[St. Ives by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link book
St. Ives

CHAPTER XXV--I MEET A CHEERFUL EXTRAVAGANT
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I pass over the next fifty or sixty leagues of our journey without comment.

The reader must be growing weary of scenes of travel; and for my own part I have no cause to recall these particular miles with any pleasure.

We were mainly occupied with attempts to obliterate our trail, which (as the result showed) were far from successful; for, on my cousin following, he was able to run me home with the least possible loss of time, following the claret-coloured chaise to Kirkby-Lonsdale, where I think the landlord must have wept to learn what he had missed, and tracing us thereafter to the doors of the coach-office in Edinburgh without a single check.

Fortune did not favour me, and why should I recapitulate the details of futile precautions which deceived nobody, and wearisome arts which proved to be artless?
The day was drawing to an end when Mr.Rowley and I bowled into Edinburgh to the stirring sound of the guard's bugle and the clattering team.

I was here upon my field of battle; on the scene of my former captivity, escape and exploits; and in the same city with my love.


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