sometimes used by an I WESSEL, westward; WASSIL- 1 WHITTRET, weasel experienced sportsman GATE, west gate
WITTERS, the barbs of the with singular dexterity WHAAP, or HOPE, the spear WAUr, worse
sheltered part or hollow WORRIEcow, hobgoblin, WEAN, infant, young child of a hill. Hoff, howff, bugbear WEAR, force, restraint
haaf, haven are all modi. WUDDIE, WOODIE, rope, WEDDER, a weather (sheep) fications of the same word halter WEEL - FAURED, well fav. WHEEN, WHIN, a few, a Wuss, wish oured, prepossessing
party
WYTE, blame WEIRD, destiny; WEIRD'S WHIGGING, jogging
DREE'D, the destiny is run WHISTLED, given a hint, out
information, to. See | YAFFING, barking Weize, direct, send
note Whistling (p. 431) | YEPISTLE, letter
wood, 201 ; goes to Cumberland, 280 ; revisits Ellangowan, 285
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
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, 42 Cumberland Waste, 138 Curling, 200
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,
DAVIDSON, the original of Dandie Din-
mont, 427 Deacon' Bearcliff, 68; his familiarity,
212 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, 147 ; arrival at Charlie's Hope, 150; at the lawyer's, 243; his law-suit, 249; at Miss Bertram's funeral, 258; joins Bertram in the Portanferry bridewell, 318; a wakes 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, Daudie's pony. 148
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-
Dundas of Arniston, anecdote of, 430 Dutch courtship, 356
EDINBURGH, temp. of tale, 242 Ellangowan. See Bertram Ellangowan Castle, described, 18; re.
visited by Brown (Bertrain), 285 Ellangowan Place, described, 8; view
from, 23 ; sale of, 78; bought by Glossin,
94; restored to Bertram, 421 Erskine, Rev. Dr., his sermon, 255
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
FARMERS in south of Scotland, 152 Fighting Charlie of Liddesdale, 424 Fletcher of Saltoun on the gipsies, 39 Fox-hunt at Charlie's Hope, 159 Funeral, Scotch, description of, 258
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
GABRIEL FAA, the gipsy huntsman, 163 ;
his history, 227 ; warns Dandie of Harry Bertram's danger, 320; gives evidence as to Kennedy and young
Bertram, 413 Gad, the, 431 Galwegian localities and personages con-
nected with the novel, xix Gerunto —'Where is Gerunto now?'
253; note on, 429 Gin by pailfuls, 226 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-
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,
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. I
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,
QUID, the tobacconist, 263
REBECCA, Singleside's waiting-maid, 267 ;
her examination by Pleydell, 276 Redding straik, 173 Riding on the Border, 167 Roads in Liddesdale, 429 Robertson, Rev. Dr., the historian,
255 Roman Wall of Cumberland, 139
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
SALMON-LEISTERING at Charlie's Hope,
162 Sampson, Abel. See Dominie Sampson Saufen Bier und Brantewein, 226 Scottish bar, convivial habits, 430 Sheriff, his examination into Kennedy's
death, 60 Skreigh, the precentor of Kippletringan,
68 Smugglers' attack on Woodbourne, 194;
attack on Portanferry custom-house,
346 Smuggling, Godfrey Bertram's opinion of, · 30, 53; at Ellangowan, 52 Superstitions, gipsy, 172, 428
TAPPIT HEN, 429 Terriers. See Pepper and Mustard Thomson, Rev. George, prototype of
Dominie Sampson, xxviii Tib Mumps of Mumps's Ha', 140 Twist ye, twine ye ! 25
« PreviousContinue » |