King
of Scots and the Spider
Robert
the Bruce, like other Scottish heroes, observed omens, and one
is recorded by tradition. After he had retreated to one of the
miserable places of shelter, in which he could venture to take
some repose after his disasters, he lay stretched upon a handful
of straw, and abandoned himself to his melancholy meditations.
He
had now been defeated four times, and was upon the point of resolving
to abandon all hopes of further opposition to his fate, and go
to the Holy Land.
It chanced his eye, while he was thus pondering, was attracted
by the exertions of a spider, who, in order to fix his web, endeavoured
to swing himself from one beam to another above his head. Involuntary
he became interested in the pertinacity with which the insect
renewed his exertions, after failing six times ; and it occurred
to him that he would decide his own course according to the success
or failure of the spider.
Return
To Robert The Bruce
|