[Montezuma’s Daughter by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
Montezuma’s Daughter

CHAPTER VII
19/22

He had travelled far, and seen much, and he forgot nothing.

In part he was a quack, but his quackery always had a meaning in it.

He fleeced the foolish, indeed, and even juggled with astronomy, making money out of their superstition; but on the other hand he did many a kind act without reward.

He would make a rich lady pay ten gold pesos for the dyeing of her hair, but often he would nurse some poor girl through her trouble and ask no charge; yes, and find her honest employment after it.

He who knew all the secrets of Seville never made money out of them by threat of exposure, as he said because it would not pay to do so, but really because though he affected to be a selfish knave, at bottom his heart was honest.
For my own part I found life with him both easy and happy, so far as mine could be quite happy.


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