The Journal of Sir Walter Scott eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,191 pages of information about The Journal of Sir Walter Scott.

The Journal of Sir Walter Scott eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,191 pages of information about The Journal of Sir Walter Scott.

February 28.—­Past ten, and Mr. Laidlaw, the model of a clerk in other respects, is not come yet.  He has never known the value of time, so is not quite accurate in punctuality; but that, I hope, will come if I can drill him to it without hurting him.  I think I hear him coming.  I am like the poor wizard who is first puzzled how to raise the devil and then how to employ him.  But vogue la galere.  Worked till one, then walked with great difficulty and pain till half-past two.  I think I can hardly stir without my pony, which is a sad pity.  Mr. Laidlaw dines here.

FOOTNOTES: 

[428] Macbeth, Act V. Sc. 5.

[429] Lear, Act III.  Sc. 4.

[430] Colman the elder.

MARCH.

March 1, 2, 3.—­All these three days I wrote forenoon and fagged afternoon.  Kept up the ball indifferent well, but began to tire on the third, and suspected that I was flat—­a dreary suspicion, not easily chased away when once it takes root.

March 4.—­Laid aside the novel, and began with vigour a review of Robson’s Essay on Heraldry;[431] but I missed some quotations which I could not get on without.  I gave up, and took such a rash ride nowadays.  Returned home, and found Colonel Russell there on a visit.  Then we had dinner, and afterwards the making up this miserable Journal.

March 5.—­I have a letter from our member, Whytbank, adjuring me to assist the gentlemen of the county with an address against the Reform Bill, which menaces them with being blended with Peeblesshire, and losing of consequence one half of their franchise.  Mr. Pringle conjures me not to be very nice in choosing my epithets.  Mr. Pringle, Torwoodlee, comes over and speaks to the same purpose, adding, it will be the greatest service I can do the county, etc.  This, in a manner, drives me out of a resolution to keep myself clear of politics, and “let them fight dog, fight bear.”  But I am too easy to be persuaded to bear a hand.  The young Duke of Buccleuch comes to visit me also; so I promised to shake my duds and give them a cast of my calling, fall back, fall edge.

March 7-10.—­In these four days I drew up, with much anxiety, an address reprobatory of the Bill, both with respect to Selkirkshire, and in its general purport.  I was not mealy-mouthed, and those who heard the beginning could hardly avoid listening to the end.  It was certainly in my best style, and would have made a deal of noise.  From the uncompromising style it would have attracted attention.  Mr. Laidlaw, though he is on t’other side on the subject, thinks it the best thing I ever wrote; and I myself am happy to find that it cannot be said to smell of the apoplexy.  The pointed passages were, on the contrary, clever and well put.  But it was too declamatory, too much like a pamphlet, and went far too generally into opposition to please the country gentlemen, who are timidly inclined to dwell on their own grievances rather than the public wrongs.

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The Journal of Sir Walter Scott from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.