[The Black Dwarf by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookThe Black Dwarf CHAPTER XI 9/10
Lend me your assistance, gentlemen--give me your advice, Mr.Ratcliffe.I am incapable of acting, or thinking, under the unexpected violence of such a blow." "Let us take our horses, call our attendants, and scour the country in pursuit of the villains," said Sir Frederick. "Is there no one whom you can suspect," said Ratcliffe, gravely, "of having some motive for this strange crime? These are not the days of romance, when ladies are carried off merely for their beauty." "I fear," said Mr.Vere, "I can too well account for this strange incident.
Read this letter, which Miss Lucy Ilderton thought fit to address from my house of Ellieslaw to young Mr.Earnscliff; whom, of all men, I have a hereditary right to call my enemy.
You see she writes to him as the confidant of a passion which he has the assurance to entertain for my daughter; tells him she serves his cause with her friend very ardently, but that he has a friend in the garrison who serves him yet more effectually.
Look particularly at the pencilled passages, Mr.Ratcliffe, where this meddling girl recommends bold measures, with an assurance that his suit would be successful anywhere beyond the bounds of the barony of Ellieslaw." "And you argue, from this romantic letter of a very romantic young lady, Mr.Vere," said Ratcliffe, "that young Earnscliff has carried off your daughter, and committed a very great and criminal act of violence, on no better advice and assurance than that of Miss Lucy Ilderton ?" "What else can I think ?" said Ellieslaw. "What else CAN you think ?" said Sir Frederick; "or who else could have any motive for committing such a crime ?" "Were that the best mode of fixing the guilt," said Mr.Ratcliffe, calmly, "there might easily be pointed out persons to whom such actions are more congenial, and who have also sufficient motives of instigation. Supposing it were judged advisable to remove Miss Vere to some place in which constraint might be exercised upon her inclinations to a degree which cannot at present be attempted under the roof of Ellieslaw Castle--What says Sir Frederick Langley to that supposition ?" "I say," returned Sir Frederick, "that although Mr.Vere may choose to endure in Mr.Ratcliffe freedoms totally inconsistent with his situation in life, I will not permit such license of innuendo, by word or look, to be extended to me, with impunity." "And I say," said young Mareschal of Mareschal-Wells, who was also a guest at the castle, "that you are all stark mad to be standing wrangling here, instead of going in pursuit of the ruffians." "I have ordered off the domestics already in the track most likely to overtake them," said Mr.Vere "if you will favour me with your company, we will follow them, and assist in the search." The efforts of the party were totally unsuccessful, probably because Ellieslaw directed the pursuit to proceed in the direction of Earnscliff Tower, under the supposition that the owner would prove to be the author of the violence, so that they followed a direction diametrically opposite to that in which the ruffians had actually proceeded.
In the evening they returned, harassed and out of spirits.
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