The Sword Maker by Robert Barr
page 26 of 445 (05%)
page 26 of 445 (05%)
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depends upon her merchants, and if you are chief among them; yet I
cannot forget that you risked life and liberty on my behalf, though now you will not venture a miserable thousand thalers on my word of honor." "On _your_ behalf? What do you mean?" "I mean, Herr Goebel, that I am Prince Roland, only son of the Emperor, and that you placed your neck in jeopardy to elevate me to the throne." II THE BARGAIN IS STRUCK Every epoch seems to have possessed a two-word phrase that contained, as it were, the condensed wisdom of the age, and was universally believed by the people. For instance, the aphorism "Know thyself" rose to popularity when cultured minds turned towards science. In the period to which this recital belongs the adage "Blood tells" enjoyed universal acceptance. It was, in fact, that erroneous statement "The King can do no wrong" done up into tabloid form. From it, too, sprang that double-worded maxim of the days of chivalry, "_Noblesse oblige_." In our own time, the two-worded phrase is "Money talks," and if diligent inquirers probe deeply into the matter, they will find that the aspirations of the people always correspond with reasonable accuracy to the meaning of the phrase then in use. Nothing could be more excellent, |
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