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incitations, he might at last overcome this stubborn
beauty; and therefore to what she had said, he
thus replied :--
  " Kings, you know, have a peculiar prerogative,
and move in spheres above the common rank;
their privilege is to have many wives, when sub-
jects are by law confined to one; and therefore
though Eleanor be queen, yet Rosamond, shall
reign as well as she, and even in my command as
chief. We will be married first, my Rosamond,
and then I hope you will not scruple."
  " I know not, sire,” said Rosamond. “ whether
it be a lawful thing to marry one that has a wife
already: but if that can be proved, I have nothing
to object, for I have no aversion to your person;
nay, I have a value for you beyond others, both as
a man, and much more as you are my king and so-
vereign."
  The king made many promises to make her
happy, if she had agreed to what he had proposed;
and having left Rosamond, went to Alethea, and
told her what repulses he had met with from Ro-
samond, instead of that enjoyment he expected.
Alethea told the king, that if his majesty pleased
to follow her humble advice, he should not enter
into farther parlies with her, but that he should
find a nearer way to the happiness he desired; for
as to being married, it would be both a dilatory
thing, and of no avail when it was done, as she in-
tended to inform Rosamond.
  "But what is the way, then, you would advise
me to do?" said the king.
  " May it please your majesty," said Alethea,
the way I would have you take is this—-that you
should come into my chamber to-morrow night, a
little before bed-time, and I will leave you there
alone till I have got my lady to bed : and as I lie
with her, I will delay the time of my going to bed