Scottish sketches eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Scottish sketches.

Scottish sketches eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 238 pages of information about Scottish sketches.

“John,” he said, “what were you going to do wi’ that sorrowfu’ lad?”

“I was going to gie him up to justice, minister, as it was right and just to do; but first we must see about—­about the body.”

“That has, without doot, been already cared for.  On the warst o’ nights there are plenty o’ folk passing o’er Glasgow Green after the tea-hour.  It is David we must care for now.  Why should we gie him up to the law?  Not but what ‘the law is good, if a man use it lawfully.’  But see how the lad is weeping.  Dinna mak yoursel’ hard to a broken heart, deacon.  God himsel’ has promised to listen to it.  You must go back hame and leave him wi’ me.  And, John,” he said, with an air of triumph, as they stood at the door together, with the snow blowing in their uplifted faces, “John, my dear old brother John, go hame and bless God; for, I tell you, this thing shall turn out to be a great salvation.”

So John went home, praying as he went, and conscious of a strange hopefulness in the midst of his grief.  The minister turned back to the sobbing criminal, and touching him gently, said,

“Davie, my son, come wi’ me.”

David rose hopelessly and followed him.  They went into the room where they had seen the minister take the stranger who had entered the house with them.  The stranger was still there, and as they entered he came gently and on tiptoe to meet them.

“Dr. Fleming,” said the minister, “this is David Callendar, your patient’s late partner in business; he wishes to be the poor man’s nurse, and indeed, sir, I ken no one fitter for the duty.”

So Dr. Fleming took David’s hand, and then in a low voice gave him directions for the night’s watch, though David, in the sudden hope and relief that had come to him, could scarcely comprehend them.  Then the physician went, and the minister and David sat by the bedside alone.  Robert lay in the very similitude and presence of death, unconscious both of his sufferings and his friends.  Congestion of the brain had set in, and life was only revealed by the faintest pulsations, and by the appliances for relief which medical skill thought it worth while to make.

“‘And sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death,’” said the doctor solemnly.  “David, there is your work.”

“God knows how patiently and willingly I’ll do it, minister.  Poor Robert, I never meant to harm him.”

“Now listen to me, and wonder at God’s merciful ways.  Auld Deacon Galbraith, who lives just beyond Rutherglen Bridge, sent me word this afternoon that he had gotten a summons from his Lord, and he would like to see my face ance mair before he went awa for ever.  He has been my right hand in the kirk, and I loved him weel.  Sae I went to bid him a short Gude-by—­for we’ll meet again in a few years at the maist—­and I found him sae glad and solemnly happy within sight o’ the heavenly shore, that I tarried wi’ him a few hours, and we ate and drank his last sacrament

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Project Gutenberg
Scottish sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.