[Sir Walter Scott by Richard H. Hutton]@TWC D-Link book
Sir Walter Scott

CHAPTER VII
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It was Camp on whose death he relinquished a dinner invitation previously accepted, on the ground that the death of "an old friend" rendered him unwilling to dine out; Maida to whom he erected a marble monument, and Nimrod of whom he spoke so affectingly as too good a dog for his diminished fortunes during his absence in Italy on the last hopeless journey.
Scott's amusements at Ashestiel, besides riding, in which he was fearless to rashness, and coursing, which was the chief form of sporting in the neighbourhood, comprehended "burning the water," as salmon-spearing by torchlight was called, in the course of which he got many a ducking.

Mr.Skene gives an amusing picture of their excursions together from Ashestiel among the hills, he himself followed by a lanky Savoyard, and Scott by a portly Scotch butler--both servants alike highly sensitive as to their personal dignity--on horses which neither of the attendants could sit well.
"Scott's heavy lumbering buffetier had provided himself against the mountain storms with a huge cloak, which, when the cavalcade was at gallop, streamed at full stretch from his shoulders, and kept flapping in the other's face, who, having more than enough to do in preserving his own equilibrium, could not think of attempting at any time to control the pace of his steed, and had no relief but fuming and _pesting_ at the _sacre manteau_, in language happily unintelligible to its wearer.

Now and then some ditch or turf-fence rendered it indispensable to adventure on a leap, and no farce could have been more amusing than the display of politeness which then occurred between these worthy equestrians, each courteously declining in favour of his friend the honour of the first experiment, the horses fretting impatient beneath them, and the dogs clamouring encouragement."[24] Such was Scott's order of life at Ashestiel, where he remained from 1804 to 1812.

As to his literary work here, it was enormous.
Besides finishing _The Lay of the Last Minstrel_, writing _Marmion_, _The Lady of the Lake_, part of _The Bridal of Triermain_, and part of _Rokeby_, and writing reviews, he wrote a _Life of Dryden_, and edited his works anew with some care, in eighteen volumes, edited _Somers's Collection of Tracts_, in thirteen volumes, quarto, _Sir Ralph Sadler's Life, Letters, and State Papers_, in three volumes, quarto, _Miss Seward's Life and Poetical Works_, _The Secret History of the Court of James I_., in two volumes, _Strutt's Queenhoo Hall_, in four volumes, 12mo., and various other single volumes, and began his heavy work on the edition of Swift.

This was the literary work of eight years, during which he had the duties of his Sheriffship, and, after he gave up his practice as a barrister, the duties of his Deputy Clerkship of Session to discharge regularly.


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