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I saved his life, and he therefore places confidence in me. He has been robbed last night--is sick--a stranger--and in no condition to discover the villain who has plundered him.... and the business on which I sought the Intendant was chiefly that.'"--_Canterbury Tales_, by Sophia and Harriet Lee, 1838, ii. 203, 204.] [177] ["'And who,' said he, 'has entitled you to brand thus with ignominious epithets a being you do not know? Who ... has taught you that it would be safe even for my son to insult me?'--'It is not necessary to know the person of a ruffian,' replied Conrad, indignantly, 'to give him the appellation he merits:--and what is there in common between my father and such a character?'--'_Everything_,' said Siegendorf, bitterly,--'for that ruffian was your father!'"--Ibid., p. 204.] [178] {382}["'Conrad ... before you thus presume to chastise me with your eye, learn to understand my actions! Young, and inexperienced in the world--reposing hitherto in the bosom of indulgence and luxury, is it for _you_ to judge of the impulse of the passions, or the temptations of misery? Wait till, like me, you have blighted your fairest hopes--have endured humiliation and sorrow--poverty and insult--before you pretend to judge of their effect on you! Should that miserable day ever arrive--should you see the being at your mercy who stands between you and everything that is dear or noble in life!--who is ready to tear from you your name--your inheritance--your very life itself--congratulate your own heart, if, like me, you are content with petty plunder, and are not tempted to exterminate a serpent, who now lives, perhaps to sting us all.'"--_Canterbury Tales_, by Sophia and Harriet Lee, 1838, ii. 204, 205.] [179] {383}["'You do not know this man,' continued he; 'I do!--I believe him to be mean--sordid--deceitful! You will conceive yourself safe, because you are young and brave! Learn, however, ... none are so secure but desperation or subtilty may reach them! Stralenheim, in the palace of a prince, was in my power! My knife was held over him--a single moment would have swept him from the face of the earth, and with him all my future fears:--I forbore--and I am now in his.--Are you certain that you are not so too? Who assures you he does not know you?--who tells you that he has not lured you into his society, either to rid himself of you for ever, or to plunge you with your family into a dungeon?'"--_Canterbury Tales_, by
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