[The Antiquary by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link book
The Antiquary

CHAPTER FOURTEENTH
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CHAPTER FOURTEENTH.
If I may trust the flattering eye of sleep, My dreams presage some joyful news at hand: My bosom's lord sits lightly on his throne, And all this day, an unaccustomed spirit Lifts me above the ground with cheerful thoughts.
Romeo and Juliet.
The account of Sir Arthur's unhappy adventure had led Oldbuck somewhat aside from his purpose of catechising Lovel concerning the cause of his residence at Fairport.

He was now, however, resolved to open the subject.

"Miss Wardour was formerly known to you, she tells me, Mr.
Lovel ?" "He had had the pleasure," Lovel answered, "to see her at Mrs.Wilmot's, in Yorkshire." "Indeed! you never mentioned that to me before, and you did not accost her as an old acquaintance." "I--I did not know," said Lovel, a good deal embarrassed, "it was the same lady, till we met; and then it was my duty to wait till she should recognise me." "I am aware of your delicacy: the knight's a punctilious old fool, but I promise you his daughter is above all nonsensical ceremony and prejudice.

And now, since you have, found a new set of friends here, may I ask if you intend to leave Fairport as soon as you proposed ?" "What if I should answer your question by another," replied Lovel, "and ask you what is your opinion of dreams ?" "Of dreams, you foolish lad!--why, what should I think of them but as the deceptions of imagination when reason drops the reins?
I know no difference betwixt them and the hallucinations of madness--the unguided horses run away with the carriage in both cases, only in the one the coachman is drunk, and in the other he slumbers.

What says our Marcus Tullius--Si insanorum visis fides non est habenda, cur credatur somnientium visis, quae multo etiam perturbatiora sunt, non intelligo." "Yes, sir; but Cicero also tells us, that as he who passes the whole day in darting the javelin must sometimes hit the mark, so, amid the cloud of nightly dreams, some may occur consonant to future events." "Ay--that is to say, you have hit the mark in your own sage opinion?
Lord! Lord! how this world is given to folly! Well, I will allow for once the Oneirocritical science--I will give faith to the exposition of dreams, and say a Daniel hath arisen to interpret them, if you can prove to me that that dream of yours has pointed to a prudent line of conduct." "Tell me, then," answered Lovel, "why when I was hesitating whether to abandon an enterprise, which I have perhaps rashly undertaken, I should last night dream I saw your ancestor pointing to a motto which encouraged me to perseverance ?--why should I have thought of those words which I cannot remember to have heard before, which are in a language unknown to me, and which yet conveyed, when translated, a lesson which I could so plainly apply to my own circumstances ?" The Antiquary burst into a fit of laughing.


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