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The Pirate: Andrew Lang Edition

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Title: The Pirate

Author: Walter Scott

Editor: Andrew Lang

 
Release date: March 23, 2013 [eBook #42389]
 Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/42389

Credits: E-text prepared by sp1nd and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (http://archive.org)

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Transcriber's note:

 [oe] represents the oe-ligature.

THE PIRATE.

 Nothing in him----
 But doth suffer a sea-change.

 _Tempest._

Bibliophile Edition

 This Edition of the Works of Sir Walter Scott,
 Bart, is limited to One Thousand Numbered and
 Signed Sets, of which this is

 Number ...

 University Library Association

[Illustration]

Bibliophile Edition

The Waverley Novels

With New Introductions, Notes and Glossaries by Andrew Lang

THE PIRATE

by

SIR WALTER SCOTT, Bart.

Illustrated

[Illustration]

University Library Association
Philadelphia

Copyright, 1893
By Estes & Lauriat

Andrew Lang Edition.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

THE PIRATE.

 VOLUME I.
 PAGE
 MORDAUNT IN YELLOWLEY'S COTTAGE. _Frontispiece_
 THE SWORD DANCE 234

 VOLUME II.

 MINNA ON THE CLIFF 103
 THE PIRATE'S COUNCIL 208
 MINNA TAKING THE PISTOL 250

EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION TO THE PIRATE.

The circumstances in which "The Pirate" was composed have for the Editor
a peculiar interest. He has many times scribbled at the old bureau in
Chiefswood whereon Sir Walter worked at his novel, and sat in summer
weather beneath the great tree on the lawn where Erskine used to read
the fresh chapters to Lockhart and his wife, while the burn murmured by
from the Rhymer's Glen. So little altered is the cottage of Chiefswood
by the addition of a gabled wing in the same red stone as the older
portion, so charmed a quiet has the place, in the shelter of Eildon
Hill, that there one can readily beget the golden time again, and think
oneself back into the day when Mustard and Spice, running down the shady
glen, might herald the coming of the Sheriff himself. Happy hours and
gone: like that summer of 1821, whereof Lockhart speaks with an emotion
the more touching because it is so rare,--

 the first of several seasons, which will ever dwell on my memory
 as the happiest of my life. We were near enough Abbotsford to
 partake as often as we liked of its brilliant society; yet could
 do so without being exposed to the worry and exhaustion of spirit
 which the daily reception of new visitors entailed upon all the
 society except Sir Walter himself. But, in truth, even he was not
 always proof against the annoyances connected with such a style of
 open-house-keeping. Even his temper sank sometimes under the
 solemn applause of learned dulness, the vapid raptures of painted
 and periwigged dowagers the horse-leech avidity with which
 underbred foreigners urged their questions, and the pompous
 simpers of condescending magnates. When sore beset in this way, he
 would every now and then discover that he had some very particular
 business to attend to on an outlying part of his estate, and,
 craving the indulgence of his guests overnight, appear at the
 cabin in the glen before its inhabitants were astir in the
 morning. The clatter of Sibyl Grey's hoofs, the yelping of Mustard
 and Spice, and his own joyous shout of _reveillée_ under our
 window, were the signal that he had burst his bonds, and meant for
 that day to take his ease in his inn.... After breakfast he would
 take possession of a dressing-room upstairs, and write a chapter
 of "The Pirate"; and then, having made up and dispatched his
 parcel for Mr. Ballantyne, away to join Purdie where the foresters
 were at work....

 The constant and eager delight with which Erskine watched the
 progress of the tale has left a deep impression on my memory: and
 indeed I heard so many of its chapters first read from the MS. by
 him, that I can never open the book now without thinking I hear
 his voice. Sir Walter used to give him at breakfast the pages he
 had written that morning, and very commonly, while he was again at
 work in his study, Erskine would walk over to Chiefswood, that he
 might have the pleasure of reading them aloud to my wife and me
 under our favourite tree.[1]

"The tree is living yet!" This long quotation from a book but too little
read in general may be excused for its interest, as bearing on the
composition of "The Pirate," in the early autumn of 1821. In "The
Pirate" Scott fell back on his recollections of the Orcades, as seen by
him in a tour with the Commissioners of Light Houses, in August 1814,
immediately after the publication of "Waverley." They were accompanied
by Mr. Stevenson, the celebrated engineer, "a most gentlemanlike and
modest man, and well known by his scientific skill."[2] It is understood
that Mr. Stevenson also kept a diary, and that it is to be published by
the care of his distinguished grandson, Mr. Robert Louis Stevenson,
author of "Kidnapped," "The Master of Ballantrae," and other novels in
which Scott would have recognised a not alien genius.

Sir Walter's Diary, read in company with "The Pirate," offers a most
curious study of his art in composition. It may be said that he scarcely
noted a natural feature, a monument, a custom, a superstition, or a
legend in Zetland and Orkney which he did not weave into the magic web
of his romance. In the Diary all those matters appear as very ordinary;
in "The Pirate" they are transfigured in the light of fancy. History
gives Scott the career of Gow and his betrothal to an island lady:
observation gives him a few headlands, Picts' houses, ruined towers, and
old stone monuments, and his characters gather about these, in rhythmic
array, like the dancers in the sword-dance. We may conceive that
Cleveland, like Gow, was originally meant to die, and that Minna, like
Margaret in the ballad of Clerk Saunders, was to recover her troth from
the hand of her dead lover. But, if Scott intended this, he was
good-natured, and relented.

Taking the incidents in the Diary in company 

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