were worse shame to be idle than to be on the worst
side, though blacker than usurpation could make it.
As for Aunt Rachel, her scheme had not exactly terminated
according to her wishes, but she was under the necessity
of submitting to circumstances; and her mortification
was diverted by the employment she found in fitting
out her nephew for the campaign, and greatly consoled
by the prospect of beholding him blaze in complete
uniform. Edward Waverley himself received with
animated and undefined surprise this most unexpected
intelligence. It was, as a fine old poem expresses
it, ’like a fire to heather set,’ that
covers a solitary hill with smoke, and illumines it
at the same time with dusky fire. His tutor, or,
I should say, Mr. Pembroke, for he scarce assumed
the name of tutor, picked up about Edward’s
room some fragments of irregular verse, which he appeared
to have composed under the influence of the agitating
feelings occasioned by this sudden page being turned
up to him in the book of life. The doctor, who
was a believer in all poetry which was composed by
his friends, and written out in fair straight lines,
with a capital at the beginning of each, communicated
this treasure to Aunt Rachel, who, with her spectacles
dimmed with tears, transferred them to her commonplace
book, among choice receipts for cookery and medicine,
favourite texts, and portions from High-Church divines,
and a few songs, amatory and Jacobitical, which she
had carolled in her younger days, from whence her
nephew’s poetical tentamina were extracted when
the volume itself, with other authentic records of
the Waverley family, were exposed to the inspection
of the unworthy editor of this memorable history.
If they afford the reader no higher amusement, they
will serve, at least, better than narrative of any
kind, to acquaint him with the wild and irregular spirit
of our hero:—
Late, when the Autumn evening
fell
On Mirkwood-Mere’s romantic
dell,
The lake return’d, in
chasten’d gleam,
The purple cloud, the golden
beam:
Reflected in the crystal pool,
Headland and bank lay fair
and cool;
The weather-tinted rock and
tower,
Each drooping tree, each fairy
flower,
So true, so soft, the mirror
gave,
As if there lay beneath the
wave,
Secure from trouble, toil,
and care,
A world than earthly world
more fair.
But distant winds began to
wake,
And roused the Genius of the
Lake!
He heard the groaning of the
oak,
And donn’d at once his
sable cloak,
As warrior, at the battle-cry,
Invests him with his panoply:
Then, as the whirlwind nearer
press’d
He ’gan to shake his
foamy crest
O’er furrow’d
brow and blacken’d cheek,
And bade his surge in thunder
speak.
In wild and broken eddies
whirl’d.
Flitted that fond ideal world,
And to the shore in tumult
tost
The realms of fairy bliss
were lost.