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"
Alan
Breck
!
"
I
cried
;
and
then
:
"
Do
you
think
I
am
one
to
turn
my
back
on
you
in
your
chief
need
?
You
durs
n't
say
it
to
my
face
.
My
whole
conduct
's
there
to
give
the
lie
to
it
.
It
's
true
,
I
fell
asleep
upon
the
muir
;
but
that
was
from
weariness
,
and
you
do
wrong
to
cast
it
up
to
me
--
--
"
"
Which
is
what
I
never
did
,
"
said
Alan
.
"
But
aside
from
that
,
"
I
continued
,
"
what
have
I
done
that
you
should
even
me
to
dogs
by
such
a
supposition
?
I
never
yet
failed
a
friend
,
and
it
's
not
likely
I
'll
begin
with
you
.
There
are
things
between
us
that
I
can
never
forget
,
even
if
you
can
.
"
"
I
will
only
say
this
to
ye
,
David
,
"
said
Alan
,
very
quietly
,
"
that
I
have
long
been
owing
ye
my
life
,
and
now
I
owe
ye
money
.
Ye
should
try
to
make
that
burden
light
for
me
.
"
This
ought
to
have
touched
me
,
and
in
a
manner
it
did
,
but
the
wrong
manner
.
I
felt
I
was
behaving
badly
;
and
was
now
not
only
angry
with
Alan
,
but
angry
with
myself
in
the
bargain
;
and
it
made
me
the
more
cruel
.
"
You
asked
me
to
speak
,
"
said
I.
"
Well
,
then
,
I
will
.
You
own
yourself
that
you
have
done
me
a
disservice
;
I
have
had
to
swallow
an
affront
:
I
have
never
reproached
you
,
I
never
named
the
thing
till
you
did
.
And
now
you
blame
me
,
"
cried
I
,
"
because
I
cannae
laugh
and
sing
as
if
I
was
glad
to
be
affronted
.
The
next
thing
will
be
that
I
'm
to
go
down
upon
my
knees
and
thank
you
for
it
!
Ye
should
think
more
of
others
,
Alan
Breck
.
If
ye
thought
more
of
others
,
ye
would
perhaps
speak
less
about
yourself
;
and
when
a
friend
that
likes
you
very
well
has
passed
over
an
offence
without
a
word
,
you
would
be
blithe
to
let
it
lie
,
instead
of
making
it
a
stick
to
break
his
back
with
.
By
your
own
way
of
it
,
it
was
you
that
was
to
blame
;
then
it
shouldnae
be
you
to
seek
the
quarrel
.
"
"
Aweel
,
"
said
Alan
,
"
say
nae
mair
.
"
And
we
fell
back
into
our
former
silence
;
and
came
to
our
journey
's
end
,
and
supped
,
and
lay
down
to
sleep
,
without
another
word
.
The
gillie
put
us
across
Loch
Rannoch
in
the
dusk
of
the
next
day
,
and
gave
us
his
opinion
as
to
our
best
route
.
This
was
to
get
us
up
at
once
into
the
tops
of
the
mountains
:
to
go
round
by
a
circuit
,
turning
the
heads
of
Glen
Lyon
,
Glen
Lochay
,
and
Glen
Dochart
,
and
come
down
upon
the
lowlands
by
Kippen
and
the
upper
waters
of
the
Forth
.
Alan
was
little
pleased
with
a
route
which
led
us
through
the
country
of
his
blood-foes
,
the
Glenorchy
Campbells
.
He
objected
that
by
turning
to
the
east
,
we
should
come
almost
at
once
among
the
Athole
Stewarts
,
a
race
of
his
own
name
and
lineage
,
although
following
a
different
chief
,
and
come
besides
by
a
far
easier
and
swifter
way
to
the
place
whither
we
were
bound
.
But
the
gillie
,
who
was
indeed
the
chief
man
of
Cluny
's
scouts
,
had
good
reasons
to
give
him
on
all
hands
,
naming
the
force
of
troops
in
every
district
,
and
alleging
finally
(
as
well
as
I
could
understand
)
that
we
should
nowhere
be
so
little
troubled
as
in
a
country
of
the
Campbells
.