The Knights of the Cross - or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
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page 20 of 881 (02%)
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"because the days are very warm; but why do they come to the inn when the
monastery is so near?" Here he turned toward Zbyszko: "The beautiful Ryngalla's own sister; do you understand?" And Zbyszko answered: "There must be many Mazovian ladies with her, hej!" CHAPTER II. At that moment the princess entered. She was a middle-aged lady with a smiling face, dressed in a red mantle and light green dress with a golden girdle around her hips. The princess was followed by the ladies of the court; some not yet grown up, some of them older; they had pink and lilac wreaths on their heads, and the majority of them had lutes in their hands. Some of them carried large bunches of fresh, flowers, evidently plucked by the roadside. The room was soon filled, because the ladies were followed by some courtiers and young pages. All were lively, with mirth on their faces, talking loudly or humming as if they were intoxicated with the beauty of the night. Among the courtiers, there were two _rybalts_;[12] one had a lute and the other had a _gensla_[13] at his girdle. One of the girls who was very young, perhaps twelve years old, carried behind the princess a very small lute ornamented with brass nails. |
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