They loaded
him with execrations, but it availed nothing; he seemed courting
persecution and buffetings, keeping steadfastly to his old joke of
damnation, and marring the game so completely that, in spite of
every effort on the part of the players, he forced them to stop
their game and give it up. He was such a rueful-looking object,
covered with blood, that none of them had the heart to kick him,
although it appeared the only thing he wanted; and, as for George,
he said not another word to him, either in anger or reproof.
When the game was fairly given up, and the party were washing
their hands in the stone fount, some of them besought Robert
Wringhim to wash himself; but he mocked at them, and said he was
much better as he was. George, at length, came forward abashedly
towards him, and said: "I have been greatly to blame, Robert, and
am very sorry for what I have done. But, in the first instance, I
erred through ignorance, not knowing you were my brother, which you
certainly are; and, in the second, through a momentary irritation,
for which I am ashamed. I pray you, therefore, to pardon me, and
give me your hand."
As he said this, he held out his hand towards his polluted
brother; but the froward predestinarian took not his from his
breeches pocket, but lifting his foot, he gave his brother's hand a
kick. "I'll give you what will suit such a hand better than mine,"
said he, with a sneer. And then, turning lightly about, he added:
"Are there to be no more of these d—-d fine blows, gentlemen? For
shame, to give up such a profitable and edifying game!"
"This is too bad," said George. "But, since it is thus, I have
the less to regret." And, having made this general remark, he took
no more note of the uncouth aggressor. But the persecution of the
latter terminated not on the play-ground: he ranked up among them,
bloody and disgusting as he was, and, keeping close by his
brother's side, he marched along with the party all the way to the
Black Bull. Before they got there, a great number of boys and idle
people had surrounded them, hooting and incommoding them
exceedingly, so that they were glad to get into the inn; and the
unaccountable monster actually tried to get in alongst with them,
to make one of the party at dinner. But the innkeeper and his men,
getting the hint, by force prevented him from entering, although he
attempted it again and again, both by telling lies and offering a
bribe. Finding he could not prevail, he set to exciting the mob at
the door to acts of violence; in which he had like to have
succeeded. The landlord had no other shift, at last, but to send
privately for two officers, and have him carried to the
guard-house; and the hilarity and joy of the party of young
gentlemen, for the evening, was quite spoiled by the inauspicious
termination of their game.
The Rev. Robert Wringhim was now to send for, to release his
beloved ward. The messenger found him at table, with a number of
the leaders of the Whig faction, the Marquis of Annandale being in
the chair; and, the prisoner's note being produced, Wringhim read
it aloud, accompanying it with some explanatory remarks. The
circumstances of the case being thus magnified and distorted, it
excited the utmost abhorrence, both of the deed and the
perpetrators, among the assembled faction. They declaimed against
the act as an unnatural attempt on the character, and even the
life, of an unfortunate brother, who had been expelled from his
father's house. And, as party spirit was the order of the day, an
attempt was made to lay the burden of it to that account. In short,
the young culprit got some of the best blood of the land to enter
as his securities, and was set at liberty. But, when Wringhim
perceived the plight that he was in, he took him, as he was, and
presented him to his honourable patrons. This raised the
indignation against the young laird and his associates a
thousand-fold, which actually roused the party to temporary
madness. They were, perhaps, a little excited by the wine and
spirits they had swallowed; else a casual quarrel between two young
men, at tennis, could not have driven them to such extremes. But
certain it is that, from one at first arising to address the party
on the atrocity of the offence, both in a moral and political point
of view, on a sudden there were six on their feet, at the same
time, expatiating on it; and, in a very short time thereafter,
everyone in the room was up talking with the utmost vociferation,
all on the same subject, and all taking the same side in the
debate.
In the midst of this confusion, someone or other issued from the
house, which was at the back of the Canongate, calling out: "A
plot, a plot! Treason, treason! Down with the bloody incendiaries
at the Black Bull!"
The concourse of people that were assembled in Edinburgh at that
time was prodigious; and, as they were all actuated by political
motives, they wanted only a ready-blown coal to set the mountain on
fire. The evening being fine, and the streets thronged, the cry ran
from mouth to mouth through the whole city. More than that, the mob
that had of late been gathered to the door of the Black Bull had,
by degrees, dispersed; but, they being young men, and idle
vagrants, they had only spread themselves over the rest of the
street to lounge in search of further amusement: consequently, a
word was sufficient to send them back to their late rendezvous,
where they had previously witnessed something they did not much
approve of.
The master of the tavern was astonished at seeing the mob again
assembling; and that with such hurry and noise. But, his inmates
being all of the highest respectability, he judged himself sure of
protection, or at least of indemnity. He had two large parties in
his house at the time; the largest of which was of the
Revolutionist faction. The other consisted of our young
Tennis-players, and their associates, who were all of the Jacobite
order; or, at all events, leaned to the Episcopal side. The largest
party were in a front room; and the attack of the mob fell first on
their windows, though rather with fear and caution. Jingle went one
pane; then a loud hurrah; and that again was followed by a number
of voices, endeavouring to restrain the indignation from venting
itself in destroying the windows, and to turn it on the inmates.
The Whigs, calling the landlord, inquired what the assault meant:
he cunningly answered that he suspected it was some of the youths
of the Cavalier, or High-Church party, exciting the mob against
them.
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