Rob Roy โ Complete by Walter Scott (books to read in your 20s female .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Walter Scott
Read book online ยซRob Roy โ Complete by Walter Scott (books to read in your 20s female .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Walter Scott
A more ominous conjunction to my own affairs, and those of my father, could scarce have been formed. I remembered Morris's false accusation against me, which he might be as easily induced to renew as he had been intimidated to withdraw; I recollected the inauspicious influence of MacVittie over my father's affairs, testified by the imprisonment of Owen;โand I now saw both these men combined with one, whose talent for mischief I deemed little inferior to those of the great author of all ill, and my abhorrence of whom almost amounted to dread.
When they had passed me for some paces, I turned and followed them unobserved. At the end of the walk they separated, Morris and MacVittie leaving the gardens, and Rashleigh returning alone through the walks. I was now determined to confront him, and demand reparation for the injuries he had done my father, though in what form redress was likely to be rendered remained to be known. This, however, I trusted to chance; and flinging back the cloak in which I was muffled, I passed through a gap of the low hedge, and presented myself before Rashleigh, as, in a deep reverie, he paced down the avenue.
Rashleigh was no man to be surprised or thrown off his guard by sudden occurrences. Yet he did not find me thus close to him, wearing undoubtedly in my face the marks of that indignation which was glowing in my bosom, without visibly starting at an apparition so sudden and menacing.
โYou are well met, sir,โ was my commencement; โI was about to take a long and doubtful journey in quest of you.โ
โYou know little of him you sought then,โ replied Rashleigh, with his usual undaunted composure. โI am easily found by my friendsโstill more easily by my foes;โyour manner compels me to ask in which class I must rank Mr. Francis Osbaldistone?โ
โIn that of your foes, sir,โ I answeredโโin that of your mortal foes, unless you instantly do justice to your benefactor, my father, by accounting for his property.โ
โAnd to whom, Mr. Osbaldistone,โ answered Rashleigh, โam I, a member of your father's commercial establishment, to be compelled to give any account of my proceedings in those concerns, which are in every respect identified with my own?โSurely not to a young gentleman whose exquisite taste for literature would render such discussions disgusting and unintelligible.โ
โYour sneer, sir, is no answer; I will not part with you until I have full satisfaction concerning the fraud you meditateโyou shall go with me before a magistrate.โ
โBe it so,โ said Rashleigh, and made a step or two as if to accompany me; then pausing, proceededโโWere I inclined to do so as you would have me, you should soon feel which of us had most reason to dread the presence of a magistrate. But I have no wish to accelerate your fate. Go, young man! amuse yourself in your world of poetical imaginations, and leave the business of life to those who understand and can conduct it.โ
His intention, I believe, was to provoke me, and he succeeded. โMr. Osbaldistone,โ I said, โthis tone of calm insolence shall not avail you. You ought to be aware that the name we both bear never submitted to insult, and shall not in my person be exposed to it.โ
โYou remind me,โ said Rashleigh, with one of his blackest looks, โthat it was dishonoured in my person!โand you remind me also by whom! Do you think I have forgotten the evening at Osbaldistone Hall when you cheaply and with impunity played the bully at my expense? For that insultโnever to be washed out but by blood!โfor the various times you have crossed my path, and always to my prejudiceโfor the persevering folly with which you seek to traverse schemes, the importance of which you neither know nor are capable of estimating,โfor all these, sir, you owe me a long account, for which there shall come an early day of reckoning.โ
โLet it come when it will,โ I replied, โI shall be willing and ready to meet it. Yet you seem to have forgotten the heaviest articleโthat I had the pleasure to aid Miss Vernon's good sense and virtuous feeling in extricating her from your infamous toils.โ
I think his dark eyes flashed actual fire at this home-taunt, and yet his voice retained the same calm expressive tone with which he had hitherto conducted the conversation.
โI had other views with respect to you, young man,โ was his answer: โless hazardous for you, and more suitable to my present character and former education. But I see you will draw on yourself the personal chastisement your boyish insolence so well merits. Follow me to a more remote spot, where we are less likely to be interrupted.โ
I followed him accordingly, keeping a strict eye on his motions, for I believed him capable of the very worst actions. We reached an open spot in a sort of wilderness, laid out in the Dutch taste, with clipped hedges, and one or two statues. I was on my guard, and it was well with me that I was so; for Rashleigh's sword was out and at my breast ere I could throw down my cloak, or get my weapon unsheathed, so that I only saved my life by springing a pace or two backwards. He had some advantage in the difference of our weapons; for his sword, as I recollect, was longer than mine, and had one of those bayonet or three-cornered blades which are now generally worn; whereas mine was what we then called a Saxon bladeโnarrow, flat, and two-edged, and scarcely so manageable as that of my enemy. In other respects we were pretty equally matched: for what advantage I might possess in superior address and agility, was fully counterbalanced by Rashleigh's great strength and coolness. He fought, indeed, more like a fiend than a manโwith concentrated spite and desire of blood, only allayed by that cool consideration which made his worst actions appear yet worse from the air of deliberate premeditation which seemed to accompany them. His obvious malignity of purpose never for a moment threw him off his guard, and he exhausted every feint and stratagem proper to the science of defence; while, at the same time, he meditated the most desperate catastrophe to our rencounter.
On my part, the combat was at first sustained with more moderation. My passions, though hasty, were not malevolent; and the walk of two or three
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