[St. George and St. Michael by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link bookSt. George and St. Michael CHAPTER XXXIII 7/10
I could not sleep for thinking of my wounded playmate.
And as to what he had done, after it became clear that he sought but his own, and meant no hair's-breadth of harm to your lordship, I confess the matter looked not the same.' 'Therefore you would make him amends and undo what you had done? You had caught the bird, and had therefore a right to free the bird when you would? All well, mistress Dorothy, had he been indeed a bird! But being a man, and in thy friend's house, I doubt thy logic.
The thing had passed from thy hands into mine, young mistress,' said the marquis, into the ball of whose foot the gout that moment ran its unicorn-horn. 'I did not set him free, my lord.
When I entered the prison-chamber, he was already gone.' 'Thou hadst the will and didst it not! Is there yet another in my house who had the will and did it ?' cried the marquis, who, although more than annoyed that she should have so committed herself, yet was willing to give such scope to a lover, that if she had but confessed she had liberated him, he would have pardoned her heartily.
He did not yet know how incapable Dorothy was of a lie. 'But, my lord, I had not the will to set him free,' she said. 'Wherefore then didst go to him ?' 'My lord, he was sorely wounded, and I had seen him fall fainting,' said Dorothy, repressing her tears with much ado. 'And thou didst go to comfort him ?' Dorothy was silent. 'How camest thou locked into his room? Tell me that, mistress.' 'Your lordship knows as much of that as I do.
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