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Benson, Robert Hugh, 1871-1914

"Come Rack! Come Rope!"

Her Grace
will have to turn her coat once more, I think, when that comes to pass."
Mr. John glanced at him doubtfully.
"First," he said, "no man knows whether it will come. And, next, I for
one am not sure if I even wish for it."
Mr. Bassett laughed loudly.
"You will dance for joy!" he said. "And why do you not know whether you
wish it to come?"
"I have no taste to be a Spanish subject."
"Why, nor have I! But the King of Spain will but sail away again when he
hath made terms against the privateers, whether they be those that ply
on the high seas against men's bodies, or here in England against their
souls. There will be no subjection of England beyond that."
Mr. John was silent.
"Why, I heard from Sir Thomas but a week ago, to ask for a little money
to pay his fines with. He said that repayment should follow so soon as
the fleet should come. Those were his very words."
"You sent the money, then?"
"Why, yes; I made shift that a servant should throw down a bag with ten
pounds in it, into a bush, and that Brittlebank--your brother's
man--should see him do it! And lo! when we looked again, the bag was
gone!"
He laughed again with open mouth. Certainly he was an inspiriting man
with a loud bark of his own; but Robin imagined that he would not bite
too cruelly for all that. But he saw another side of him presently.
"What was that matter of Mr. Sutton, the priest who was executed in
Stafford last year?" asked Mr.


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