Andivius Hedulio - Adventures of a Roman Nobleman in the Days of the Empire by Edward Lucas White
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page 56 of 736 (07%)
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get off that boy's stool and lie down between me and Entedius."
"Go slow, Caius!" I admonished him. "You just confessed that you know nothing of the circumstances, yet you give orders in my house, orders affecting my property-rights, without first acquainting yourself with all the conditions on which such orders should be based, even if you had asked and received my permission to issue them." Tanno was impulsive, even headlong, but he never wrangled or quarrelled and seldom lost his temper. I had feared a still more violent outburst from him, but my admonition brought him to himself. "I apologize," he said, the red fading from his face. "Tell me the whole matter, so that I may comprehend. I'll listen in silence." "The vital fact," I said, "is that, although I fully expected my uncle, in his will, to free Agathemer, he not only did not free him, but he enjoined me not to free him within five years after my entrance into my inheritance." "Well," said Tanno, "I take back what I said of you when I called you a hog, but, even if we are taught to utter nothing but good of the dead, I repeat that your uncle was a hog. What do you think of it, Agathemer?" Agathemer sat at ease now on his stool and his face was placid. "Since you have asked what I think," he said, "may I assume that you accord me permission to utter what I think, as if I were even a free man?" "Utter precisely what you think, without any reservations or |
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