[St. Ronan’s Well by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link book
St. Ronan’s Well

CHAPTER VI
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He was, indeed, of a grave musing sort of habit, and often preferred solitary walks, in the wild and beautiful scenery with which the village is surrounded, to the use of the gun.

He was attached to fishing, moreover, that dullest of human amusements, and this also tended to keep us considerably apart.

This gave me rather pleasure than concern;--not that I hated Francis at that time; nay, not that I greatly disliked his society; but merely because it was unpleasant to be always with one, whose fortunes I looked upon as standing in direct opposition to my own.

I also rather despised the indifference about sport, which indeed seemed to grow upon him; but my gentleman had better taste than I was aware of.

If he sought no grouse on the hill, he had flushed a pheasant in the wood.
"Clara Mowbray, daughter of the Lord of the more picturesque than wealthy domain of St.Ronan's, was at that time scarce sixteen years old, and as wild and beautiful a woodland nymph as the imagination can fancy--simple as a child in all that concerned the world and its ways, acute as a needle in every point of knowledge which she had found an opportunity of becoming acquainted with; fearing harm from no one, and with, a lively and natural strain of wit, which brought amusement and gaiety wherever she came.


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