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The World's Desire by H. Rider (Henry Rider) Haggard;Andrew Lang
page 63 of 293 (21%)
waved me back.

"'Has, then, the Prince--thy husband----' I stammered.

"'Speak not to me of the Prince, Rei, my servant,' she made answer.
'Yesterday I spoke to thee wildly, my mind was overwrought; let it be
forgotten--a wife am I, a happy wife'; and she smiled so strangely that
I shrunk back from her.

"'Now to my errand. I have dreamed a dream, a troublous dream, and thou
art wise and instructed, therefore I pray thee interpret my vision. I
slept and dreamed of a man, and in my dream I loved him more than I can
tell. For my heart beat to his heart, and in the light of him I lived,
and all my soul was his, and I knew that I loved him for ever. And
Pharaoh was my husband; but, in my dream, I loved him not. Now there
came a woman rising out of the sea, more beautiful than I, with a beauty
fairer and more changeful than the dawn upon the mountains; and she,
too, loved this godlike man, and he loved her. Then we strove together
for his love, matching beauty against beauty, and wit against wit, and
magic against magic. Now one conquered, and now the other; but in the
end the victory was mine, and I went arrayed as for a marriage-bed--and
I clasped a corpse.

"'I woke, and again I slept, and saw myself wearing another garb, and
speaking another tongue. Before me was the man I loved, and there, too,
was the woman, wrapped about with beauty, and I was changed, and yet
I was the very Meriamun thou seest. And once more we struggled for the
mastery and for this man's love, and in that day she conquered me.

"'I slept, and again I woke, and in another land than Khem--a strange
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