[The Scottish Chiefs by Jane Porter]@TWC D-Link book
The Scottish Chiefs

CHAPTER XXXVI
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As your general, I may serve you gloriously; as your monarch, in spite of myself, I should incur your ultimate destruction." "From whom, noblest of Scots!" asked the Lord of Bothwell.
"From yourselves, my friends," answered Wallace, with a gentle smile.
"Could I take advantage of the generous enthusiasm of a grateful nation; could I forget the duty I owe to the blood of our Alexanders, and leap into the throne, there are many who would soon revolt against their own election.

You cannot be ignorant, that there are natures who would endure no rule, did it not come by the right of inheritance; a right by dispute, lest they teach their inferiors the same refractory lesson.

But to bend with voluntary subjection, to long obey a power raised by themselves, would be a sacrifice abhorrent to their pride.
After having displayed their efficiency in making a king, they would prove their independence by striving to pull him down the moment he made them feel his specter.
"Such would be the fate of this election.

Jealousies and rebellions would mark my reign; till even my closest adherents, seeing the miseries of civil war, would fall from my side, and leave the country again open to the inroads of her enemies.
"These, my friends and countrymen, would be my reasons for rejecting the crown did my ambition point that way.

But as I have no joy in titles, no pleasure in any power that does not spring hourly from the heart, let my reign be in your bosoms; and with the appellation of your fellow-soldier, your friend! I will fight for you, I will conquer for you--I will live or die!" "This man," whispered Lord Buchan, who having arrived in the rear of the troops on the appearance of Wallace, advanced within hearing of what he said-"this man shows more cunning in repulsing a crown than most are capable of exerting to obtain one." "Ay, but let us see," returned the Earl of March, who accompanied him, "whether it be not Caesar's coyness; he thrice refused the purple, and yet he died Emperor of the Romans!" "He that offers me a crown," returned Buchan, "shall never catch me playing the coquette with its charms.


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