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The Lost Hunter - A Tale of Early Times by John Turvill Adams
page 217 of 512 (42%)

"He rose the morrow morn."

Not a word spoke he the next day of his misadventure, until it having
been ascertained that Holden had not been at the workhouse, inquiry
was made respecting his non-appearance. The constable was then obliged
to confess the truth, which his captors, as if defying discovery,
had not enjoined him to conceal. Faithful to his instructions, he
exculpated Holden from all blame, praising him for his submissiveness
to the law, expressing his conviction that the old man knew nothing of
the intentions of his captors, nor whether they were friends or
foes. Notwithstanding the reluctance of the constable, the indignant
Justice, in the first ebullition of his anger, made out another
mittimus, which he almost forced into the other's unwilling hands, and
commanded him to arrest the fugitive, wherever he might find him, by
night or by day, on the Lord's Day or on any other day, were the place
the Sanctuary itself.

But the rescue had diverted public attention from the Solitary into
another channel, and the community had not a stock of indignation
sufficient, like the Justice, to expend on Holden as well as on his
rescuers. It appeared, even to the few who were originally in favor
of his arrest, that he had suffered enough, satisfied as they were,
as well from his behavior they had witnessed as from the report of the
constable, that he had in no respect contributed to his freedom, but
was rather compelled to accept it, and therefore attaching no blame to
him for the escape. The resentment of the citizens was now transferred
to the daring offenders, who, with a strong hand, had interposed
between the sentence and the execution of the law, and this last
offence, as being of so much greater magnitude than Holden's, cast it
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