[Guy Mannering or The Astrologer Complete by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookGuy Mannering or The Astrologer Complete CHAPTER XXII 4/11
Suum cuique tribuito.' 'You, then,' said Bertram to his sister, 'are all that remains to me! Last night, but more fully this morning, Colonel Mannering gave me an account of our family misfortunes, though without saying I should find my sister here.' 'That,' said Lucy, 'he left to this gentleman to tell you--one of the kindest and most faithful of friends, who soothed my father's long sickness, witnessed his dying moments, and amid the heaviest clouds of fortune would not desert his orphan.' 'God bless him for it!' said Bertram, shaking the Dominie's hand;' he deserves the love with which I have always regarded even that dim and imperfect shadow of his memory which my childhood retained.' 'And God bless you both, my dear children!' said Sampson; 'if it had not been for your sake I would have been contented--had Heaven's pleasure so been--to lay my head upon the turf beside my patron.' 'But I trust,' said Bertram--'I am encouraged to hope, we shall all see better days.
All our wrongs shall be redressed, since Heaven has sent me means and friends to assert my right.' 'Friends indeed!' echoed the Dominie, 'and sent, as you truly say, by HIM to whom I early taught you to look up as the source of all that is good. There is the great Colonel Mannering from the Eastern Indies, a man of war from his birth upwards, but who is not the less a man of great erudition, considering his imperfect opportunities; and there is, moreover, the great advocate Mr.Pleydell, who is also a man of great erudition, but who descendeth to trifles unbeseeming thereof; and there is Mr.Andrew Dinmont, whom I do not understand to have possession of much erudition, but who, like the patriarchs of old, is cunning in that which belongeth to flocks and herds; lastly, there is even I myself, whose opportunities of collecting erudition, as they have been greater than those of the aforesaid valuable persons, have not, if it becomes me to speak, been pretermitted by me, in so far as my poor faculties have enabled me to profit by them.
Of a surety, little Harry, we must speedily resume our studies.
I will begin from the foundation.
Yes, I will reform your education upward from the true knowledge of English grammar even to that of the Hebrew or Chaldaic tongue.' The reader may observe that upon this occasion Sampson was infinitely more profuse of words than he had hitherto exhibited himself.
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