regularly every spring and autumn he absented himself for about a
month. On the direction and purpose of his
periodical journey he
remained
steadily silent; but it was well understood that he was
then in attendance on his
unfortunatepatron. At length, on his
return from one of these visits, his grave
countenance, and deep
mourning dress, announced to the Ellieslaw family that their
benefactor was no more. Sir Edward's death made no
addition to
their fortune, for he had divested himself of his property during
his
lifetime, and
chiefly in their favour. Ratcliffe, his sole
confidant, died at a good old age, but without ever naming the
place to which his master had finally
retired, or the manner of
his death, or the place of his burial. It was
supposed that on
all these particulars his
patron had enjoined him
strict secrecy.
The sudden
disappearance of Elshie from his extraordinary
hermitage corroborated the reports which the common people had
spread
concerning him. Many believed that, having ventured to
enter a consecrated building,
contrary to his paction with the
Evil One, he had been
bodily carried off while on his return to
his
cottage; but most are of opinion that he only disappeared for
a season, and continues to be seen from time to time among the
hills. And retaining, according to custom, a more vivid
recollection of his wild and
desperate language, than of the
benevolent
tendency of most of his actions, he is usually
identified with the
malignant demon called the Man of the Moors,
whose feats were quoted by Mrs. Elliot to her grandsons; and,
accordingly, is generally represented as bewitching the sheep,
causing the ewes to KEB, that is, to cast their lambs, or seen
loosening the
impendingwreath of snow to
precipitate its weight
on such as take shelter, during the storm, beneath the bank of a
torrent, or under the shelter of a deep glen. In short, the
evils most dreaded and deprecated by the inhabitants of that
pastoral country, are ascribed to the
agency of the BLACK DWARF.
End