[Oddsfish! by Robert Hugh Benson]@TWC D-Link bookOddsfish! CHAPTER I 5/19
So much the King was told, and the Duke. But on my side I was told a little more--that I was to do my utmost, if the King were pleased with me, to further his conversion and his declaration of himself as a Catholic; that I was to mix with all kinds of folks, and observe what men really thought of all such matters as these, and send my reports regularly to Rome; that I was to place myself at the King's service in any way that I could--in short that I was to follow my discretion and do, as a layman may sometimes even more than a priest, all that was in my power for the furtherance of the Catholic cause. Now it may be wondered perhaps how it was that I, who was so young, should be entrusted with such matters as these.
Here then, I am bound to say, however immodest it may appear, that I have had always the art of making friends easily and of commending myself quickly.
I had lived too in the societies of both Paris and Rome; and I had the accomplishments of a gentleman as well as his blood.
I was thought a pleasant fellow, that is to say, who could make himself agreeable; and I certainly had too--and I am not ashamed to say this--but one single ambition in the world, and that was to serve God's cause: and these things do not always go together in this world.
Last of all, it must be observed, that no very weighty secrets were entrusted to me: I bore no letters; and I had been told no more of affairs in general than such as any quick and intelligent man might pick up for himself.
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