CHAPTER THIRTEEN
t h him.”
quot;Plague on you!quot; cried Miraz. quot;It t sort of council I ed. Do you to meet ter (if ted your counsel on tter; tle.”
quot;to ; said Glozelle, quot;t for all reasons trange knights face.”
quot;t; said Miraz, no;Are you trying, to make it appear t I am as great a coward as your Lordship?”
quot;Your Majesty may say your pleasure,quot; said Glozelle sulkily.
quot;You talk like an old ; said t; say you, my Lord Sopespian?”
quot;Do not touc, Sire,quot; ;And y says of t gives your Majesty excellent grounds for a refusal any cause for questioning your Majestys honour or courage.”
quot;Great ; exclaimed Miraz, jumping to . quot;Are you also becoday?
Do you to refuse it? You migo my face.”
tion ly as two lords wishing.
quot;I see is,quot; said Miraz, after staring at tart out of ;you are as lilylivered as ery to imagine my after t fighting!
Are you soldiers? Are you telmarines? Are you men? And if I dog refuse it (as ail good reasons of captaincy and martial policy urge me to do) you eacan t not so?”
quot;No man of your Majestys age,quot; said Glozelle, quot; h.”
quot;So Im to be a dotard in tard,quot; roared Miraz. quot;Ill tell you is, my Lords. itrue point, ent. I to refuse it. But Ill accept it. Do you it! Ill not be sc or treason h your bloods.”
quot;e beseecy -quot; said Glozelle, but Miraz of tent and t ance to Edmund.
t one anotly.