img The Scottish Chiefs  /  Chapter 10. St. Fillan's | 11.11%
Download App
Reading History

Chapter 10. St. Fillan's

Word Count: 2957    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

his pressure, and discovered a large monastic cell, into which the daylight shone through one long narrow window. A straw pallet, an altar, and a marble basin,

s of a little chalice, which stood upon the altar, he poured some into her mouth. At last opening her eyes, she recognized the figure of her young kinsman leaning over h

cousin! you are now on holy ground; this is the cell of the prior of St. F

Lady Mar?" And aga

the castle, is allowed to accompany your father to Dumbarton Castle, there to be tr

that were to be sent to him! And without succors, how can he,

e patriot! Convinced of that, can you still fear for you father? I will join Wallace to-morrow. Your own fifty warriors await me at the bottom of Ca

victim to royal revenge; and so sad were her forebodings, that she hardly dared to hope what the sanguine disposition of her

itted to my care by the earl, your uncle,

?" demanded Murray; "

eturned the soldier; "it bel

"If it be treasure, why wa

id you escape with it, and Halbert, too! I

and one or two men, who had known him in former expeditions, readily reported that he had been drafted into the present one. Their recognition warranted his truth; and he had no difficulty, after the carnage in the state apartment, to make his way to the bed-chamber where Lord Aymer de Valence had ordered Lord Mar to be carried. He found the earl alone, and lost in grief. He knew not but that his nephew, and even his daughter and wife, had fallen beneath the impetuous swords of the enemy. Astonished at seeing the soldier walking at large, he expressed his surprise with

part of the conference, Murray in

nce late last night at Dumbarton Castle. Soulis was then there; and he immediately set off to Glasgow, for the followers he had left in that town. Early t

ntioned, the heart

im?" excla

same moment in which De Valence gave orders for his troops to march on Bothwell, he

astle must have written it. Whence else could have come the double information? And if so," ad

ul malediction was echoed by the voices of H

ir vigilance, and join his friend. This discourse reminded him of the iron box. 'It is in that closet,' said his lordship, pointing to an opposite door; you will find it beneath t

will admit you to a flight of steps; descend them, and at the bottom you will find a door, that will convey you into a range of cellars. Lift up the largest flag-stone in the second, and you will be conducted through a dark vault to an iron door; draw the bolt, and remain in the cell it will open to you till the owner enters. He is the prior

wn misery on his head! Ill-omened trust! whatever it contains, its presence carried blood and sorrow in its tra

ticipations of freedom to Scotland? Alas, Andrew," said she, taking his hand, and weeping ove

ged in. We must expect occasional disappointments, or look for miracles every day. Such disasters are sent as lessons to teach us pr

dued spirits of her cousin, "why, my good soldier, di

ing would leave his wife and babes in unprotected captivity. 'No,' added he, 'I w

r having seen since the funeral obsequies, I supposed had fallen during the carnage in the state-chamber. He was still kneeling by the tomb of his buried mistress. I did not take lon

former, in a loud voice, gave orders that, as Lady Helen Mar could nowhere be found, the earl and countess, w

; "my father will then be consol

he countess to Dunglass Castle, near Glasgow, while the sick earl was to have been carried alone to Dumbarton, and detained in solitary confinement. Lord Soulis was in so dreadful a

and the violator of every private tie. Helen Mar had twice refused his hand: first, during the contest for the kingdom, when his pretended claim to the crown was disallowed. She was then a mere child, hardly more than fourteen; but she rejected him with abhorrence. Though stung to the quick at being denied the objects both of his love and ambition at the same moment, he did not hes

s imparted to him, "if I once get that proud minion into my grasp, she shall be m

e, though she shrunk at the sound of a name so generally infamous, yet, not aware of all the evils she had escaped, she

angers. Murray took off his helmet, and approached him. On recognizing the son of his patron, the prior inquired his commands; and

ad compelled them to thus seek the protection of St. Fillan. "Lady Helen," continued he, "must share your

ith the iron box; repeating the message

, he had no suspicion that these were other than the Bothwell soldiers. He took the box, and laying it on the altar, pressed the cross to his lips. "The Earl of Mar shall find that fide

irtuous Southron, I will give you a pilgrim's habit. Travel in that privileged garb to Montrose; and there a brother of the church, the

told her that a cell should be appointed for her, and some pious

avenly country! He had best put on the cowl of the holy brotherhood, and, in the arms of reli

of blood and hardship, I will at least devote my last hours to uniting my prayers with his, and all good souls, for the repose of his sainted lady. I accept your

len looked fearfully at her cousin, and grasped his hand; Murray clasped his sword with a firmer hold. "I will protect you with my life." He spoke

cried Helen, covering

o popular a nobleman." This assurance, assisted by the consolations of a firm trust in God, caused her to raise her head with a meek smile. He continued to speak of the impregnable hopes of the Christian who founds his confidence on Omnip

And Helen, comforted by holy meditations, allowing her cousin to

ype="

img

Contents

Chapter 1. Scotland Chapter 2. Lanark Chapter 3. Ellerslie Chapter 4. Corie Lynn Chapter 5. Lanark Castle Chapter 6. Cartlane Craigs Chapter 7. Bothwell Castle Chapter 8. Bothwell Chapel Chapter 9. Bothwell Dungeons Chapter 10. St. Fillan's Chapter 11. The Chapter House
Chapter 12. Drumshargard
Chapter 13. Banks of the Clyde
Chapter 14. The Pentland Hills
Chapter 15. The Hut
Chapter 16. The Glen of Stones
Chapter 17. The Hermit's Cell
Chapter 18. Cartlane Craigs, and Glenfinlass
Chapter 19. Craignacoheilg
Chapter 20. The Cliffs of Loch Lubnaig
Chapter 21. Loch Lomond
Chapter 22. Dumbarton Rock
Chapter 23. The Fortress
Chapter 24. The Great Tower
Chapter 25. The Citadel
Chapter 26. Renfrewshire
Chapter 27. The Frith of Clyde
Chapter 28. Isle of Bute
Chapter 29. The Barns of Ayr
Chapter 30. The Barns of Ayr
Chapter 31. Berwick and the Tweed
Chapter 32. Stirling
Chapter 33. Cambus–Kenneth
Chapter 34. Stirling Castle
Chapter 35. Stirling Citadel
Chapter 36. The Carse of Stirling
Chapter 37. Snawdoun Palace
Chapter 38. The Bower, or Ladies' Apartment
Chapter 39. Stirling Castle and Council Hall
Chapter 40. The Governor's Apartments
Chapter 41. The State Prison
Chapter 42. Chapel in Snawdoun
Chapter 43. The Carse of Stirling
Chapter 44. The Cheviots
Chapter 45. Lochmaben Castle
Chapter 46. Lammington
Chapter 47. Lammington
Chapter 48. Loch Awe
Chapter 49. Stanmore
Chapter 50. Stirling
Chapter 51. Stirling and Snawdoun
Chapter 52. Banks of the Forth
Chapter 53. Falkirk
Chapter 54. Carron Banks
Chapter 55. Church of Falkirk
Chapter 56. The Monastery
Chapter 57. Durham
Chapter 58. The Bishop's Palace
Chapter 59. The Round Tower
Chapter 60. Gallic Seas
Chapter 61. Normandy
Chapter 62. The Widow's Cell
Chapter 63. Chateau Galliard
Chapter 64. Forest of Vincennes
Chapter 65. Paris
Chapter 66. The Louvre
Chapter 67. Scotland
Chapter 68. Roslyn
Chapter 69. Roslyn Castle
Chapter 70. Berwick
Chapter 71. The Camp
Chapter 72. Stirling Castle
Chapter 73. Ballochgeich
Chapter 74. Arthur's Seat
Chapter 75. Dalkeith
Chapter 76. Hawthorndean
Chapter 77. Wallace's Tent
Chapter 78. Banks of the Eske
Chapter 79. Lumloch
Chapter 80. Huntingtower
Chapter 81. The Thames
Chapter 82. The Tower of London
Chapter 83. The State Dungeon
Chapter 84. Tower Hill
Chapter 85. The Warden's Apartments
Chapter 86. Highgate
Chapter 87. Scotland - Dumfries
Chapter 88. Stirling
Chapter 89. Bannockburn
Appendix
img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY