The Prince and The Pauper


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but none else. My father loved him best of us all, and trusted and  
believed him; for he was the youngest child, and others hated him--these  
qualities being in all ages sufficient to win a parent's dearest love;  
and he had a smooth persuasive tongue, with an admirable gift of lying  
--and these be qualities which do mightily assist a blind affection to  
cozen itself. I was wild--in troth I might go yet farther and say VERY  
wild, though 'twas a wildness of an innocent sort, since it hurt none but  
me, brought shame to none, nor loss, nor had in it any taint of crime or  
baseness, or what might not beseem mine honourable degree.  
"Yet did my brother Hugh turn these faults to good account--he seeing  
that our brother Arthur's health was but indifferent, and hoping the  
worst might work him profit were I swept out of the path--so--but 'twere  
a long tale, good my liege, and little worth the telling. Briefly, then,  
this brother did deftly magnify my faults and make them crimes; ending  
his base work with finding a silken ladder in mine apartments--conveyed  
thither by his own means--and did convince my father by this, and  
suborned evidence of servants and other lying knaves, that I was minded  
to carry off my Edith and marry with her in rank defiance of his will.  
"Three years of banishment from home and England might make a soldier  
and a man of me, my father said, and teach me some degree of wisdom. I  
fought out my long probation in the continental wars, tasting sumptuously  
of hard knocks, privation, and adventure; but in my last battle I was  
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104 105 106 107 108

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