Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
Walter Scott to George Ellis, 14 October 1803
Scott tells Ellis in reply (October 14), that he was
| LASSWADE—OCTOBER 1803. | 399 |
“infinitely gratified with his account
of Wortley Lodge and the Dragon,” and refers him to the article
“Kempion,” in the Minstrelsy, for a similar tradition respecting an ancestor of the
noble house of Somerville. The reader can hardly need to
be reminded that the gentle knight, Sir Thomas
Wortley’s, love of hearing the deer bell was often alluded
to in Scott’s subsequent writings. He goes on to
express his hope, that next summer will be “a more propitious season for
a visit to Scotland. The necessity of the present occasion,” he says,
“has kept almost every individual, however insignificant, to his post.
God has left us entirely to our own means of defence, for we have not above one
regiment of the line in all our ancient kingdom. In the mean while, we are
doing the best we can to prepare ourselves for a contest, which, perhaps, is
not far distant. A beacon light, communicating with that of Edinburgh Castle,
is just erecting in front of our quiet cottage. My field equipage is ready, and
I want nothing but a pipe and a schnurbartchen to convert me into a complete hussar.*
Charlotte, with the infantry (of the
household troops, I mean), is to beat her retreat into Ettrick Forest, where,
if the Tweed is in his usual wintry state of flood, she may weather out a
descent from Ostend. Next year I hope all this will be over, and that not only
I shall have the pleasure of receiving you in peace and quiet, but also of
going with you through every part of Caledonia, in which you can possibly be
interested. Friday se’ennight our corps takes the field * Schnurbartchen is German for mustachio. It appears
from a page of an early note-book previously transcribed, that
Scott had been sometimes a
smoker of tobacco in the first days of his lighthorsemanship. He had
laid aside the habit at the time when this letter was written; but he
twice again resumed it, though he never carried the indulgence to any
excess. |
400 | LIFE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. | |
for ten days—for the second time within three months—which
may explain the military turn of my epistle.
“Poor Ritson
is no more. All his vegetable soups and puddings have not been able to avert
the evil day, which, I understand, was preceded by madness. It must be worth
while to enquire who has got his MSS. I mean his own notes and writings. The
‘Life of
Arthur,’ for example, must contain many curious facts and
quotations, which the poor defunct had the power of assembling to an
astonishing degree, without being able to combine any thing like a narrative,
or even to deduce one useful inference—witness his ‘Essay on Romance and
Minstrelsy,’ which reminds one of a heap of rubbish, which had
either turned out unfit for the architect’s purpose, or beyond his skill
to make use of. The ballads he had collected in Cumberland and Northumberland,
too, would greatly interest me. If they have fallen into the hands of any
liberal collector, I dare say I might be indulged with a sight of them. Pray
enquire about this matter.
“Yesterday Charlotte and I had a visit which we owe to Mrs E. A rosy lass, the sister of a bold
yeoman in our neighbourhood, entered our cottage, towing in a monstrous sort of
bulldog, called emphatically Cerberus, whom she came
on the part of her brother to beg our acceptance of, understanding we were
anxious to have a son of Camp. Cerberus was no sooner loose (a pleasure which, I suspect, he had
rarely enjoyed) than his father (supposé) and he engaged in a battle which might have
been celebrated by the author of the
‘Unnatural
Combat,’ and which, for aught I know, might have turned out a
combat à
l’outrance, if I had not interfered with a horsewhip,
instead of a baton, as juge de Camp. The odds were
indeed greatly against the stranger knight—two fierce Forest greyhounds having
arrived, and, contrary
| CORRESPONDENCE WITH ELLIS—1803. | 401 |
to the law of arms, stoutly assailed him. I hope to send you a puppy instead of
this redoubtable Cerberus. Love to Mrs
E.—W. S.”
Anne Ellis [née Parker] (1773 c.-1862)
The daughter of Admiral Sir Peter Parker; in 1800 she married the antiquary George Ellis
of Sunninghill.
George Ellis (1753-1815)
English antiquary and critic, editor of
Specimens of Early English
Poets (1790), friend of Walter Scott.
Philip Massinger (1583-1649)
Jacobean playwright; author of
A New Way to Pay Old Debts (1625);
his works were edited by William Gifford (1805, 1813).
Joseph Ritson (1752-1803)
English antiquary and editor remembered as much for his quarrelsome temperament as for
his contributions to literary history.