<h2 id="id00581" style="margin-top: 4em">Chapter XII.</h2>
<p id="id00582">Drumshargard.</p>
<p id="id00583" style="margin-top: 2em">While these transactions occupied the morning, Lady Helen (who the
night before had been removed into the quiet cell appointed for her)
slept long and sweetly. Her exhausted frame found renovation; and she
awoke with a heavenly calm at her heart. A cheering vision had visited
her sleeping thoughts; and a trance of happy feelings absorbed her
senses, while her hardly disengaged spirit still hovered over its
fading images.</p>
<p id="id00584">She had seen in her dream a young knight enter her cell, bearing her
father in his arms. He laid the earl down before her; but as she
stooped to embrace him, the knight took her by the hand, leading her to
the window of the apartment (which seemed extended to an immense size),
he smiled, and said, "Look out and see how I have performed my vow!"
She obeyed, and saw crowds of rejoicing people, who at sight of the
young warrior raised such a shout, that Helen awoke. She started—she
looked around—she was still in the narrow cell, and lone; but the
rapture of beholding her father yet fluttered in her breast, and the
touch of the warrior's hand seemed still warm upon hers. "Angels of
rest," cried she, "I thank ye for this blessed vision!"</p>
<p id="id00585">The prior of St. Fillan might have read his own just sentiment in the
heart of Lady Helen. While the gentlest of human beings, she was an
evidence that an ardent and pious mind contains the true principles of
heroism. Hope, in such a mind, treads down impossibilities; and,
regardless of impediments or dangers, rushes forward to seize the
prize. In the midst of hosts, it feels a conqueror's power; or, when
its strength fails, sees, by the eye of faith, legions of angels
watching to support the natural weakness. Lady Helen knew that the
cause was just which had put the sword into the hand of Wallace; that
it was virtue which had prompted her father to second him; and where
justice is there are the wings of the Most High stretched out as a
shield!</p>
<p id="id00586">This dream seemed prophetic. "Yes," cried she, "though thousands of
Edward's soldiers surrounded my father and his friend, I should not
despair. Thy life, O noble Wallace, was not give to be extinguished in
an hour! Thy morn has hardly risen, the perfect day must come that is
to develop thy greatness—that is to prove thee (and oh! gracious God,
grant my prayer!) the glory of Scotland!"</p>
<p id="id00587">Owing to the fervor of her apostrophe, she did not observe the door of
the cell open, till the prior stood before her. After expressing his
pleasure at the renovation in her countenance, he informed her of the
departure of the English soldier, and of the alarm which he and Murray
had sustained for his safety, by the adventure which had thrown a
stranger from the craigs into their protection. At the mention of that
now momentous spot, she blushed; the golden-haired warrior of her dream
seemed ready to rise before her; and with a beating heart she prepared
to hear some true but miraculous account of her father's rescue.</p>
<p id="id00588">Unconscious of what was passing in her young and eager mind, the prior
calmly proceeded to relate all that Ker had told of the dangerous
extremity to which Wallace was reduced; and then closed his
intelligence, by mentioning the attempt which meditated to save him.
The heightened color gradually faded from the face of Helen, and low
sighs were her only responses to the observations the good priest made
on the difficulty of the enterprise. But when his pity for the brave
man engaged in the cause, betrayed him into expressing his fears that
the patriotic zeal of Wallace would only make him and them a sacrifice,
Helen looked up; there was inspiration on her lips and in her eyes.
"Father," said she, "hast thou not taught me that God shieldeth the
patriot as well as armeth him!"</p>
<p id="id00589">"True!" returned he, with an answering smile; "steadily believe this,
and where will be the sighs you have just been breathing!"</p>
<p id="id00590">"Nature will shrink," replied she; "but the Christian's hope checks her
ere she falls. Pardon me then, holy father, that I sometimes weep; but
they are often tears of trust and consolation."</p>
<p id="id00591">"Daughter of heaven," replied the good prior, "you might teach devotion
to age, and cause youth to be enamored of the graces of religion! Be
ever thus, and you may look with indifference on the wreck of worlds."</p>
<p id="id00592">Helen having meekly replied to this burst from the heart of the holy
man, begged to see her cousin before he set off on his expedition. The
prior withdrew, and within an hour after, Murray entered the apartment.
Their conversation was long, and their parting full of an interest
that dissolved them both into tears. "When I see you again, my brave
cousin, tell me that my father is free, and his preserver safe. Your
own life, dear Andrew," added she, as he pressed his cheek to hers,
"must always be precious to me."</p>
<p id="id00593">Murray hastily withdrew, and Helen was again alone.</p>
<p id="id00594">The young chieftain and Ker covered their armor with shepherd's plaids;
and having received a thousand blessings from the prior and Halbert,
proceeded under shelter of the night, through the obscurest paths of
the wood which divided Bothwell from Drumshargard.</p>
<p id="id00595">Sir John Murray was gone to rest when his nephew arrived, but Lord
Andrew's voice being well known by the porter, he was admitted into the
house; and leaving his companion in the dining-hall, went to the
apartment of his uncle. The old knight was soon aroused, and welcomed
his nephew with open arms; for he had feared, from the accounts brought
by the fugitive tenants of Bothwell, that he also had been carried away
prisoner.</p>
<p id="id00596">Murray now unfolded his errand—first to obtain a band of Sir John's
trustiest people to assist in rescuing the preserver of the earl's life
from immediate destruction; and secondly, if a commission for Lord
Mar's release did not arrive from King Edward, to aid him to free his
uncle and the countess from Dumbarton Castle.</p>
<p id="id00597">Sir John listened with growing anxiety to his nephew's details. When
he heard of Lady Helen's continuing in the convent, he highly approved
it. "That is well," said he; "so bring her to any private protection
would only spread calamity. She might be traced, and her protector put
in danger; none but the church, with safety to itself, can grant asylum
to the daughter of a state prisoner."</p>
<p id="id00598">"Then I doubly rejoice she is there," replied Murray, "and there she
will remain, till your generous assistance empowers me to rescue her
father."</p>
<p id="id00599">"Lord Mar has been very rash, nephew," returned Drumshargard. "What
occasion was there for him to volunteer sending men to support Sir
William Wallace? and how durst he bring ruin on Bothwell Castle, by
collecting unauthorized by my brother, its vassals for so dangerous an
experiment?"</p>
<p id="id00600">Murray started at these unexpected observations. He knew his uncle was
timid, but he had never suspected him of meanness; however, in
consideration of the respect he owed to him as his father's brother, he
smothered his disgust, and gave him a mild answer. But the old man
could not approve of a nobleman of his rank running himself, his
fortune, and his friends into peril, to pay any debt of gratitude; and,
as to patriotic sentiments being a stimulus, he treated the idea with
contempt. "Trust me, Andrew," said he, "nobody profits by these
notions but thieves and desperate fellows ready to become thieves!"</p>
<p id="id00601">"I do not understand you, sir!"</p>
<p id="id00602">"Not understand me?" replied the knight, rather impatiently. "Who
suffers in these contests for liberty, as you choose to call them, but
such men as Lord Mar and your father? Betrayed by artful declamation,
they rush into conspiracies against the existing government, are
detected, ruined, and perhaps finally lose their lives! Who gains by
rebellion, but a few penniless wretches, that embrace these vaunted
principles from the urgency of their necessities? They acquire
plunder, under the mask of extraordinary disinterestedness; and
hazarding nothing of themselves but their worthless lives, they would
make tools of the first men in the realm; and throw the whole country
into flames, that they may catch a few brands from the fire!"</p>
<p id="id00603">Young Murray felt his anger rise with this speech. "You do not speak
to my point, sir! I do not come here to dispute the general evil of
revolt, but to ask your assistance to snatch two of the bravest men in
Scotland from the fangs of the tyrant who has made you a slave!"</p>
<p id="id00604">"Nephew!" cried the knight, starting from his couch; and darting a
fierce look at him, "if any man but one of my own blood had uttered
that word, this hour should have been his last."</p>
<p id="id00605">"Every man, sir," continued Murray, "who acts upon your principles,
must know himself to be a slave;-and to resent being called so, is to
affront his conscience. A name is nothing, the fact ought to knock
upon your heart, and there arouse the indignation of a Scot and a
Murray. See you not the villages of your country burning around you?
the castles of your chieftains razed to the ground? Did not the
plains of Dunbar reek with the blood of your kinsmen; and even now, do
you not see them led away in chains to the strongholds of the tyrant?
Are not your stoutest vassals pressed from your service, and sent into
foreign wars? And yet you exclaim, 'I see no injury—I spurn at the
name of slave!'"</p>
<p id="id00606">Murray rose from his seat as he ended, and walking the room in
agitation, did not perceive the confusion of his uncle, who, at once
overcome with conviction and fear, again ventured to speak: "It is too
sure you speak truth, Andrew; but what am I, or any other private
individual, that we should make ourselves a forlorn hope for the whole
nation? Will Baliol, who was the first to bow to the usurper, will he
thank us for losing our heads in resentment of his indignity? Bruce
himself, the rightful heir of the crown, leaves us to our fates, and
has become a courtier in England! For whom, then, should I adventure
my gray hairs, and the quiet of my home, to seek an uncertain liberty,
and to meet an almost certain death?"</p>
<p id="id00607">"For Scotland, uncle," replied he; "just laws are her right. You are
her son; and if you do not make one in the grand attempt to rescue her
from the bloodhounds which tear her vitals, the guilt of parricide will
be on your soul! Think not, sir, to preserve your home, or even your
gray hairs, by hugging the chains by which you are bound. You are a
Scot, and that is sufficient to arm the enemy against your property and
life. Remember the fate of Lord Monteith! At the very time he was
beset by the parasites of Edward, and persuaded by their flatteries to
be altogether as an Englishman, in that very hour, when he had taken a
niece of Cressingham's to his arms, by her hands the vengeance of
Edward reached him-he fell!"</p>
<p id="id00608">Murray saw that his uncle was struck, and that he trembled.</p>
<p id="id00609">"But I am too insignificant, Andrew!"</p>
<p id="id00610">"You are the brother of Lord Bothwell!" answered Murray, with all the
dignity of his father rising in his countenance. "His large
possessions made him a traitor in the eyes of the tyrant's
representatives. Cressingham, as treasurer for the crew, has already
sent his lieutenant to lord it in our paternal castle; and do not
deceive yourself in believing that some one of his officers will not
require the fertile fields of Drumshargard as a reward for his
services! No!-cheat not yourself with the idea that the brother of
Lord Bothwell will be too insignificant to share in the honor of
bearing a part in the confiscations of his country! Trust me, my
uncle, the forbearance of tyrants is not that of mercy, but of
convenience. When they need your wealth, or your lands, your
submission is forgotten, and a prison, or the ax, ready to give them
quiet possession."</p>
<p id="id00611">Sir John Murray, though a timid and narrow-sighted man, now fully
comprehended his nephew's reasoning; and his fears taking a different
turn, he hastily declared his determination to set off immediately for
the Highlands. "In the morning, by daybreak," said he, "I will
commence my journey, and join my brother at Loch-awe; for I cannot
believe myself safe a moment, while so near the garrisons of the enemy."</p>
<p id="id00612">Murray approved this plan; and after obtaining his hard-wrung leave to
take thirty men from his vassals, he returned to Ker, to inform him of
the success of his mission. It was not necessary, neither would it
have been agreeable to his pride, to relate the arguments which had
been required to obtain this small assistance; and in the course of an
hour he brought together the appointed number of the bravest men on the
estate. When equipped he led them into the hall, to receive the last
command from their feudal lord.</p>
<p id="id00613">On seeing them armed, with every man his drawn dirk in his hand, Sir
John turned pale. Murray, with the unfolded banner of Mar in his
grasp, and Ker by his side, stood at their head.</p>
<p id="id00614">"Young men," said the old knight, striving to speak in a firm tone, "in
this expedition you are to consider yourselves the followers of my
nephew; he is brave and honourable, therefore I commit you to his
command. But as you go on his earnest petition, I am not answerable to
any man for the enterprises to which he may lead you."</p>
<p id="id00615">"Be they all on my own head!" cried Murray, blushing at his uncle's
pusillanimity, and drawing out his sword with an impatience that made
the old knight start. "We now have your permission to depart, sir?"</p>
<p id="id00616">Sir John gave a ready assent; he was anxious to get so hot-headed a
youth out of his house, and to collect his gold and servants, that he
might commence his own flight by break of day.</p>
<p id="id00617">It was still dark as midnight when Murray and his little company passed
the heights above Drumshargard, and took their rapid though silent
march toward the cliffs, which would conduct them to the more dangerous
passes of the Cartlane Craigs.</p>
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