A Legend of Montrose eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about A Legend of Montrose.

A Legend of Montrose eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about A Legend of Montrose.
one paire of whole stockings, and a paire of boothose, greater then the former.  These I put on my legs.  The third morning I found the same usage, the stockins for one leg onlie left me.  It was time for me then, and my servants too, to imagine it must be rats that had shard my stockins so inequallie with me; and this the mistress of the house knew well enough, but would not tell it me.  The roome, which was a low parlour, being well searched with candles, the top of my great boothose was found at a hole, in which they had drawne all the rest.  I went abroad and ordered the boards to be raised, to see how the rats had disposed of my moveables.  The mistress sent a servant of her oune to be present at this action, which she knew concerned her.  One board being bot a litle opend, a litle boy of mine thrust in his hand, and fetchd with him foure and tuentie old peeces of gold, and one angell.  The servant of the house affirmed it appertained to his mistres.  The boy bringing the gold to me, I went immediatlie to the gentlewomans chamber, and told her, it was probable Lambert haveing quarterd in that house, as indeed he had, some of his servants might have hid that gold; and if so, it was lawfullie mine; bot if she could make it appeare it belongd to her, I should immediatlie give it her.  The poore gentlewoman told me with many teares, that her husband being none of the frugallest men (and indeed he was a spendthrift), she had hid that gold without his, knowledge, to make use of it as she had occasion, especiallie when she lay in; and conjured me, as I lovd the King (for whom her husband and she had suffered much), not to detaine her gold.  She said, if there was either more or lesse then foure and tuentie whole peeces, and two halfe ones, it sould be none of hers; and that they were put by her in a red velvet purse.  After I had given her assureance of her gold, a new search is made, the other angell is found, the velvet purse all gnawd in bits, as my stockins were, and the gold instantlie restord to the gentlewoman.  I have often heard that the eating or gnawing of cloths by rats is ominous, and portends some mischance to fall on those to whom the cloths belong.  I thank God I was never addicted to such divinations, or heeded them.  It is true, that more misfortunes then one fell on me shortlie after; bot I am sure I could have better forseene them myselfe then rats or any such vermine, and yet did it not.  I have heard indeed many fine stories told of rats, how they abandon houses and ships, when the first are to be burnt and the second dround.  Naturalists say they are very sagacious creatures, and I beleeve they are so; bot I shall never be of the opinion they can forsee future contingencies, which I suppose the divell himselfe can neither forknow nor fortell; these being things which the Almightie hath keepd hidden in the bosome of his divine prescience.  And whither the great God hath preordained or predestinated these things, which to us are contingent, to fall out by ane uncontrollable and unavoidable necessitie, is a question not yet decided.” [Sir James TURNER’S memoirs, Bannatyne edition, p. 59.]

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A Legend of Montrose from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.