[Uarda Complete by Georg Ebers]@TWC D-Link bookUarda Complete CHAPTER IX 9/13
Then he went back to the table, read the king's letter through once more, and said: "One may learn from it how to deny by granting, and at the same time not to forget to give it a brilliant show of magnanimity.
Rameses knows his daughter.
She is a girl like any other, and will take good care not to choose a man twice as old as herself, and who might be her father. Rameses will 'submit'-- I am to I submit!' And to what? to the judgment and the choice of a wilful child!" With these words he threw the letter so vehemently on to the table, that it slipped off on to the floor. The mute slave picked it up, and laid it carefully on the table again, while his master threw a ball into a silver bason. Several attendants rushed into the room, and Ani ordered them to bring to him the captive dwarf of the Lady Katuti.
His soul rose in indignation against the king, who in his remote camp-tent could fancy he had made him happy by a proof of his highest favor.
When we are plotting against a man we are inclined to regard him as an enemy, and if he offers us a rose we believe it to be for the sake, not of the perfume, but of the thorns. The dwarf Nemu was brought before the Regent and threw himself on the ground at his feet. Ani ordered the attendants to leave him, and said to the little man "You compelled me to put you in prison.
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