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    Chapter 7

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    --This ring.--
    This little ring, with necromantic force,
    Has raised the ghost of pleasure to my fears,
    Conjured the sense of honour and of love
    Into such shapes, they fright me from myself.
    The Fatal Marriage.

    The ancient forms of mourning were observed in Glenallan House,
    notwithstanding the obduracy with which the members of the family were
    popularly supposed to refuse to the dead the usual tribute of
    lamentation. It was remarked, that when she received the fatal letter
    announcing the death of her second, and, as was once believed, her
    favourite son, the hand of the Countess did not shake, nor her eyelid
    twinkle, any more than upon perusal of a letter of ordinary business.
    Heaven only knows whether the suppression of maternal sorrow, which her
    pride commanded, might not have some effect in hastening her own death.
    It was at least generally supposed that the apoplectic stroke, which so
    soon afterwards terminated her existence, was, as it were, the vengeance
    of outraged Nature for the restraint to which her feelings had been
    subjected. But although Lady Glenallan forebore the usual external signs
    of grief, she had caused many of the apartments, amongst others her own
    and that of the Earl, to be hung with the exterior trappings of woe.

    The Earl of Glenallan was therefore seated in an apartment hung with
    black cloth, which waved in dusky folds along its lofty walls. A screen,
    also covered with black baize, placed towards the high and narrow window,
    intercepted much of the broken light which found its way through the
    stained glass, that represented, with such skill as the fourteenth
    century possessed, the life and sorrows of the prophet Jeremiah. The
    table at which the Earl was seated was lighted with two lamps wrought in
    silver, shedding that unpleasant and doubtful light which arises from the
    mingling of artificial lustre with that of general daylight. The same
    table displayed a silver crucifix, and one or two clasped parchment
    books. A large picture, exquisitely painted by Spagnoletto, represented
    the martyrdom of St. Stephen, and was the only ornament of the apartment.

    The inhabitant and lord of this disconsolate chamber was a man not past
    the prime of life, yet so broken down with disease and mental misery, so
    gaunt and ghastly, that he appeared but a wreck of manhood; and when he
    hastily arose and advanced towards his visitor, the exertion seemed
    almost to overpower his emaciated frame. As they met in the midst of the
    apartment, the contrast they exhibited was very striking. The hale cheek,
    firm step, erect stature, and undaunted presence and bearing of the old
    mendicant, indicated patience and content in the extremity of age, and in
    the lowest condition to which humanity can
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