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.

May 3.—­The very same diary might serve this day as the last.  I sent off to Gillies half his review, and I wish the other half at Old Nick.

May 4.—­A poor young woman came here this morning, well-dressed and well-behaved, with a strong northern accent.  She talked incoherently a long story of a brother and a lover both dead.  I would have kept her here till I wrote to her friends, particularly to Mr. Sutherland (an Aberdeen bookseller), to inform them where she is, but my daughter and her maidens were frightened, as indeed there might be room for it, and so I sent her in one of Davidson’s chaises to the Castle at Jedburgh, and wrote to Mr. Shortreed to see she is humanely treated.  I have written also to her brother.

    “Long shall I see these things forlorn,
       And long again their sorrows feel.”

The rest was write, walk, eat, smoke; smoke, and write again.

May 5.—­A moist rainy day, mild, however, and promising good weather.  I sat at my desk the whole day, and worked at Gillies’s review.  So was the day exhausted.

May 6.—­I sent off the review.  Received the sheets of the Secret Tribunal from Master Reynolds.  Keith Scott, a grandson of James Scott, my father’s cousin-german, came here, a fine lively boy with good spirits and amiable manners.  Just when I had sent off the rest of Gillies’s manuscript, W. Laidlaw came, so I had him for my companion in a walk which the late weather has prevented for one or two days.  Colonel and Mrs. Ferguson, and Margaret Ferguson, came to dinner, and so passed the evening.

May 7.—­Captain Percy, brother of Lord Lovaine, and son of Lord Beverley, came out to dinner.  Dr. and Mrs. Brewster met him.  He is like his brother, Lord Lovaine, an amiable, easy, and accomplished man, who has seen a great deal of service, and roamed about with tribes of Western Indians.

May 8.—­Went up Yarrow with Captain Percy, which made a complete day’s idleness, for which I have little apology to offer.  I heard at the same time from the President[309] that Sir Robert Dundas is very unwell, so I must be in Edinburgh on Monday 11th.  Very disagreeable, now the weather is becoming pleasant.

May 9.—­Captain Percy left us at one o’clock.  He has a sense of humour, and aptness of comprehension which renders him an agreeable companion.  I am sorry his visit has made me a little idle, but there is no help for it.

I have done everything to-day previous to my going away, but—­que faut-il faire? one must see society now and then, and this is really an agreeable man.  And so, transeat ille.  I walked, and was so fatigued as to sleep, and now I will attack John Lockhart’s proof-sheets, of which he has sent me a revise.  In the evening I corrected proofs for the review.

May 10.—­This must be a day of preparation, which I hate; yet it is but laying aside a few books, and arranging a few papers, and yet my nerves are fluttered, and I make blunders, and mislay my pen and my keys, and make more confusion than I can repair.  After all, I will try for once to do it steadily.

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