<SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XVI. </h3>
<h3> COLLOQUIES. </h3>
<p>In the evening Donal went to see Andrew Comin.</p>
<p>"Weel, hoo are ye gettin' on wi' the yerl?" asked the cobbler.</p>
<p>"You set me a good example of saying nothing about him," answered
Donal; "and I will follow it—at least till I know more: I have scarce
seen him yet."</p>
<p>"That's right!" returned the cobbler with satisfaction. "I'm thinkin'
ye'll be ane o' the feow 'at can rule their ane hoose—that is, haud
their ain tongues till the hoor for speech be come. Stick ye to that,
my dear sir, an' mair i'll be weel nor in general is weel."</p>
<p>"I'm come to ye for a bit o' help though; I want licht upon a queston
'at 's lang triblet me.—What think ye?—hoo far does the comman' laid
upo' 's, as to warfare 'atween man an' man, reach? Are we never ta
raise the han' to human bein', think ye?"</p>
<p>"Weel, I hae thoucht a heap aboot it, an' I daurna say 'at I'm jist
absolute clear upo' the maitter. But there may be pairt clear whaur a'
's no clear; an' by what we un'erstan' we come the nearer to what we
dinna un'erstan'. There's ae thing unco plain—'at we're on no accoont
to return evil for evil: onybody 'at ca's himsel' a Christian maun
un'erstan' that muckle. We're to gie no place to revenge, inside or
oot. Therefore we're no to gie blow for blow. Gien a man hit ye, ye're
to take it i' God's name. But whether things mayna come to a p'int
whaurat ye're bu'n', still i' God's name, to defen' the life God has
gien ye, I canna say—I haena the licht to justifee me in denyin' 't.
There maun surely, I hae said to mysel', be a time whan a man may hae
to du what God dis sae aften—mak use o' the strong han'! But it's
clear he maunna do 't in rage—that's ower near hate—an' hate 's the
deevil's ain. A man may, gien he live varra near the Lord, be whiles
angry ohn sinned: but the wrath o' man worketh not the richteousness o'
God; an' the wrath that rises i' the mids o' encoonter, is no like to
be o' the natur o' divine wrath. To win at it, gien 't be possible,
lat's consider the Lord—hoo he did. There's no word o' him ever
liftin' han' to protec' himsel'. The only thing like it was for
ithers. To gar them lat his disciples alane—maybe till they war like
eneuch til himsel' no to rin, he pat oot mair nor his han' upo' them
'at cam to tak him: he strak them sair wi' the pooer itsel' 'at muvs a'
airms. But no varra sair naither—he but knockit them doon!—jist to
lat them ken they war to du as he bade them, an' lat his fowk be;—an'
maybe to lat them ken 'at gien he loot them tak him, it was no 'at he
couldna hin'er them gien he likit. I canna help thinkin' we may stan'
up for ither fowk. An' I'm no sayin' 'at we arena to defen' oorsels
frae a set attack wi' design.—But there's something o' mair importance
yet nor kennin' the richt o' ony queston."</p>
<p>"What can that be? What can be o' mair importance nor doin' richt i'
the sicht o' God?" said Donal.</p>
<p>"Bein' richt wi' the varra thoucht o' God, sae 'at we canna mistak, but
maun ken jist what he wad hae dune. That's the big Richt, the mother
o' a' the lave o' the richts. That's to be as the maister was.
Onygait, whatever we du, it maun be sic as to be dune, an' it maun be
dune i' the name o' God; whan we du naething we maun du that naething
i' the name o' God. A body may weel say, 'O Lord, thoo hasna latten me
see what I oucht to du, sae I'll du naething!' Gien a man ought to
defen' himsel', but disna du 't, 'cause he thinks God wadna hae him du
't, wull God lea' him oondefent for that? Or gien a body stan's up i'
the name o' God, an' fronts an airmy o' enemies, div ye think God 'ill
forsake him 'cause he 's made a mistak? Whatever's dune wantin' faith
maun be sin—it canna help it; whatever's dune in faith canna be sin,
though it may be a mistak. Only latna a man tak presumption for faith!
that's a fearsome mistak, for it's jist the opposite."</p>
<p>"I thank ye," said Donal. "I'll consider wi' my best endeevour what ye
hae said."</p>
<p>"But o' a' things," resumed the cobbler, "luik 'at ye lo'e fairplay.
Fairplay 's a won'erfu' word—a gran' thing constantly lost sicht o'.
Man, I hae been tryin' to win at the duin' o' the richt this mony a
year, but I daurna yet lat mysel' ac' upo' the spur o' the moment whaur
my ain enterest 's concernt: my ain side micht yet blin' me to the
ither man's side o' the business. Onybody can un'erstan' his ain
richt, but it taks trible an' thoucht to un'erstan' what anither coonts
his richt. Twa richts canna weel clash. It's a wrang an' a richt, or
pairt wrang an' a pairt richt 'at clashes."</p>
<p>"Gien a'body did that, I doobt there wad be feow fortins made!" said
Donal.</p>
<p>"Aboot that I canna say, no kennin'; I daurna discover a law whaur I
haena knowledge! But this same fairplay lies, alang wi' love, at the
varra rute and f'undation o' the universe. The theologians had a
glimmer o' the fac' whan they made sae muckle o' justice, only their
justice is sic a meeserable sma' bit plaister eemage o' justice, 'at it
maist gars an honest body lauch. They seem to me like shepherds 'at
rive doon the door-posts, an' syne block up the door wi' them."</p>
<p>Donal told him of the quarrel he had had with lord Forgue, and asked
him whether he thought he had done right.</p>
<p>"Weel," answered the cobbler, "I'm as far frae blamin' you as I am frae
justifeein' the yoong lord."</p>
<p>"He seems to me a fine kin' o' a lad," said Donal, "though some
owerbeirin'."</p>
<p>"The likes o' him are mair to be excused for that nor ither fowk, for
they hae great disadvantages i' the position an' the upbringin'. It's
no easy for him 'at's broucht up a lord to believe he's jist ane wi'
the lave."</p>
<p>Donal went for a stroll through the town, and met the minister, but he
took no notice of him. He was greatly annoyed at the march which he
said the fellow had stolen upon him, and regarded him as one who had
taken an unfair advantage of him. But he had little influence at the
castle. The earl never by any chance went to church. His niece, lady
Arctura, did, however, and held the minister for an authority at things
spiritual—one of whom living water was to be had without money and
without price. But what she counted spiritual things were very common
earthly stuff, and for the water, it was but stagnant water from the
ditches of a sham theology. Only what was a poor girl to do who did
not know how to feed herself, but apply to one who pretended to be able
to feed others? How was she to know that he could not even feed
himself? Out of many a difficulty she thought he helped her—only the
difficulty would presently clasp her again, and she must deal with it
as she best could, until a new one made her forget it, and go to the
minister, or rather to his daughter, again. She was one of those who
feel the need of some help to live—some upholding that is not of
themselves, but who, through the stupidity of teachers unconsciously
false,—men so unfit that they do not know they are unfit, direct their
efforts, first towards having correct notions, then to work up the
feelings that belong to those notions. She was an honest girl so far
as she had been taught—perhaps not so far as she might have been
without having been taught. How was she to think aright with scarce a
glimmer of God's truth? How was she to please God, as she called it,
who thought of him in a way repulsive to every loving soul? How was
she to be accepted of God, who did not accept her own neighbour, but
looked down, without knowing it, upon so many of her fellow-creatures?
How should such a one either enjoy or recommend her religion? It would
have been the worse for her if she had enjoyed it—the worse for others
if she had recommended it! Religion is simply the way home to the
Father. There was little of the path in her religion except the
difficulty of it. The true way is difficult enough because of our
unchildlikeness—uphill, steep, and difficult, but there is fresh life
on every surmounted height, a purer air gained, ever more life for more
climbing. But the path that is not the true one is not therefore easy.
Up hill is hard walking, but through a bog is worse. Those who seek
God with their faces not even turned towards him, who, instead of
beholding the Father in the Son, take the stupidest opinions concerning
him and his ways from other men—what should they do but go wandering
on dark mountains, spending their strength in avoiding precipices and
getting out of bogs, mourning and sighing over their sins instead of
leaving them behind and fleeing to the Father, whom to know is eternal
life. Did they but set themselves to find out what Christ knew and
meant and commanded, and then to do it, they would soon forget their
false teachers. But alas! they go on bowing before long-faced,
big-worded authority—the more fatally when it is embodied in a good
man who, himself a victim to faith in men, sees the Son of God only
through the theories of others, and not with the sight of his own
spiritual eyes.</p>
<p>Donal had not yet seen the lady. He neither ate, sat, nor held
intercourse with the family. Away from Davie, he spent his time in his
tower chamber, or out of doors. All the grounds were open to him
except a walled garden on the south-eastern slope, looking towards the
sea, which the earl kept for himself, though he rarely walked in it.
On the side of the hill away from the town, was a large park reaching
down to the river, and stretching a long way up its bank—with fine
trees, and glorious outlooks to the sea in one direction, and to the
mountains in the other. Here Donal would often wander, now with a
book, now with Davie. The boy's presence was rarely an interruption to
his thoughts when he wanted to think. Sometimes he would thrown himself
on the grass and read aloud; then Davie would throw himself beside him,
and let the words he could not understand flow over him in a spiritual
cataract. On the river was a boat, and though at first he was awkward
enough in the use of the oars, he was soon able to enjoy thoroughly a
row up or down the stream, especially in the twilight.</p>
<p>He was alone with his book under a beech-tree on a steep slope to the
river, the day after his affair with lord Forgue: reading aloud, he did
not hear the approach of his lordship.</p>
<p>"Mr. Grant," he said, "if you will say you are sorry you threw me from
my horse, I will say I am sorry I struck you."</p>
<p>"I am very sorry," said Donal, rising, "that it was necessary to throw
you from your horse; and perhaps your lordship may remember that you
struck me before I did so."</p>
<p>"That has nothing to do with it. I propose an accommodation, or
compromise, or what you choose to call it: if you will do the one, I
will do the other."</p>
<p>"What I think I ought to do, my lord, I do without bargaining. I am
not sorry I threw you from your horse, and to say so would be to lie."</p>
<p>"Of course everybody thinks himself in the right!" said his lordship
with a small sneer.</p>
<p>"It does not follow that no one is ever in the right!" returned Donal.
"Does your lordship think you were in the right—either towards me or
the poor animal who could not obey you because he was in torture?"</p>
<p>"I don't say I do."</p>
<p>"Then everybody does not think himself in the right! I take your
lordship's admission as an apology."</p>
<p>"By no means: when I make an apology, I will do it; I will not sneak
out of it."</p>
<p>He was evidently at strife with himself: he knew he was wrong, but
could not yet bring himself to say so. It is one of the poorest of
human weaknesses that a man should be ashamed of saying he has done
wrong, instead of so ashamed of having done wrong that he cannot rest
till he has said so; for the shame cleaves fast until the confession
removes it.</p>
<p>Forgue walked away a step or two, and stood with his back to Donal,
poking the point of his stick into the grass. All at once he turned
and said:</p>
<p>"I will apologize if you will tell me one thing."</p>
<p>"I will tell you whether you apologize or not," said Donal. "I have
never asked you to apologize."</p>
<p>"Tell me then why you did not return either of my blows yesterday."</p>
<p>"I should like to know why you ask—but I will answer you: simply
because to do so would have been to disobey my master."</p>
<p>"That's a sort of thing I don't understand. But I only wanted to know
it was not cowardice; I could not make an apology to a coward."</p>
<p>"If I were a coward, you would owe me an apology all the same, and he
is a poor creature who will not pay his debts. But I hope it is not
necessary I should either thrash or insult your lordship to convince
you I fear you no more than that blackbird there!"</p>
<p>Forgue gave a little laugh. A moment's pause followed. Then he held
out his hand, but in a half-hesitating, almost sheepish way:</p>
<p>"Well, well! shake hands," he said.</p>
<p>"No, my lord," returned Donal. "I bear your lordship not the slightest
ill-will, but I will shake hands with no one in a half-hearted way, and
no other way is possible while you are uncertain whether I am a coward
or not."</p>
<p>So saying, he threw himself again upon the grass, and lord Forgue
walked away, offended afresh.</p>
<p>The next morning he came into the school-room where Donal sat at
lessons with Davie. He had a book in his hand.</p>
<p>"Mr. Grant," he said, "will you help me with this passage in Xenophon?"</p>
<p>"With all my heart," answered Donal, and in a few moments had him out
of his difficulty.</p>
<p>But instead of going, his lordship sat down a little way off, and went
on with his reading—sat until master and pupil went out, and left him
sitting there. The next morning he came with a fresh request, and
Donal found occasion to approve warmly of a translation he proposed.
From that time he came almost every morning. He was no great scholar,
but with the prospect of an English university before him, thought it
better to read a little.</p>
<p>The housekeeper at the castle was a good woman, and very kind to Donal,
feeling perhaps that he fell to her care the more that he was by birth
of her own class; for it was said in the castle, "the tutor makes no
pretence to being a gentleman." Whether he was the more or the less of
one on that account, I leave my reader to judge according to his
capability. Sometimes when his dinner was served, mistress Brookes
would herself appear, to ensure proper attention to him, and would sit
down and talk to him while he ate, ready to rise and serve him if
necessary. Their early days had had something in common, though she
came from the southern highlands of green hills and more sheep. She
gave him some rather needful information about the family; and he soon
perceived that there would have been less peace in the house but for
her good temper and good sense.</p>
<p>Lady Arctura was the daughter of the last lord Morven, and left sole
heir to the property; Forgue and his brother Davie were the sons of the
present earl. The present lord was the brother of the last, and had
lived with him for some years before he succeeded. He was a man of
peculiar and studious habits; nobody ever seemed to take to him; and
since his wife's death, his health had been precarious. Though a
strange man, he was a just if not generous master. His brother had
left him guardian to lady Arctura, and he had lived in the castle as
before. His wife was a very lovely, but delicate woman, and latterly
all but confined to her room. Since her death a great change had
passed upon her husband. Certainly his behaviour was sometimes hard to
understand.</p>
<p>"He never gangs to the kirk—no ance in a twalmonth!" said Mrs.
Brookes. "Fowk sud be dacent, an' wha ever h'ard o' dacent fowk 'at
didna gang to the kirk ance o' the Sabbath! I dinna haud wi' gaein'
twise mysel': ye hae na time to read yer ain chapters gien ye do that.
But the man's a weel behavet man, sae far as ye see, naither sayin' nor
doin' the thing he shouldna: what he may think, wha's to say! the mair
ten'er conscience coonts itsel' the waur sinner; an' I'm no gaein' to
think what I canna ken! There's some 'at says he led a gey lowse kin'
o' a life afore he cam to bide wi' the auld yerl; he was wi' the airmy
i' furreign pairts, they say; but aboot that I ken naething. The auld
yerl was something o' a sanct himsel', rist the banes o' 'im! We're no
the jeedges o' the leevin' ony mair nor o' the deid! But I maun awa'
to luik efter things; a minute's an hoor lost wi' thae fule lasses.
Ye're a freen' o' An'rew Comin's, they tell me, sir: I dinna ken what
to do wi' 's lass, she's that upsettin'! Ye wad think she was ane o'
the faimily whiles; an' ither whiles she 's that silly!"</p>
<p>"I'm sorry to hear it!" said Donal. "Her grandfather and grandmother
are the best of good people."</p>
<p>"I daursay! But there's jist what I hae seen: them 'at 's broucht up
their ain weel eneuch, their son's bairn they'll jist lat gang. Aither
they're tired o' the thing, or they think they're safe. They hae
lippent til yoong Eppy a heap ower muckle. But I'm naither a prophet
nor the son o' a prophet, as the minister said last Sunday—an' said
well, honest man! for it's the plain trowth: he's no ane o' the major
nor yet the minor anes! But haud him oot o' the pu'pit an' he dis no
that ill. His dochter 's no an ill lass aither, an' a great freen' o'
my leddy's. But I'm clean ashamed o' mysel' to gang on this gait. Hae
ye dune wi' yer denner, Mr. Grant?—Weel, I'll jist sen' to clear awa',
an' lat ye til yer lessons."</p>
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