The Surgeons Daughter | Page 2

Walter Scott
India
Company.
A respectable surgeon, whose residence was in a neighbouring village,
had a beautiful daughter named Emma, who had long been courted by
D------. Immediately before his departure to India, as a mark of mutual
affection, they exchanged miniatures, taken by an eminent artist in Fife,
and each set in a locket, for the purpose of having the object of
affection always in view.
The eyes of the old Thane were now turned towards Hindostan with
much anxiety; but his relation had not long arrived in that distant
quarter of the globe before he had the satisfaction of receiving a letter,
conveying the welcome intelligence of his having taken possession of
his new station in a large frontier town of the Company's dominions,
and that great emoluments were attached to the situation; which was
confirmed by several subsequent communications of the most
gratifying description to the old Thane, who took great pleasure in
spreading the news of the reformed habits and singular good fortune of
his intended heir. None of all his former acquaintances heard with such
joy the favourable report of the successful adventurer in the East, as did
the fair and accomplished daughter of the village surgeon; but his
previous character caused her to keep her own correspondence with
him secret from her parents, to whom even the circumstance of her
being acquainted with D------ was wholly unknown, till her father
received a letter from him, in which he assured him of his attachment to
Emma long before his departure from Fife; that having been so happy
as to gain her affections, he would have made her his wife before
leaving his native country, had he then had the means of supporting her
in a suitable rank through life; and that, having it now in his power to

do so, he only waited the consent of her parents to fulfil the vow he had
formerly made.
The Doctor having a large family, with a very limited income to
support them, and understanding that D------ had at last become a
person of sober and industrious habits, he gave his consent, in which
Emma's mother fully concurred.
Aware of the straitened circumstances of the Doctor, D------ remitted a
sum of money to complete at Edinburgh Emma's Oriental education,
and fit her out in her journey to India; she was to embark at Sheerness,
on board one of the Company's ships, for a port in India, at which place,
he said, he would wait her arrival, with a retinue suited to a person of
his rank in society.
Emma set out from her father's house just in time to secure a passage,
as proposed by her intended husband, accompanied by her only brother,
who, on their arrival at Sheerness, met one C------, an old schoolfellow,
captain of the ship by which Emma was to proceed to India.
It was the particular desire of the Doctor that his daughter should be
committed to the care of that gentleman, from the time of her leaving
the shores of Britain, till the intended marriage ceremony was duly
performed on her arrival in India; a charge that was frankly undertaken
by the generous sea-captain.
On the arrival of the fleet at the appointed port, D------, with a large
cavalcade of mounted Pindarees, was, as expected, in attendance, ready
to salute Emma on landing, and to carry her direct into the interior of
the country. C------, who had made several voyages to the shores of
Hindostan, knowing something of Hindoo manners and customs, was
surprised to see a private individual in the Company's service with so
many attendants; and when D------ declined having the marriage
ceremony performed according to the rites of the Church, till he
returned to the place of his abode, C------, more and more confirmed in
his suspicion that all was not right, resolved not to part with Emma till
he had fulfilled, in the most satisfactory manner, the promise he had
made before leaving England, of giving her duly away in marriage. Not

being able by her entreaties to alter the resolution of D------, Emma
solicited her protector C------ to accompany her to the place of her
intended destination, to which he most readily agreed, taking with him
as many of his crew as he deemed sufficient to ensure the safe custody
of his innocent protege, should any attempt be made to carry her away
by force.
Both parties journeyed onwards till they arrived at a frontier town,
where a native Rajah was waiting the arrival of the fair maid of Fife,
with whom he had fallen deeply in love, from seeing her miniature
likeness in the possession of D------, to whom he had paid a large sum
of money for the original, and had only intrusted him to convey her in
state
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