Sir Walter Scott eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about Sir Walter Scott.

Sir Walter Scott eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about Sir Walter Scott.

Another wild shepherd, and wilder genius among Scott’s associates, not only in those earlier days, but to the end, was that famous Ettrick Shepherd, James Hogg, who was always quarrelling with his brother poet, as far as Scott permitted it, and making it up again when his better feelings returned.  In a shepherd’s dress, and with hands fresh from sheep-shearing, he came to dine for the first time with Scott in Castle Street, and finding Mrs. Scott lying on the sofa, immediately stretched himself at full length on another sofa; for, as he explained afterwards, “I thought I could not do better than to imitate the lady of the house.”  At dinner, as the wine passed, he advanced from “Mr. Scott,” to “Shirra” (Sheriff), “Scott,” “Walter,” and finally “Wattie,” till at supper he convulsed every one by addressing Mrs. Scott familiarly as “Charlotte."[23] Hogg wrote certain short poems, the beauty of which in their kind Sir Walter himself never approached; but he was a man almost without self-restraint or self-knowledge, though he had a great deal of self-importance, and hardly knew how much he owed to Scott’s magnanimous and ever-forbearing kindness, or if he did, felt the weight of gratitude a burden on his heart.  Very different was William Laidlaw, a farmer on the banks of the Yarrow, always Scott’s friend, and afterwards his manager at Abbotsford, through whose hand he dictated many of his novels.  Mr. Laidlaw was one of Scott’s humbler friends,—­a class of friends with whom he seems always to have felt more completely at his ease than any others—­who gave at least as much as he received, one of those wise, loyal, and thoughtful men in a comparatively modest position of life, whom Scott delighted to trust, and never trusted without finding his trust justified.  In addition to these Scotch friends, Scott had made, even before the publication of his Border Minstrelsy, not a few in London or its neighbourhood,—­of whom the most important at this time was the grey-eyed, hatchet-faced, courteous George Ellis, as Leyden described him, the author of various works on ancient English poetry and romance, who combined with a shrewd, satirical vein, and a great knowledge of the world, political as well as literary, an exquisite taste in poetry, and a warm heart.  Certainly Ellis’s criticism on his poems was the truest and best that Scott ever received; and had he lived to read his novels,—­only one of which was published before Ellis’s death,—­he might have given Scott more useful help than either Ballantyne or even Erskine.

FOOTNOTES: 

[Footnote 19:  Lockhart’s Life of Scott, i. 214.]

[Footnote 20:  Lockhart’s Life of Scott, iii. 344.]

[Footnote 21:  Lockhart’s Life of Scott, ix. 75.]

[Footnote 22:  Lockhart’s Life of Scott, ii. 56.]

[Footnote 23:  Lockhart’s Life of Scott, ii. 168-9.]

CHAPTER VII.

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Sir Walter Scott from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.