[The Lovely Lady by Mary Austin]@TWC D-Link book
The Lovely Lady

PART FOUR
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And he did not know in the least how to go about it for in all his life the knight could never have spoken to one before.

You have to think of that when you think of him at all, and of how he must stand even with his heart at her feet, hardly daring to so much as call her attention to it.

For though he knows very well that it is quite enough to hope for and more than he deserves, to be able to spend his whole life serving her, love, great love such as one may have for princesses, aches, aches, my dear, and needs a comforting touch sometimes and a word of recognition to make it beat more steadily and more serviceably for every day." He went out that night to post his letter when it was done, for though there was not time for an answer to it, he was going down to her on Saturday, he liked to think of it running before him as a torch to light the way which, even while he slept, he was so happily traversing.

He was quite trembling with the journey he had come, when on Saturday she met him, floating in summer draperies and holding out a slim ringed hand, and a cool cheek to glance past his lips like a swallow.
"You had my letter, dear ?" "Such a lovely letter, Peter, I couldn't think of trying to answer it." "Oh, it wasn't to be answered--at least not by another----" He released her lest she should be troubled by his trembling.
"I should think not!" She was more than gracious to him.

"It's a wonder to me, Peter, you never thought of writing.


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