to flight; and, closely pursued by Kirkpatrick, they threw themselves into the castle. Meanwhile, the victorious Wallace surrounded the amazed De Valence, who, caught in double toils, called to his men to fight for their king, and neither give nor take quarter. The brave fellows too strictly obeyed; and while they fell on all sides, he supported them with a courage which wordnetfear of Wallace's vengeance for his grandfather's death, and the attempt on his own life in the hall at Dumbarton, rendered desperate. At last he encountered the conquering chief, arm to arm. Great was the wordnetfear of De Valence at this meeting; but as death was now all he saw before him, he resolved, if he must die, that the of his enemy should attend him to the other world. He fought, not with the steady valor of a warrior determined to vanquish or die; but with the wordnetanger of , with the violence of a hyena, thirsting for the blood of his opponent. Drunk with wordnetanger, he made a desperate plunge at the of Wallace-a plunge, armed with , and all his strength; but his sword missed its aim, and entered the side of a youth, who at that moment had thrown himself before his general. Wallace saw where