Page:Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations (Volume 3).djvu/157

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The Fatal Marksman.
145

These bursts of wounded feeling were softened in the report of the mother: she explained to the bewildered clerk, who knew not what to make of Katharine’s ejaculations, that Bertram had no objections to him personnally; but that, simply with a view to the reversionary interest in his place as forester, he insisted on having a son-in-law who understood hunting.

“Is that all?” said William recovering his composure, and at the same time he caught the sobbing girl to his bosom.—“Is that all? Then be of good cheer, dearest Kate. I am not unskilled in hunting: for, at one time, I was apprenticed to my uncle Finsterbusch the forester-general; and it was only to gratify my god-father the bailiff that I exchanged the gun for the writing-desk. What care I for the reversion of the bailiff’s place, unless I may take my Kate into the bailiff’s house as mistress? If you can be content to look no higher than your mother did, and Will the forester is not less dear to you than Will the bailiff, then let me die if I won’t quit my clerk-

Vol. III.
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