[Veranilda by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link book
Veranilda

CHAPTER XXVII
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Out with it all, good fellow.

I have suffered worse things than any that can lie before me.' In sad obedience, the servant made known that he and his fellows had been closely questioned, first by Venantius, later, some two or three of them, by the king himself, regarding their master's course of life since he went into Picenum.

They had told the truth, happy in that they could do so without fear and without shame.
'And how did the king bear himself to you ?' asked Basil eagerly.
'With that nobleness which became him,' was the fervid answer.

'It is said among the Goths that only a lie or an act of cowardice can move Totila to wrath against one who is in his power; and after speaking face to face with him, I well believe it.

He questioned me in few words, but not as a tyrant; and when I had replied as best I could, he dismissed me with a smile.' Basil's head drooped.
'Yes, Totila is noble,' fell softly from him.


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