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991
Thereupon
we
said
farewell
,
and
set
out
again
,
bending
somewhat
eastwards
,
in
a
fine
mild
dark
night
,
and
over
much
the
same
broken
country
as
before
.
992
Sometimes
we
walked
,
sometimes
ran
;
and
as
it
drew
on
to
morning
,
walked
ever
the
less
and
ran
the
more
.
Though
,
upon
its
face
,
that
country
appeared
to
be
a
desert
,
yet
there
were
huts
and
houses
of
the
people
,
of
which
we
must
have
passed
more
than
twenty
,
hidden
in
quiet
places
of
the
hills
.
When
we
came
to
one
of
these
,
Alan
would
leave
me
in
the
way
,
and
go
himself
and
rap
upon
the
side
of
the
house
and
speak
awhile
at
the
window
with
some
sleeper
awakened
.
This
was
to
pass
the
news
;
which
,
in
that
country
,
was
so
much
of
a
duty
that
Alan
must
pause
to
attend
to
it
even
while
fleeing
for
his
life
;
and
so
well
attended
to
by
others
,
that
in
more
than
half
of
the
houses
where
we
called
they
had
heard
already
of
the
murder
.
In
the
others
,
as
well
as
I
could
make
out
(
standing
back
at
a
distance
and
hearing
a
strange
tongue
)
,
the
news
was
received
with
more
of
consternation
than
surprise
.
993
For
all
our
hurry
,
day
began
to
come
in
while
we
were
still
far
from
any
shelter
.
It
found
us
in
a
prodigious
valley
,
strewn
with
rocks
and
where
ran
a
foaming
river
.
Wild
mountains
stood
around
it
;
there
grew
there
neither
grass
nor
trees
;
and
I
have
sometimes
thought
since
then
,
that
it
may
have
been
the
valley
called
Glencoe
,
where
the
massacre
was
in
the
time
of
King
William
.
But
for
the
details
of
our
itinerary
,
I
am
all
to
seek
;
our
way
lying
now
by
short
cuts
,
now
by
great
detours
;
our
pace
being
so
hurried
,
our
time
of
journeying
usually
by
night
;
and
the
names
of
such
places
as
I
asked
and
heard
being
in
the
Gaelic
tongue
and
the
more
easily
forgotten
.
Отключить рекламу
994
The
first
peep
of
morning
,
then
,
showed
us
this
horrible
place
,
and
I
could
see
Alan
knit
his
brow
.
995
"
This
is
no
fit
place
for
you
and
me
,
"
he
said
.
"
This
is
a
place
they
're
bound
to
watch
.
"
996
And
with
that
he
ran
harder
than
ever
down
to
the
water-side
,
in
a
part
where
the
river
was
split
in
two
among
three
rocks
.
It
went
through
with
a
horrid
thundering
that
made
my
belly
quake
;
and
there
hung
over
the
lynn
a
little
mist
of
spray
.
Alan
looked
neither
to
the
right
nor
to
the
left
,
but
jumped
clean
upon
the
middle
rock
and
fell
there
on
his
hands
and
knees
to
check
himself
,
for
that
rock
was
small
and
he
might
have
pitched
over
on
the
far
side
.
I
had
scarce
time
to
measure
the
distance
or
to
understand
the
peril
before
I
had
followed
him
,
and
he
had
caught
and
stopped
me
.
997
So
there
we
stood
,
side
by
side
upon
a
small
rock
slippery
with
spray
,
a
far
broader
leap
in
front
of
us
,
and
the
river
dinning
upon
all
sides
.
When
I
saw
where
I
was
,
there
came
on
me
a
deadly
sickness
of
fear
,
and
I
put
my
hand
over
my
eyes
.
Alan
took
me
and
shook
me
;
I
saw
he
was
speaking
,
but
the
roaring
of
the
falls
and
the
trouble
of
my
mind
prevented
me
from
hearing
;
only
I
saw
his
face
was
red
with
anger
,
and
that
he
stamped
upon
the
rock
.
The
same
look
showed
me
the
water
raging
by
,
and
the
mist
hanging
in
the
air
:
and
with
that
I
covered
my
eyes
again
and
shuddered
.
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998
The
next
minute
Alan
had
set
the
brandy
bottle
to
my
lips
,
and
forced
me
to
drink
about
a
gill
,
which
sent
the
blood
into
my
head
again
.
999
Then
,
putting
his
hands
to
his
mouth
,
and
his
mouth
to
my
ear
,
he
shouted
,
"
Hang
or
drown
!
"
and
turning
his
back
upon
me
,
leaped
over
the
farther
branch
of
the
stream
,
and
landed
safe
.
I
was
now
alone
upon
the
rock
,
which
gave
me
the
more
room
;
the
brandy
was
singing
in
my
ears
;
I
had
this
good
example
fresh
before
me
,
and
just
wit
enough
to
see
that
if
I
did
not
leap
at
once
,
I
should
never
leap
at
all
.
I
bent
low
on
my
knees
and
flung
myself
forth
,
with
that
kind
of
anger
of
despair
that
has
sometimes
stood
me
in
stead
of
courage
.
Sure
enough
,
it
was
but
my
hands
that
reached
the
full
length
;
these
slipped
,
caught
again
,
slipped
again
;
and
I
was
sliddering
back
into
the
lynn
,
when
Alan
seized
me
,
first
by
the
hair
,
then
by
the
collar
,
and
with
a
great
strain
dragged
me
into
safety
.