The Surgeon's Daughter by Walter Scott (books suggested by elon musk .txt) ๐
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- Author: Walter Scott
Read book online ยซThe Surgeon's Daughter by Walter Scott (books suggested by elon musk .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Walter Scott
At present they were both in the botanic patch of the garden, when Dick Middlemas asked Hartley why he had left the ball so soon the evening before?
โI should rather ask you,โ said Hartley, โwhat pleasure you felt in staying there?โI tell you, Dick, it is a shabby low place this Middlemas of ours. In the smallest burgh in England, every decent freeholder would have been asked if the Member gave a ball.โ
โWhat, Hartley!โ said his companion, โare you, of all men, a candidate for the honour of mixing with the first-born of the earth? Mercy on us! How will canny Northumberland [throwing a true northern accent on the letter R] acquit himself? Methinks I see thee in thy pea-green suit, dancing a jig with the honourable Miss Maddie MacFudgeon, while chiefs and thanes around laugh as they would do at a hog in armour!โ
โYou don't, or perhaps you won't, understand me.โ said Hartley. โI am not such a fool as to desire to be hail-fellow-well-met with these fine folksโI care as little for them as they do for me. But as they do not choose to ask us to dance, I don't see what business they have with our partners.โ
โPartners, said you!โ answered Middlemas; โI don't think Menie is very often yours.โ
โAs often as I ask her,โ answered Hartley, rather haughtily.
โAy? Indeed?โI did not think that.โAnd hang me, if I think so yet.โ said Middlemas, with the same sarcastic tone. โI tell thee, Adam, I will bet you a bowl of punch, that Miss Gray will not dance with you the next time you ask her. All I stipulate, is to know the day.โ
โI will lay no bets about Miss Gray,โ said Hartley; โher father is my master, and I am obliged to himโI think I should act very scurvily, if I were to make her the subject of any idle debate betwixt you and me.โ
โVery right,โ replied Middlemas; โyou should finish one quarrel before you begin another. Pray, saddle your pony, ride up to the gate of Louponheight Castle, and defy the Baron to mortal combat, for having presumed to touch the fair hand of Menie Gray.โ
โI wish you would leave Miss Gray's name out of the question, and take your defiances to your fine folks in your own name, and see what they will say to the surgeon's apprentice.โ
โSpeak for yourself, if you please, Mr. Adam Hartley. I was not born a clown like some folks, and should care little, if I saw it fit, to talk to the best of them at the ordinary, and make myself understood too.โ
โVery likely,โ answered Hartley, losing patience: โyou are one of themselves, you knowโMiddlemas of that Ilk.โ
โYou scoundrel!โ said Richard, advancing on him in fury, his taunting humour entirely changed into rage.
โStand back,โ said Hartley, โor you will come by the worst; if you will break rude jests, you must put up with rough answers.โ
โI will have satisfaction for this insult, by Heaven!โ
โWhy so you shall, if you insist on it,โ said Hartley; โbut better, I think, to say no more about the matter. We have both spoken what would have been better left unsaid. I was in the wrong to say what I said to you, although you did provoke me. And now I have given you as much satisfaction as a reasonable man can ask.โ
โSir,โ repeated Middlemas, โthe satisfaction which I demand, is that of a gentlemanโthe Doctor has a pair of pistols.โ.
โAnd a pair of mortars also, which are heartily at your service, gentlemen,โ said Mr. Gray, coming forward from behind a yew hedge, where he had listened to the whole or greater part of this dispute. โA fine story it would be of my apprentices shooting each other with my own pistols! Let me see either of you fit to treat a gunshot wound, before you think of inflicting one. Go, you are both very foolish boys, and I cannot take it kind of either of you to bring the name of my daughter into such disputes as these. Hark ye, lads, ye both owe me, I think, some portion of respect, and even of gratitudeโit will be a poor return, if instead of living quietly with this poor motherless girl, like brothers with a sister, you should oblige me to increase my expense, and abridge my comfort, by sending my child from me, for the few months that you are to remain here. Let me see you shake hands, and let us have no more of this nonsense.โ
While their master spoke in this manner, both the young men stood before him in the attitude of self-convicted criminals. At the conclusion of his rebuke, Hartley turned frankly round, and, offered his hand to his companion, who accepted it, but after a moment's hesitation. There was nothing farther passed on the subject, but the lads never resumed the same sort of intimacy which had existed betwixt them in their earlier acquaintance. On the contrary, avoiding every connexion not absolutely required by their situation, and abridging as much as possible even their indispensable intercourse in professional matters, they seemed as much estranged from each other as two persons residing in the same small house had the means of being.
As for Menie Gray, her father did not appear to entertain the least anxiety upon her account, although from his frequent and almost daily absence from home, she was exposed to constant intercourse with two handsome young men, both, it might be supposed, ambitious of pleasing her more than most parents would have deemed entirely prudent. Nor was Nurse Jamieson,โher menial situation, and her excessive partiality for her foster-son, considered,โaltogether such a matron as could afford her protection. Gideon, however, knew that his daughter possessed, in its fullest extent, the upright and pure integrity of his own character, and that never father had less reason to apprehend that a daughter should deceive his confidence; and justly secure of her principles, he overlooked the danger to which he exposed her feelings and affections.
The intercourse betwixt Menie and the young men seemed now of a guarded kind on all sides. Their meeting was only at meals, and Miss Gray was at pains, perhaps by her father's recommendation, to treat them with the same degree of attention. This, however, was no easy matter; for Hartley became so retiring, cold, and formal, that it was impossible for her to sustain any prolonged intercourse with him; whereas Middlemas, perfectly at his ease, sustained his part as formerly upon all occasions that occurred, and without appearing to press his intimacy assiduously, seemed nevertheless to retain the complete possession of it.
The time drew nigh at length when the young men, freed from the engagements of their indentures, must look to play their own independent part in the
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