登陆注册
5385000000065

第65章

The good man was somewhat startled to behold an armed Highlander, then so unusual a sight, and apparently much agitated, stop his horse by the bridle, and ask him with a faltering voice the day of the week and month. "Had you been where you should have been yesterday, young man," replied the clergyman, "you would have known that it was God's Sabbath; and that this is Monday, the second day of the week, and twenty-first of the month."

"And this is true?" said Hamish.

"As true," answered the surprised minister, "as that I yesterday preached the word of God to this parish. What ails you, young man?--are you sick?--are you in your right mind?"

Hamish made no answer, only repeated to himself the first expression of the clergyman, "Had you been where you should have been yesterday;" and so saying, he let go the bridle, turned from the road, and descended the path towards the hut, with the look and pace of one who was going to execution. The minister looked after him with surprise; but although he knew the inhabitant of the hovel, the character of Elspat had not invited him to open any communication with her, because she was generally reputed a Papist, or rather one indifferent to all religion, except some superstitious observances which had been handed down from her parents. On Hamish the Reverend Mr. Tyrie had bestowed instructions when he was occasionally thrown in his way; and if the seed fell among the brambles and thorns of a wild and uncultivated disposition, it had not yet been entirely checked or destroyed. There was something so ghastly in the present expression of the youth's features that the good man was tempted to go down to the hovel, and inquire whether any distress had befallen the inhabitants, in which his presence might be consoling and his ministry useful. Unhappily he did not persevere in this resolution, which might have saved a great misfortune, as he would have probably become a mediator for the unfortunate young man; but a recollection of the wild moods of such Highlanders as had been educated after the old fashion of the country, prevented his interesting himself in the widow and son of the far-dreaded robber, MacTavish Mhor, and he thus missed an opportunity, which he afterwards sorely repented, of doing much good.

When Hamish MacTavish entered his mother's hut, it was only to throw himself on the bed he had left, and exclaiming, "Undone, undone!" to give vent, in cries of grief and anger, to his deep sense of the deceit which had been practised on him, and of the cruel predicament to which he was reduced.

Elspat was prepared for the first explosion of her son's passion, and said to herself, "It is but the mountain torrent, swelled by the thunder shower. Let us sit and rest us by the bank; for all its present tumult, the time will soon come when we may pass it dryshod." She suffered his complaints and his reproaches, which were, even in the midst of his agony, respectful and affectionate, to die away without returning any answer; and when, at length, having exhausted all the exclamations of sorrow which his language, copious in expressing the feelings of the heart, affords to the sufferer, he sunk into a gloomy silence, she suffered the interval to continue near an hour ere she approached her son's couch.

"And now," she said at length, with a voice in which the authority of the mother was qualified by her tenderness, "have you exhausted your idle sorrows, and are you able to place what you have gained against what you have lost? Is the false son of Dermid your brother, or the father of your tribe, that you weep because you cannot bind yourself to his belt, and become one of those who must do his bidding? Could you find in yonder distant country the lakes and the mountains that you leave behind you here? Can you hunt the deer of Breadalbane in the forests of America, or will the ocean afford you the silver-scaled salmon of the Awe? Consider, then, what is your loss, and, like a wise man, set it against what you have won."

"I have lost all, mother," replied Hamish, "since I have broken my word, and lost my honour. I might tell my tale, but who, oh, who would believe me?" The unfortunate young man again clasped his hands together, and, pressing them to his forehead, hid his face upon the bed.

Elspat was now really alarmed, and perhaps wished the fatal deceit had been left unattempted. She had no hope or refuge saving in the eloquence of persuasion, of which she possessed no small share, though her total ignorance of the world as it actually existed rendered its energy unavailing. She urged her son, by every tender epithet which a parent could bestow, to take care for his own safety.

"Leave me," she said, "to baffle your pursuers. I will save your life--I will save your honour. I will tell them that my fair-haired Hamish fell from the Corrie Dhu (black precipice) into the gulf, of which human eye never beheld the bottom. I will tell them this, and I will fling your plaid on the thorns which grow on the brink of the precipice, that they may believe my words.

They will believe, and they will return to the Dun of the double-crest; for though the Saxon drum can call the living to die, it cannot recall the dead to their slavish standard. Then will we travel together far northward to the salt lakes of Kintail, and place glens and mountains betwixt us and the sons of Dermid. We will visit the shores of the dark lake; and my kinsmen--for was not my mother of the children of Kenneth, and will they not remember us with the old love?--my kinsmen will receive us with the affection of the olden time, which lives in those distant glens, where the Gael still dwell in their nobleness, unmingled with the churl Saxons, or with the base brood that are their tools and their slaves."

同类推荐
  • 宗镜录

    宗镜录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金箓十回度人晚朝开收仪

    金箓十回度人晚朝开收仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 成方切用

    成方切用

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伤寒舌鉴

    伤寒舌鉴

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 藏海居士集

    藏海居士集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 圣心盛源

    圣心盛源

    中华五千年历史承载着国家璀璨文明,但璀璨的文明并不意味着一帆风顺。无数艰辛磨难、刀剑血火让历史车轮一次次偏离轨道,但也让历史又一次次重回正轨。世人观史,偏爱灿烂盛唐,却不愿谈及魏晋南北。战火纷飞,国家沦丧,这段历史被史书轻描淡写般记录、传承。然而记录中华五千年文明的不仅仅是历史,还有神话传说。或许神话只是国家民族根据历史的深加工再创作,稗官野史罢了。或许……真正的历史已被神话,而流传的历史只是冰山一角。
  • 我的金仙时代

    我的金仙时代

    这个时代,修行者更像是把修行知识实践在自己身上的学者!这个时代,六大金仙道祖开辟仙域,矗立在文明云颠,统治寰宇,镇压气运!这个时代,六大仙域、亿万灵界、无数秘境组成浩瀚无比的仙道文明!这个时代,哪怕一个最落后的小型灵界,亦是领地百亿里,人口千亿计!这就是金仙时代,是最好的时代,也是最奋发向上的时代,各界修行者一代代储备知识、钻研课题,突破一个个修行路上的学术障碍,只盼有朝一日,自家所在的灵界能晋升为第七个仙域!刘海,一个魂穿而来的少年,将在这个璀璨的时代带领一个落后的小型灵界,走向巅峰!
  • 我的连队

    我的连队

    本书是一本中篇小说集,收入“父亲和他的儿女们”、“一人当兵 全家光荣”、“男左女右”等五篇小说。
  • 精灵王座故事的继续

    精灵王座故事的继续

    《精灵王座》故事的继续.同时拥有了生命宝玉和黑暗宝玉,两股强大,却又格格不入的能量...女神冥冥中的祈佑,给予了人类少年小鱼机遇,而这也是他的爱与勇气,所带来的...小鱼会肩负起责任,而他一切信念的来源——精灵少女莉雅,会和他共同承担!......故事永远不会结束,携手并肩...
  • 霸天神帝

    霸天神帝

    杀神“凶虎百屠”在与宿命之敌生死一战之后,惨遭伏击而亡,却得到古佛镇压的裂道之龙的传承,破界成为穹武帝国一身世凄惨的少年-凌沧笑。在这个世界,如果你想活着,就无法停止杀戮;如果你想称尊做祖,就无法杜绝尸山海骨。这里有正道,有邪道,甚至有魔道,但是他让人知道挡我道者,八方喋血,十方俱灭;乱我心者,风雪埋骨,血绽穹庐。
  • Hero Tales From American History

    Hero Tales From American History

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 至尊兵王纵横都市

    至尊兵王纵横都市

    逍遥武神纵横校园,重走修仙路。看他如何纵横凡间,专治各种不服,得证正果……
  • 幻住庵清规

    幻住庵清规

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 这样读资治通鉴(第5部)

    这样读资治通鉴(第5部)

    青年学子亦可从中学到有别于课堂上的历史讲述,一部一直放在毛泽东床头的大书,一部曾经让毛泽东读了17遍的大书,《资治通鉴》是中国人的管理智慧。这样读《资治通鉴》,是为官者的管理智慧,是企业家的MBA教材,是奋斗者的行为指南。
  • 影响青年人一生的100句至理名言

    影响青年人一生的100句至理名言

    该书从为人处世、求知惜时、人际沟通、修身养性、情感智慧几个方面撷取了一百条至理名言及与之相关的文章,涵盖了许多简单而又深刻的人生道理,方便读者能分门别类地感悟的人生智慧。