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"Away!" said the Templar; "thou a leader
of a Free Company, and regard a woman's tears! A few drops sprinkled on the torch of love, make the flame blaze the brighter."
"Gramercy for the few drops of thy sprinkling," replied De Bracy; "but this damsel hath wept enough to extinguish a beacon-light. Never was such wringing of hands and such overflowing of eyes, since the days of St Niobe,[1] of whom Prior Aymer told us. A water-fiend hath possessed the fair Saxon."
"A legion of fiends hath occupied the bosom of the Jewess," replied the Templar; "for, I think no single one, not even Apollyon himself, could have inspired such indomitable pride and resolution. But where is Front-de-Bœuf? That horn is sounded more and more clamorously."
- ↑ I wish the Prior had also informed them when Niobe
was sainted. Probably during that enlightened period when
"Pan to Moses lent his pagan horn."L. T.
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