[The Heart of Mid-Lothian Complete, Illustrated by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookThe Heart of Mid-Lothian Complete, Illustrated CHAPTER FOURTEENTH 6/9
Take this weapon, shoot me through the head, and with your own hand revenge your sister's wrong, only follow the course--the only course, by which her life can be saved." "Alas! is she innocent or guilty ?" "She is guiltless--guiltless of every thing, but of having trusted a villain!--Yet, had it not been for those that were worse than I am--yes, worse than I am, though I am bad indeed--this misery had not befallen." "And my sister's child--does it live ?" said Jeanie. "No; it was murdered--the new-born infant was barbarously murdered," he uttered in a low, yet stern and sustained voice.--"but," he added hastily, "not by her knowledge or consent." "Then, why cannot the guilty be brought to justice, and the innocent freed ?" "Torment me not with questions which can serve no purpose," he sternly replied--"The deed was done by those who are far enough from pursuit, and safe enough from discovery!--No one can save Effie but yourself." "Woe's me! how is it in my power ?" asked Jeanie, in despondency. "Hearken to me!--You have sense--you can apprehend my meaning--I will trust you.
Your sister is innocent of the crime charged against her." "Thank God for that!" said Jeanie. "Be still and hearken!--The person who assisted her in her illness murdered the child; but it was without the mother's knowledge or consent--She is therefore guiltless, as guiltless as the unhappy innocent, that but gasped a few minutes in this unhappy world--the better was its hap, to be so soon at rest.
She is innocent as that infant, and yet she must die--it is impossible to clear her of the law!" "Cannot the wretches be discovered, and given up to punishment ?" said Jeanie. "Do you think you will persuade those who are hardened in guilt to die to save another ?--Is that the reed you would lean to ?" "But you said there was a remedy," again gasped out the terrified young woman. "There is," answered the stranger, "and it is in your own hands.
The blow which the law aims cannot be broken by directly encountering it, but it may be turned aside.
You saw your sister during the period preceding the birth of her child--what is so natural as that she should have mentioned her condition to you? The doing so would, as their cant goes, take the case from under the statute, for it removes the quality of concealment.
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