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    The Doomed Rider

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    "The Conan is as bonny a river as we hae in a' the north country. There's
    mony a sweet sunny spot on its banks, an' mony a time an' aft hae I waded
    through its shallows, whan a boy, to set my little scautling-line for the
    trouts an' the eels, or to gather the big pearl-mussels that lie sae
    thick in the fords. But its bonny wooded banks are places for enjoying
    the day in--no for passing the nicht. I kenna how it is; it's nane o'
    your wild streams that wander desolate through a desert country, like the
    Aven, or that come rushing down in foam and thunder, ower broken rocks,
    like the Foyers, or that wallow in darkness, deep, deep in the bowels o'
    the earth, like the fearfu' Auldgraunt; an' yet no ane o' these rivers
    has mair or frightfuller stories connected wi' it than the Conan. Ane
    can hardly saunter ower half-a-mile in its course, frae where it leaves
    Coutin till where it enters the sea, without passing ower the scene o'
    some frightful auld legend o' the kelpie or the waterwraith. And ane o'
    the most frightful looking o' these places is to be found among the woods
    of Conan House. Ye enter a swampy meadow that waves wi' flags an' rushes
    like a corn-field in harvest, an' see a hillock covered wi' willows
    rising like an island in the midst. There are thick mirk-woods on ilka
    side; the river, dark an' awesome, an' whirling round an' round in mossy
    eddies, sweeps away behind it; an' there is an auld burying-ground, wi'
    the broken ruins o' an auld Papist kirk, on the tap. Ane can see amang
    the rougher stanes the rose-wrought mullions of an arched window, an' the
    trough that ance held the holy water. About twa hunder years ago--a wee
    mair maybe, or a wee less, for ane canna be very sure o' the date o' thae
    old stories--the building was entire; an' a spot near it, whar the wood
    now grows thickest, was laid out in a corn-field. The marks o' the
    furrows may still be seen amang the trees.

    "A party o' Highlanders were busily engaged, ae day in harvest, in
    cutting down the corn o' that field; an' just aboot noon, when the sun
    shone brightest an' they were busiest in the work, they heard a voice
    frae the river exclaim:--'The hour but not the man has come.' Sure
    enough, on looking round, there was the kelpie stan'in' in what they ca'

    a fause ford, just fornent the auld kirk. There is a deep black pool
    baith aboon an' below, but i' the ford there's a bonny ripple, that
    shows, as ane might think, but little depth o' water; an' just i' the
    middle o' that, in a place where a horse might swim, stood the kelpie.
    An' it again repeated its words:--'The hour but not the man has come,'
    an' then flashing through the water like a drake, it disappeared in the
    lower pool. When the folk stood wondering what the creature might mean,
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