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    Chapter 8

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    Now horse and hattock, cried the Laird,--
    Now horse and hattock, speedilie;
    They that winna ride for Telfer's kye,
    Let them never look in the face o' me.--Border Ballad.

    "Horse! horse! and spear!" exclaimed Hobbie to his kinsmen. Many a ready
    foot was in the stirrup; and, while Elliot hastily collected arms and
    accoutrements, no easy matter in such a confusion, the glen resounded
    with the approbation of his younger friends.

    "Ay, ay!" exclaimed Simon of Hackburn, "that's the gate to take it,
    Hobbie. Let women sit and greet at hame, men must do as they have been
    done by; it's the Scripture says't."

    "Haud your tongue, sir," said one of the seniors, sternly; "dinna abuse
    the Word that gate, ye dinna ken what ye speak about."

    "Hae ye ony tidings?--Hae ye ony speerings, Hobbie?--O, callants, dinna
    be ower hasty," said old Dick of the Dingle.

    "What signifies preaching to us, e'enow?" said Simon; "if ye canna make
    help yoursell, dinna keep back them that can."

    "Whisht, sir; wad ye take vengeance or ye ken wha has wrang'd ye?"

    "D'ye think we dinna ken the road to England as weel as our fathers
    before us?--All evil comes out o' thereaway--it's an auld saying and a
    true; and we'll e'en away there, as if the devil was blawing us south."

    "We'll follow the track o' Earnscliff's horses ower the waste," cried
    one Elliot.

    "I'll prick them out through the blindest moor in the Border, an there
    had been a fair held there the day before," said Hugh, the blacksmith of
    Ringleburn, "for I aye shoe his horse wi' my ain hand."

    "Lay on the deer-hounds," cried another "where are they?"

    "Hout, man, the sun's been lang up, and the dew is aff the grund--the
    scent will never lie."

    Hobbie instantly whistled on his hounds, which were roving about the
    ruins of their old habitation, and filling the air with their doleful
    howls.

    "Now, Killbuck," said Hobbie, "try thy skill this day," and then, as if a
    light had suddenly broke on him,--"that ill-faur'd goblin spak something
    o' this! He may ken mair o't, either by villains on earth, or devils
    below--I'll hae it frae him, if I should cut it out o' his mis-shapen
    bouk wi' my whinger." He then hastily gave directions to his comrades:
    "Four o' ye, wi' Simon, haud right forward to Graeme's-gap. If they're
    English, they'll be for being back that way. The rest disperse
    by twasome and threesome through the waste, and meet me at the
    Trysting-pool. Tell my brothers, when they come up, to follow and meet
    us there. Poor lads, they will hae hearts
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