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sometimes used by an experienced sportsman

with singular dexterity WAUR, worse

WEAN, infant, young child WEAR, force, restraint WEDDER, a weather (sheep) WEEL-FAURED, well favoured, prepossessing WEIRD, destiny; WEIRD'S DREE'D, the destiny is run out

WEIZE, direct, send

WESSEL, westward; WASSILGATE, west gate WHAAP, or HOPE, the sheltered part or hollow of a hill. Hoff, howff, haaf, haven are all modifications of the same word WHEEN, WHIN, a few, a party

WHIGGING, jogging WHISTLED, given a hint, information, to. See note Whistling (p. 431)

WHITTRET, weasel WITTERS, the barbs of the spear

WORRIECOW, hobgoblin, bugbear

WUDDIE, WOODIE, rope,
halter
Wuss, wish
WYTE, blame

YAFFING, barking YEPISTLE, letter

INDEX

ALLAN, Mrs., Colonel Mannering's house-
keeper, 333

Astrologer, Mac-Kinlay's story of, v
Astrology, Mannering's knowledge of, 16;
Sampson's opinion of, 17; general
belief in, 21

BADGER-HUNT at Charlie's Hope, 166
Balaam's sword, anecdote, xxiii
Bertram, Godfrey, his pedigree, 6; made a
justice, 36; quarrel with the gipsies,
43; meets the ejected gipsies, 47; last
hours of, 85, 89

Bertram, Harry, birth of, 17; companion-
ship with the gipsies, 46; disappear-
ance with Kennedy, 57; (see Brown),
Hatteraick's account of, 226; revisits
Ellangowan, 285;
encounter with
Glossin, 290; a prisoner before Hazle-
wood, 302; incarcerated in Portan-
ferry bridewell, 311; joined by Dandie,
318; rescued from the smugglers, 349;
arrives at Woodbourne, 359; examined
as to his history, 363; recognised by
the Dominie, 364; introduced to his
sister, 371; enters Hatteraick's cave,
394; recognised by the villagers, 403;
evidence as to his identity, 363, 408
Bertram, Lucy, by her father's side, 86;
leaves Ellangowan, 95; her lover, 99;
received as a guest at Woodbourne, 124;
Julia's opinion of, 185; recognises her
brother, 372

Bertram, Mrs., accouchement of, 17;
anxieties about her boy, 56; death of,

59

Bertram, Mrs. Margaret, of Singleside,

93; funeral of, 258; expectants at, 263
Bewcastle Waste, 146

Brown, the smuggler lieutenant, 413;
shot by Hazlewood, 196; death of, 171
Brown, Vanbeest (see also Bertram), in
India, 81; serenades Julia Mannering at
Mr. Mervyn's, 101, 110; his history
and wanderings, 114, 131; his excursion
over the Cumberland Border, 138; at
Mumps's Ha', 140; rescues Dandie,
147; leaves Charlie's Hope for Kipple-
tringan, 168; seeks shelter in the
gipsy hut, 171; escapes under Meg's
guidance, 179; encounter with Hazle-

wood, 201; goes to Cumberland, 280;
revisits Ellangowan, 285

CAIRD of Barullion, king of the gipsies,
xxi

Carlaverock Castle, the prototype of Ellan-
gowan, 25

Cave at Warroch Point, 224, 394
Charlie's Hope, 150, 157

Clan surnames, 165, 428
Come from Tripoli, 429
Cumberland Waste, 138
Curling, 200

DAVIDSON, the original of Dandie Din-
mont, 427

Deacon Bearcliff, 68; his familiarity,

212

147;

Derncleugh, gipsy village, 41; burial
scene at, 182; ghostly associations of
the place, 327; revisited, 395
Dinmont, Ailie, and her family, 152, 166
Dinmont, Dandie, at Mumps's Ha', 140;
encounter with the ruffians,
arrival at Charlie's Hope, 150; at the
lawyer's, 243; his lawsuit, 249; at
Miss Bertram's funeral, 258; joins
Bertram in the Portanferry bridewell,
318; awakes to his danger, 347; at
Woodbourne, 359; accompanies Ber-
tram to Hatteraick's cave, 387; pro-
totype of, 426

Dominie Sampson, description of, 10;
tutor to young Bertram, 46; in search
of young Bertram, 56; confronts the
attorney, 87; appointed guardian to
Lucy, 92; his longest speech, 96; gives
lessons to Charles Hazlewood, 97; in
his new suit of clothes, 123; catalogues
the Colonel's library, 128; extracting
bullets from the mutilated tomes, 197;
journey to Edinburgh, 241; encounter
with Pleydell, 272; revisits Ellan-
gowan, 327; falls in with Meg at
Derncleugh, 328; recognises Harry
Bertram, 364; breaks the news to
Lucy, 371; scalds Plato at breakfast,
379; his joy in returning to Ellangowan,
421; prototype of, xviii
Driver, Pleydell's clerk, 274
Dumple, Dandie's pony. 148

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253; note on, 429
Gin by pailfuls, 226

Gerunto now?'

Gipsies, Scottish, 39; ejectment from
Ellangowan, 47; in the hut where
Brown is concealed, 174; cookery of,
330, 430; superstitions, 172, 428
Glossary, 433

Glossin, Gilbert, his electioneering
tactics, 35; at the sale of Ellangowan,
91; buys the estate, 94; his unpleasant
position in society, 204; interview with
Mrs. Mac-Candlish about Brown, 206;
Dirk Hatteraick in his hands, 217;
his guilty dream, 219; meets Hatter-
aick in the cave, 225; plots against
Brown, 229; rebuff at Woodbourne,
234; encounters Bertram at Ellan-
gowan, 290; helps Sir R. Hazlewood
to examine Bertram, 302; at Hatter-
aick's examination, 409; committed to
gaol, 415; murder of, 419

Gordon, Jean, prototype of Meg Merrilies,
xiv; Madge, queen of the Yetholm
gipsies, xvii

Greyfriars Church, Edinburgh, 255
Groaning Malt, 425

Guy Mannering, origin of the work, v;
note on localities and personages, xix

HATTERAICK, Dirk, Mannering's first
interview with, 27; destruction of his
lugger, 63; brought prisoner to Glossin,
217; escape from the old castle, 221;
in his cave with Glossin, 223; his cave
entered by Bertram and Dandie, 394;
seized by Bertram, 398; examination
of, 409; his pocket-book opened, 412;
visited by Glossin in his cell, 416; pro-
totype of, xx

Hazlewood, Charles, attending on Mr.
Bertram, 86; employs Dominie Sampson
for Lucy's sake, 97; his visits to Wood-

bourne, 188; accidentally wounded by
Brown, 201; warned by Meg, 337; joins
Bertram in Hatteraick's cave, 394
Hazlewood, Sir Robert, 295; examines
Bertram, 302; his interview with his
son, 339; with Pleydell and Mannering,
381

Herezeld in feudal tenures, 431

Hewit, old Bertram's natural son, 411
High Jinks, 245, 429

JENNY GIBSON, Mrs. M. Bertram's drudge,

263

Jock Jabos, guides Mannering to Ellan-
gowan, 4; corrects the precentor, 74;
interrogated by Glossin, 210; drives
Brown and Dandie from the prison,

349

KENNEDY, Frank, excise officer, 51;
found dead at Warroch Point, 58;
versions of the story of his death,
72; Glossin's dream of, 219; death of,
described by witnesses, 408
Ken-no cheese, 425
Kippletringan, Mannering's journey to,
3; Gordon Arms Inn, 68
Kittlecourt, Sir Thomas, 31, 35

LAWYERS of Old Edinburgh, 242; con-
vivial habits, 245, 430; sleepless nights,

431

Lay of Last Minstrel, reason for quoting,

168

Liddesdale roads, 429

Lochside, gudeman of, among the gipsies,
xiv

Lum-cleeks, 428

MAC-CANDLISH, Mrs., of the Gordon Arms,
Kippletringan, 68; interrogated by
Glossin about Brown, 206
Mac-Casquil, an expectant of Singleside's,

263

Macers before Supreme Court, 422
Mac-Guffog, the thief-taker, 214; brings
Hatteraick to Glossin, 215; receives
Bertram at Portanferry, 311; admits
Glossin to Hatteraick's cell, 417
Mac-Guffog, Mrs., of the bridewell, 311
Mac-Kinlay, John, his story, v
Mac-Morlan, sheriff-substitute, 78; his
interview with Mannering about the
property, 83; disappointed at the sale,
94; receives Lucy and the Dominie into
his house, 95; his visit to Sir R. Hazle-
wood, 341

Mannering, Guy, seeks a guide for
Kippletringan, 3; reads young Ber-
tram's fortune, 21; second visit to
Kippletringan, 70; his career in India,
78; second visit to Ellangowan, 85;
silences Glossin, 88; interview with
his daughter, 116; settles at Wood-
bourne, 120; defends it against the
smugglers, 194; visits Edinburgh on
law business, 241; meets Dandie at
the lawyer's, 243; at Miss Bertram's
funeral, 258; return to Woodbourne,

325; receives Bertram and Dandie,
359; advice to his daughter, 374; bails
out Bertram, 382
Mannering, Julia, at Mr. Mervyn's, 103;
extracts from her letters, 106, 113, 185,
193, 199; first meeting with Lucy,
126; flirtations at Woodbourne, 189,
355; alarming meeting with Brown,
201; letter to Brown, 283; examined by
her father, 374
Marchmont, Matilda, Julia's corre-
spondent, 106

Marshal, Flora and Will, gipsies, xxi
Meg Merrilies, Mannering's first interview

with, 14; at Ellangowan Castle, 25;
malediction on old Bertram, 49; ex-
amined about the disappearance of
Harry Bertram, 66; at Mumps's Ha',
142; in the gipsy hut with the dead
body, 171; craves two boons from
Bertram, 181; Hatteraick's opinion of
her occult influence, 232; gives the
Dominie a letter to Mannering, 329;
warns young Hazlewood to send back
the guard to Portanferry, 337; her
letter to Mannering, 353; takes
Bertram and Dandie to Hatteraick's
cave, 387; death and declaration of,
401; character of, founded on Jean
Gordon, xiv

Mervyn, letter from, to Mannering, 101
Monboddo, Lord, 431

Mumps's Ha', meeting of Brown and
Dandie, 140; note on, 425

OTTERSCOPE SCAURS fox-hunt, 159

PEPPER and Mustard terriers, 141;
mutilated by the badger, 161; note
on, 427

Pleydell, Mr., the advocate, 245; his
house, 256; examines Rebecca, 276;
arrives at Woodbourne, 351; examines
young Bertram, 363; offers bail for
Bertram, 382; examines Hatteraick
and Glossin, 409

Portanferry bridewell, 310; custom-house
broken into by the smugglers, 347
Protocol, the attorney, 264

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END OF GUY MANNERING

Printed by R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, Edinburgh.

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