The ninth vibration and other stories by L. Adams (Lily Moresby Adams) Beck
page 41 of 266 (15%)
page 41 of 266 (15%)
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and jungle, and the blue lotus of Buddha swaying on the still
lagoon,- And she spoke of loves of men and women, their passion and pain and joy. And when she told of their fidelity and valour and honour that death cannot quench, her voice was like the song of a minstrel, for she had read all the stories of the ages and the heart of a Princess told her the rest. And the King listened unwearying though he believed this was but a slave. (The face of the man at the feet of the Dweller in the Heights twitched in a white agony. Pearls of sweat were distilled upon his brows, but he moved neither hand nor foot, enduring as in a flame of fire. And the voice continued.) So one day, in the misty green of the Spring, while she rested at his feet in the garden Pavilion, he said to her: "Little slave, why do you love me?" And she answered proudly: "Because you have the heart of a King." He replied slowly; "Of the women who have loved me none gave this reason, though they gave many." She laid her cheek on his hand. "That is the true reason." |
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