The History of Richard Raynal, Solitary
King's dinner-time, which was ten o'clock,
g plainly. He was upon his seat beneath the cloth-of-estate that was quartered with the leopards and lilies, and had his hat upon his head. About him, bene
ide and that beneath the windows, and, finest of all were the colours of the robes, and the steel and the g
ery busy together in the crowd, shaking their fingers, lifting their brows, and clacking like rooks at sunset-so the young man related it. There were two fellows with their
a great quill in his hand, and the King's eyes roved as he listened, now up, now down, and his fingers with rings upon them were arched at his ear. My lord cardinal had a ruddy face and bright holy eyes, and sat
ear what was said. But it seemed to content the clerks and the Religious [King Henry VI. was a great favourer of ecclesiastics.], for they roared and clamoured and one flung up his cap so th
ould not cry out: it seemed as if the fiend had gripped him by the throat and were hammering in
at to what God should put in his mouth, and this
rd! News from our
e at his shoulder from behind; one struck him on the head: he heard himself named madman, feeble-wit, knave, fond fellow. The guards in front turned themselves abou
out again with
rward to the barrier, still looking at the King who had turned and
gainst the barrier, menacing him with his glaive, but the Kin
usiness, sir?"
ed Master Richard
all out of breath, he told me, with the pushing and striki
the sleeve, for the space of a paternoster, and the murmuring began to br
the tidi
your private e
"we have no private ea
Word," said M
that, and the crowd ca
stood still, looking th
ow on the cardinal, w
s if he could not d
e spok
re you
he country, from ... [It is most annoying that the name of the village is w
ked my lord cardinal,
er Richard, "he has his
run about
crowd of clerks, and my lord cardinal smiled more than ev
your grace," said my lo
ace be pleased to h
er Richard again, as if
tell us here,
not, you
you?" said my lord ca
inted to the line
red; which was a brave and shrewd answ
dy day, and the crowd crept up nearer, so that Master Richard could feel hot breath upon his bare neck behind. H
*
he clear pallour of his face and his pure simple eyes, and then at the coarse red faces behind him that crept up like devils after holy Job. It was not hard to know which was in the right, and besides the brave words that had stung the clerks t
*
s presence, and the cardinals and the nobles, in Westminster Hall on the Monday after Deus qui nobis. [S
ng with the King's Grace:
ligite: erudimini q
d: receive instruction, ye tha
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