[Medieval People by Eileen Edna Power]@TWC D-Link bookMedieval People CHAPTER VI 22/46
William Stonor's attitude towards his partner's illness is not without humour.
He was torn between anxiety for the life of a friend and an even greater anxiety that Betson should not die without setting straight the business obligations between them.
We hear of the illness and of Katherine's labours in a letter from one of Stonor's agents to his master: Sir, according to the commandment of your mastership, we were at Stepney by nine of the clock; at such time as we came thither we saw the gentleman forthwith, and in good faith he made us good cheer as a sick man might by countenance notwithstanding, for in good faith we saw by his demeanour that he might not prosper in this world, for Mistress Bevice and other gentlewomen and his uncle were of the same opinion.
And we desired and prayed him to be of good comfort and so comforted him as heartily as we could in your name and in my lady's, and so we departed from the chamber down into the hall, and he fell into a great slumbering and was busily moved in his spirits.
And at eleven of the clock I called his uncle out of his bed into the gentleman's chamber, and I asked his advice and my mistress his wife, of the stock and of the demeanour thereof for the year and the half that is last past.
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