第42章 A LEGEND OF MONTROSE.(35)
Sir Duncan Campbell made no answer at the time;but,the moment afterwards,when they had entered the second cavern,he struck with the stick which he had in his hand,first on the one side,and then on the other of the wicket,and the sullen ringing sound which replied to the blows,made Captain Dalgetty sensible that there was a gun placed on each side,for the purpose of raking the gallery through which they had passed,although the embrasures,through which they might be fired on occasion,were masked on the outside with sods and loose stones.Having ascended the second staircase,they found themselves again on an open platform and gallery,exposed to a fire both of musketry and wall-guns,if,being come with hostile intent,they had ventured farther.A third flight of steps,cut in the rock like the former,but not caverned over,led them finally into the battery at the foot of the tower.This last stair also was narrow and steep,and,not to mention the fire which might be directed on it from above,one or two resolute men,with pikes and battle-axes,could have made the pass good against hundreds;for the staircase would not admit two persons abreast,and was not secured by any sort of balustrade,or railing,from the sheer and abrupt precipice,on the foot of which the tide now rolled with a voice of thunder.So that,under the jealous precautions used to secure this ancient Celtic fortress,a person of weak nerves,and a brain liable to become dizzy,might have found it something difficult to have achieved the entrance to the castle,even supposing no resistance had been offered.
Captain Dalgetty,too old a soldier to feel such tremors,had no sooner arrived in the court-yard,than he protested to God,the defences of Sir Duncan's castle reminded him more of the notable fortress of Spandau,situated in the March of Brandenburg,than of any place whilk it had been his fortune to defend in the course of his travels.Nevertheless,he criticised considerably the mode of placing the guns on the battery we have noticed,observing,that "where cannon were perched,like to scarts or sea-gulls on the top of a rock,he had ever observed that they astonished more by their noise than they dismayed by the skaith or damage which they occasioned."
Sir Duncan,without replying,conducted the soldier into the tower;the defences of which were a portcullis and ironclenched oaken door,the thickness of the wall being the space between them.He had no sooner arrived in a hall hung with tapestry,than the Captain prosecuted his military criticism.It was indeed suspended by the sight of an excellent breakfast,of which he partook with great avidity;but no sooner had he secured this meal,than he made the tour of the apartment,examining the ground around the Castle very carefully from each window in the room.He then returned to his chair,and throwing himself back into it at his length,stretched out one manly leg,and tapping his jack-boot with the riding-rod which he carried in his hand,after the manner of a half-bred man who affects ease in the society of his betters,he delivered his unasked opinion as follows:--"This house of yours,now,Sir Duncan,is a very pretty defensible sort of a tenement,and yet it is hardly such as a cavaliero of honour would expect to maintain his credit by holding out for many days.For,Sir Duncan,if it pleases you to notice,your house is overcrowed,and slighted,or commanded,as we military men say,by yonder round hillock to the landward,whereon an enemy might stell such a battery of cannon as would make ye glad to beat a chamade within forty-eight hours,unless it pleased the Lord extraordinarily to show mercy."
"There is no road,"replied Sir Duncan,somewhat shortly,"by which cannon can be brought against Ardenvohr.The swamps and morasses around my house would scarce carry your horse and yourself,excepting by such paths as could be rendered impassable within a few hours."
"Sir Duncan,"said the Captain,"it is your pleasure to suppose so;and yet we martial men say,that where there is a sea-coast there is always a naked side,seeing that cannon and munition,where they cannot be transported by land,may be right easily brought by sea near to the place where they are to be put in action.Neither is a castle,however secure in its situation,to be accounted altogether invincible,or,as they say,impregnable;
for I protest t'ye,Sir Duncan,that I have known twenty-five men,by the mere surprise and audacity of the attack,win,at point of pike,as strong a hold as this of Ardenvohr,and put to the sword,captivate,or hold to the ransom,the defenders,being ten times their own number."
Notwithstanding Sir Duncan Campbell's knowledge of the world,and his power of concealing his internal emotion,he appeared piqued and hurt at these reflections,which the Captain made with the most unconscious gravity,having merely selected the subject of conversation as one upon which he thought himself capable of shining,and,as they say,of laying down the law,without exactly recollecting that the topic might not be equally agreeable to his landlord.
"To cut this matter short,"said Sir Duncan,with an expression of voice and countenance somewhat agitated,"it is unnecessary for you to tell me,Captain Dalgetty,that a castle may be stormed if it is not valorously defended,or surprised if it is not heedfully watched.I trust this poor house of mine will not be found in any of these predicaments,should even Captain Dalgetty himself choose to beleaguer it."