Page:Dramas 2.pdf/206

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194
THE STRIPLING: A TRAGEDY.

indeed, if the injuries he has received were alone made the cause of more injuries.

Enter a Servant.

BRUTON.

What do you want? I am at present engaged.

SERVANT.

One of Mr. Robinair's servants is below, Sir; and a poor labouring man is along with him, who found a hat last night on the grass-plat near the house, just after the murder was committed.

BRUTON.

Show them up immediately.

[Exit Servant.

JUSTICE.

This will probably lead to the discovery.

BRUTON.

Yes; murder, the proverb says, is always found out. And, in truth, it is often discovered by circumstances that appear at the first wonderfully trifling and minute.

JUSTICE.

When men commit such deeds, they do so in a state of mind which renders them incapable of perceiving what circumstances will excite or prevent suspicion; and they are as often detected from caution as from oversight.