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.

On the 22nd of March, 1832, Goethe died, an event which made a great impression on Scott, who had intended to visit Weimar on his way back, on purpose to see Goethe, and this much increased his eager desire to return home.  Accordingly on the 16th of April, the last day on which he made any entry in his diary, he quitted Naples for Rome, where he stayed long enough only to let his daughter see something of the place, and hurried off homewards on the 21st of May.  In Venice he was still strong enough to insist on scrambling down into the dungeons adjoining the Bridge of Sighs; and at Frankfort he entered a bookseller’s shop, when the man brought out a lithograph of Abbotsford, and Scott remarking, “I know that already, sir,” left the shop unrecognized, more than ever craving for home.  At Nimeguen, on the 9th of June, while in a steamboat on the Rhine, he had his most serious attack of apoplexy, but would not discontinue his journey, was lifted into an English steamboat at Rotterdam on the 11th of June, and arrived in London on the 13th.  There he recognized his children, and appeared to expect immediate death, as he gave them repeatedly his most solemn blessing, but for the most part he lay at the St. James’s Hotel, in Jermyn Street, without any power to converse.  There it was that Allan Cunningham, on walking home one night, found a group of working men at the corner of the street, who stopped him and asked, “as if there was but one death-bed in London, ’Do you know, sir, if this is the street where he is lying?’” According to the usual irony of destiny, it was while the working men were doing him this hearty and unconscious homage, that Sir Walter, whenever disturbed by the noises of the street, imagined himself at the polling-booth of Jedburgh, where the people had cried out, “Burk Sir Walter.”  And it was while lying here,—­only now and then uttering a few words,—­that Mr. Lockhart says of him, “He expressed his will as determinedly as ever, and expressed it with the same apt and good-natured irony that he was wont to use.”

Sir Walter’s great and urgent desire was to return to Abbotsford, and at last his physicians yielded.  On the 7th July he was lifted into his carriage, followed by his trembling and weeping daughters, and so taken to a steamboat, where the captain gave up his private cabin—­a cabin on deck—­for his use.  He remained unconscious of any change till after his arrival in Edinburgh, when, on the 11th July, he was placed again in his carriage, and remained in it quite unconscious during the first two stages of the journey to Tweedside.  But as the carriage entered the valley of the Gala, he began to look about him.  Presently he murmured a name or two, “Gala water, surely,—­Buckholm,—­Torwoodlee.”  When the outline of the Eildon hills came in view, Scott’s excitement was great, and when his eye caught the towers of Abbotsford, he sprang up with a cry of delight, and while the towers remained in sight it took his physician, his son-in-law, and his

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Sir Walter Scott from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.