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Ivanhoe -Sir Walter Scott-Chapter 15

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Ivanhoe- Sir Walter Scott -Chapter 15 Đây là một tác phẩm anh ngữ nổi tiếng với những từ vựng nâng cao chuyên ngành văn chương. Nhằm giúp các bạn yêu thich tiếng anh luyện tập và củng cố thêm kỹ năng đọc tiếng anh . | Ivanhoe Sir Walter Scott Chapter 15 And yet he thinks -ha ha ha ha -he thinks I am the tool and servant of his will. Well let it be through all the maze of trouble His plots and base oppression must create I ll shape myself a way to higher things And who will say tis wrong Basil a Tragedy No spider ever took more pains to repair the shattered meshes of his web than did Waldemar Fitzurse to reunite and combine the scattered members of Prince John s cabal. Few of these were attached to him from inclination and none from personal regard. It was therefore necessary that Fitzurse should open to them new prospects of advantage and remind them of those which they at present enjoyed. To the young and wild nobles he held out the prospect of unpunished license and uncontrolled revelry to the ambitious that of power and to the covetous that of increased wealth and extended domains. The leaders of the mercenaries received a donation in gold an argument the most persuasive to their minds and without which all others would have proved in vain. Promises were still more liberally distributed than money by this active agent and in fine nothing was left undone that could determine the wavering or animate the disheartened. The return of King Richard he spoke of as an event altogether beyond the reach of probability yet when he observed from the doubtful looks and uncertain answers which he received that this was the apprehension by which the minds of his accomplices were most haunted he boldly treated that event should it really take place as one which ought not to alter their political calculations. If Richard returns said Fitzurse he returns to enrich his needy and impoverished crusaders at the expense of those who did not follow him to the Holy Land. He returns to call to a fearful reckoning those who during his absence have done aught that can be construed offence or encroachment upon either the laws of the land or the privileges of the crown. He returns to avenge upon the Orders