose.
"A dash--not an ill dash, of course--of what you might call the Borgia
... good and evil tied into a sultry, thunderous splendor."
Glenfernie bent a keen look upon him out of gray eyes. "An enemy might
describe him so, perhaps. I can see that such a one might do so."
"Ah, you're his friend!"
"Yes."
"Well," said Mr. Wotherspoon, straightening himself from the
contemplation of the roses, "there's no greater thing than to have a
steadfast friend!"
It seemed that an expedition had been planned, for a servant now
appeared to say that coach and horses were at the door. Mr. Touris
explained:
"I've engaged to show Mr. and Mrs. Goodworth our considerable town.
Mr. Wotherspoon, too, has a moment's business there. Alison will not
come, but Munro Touris rides along. Will you come, too, Glenfernie?
We'll have a bit of dinner at the 'Glorious Occasion.'"
"No, thank you. I have to get home presently. But I'll stay a little
and talk to Mrs. Alison, if I may."
"Ah, you may!" said Mrs. Alison.
From the porch they watched the coach and four away, with Munro Touris
following on a strong and ugly bay mare. The elm boughs of the avenue
hid the whole. The cloud continents and islands were dissolving into
the air ocean, the sun lay in strong beams, the water drops were
drying from leaf and blade. Mrs. Alison and Alexander moved through
the great hall and down a corridor to a little parlor that was hers
alone. They entered it. It gave, through an open door and two windows
set wide, upon a small, choice garden and one wide-spreading, noble,
ancient tree. Glenfernie entered as one who knew the place, but upon
whom, at every coming, it struck with freshness and liking. The room
itself was most simple.
"I like," said Alexander, "our spare, clean, precise Scotch parlors.
But this is to me like a fine, small prioress's room in a convent of
learned saints!"
His old friend laughed. "Very little learned, very little saintly, not
at all prior! Let us sit in the doorway, smell the lavender, and hear
the linnets in the tree."
She took the chair he pushed forward. He sat upon the door-step at her
feet.
"Concerning Ian," she said. "What do you make out of it all?"
"I make out that I hope he'll not involve himself in some French and
Tory mad attempt!"
"What do his letters say?"
"They speak by indirection. Moreover, they're at present few and
short.... We shall see when he comes!"
"Do you think that he will tell you all?"
Alexander's gray eyes glanced at her as earlier they had glanced at
Mr. Wotherspoon. "I do not think that we keep much from each other!...
No, of course you are right! If there is anything that in honor he
cannot tell, or that I--with my pledges, such as they are, in another
urn--may not hear, we shall find silences. I pin my trust to there
being nothing, after all!"
"The old wreath withered, and a new one better woven and more
evergreen--"
"I do not know.... I said just now that Ian and I kept little from
each other. In an exceeding great measure that is true. But there are
huge lands in every nature where even the oldest, closest, sworn
friend does not walk. It must be so. Friendship is not falsified nor
betrayed by its being so."
"Not at all!" said Mrs. Alison. "True friend or lover loves that sense
of the unplumbed, of the infinite, in the cared-for one. To do else
would be to deny the unplumbed, the infinite, in himself, and so the
matching, the equaling, the _oneing_ of love!" She leaned forward in
her chair; she regarded the small, fragrant garden where every sweet
and olden flower seemed to bloom. "Now let us leave Ian, and old,
stanch, trusted, and trusting friendship. It is part of oneness--it
will be cared for!" She turned her bright, calm gaze upon him. "What
other realm have you come into, Alexander? It was plain the last time
that you were here, but I did not speak of it--it is plain to-day!"
She laughed. She had a silver, sweet, and merry laugh. "My dear, there
is a bloom and joy, a _vivification_ about you that may be felt ten
feet away!" She looked at him with affection and now seriously. "I
know, I think, the look of one who comes into spiritual treasures.
This is that and not that. It is the wilderness of lovely
flowers--hardly quite the music of the spheres! It is not the mountain
height, but the waving, leafy, lower slopes--and yet we pass on to the
height by those slopes! Are you in love, Alexander?"
"You guess so much!" he said. "You have guessed that, too. I do not
care! I am glad that the sun shines through me."
"You must be happy in your love! Who is she?"
"Elspeth Barrow, the granddaughter of Jarvis Barrow of White Farm....
You say that I must be happy in my love. The Lord of Heaven knows that
I am! and yet she is not yet sure that she loves me in her turn. One
might say that I had great uncertainty of bliss. But I love so
strongly that I have no strength of disbelief in me!"
"Elspeth Barrow!"
"My old friend--the unworldliest, the better-worldliest soul I
know--do not you join in that hue and cry about world's gear and
position! To be Barrow is as good as to be Jardine. Elspeth is
Elspeth."
"Oh, I know why I made exclamation! Just the old, dull earthy
surprise! Wait for me a moment, Alexander." She put her hands before
her eyes, then, dropping them, sat with her gaze upon the great tree
shot through with light from the clearing sky. "I see her now. At
first I could not disentangle her and Gilian, for they were always
together. I have not seen them often--just three or four times to
remember, perhaps. But in April I chanced for some reason to go to
White Farm.... I see her now! Yes, she has beauty, though it would not
strike many with the edge of the sword.... Yes, I see--about the mouth
and the eyes and the set of the head. It's subtle--it's like some
pictures I remember in Italy. And intelligence is there. Enchantment
... the more real, perhaps, for not being the most obvious.... So you
are enchained, witched, held by the great sorceress!... Elspeth is
only one of her little names--her great name is just love--love
between man and woman.... Oh yes, the whole of the sweetness is
distilled into one honey-drop--the whole giant thing is shortened into
one image--the whole heaven and earth slip silkenly into one banner,
and you would die for it! You see, my dear," said Mrs. Alison, who had
never married, "I loved one who died. I know."
Glenfernie took her hand and kissed it. "Nothing is loss to
you--nothing! For me, I am more darkly made. So I hope to God I'll
not lose Elspeth!"
Her tears, that were hardly of grief, dropped upon his bent head. "Eh,
my laddie! the old love is there in the midst of the wide love. But
the larger controls.... Well, enough of that! And do you mean that you
have asked Elspeth to marry you--and that she does not know her own
heart?"
They talked, sitting before the fragrant garden, in the little room
that was tranquil, blissful, and recluse. At last he rose.
"I must go."
They went out through the garden to the wicket that parted her demesne
from the formal, wide pleasure-sweeps. He stopped for a moment under
the great tree.
"In a fortnight or so I must go to Edinburgh to see Renwick about that
land. And it is in my mind to travel from there to London for a few
weeks. There are two or three persons whom I know who could put a
stout shoulder to the wheel of Jamie's prospects. Word of mouth is
better with them than would be letters. Jamie is at Windsor. I could
take him with me here or there--give him, doubtless, a little help."
"You are a world-man," said his friend, "which is quite different from
a worldly man! Come or go as you will, still all is your garden that
you cultivate.... Now you are thinking again of Elspeth!"
"Perhaps if for a month or two I plague her not, then when I come
again she may have a greater knowledge of herself. Perhaps it is more
generous to be absent for a time--"
"I see that you will not doubt--that you cannot doubt--that in the
end she loves you!"
"Is it arrogance, self-love, and ignorance if I think that? Or is it
knowledge? I think it, and I cannot and will not else!"
They came to the wicket, and stood there a moment ere going on by the
terrace to the front of the house. The day was now clear and vivid,
soft and bright. The birds sang in a long ecstasy, the flowers bloomed
as though all life must be put into June, the droning bees went about
with the steadiest preoccupation. Alexander looked about him.
"The earth is drunk with sweetness, and I see now how great joy is sib
to great pain!" He shook himself. "Come back to earth and daylight,
Alexander Jardine!" He put a hand, large, strong, and shapely, over
Mrs. Alison's slender ivory one. "She, too, has long fingers, though
her hand is brown. But it is an artist hand--a picture hand--a
thoughtful hand."
Mrs. Alison laughed, but her eyes were tender over him. "Oh, man! what
a great forest--what an ever-rising song--is this same thing you're
feeling! And so old--and so fire-new!" They walked along the terrace
to the porch. "They're bringing you Black Alan to ride away upon. But
you'll come again as soon as Ian's here?"
"Yes, of course. You may be assured that if he is free of that Stewart
coil--or if he is in it only so deep that he may yet free himself--I
shall say all that I can to keep him free or to urge him forth. Not
for much would I see Ian take ship in that attempt!"
"No!... I have been reading the Book of Daniel. Do you know what Ian
is like to me? He is like some great lord--a prince or governor--in
the court maybe of Belshazzar, or Darius the Mede, or Cyrus the
Persian--in that hot and stately land of golden images and old rivers
and the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and
dulcimer and all kinds of music. He must serve his tyrant--and yet
Daniel, kneeling in his house, in his chamber, with the windows open
toward Jerusalem, might hear a cry to hold his name in his prayers....
What strange thoughts we have of ourselves, and of those nearest and
dearest!"
"Mr. Wotherspoon says that he is fifteenth-century Italian. You have
both done a proper bit of characterization! But I," said Alexander, "I
know another great territory of Ian."
"I know that, Glenfernie! And so do I know other good realms of Ian.
Yet that was what I thought when I read Daniel. And I had the thought,
too, that those old people were capable of great friendships."
Black Alan was waiting. Glenfernie mounted, said good-by again; the
green boughs of the elm-trees took him and his steed.
CHAPTER XIII
Ian forestalled Alexander, riding to Glenfernie House the morning
after his arrival at Black Hill. "Let us go," he said, "where we can
talk at ease! The old, alchemical room?"
They crossed the grass-grown court to the keep, entered and went up
the broken stair to the stone-walled chamber that took up the second
floor, that looked out of loophole windows north, south, east, and
west. The day was high summer, bright and hot. Strong light and less
strong light came in beams from the four quarters and made in the
large place a conflict of light and shadow. The fireplace was great
enough for Gog and Magog to have warmed themselves thereby. Around, in
an orderly litter, yet stood on table or bench or shelf many of the
matters that Alexander had gathered there in his boyhood. In one
corner was the furnace that when he was sixteen his father had let him
build. More recent was the oaken table in the middle of the room, two
deep chairs, and shelves with many books. After the warmth of the sun
the place presented a grave, cool, brown harbor.
The two, entering, had each an arm over the other's shoulder. Where
they were known their friendship was famed. Youth and manhood, they
had been together when it was possible. When it was not so the
thought of each outtraveled separation. Their differences, their
varied colors of being, seemed but to bind them closer. They entered
this room like David and Jonathan.
Ian also was tall, but not so largely made as was the other. Lithe,
embrowned, with gold-bronze hair and eyes, knit of a piece, moving as
by one undulation, there was something in him not like the Scot,
something foreign, exotic. Sometimes Alexander called him "Saracen"--a
finding of the imagination that dated from old days upon the moor
above the Kelpie's Pool when they read together the _Faery Queen_. The
other day, at Black Hill, this ancient fancy had played through
Alexander's mind while Mr. Wotherspoon talked of Italy, and Mrs.
Alison of Babylonish lords.... The point was that he relished Paynim
knight and Renaissance noble and prince of Babylon. Let Ian seem or be
all that, and richer yet! Still there would be Ian, outside of all
circles drawn.
In the room that he called the "alchemical," Ian, disengaging himself,
turned and put both hands on Alexander's shoulders. "Thou Old
Steadfast!" he cried. "God knows how glad I am to see thee!"
Alexander laughed. "Not more glad than I am at the sight of you!
What's the tidings?"
"What should they be? I am tired of being King George's soldier!"
"So that you are tired of being any little king of this earth's
soldier!"
"Why, I think I am--"
"Kings 'over the water' included, Ian?"
"Kings without kingdoms? Well," said Ian, "they don't amount to much,
do they?"
"They do not." The two moved together to the table and the chairs by
it. "You are free of them, Ian?"
"What is it to be free of them?"
"Well, to be plain, out of the Stewart cark and moil! Pretender,
Chevalier de St. George, or uncrowned king--let it drift away like the
dead leaf it is!"
"A dead leaf. Is it a dead leaf?... I wonder!... But you are usually
right, old Steadfast!"
"I see that you will not tell me plainly."
"Are you so anxious? There is nothing to be anxious about."
"Nothing.... What is 'nothing'?"
Ian drummed upon the table and whistled "Lillibullero."
"Something--nothing. Nothing--something! Old Steadfast, you are a
sight for sair een! They say you make the best of lairds! Every cotter
sings of just ways!"
"My father was a good laird. I would not shatter the tradition. Come
with me to Edinburgh and London, on that journey I wrote you of!"
"No. I want to sink into the summer green and not raise my head from
some old poetry book! I have been marching and countermarching until I
am tired. As for what you have in your mind, don't fash yourself about
it! I will say that, at the moment, I think it _is_ a dead leaf.... Of
course, should the Pope's staff unexpectedly begin to bud and
flower--! But it mayn't--indeed, it only looks at present smooth and
polished and dead.... I left the army because, naturally, I didn't
want to be there in case--just in case--the staff budded. Heigho! It
is the truth. You need not look troubled," said Ian.
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