[St. George and St. Michael by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link book
St. George and St. Michael

CHAPTER XIII
10/12

I did not mean to vex you, sweet heart.' ''Tis gone again, Ned,' she answered, smiling.

'Give cousin Dorothy her first lesson.' 'It shall be that, then, to which I sought in vain to make thee listen this very morning--a certain great saying of my lord of Verulam, mistress Dorothy.

I had learnt it by heart that I might repeat it word for word to my lady, but she would none of it.' 'May I not hear it, madam ?' said Dorothy.
'We will both hear it, Herbert, if you will pardon your foolish wife and admit her to grace.' And as she spoke she laid her hand on his sooty arm.
He answered her only with a smile, but such a one as sufficed.
'Listen then, ladies both,' he said.

'My lord of Verulam, having quoted the words of Solomon, "The glory of God is to conceal a thing, but the glory of the king is to find it out," adds thus, of his own thought concerning them,--"as if," says my lord, "according to the innocent play of children, the divine majesty took delight to hide his works, to the end to have them found out, and as if kings could not obtain a greater honour than to be God's playfellows in that game, considering the great commandment of wits and means, whereby nothing needeth to be hidden from them."' 'That was very well for my lord of--what did'st thou call him, Ned ?' 'Francis Bacon, lord Verulam,' returned Herbert, with a queer smile.
'Very well for my lord of Veryflam!' resumed lady Margaret, with a mock, yet bewitching affectation of innocence and ignorance; 'but tell me had he ?--nay, I am sure he had not a wild Irishwoman sitting breaking her heart in her bower all day long for his company.

He could never else have had the heart to say it .-- Mistress Dorothy,' she went on, 'take the counsel of a forsaken wife, and lay it to thy heart: never marry a man who loves lathes and pipes and wheels and water and fire, and I know not what.


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