[The King’s Achievement by Robert Hugh Benson]@TWC D-Link bookThe King’s Achievement CHAPTER XIII 1/12
PRISONER AND PRINCE The sun sank lower and had begun to throw long shadows before the door opened again and the Prior beckoned.
As Chris had stood there staring out of the window at the green water of the moat and the shadowed wall beyond, with the warder standing a few steps below, now sighing at the delay, now humming a line or two, he had heard voices now and again from the room above, but it had been no more than a murmur that died once more into silence. * * * * * Chris was aware of a dusty room as he stepped over the threshold, bare walls, one or two solid pieces of furniture, and of the Prior's figure very upright in the light from the tiny window at one side; and then he forgot everything as he looked at the man that was standing smiling by the table. It was a very tall slender figure, dressed in a ragged black gown turning green with age; a little bent now, but still dignified; the face was incredibly lean, with great brown eyes surrounded by wrinkles, and a little white hair, ragged, too, and long, hung down under the old flapped cap.
The hand that Chris kissed seemed a bundle of reeds bound with parchment, and above the wrist bones the arm grew thinner still under the loose, torn sleeve. Then the monk stood up and saw those kindly proud eyes looking into his own. The Prior made a deferential movement and said a word or two, and the bishop answered him. "Yes, yes, my Lord Prior; I understand--God bless you, my son." The bishop moved across to the chair, and sat down, panting a little, for he was torn by sickness and deprivation, and laid his long hands together. "Sit down, brother," he said, "and you too, my Lord Prior." Chris saw the Prior move across to an old broken stool, but he himself remained standing, awed and almost terrified at that worn face in which the eyes alone seemed living; so thin that the cheekbones stood out hideously, and the line of the square jaw.
But the voice was wonderfully sweet and penetrating. "My Lord Prior and I have been talking of the times, and what is best to be done, and how we must all be faithful.
You will be faithful, brother ?" Chris made an effort against the absorbing fascination of that face and voice. "I will, my lord." "That is good; you must follow your prior and be obedient to him.
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