Linne(The Heir of). The Lord of Linne was a great spendthrift, “who
wasted his substance in riotous living.” Having spent all, he sold his
estates to John o' the Scales, his steward, reserving to himself only a
“poor and lonesome lodge in a lonely glen.” When he had squandered away
the money received for his estates, and found that no one would lend or
give him more, he retired to the lodge in the glen, where he found a
rope with a running noose dangling over his head. He put the rope round
his neck and sprang aloft, when lo! the ceiling burst in twain, and he
fell to the ground. When he came to himself he espied two chests of
beaten gold, and a third full of white money, and over them was
written, “Once more, my son, I set thee clear; amend thy life, or a
rope at last must end it.” The heir of Linne now returned to his old
hall, where he asked his quondam steward for the loan of forty pence;
this was refused him. One of the guests proffered the loan, and told
John o' the Scales he ought to have lent it, as he had bought the
estate cheap enough. “Cheap call you it?” exclaimed John; “why, he
shall have it back for 100 marks less.” “Done,” said the heir of Linne,
and counted out the money. He thus recovered his estates, and made the
kind guest his forester. ( Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894 More on Linne from Fact Monster:
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