The Lost Lady of Lone 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Lady of Lone, by E.D.E.N. 
Southworth This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost 
and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it 
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Title: The Lost Lady of Lone 
Author: E.D.E.N. Southworth 
Release Date: June 11, 2005 [EBook #16039] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOST 
LADY OF LONE *** 
 
Produced by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, Mary Meehan and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
THE LOST LADY OF LONE 
By MRS. E.D.E.N. SOUTHWORTH 
Author of "Nearest and Dearest," "The Hidden Hand," "Unknown," 
"Only a Girl's Heart," "For Woman's Love," etc. 
1876 
 
PUBLISHERS' NOTICE. 
"THE LOST LADY OF LONE" is different from any of Mrs. 
Southworth's other novels. The plot, which is unusually provocative of 
conjecture and interest, is founded on thrilling and tragic events which
occurred in the domestic history of one of the most distinguished 
families in the Highlands of Scotland. The materials which these 
interesting and tragic annals place at the disposal of Mrs. Southworth 
give full scope to her unrivalled skill in depicting character and 
developing a plot, and she has made the most of her opportunity and 
her subject. 
 
CONTENTS. 
I. The bride of Lone 
II. An ideal love 
III. The ruined heir 
IV. Salome's choice 
V. Arondelle's consolation 
VI. A horrible mystery on the wedding-day 
VII. The morning's discovery 
VIII. A horrible discovery 
IX. After the discovery 
X. The letter and its effect 
XI. The vailed passenger 
XII. The house on Westminster Road 
XIII. A surprise for Mrs. Scott 
XIV. The second bridal morn 
XV. The cloud falls 
XVI. Vanished 
XVII. The lost Lady of Lone 
XVIII. The flight of the duchess 
XIX. Salome's refuge 
XX. Salome's protectress 
XXI. The bridegroom 
XXII. At Lone 
XXIII. A startling charge 
XXIV. The vindication 
XXV. Who was found? 
XXVI. Off the track 
XXVII. In the convent 
XXVIII. The soul's struggle 
XXIX. The stranger in the chapel
XXX. The haunter 
XXXI. The abbess' story 
XXXII. The duke's double 
XXXIII. After the earthquake 
XXXIV. Risen from the grave 
XXXV. Face to face 
XXXVI. A gathering storm 
XXXVII. A sentence of banishment 
XXXVIII. The storm bursts 
XXXIX. The rivals 
XL. After the storm 
XLI. Father and son 
XLII. Her son 
XLIII. The duke's ward 
XLIV. Retribution 
XLV. After the revelation 
XLVI. Retribution 
XLVII. The end of a lost life 
XLVIII. Husband and wife 
 
THE LOST LADY OF LONE. 
 
CHAPTER I. 
THE BRIDE OF LONE. 
"Eh, Meester McRath? Sae grand doings I hae na seen sin the day o' the 
queen's visit to Lone. That wad be in the auld duke's time. And a waefu' 
day it wa'." 
"Dinna ye gae back to that day, Girzie Ross. It gars my blood boil only 
to think o' it!" 
"Na, Sandy, mon, sure the ill that was dune that day is weel compensate 
on this. Sooth, if only marriages be made in heaven, as they say, sure 
this is one. The laird will get his ain again, and the bonnyest leddy in a' 
the land to boot."
"She is a bonny lass, but na too gude for him, although her fair hand 
does gie him back his lands." 
"It's only a' just as it sud be." 
"Na, it's no all as it sud be. Look at they fules trying to pit up yon 
triumphal arch! The loons hae actually gotten the motto 'HAPPINESS' 
set upside down, sae that a' the blooming red roses are falling out o' it. 
An ill omen that if onything be an ill omen. I maun rin and set it right." 
The speakers in this short colloquy were Mrs. Girzie Ross, housekeeper, 
and Mr. Alexander McRath, house-steward of Castle Lone. 
The locality was in the Highlands of Scotland. The season was early 
summer. The hour was near sunset. The scene was one of great beauty 
and sublimity. The occasion one of high festivity and rejoicing. 
The preparations were being completed for a grand event. For on the 
morning of the next day a deep wrong was to be made right by the 
marriage of the young and beautiful Lady of Lone to the chosen lord of 
her heart. 
Lone Castle was a home of almost ideal grandeur and loveliness, 
situated in one of the wildest and most picturesque regions of the 
Highlands, yet brought to the utmost perfection of fertility by skillful 
cultivation. 
The castle was originally the stronghold of a race of powerful and 
warlike Scottish chieftains, ancestors of the illustrious ducal line of 
Scott-Hereward. It was strongly built, on a rocky island, that arose from 
The midst    
    
		
	
	
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