[Edinburgh by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link bookEdinburgh CHAPTER III 2/11
He made his entrance by the upper end, playing a strathspey; the curious footed it after him down the street, following his descent by the sound of the chanter from below; until all of a sudden, about the level of St.Giles's, the music came abruptly to an end, and the people in the street stood at fault with hands uplifted.
Whether he was choked with gases, or perished in a quag, or was removed bodily by the Evil One, remains a point of doubt; but the piper has never again been seen or heard of from that day to this. Perhaps he wandered down into the land of Thomas the Rhymer, and some day, when it is least expected, may take a thought to revisit the sunlit upper world.
That will be a strange moment for the cabmen on the stance besides St.Giles's, when they hear the drone of his pipes reascending from the bowels of the earth below their horses' feet. But it is not only pipers who have vanished, many a solid bulk of masonry has been likewise spirited into the air.
Here, for example, is the shape of a heart let into the causeway.
This was the site of the Tolbooth, the Heart of Midlothian, a place old in story and namefather to a noble book. The walls are now down in the dust; there is no more _squalor carceris_ for merry debtors, no more cage for the old, acknowledged prison-breaker; but the sun and the wind play freely over the foundations of the jail. Nor is this the only memorial that the pavement keeps of former days. The ancient burying-ground of Edinburgh lay behind St.Giles's Church, running downhill to the Cowgate and covering the site of the present Parliament House.
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