Page:Walter Scott - The Monastery (Henry Frowde, 1912).djvu/418

RV 350 (Rh) a foreign university, but had been long separated from each other; and the change of name, which the preacher had adopted from motives of safety, and the monk from the common custom of the convent, had prevented the possibility

of their hitherto recognizing each other in the opposite parts which they had been playing in the great polemical and political drama. But now the sub-prior exclaimed, 'Henry Wellwood!' and the preacher replied, 'William Allan!'—and, stirred by the old familiar names, and