Red Cap Tales | Page 2

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
page 2 In an instant his red cap was off and he
was bowing and saluting . . . with . . . extravagant gestures 20 3 So
fierce was the attack . . . made on Edward, that the young man was
compelled to draw his pistol 66 4 Rose Bradwardine . . . watched him
with a sigh on her lip and colour on her cheek 84 5 "Vich Ian Vohr," it
said in a dreadful voice, "beware of to-morrow" 102
GUY MANNERING
6 "Ride your ways, Laird of Ellangowan," she cried 136 7 He would
stand there transfixed . . . till a serving-maid pulled his skirts to tell him
dinner was waiting 150 8 He saw his late companion . . . engaged in
deadly combat with a couple of rascals 154 9 Hazlewood snatched the
gun from the servant and haughtily ordered Brown to stand back and
not to alarm the lady 170
ROB ROY
10 He took the lantern . . . and holding it up, proceeded to examine the
stern, set countenance of Frank's guide 256 11 The fight between Frank

and Rashleigh 266 12 "Stand!" she cried, . . . "and tell me what you
seek in Macgregor's country" 278 13 The girl's face, perhaps not
altogether unintentionally, touched that of Frank Osbaldistone 300
THE ANTIQUARY
14 "Turn back! Turn back!" he cried 344 15 Dousterswivel flung
himself on his knees 375 16 He lighted his beacon accordingly 410

RED CAP TALES

CERTAIN SMALL PHARAOHS THAT KNEW NOT JOSEPH
IT was all Sweetheart's fault, and this is how it came about.
She and I were at Dryburgh Abbey, sitting quietly on a rustic seat, and
looking toward the aisle in which slept the Great Dead. The long
expected had happened, and we had made pilgrimage to our Mecca.
Yet, in spite of the still beauty of the June day, I could see that a
shadow lay upon our Sweetheart's brow.
"Oh, I know he was great," she burst out at last, "and what you read me
out of the Life was nice. I like hearing about Sir Walter--but--"
I knew what was coming.
"But what?" I said, looking severely at the ground, so that I might be
able to harden my heart against the pathos of Sweetheart's expression.
"But--I can't read the novels--indeed I can't. I have tried Waverley at
least twenty times. And as for Rob Roy--"
Even the multiplication table failed here, and at this, variously a-sprawl
on the turf beneath, the smaller fry giggled.
"Course," said Hugh John, who was engaged in eating grass like an ox,

"we know it is true about Rob Roy. She read us one whole volume, and
there wasn't no Rob Roy, nor any fighting in it. So we pelted her with
fir-cones to make her stop and read over Treasure Island to us instead!"
"Yes, though we had heard it twenty times already," commented Sir
Toady Lion, trying his hardest to pinch his brother's legs on the sly.
"Books wifout pictures is silly!" said a certain Maid Margaret, a
companion new to the honourable company, who was weaving
daisy-chains, her legs crossed beneath her, Turk fashion. In literature
she had got as far as words of one syllable, and had a poor opinion even
of them.
"I had read all Scott's novels long before I was your age," I said
reprovingly.
The children received this announcement with the cautious silence with
which every rising generation listens to the experiences of its elders
when retailed by way of odious comparison.
"Um-m!" said Sir Toady, the licensed in speech; "we know all that. Oh,
yes; and you didn't like fruit, and you liked medicine in a big spoon,
and eating porridge and--"
"Oh, we know--we know!" cried all the others in chorus. Whereupon I
informed them what would have happened to us thirty years ago if we
had ventured to address our parents in such fashion. But Sweetheart,
with the gravity of her age upon her, endeavoured to raise the
discussion to its proper level.
"Scott writes such a lot before you get at the story," she objected,
knitting her brows; "why couldn't he just have begun right away?"
"With Squire Trelawney and Dr. Livesey drawing at their pipes in the
oak-pannelled dining room, and Black Dog outside the door, and Pew
coming tapping along the road with his stick!" cried Hugh John, turning
off a sketchy synopsis of his favourite situations in fiction.

"Now that's what I call a proper book!" said Sir Toady, hastily rolling
himself out of the way of being kicked. (For with these unusual
children, the smooth ordinary upper surfaces of life covered a constant
succession of private wars and rumours of wars, which went on under
the table at meals,
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