A Noble Life by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik
page 14 of 248 (05%)
page 14 of 248 (05%)
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"Poor child!"
The gentlemen then sat down and thoroughly discussed the whole matter, finally deciding that, until things appeared somewhat plainer, it was advisable to keep the earl's condition as much as possible from the world in general, and more especially from his own kindred. The Bruces, who lived abroad, would, it was naturally to be concluded--or Mr. Menteith, who had a lawyer's slender faith in human nature, believed so --would pounce down, like eagles upon a wounded lamb, the instant they heard what a slender thread of life hung between them and these great possessions. Under such circumstances, for the infant to be left unprotected in the solitudes of Loch Beg was very unadvisable; and, besides, it was the guardian's duty to see that every aid which medical skill and surgical science could procure was supplied to a child so afflicted, and upon whose life so much depended. He therefore proposed and Dr. Hamilton agreed, that immediately after the funeral the little earl should be taken to Edinburg, and placed in the house of the latter, to remain there a year or two, or so long as might be necessary. Janet Campbell was called in, and expressed herself willing to take her share--no small one--in the responsibility of this plan, if the minister would see to her "ain bairn;" that was, if the minister really thought the scheme a wise one. "The minister's opinion seems to carry great weight here," said Dr. Hamilton, smiling. And it was so; not merely because of his being a minister, but because, |
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