[The King’s Achievement by Robert Hugh Benson]@TWC D-Link bookThe King’s Achievement CHAPTER VI 6/25
With a touch of amusement he found himself studying Horace and Terence again, not only for Sir Thomas More's benefit, but in order to win his approval and his good report to his household, among whom Beatrice was practically to be reckoned. He was pleased too by More's account of Beatrice. "She is nearly as good a scholar as my dear Meg," he had said one day. "Try her, Mr.Torridon." Ralph had carefully prepared an apt quotation that day, and fired it off presently, not at Beatrice, but, as it were, across her; but there was not the faintest response or the quiver of an eyelid. There was silence a moment; and then Sir Thomas burst out-- "You need not look so demure, my child; we all know that you understand." Beatrice had given him a look of tranquil amusement in return. "I will not be made a show of," she said. Ralph went away that day more engrossed than ever.
He began to ask himself where his interest in her would end; and wondered at its intensity. As he questioned himself about it, it seemed that to him it was to a great extent her appearance of detached self-possession that attracted him.
It was the quality that he most desired for himself, and one which he had in measure attained; but he was aware that in the presence of Cromwell at least it deserted him.
He knew well that he had found his master there, and that he himself was nothing more than a hero-worshipper before a shrine; but it provoked him to feel that there was no one who seemed to occupy the place of a similar divinity with regard to this girl.
Obviously she admired and loved Sir Thomas More--Ralph soon found out how deeply in the course of his visits--but she was not in the least afraid of her friend.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|