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

CHAPTER X
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NARRATIVE OF ALAN FAIRFORD The reader ought, by this time, to have formed some idea of the character of Alan Fairford.

He had a warmth of heart which the study of the law and of the world could not chill, and talents which they had rendered unusually acute.

Deprived of the personal patronage enjoyed by most of his contemporaries, who assumed the gown under the protection of their aristocratic alliances and descents, he early saw that he should have that to achieve for himself which fell to them as a right of birth.
He laboured hard in silence and solitude, and his labours were crowned with success.

But Alan doted on his friend Darsie, even more than he loved his profession, and, as we have seen, threw everything aside when he thought Latimer in danger; forgetting fame and fortune, and hazarding even the serious displeasure of his father, to rescue him whom he loved with an elder brother's affection.

Darsie, though his parts were more quick and brilliant than those of his friend, seemed always to the latter a being under his peculiar charge, whom he was called upon to cherish and protect in cases where the youth's own experience was unequal to the exigency; and now, when, the fate of Latimer seeming worse than doubtful, Alan's whole prudence and energy were to be exerted in his behalf, an adventure which might have seemed perilous to most youths of his age had no terrors for him.


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