It was with the greatest difficulty that he escaped
on board of a small trading vessel, which landed him in Holland,
and from thence, flying into Germany, he entered into the service
of the Emperor Charles VI. Many regretted that he was not taken,
and made to suffer the penalty due for such a crime, and the
melancholy incident became a pulpit theme over a great part of
Scotland, being held up as a proper warning to youth to beware of
such haunts of vice and depravity, the nurses of all that is
precipitate, immoral, and base, among mankind.
After the funeral of this promising and excellent young man, his
father never more held up his head. Miss Logan, with all her art,
could not get him to attend to any worldly thing, or to make any
settlement whatsoever of his affairs, save making her over a
present of what disposable funds he had about him. As to his
estates, when they were mentioned to him, he wished them all in the
bottom of the sea, and himself along with them. But, whenever she
mentioned the circumstance of Thomas Drummond having been the
murderer of his son, he shook his head, and once made the remark
that "It was all a mistake, a gross and fatal error; but that God,
who had permitted such a flagrant deed, would bring it to light in
his own time and way." In a few weeks he followed his son to the
grave, and the notorious Robert Wringhim took possession of his
estates as the lawful son of the late laird, born in wedlock, and
under his father's roof. The investiture was celebrated by prayer,
singing of psalms, and religious disputation. The late guardian and
adopted father, and the mother of the new laird, presided on the
grand occasion, making a conspicuous figure in all the work of the
day; and, though the youth himself indulged rather more freely in
the bottle than he had ever been seen to do before, it was agreed
by all present that there had never been a festivity so sanctified
within the great hall of Dalcastle. Then, after due thanks
returned, they parted rejoicing in spirit; which thanks, by the by,
consisted wholly in telling the Almighty what he was; and
informing, with very particular precision, what they were who
addressed him; for Wringhim's whole system of popular declamation
consisted, it seems, in this—to denounce all men and women to
destruction, and then hold out hopes to his adherents that they
were the chosen few, included in the promises, and who could never
fall away. It would appear that this pharisaical doctrine is a very
delicious one, and the most grateful of all others to the worst
characters.
But the ways of heaven are altogether inscrutable, and soar as
far above and beyond the works and the comprehensions of man as the
sun, flaming in majesty, is above the tiny boy's evening rocket. It
is the controller of Nature alone that can bring light out of
darkness, and order out of confusion. Who is he that causeth the
mole, from his secret path of darkness, to throw up the gem, the
gold, and the precious ore? The same that from the mouths of babes
and sucklings can extract the perfection of praise, and who can
make the most abject of his creatures instrumental in bringing the
most hidden truths to light.
Miss Logan had never lost the thought of her late master's
prediction that Heaven would bring to light the truth concerning
the untimely death of his son. She perceived that some strange
conviction, too horrible for expression, preyed on his mind from
the moment that the fatal news reached him to the last of his
existence; and, in his last ravings, he uttered some incoherent
words about justification by faith alone and absolute and eternal
predestination having been the ruin of his house. These, to be
sure, were the words of superannuation, and of the last and
severest kind of it; but, for all that, they sunk deep into Miss
Logan's soul, and at last she began to think with herself: "Is it
possible the Wringhims, and the sophisticating wretch who is in
conjunction with them, the mother of my late beautiful and amiable
young master, can have effected his destruction? If so, I will
spend my days, and my little patrimony, in endeavours to rake up
and expose the unnatural deed."
In all her outgoings and incomings Mrs. Logan (as she was now
styled) never lost sight of this one object. Every new
disappointment only whetted her desire to fish up some particulars,
concerning it; for she thought so long and so ardently upon it that
by degrees it became settled in her mind as a sealed truth. And, as
woman is always most jealous of her own sex in such matters, her
suspicions were fixed on her greatest enemy, Mrs. Colwan, now the
Lady Dowager of Dalcastle. All was wrapt in a chaos of confusion
and darkness; but at last, by dint of a thousand sly and secret
inquiries, Mrs. Logan found out where Lady Dalcastle had been on
the night that the murder happened, and likewise what company she
had kept, as well as some of the comers and goers; and she had
hopes of having discovered a clue, which, if she could keep hold of
the thread, would lead her through darkness to the light of
truth.
Returning very late one evening from a convocation of family
servants, which she had drawn together in order to fish something
out of them, her maid having been in attendance on her all the
evening, they found, on going home, that the house had been broken
and a number of valuable articles stolen therefrom. Mrs. Logan had
grown quite heartless before this stroke, having been altogether
unsuccessful in her inquiries, and now she began to entertain some
resolutions of giving up the fruitless search.
In a few days thereafter, she received intelligence that her
clothes and plate were mostly recovered, and that she for one was
bound over to prosecute the depredator, provided the articles
turned out to be hers, as libelled in the indictment, and as a
king's evidence had given out. She was likewise summoned, or
requested, I know not which, being ignorant of these matters, to go
as far as the town of Peebles in Tweedside, in order to survey
these articles on such a day, and make affidavit to their identity
before the Sheriff She went accordingly; but, on entering the town
by the North Gate, she was accosted by a poor girl in tattered
apparel, who with great earnestness inquired if her name was not
Mrs. Logan? On being answered in the affirmative, she said that the
unfortunate prisoner in the Tolbooth requested her, as she valued
all that was dear to her in life, to go and see her before she
appeared in court at the hour of cause, as she (the prisoner) had
something of the greatest moment to impart to her. Mrs. Logan's
curiosity was excited, and she followed the girl straight to the
Tolbooth, who by the way said to her that she would find in the
prisoner a woman of superior mind, who had gone through all the
vicissitudes of life. "She has been very unfortunate, and I fear
very wicked," added the poor thing, "but she is my mother, and God
knows, with all her faults and failings, she has never been unkind
to me. You, madam, have it in your power to save her; but she has
wronged you, and therefore, if you will not do it for her sake, do
it for mine, and the God of the fatherless will reward you."
Mrs. Logan answered her with a cast of the head, and a hem! and
only remarked, that "the guilty must not always be suffered to
escape, or what a world must we be doomed to live in!"
She was admitted to the prison, and found a tall emaciated
figure, who appeared to have once possessed a sort of masculine
beauty in no ordinary degree, but was now considerably advanced in
years. She viewed Mrs. Logan with a stem, steady gaze, as if
reading her features as a margin to her intellect; and when she
addressed her it was not with that humility, and agonized fervour,
which are natural for one in such circumstances to address to
another who has the power of her life and death in her hands.
"I am deeply indebted to you for this timely visit, Mrs.
1 comment