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from your enemies.' She made him no answer, and he protested desperately-- 'All this afternoon I have wrestled with a woman to make her say that you are older than your age, and precontracted to a cousin of yours. I have made her say it at last, so your life is saved.' She turned half to go from him, but he ran round in front of her. 'Your life is saved!' he said desperately, 'for if you were precontracted to Dearham your marriage with me is void. And if your marriage with me is void, though it be proved against you that you were false to me, yet it is not treason, for you are not my wife.' Again she moved to circumvent him, and again he came before her. 'Speak!' he said, 'speak!' But she folded her lips close. He cast his arms abroad in a passion of despair. 'You shall be put away into a castle where you shall have such state as never empress had yet. All your will I will do. Always I will live near you in secret fashion.' 'I will not be your leman,' she said. 'But once you offered it!' he answered. 'Then you appeared in the guise of a king!' she said. He withered beneath her tone. 'All you would have you shall have,' he said. 'I will call in a messenger and here and now send the letter that you wot of to Rome.' 'Your Highness,' she said, 'I would not have the Church brought back to this land by one deemed an adult'ress. Assuredly, it should not prosper.' Again he sought to stay her going, holding out his arms to enfold her. She stepped back. 'Your Highness,' she said, 'I will speak some last words. And, as you know me well, you know that these irrevocably shall be my last to you!' He cried--'Delay till you hear----' 'There shall be no delay,' she said; 'I will not hear.' She smoothed a strand of hair that had fallen over her forehead in a gesture that she always had when she was deep in thoughts. 'This is what I would say,' she uttered. And she began to speak levelly-- 'Very truly you say when you say that once I made offer to be your leman. But it was when I was a young girl, mazed with reading of books in the learned tongue, and seeing all men as if they were men of those days. So you appeared to me such a man as was Pompey the Great, or as was Marius, or as was Sylla. For each of these great men erred; yet they erred greatly as rulers that would rule. Or rather I did see you such a one as was Caesar Julius, who, as you well wot, crossed a Rubicon and set out upon a high endea
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