[Fair Margaret by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookFair Margaret CHAPTER III 3/22
It is made out in your name, Peter Brome, and whether you marry my daughter, or whether you marry her not, yours they shall be when I am gone, since I promised my dead wife to befriend you, and as a child she lived there in your Hall." Now moved out of his calm, the young man sprang from his seat, and, after the pious fashion of the time, addressed his patron saint, on whose feast-day he was born. "Saint Peter, I thank thee--" "I asked you to be silent," interrupted Castell, breaking him short. "Moreover, after God, it is one John who should be thanked, not St. Peter, who has no more to do with these lands than Father Abraham or the patient Job.
Well, thanks or no thanks, those estates are yours, though I had not meant to tell you of them yet.
But now I have something to propose to you.
Say, first, does Margaret think aught of that wooden face and those shut lips of yours ?" "How can I know? I have never asked her; you forbade me." "Pshaw! Living in one house as you do, at your age I would have known all there was to know on such a matter, and yet kept my word.
But there, the blood is different, and you are somewhat over-honest for a lover. Was she frightened for you, now, when that knave made at you with the sword ?" Peter considered the question, then answered: "I know not.
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