Page:Scott - Tales of my Landlord - 3rd series - 1819.djvu/301

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A LEGEND OF MONTROSE.
291

a short distance, and eyeing each other with looks in which self-importance and defiance might be traced, they strutted, puffed, and plied their screaming instruments, each playing his own favourite tune with such a din, that if an Italian musician had lain buried within ten miles of them, he must have risen from the dead to run out of hearing.

The chieftains meanwhile had assembled in close conclave in the great hall of the castle. Among them were the persons of the greatest consequence in the Highlands, some of them attracted by zeal for the royal cause, and many by aversion to that domination which the Marquis of Argyle, since his rising to such influence in the state, had exercised over his Highland neighbours. That statesman, indeed, though possessed of very considerable abilities, and very great power, had failings which rendered him unpopular among the Highland chiefs. The devotion which he professed was of a morose and fanatical