[Burlesques by William Makepeace Thackeray]@TWC D-Link book
Burlesques

CHAPTER VI
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The sight of those bloody relics added fury to his cruel disposition, and served to steel a heart already but little disposed to sentiments of mercy.
Three days after the sack and plunder of the place, Don Beltran was seated in the hall-court lately occupied by the proud Alfaqui, lying in his divan, dressed in his rich robes, the fountains playing in the centre, the slaves of the Moor ministering to his scarred and rugged Christian conqueror.

Some fanned him with peacocks' pinions, some danced before him, some sang Moor's melodies to the plaintive notes of a guzla, one--it was the only daughter of the Moor's old age, the young Zutulbe, a rosebud of beauty--sat weeping in a corner of the gilded hall: weeping for her slain brethren, the pride of Moslem chivalry, whose heads were blackening in the blazing sunshine on the portals without, and for her father, whose home had been thus made desolate.
He and his guest, the English knight Sir Wilfrid, were playing at chess, a favorite amusement with the chivalry of the period, when a messenger was announced from Valencia, to treat, if possible, for the ransom of the remaining part of the Alfaqui's family.

A grim smile lighted up Don Beltran's features as he bade the black slave admit the messenger.

He entered.

By his costume it was at once seen that the bearer of the flag of truce was a Jew--the people were employed continually then as ambassadors between the two races at war in Spain.
"I come," said the old Jew (in a voice which made Sir Wilfrid start), "from my lord the Alfaqui to my noble senor, the invincible Don Beltran de Cuchilla, to treat for the ransom of the Moor's only daughter, the child of his old age and the pearl of his affection." "A pearl is a valuable jewel, Hebrew.


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