“He never gangs to the kirk—no ance in a twalmonth!” said Mrs. Brookes. “Fowk sud be dacent, an’ wha ever h’ard o’ dacent fowk ’at didna gang to the kirk ance o’ the Sabbath! I dinna haud wi’ gaein’ twise mysel’: ye hae na time to read yer ain chapters gien ye do that. But the man’s a weel behavet man, sae far as ye see, naither sayin’ nor doin’ the thing he shouldna: what he may think, wha’s to say! the mair ten’er conscience coonts itsel’ the waur sinner; an’ I’m no gaein’ to think what I canna ken! There’s some ’at says he led a gey lowse kin’ o’ a life afore he cam to bide wi’ the auld yerl; he was wi’ the airmy i’ furreign pairts, they say; but aboot that I ken naething. The auld yerl was something o’ a sanct himsel’, rist the banes o’ ’im! We’re no the jeedges o’ the leevin’ ony mair nor o’ the deid! But I maun awa’ to luik efter things; a meenute’s an hoor lost wi’ thae fule lasses. Ye’re a freen’ o’ An’rew Comin’s, they tell me, sir: I dinna ken what to do wi’ ’s lass, she’s that upsettin’! Ye wad think she was ane o’ the faimily whiles; an’ ither whiles she ’s that silly!”

“I’m sorry to hear it!” said Donal. “Her grandfather and grandmother are the best of good people.”

“I daursay! But there’s jist what I hae seen: them ’at ’s broucht up their ain weel eneuch, their son’s bairn they’ll jist lat gang. Aither they’re tired o’ the thing, or they think they’re safe. They hae lippent til yoong Eppy a heap ower muckle. But I’m naither a prophet nor the son o’ a prophet, as the minister said last Sunday—an’ said well, honest man! for it’s the plain trowth: he’s no ane o’ the major nor yet the minor anes! But haud him oot o’ the pu’pit an’ he dis no that ill. His dochter ’s no an ill lass aither, an’ a great freen’ o’ my leddy’s. But I’m clean ashamed o’ mysel’ to gang on this gait. Hae ye dune wi’ yer denner, Mr. Grant?—Weel, I’ll jist sen’ to clear awa’, an’ lat ye til yer lessons.”

CHAPTER XVII.
LADY ARCTURA.

It was now almost three weeks since Donal had become an inmate of the castle, and he had scarcely set his eyes on the lady of the house. Once he had seen her back, and more than once had caught a glimpse of her profile, but he had never really seen her face, and they had never spoken to each other.

One afternoon he was sauntering along under the overhanging boughs of an avenue of beeches, formerly the approach to a house in which the family had once lived, but which had now another entrance. He had in his hand a copy of the Apocrypha, which he had never seen till he found this in the library. In his usual fashion he had begun to read it through, and was now in the book called the Wisdom of Solomon, at the 17th chapter, narrating the discomfiture of certain magicians. Taken with the beauty of the passage, he sat down on an old stone-roller, and read aloud. Parts of the passage were these—they will enrich my page:—

“For they, that promised to drive away terrors and troubles from a sick soul, were sick themselves of fear, worthy to be laughed at.

“... For wickedness, condemned by her own witness, is very timorous, and being pressed with conscience, always forecasteth grievous things.

“... But they sleeping the same sleep that night, which was indeed intolerable, and which came upon them out of the bottoms of inevitable hell,

“Were partly vexed with monstrous apparitions, and partly fainted, their heart failing them: for a sudden fear, and not looked for, came upon them.