[The Antiquary by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookThe Antiquary CHAPTER TWENTY-FIRST 8/19
And now I wad like a wise man to tell me whether Heaven is maist pleased wi' the sight we are looking upon--thae pleasant and quiet lang streaks o' moonlight that are lying sae still on the floor o' this auld kirk, and glancing through the great pillars and stanchions o' the carved windows, and just dancing like on the leaves o' the dark ivy as the breath o' wind shakes it--I wonder whether this is mair pleasing to Heaven than when it was lighted up wi' lamps, and candles nae doubt, and roughies,* and wi' the mirth and the frankincent that they speak of in the Holy Scripture, and wi' organs assuredly, and men and women singers, and sackbuts, and dulcimers, and a' instruments o' music--I wonder if that was acceptable, or whether it is of these grand parafle o' ceremonies that holy writ says, It is an abomination to me. * Links, or torches. I am thinking, Maister Lovel, if twa puir contrite spirits like yours and mine fand grace to make our petition"-- Here Lovel laid his hand eagerly on the mendicant's arm, saying,--"Hush! I heard some one speak." "I am dull o' hearing," answered Edie, in a whisper, "but we're surely safe here--where was the sound ?" Lovel pointed to the door of the chancel, which, highly ornamented, occupied the west end of the building, surmounted by the carved window, which let in a flood of moonlight over it. "They can be nane o' our folk," said Edie in the same low and cautious tone; "there's but twa o' them kens o' the place, and they're mony a mile off, if they are still bound on their weary pilgrimage.
I'll never think it's the officers here at this time o' night.
I am nae believer in auld wives' stories about ghaists, though this is gey like a place for them--But mortal, or of the other world, here they come!--twa men and a light." And in very truth, while the mendicant spoke, two human figures darkened with their shadows the entrance of the chancel--which had before opened to the moon-lit meadow beyond, and the small lantern which one of them displayed, glimmered pale in the clear and strong beams of the moon, as the evening star does among the lights of the departing day.
The first and most obvious idea was, that, despite the asseverations of Edie Ochiltree, the persons who approached the ruins at an hour so uncommon must be the officers of justice in quest of Lovel.
But no part of their conduct confirmed the suspicion.
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