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

CHAPTER VII
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And yet, it's true, I should hae minded your goats, and coupled up the dogs.

I'm sure I would rather they had worried the primest wether in my faulds .-- Come, man, forget and forgie.
I'm e'en as vexed as ye can be--But I am a bridegroom, ye see, and that puts a' things out o' my head, I think.

There's the marriage-dinner, or gude part o't, that my twa brithers are bringing on a sled round by the Riders' Slack, three goodly bucks as ever ran on Dallomlea, as the sang says; they couldna come the straight road for the saft grund.

I wad send ye a bit venison, but ye wadna take it weel maybe, for Killbuck catched it." During this long speech, in which the good-natured Borderer endeavoured to propitiate the offended Dwarf by every argument he could think of, he heard him with his eyes bent on the ground, as if in the deepest meditation, and at length broke forth--"Nature ?--yes! it is indeed in the usual beaten path of Nature.

The strong gripe and throttle the weak; the rich depress and despoil the needy; the happy (those who are idiots enough to think themselves happy) insult the misery and diminish the consolation of the wretched .-- Go hence, thou who hast contrived to give an additional pang to the most miserable of human beings--thou who hast deprived me of what I half considered as a source of comfort.


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