The Scottish Chiefs by Jane Porter
page 238 of 980 (24%)
page 238 of 980 (24%)
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bosom, staunched the wound.
"So is your mercy rewarded!" exclaimed Kirkpatrick. "So am I true to a soldier's duty," returned Wallace, "though De Valence is a traitor to his!" "You treated him as a man," replied Kirkpatrick, "but now you find him a treacherous fiend!" "Your eagerness, my brave friend," returned Wallace, "has lost him as a prisoner. If not for humanity or honor, for policy's sake, we ought to have spared his life, and detained him as an hostage for our countrymen in England. Kirkpatrick remembered how his violence had released the earl, and he looked down abashed. Wallace, perceiving it, continued, "But let us not abuse our time discoursing on a coward. He is gone, the fortress is ours, and our first measure must be to guard if from surprise." As he spoke, his eyes fell upon Edwin, who, having recovered from the shock of Murray's exclamation, had brought forward the surgeon of their little band. A few minutes bound up the wounds of their chief, even while beckoning the anxious boy towards him. "Brave youth," cried he, "you, at the imminent risk of your own life, explored these heights, that you might render our ascent more sure; you who have fought like a young lion in this unequal contest! here, in the face of all your valiant comrades, receive that knighthood which rather derives luster from your virtues than gives additional consequence to your name." |
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