and wild fowls, and you will be able to teach the boys about
how to set the helm and the sails when they are launching their
small boats.
how to set the helm and the sails when they are launching their
small boats.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v04 - Bes to Bro
And there is no penalty for that in the South, perhaps;
but you are no longer in the South.
And if you have this very
night to drink a glass with me, you will not refuse it?
a glass of the coal-black wine! "
It is only
## p. 1991 (#181) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1991
She struggled back from him, for there was a look in his face
that frightened her. But she had a wonderful self-command.
"Is that the message I was to hear? " said she, coldly.
"Why, sweetheart, are you not glad? Is not that the only
gladness left for you and for me, that we should drink one glass
together, and clasp hands, and say good-by? What else is there
left? What else could come to you and to me? And it may not
be this night, or to-morrow night; but one night I think it will
come; and then, sweetheart, we will have one more glass together,
before the end. "
He went on deck. He called Hamish.
"Hamish," said he, in a grave, matter-of-fact way, "I don't
like the look of this evening. Did you say the sheiling was still
on the island? "
"Oh yes, Sir Keith," said Hamish, with great joy; for he
thought his advice was going to be taken, after all.
"Well, now, you know the gales, when they begin, sometimes
last for two or three or four days; and I will ask you to see
that Christina takes a good store of things to the sheiling before
the darkness comes on. Take plenty of things now, Hamish, and
put them in the sheiling, for I am afraid this is going to be a
wild night. "
Now indeed all the red light had gone away; and as the sun
went down there was nothing but a spectral whiteness over the
sea and the sky; and the atmosphere was so close and sultry
that it seemed to suffocate one. Moreover, there was a dead
calm; if they had wanted to get away from this exposed place,
how could they? They could not get into the gig and pull this
great yacht over to Loch Tua.
It was with a light heart that Hamish set about this thing;
and Christina forthwith filled a hamper with tinned meats, and
bread, and whisky, and what not. And fuel was taken ashore,
too; and candles, and a store of matches. If the gales were
coming on, as appeared likely from this ominous-looking evening,
who could tell how many days and nights the young master-
and the English lady, too, if he desired her company-might not
have to stay ashore, while the men took the chance of the sea
with this yacht, or perhaps seized the occasion of some lull to
make for some place of shelter? There was Loch Tua, and
there was the bay at Bunessan, and there was the little channel
called Polterriv, behind the rocks opposite Iona. Any shelter at
## p. 1992 (#182) ###########################################
1992
WILLIAM BLACK
all was better than this exposed place, with the treacherous
anchorage.
Hamish and Duncan Cameron returned to the yacht.
"Will you go ashore now, Sir Keith? " the old man said.
"Oh no; I am not going ashore yet. It is not yet time to
run away, Hamish. "
He spoke in a friendly and pleasant fashion, though Hamish,
in his increasing alarm, thought it no proper time for jesting.
They hauled the gig up to the davits, however, and again the
yacht lay in dead silence in this little bay.
The evening grew to dusk; the only change visible in the
spectral world of pale yellow-white mist was the appearance in
the sky of a number of small, detached bulbous-looking clouds of
a dusky blue-gray. They had not drifted hither, for there was
no wind. They had only appeared. They were absolutely mo-
tionless. But the heat and the suffocation in this atmosphere
became almost insupportable. The men, with bare heads, and
jerseys unbuttoned at the neck, were continually going to the
cask of fresh water beside the windlass. Nor was there any
change when the night came on.
hotter than the evening had been.
might come of this ominous calm.
Hamish came aft.
"I beg your pardon, Sir Keith," said he, "but I am thinking
we will have an anchor-watch to-night. "
"You will have no anchor-watch to-night," Macleod answered
slowly, from out of the darkness. "I will be all the anchor-
watch you will need, Hamish, until the morning. "
"You, sir! " Hamish cried. "I have been waiting to take you
ashore; and surely it is ashore that you are going! "
Just as he had spoken, there was a sound that all the world
seemed to stand still to hear. It was a low, murmuring sound
of thunder; but it was so remote as almost to be inaudible. The
next moment an awful thing occurred. The two men standing
face to face in the dark suddenly found themselves in a blaze
of blinding steel-blue light, and at the very same instant the
thunder-roar crackled and shook all around them like the firing
of a thousand cannon. How the wild echoes went booming over
If anything, the night was
They waited in silence what
the sea!
Then they were in the black night again. There was a period
of awed silence.
## p. 1993 (#183) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1993
"Hamish," Macleod said, quickly, "do as I tell you now!
Lower the gig; take the men with you, and Christina, and go
ashore and remain in the sheiling till the morning. "
"O Sir Keith,
"O Sir Keith, would you have
"I will not! " Hamish cried.
me do that? ”
Macleod had anticipated his refusal. Instantly he went for-
ward and called up Christina. He ordered Duncan Cameron and
John Cameron to lower away the gig. He got them all in but
Hamish.
"Hamish," said he, "you are a smaller man than I. Is it on
such a night that you would have me quarrel with you?
I throw you into the boat? "
Must
The old man clasped his trembling hands together as if in
prayer; and he said, with an agonized and broken voice:
"O Sir Keith, you are my master, and there is nothing I
will not do for you; but only this one night you will let me
remain with the yacht? I will give you the rest of my life;
but only this one night-"
"Into the gig with you! " Macleod cried, angrily. "Why, man,
don't you think I can keep anchor-watch? " But then he added
very gently, "Hamish, shake hands with me now.
You were my
friend, and you must get ashore before the sea rises. "
"I will stay in the dingy, then? " the old man entreated.
"You will go ashore, Hamish; and this very instant, too.
the gale begins, how will you get ashore ? Good-by, Hamish-
good-night! »
Another white sheet of flame quivered all around them, just
as this black figure was descending into the gig; and then the
fierce hell of sounds broke loose once more. Sea and sky to-
gether seemed to shudder at the wild uproar, and far away the
sounds went thundering through the hollow night. How could
one hear if there was any sobbing in that departing boat, or
any last cry of farewell? It was Ulva calling now, and Fladda
answering from over the black water; and the Dutchman is
surely awake at last!
――――――――――
-
If
There came a stirring of wind from the east, and the sea
began to moan. Surely the poor fugitives must have reached
the shore now. And then there was a strange noise in the dis-
tance: in the awful silence between the peals of thunder it would
be heard; it came nearer and nearer a low murmuring noise,
but full of a secret life and thrill-it came along like the tread
## p. 1994 (#184) ###########################################
1994
WILLIAM BLACK
of a thousand armies and then the gale struck its first blow.
The yacht reeled under the stroke, but her bows staggered up
again like a dog that has been felled, and after one or two
convulsive plunges she clung hard at the strained cables. And
now the gale was growing in fury, and the sea rising. Blind-
ing showers of rain swept over, hissing and roaring; the white
tongues of flame were shooting this way and that across the
startled heavens; and there was a more awful thunder than even
the falling of the Atlantic surge booming into the great sea-
caves. In the abysmal darkness the spectral arms of the ocean
rose white in their angry clamor; and then another blue gleam
would lay bare the great heaving and wreathing bosom of the
deep. What devil's dance is this? Surely it cannot be Ulva-
Ulva the green-shored — Ulva that the sailors, in their love of
her, call softly Ool-a-va-that is laughing aloud with wild laugh-
ter on this awful night? And Colonsay, and Lunga, and Fladda
-they were beautiful and quiet in the still summer-time; but
now they have gone mad, and they are flinging back the plun-
ging sea in white masses of foam, and they are shrieking in their
fierce joy of the strife. And Staffa - Staffa is far away and
alone; she is trembling to her core: how long will the shudder-
ing caves withstand the mighty hammer of the Atlantic surge?
And then again the sudden wild gleam startles the night, and
one sees, with an appalling vividness, the driven white waves
and the black islands; and then again a thousand echoes go
booming along the iron-bound coast. What can be heard in the
roar of the hurricane, and the hissing of rain, and the thunder-
ing whirl of the waves on the rocks? Surely not the one glad
last cry: SWEETHEART! YOUR HEALTH! YOUR HEALTH IN THE COAL-
BLACK WINE!
-
The poor fugitives crouching in among the rocks-is it the
blinding rain or the driven white surf that is in their eyes?
But they have sailors' eyes; they can see through the awful
storm; and their gaze is fixed on one small green point far out
there in the blackness- the starboard light of the doomed ship.
It wavers like a will-o'-the-wisp, but it does not recede; the old
Umpire still clings bravely to her chain cables.
And amidst all the din of the storm they hear the voice of
Hamish lifted aloud in lamentation:
## p. 1995 (#185) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1995
«< Oh, the brave lad! the brave lad! And who is to save my
young master now? and who will carry this tale back to Castle
Dare? They will say to me, 'Hamish, you had charge of the
young lad; you put the first gun in his hand; you had charge of
him; he had the love of a son for you: what is it you have
done with him this night? ' He is my Absalom; he is my brave
young lad: oh, do you think that I will let him drown and do
nothing to try to save him? Do you think that? Duncan Cam-
eron, are you a man? Will you get into the gig with me and
pull out to the Umpire? "
"By God," said Duncan Cameron, solemnly, "I will do that!
I have no wife; I do not care. I will go into the gig with you,
Hamish; but we will never reach the yacht—this night or any
night that is to come. "
Then the old woman Christina shrieked aloud, and caught her
husband by the arm.
"Hamish! Hamish! Are you going to drown yourself before
my eyes? »
He shook her hand away from him.
<< My young master ordered me ashore: I have come ashore.
But I myself, I order myself back again. Duncan Cameron,
they will never say that we stood by and saw Macleod of Dare
go down to his grave! "
They emerged from the shelter of this great rock; the hurri-
cane was so fierce that they had to cling to one bowlder after
another to save themselves from being whirled into the sea.
But were these two men by themselves? Not likely! It was a
party of five men that now clambered along the slippery rocks
to the shingle up which they had hauled the gig, and one wild
lightning-flash saw them with their hands on the gunwale, ready
to drag her down to the water. There was a surf raging there
that would have swamped twenty gigs: these five men were
going of their own free will and choice to certain death
much had they loved the young master.
SO
But a piercing cry from Christina arrested them. They looked
out to sea. What was this sudden and awful thing? Instead of
the starboard green light, behold! the port red light- and that
moving! Oh, see! how it recedes, wavering, flickering through
the whirling vapor of the storm! And there again is the green
light! Is it a witch's dance, or are they strange death-fires hover-
ing over the dark ocean-grave? But Hamish knows too well
-
## p. 1996 (#186) ###########################################
1996
WILLIAM BLACK
what it means; and with a wild cry of horror and despair, the
old man sinks on his knees and clasps his hands, and stretches
them out to the terrible sea.
"O, Macleod, Macleod! are you going away from me forever?
and we will go up the hills together and on the lochs together
no more! Oh, the brave lad that he was!
and the good master! And who was not proud of him—my
handsome lad—and he the last of the Macleods of Dare? "
no more- no more—
-
Arise, Hamish, and have the gig hauled up into shelter; for
will you not want it when the gale abates, and the seas are
smooth, and you have to go away to Dare, you and your com-
rades, with silent tongues and sombre eyes? Why this wild
lamentation in the darkness of the night? The stricken heart
that you loved so well has found peace at last; the coal-black
wine has been drunk: there is an end! And you, you poor,
cowering fugitives, who only see each other's terrified faces
when the wan gleam of the lightning blazes through the sky,
perhaps it is well that you should weep and wail for the young
master; but that is soon over, and the day will break. And this
is what I am thinking of now: when the light comes and the
seas are smooth, then which of you-oh, which of you all will
tell this tale to the two women at Castle Dare?
So fair shines the mor
orning sun on the white sands of Iona!
The three-days' gale is over. Behold how Ulva-Ulva the green-
shored the Ool-a-va that the sailors love-is laughing out again.
to the clear skies! And the great skarts on the shores of Eris-
geir are spreading abroad their dusky wings to get them dried.
in the sun; and the seals are basking on the rocks in Loch-na-
Keal; and in Loch Scridain the white gulls sit buoyant on the
blue sea.
There go the Gometra men in their brown-sailed
boat to look after the lobster traps at Staffa, and very soon you
will see the steamer come round the far Cailleach Point; over at
Erraidh they are signaling to the men at Dubh-Artach, and they
are glad to have a message from them after the heavy gale.
The new, bright day has begun; the world has awakened again
to the joyous sunlight; there is a chattering of the sea-birds all
along the shores. It is a bright, eager, glad day for all the
world. But there is silence in Castle Dare!
## p. 1997 (#187) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1997
SHEILA IN LONDON
From A Princess of Thule
SHE
HE asked if they were lords who owned those beautiful houses
built up on the hill, and half-smothered among lilacs and
ash-trees and rowan-trees and ivy.
"My darling," Lavender had said to her, "if your papa were
to come and live here, he could buy half a dozen of these cot-
tages, gardens and all. They are mostly the property of well-to-
do shopkeepers. If this little place takes your fancy, what will
you say when you go South-when you see Wimbledon and
Richmond and Kew, with their grand old commons and trees?
Why, you could hide Oban in a corner of Richmond Park! "
"And my papa has seen all these places?
«Yes. Don't you think it strange he should have seen them
all, and known he could live in any of them, and then gone
away back to Borva?
>>>
>>
"But what would the poor people have done if he had never
gone back? »
"Oh, some one else would have taken his place. "
"And then, if he were living here, or in London, he might
have got tired, and he might have wished to go back to the
Lewis and see all the people he knew; and then he would come
among them like a stranger, and have no house to go to. "
-
Then Lavender said, quite gently:-
"Do you think, Sheila, you will ever tire of living in the
South? "
The girl looked up quickly, and said with a sort of surprised
questioning in her eyes:-
"No, not with you. But then we shall often go to the
Lewis ? "
"Oh, yes," her husband said, "as often as we can con-
veniently. But it will take some time at first, you know, before
you get to know all my friends, who are to be your friends, and
before you get properly fitted with your social circle. That will
take you a long time, Sheila, and you may have many annoy-
ances or embarrassments to encounter; but you won't be very
much afraid, my girl? "
Sheila merely looked up to him; there was no fear in the
frank, brave eyes.
## p. 1998 (#188) ###########################################
1998
WILLIAM BLACK
The first large town she saw struck a cold chill to her heart.
On a wet and dismal afternoon they sailed into Greenock. A
heavy smoke hung about the black building-yards and the dirty
quays; the narrow and squalid streets were filled with mud, and
only the poorer sections of the population waded through the
mire or hung disconsolately about the corners of the thorough-
fares. A gloomier picture could not well be conceived; and
Sheila, chilled with the long and wet sail and bewildered by the
noise and bustle of the harbor, was driven to the hotel with a
sore heart and a downcast face.
"This is not like London, Frank? " she said, pretty nearly
ready to cry with disappointment.
"This? No. Well, it is like a part of London, certainly, but
not the part you will live in. "
"But how can we live in the one place without passing the
other and being made miserable by it? There was no part of
Oban like this. "
<< Why, you will live miles away from the docks and quays of
London. You might live for a lifetime in London without ever
knowing it had a harbor. Don't you be afraid, Sheila. You will
live in a district where there are far finer houses than any you
saw in Oban, and far finer trees; and within a few minutes'
walk you will find great gardens and parks, with lakes in them.
and wild fowls, and you will be able to teach the boys about
how to set the helm and the sails when they are launching their
small boats. "
"I should like that," said Sheila, her face brightening.
<< Perhaps you would like a boat yourself? "
"Yes," she said, frankly. "If there were not many people
there, we might go out sometimes in the evening-"
Her husband laughed and took her hand: "You don't under-
stand, Sheila. The boats the boys have are little things a foot
or two long-like the one in your papa's bedroom in Borva.
But many of the boys would be greatly obliged to you if you
would teach them how to manage the sails properly, for some-
times dreadful shipwrecks occur. "
"You must bring them to our house. I am very fond of
little boys, when they begin to forget to be shy, and let you
become acquainted with them. "
"Well," said Lavender, "I don't know many of the boys who
sail boats in the Serpentine: you will have to make their acquaint-
## p. 1999 (#189) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1999
ance yourself.
But I know one boy whom I must bring to the
house. He is a German-Jew boy, who is going to be another
Mendelssohn, his friends say. He is a pretty boy, with ruddy-
brown hair, big black eyes, and a fine forehead; and he really
sings and plays delightfully. But you know, Sheila, you must
not treat him as a boy, for he is over fourteen, I should think;
and if you were to kiss him
>>>
"He might be angry," said Sheila, with perfect simplicity.
"I might," said Lavender; and then, noticing that she seemed
a little surprised, he merely patted her head and bade her go
and get ready for dinner.
Then came the great climax of Sheila's southward journey —
her arrival in London. She was all anxiety to see her future
home; and as luck would have it, there was a fair spring morn-
ing shining over the city. For a couple of hours before, she
had sat and looked out of the carriage-window as the train
whirled rapidly through the scarcely awakened country, and she
had seen the soft and beautiful landscapes of the South lit up by
the early sunlight. How the bright little villages shone, with
here and there a gilt weathercock glittering on the spire of some
small gray church, while as yet in many valleys a pale gray mist
lay along the bed of the level streams or clung to the dense
woods on the upland heights! Which was the more beautiful-
the sharp, clear picture, with its brilliant colors and its awaken-
ing life, or the more mystic landscape over which was still drawn
the tender veil of the morning haze? She could not tell.
only knew that England, as she then saw it, seemed a great
country that was very beautiful, that had few inhabitants, and
that was still and sleepy and bathed in sunshine.
How happy
must the people be who lived in those quiet green valleys by the
side of slow and smooth rivers, and amid great woods and avenues
of stately trees, the like of which she had not imagined even in
her dreams!
But from the moment that they got out at Euston Square
she seemed a trifle bewildered, and could only do implicitly as
her husband bade her -clinging to his hand, for the most part,
as if to make sure of guidance. She did indeed glance somewhat
nervously at the hansom into which Lavender put her, apparently
asking how such a tall and narrow two-wheeled vehicle could be
prevented toppling over. But when he, having sent on all their
luggage by a respectable old four-wheeler, got into the hansom.
## p. 2000 (#190) ###########################################
2000
WILLIAM BLACK
beside her, and put his hand inside her arm, and bade her be of
good cheer that she should have such a pleasant morning to wel-
come her to London, she said "Yes," mechanically, and only
looked out in a wistful fashion at the great houses and trees of
Euston Square, the mighty and roaring stream of omnibuses,
the droves of strangers, mostly clad in black, as if they were
going to church, and the pale blue smoke that seemed to mix
with the sunshine and make it cold and distant.
They were in no hurry, these two, on that still morning; and
so, to impress Sheila all at once with a sense of the greatness
and grandeur of London, he made the cabman cut down by Park
Crescent and Portland Place to Regent Circus. Then they went
along Oxford Street; and there were crowded omnibuses taking
young men into the city, while all the pavements were busy
with hurrying passers-by. What multitudes of unknown faces,
unknown to her and unknown to each other! These people did
not speak: they only hurried on, each intent upon his own affairs,
caring nothing, apparently, for the din around them, and looking
so strange and sad in their black clothes in the pale and misty
sunlight.
"You are in a trance, Sheila," he said.
She did not answer. Surely she had wandered into some
magical city, for now the houses on one side of the way suddenly
ceased, and she saw before her a great and undulating extent of
green, with a border of beautiful flowers, and with groups of
trees that met the sky all along the southern horizon. Did the
green and beautiful country she had seen, shoot in thus into
the heart of the town, or was there another city far away on
the other side of the trees? The place was almost as deserted
as those still valleys she had passed by in the morning. Here
in the street there was the roar of a passing crowd; but there
was a long and almost deserted stretch of park, with winding
roads and umbrageous trees, on which the wan sunlight fell from
between loose masses of half-golden cloud.
Then they passed Kensington Gardens, and there were more
people walking down the broad highways between the elms.
"You are getting nearly home now, Sheila," he said. « And
you will be able to come and walk in these avenues whenever
you please. "
Was this, then, her home? this section of a barrack-row of
dwellings, all alike in steps, pillars, doors, and windows? When
## p. 2001 (#191) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
2001
she got inside, the servant who had opened the door bobbed a
courtesy to her: should she shake hands with her and say, "And
are you ferry well? » But at this moment Lavender came run-
ning up the steps, playfully hurried her into the house and up
the stairs, and led her into her own drawing-room. "Well, dar-
ling, what do you think of your home, now that you see it? ”
It
Sheila looked around timidly. It was not a big room, but it
was a palace in height and grandeur and color compared with
that little museum in Borva in which Sheila's piano stood.
was all so strange and beautiful-the split pomegranates and
quaint leaves on the upper part of the walls, and underneath a
dull slate-color where the pictures hung; the curious painting on
the frames of the mirrors; the brilliant curtains, with their stiff
and formal patterns. It was not very much like a home as yet;
it was more like a picture that had been carefully planned and
executed; but she knew how he had thought of pleasing her in
choosing these things, and without saying a word she took his
hand and kissed it. And then she went to one of the three tall
French windows and looked out on the square. There, between
the trees, was a space of beautiful soft green; and some children
dressed in bright dresses, and attended by a governess in sober
black, had just begun to play croquet. An elderly lady with a
small white dog was walking along one of the graveled paths.
An old man was pruning some bushes.
"It is very still and quiet here," said Sheila. "I was afraid
we should have to live in that terrible noise always. "
"I hope you won't find it dull, my darling," he said.
"Dull, when you are here ? »
"But I cannot always be here, you know. "
She looked up.
"You see, a man is so much in the way if he is dawdling
about a house all day long. You would begin to regard me as
a nuisance, Sheila, and would be for sending me to play croquet
with those young Carruthers, merely that you might get the
rooms dusted. Besides, you know I couldn't work here: I must
have a studio of some sort - in the neighborhood, of course.
And then you will give me your orders in the morning as to
when I am to come round for luncheon or dinner. "
"And you will be alone all day at your work? "
"Yes. "
"Then I will come and sit with you, my poor boy," she said.
IV-126
## p. 2002 (#192) ###########################################
2002
WILLIAM BLACK
>>
"Much work I should do in that case! he said. "But we'll
see. In the mean time go up-stairs and get your things off: that
young person below has breakfast ready, I dare say. "
"But you have not shown me yet where Mr. Ingram lives,”
said Sheila before she went to the door.
"Oh, that is miles away. You have only seen a little bit of
London yet. Ingram lives about as far away from here as the
distance you have just come, but in another direction. "
"It is like a world made of houses," said Sheila, "and all
filled with strangers. But you will take me to see Mr. Ingram ? "
But he is sure to drop in on you as soon
«< By-and-by, yes.
as he fancies you are settled in your new home. "
And here at last was Mr. Ingram come; and the mere sound
of his voice seemed to carry her back to Borva, so that in talk-
ing to him and waiting on him as of old, she would scarcely
have been surprised if her father had walked in to say that a
coaster was making for the harbor, or that Duncan was going
over to Stornoway, and Sheila would have to give him commis-
sions.
Her husband did not take the same interest in the social
and political affairs of Borva that Mr. Ingram did. Lavender
had made a pretense of assisting Sheila in her work among the
poor people, but the effort was a hopeless failure. He could not
remember the name of the family that wanted a new boat, and
was visibly impatient when Sheila would sit down to write out
for some aged crone a letter to her grandson in Canada. Now
Ingram, for the mere sake of occupation, had qualified himself
during his various visits to Lewis, so that he might have be-
come the home minister of the King of Borva; and Sheila was
glad to have one attentive listener as she described all the won-
derful things that had happened in the island since the previous
summer.
But Ingram had got a full and complete holiday on which to
come up and see Sheila; and he had brought with him the wild
and startling proposal that in order that she should take her
first plunge into the pleasures of civilized life, her husband and
herself should drive down to Richmond and dine at the Star
and Garter.
"What is that? " said Sheila,
"My dear girl," said her husband, seriously, "your ignorance
is something fearful to contemplate. It is quite bewildering. How
## p. 2003 (#193) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
2003
can a person who does not know what the Star and Garter is, be
told what the Star and Garter is? "
"But I am willing to go and see," said Sheila.
"Then I must look after getting a brougham," said Lavender,
rising.
"A brougham on such a day as this? " exclaimed Ingram.
"Nonsense! Get an open trap of some sort; and Sheila, just to
please me, will put on that very blue dress she used to wear in
Borva, and the hat and the white feather, if she has got them. "
"Perhaps you would like me to put on a sealskin cap and a
red handkerchief instead of a collar," observed Lavender, calmly.
"You may do as you please. Sheila and I are going to dine
at the Star and Garter. "
"May I put on that blue dress? " said the girl, going up to
her husband.
"Yes, of course, if you like," said Lavender meekly, going off
to order the carriage, and wondering by what route he could
drive those two maniacs down to Richmond so that none of his
friends should see them.
When he came back again, bringing with him a landau which
could be shut up for the homeward journey at night, he had to
confess that no costume seemed to suit Sheila so well as the
rough sailor dress; and he was so pleased with her appearance
that he consented at once to let Bras go with them in the car-
riage, on condition that Sheila should be responsible for him.
Indeed, after the first shiver of driving away from the square was
over, he forgot that there was much unusual about the look of
this odd pleasure party. If you had told him eighteen months
before that on a bright day in May, just as people were going
home from the Park for luncheon, he would go for a drive in a
hired trap with one horse, his companions being a man with a
brown wide-awake, a girl dressed as though she were the owner of
a yacht, and an immense deerhound, and that in this fashion he
would dare to drive up to the Star and Garter and order dinner,
he would have bet five hundred to one that such a thing would
never occur so long as he preserved his senses. But somehow
he did not mind much. He was very much at home with those
two people beside him; the day was bright and fresh; the horse
went a good pace; and once they were over Hammersmith Bridge
and out among fields and trees, the country looked exceedingly
pretty, and all the beauty of it was mirrored in Sheila's eyes.
W
## p. 2004 (#194) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
2004
"I can't quite make you out in that dress, Sheila," he said.
"I am not sure whether it is real and business-like or a theatri-
cal costume. I have seen girls on Ryde Pier with something
of the same sort on, only a good deal more pronounced, you
know, and they looked like sham yachtsmen; and I have seen
stewardesses wearing that color and texture of cloth—»
"But why not leave it as it is," said Ingram-"a solitary
costume produced by certain conditions of climate and duties,
acting in conjunction with a natural taste for harmonious color-
ing and simple form? That dress, I will maintain, sprang as
naturally from the salt sea as Aphrodite did; and the man who
suspects artifice in it, or invention, has had his mind perverted
by the skepticism of modern society. "
"Is my dress so very wonderful? " said Sheila, with a grave
complacence. "I am pleased that the Lewis has produced such
a fine thing, and perhaps you would like me to tell you its
history. It was my papa bought a piece of blue serge in Storno-
way: it cost three shillings sixpence a yard, and a dressmaker
in Stornoway cut it for me, and I made it myself. That is all
the history of the wonderful dress. "
Suddenly Sheila seized her husband's arm. They had got
down to the river by Mortlake; and there, on the broad bosom
of the stream, a long and slender boat was shooting by, pulled
by four oarsmen clad in white flannel.
"How can they go out in such a boat? " said Sheila, with
great alarm visible in her eyes. "It is scarcely a boat at all;
and if they touch a rock, or if the wind catches them-»
"Don't be frightened, Sheila," said her husband. "They are
quite safe. There are no rocks in our rivers, and the wind does
not give us squalls here like those on Loch Roag. You will see
hundreds of those boats by and by, and perhaps you yourself
will go out in one. "
"Oh, never, never! " she said, almost with a shudder.
"Why, if the people here heard you they would not know
how brave a sailor you are. You are not afraid to go out at
night by yourself on the sea, and you won't go on a smooth
inland river—»
"But those boats: if you touch them they must go over. "
She seemed glad to get away from the river. She could not
be persuaded of the safety of the slender craft of the Thames;
and indeed, for some time after seemed so strangely depressed
I
I
## p. 2005 (#195) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
2005
that Lavender begged and prayed of her to tell him what was
the matter. It was simple enough. She had heard him speak
of his boating adventures. Was it in such boats as that she
had just seen? and might he not be some day going out in one
of them and an accident - the breaking of an oar, a gust of
wind
There was nothing for it but to reassure her by a solemn
promise that in no circumstances whatever would he, Lavender,
go into a boat without her express permission, whereupon Sheila
was as grateful to him as though he had dowered her with a
kingdom.
This was not the Richmond Hill of her fancy-this spacious
height; with its great mansions, its magnificent elms, and its
view of all the westward and wooded country, with the blue-
white streak of the river winding through the green foliage.
Where was the farm? The famous Lass of Richmond Hill must
have lived on a farm; but here surely were the houses of great
lords and nobles, which had apparently been there for years
and years.
And was this really a hotel that they stopped at-
this great building that she could only compare to Stornoway
Castle?
―
"Now, Sheila," said Lavender, after they had ordered dinner
and gone out, "mind you keep a tight hold on that leash, for
Bras will see strange things in the Park. "
"It is I who will see strange things," she said; and the
prophecy was amply fulfilled. For as they went along the broad
path, and came better into view of the splendid undulation of
woodland and pasture and fern, when on the one hand they saw
the Thames far below them flowing through the green and spa-
cious valley, and on the other hand caught some dusky glimpse
of the far white houses of London, it seemed to her that she had
got into a new world, and that this world was far more beauti-
ful than the great city she had left. She did not care so much
for the famous view from the hill. She had cast one quick look
to the horizon, with one throb of expectation that the sea might
be there. There was no sea there-only the faint blue of long
lines of country, apparently without limit. Moreover, over the
western landscape a faint haze prevailed, that increased in the
distance and softened down the more distant woods into a sober
gray. That great extent of wooded plain, lying sleepily in its
pale mists, was not so cheerful as the scene around her, where
## p. 2006 (#196) ###########################################
2006
WILLIAM BLACK
the sunlight was sharp and clear, the air fresh, the trees flooded
with a pure and bright color. Here indeed was a cheerful and
beautiful world, and she was full of curiosity to know all about
it and its strange features. What was the name of this tree?
and how did it differ from that? Were not these rabbits over
by the fence? and did rabbits live in the midst of trees and
bushes? What sort of wood was the fence made of? and was it
not terribly expensive to have such a protection? Could not he
tell the cost of a wooden fence? Why did they not use wire
netting? Was not that a loch away down there? and what was
its name? A loch without a name! Did the salmon come up to
it? and did any sea-birds ever come inland and build their nests
on its margin?
"O, Bras, you must come and look at the loch. It is a long
time since you will see a loch. "
And away she went through the thick bracken, holding on to
the swaying leash that held the galloping greyhound, and run-
ning swiftly as though she had been making down for the shore
to get out the Maighdean-mhara.
"Sheila," called her husband, "don't be foolish! "
"Sheila," called Ingram, "have pity on an old man! "
Suddenly she stopped. A brace of partridges had sprung up
at some distance, and with a wild whirr of their wings were now
directing their low and rapid flight toward the bottom of the
valley.
"What birds are those? " she said peremptorily.
She took no notice of the fact that her companions were
pretty nearly too blown to speak. There was a brisk life and
color in her face, and all her attention was absorbed in watching
the flight of the birds. Lavender fancied he saw in the fixed
and keen look something of old Mackenzie's gray eye: it was
not the first trace of a likeness to her father he had seen.
"You bad girl! " he said, "they are partridges. "
She paid no heed to this reproach, for what were those other
things over there underneath the trees? Bras had pricked up his
ears, and there was a strange excitement in his look and in his
trembling frame.
"Deer! " she cried, with her eyes as fixed as were those of
the dog beside her.
"Well," said her husband calmly, "what although they are
deer? »
S
S
## p. 2007 (#197) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
2007
said; and with that she caught the leash
"But Bras- » she
with both her hands.
"Bras won't mind them if you keep him quiet. I suppose
you can manage him better than can. I wish we had brought
a whip. "
"I would rather let him kill every deer in the Park than
touch him with a whip," said Sheila proudly.
"You fearful creature, you don't know what you say. That
is high treason. If George Ranger heard you, he would have
you hanged in front of the Star and Garter. "
"Who is George Ranger? " said Sheila with an air as if she
had said, "Do you know that I am the daughter of the King of
Borva, and whoever touches me will have to answer to my papa,
who is not afraid of any George Ranger ? »
"He is a great lord who hangs all persons who disturb the
deer in this Park.
but you are no longer in the South.
And if you have this very
night to drink a glass with me, you will not refuse it?
a glass of the coal-black wine! "
It is only
## p. 1991 (#181) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1991
She struggled back from him, for there was a look in his face
that frightened her. But she had a wonderful self-command.
"Is that the message I was to hear? " said she, coldly.
"Why, sweetheart, are you not glad? Is not that the only
gladness left for you and for me, that we should drink one glass
together, and clasp hands, and say good-by? What else is there
left? What else could come to you and to me? And it may not
be this night, or to-morrow night; but one night I think it will
come; and then, sweetheart, we will have one more glass together,
before the end. "
He went on deck. He called Hamish.
"Hamish," said he, in a grave, matter-of-fact way, "I don't
like the look of this evening. Did you say the sheiling was still
on the island? "
"Oh yes, Sir Keith," said Hamish, with great joy; for he
thought his advice was going to be taken, after all.
"Well, now, you know the gales, when they begin, sometimes
last for two or three or four days; and I will ask you to see
that Christina takes a good store of things to the sheiling before
the darkness comes on. Take plenty of things now, Hamish, and
put them in the sheiling, for I am afraid this is going to be a
wild night. "
Now indeed all the red light had gone away; and as the sun
went down there was nothing but a spectral whiteness over the
sea and the sky; and the atmosphere was so close and sultry
that it seemed to suffocate one. Moreover, there was a dead
calm; if they had wanted to get away from this exposed place,
how could they? They could not get into the gig and pull this
great yacht over to Loch Tua.
It was with a light heart that Hamish set about this thing;
and Christina forthwith filled a hamper with tinned meats, and
bread, and whisky, and what not. And fuel was taken ashore,
too; and candles, and a store of matches. If the gales were
coming on, as appeared likely from this ominous-looking evening,
who could tell how many days and nights the young master-
and the English lady, too, if he desired her company-might not
have to stay ashore, while the men took the chance of the sea
with this yacht, or perhaps seized the occasion of some lull to
make for some place of shelter? There was Loch Tua, and
there was the bay at Bunessan, and there was the little channel
called Polterriv, behind the rocks opposite Iona. Any shelter at
## p. 1992 (#182) ###########################################
1992
WILLIAM BLACK
all was better than this exposed place, with the treacherous
anchorage.
Hamish and Duncan Cameron returned to the yacht.
"Will you go ashore now, Sir Keith? " the old man said.
"Oh no; I am not going ashore yet. It is not yet time to
run away, Hamish. "
He spoke in a friendly and pleasant fashion, though Hamish,
in his increasing alarm, thought it no proper time for jesting.
They hauled the gig up to the davits, however, and again the
yacht lay in dead silence in this little bay.
The evening grew to dusk; the only change visible in the
spectral world of pale yellow-white mist was the appearance in
the sky of a number of small, detached bulbous-looking clouds of
a dusky blue-gray. They had not drifted hither, for there was
no wind. They had only appeared. They were absolutely mo-
tionless. But the heat and the suffocation in this atmosphere
became almost insupportable. The men, with bare heads, and
jerseys unbuttoned at the neck, were continually going to the
cask of fresh water beside the windlass. Nor was there any
change when the night came on.
hotter than the evening had been.
might come of this ominous calm.
Hamish came aft.
"I beg your pardon, Sir Keith," said he, "but I am thinking
we will have an anchor-watch to-night. "
"You will have no anchor-watch to-night," Macleod answered
slowly, from out of the darkness. "I will be all the anchor-
watch you will need, Hamish, until the morning. "
"You, sir! " Hamish cried. "I have been waiting to take you
ashore; and surely it is ashore that you are going! "
Just as he had spoken, there was a sound that all the world
seemed to stand still to hear. It was a low, murmuring sound
of thunder; but it was so remote as almost to be inaudible. The
next moment an awful thing occurred. The two men standing
face to face in the dark suddenly found themselves in a blaze
of blinding steel-blue light, and at the very same instant the
thunder-roar crackled and shook all around them like the firing
of a thousand cannon. How the wild echoes went booming over
If anything, the night was
They waited in silence what
the sea!
Then they were in the black night again. There was a period
of awed silence.
## p. 1993 (#183) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1993
"Hamish," Macleod said, quickly, "do as I tell you now!
Lower the gig; take the men with you, and Christina, and go
ashore and remain in the sheiling till the morning. "
"O Sir Keith,
"O Sir Keith, would you have
"I will not! " Hamish cried.
me do that? ”
Macleod had anticipated his refusal. Instantly he went for-
ward and called up Christina. He ordered Duncan Cameron and
John Cameron to lower away the gig. He got them all in but
Hamish.
"Hamish," said he, "you are a smaller man than I. Is it on
such a night that you would have me quarrel with you?
I throw you into the boat? "
Must
The old man clasped his trembling hands together as if in
prayer; and he said, with an agonized and broken voice:
"O Sir Keith, you are my master, and there is nothing I
will not do for you; but only this one night you will let me
remain with the yacht? I will give you the rest of my life;
but only this one night-"
"Into the gig with you! " Macleod cried, angrily. "Why, man,
don't you think I can keep anchor-watch? " But then he added
very gently, "Hamish, shake hands with me now.
You were my
friend, and you must get ashore before the sea rises. "
"I will stay in the dingy, then? " the old man entreated.
"You will go ashore, Hamish; and this very instant, too.
the gale begins, how will you get ashore ? Good-by, Hamish-
good-night! »
Another white sheet of flame quivered all around them, just
as this black figure was descending into the gig; and then the
fierce hell of sounds broke loose once more. Sea and sky to-
gether seemed to shudder at the wild uproar, and far away the
sounds went thundering through the hollow night. How could
one hear if there was any sobbing in that departing boat, or
any last cry of farewell? It was Ulva calling now, and Fladda
answering from over the black water; and the Dutchman is
surely awake at last!
――――――――――
-
If
There came a stirring of wind from the east, and the sea
began to moan. Surely the poor fugitives must have reached
the shore now. And then there was a strange noise in the dis-
tance: in the awful silence between the peals of thunder it would
be heard; it came nearer and nearer a low murmuring noise,
but full of a secret life and thrill-it came along like the tread
## p. 1994 (#184) ###########################################
1994
WILLIAM BLACK
of a thousand armies and then the gale struck its first blow.
The yacht reeled under the stroke, but her bows staggered up
again like a dog that has been felled, and after one or two
convulsive plunges she clung hard at the strained cables. And
now the gale was growing in fury, and the sea rising. Blind-
ing showers of rain swept over, hissing and roaring; the white
tongues of flame were shooting this way and that across the
startled heavens; and there was a more awful thunder than even
the falling of the Atlantic surge booming into the great sea-
caves. In the abysmal darkness the spectral arms of the ocean
rose white in their angry clamor; and then another blue gleam
would lay bare the great heaving and wreathing bosom of the
deep. What devil's dance is this? Surely it cannot be Ulva-
Ulva the green-shored — Ulva that the sailors, in their love of
her, call softly Ool-a-va-that is laughing aloud with wild laugh-
ter on this awful night? And Colonsay, and Lunga, and Fladda
-they were beautiful and quiet in the still summer-time; but
now they have gone mad, and they are flinging back the plun-
ging sea in white masses of foam, and they are shrieking in their
fierce joy of the strife. And Staffa - Staffa is far away and
alone; she is trembling to her core: how long will the shudder-
ing caves withstand the mighty hammer of the Atlantic surge?
And then again the sudden wild gleam startles the night, and
one sees, with an appalling vividness, the driven white waves
and the black islands; and then again a thousand echoes go
booming along the iron-bound coast. What can be heard in the
roar of the hurricane, and the hissing of rain, and the thunder-
ing whirl of the waves on the rocks? Surely not the one glad
last cry: SWEETHEART! YOUR HEALTH! YOUR HEALTH IN THE COAL-
BLACK WINE!
-
The poor fugitives crouching in among the rocks-is it the
blinding rain or the driven white surf that is in their eyes?
But they have sailors' eyes; they can see through the awful
storm; and their gaze is fixed on one small green point far out
there in the blackness- the starboard light of the doomed ship.
It wavers like a will-o'-the-wisp, but it does not recede; the old
Umpire still clings bravely to her chain cables.
And amidst all the din of the storm they hear the voice of
Hamish lifted aloud in lamentation:
## p. 1995 (#185) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1995
«< Oh, the brave lad! the brave lad! And who is to save my
young master now? and who will carry this tale back to Castle
Dare? They will say to me, 'Hamish, you had charge of the
young lad; you put the first gun in his hand; you had charge of
him; he had the love of a son for you: what is it you have
done with him this night? ' He is my Absalom; he is my brave
young lad: oh, do you think that I will let him drown and do
nothing to try to save him? Do you think that? Duncan Cam-
eron, are you a man? Will you get into the gig with me and
pull out to the Umpire? "
"By God," said Duncan Cameron, solemnly, "I will do that!
I have no wife; I do not care. I will go into the gig with you,
Hamish; but we will never reach the yacht—this night or any
night that is to come. "
Then the old woman Christina shrieked aloud, and caught her
husband by the arm.
"Hamish! Hamish! Are you going to drown yourself before
my eyes? »
He shook her hand away from him.
<< My young master ordered me ashore: I have come ashore.
But I myself, I order myself back again. Duncan Cameron,
they will never say that we stood by and saw Macleod of Dare
go down to his grave! "
They emerged from the shelter of this great rock; the hurri-
cane was so fierce that they had to cling to one bowlder after
another to save themselves from being whirled into the sea.
But were these two men by themselves? Not likely! It was a
party of five men that now clambered along the slippery rocks
to the shingle up which they had hauled the gig, and one wild
lightning-flash saw them with their hands on the gunwale, ready
to drag her down to the water. There was a surf raging there
that would have swamped twenty gigs: these five men were
going of their own free will and choice to certain death
much had they loved the young master.
SO
But a piercing cry from Christina arrested them. They looked
out to sea. What was this sudden and awful thing? Instead of
the starboard green light, behold! the port red light- and that
moving! Oh, see! how it recedes, wavering, flickering through
the whirling vapor of the storm! And there again is the green
light! Is it a witch's dance, or are they strange death-fires hover-
ing over the dark ocean-grave? But Hamish knows too well
-
## p. 1996 (#186) ###########################################
1996
WILLIAM BLACK
what it means; and with a wild cry of horror and despair, the
old man sinks on his knees and clasps his hands, and stretches
them out to the terrible sea.
"O, Macleod, Macleod! are you going away from me forever?
and we will go up the hills together and on the lochs together
no more! Oh, the brave lad that he was!
and the good master! And who was not proud of him—my
handsome lad—and he the last of the Macleods of Dare? "
no more- no more—
-
Arise, Hamish, and have the gig hauled up into shelter; for
will you not want it when the gale abates, and the seas are
smooth, and you have to go away to Dare, you and your com-
rades, with silent tongues and sombre eyes? Why this wild
lamentation in the darkness of the night? The stricken heart
that you loved so well has found peace at last; the coal-black
wine has been drunk: there is an end! And you, you poor,
cowering fugitives, who only see each other's terrified faces
when the wan gleam of the lightning blazes through the sky,
perhaps it is well that you should weep and wail for the young
master; but that is soon over, and the day will break. And this
is what I am thinking of now: when the light comes and the
seas are smooth, then which of you-oh, which of you all will
tell this tale to the two women at Castle Dare?
So fair shines the mor
orning sun on the white sands of Iona!
The three-days' gale is over. Behold how Ulva-Ulva the green-
shored the Ool-a-va that the sailors love-is laughing out again.
to the clear skies! And the great skarts on the shores of Eris-
geir are spreading abroad their dusky wings to get them dried.
in the sun; and the seals are basking on the rocks in Loch-na-
Keal; and in Loch Scridain the white gulls sit buoyant on the
blue sea.
There go the Gometra men in their brown-sailed
boat to look after the lobster traps at Staffa, and very soon you
will see the steamer come round the far Cailleach Point; over at
Erraidh they are signaling to the men at Dubh-Artach, and they
are glad to have a message from them after the heavy gale.
The new, bright day has begun; the world has awakened again
to the joyous sunlight; there is a chattering of the sea-birds all
along the shores. It is a bright, eager, glad day for all the
world. But there is silence in Castle Dare!
## p. 1997 (#187) ###########################################
WILLIAM BLACK
1997
SHEILA IN LONDON
From A Princess of Thule
SHE
HE asked if they were lords who owned those beautiful houses
built up on the hill, and half-smothered among lilacs and
ash-trees and rowan-trees and ivy.
"My darling," Lavender had said to her, "if your papa were
to come and live here, he could buy half a dozen of these cot-
tages, gardens and all. They are mostly the property of well-to-
do shopkeepers. If this little place takes your fancy, what will
you say when you go South-when you see Wimbledon and
Richmond and Kew, with their grand old commons and trees?
Why, you could hide Oban in a corner of Richmond Park! "
"And my papa has seen all these places?
«Yes. Don't you think it strange he should have seen them
all, and known he could live in any of them, and then gone
away back to Borva?
>>>
>>
"But what would the poor people have done if he had never
gone back? »
"Oh, some one else would have taken his place. "
"And then, if he were living here, or in London, he might
have got tired, and he might have wished to go back to the
Lewis and see all the people he knew; and then he would come
among them like a stranger, and have no house to go to. "
-
Then Lavender said, quite gently:-
"Do you think, Sheila, you will ever tire of living in the
South? "
The girl looked up quickly, and said with a sort of surprised
questioning in her eyes:-
"No, not with you. But then we shall often go to the
Lewis ? "
"Oh, yes," her husband said, "as often as we can con-
veniently. But it will take some time at first, you know, before
you get to know all my friends, who are to be your friends, and
before you get properly fitted with your social circle. That will
take you a long time, Sheila, and you may have many annoy-
ances or embarrassments to encounter; but you won't be very
much afraid, my girl? "
Sheila merely looked up to him; there was no fear in the
frank, brave eyes.
## p. 1998 (#188) ###########################################
1998
WILLIAM BLACK
The first large town she saw struck a cold chill to her heart.
On a wet and dismal afternoon they sailed into Greenock. A
heavy smoke hung about the black building-yards and the dirty
quays; the narrow and squalid streets were filled with mud, and
only the poorer sections of the population waded through the
mire or hung disconsolately about the corners of the thorough-
fares. A gloomier picture could not well be conceived; and
Sheila, chilled with the long and wet sail and bewildered by the
noise and bustle of the harbor, was driven to the hotel with a
sore heart and a downcast face.
"This is not like London, Frank? " she said, pretty nearly
ready to cry with disappointment.
"This? No. Well, it is like a part of London, certainly, but
not the part you will live in. "
"But how can we live in the one place without passing the
other and being made miserable by it? There was no part of
Oban like this. "
<< Why, you will live miles away from the docks and quays of
London. You might live for a lifetime in London without ever
knowing it had a harbor. Don't you be afraid, Sheila. You will
live in a district where there are far finer houses than any you
saw in Oban, and far finer trees; and within a few minutes'
walk you will find great gardens and parks, with lakes in them.
and wild fowls, and you will be able to teach the boys about
how to set the helm and the sails when they are launching their
small boats. "
"I should like that," said Sheila, her face brightening.
<< Perhaps you would like a boat yourself? "
"Yes," she said, frankly. "If there were not many people
there, we might go out sometimes in the evening-"
Her husband laughed and took her hand: "You don't under-
stand, Sheila. The boats the boys have are little things a foot
or two long-like the one in your papa's bedroom in Borva.
But many of the boys would be greatly obliged to you if you
would teach them how to manage the sails properly, for some-
times dreadful shipwrecks occur. "
"You must bring them to our house. I am very fond of
little boys, when they begin to forget to be shy, and let you
become acquainted with them. "
"Well," said Lavender, "I don't know many of the boys who
sail boats in the Serpentine: you will have to make their acquaint-
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ance yourself.
But I know one boy whom I must bring to the
house. He is a German-Jew boy, who is going to be another
Mendelssohn, his friends say. He is a pretty boy, with ruddy-
brown hair, big black eyes, and a fine forehead; and he really
sings and plays delightfully. But you know, Sheila, you must
not treat him as a boy, for he is over fourteen, I should think;
and if you were to kiss him
>>>
"He might be angry," said Sheila, with perfect simplicity.
"I might," said Lavender; and then, noticing that she seemed
a little surprised, he merely patted her head and bade her go
and get ready for dinner.
Then came the great climax of Sheila's southward journey —
her arrival in London. She was all anxiety to see her future
home; and as luck would have it, there was a fair spring morn-
ing shining over the city. For a couple of hours before, she
had sat and looked out of the carriage-window as the train
whirled rapidly through the scarcely awakened country, and she
had seen the soft and beautiful landscapes of the South lit up by
the early sunlight. How the bright little villages shone, with
here and there a gilt weathercock glittering on the spire of some
small gray church, while as yet in many valleys a pale gray mist
lay along the bed of the level streams or clung to the dense
woods on the upland heights! Which was the more beautiful-
the sharp, clear picture, with its brilliant colors and its awaken-
ing life, or the more mystic landscape over which was still drawn
the tender veil of the morning haze? She could not tell.
only knew that England, as she then saw it, seemed a great
country that was very beautiful, that had few inhabitants, and
that was still and sleepy and bathed in sunshine.
How happy
must the people be who lived in those quiet green valleys by the
side of slow and smooth rivers, and amid great woods and avenues
of stately trees, the like of which she had not imagined even in
her dreams!
But from the moment that they got out at Euston Square
she seemed a trifle bewildered, and could only do implicitly as
her husband bade her -clinging to his hand, for the most part,
as if to make sure of guidance. She did indeed glance somewhat
nervously at the hansom into which Lavender put her, apparently
asking how such a tall and narrow two-wheeled vehicle could be
prevented toppling over. But when he, having sent on all their
luggage by a respectable old four-wheeler, got into the hansom.
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WILLIAM BLACK
beside her, and put his hand inside her arm, and bade her be of
good cheer that she should have such a pleasant morning to wel-
come her to London, she said "Yes," mechanically, and only
looked out in a wistful fashion at the great houses and trees of
Euston Square, the mighty and roaring stream of omnibuses,
the droves of strangers, mostly clad in black, as if they were
going to church, and the pale blue smoke that seemed to mix
with the sunshine and make it cold and distant.
They were in no hurry, these two, on that still morning; and
so, to impress Sheila all at once with a sense of the greatness
and grandeur of London, he made the cabman cut down by Park
Crescent and Portland Place to Regent Circus. Then they went
along Oxford Street; and there were crowded omnibuses taking
young men into the city, while all the pavements were busy
with hurrying passers-by. What multitudes of unknown faces,
unknown to her and unknown to each other! These people did
not speak: they only hurried on, each intent upon his own affairs,
caring nothing, apparently, for the din around them, and looking
so strange and sad in their black clothes in the pale and misty
sunlight.
"You are in a trance, Sheila," he said.
She did not answer. Surely she had wandered into some
magical city, for now the houses on one side of the way suddenly
ceased, and she saw before her a great and undulating extent of
green, with a border of beautiful flowers, and with groups of
trees that met the sky all along the southern horizon. Did the
green and beautiful country she had seen, shoot in thus into
the heart of the town, or was there another city far away on
the other side of the trees? The place was almost as deserted
as those still valleys she had passed by in the morning. Here
in the street there was the roar of a passing crowd; but there
was a long and almost deserted stretch of park, with winding
roads and umbrageous trees, on which the wan sunlight fell from
between loose masses of half-golden cloud.
Then they passed Kensington Gardens, and there were more
people walking down the broad highways between the elms.
"You are getting nearly home now, Sheila," he said. « And
you will be able to come and walk in these avenues whenever
you please. "
Was this, then, her home? this section of a barrack-row of
dwellings, all alike in steps, pillars, doors, and windows? When
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2001
she got inside, the servant who had opened the door bobbed a
courtesy to her: should she shake hands with her and say, "And
are you ferry well? » But at this moment Lavender came run-
ning up the steps, playfully hurried her into the house and up
the stairs, and led her into her own drawing-room. "Well, dar-
ling, what do you think of your home, now that you see it? ”
It
Sheila looked around timidly. It was not a big room, but it
was a palace in height and grandeur and color compared with
that little museum in Borva in which Sheila's piano stood.
was all so strange and beautiful-the split pomegranates and
quaint leaves on the upper part of the walls, and underneath a
dull slate-color where the pictures hung; the curious painting on
the frames of the mirrors; the brilliant curtains, with their stiff
and formal patterns. It was not very much like a home as yet;
it was more like a picture that had been carefully planned and
executed; but she knew how he had thought of pleasing her in
choosing these things, and without saying a word she took his
hand and kissed it. And then she went to one of the three tall
French windows and looked out on the square. There, between
the trees, was a space of beautiful soft green; and some children
dressed in bright dresses, and attended by a governess in sober
black, had just begun to play croquet. An elderly lady with a
small white dog was walking along one of the graveled paths.
An old man was pruning some bushes.
"It is very still and quiet here," said Sheila. "I was afraid
we should have to live in that terrible noise always. "
"I hope you won't find it dull, my darling," he said.
"Dull, when you are here ? »
"But I cannot always be here, you know. "
She looked up.
"You see, a man is so much in the way if he is dawdling
about a house all day long. You would begin to regard me as
a nuisance, Sheila, and would be for sending me to play croquet
with those young Carruthers, merely that you might get the
rooms dusted. Besides, you know I couldn't work here: I must
have a studio of some sort - in the neighborhood, of course.
And then you will give me your orders in the morning as to
when I am to come round for luncheon or dinner. "
"And you will be alone all day at your work? "
"Yes. "
"Then I will come and sit with you, my poor boy," she said.
IV-126
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>>
"Much work I should do in that case! he said. "But we'll
see. In the mean time go up-stairs and get your things off: that
young person below has breakfast ready, I dare say. "
"But you have not shown me yet where Mr. Ingram lives,”
said Sheila before she went to the door.
"Oh, that is miles away. You have only seen a little bit of
London yet. Ingram lives about as far away from here as the
distance you have just come, but in another direction. "
"It is like a world made of houses," said Sheila, "and all
filled with strangers. But you will take me to see Mr. Ingram ? "
But he is sure to drop in on you as soon
«< By-and-by, yes.
as he fancies you are settled in your new home. "
And here at last was Mr. Ingram come; and the mere sound
of his voice seemed to carry her back to Borva, so that in talk-
ing to him and waiting on him as of old, she would scarcely
have been surprised if her father had walked in to say that a
coaster was making for the harbor, or that Duncan was going
over to Stornoway, and Sheila would have to give him commis-
sions.
Her husband did not take the same interest in the social
and political affairs of Borva that Mr. Ingram did. Lavender
had made a pretense of assisting Sheila in her work among the
poor people, but the effort was a hopeless failure. He could not
remember the name of the family that wanted a new boat, and
was visibly impatient when Sheila would sit down to write out
for some aged crone a letter to her grandson in Canada. Now
Ingram, for the mere sake of occupation, had qualified himself
during his various visits to Lewis, so that he might have be-
come the home minister of the King of Borva; and Sheila was
glad to have one attentive listener as she described all the won-
derful things that had happened in the island since the previous
summer.
But Ingram had got a full and complete holiday on which to
come up and see Sheila; and he had brought with him the wild
and startling proposal that in order that she should take her
first plunge into the pleasures of civilized life, her husband and
herself should drive down to Richmond and dine at the Star
and Garter.
"What is that? " said Sheila,
"My dear girl," said her husband, seriously, "your ignorance
is something fearful to contemplate. It is quite bewildering. How
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2003
can a person who does not know what the Star and Garter is, be
told what the Star and Garter is? "
"But I am willing to go and see," said Sheila.
"Then I must look after getting a brougham," said Lavender,
rising.
"A brougham on such a day as this? " exclaimed Ingram.
"Nonsense! Get an open trap of some sort; and Sheila, just to
please me, will put on that very blue dress she used to wear in
Borva, and the hat and the white feather, if she has got them. "
"Perhaps you would like me to put on a sealskin cap and a
red handkerchief instead of a collar," observed Lavender, calmly.
"You may do as you please. Sheila and I are going to dine
at the Star and Garter. "
"May I put on that blue dress? " said the girl, going up to
her husband.
"Yes, of course, if you like," said Lavender meekly, going off
to order the carriage, and wondering by what route he could
drive those two maniacs down to Richmond so that none of his
friends should see them.
When he came back again, bringing with him a landau which
could be shut up for the homeward journey at night, he had to
confess that no costume seemed to suit Sheila so well as the
rough sailor dress; and he was so pleased with her appearance
that he consented at once to let Bras go with them in the car-
riage, on condition that Sheila should be responsible for him.
Indeed, after the first shiver of driving away from the square was
over, he forgot that there was much unusual about the look of
this odd pleasure party. If you had told him eighteen months
before that on a bright day in May, just as people were going
home from the Park for luncheon, he would go for a drive in a
hired trap with one horse, his companions being a man with a
brown wide-awake, a girl dressed as though she were the owner of
a yacht, and an immense deerhound, and that in this fashion he
would dare to drive up to the Star and Garter and order dinner,
he would have bet five hundred to one that such a thing would
never occur so long as he preserved his senses. But somehow
he did not mind much. He was very much at home with those
two people beside him; the day was bright and fresh; the horse
went a good pace; and once they were over Hammersmith Bridge
and out among fields and trees, the country looked exceedingly
pretty, and all the beauty of it was mirrored in Sheila's eyes.
W
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"I can't quite make you out in that dress, Sheila," he said.
"I am not sure whether it is real and business-like or a theatri-
cal costume. I have seen girls on Ryde Pier with something
of the same sort on, only a good deal more pronounced, you
know, and they looked like sham yachtsmen; and I have seen
stewardesses wearing that color and texture of cloth—»
"But why not leave it as it is," said Ingram-"a solitary
costume produced by certain conditions of climate and duties,
acting in conjunction with a natural taste for harmonious color-
ing and simple form? That dress, I will maintain, sprang as
naturally from the salt sea as Aphrodite did; and the man who
suspects artifice in it, or invention, has had his mind perverted
by the skepticism of modern society. "
"Is my dress so very wonderful? " said Sheila, with a grave
complacence. "I am pleased that the Lewis has produced such
a fine thing, and perhaps you would like me to tell you its
history. It was my papa bought a piece of blue serge in Storno-
way: it cost three shillings sixpence a yard, and a dressmaker
in Stornoway cut it for me, and I made it myself. That is all
the history of the wonderful dress. "
Suddenly Sheila seized her husband's arm. They had got
down to the river by Mortlake; and there, on the broad bosom
of the stream, a long and slender boat was shooting by, pulled
by four oarsmen clad in white flannel.
"How can they go out in such a boat? " said Sheila, with
great alarm visible in her eyes. "It is scarcely a boat at all;
and if they touch a rock, or if the wind catches them-»
"Don't be frightened, Sheila," said her husband. "They are
quite safe. There are no rocks in our rivers, and the wind does
not give us squalls here like those on Loch Roag. You will see
hundreds of those boats by and by, and perhaps you yourself
will go out in one. "
"Oh, never, never! " she said, almost with a shudder.
"Why, if the people here heard you they would not know
how brave a sailor you are. You are not afraid to go out at
night by yourself on the sea, and you won't go on a smooth
inland river—»
"But those boats: if you touch them they must go over. "
She seemed glad to get away from the river. She could not
be persuaded of the safety of the slender craft of the Thames;
and indeed, for some time after seemed so strangely depressed
I
I
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that Lavender begged and prayed of her to tell him what was
the matter. It was simple enough. She had heard him speak
of his boating adventures. Was it in such boats as that she
had just seen? and might he not be some day going out in one
of them and an accident - the breaking of an oar, a gust of
wind
There was nothing for it but to reassure her by a solemn
promise that in no circumstances whatever would he, Lavender,
go into a boat without her express permission, whereupon Sheila
was as grateful to him as though he had dowered her with a
kingdom.
This was not the Richmond Hill of her fancy-this spacious
height; with its great mansions, its magnificent elms, and its
view of all the westward and wooded country, with the blue-
white streak of the river winding through the green foliage.
Where was the farm? The famous Lass of Richmond Hill must
have lived on a farm; but here surely were the houses of great
lords and nobles, which had apparently been there for years
and years.
And was this really a hotel that they stopped at-
this great building that she could only compare to Stornoway
Castle?
―
"Now, Sheila," said Lavender, after they had ordered dinner
and gone out, "mind you keep a tight hold on that leash, for
Bras will see strange things in the Park. "
"It is I who will see strange things," she said; and the
prophecy was amply fulfilled. For as they went along the broad
path, and came better into view of the splendid undulation of
woodland and pasture and fern, when on the one hand they saw
the Thames far below them flowing through the green and spa-
cious valley, and on the other hand caught some dusky glimpse
of the far white houses of London, it seemed to her that she had
got into a new world, and that this world was far more beauti-
ful than the great city she had left. She did not care so much
for the famous view from the hill. She had cast one quick look
to the horizon, with one throb of expectation that the sea might
be there. There was no sea there-only the faint blue of long
lines of country, apparently without limit. Moreover, over the
western landscape a faint haze prevailed, that increased in the
distance and softened down the more distant woods into a sober
gray. That great extent of wooded plain, lying sleepily in its
pale mists, was not so cheerful as the scene around her, where
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the sunlight was sharp and clear, the air fresh, the trees flooded
with a pure and bright color. Here indeed was a cheerful and
beautiful world, and she was full of curiosity to know all about
it and its strange features. What was the name of this tree?
and how did it differ from that? Were not these rabbits over
by the fence? and did rabbits live in the midst of trees and
bushes? What sort of wood was the fence made of? and was it
not terribly expensive to have such a protection? Could not he
tell the cost of a wooden fence? Why did they not use wire
netting? Was not that a loch away down there? and what was
its name? A loch without a name! Did the salmon come up to
it? and did any sea-birds ever come inland and build their nests
on its margin?
"O, Bras, you must come and look at the loch. It is a long
time since you will see a loch. "
And away she went through the thick bracken, holding on to
the swaying leash that held the galloping greyhound, and run-
ning swiftly as though she had been making down for the shore
to get out the Maighdean-mhara.
"Sheila," called her husband, "don't be foolish! "
"Sheila," called Ingram, "have pity on an old man! "
Suddenly she stopped. A brace of partridges had sprung up
at some distance, and with a wild whirr of their wings were now
directing their low and rapid flight toward the bottom of the
valley.
"What birds are those? " she said peremptorily.
She took no notice of the fact that her companions were
pretty nearly too blown to speak. There was a brisk life and
color in her face, and all her attention was absorbed in watching
the flight of the birds. Lavender fancied he saw in the fixed
and keen look something of old Mackenzie's gray eye: it was
not the first trace of a likeness to her father he had seen.
"You bad girl! " he said, "they are partridges. "
She paid no heed to this reproach, for what were those other
things over there underneath the trees? Bras had pricked up his
ears, and there was a strange excitement in his look and in his
trembling frame.
"Deer! " she cried, with her eyes as fixed as were those of
the dog beside her.
"Well," said her husband calmly, "what although they are
deer? »
S
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said; and with that she caught the leash
"But Bras- » she
with both her hands.
"Bras won't mind them if you keep him quiet. I suppose
you can manage him better than can. I wish we had brought
a whip. "
"I would rather let him kill every deer in the Park than
touch him with a whip," said Sheila proudly.
"You fearful creature, you don't know what you say. That
is high treason. If George Ranger heard you, he would have
you hanged in front of the Star and Garter. "
"Who is George Ranger? " said Sheila with an air as if she
had said, "Do you know that I am the daughter of the King of
Borva, and whoever touches me will have to answer to my papa,
who is not afraid of any George Ranger ? »
"He is a great lord who hangs all persons who disturb the
deer in this Park.
