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Murad the Unlucky, etc. by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 51 / 129


this man was a watchman whom the over-vigilant verger had stationed
there to guard the Hereford Cathedral from his attacks. O'Neill
little guessed that he had been arrested merely to keep him from
blowing up the cathedral this night. The arrest had an excellent
effect upon his mind, for he was a young man of good sense: it
made him resolve to retrench his expenses in time, to live more
like a glover and less like a gentleman; and to aim more at
establishing credit, and less at gaining popularity. He found,
from experience, that good friends will not pay bad debts.



CHAPTER II



On Thursday morning our verger rose in unusually good spirits,
congratulating himself upon the eminent service he had done to the
city of Hereford by his sagacity in discovering the foreign plot to
blow up the Cathedral, and by his dexterity in having the enemy
held in custody, at the very hour when the dreadful deed was to
have been perpetrated. Mr. Hill's knowing friends farther agreed
it would be necessary to have a guard that should sit up every
night in the churchyard; and that as soon as they could, by
constantly watching the enemy's motions, procure any information
which the attorney should deem sufficient grounds for a legal
proceeding, they should lay the whole business before the mayor.

After arranging all this most judiciously and mysteriously with
friends who were exactly of his own opinion, Mr. Hill laid aside
his dignity of verger, and assuming his other character of a
tanner, proceeded to his tan-yard. What was his surprise and
consternation, when he beheld his great rick of oak bark levelled
to the ground; the pieces of bark were scattered far and wide, some
over the close, some over the fields, and some were seen swimming
upon the water! No tongue, no pen, no muse can describe the
feelings of our tanner at this spectacle--feelings which became the
more violent from the absolute silence which he imposed on himself
upon this occasion. He instantly decided in his own mind that this
injury was perpetrated by O'Neill, in revenge for his arrest; and

 
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