the major himself at a sudden onfall at the siege of Trailesund."
"I have often heard of this faculty," observed Anderson, "but I have always thought those pretending to it were either enthusiasts or impostors."
"I should be loth," said Lord Menteith, "to apply either character to my kintman, Allan M'Aulay. He has shewn on many occasions too much acuteness and sense, of which you this night had an instance, for the character of an enthusiast; and his high sense of honour, and manliness of disposition, free him from the charge of imposture."
"Your lordship, then," said Anderson, "is a believer in his supernatural attributes?"
"By no means," said the young nobleman; "I think that he persuades himself that the predictions which are, in reality, the result of judgment and reflection, are supernatural impressions on his mind, just as fanatics conceive the workings of their