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truth_n believe_v great_a speak_v 2,174 5 4.1269 3 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29295 Hattige: or The amours of the king of Tamaran A novel.; Hattigé, ou, Les amours du roy de Tamaran. English. Brémond, Gabriel de. 1683 (1683) Wing B4352; ESTC R218696 34,415 129

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Character so exactly like Hattiges though he knew Folks have the art of counterfeiting hands And taking time at his leisure to examine in private and weigh with himself all the Circumstances of that Evenings Adventure it made him for a while very unquiet and full of vexation At last he resolv'd for his satisfaction and ease to observe in person the Conduct of his Mistress to rid himself at once of the Suspicions that tormented him or the Passion he had for her if guilty He bethought himself of a Stratagem for the purpose which hit very luckily He had the priviledge to enter the Seraglio when he pleas'd through Doors made of purpose the Keys whereof were in his custody The Day he intended to put his Design in Execution he spent almost all in Hattiges Lodgings paying her all the Amorous Devoirs he us'd to do with more than ordinary Gaiety and Tenderness insomuch that she thought him better satisfied than ever of her Fidelity to him Besides he staid of purpose much later than ordinary though to the good Ladys very great trouble it being a Day of Assignation for Rajep who with the impatience of a fortunate Lover waited Zara's coming But when a Person who is jealous knows how to dissemble he deceives the most mistrustful The King from Hattige's Lodgings went into his own to dress himself like a Bedowin so they call the Moorish Women of the Mountains of whom there are commonly great numbers in the Serallio his Face he cover'd with a black Vail and his Body a white Blanket and put on a pair of Linnen-Drawers and black Stockings which is all the Equipage of that sort of Women when they are in the Towns for in the Country they go as God made them The King in his new Dress slipt softly and alone into the Seraglio and posted himself before the Door of his Mistresses Apartment where to avoid suspicion he laid him down on a Bench as the Bedowines use to do It was a Gallery you must of necessity pass through whether you went in or out of my Mistresses Lodgings At one end of it was a Lanthorn which had a Light in it all Night but the King being at the other end of the Gallery it was almost dark there He had not long been on the Watch but he discover'd the Enemy though he had no great mind to ask Who goes there He never bid them stand but let them come on undisturb'd that he might have them where he desar'd 'T was ev'n Zara leading another Bedowine by the hand whom the King prepossest with suspicion presently believ'd such another Woman as himself And to speak the truth the Bodowin's Stature and Gate confirm'd his conjecture Zara went up to the door never minding the Centinel and turning towards her Bedowin bid him have a moments patience and she would go to her Mistress for Orders for his Entrance The King had time then to take a full view of the Bedowine who turning about toward that side where the King lay perceiv'd there was something in humane Shape on the Bench and being now in an Enemies Country the Bedowin thought She could not be too cautious and for fear of leaving behind her fomething that might hinder her retreat thought good to make up to what she saw and examine nearer at hand what it was Fortune being commonly favourable to those Love exposes order'd it so that a corner of the Blanket the King had wrapt himself in being untyed the curious Bedowin discover'd part of a Sword which being Enamell'd with Vermillion in that little light there was gave the Bedowin enough to know 't was time to look about her and not safe to be there Accordingly She went softly to the other end of the Gallery and so down the Stairs and away out of Doors which she was very glad of having scap'd a scowring being fully perswaded the Sword she had seen threatne her Life The King who thought he had not given his fellow Beaowin the least suspition could not fancy her marching back was to run quite away He got up to see what was become of her Zara arriving took him for the Bedowin she had left at the door and wisper'd him in the Ear he might enter and be kindly receiv'd The King glad of the mistake followed his Guide leading him by the hand a way he knew better than any one alive He was no sooner got into Hattiges Chamber but she took him about the neek hugging him in her Arms with the Transports of a Woman amorous as she Dear Rajep says she how glad am I to see thee having spent all this day with a King whose Caresses are torments to me Thou must make me amends by a thousand Transports of Love This was an excellent beginning for the Monarchs Entertainment who took all patiently not stirring from under his Disguise The Lady more hasty than he to make good use of those pleasant moments the presence of a Lover belov'd as he was should produce couldnot endure that so little delay Her longings more prevalent than her Modesty put her into a fit of charming Wrath against the coldness of her insensible Lover she made him a thousand Reproaches and would have tore off with her own hands his Vail and his Blankets and the rest of his fine dress What Rajep says she with an amorous Indignation do you expect that I should unmask you Have you no more Desire to see and embrace me Is the time you purchase with the peril of your life and mine of so little Value that you can afford to lose so many precious moments No soomer had she said this but down dropt the Disguise Zara who had helpt her Mistress to undress the false Bedowin first discover'd the mistake and ran away with a shrieck that frighted her Mistress who was never so surpriz'd as to see 't was the King Hattige very luckily swouned away for fear for 't is very probable the injur'd Monarch would otherwise in the beginning of his fury have been transported into some act of violence against her which might have mis become him But seeing a Woman almost dead at his feet though she did but counterfeit his fury vanish'd to give place to his pity which seiz'd him with that Tenderness that made him sensible false and ingratefull as she was he could not forbear loveing her still He call'd to the Slaves of the Apartment and order'd her to be laid on a Bed where it would have pleas'd him to approach her with her Falshood but finding his Resentment too weak for his good nature melting at sight of an Object so amiable though false he retir'd The next day Osman was call'd to Court where he had from the King a very favourable Reception to make him amends for his former hard Usage He told him he was but too much convinc'd of the ill Conduct of Hattige against whom he let fall the most opprobrious Language imaginable protesting he would for the future