The Spell of Scotland
t to let it lie there. These Middle Marches however are so essentially Scottish, the splendour and the romance, the history and the tragedy, that one would fain keep them so, and come u
in this realm of romance, since the Border was nea
istory and story have passed before. There was James II going to the siege of Roxburgh, and not returning; there was James IV going to the field of Flodden and not returning; there was James V going to hunt the deer; there was James VI going up t
ES
Bothwell-of all place of emotion this is the most difficult to realize, and I can but think Mary's heart was broken here, and the heartbreak at Carberry Hill was but an echo of this; past Lauder, where the nobles
lr
as to arrive there in the evening of a night when the moon would be at the full. I had seen it shine gloriousl
ng my eyes resolutely to all the glory and the memory that lay about, I went sou
to enter there until the magic hour should strike. The country roun
eed flows roun
slopes to
light of day and the coming shadows of night in a curious effect which no picture can report; t
from Bannockburn, and Flodden, and Culloden; and where men and women still insert their mortality into this immortality-Elizabeth Clephane who wrote the "Ninety and Nine" lies there; and out into the country and down by the Tweed toward the Holy Pool, the Haly Wheel, to wonder if when I came again in the mi
n this my first evening in Scotland! And whether or not you care for the pipes, there is nothing like
ways they could perform miracles and obtain food; which they did. That for the early time. And for the late, the encampment of Leslie's men in these fields before the day when
battle on the way against the Moslems in southern Spain, where "a Douglass! a Douglass!" rang in battle clash against "Allah, illah, allah," and the Douglass himself was slain. The heart of The Bruce flung against the infidel, was recove
also buried
St. Micha
ll'd one and the
the world over, Oxford, Paris, Bologna, Palermo, Toledo, and finally, perhaps because his wizardry had sent him like a wandering Jew from place to place, back to the Border, his home country, where he came and served the Evil One. Dante places him in the Pu
ld say
left the Eildon
To that height on the morrow I should climb, for it is there that Sir Walter Scott, a later wizard, had carried our Washi
nd Smailholm; and there you have Galashiels and Torwoodelee and Gala Water; and in that direction you see Teviotdale and the Braes of Yarrow; and Ettrick stream winding along like a silver thread to throw itself into the Tweed. It may be pertinacity, but to my eye, these gray hills and all this wild B
ugh to remember that perfect picture as im
s against th
he purpl
remembe
once mo
from the Bo
from the
music lull
s to qui
d ghost thy
ough the d
come home to
returnin
emory broods
der wat
full of b
ut of l
hat sung the
ugh a boy'
below the bl
n the gol
nd Tweed, an
too fai
that the v
d have wel
Melrose, mael ros, so the old Celtic goes, "the naked headland in the wood." And I was seeing, was hearing, what I have co
not see the moonlight flooding the Abbey, Melrose Abbey? Out of a remembered yesterday, out of
'st view fair
by the pal
beams of l
flout the
n arches are b
fted oriel g
d light's un
he ruined ce
s and buttre
d of ebon
r edges th
that teach thee
Tweed is he
hoot o'er the d
t go alone
t. David's
eturning, s
cene so sad
d not rise
the Cross in the market, looked expectan
the ringing o
was well n
d true, Charles' wain-as Charles should in Bonnie Scotland-held true to the pole. But it was a late July moon, and those Eildon hills and their circling kin rose so high against the night s
n December, on December 27, when the festival of St. John's is celebrated with torch lights in the ruins of the Abbey-
come, I mu
ot come
St. John's, I
wer I may
an October moon, in wh
OSE
n in the land where reform has meant ruin, and where from Kelso to Elgin, shattered fanes of the fai
the Tweed, and is so lovely, so dramatic a corner of the Tweed, that Dorothy Woodsworth declared, "we wished
before Saint Augustine came to Canterbury. It was the chief "island" between Iona and Lindisfarne. Very haughty were these monks of the West. "Rome errs, Alexandria errs
on these very hills round about us, and saw, when abiding in the fields, angels ascending and descending on golden ladders. Entering Melrose as a novice he became prior in 664, and l
n mountain, m
sea, from sh
. Cuthbert's c
them in fa
alive he lo
is relics m
h neither sinner nor saint, because Darnley crossed Mary in his veins-David determined to build him fair Abbeys. Of which, Melrose, "St. David's ruined pile," is the fairest. He brought Cistercians from Rievaulx in Yorkshire, to supplant the Culdees of Iona, and they builded them
he caused the Abbey to be pillaged and burned. And when Hertford came for Henry VIII, after the Thirty Nine Articles had annulled respect for buildings under the protection of Rome, the final ruin came to St. David's church-palace. Yet, late as 1810, church service, reformed, of course, was held in a roofed-over part of the Abbey ruin. To-day it is un
t exquisite ruins in the United Kingdom, perhaps second to Tintern, but why compare? It is of f
'd roof ros
lofty, lig
hat locked eac
e lys or a qu
re carved grot
with clustered
with capital f
lances which gar
ny other, is the east window over the high altar, throu
n the east
er shafts of
ed tracer
have thought s
rs straight
reakish kno
spell when the
he willow wre
ight, so pal
prophet and
on the gla
midst his
Michael b
on the Apos
ms kissed t
he pavement a
ots
uilt the "keep" which centers all
ed mansion of all the land. Scott, like the monks, could not leave the silver wash of the Tweed; and, more loving than t
nd athwart the shifting shadows of oak, ash, and thorn-Puck of Pook's hill must have known the Border country in its most embroidered days-you
e to its consciousness through the homespun, alas, to-day too often the factory-spun wo
emark it when he himself recognized how his vision was quickened through her companionship?-has spoke
he Cheviot hills, where East a
Tweed, a
ut o' ae
it runs, its short h
the stretch o
p of Berw
row of the thousands who through the centuries have exiled themselves f
I maun wa
anes far fra
, that sunken way that runs along the boundary for one-half its length, and may have been a fosse, or may have been a concealed road o
rough the s
it a jo
gain and aga
e voice of
ots
d come hither by rail from Galashiels-that noisy modern factory town, once the housing place for Melrose pilgrims, which to-day speaks nothing of the romance of Gala water, and surely not these factory folk "can match the lads o' Gala Water."
hole. Sir Walter wished to possess the Border, or as much of it as might be, so he
either of which would suit me, but both would make a very desirable property indeed, and could be had for betw
had extended to a thousand acres, to the inclusion of many fi
resolved on no more building, and no pur
been knighted, and was, in truth, the Chief of the Border; a royal ambition which
s had become safer, in those scant seven years that were left to him. Even Scott could be mistaken, for
s lay on Hu
e spied wi
he saw a l
down by the
s o' the gras
o' the ve
tt o' her
siller bell
ank at all, but that is in an entirely different dir
se if they knew that Scott wished them to have lived at his Huntlie Bank, they straightway would have managed to have lived there. Always, as
d a basement doorway. "My dreams about my cottage go on," he wrote to Joanna Baillie, as we all dream of building cottages into castles. "My present intention is to have only two spare bedrooms," but "I can
ver that may be, and are confident that Sir Walter if
alled this "perhaps the most incongruous pile that gentlemanly modernism ever designed." This may c
s through a sort of transubstantiation of personality that comes by looking on what the great
ich Queen Mary prayed, the quaigh of her great great and last grandson, the tumbler from which Bobbie Burns drank-one of them-the purse int
DY, ABB
es I, the pistol of Claverhouse, the pistol of Napoleon, a hunting flask of James III; and here are the keys of Loch Leven castle, dropped in the lake by Mary
cony, also book-lined, and escape through a little doorway. When Scott first came to the cottage of Abbotsford he wrote, furiously, in a little window embrasure with only a curta
esire to write, the ruling passion. He was wheeled to the desk, he took the pen,-nothing came. He sank back and burst into tears.
and now he could never read him all over again for the first time. It is rather because Scott the man is so immortal that he seems like a man still living; or at least like one who died but yesterday. Into the dining-room whe
ter glow, "so warm that every window was wide open, and so peacefully still that the sound of
yb
tored so much precious personal dust. The time had become thrawn; dark skies hung over the Cheviots and the Eildon, and ov
was by this very way that there passed the funeral train of Scott, the chief carriage drawn by Scott's own horses. Thousands and thousands of pilgrims have followed that fu
e across the river, with the ringing of bells in the ear. For it was ordered on that September day of 1832, by the Provost, "tha
me to forget; the stream of pilgrims has been so uninterrupted for nearly a century. Through the market-place of Melrose it passed, t
and very lonely. And one wonders if Michael Scot did not call to Walter Scott to come and join the quiet there, a
and pass through the little winding street-and wonder if the early Roman name of Trimontium,
ve come the wrong way. There is a steep climb to the heights of Bemersyde, where on the crest all Melrose Glen lies beautifully storied b
, the Dunion, the Ruberslaw, the Eildon rise, and in the great bend of the river with richly wooded braes abou
h woodlands on either side, and to the east,
y three years old. It is in truth his birthplace, for without the clear air of the Border he would have fol
utiful Scottish panorama may be glimpsed, and here Scott brought Turner to make his sketch of the Border. And here, because a kinsman agreed to save Sandyknowe Tower from t
nun in Dry
oks upon
monk in M
th a word
d leaves a peninsula for Dryburgh. The gray walls of the ruin lift above
TOMB OF SIR WALTER
is made chiefly because in the quiet sheltered ruined St. Mary's aisle sleeps Sir Walte
than Augustus or Columba. These were white monks that David brought up from Alnwick where his queen had been a Northumbrian p
would prefer that Sir Walter were there with his kin, instead of here with his kindred. But this is a sweet place, a historic place, begun by Hugh de Moreville, who was a slayer of Thomas à Becket, and was Constab
e you carry away, but tha
here with c
ites sing