The Tales Of The Heptameron, Vol. IV. (of V.) by Queen of Navarre Margaret
page 79 of 194 (40%)
page 79 of 194 (40%)
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died unmarried, says Anselme's _Histoire Généalogique_ (vol.
iv. p. 57), and would appear to be the heroine of Queen Margaret's tale.--L. and B. J. And so dearly did she love her brother that he, for his part, preferred her even to his wife and children. She was asked in marriage by many of good estate, but her brother would never listen to them through dread of losing her, and also because he loved his money too well. She therefore spent a great part of her life un-wedded, living very virtuously in her brother's house. Now there was a young and handsome gentleman who had been reared from childhood in this same house, and who, growing in comeliness and virtue as well as in years, had come to have a complete and peaceful rule over his master, in such sort that whenever the latter desired to give any charge to his sister he always did so by means of this young gentleman, (3) and he allowed him so much influence and intimacy, sending him morning and evening to his sister, that at last a great love sprang up between the two. 3 This is possibly a Count of Keradreux, whom John II. is known to have put to death, though the Breton and French chroniclers do not relate the circumstances of the crime.-- See_post_, p. 100, note 4.--Ed. But as the gentleman feared for his life if he should offend his master, and the lady feared also for her honour, their love found gladness in speech alone, until the Lord of Jossebelin had often said to his sister that he wished the gentleman were rich and of as good a house as her own, for he had never known a man whom he would so gladly have had for |
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