[Guy Mannering or The Astrologer<br> Complete by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link book
Guy Mannering or The Astrologer
Complete

CHAPTER IV
2/13

Set things to rights in my study, and wheel the great leathern chair up to the writing-table; set a stool for Mr.Scrow.
Scrow (to the clerk, as he entered the presence-chamber), hand down Sir George Mackenzie "On Crimes"; open it at the section "Vis Publica et Privata," and fold down a leaf at the passage "anent the bearing of unlawful weapons." Now lend me a hand off with my muckle-coat, and hang it up in the lobby, and bid them bring up the prisoner; I trow I'll sort him; but stay, first send up Mac-Guffog.

Now, Mac-Guffog, where did ye find this chield ?' Mac-Guffog, a stout, bandy-legged fellow, with a neck like a bull, a face like a firebrand, and a most portentous squint of the left eye, began, after various contortions by way of courtesy to the Justice, to tell his story, eking it out by sundry sly nods and knowing winks, which appeared to bespeak an intimate correspondence of ideas between the narrator and his principal auditor.

'Your honour sees I went down to yon place that your honour spoke o', that's kept by her that your honour kens o', by the sea-side.

So says she, "What are you wanting here?
ye'll be come wi' a broom in your pocket frae Ellangowan ?"--So says I, "Deil a broom will come frae there awa, for ye ken," says I, "his honour Ellangowan himsell in former times--"' 'Well, well,' said Glossin, 'no occasion to be particular, tell the essentials.' 'Weel, so we sat niffering about some brandy that I said I wanted, till he came in.' 'Who ?' 'He!' pointing with his thumb inverted to the kitchen, where the prisoner was in custody.

'So he had his griego wrapped close round him, and I judged he was not dry-handed; so I thought it was best to speak proper, and so he believed I was a Manks man, and I kept ay between him and her, for fear she had whistled.


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