Guy Mannering; or, The Astrologer โ Complete by Walter Scott (reading an ebook .txt) ๐
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- Author: Walter Scott
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There was a short pause, when Barnes, opening the door of the saloon, announced Mr. Pleydell. In marched the lawyer, whose well-brushed black coat and well-powdered wig, together with his point ruffles, brown silk stockings, highly-varnished shoes, and gold buckles, exhibited the pains which the old gentleman had taken to prepare his person for the ladiesโ society. He was welcomed by Mannering with a hearty shake by the hand. โThe very man I wished to see at this moment!โ
โYes,โ said the Counsellor, โI told you I would take the first opportunity; so I have ventured to leave the court for a week in session time--no common sacrifice; but I had a notion I could be useful, and I was to attend a proof here about the same time. But will you not introduce me to the young ladies? Ah! there is one I should have known at once from her family likeness! Miss Lucy Bertram, my love, I am most happy to see you.โ And he folded her in his arms, and gave her a hearty kiss on each side of the face, to which Lucy submitted in blushing resignation.
โOn nโarrete pas dans un si beau chemin,โ continued the gay old gentleman, and, as the Colonel presented him to Julia, took the same liberty with that fair ladyโs cheek. Julia laughed, coloured, and disengaged herself. โI beg a thousand pardons,โ said the lawyer, with a bow which was not at all professionally awkward; โage and old fashions give privileges, and I can hardly say whether I am most sorry just now at being too well entitled to claim them at all, or happy in having such an opportunity to exercise them so agreeably.โ
โUpon my word, sir,โ said Miss Mannering, laughing, โif you make such flattering apologies we shall begin to doubt whether we can admit you to shelter yourself under your alleged qualifications.โ
โI can assure you, Julia,โ said the Colonel, โyou are perfectly right. My friend the Counsellor is a dangerous person; the last time I had the pleasure of seeing him he was closeted with a fair lady who had granted him a tete-a-tete at eight in the morning.โ
โAy, but, Colonel,โ said the Counsellor, โyou should add, I was more indebted to my chocolate than my charms for so distinguished a favour from a person of such propriety of demeanour as Mrs. Rebecca.โ
โAnd that should remind me, Mr. Pleydell,โ said Julia, โto offer you tea; that is, supposing you have dined.โ
โAnything, Miss Mannering, from your hands,โ answered the gallant jurisconsult; โyes, I have dined; that is to say, as people dine at a Scotch inn.โ
โAnd that is indifferently enough,โ said the Colonel, with his hand upon the bell-handle; โgive me leave to order something.โ
โWhy, to say truth, โreplied Mr. Pleydell, โI had rather not. I have been inquiring into that matter, for you must know I stopped an instant below to pull off my boot-hose, โa world too wide for my shrunk shanks,โโ glancing down with some complacency upon limbs which looked very well for his time of life, โand I had some conversation with your Barnes and a very intelligent person whom I presume to be the housekeeper; and it was settled among us, tota re perspecta,--I beg Miss Manneringโs pardon for my Latin,--that the old lady should add to your light family supper the more substantial refreshment of a brace of wild ducks. I told her (always under deep submission) my poor thoughts about the sauce, which concurred exactly with her own; and, if you please, I would rather wait till they are ready before eating anything solid.โ
โAnd we will anticipate our usual hour of supper,โ said the Colonel.
โWith all my heart,โ said Pleydell, โproviding I do not lose the ladiesโ company a moment the sooner. I am of counsel with my old friend Burnet; [Footnote: See Note 5] I love the coena, the supper of the ancients, the pleasant meal and social glass that wash out of oneโs mind the cobwebs that business or gloom have been spinning in our brains all day.โ
The vivacity of Mr. Pleydellโs look and manner, and the quietness with which he made himself at home on the subject of his little epicurean comforts, amused the ladies, but particularly Miss Mannering, who immediately gave the Counsellor a great deal of flattering attention; and more pretty things were said on both sides during the service of the tea-table than we have leisure to repeat.
As soon as this was over, Mannering led the Counsellor by the arm into a small study which opened from the saloon, and where, according to the custom of the family, there were always lights and a good fire in the evening.
โI see,โsaid Mr. Pleydell, โyou have got something to tell me about the Ellangowan business. Is it terrestrial or celestial? What says my military Albumazar? Have you calculated the course of futurity? have you consulted your ephemerides, your almochoden, your almuten?โ
โNo, truly, Counsellor,โ replied Mannering, โyou are the only Ptolemy I intend to resort to upon the present occasion. A second Prospero, I have broken my staff and drowned my book far beyond plummet depth. But I have great news notwithstanding. Meg Merrilies, our Egyptian sibyl, has appeared to the Dominie this very day, and, as I conjecture, has frightened the honest man not a little.โ
โIndeed?โ
โAy, and she has done me the honour to open a correspondence with me, supposing me to be as deep in astrological mysteries as when we first met. Here is her scroll, delivered to me by the Dominie.โ
Pleydell put on his spectacles. โA vile greasy scrawl, indeed; and the letters are uncial or semi-uncial, as somebody calls your large text hand, and in size and perpendicularity resemble the ribs of a roasted pig; I can hardly make it out.โ
โRead aloud,โ said Mannering.
โI will try,โ answered the Lawyer. โโYOU ARE A GOOD SEEKER, BUT A BAD FINDER; YOU SET YOURSELF TO PROP A FALLING HOUSE, BUT HAD A GEY GUESS IT WOULD RISE AGAIN. LEND YOUR HAND TO THE WORK THATโS NEAR, AS YOU LENT YOUR EE TO THE WEIRD THAT WAS FAR. HAVE A CARRIAGE THIS NIGHT BY TEN OโCLOCK AT THE END OF THE CROOKED DYKES AT PORTANFERRY, AND LET IT BRING THE FOLK TO WOODBOURNE THAT SHALL ASK THEM, IF THEY BE THERE IN GODโS NAME."--Stay, here follows some poetry--
โDARK SHALL BE LIGHT, AND WRONG DONE TO RIGHT, WHEN BERTRAMโS RIGHT AND BERTRAMโS MIGHT SHALL MEET ON ELLANGOWANโS HEIGHT."A most mystic epistle truly, and closes in a vein of poetry worthy of the Cumaean sibyl. And what have you done?โ
โWhy,โ said Mannering, rather reluctantly, โI was loth to risk any opportunity of throwing light on this business. The woman is perhaps crazed, and these effusions may arise only from visions of her imagination; but you were of opinion that she knew
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