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"Here is dead silence,' said Catharine, after she had listened attentively for a moment. 'Heaven and earth, he is gone!' 'We must risk something,' said her companion, and ran her fingers over the strings of her guitar. A sigh was the only answer from the depth of the dungeon. Catharine then ventured to speak. . . . . . It is I, my lord, Catharine Glover, I have food, if I could pass it safely to you.' Heaven bless thee, maiden! I thought the pain was over, but it glows again within me at the name of food.'"- ST. VALENTINE'S DAY, Part II. pp. 193, 194,

LIBRARY EDITION.

VOL. XXI.

CHRONICLES OF THE CANONGATE

SECOND SERIES.

SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY.

FROM THE LAST REVISED EDITION, CONTAINING THE AUTHOR'S
FINAL CORRECTIONS, NOTES, &c.}

PARKER'S EDITION.

BOSTON:

SANBORN, CARTER AND BAZIN.

NEW YORK: J. S. REDFIELD; C. S. FRANCIS & CO.
PHILADELPHIA: THOMAS, COWPERTHWAIT & CO.
CINCINNATI: H. W. DERBY & CO.

1855.

PREFACE.

IN continuing the lucubrations of Chrystal Croftangry, it occurred that, although the press had of late years. teemed with works of various descriptions concerning the Scottish Gael, no attempt had hitherto been made to sketch their manners, as these might be supposed to have existed at the period when the Statute-book, as well as the page of the chronicler, begins to present constant evidence of the difficulties to which the crown was exposed, while the haughty house of Douglas all but overbalanced its authority on the Southern border, and the North was at the same time torn in pieces by the yet untamed savageness of the Highland races, and the daring loftiness to which some of the remoter chieftains still carried their pretensions. The well-authenticated fact of two powerful clans having deputed each thirty champions to fight out a quarrel of old standing, in presence of King Robert III., his brother the Duke of Albany, and the whole court of Scotland, at Perth, in the year of grace. 1396, seemed to mark with equal distinctness the rancour of these mountain-feuds, and the degraded condition of the general government of the country; and it was fixed upon accordingly as the point on which the main incidents of a romantic narrative might be made to hinge. The characters of Robert III., his ambitious brother, and his dissolute son, seemed to offer some opportunities of interesting contrast-and the tragic fate of the heir of the throne, with its immediate consequences, might serve to complete the picture of cruelty and lawlessness.

Two features of the story of this barrier-battle on the Inch of Perth, the flight of one of the appointed cham

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