A Prince of Cornwall - A Story of Glastonbury and the West in the Days of Ina of Wessex by Charles W. (Charles Watts) Whistler
page 92 of 401 (22%)
page 92 of 401 (22%)
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"Here Ina says that this is borne by one whom I know. Is it you or
this young warrior?" Then Owen went forward and fell on one knee before the king, and said in his own tongue--the tongue of Cornwall and of Devon: "I am that one of whom Ina has spoken. Yet it is for Gerent to say whether he will own that he knows me even yet." I saw the king start as the voice of Owen came to him in the familiar language, and he knitted his brows as one who tries to recall somewhat forgotten, and he looked searchingly in the face of the man who knelt before him, scanning every feature. And at last he said in a hushed voice, not like the harsh tones of but now: "Can it be Owen?--Owen, the son of my sister? They said that one like him served the Saxon, but I did not believe it. That is no service for one of our line." "What shall an exile do but serve whom he may, if the service be an honoured one? Yet I will say that I wandered long, seeing and learning, before there came to me a reason that I should serve Ina. To you I might not return." But the king was silent, and I thought that he was wroth, while Owen bided yet there on his knee before him, waiting his word. And when that came at last, it was not as I feared. |
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