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CHAPTER
XXV IN BALQUHIDDER At the door of the first house we
came to, Alan
knocked, which was of no very safe enterprise in such a part of the
Highlands as
the Braes of Balquhidder. No
great
clan held rule there; it was filled and disputed by small septs, and
broken
remnants, and what they call "chiefless folk," driven into the wild
country about the springs of Forth and Teith by the advance of the
Campbells.
Here were Stewarts and Maclarens, which came to the same thing, for the
Maclarens followed Alan's chief in war, and made but one clan with
Appin.
Here, too, were many of that old, proscribed,
nameless, red-handed clan
of the Macgregors. They
had always
been ill-considered, and now worse than ever, having credit with no
side or
party in the whole country of Scotland.
Their
chief, Macgregor of Macgregor, was in exile; the more immediate leader
of that
part of them about Balquhidder, James More, Rob Roy's eldest son, lay
waiting
his trial in Edinburgh Castle; they were in ill-blood with Highlander
and
Lowlander, with the Grahames, the Maclarens, and the Stewarts; and
Alan, who
took up the quarrel of any friend, however distant, was extremely
wishful to
avoid them. Chance served us very well; for it
was a household of
Maclarens that we found, where Alan was not only welcome for his name's
sake but
known by reputation. Here
then I
was got to bed without delay, and a doctor fetched, who found me in a
sorry
plight. But whether
because he was
a very good doctor, or I a very young, strong man, I lay bedridden for
no more
than a week, and before a month I was able to take the road again with
a good
heart. All this time Alan would not leave
me though I often
pressed him, and indeed his foolhardiness in staying was a common
subject of
outcry with the two or three friends that were let into the secret.
He hid by day in a hole of the braes under a little
wood; and at night,
when the coast was clear, would come into the house to visit me.
I need not say if I was pleased to see him; Mrs.
Maclaren, our hostess,
thought nothing good enough for such a guest; and as Duncan Dhu (which
was the
name of our host) had a pair of pipes in his house, and was much of a
lover of
music, this time of my recovery was quite a festival, and we commonly
turned
night into day. The soldiers let us be; although
once a party of two
companies and some dragoons went by in the bottom of the valley, where
I could
see them through the window as I lay in bed.
What was much more astonishing, no magistrate came
near me, and there was
no question put of whence I came or whither I was going; and in that
time of
excitement, I was as free of all inquiry as though I had lain in a
desert.
Yet my presence was known before I left to all the
people in Balquhidder
and the adjacent parts; many coming about the house on visits and these
(after
the custom of the country) spreading the news among their neighbours.
The bills, too, had now been printed.
There was one pinned near the foot of my bed, where
I could read my own
not very flattering portrait and, in larger characters, the amount of
the blood
money that had been set upon my life.
Duncan
Dhu and the rest that knew that I had come there in Alan's company,
could have
entertained no doubt of who I was; and many others must have had their
guess.
For though I had changed my clothes, I could not
change my age or person;
and Lowland boys of eighteen were not so rife in these parts of the
world, and
above all about that time, that they could fail to put one thing with
another,
and connect me with the bill. So
it
was, at least. Other
folk keep a
secret among two or three near friends, and somehow it leaks out; but
among
these clansmen, it is told to a whole countryside, and they will keep
it for a
century. There was but one thing happened
worth narrating; and
that is the visit I had of Robin Oig, one of the sons of the notorious
Rob Roy.
He was sought upon all sides on a charge of carrying
a young woman from
Balfron and marrying her (as was alleged) by force; yet he stepped
about
Balquhidder like a gentleman in his own walled policy. It was he who
had shot
James Maclaren at the plough stilts, a quarrel never satisfied; yet he
walked
into the house of his blood enemies as a rider[30]
might into a public inn.
Duncan had time to pass me word of
who it was; and we
looked at one another in concern.
You
should understand, it was then close upon the time of Alan's coming;
the two
were little likely to agree; and yet if we sent word or sought to make
a signal,
it was sure to arouse suspicion in a man under so dark a cloud as the
Macgregor.
He came in with a great show of
civility, but like a
man among inferiors; took off his bonnet to Mrs. Maclaren, but clapped
it on his
head again to speak to Duncan; and leaving thus set himself (as he
would have
thought) in a proper light, came to my bedside and bowed.
"I am given to know, sir," says he,
"that your name is Balfour."
"They call me David Balfour," said
I,
"at your service." "I would give ye my name in return,
sir" he
replied, "but it's one somewhat blown upon of late days; and it'll
perhaps
suffice if I tell ye that I am own brother to James More Drummond or
Macgregor,
of whom ye will scarce have failed to hear."
"No, sir," said I, a little
alarmed;
"nor yet of your father, Macgregor-Campbell."
And I sat up and bowed in bed; for I thought best to
compliment him, in
case he was proud of having had an outlaw to his father.
He bowed in return.
"But what I am come to say, sir," he went on, "is
this.
In the year '45, my brother raised a part of the
'Gregara' and marched
six companies to strike a stroke for the good side; and the surgeon
that marched
with our clan and cured my brother's leg when it was broken in the
brush at
Preston Pans, was a gentleman of the same name precisely as yourself.
He was brother to Balfour of Baith; and if you are
in any reasonable
degree of nearness one of that gentleman's kin, I have come to put
myself and my
people at your command."
You are to remember that I knew no
more of my descent
than any cadger's dog; my uncle, to be sure, had prated of some of our
high
connections, but nothing to the present purpose; and there was nothing
left me
but that bitter disgrace of owning that I could not tell.
Robin told me shortly he was sorry
he had put himself
about, turned his back upon me without a sign of salutation, and as he
went
towards the door, I could hear him telling Duncan that I was "only some
kinless loon that didn't know his own father."
Angry as I was at these words, and ashamed of my own
ignorance, I could
scarce keep from smiling that a man who was under the lash of the law
(and was
indeed hanged some three years later) should be so nice as to the
descent of his
acquaintances. Just in the door, he met Alan
coming in; and the two
drew back and looked at each other like strange dogs.
They were neither of them big men, but they seemed
fairly to
swell out with pride. Each wore a sword, and by a movement of his
haunch, thrust
clear the hilt of it, so that it might be the more readily grasped and
the blade
drawn. "Mr. Stewart, I am thinking," says
Robin.
"Troth, Mr. Macgregor, it's not a
name to be
ashamed of," answered Alan.
"I did not know ye were in my
country,
sir," says Robin. "It sticks in my mind that I am in
the country
of my friends the Maclarens," says Alan.
"That's a kittle point," returned
the
other. "There may
be two words
to say to that. But
I think I will
have heard that you are a man of your sword?"
"Unless ye were born deaf, Mr.
Macgregor, ye
will have heard a good deal more than that," says Alan.
"I am not the only man that can draw steel in Appin;
and when my
kinsman and captain, Ardshiel, had a talk with a gentleman of your
name, not so
many years back, I could never hear that the Macgregor had the best of
it."
"Do ye mean my father, sir?" says
Robin.
"Well, I wouldnae wonder," said
Alan.
"The gentleman I have in my mind had the ill-taste
to clap Campbell
to his name." "My father was an old man,"
returned Robin.
"The match was unequal. You and me
would make a
better pair, sir." "I was thinking that," said Alan.
I was half out of bed, and Duncan
had been hanging at
the elbow of these fighting cocks, ready to intervene upon the least
occasion.
But when that word was uttered, it was a case of now
or never; and
Duncan, with something of a white face to be sure, thrust himself
between.
"Gentlemen," said he, "I will have
been thinking of a very different matter, whateffer.
Here are my pipes, and here are you two gentlemen
who are
baith acclaimed pipers. It's an auld dispute which one of ye's the best.
Here will be a braw chance to settle it."
"Why, sir," said Alan, still
addressing
Robin, from whom indeed he had not so much as shifted his eyes, nor yet
Robin
from him, "why, sir," says Alan, "I think I will have heard some sough[31]
of the sort. Have ye music, as folk say? Are ye a bit
of a piper?"
"I can pipe like a Macrimmon!"
cries Robin.
"And that is a very bold word,"
quoth Alan.
"I have made bolder words good
before now,"
returned Robin, "and that against better adversaries."
"It is easy to try that," says Alan.
Duncan Dhu made haste to bring out
the pair of pipes
that was his principal possession, and to set before his guests a
mutton-ham and
a bottle of that drink which they call Athole brose, and which is made
of old
whiskey, strained honey and sweet cream, slowly beaten together in the
right
order and proportion. The
two
enemies were still on the very breach of a quarrel; but down they sat,
one upon
each side of the peat fire, with a mighty show of politeness.
Maclaren pressed them to taste his mutton-ham and
"the wife's
brose," reminding them the wife was out of Athole and had a name far
and
wide for her skill in that confection.
But
Robin put aside these hospitalities as bad for the breath.
"I would have ye to remark, sir,"
said
Alan, "that I havenae broken bread for near upon ten hours, which will
be
worse for the breath than any brose in Scotland."
"I will take no advantages, Mr.
Stewart,"
replied Robin. "Eat
and drink;
I'll follow you." Each ate a small portion of the ham
and drank a glass
of the brose to Mrs. Maclaren; and then after a great number of
civilities,
Robin took the pipes and played a little spring in a very ranting
manner.
"Ay, ye can, blow" said Alan; and
taking
the instrument from his rival, he first played the same spring in a
manner
identical with Robin's; and then wandered into variations, which, as he
went on,
he decorated with a perfect flight of grace-notes, such as pipers love,
and call
the "warblers." I had been pleased with Robin's
playing, Alan's
ravished me. "That's no very bad, Mr. Stewart,"
said the
rival, "but ye show a poor device in your warblers."
"Me!" cried Alan, the blood
starting to his
face. "I give ye
the
lie." "Do ye own yourself beaten at the
pipes,
then," said Robin, "that ye seek to change them for the sword?"
"And that's very well said, Mr.
Macgregor,"
returned Alan; "and in the meantime" (laying a strong accent on the
word) "I take back the lie. I
appeal to Duncan."
"Indeed, ye need appeal to
naebody," said
Robin. "Ye're a far
better
judge than any Maclaren in Balquhidder: for it's a God's truth that
you're a
very creditable piper for a Stewart.
Hand
me the pipes." Alan
did as he
asked; and Robin proceeded to imitate and correct some part of Alan's
variations, which it seemed that he remembered perfectly.
"Ay, ye have music," said Alan,
gloomily.
"And now be the judge yourself, Mr.
Stewart," said Robin; and taking up the variations from the beginning,
he
worked them throughout to so new a purpose, with such ingenuity and
sentiment,
and with so odd a fancy and so quick a knack in the grace-notes, that I
was
amazed to hear him. As for Alan, his face grew dark and
hot, and he sat
and gnawed his fingers, like a man under some deep affront.
"Enough!" he cried. "Ye can blow the pipes — make
the
most of that." And
he made as
if to rise. But Robin only held out his hand as
if to ask for
silence, and struck into the slow measure of a pibroch. It was a fine
piece of
music in itself, and nobly played; but it seems, besides, it was a
piece
peculiar to the Appin Stewarts and a chief favourite with Alan.
The first notes were scarce out, before there came a
change in his face;
when the time quickened, he seemed to grow restless in his seat; and
long before
that piece was at an end, the last signs of his anger died from him,
and he had
no thought but for the music.
"Robin Oig," he said, when it was
done,
"ye are a great piper. I
am
not fit to blow in the same kingdom with ye.
Body of me! ye have mair music in your sporran than
I have in my head!
And though it still sticks in my mind that I could
maybe show ye another
of it with the cold steel, I warn ye beforehand — it'll no be fair!
It would go against my heart to haggle a man that
can blow the pipes as
you can!" Thereupon that quarrel was made up;
all night long
the brose was going and the pipes changing hands; and the day had come
pretty
bright, and the three men were none the better for what they had been
taking,
before Robin as much as thought upon the road.
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