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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 13:10:58 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 13:10:58 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60524 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60524)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Pageant of British History, by J. Edward Parrott
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Pageant of British History
-
-Author: J. Edward Parrott
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2019 [EBook #60524]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PAGEANT OF BRITISH HISTORY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines, Cindy Beyer & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- =“_History is a pageant,_=
- =_and not a philosophy._”=
-
- =AUGUSTINE BIRRELL.=
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Henry the Eighth and Cardinal Wolsey.=
- (_From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the Guildhall Art
- Gallery, London._)]
-
-
-
-
- =THE PAGEANT OF=
- =BRITISH HISTORY=
-
-
- =DESCRIBED BY=
- =J. EDWARD PARROTT, M.A., LL.D.,=
-
- =AND DEPICTED BY=
- =THE FOLLOWING GREAT ARTISTS=
- =_J. M. W. Turner_, _G. F. Watts_, _Benjamin West_, _Lord Leighton_,=
- =_Sir John Gilbert_, _Daniel Maclise_, _C. W. Cope_, _John Opie_,=
- =_William Dyce_, _Sir L. Alma-Tadema_, _Sir John Millais_,=
- =_Paul Delaroche_, _W. Q. Orchardson_, _E. M. Ward_,=
- =_Stanhope Forbes_, _F. Goodall_, _Seymour Lucas_,=
- =_Ford Madox Brown_, _W. F. Yeames_,=
- =_Clarkson Stanfield_,=
- =_etc._, _etc._=
-
- =[Illustration]=
-
-
-
- =T H O M A S N E L S O N A N D S O N S=
- =London, Edinburgh, Dublin, and New York=
- =1908=
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
- F O R E W O R D .
-
-_The Master of the Pageant spurs into the arena; he waves his baton, and
-the trumpets sound. In the distance you see a long procession begin to
-wind its way across the greensward, and as it draws nearer and nearer
-you recognize the form and fashion of men and women whose names are writ
-large in the annals of our land. Here they come—king and queen,
-statesman and priest, warrior and merchant, poet and man of law, shipman
-and craftsman, yeoman and peasant—a motley throng, all sorts and
-conditions of men and women, high and low, rich and poor, gentle and
-simple, noble and base, hero and craven; yet each in his or her several
-degree a maker of history. These are the “counterfeit presentments” of
-the men and women who through twice a thousand years have made us what
-we are, and our glorious land what it is._
-
-_As they troop by, let a humble chronicler—who prays that he may not be
-considered intrusive—recall the story of their heroisms, their trials,
-their sufferings, their glories, or, it may be, their failures, their
-treacheries, and their shames. Perchance ’twill be a twice-told tale,
-“familiar as household words” yet it is a recital that can never lack
-hearers while men love the land that bore them, and would fain find
-example and warning, inspiration and guidance, from the story of the
-past. The chronicler pretends to no philosophy save this—that since we
-have, under Providence, been created a “noble and puissant nation” and
-entrusted with a heritage without peer in the history of the world, we
-should be false to our sires, false to ourselves, and false to our
-destiny were we, by selfishness, sloth, or ignorance, to neglect to be
-great through “craven fears of being great.” And since the best and only
-true foundation of patriotism is knowledge, he would fain hope that
-these sketches may stimulate in some who are growing towards manhood and
-womanhood a humble pride in the greatness of their land and a fervent
-desire so to play their part that Britain may be what she was meant to
-be—the Vicegerent of the Almighty in the uplifting and ennoblement of
-the world. In this belief he echoes the prayer of the poet:_—
-
- “_Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free,_
- _How shall we extol thee, who are born of thee?_
- _Wider still, and wider, shall thy bounds be set;_
- _God, who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet._”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- =_C O N T E N T S ._=
-
- ——••——
-
- _I._ _Britain before the Roman Conquest._
- _The Phœnicians_ 9
- _The Ancient Britons_ 12
- _The Druids_ 17
- _The Coming of Cæsar_ 20
- _II._ _The Shadow of Rome._
- _Caractacus_ 27
- _A Warrior Queen_ 30
- _The Iron Hand_ 33
- _III._ _The Coming of the English._
- _King Arthur and the Knights of the Round
- Table_ 41
- _Hengist and Horsa_ 46
- _Ethelbert and Bertha_ 50
- _The Singer of the First English Song_ 55
- _IV._ _The Viking Invasions._
- _The Coming of the Sea-Kings_ 57
- _Alfred the Great_ 60
- _King Canute_ 69
- _V._ _The Coming of the Normans._
- _Harold of England and William of Normandy_ 74
- _The Eve of the Invasion_ 79
- _The Battle of Hastings_ 83
- _Hereward the Wake_ 91
- _VI._ _England under the Normans._
- _William the Red_ 96
- _Matilda, “Lady” of England_ 100
- _The Great Archbishop_ 106
- _Strongbow_ 113
- _Richard of the Lion Heart_ 118
- _King John and Magna Charta_ 127
- _VII._ _The Three Edwards._
- _The First Prince of Wales_ 135
- _William Wallace_ 140
- _Robert the Bruce_ 149
- _Merciful Queen_ 157
- _The Black Prince_ 163
- _VIII._ _On French Fields._
- _King Harry the Fifth_ 169
- _Joan, the Maid_ 176
- _IX._ _The Wars of the Roses._
- _The King-Maker_ 184
- _The Little Princes in the Tower_ 191
- _X._ _Tudor Times._
- _John and Sebastian Cabot_ 195
- _King and Cardinal_ 200
- _The New Worship_ 207
- _XI._ _A Tragic Story._
- _Mary Queen of Scots_ 210
- _XII._ _In the Spacious Days._
- _The Spanish Armada_ 224
- _Sir Walter Raleigh_ 232
- _XIII._ _The Great Rebellion._
- _Charles the First_ 242
- _Oliver Cromwell_ 252
- _Robert Blake_ 258
- _XIV._ _From the Restoration to the Revolution._
- _The Restoration of Charles the Second_ 268
- _James, Duke of Monmouth_ 278
- _XV._ _After the Revolution._
- _William the Third_ 292
- _The Great Duke of Marlborough_ 297
- _XVI._ _Bonnie Prince Charlie._ 310
- _XVII._ _Makers of Empire._
- _Robert Clive, the Daring in War_ 323
- _James Wolfe, Conqueror of Canada_ 335
- _XVIII._ _Nelson of the Nile._ 347
- _XIX._ _Wellington._ 363
- _XX._ _Victoria the Good._ 376
- _XXI._ _Edward the Peacemaker._ 383
-
-
-
-
- =L I S T O F I L L U S T R A T I O N S=
-
- ———••———
-
- IN COLOUR.
-
- Henry the Eighth and Cardinal Wolsey,
- Hunters and Traders,
- Caractacus in Rome,
- Sir Tristram at the Court of Arthur,
- Augustine preaching to Ethelbert and Bertha,
- Alfred in the Camp of the Danes,
- Coronation of William the Conqueror,
- Death of Becket,
- Crusaders on the March,
- King Richard and the Young Archer,
- Hubert and Arthur,
- The Trial of Wallace,
- Edward the Third at the Siege of Calais,
- The Black Prince being made a Knight of the Garter,
- The Little Princes in the Tower,
- The Departure of John and Sebastian Cabot on their First Voyage of
- Discovery, 1497,
- Cardinal Wolsey on his Way to Westminster Hall,
- The Murder of Rizzio,
- The Armada in Sight,
- Charles the First leaving Westminster Hall after his Trial,
- Cromwell dictating Dispatches to Milton,
- The Fall of Clarendon,
- The Last Sleep of Argyll,
- The Prince of Orange landing at Torbay,
- The British Assault on the Village of Blenheim,
- A Royal Fugitive,
- The Battle of Trafalgar, and the Victory of Lord Nelson over the
- French and Spanish Fleets, October 21, 1805,
- The Death of Nelson,
- Napoleon on Board the _Bellerophon_,
- The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher after the Battle of Waterloo,
- Saving the Colours: An Incident of the Battle of Inkermann,
- Jessie’s Dream,
-
- * * * * *
-
- IN BLACK AND WHITE.
-
- The First Invasion of Britain by Julius Cæsar,
- The Invasion of the Emperor Claudius,
- The Emperor Hadrian visiting a Pottery in Britain,
- Columba preaching,
- A Great Viking,
- The Death of Harold,
- Hereward yielding to William,
- “God Wills It!”
- The First Prince of Wales,
- The Battle of Bannockburn,
- The Morning of Agincourt,
- The Coronation of Charles the Seventh at Rheims,
- Joan of Arc storming the “Bulwark” (Orleans),
- Death of Warwick,
- Richard the Third at the Battle of Bosworth,
- Trial of Queen Catherine,
- Henry the Eighth,
- At Sea. “Farewell, France!”
- Escape of Mary Queen of Scots from Loch Leven Castle,
- Queen Elizabeth at Tilbury Fort,
- The Boyhood of Sir Walter Raleigh,
- Cromwell at Marston Moor,
- Jane Lane helping Prince Charles to escape,
- Rescued from the Plague, London, 1665,
- The Arrest of Alice Lisle,
- Bonnie Prince Charlie,
- After Culloden: Royalist Soldiers searching for Jacobite Fugitives,
- Clive at Bay,
- Death of Wolfe,
- Queen Victoria in her Coronation Robes,
- Queen Victoria at St. Paul’s,
- Edward the Seventh,
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I.
- BRITAIN BEFORE THE ROMAN CONQUEST.
-
-
- THE PHŒNICIANS.
-
- “_The bond of commerce was designed_
- _To associate all the branches of mankind;_
- _And if a boundless plenty be the robe,_
- _Trade is the golden girdle of the globe._”
-
-THE procession advances. Who, you ask, are these swarthy, Jewish-looking
-men leading the way? They are Phœnicians, the first visitors from
-civilized shores to our island. These restless wanderers are keen
-traders, who have sped their barks from distant Tyre or Carthage in
-quest of merchandise. One of them, urging his ship northward towards
-this fabled happy land of the western ocean, has sighted through the
-clearing mists the distant line of an unknown shore. He has landed and
-come into touch with the natives. Spreading out his tempting treasures
-of purple cloth, glittering trinkets, and gleaming glass to the
-astonished gaze of the Britons, he has begun to barter his wares for the
-native products of the isle.
-
-His keen eyes soon discover that the Britons possess something far more
-precious than the furs which they proffer. Tin, the most precious metal
-of the ancient world, abounds here. The Phœnician’s eyes gleam as he
-makes the discovery; visions of untold wealth flash before him. Tin to
-him is the most desirable of all metals. In due proportion it will
-transform soft, yielding copper into bronze, which makes the best
-weapons of the age. The art of tempering iron is still unknown, and
-swords and spear-heads of bronze still decide the battles of the ancient
-world. Alike in peace or war, tin is sought and prized as gold is
-to-day. The statues of the temples, the urns that hold the ashes of the
-dead, the ornaments with which men and women delight to adorn
-themselves, owe their beauty and value to tin. All this the Phœnician
-knows full well; he has discovered a Klondyke which will make him rich
-beyond the dreams of avarice.
-
-Again and again he visits this land of Britain, and every voyage he
-grows richer and richer. He takes infinite precautions lest his secret
-treasure-house should be discovered. He comes and goes mysteriously.
-Other traders, greedy for similar gains, follow in his wake and closely
-beset him; he even runs his ship on a foaming reef, and escapes by
-swimming, rather than betray the source of his wealth. But all in vain;
-his secret is discovered, and other barks in quick succession steer for
-the Tin Islands. An important trade springs up between Britain and
-Southern Europe. Thus, by means of those mineral treasures which have
-made Britain what she is, our land becomes known to the civilized world.
-
-Some three hundred years before Christ, an explorer from Marseilles pays
-the island a visit, and on his return writes a brief account of what he
-has seen. He tells us of the Kentish farms, with their granaries piled
-high with golden grain; and he describes the mead of honey and wheat
-which the islanders drink. More than two long centuries pass away before
-another explorer arrives to lift the veil still further. He pushes into
-the interior and makes acquaintance with the rustic Britons, rough and
-uncouth, the hunters and graziers of the island. He visits the mines of
-Cornwall, and tells us that the tin is found in earthy veins in the
-rocks; that it is extracted, ground down, smelted and purified, and
-exported in knuckle-shaped slabs. Packed into wagons, it is carried
-during ebb-tide to a neighbouring island, which may be St. Michael’s
-Mount or the Isle of Wight, and there sold and shipped to Gaul, whence
-it is carried overland on the backs of pack-horses to Marseilles.
-
-Pass on, ye Phœnicians! We salute you as the fathers of that vast
-British commerce which has built up the mighty Empire in which we
-rejoice to-day. Our busy hives of industry with their great factories
-and roaring looms; our myriad ships that carry, over every sea to every
-land, the woven fabrics of our workshops, the coal of our mines, and the
-iron and steel of our furnaces and forges, all owe their beginnings to
-you who first set ajar for us the golden gates of trade.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Hunters and Traders.=
- (_From the painting by Lord Leighton, P.R.A., in the Royal Exchange,
- London._
- _By permission of Mr. Matthews._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE ANCIENT BRITONS.
-
- “_Where the maned bison and the wolf did roam,_
- _The ancient Briton reared his wattled home;_
- _Paddled his coracle across the mere;_
- _In the dim forest chased the antlered deer;_
- _Pastured his herds within the open glade;_
- _Played with his ‘young barbarians’ in the shade;_
- _And when the new moon o’er the high hills broke,_
- _Worshipped his heathen gods beneath the sacred oak._”
-
-Here come your first Britons, tall, blue-eyed, fair-haired, long of
-limb, and ruddy of countenance. Some, from the dense forest interior,
-are clad in the skins of the bears and other wild animals which they
-have slain; others wear garments of the rough cloth which they have
-woven on their own rude looms, or have obtained by barter from traders
-of distant and more civilized lands. None of them are mere yelling
-savages, bedaubed with blue war-paint; they have long passed that stage.
-They are all warriors born and bred, fierce in fight but sociable and
-friendly in peace. They live in tribes under their “kings;” they graze
-their cattle, till the land, and search the gravels of the rivers for
-tin.
-
-Let us visit a British “town” of Kent, a century or so before the coming
-of the Romans, and learn something of the old British mode of life. We
-plunge into the dark shades of the forest, and follow a narrow track
-that winds hither and thither through the dense undergrowth. We are
-armed, for in the thickets and in the caves of the rocky hillocks lurk
-the gray wolf, the fierce boar, the black bear, and the wild cat. Now
-and then a startled deer gazes at us for a moment, and bounds away into
-safety. In the stream which we ford herons are fishing and beavers are
-building. Overhead the hawks are sailing by, and from a neighbouring
-marsh comes the boom of a bittern.
-
-On we go, and at length reach a great cleared space. The trees have been
-felled, and some of the land is under tillage. Horses, sheep, oxen, and
-swine are quietly feeding, and here and there are strips of grain and
-barley. Half a mile away is the town. All round it is a moat, with an
-earthen wall topped by a stockade of oak logs. As we approach the narrow
-entrance, we see the pointed roofs of many huts, from which thin lines
-of blue smoke are curling up into the summer air.
-
-We enter the town by a zigzag road, and pass the homesteads, square or
-round in shape, and built of unhewn or roughly hewn trees placed on end,
-with roofs of interlaced boughs thatched with rushes or covered with
-turf. Each homestead consists of one room, large enough to contain the
-whole family. The floor is of earth, or perhaps covered with thin
-slates. In the middle of it is the family fire, which continues to burn
-night and day all the year round; when it dies out, the home is
-deserted. The smoke escapes by a hole in the roof. Round the fire, along
-the sides of the room, is a bed made of rushes and covered with hides or
-coarse rugs. On this the members of the family sit at meals, and sleep
-at night with their feet towards the fire. The rushes and green grass
-which are placed between the family fire and the family bed serve as a
-table, and on this at meal times are placed large platters containing
-oatmeal cakes, meat, and broth.
-
-In front of the entrance to one of the homesteads a blue-eyed,
-fair-haired woman, in a tunic of dark-blue cloth, sits grinding corn
-with a quern or handmill. Little boys, clad in strips of bear-skin,
-engage in a wrestling match hard by. Sturdy little lads they are, for
-their rearing has been of a Spartan character; they were plunged into
-the water of the stream at birth, and they received their first taste of
-food on the point of their father’s sword. Yonder old woman is boiling
-water by making pebbles red-hot in the fire and dropping them into an
-earthen water-pot.
-
-Passing on, we reach a long, low dwelling, which by its size indicates
-the superior condition of its owner. It is, indeed, the home of the
-chieftain of the tribe. Big mastiffs and wolf-hounds growl over their
-bones at the door. Within, the walls are covered with skins. Round
-shields of hide with shining metal bosses and rims of iron, spears with
-bronze or iron heads, and bows with quivers of reed arrows tipped with
-flint adorn the walls. One sword in particular holds the place of honour
-as a rare prize; it is of iron, with a sheath of bronze studded with red
-coral.
-
-The chieftain comes forward to welcome us—a tall, well-made man, blue
-of eye, with long, fair hair and a tawny moustache of which he is vastly
-proud. Over his flame-red blouse, which is belted at the waist, is a
-twisted _torque_ of gold, cunningly fashioned and adorned with beautiful
-tracery; across his blouse is thrown a tartan plaid fastened at the
-shoulder by a brooch of polished boar tusk. His trousers fit closely to
-the ankles, and are so characteristic an article of his attire that he
-is known as “wearer of breeches” in distant Rome. Where his skin is
-bare, we notice that it is painted with patterns of blue. He greets us
-heartily, and a slave at his direction hands us a great silver-rimmed
-horn filled with mead.
-
-His wife shares in the welcome. She is a robust, healthy matron, fit
-mother of her stalwart sons, who she prays may grow up as heroes, and do
-ere long some doughty deed which shall entitle them to the heroic names
-which they have yet to possess. When the day’s work is done, she will
-gather them about her knees and recite the wild legends of their sires,
-whose mighty feats of war still inspire young Britons to the fray. She
-wears a tunic with a scarf of red-striped plaid fastened by a pin of
-bronze. A string of dusky pearls hangs about her neck, and spiral rings
-of silver adorn her fingers. The ivory bracelets and the amber beads
-which she proudly wears have been brought from afar by the traders who
-visit the town from time to time.
-
-The wife is mistress of the home. She has the management not only of all
-household affairs, but, as she is the wife of a warrior, the care and
-direction of the whole concerns of the family both indoors and out. She
-and her sisters spin, knit, weave, dye, sow, cook, grind corn, and milk
-the cows—indeed do most of the hard work that is done. Her husband
-considers field-labour and farm-work entirely beneath his dignity. War
-and hunting are his work, and right well does he excel in both. Probably
-safely housed in a hut hard by is his precious scythe-wheeled chariot,
-in which he goes forth to war when the horn is sounded, the shield is
-struck, and the _cran-tara_—the “fiery cross”—is sent through the
-tribe as a call to arms. He and his fellow-warriors spend much time in
-their warlike exercises; the slaves, the weaklings, and the old men tend
-the flocks and herds and conduct the tillage.
-
-Let us continue our tour of the town. Here is a man cleverly weaving
-baskets of wicker-work; yonder is a fisherman returning from the river,
-his broad back bearing a coracle, such as you may see on the Dee at
-Llangollen or on the rivers of South Wales to-day. Not far away is the
-metal-worker’s hut, where the craftsman is busy mixing his bronze, and
-moulding it into axes, lance-heads, and sword-blades. Another worker is
-busy chipping flints brought from the quarry in yonder chalk hills. The
-potter who labours close at hand kneads out his yellow clay and fashions
-his pots by hand, ornamenting them by pressing a notched stick or braid
-against the wet clay. Such is a British town in the most civilized part
-of the land a century or so before the coming of the Romans.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Druids]
-
-
-
-
- “_Sage beneath a spreading oak_
- _Sat the Druid, hoary chief._”
-
-Room for the Druids! Their solemn progress, their patriarchal beards,
-their white robes of office, and the chaplets of oak leaves on their
-brows proclaim them at once. Priests, judges, magicians, and instructors
-of youth, they rule the Britons with a rod of iron. Their altars and
-idols are set deep in the gloomy shades of dense forests amidst the
-gnarled and twisted stems of aged oaks. The secrets of their cruel creed
-are close locked in their bosoms, and over all their words and works
-they cast a dread mystery that chills the heart of the boldest Briton in
-the land. Their word is law, their curse is death. Their richest
-treasures go unguarded save for the awe which they inspire. Deep in
-their forest shades they offer their mysterious sacrifices; sometimes
-human beings, imprisoned in huge wicker-work images, are burnt to death
-to appease the angry gods. The Druids claim to hold sway even over the
-spirits of the departed, and the Briton trembles as he hears the voices
-of tormented souls wailing in the night wind. Every shadow is a terror;
-every flying cloud is an omen of good or ill; every spring, river, and
-fountain has its guardian deity. Fire is the element which the Druids
-hold in the highest reverence; the sacred flame on their altars never
-dies.
-
-Four times a year solemn festivals are held. On Midsummer Eve, New
-Year’s Day, May Day, and Hallowe’en the great Beltane fires are lighted,
-and Britons from near and far assemble for worship. The mistletoe
-growing on an oak is held sacred in the highest degree, and on the sixth
-day of the moon a feast is prepared beneath the hallowed branches. White
-bulls are dragged to the tree, and their broad foreheads are bound to
-its stem, their loud bellowings mingling with the strain of the wild
-anthem which the worshippers raise. When the beasts have been
-slaughtered as sacrifices, the chief Druid, clad in his flowing white
-robes, his golden collar and bracelets, ascends the oak, treading on the
-backs and broad shoulders of blindfolded slaves. With a golden
-pruning-knife he severs the mistletoe, and beneath him attendant Druids
-receive it on a white linen cloth. It is then distributed to the awed
-and expectant multitude, who carry home and carefully preserve a sprig
-of the all-healing plant. The Christmas mistletoe beneath which youths
-and maidens now make merry at the most sacred season of the Christian
-year annually recalls this heathenish rite.
-
-Much of the Druids’ lore is imposture, but they have wrested from Nature
-some of her secrets. They know the stars in their courses; they are
-skilled in the lore of plants and the healing properties of herbs and
-simples. They practise the arts of public speaking and poesy. Their
-bards sing the songs of heroes, and inflame warriors with the lust of
-battle. But over all broods the cruel shadow of death, and men tremble
-as they pray.
-
-Dread and mighty as these Druids are, the day of their doom is coming.
-Even now the Roman galleys are on the sea, and their prows are rising
-and falling as they furrow the heaving waters towards the white cliffs
-of Albion. Centuries will elapse before the gospel of love and mercy
-sweeps away the blood-stained rites of the Druids’ creed. The gods of
-Rome will destroy the deities of the isle. Jupiter and Mars will
-dethrone them; and in their train, how or when we know not, the message
-of Christianity will be whispered, until at length the daystar rises,
-never to set, on the forests of Britain.
-
-Gone are the Druids, but their name still survives in the mountains and
-valleys of Wales, where the ancient Britons found their refuge in a
-later age. Our modern Druids love letters and music, and the other
-beautiful arts which touch and kindle souls. Theirs it is to encourage
-men and women to build the lofty rhyme, to weave the golden strands of
-melody, and to limn the loveliness of earth and sea and sky. Thus
-transformed, the Druid is a prophet of sweetness and light, not an
-enslaver of souls.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE COMING OF CÆSAR.
-
- “_The foremost man of all the world._”
-
-A king amongst men now draws near. As he strides by, a proud and
-majestic figure, you know that you are in the presence of one of the
-world’s greatest men. He bears himself like a conqueror, yet he is far
-more than a mere victorious general. Scholar, statesman, writer, orator,
-and architect, he is the “noblest Roman of them all.” Look at his stern,
-powerful face, his eagle-like nose, his thin, firm-set lips, his lofty
-brow, and his massive head crowned with a wreath of laurel. “_Cæsar!_”
-you cry, and it is none other than he.
-
-He has subdued Gaul, and now he looks across the narrow strait towards
-the white, gleaming cliffs of Dover. A new arena opens before him, a
-land untrodden by Roman feet, an island of fabled wealth of pearl and
-tin, of waving cornfields and rich pastures, peopled by sturdy warriors
-worthy to cross swords even with him. He remembers the fiery charge of
-the British on many a Gaulish battlefield, and his wrath rekindles as he
-thinks of the havoc they have wrought amongst his legions, and of the
-welcome and shelter they have afforded his flying foes in their
-unconquered island only a few leagues away. Right well do they deserve
-to feel the weight of the Roman hand. He has received invitations, too.
-The tribes on yonder coveted island are ever at war with each other;
-ambitious chiefs are ever seeking to subdue their weaker neighbours.
-Refugees have fled to him beseeching his assistance against their
-enemies. Ambition, revenge, and the prospect of easy victory over a
-disunited foe, all urge him on to the new enterprise now shaping itself
-in his busy brain. “The die is cast.” He will invade and conquer
-Britain, and add another laurel to his wreath of fame.
-
-He consults the chief merchants of the Gallic coast, and endeavours to
-learn the military strength, the resources, the landing-places of the
-island; but they are dumb, and only find their tongues when they
-secretly and hurriedly send off messengers to warn the islanders of the
-threatened invasion. Envoys from Britain speedily arrive, eager to
-appease the wrath of great Cæsar by humbly offering to submit. They are
-too late. “The die is cast.”
-
-A Roman galley pushes out to survey the British coast and to fix upon a
-suitable landing-place. Meanwhile Cæsar masses his legions and hies him
-to _Portus Itius_, where his transports lie. The return of the scout is
-the signal for embarkation, and on the morning of August 26, in the year
-55 B.C., anchors are weighed and the galleys stream out of the harbour.
-By ten o’clock they are under the cliffs of the British shore, and then
-they perceive that no easy victory awaits them. Heavy fighting must be
-done ere the legions form up on the British shore. The cliffs are black
-with warriors, chariots, and horsemen ready to oppose their landing.
-
-With a favouring breeze and the tide in his favour, Cæsar skirts the
-shore eastward, until a shelving strand somewhere near Romney Marsh
-promises him convenient landing. As his galleys move eastward, the
-British on the cliffs move eastward too. There is a long pause; the
-transports containing the cavalry are still miles away. They have not
-appeared at three in the afternoon; the day is wearing on, and Cæsar
-determines to attempt a landing without them.
-
-With difficulty his ships approach the shallow shore, only to find the
-full force of the island-army, with horsemen and chariots, drawn up in
-battle-array to receive him. The British horsemen spur their steeds into
-the waves; and many a half-naked footman, with sharp javelin, heavy
-club, or rough-hewn war-hatchet, presses on towards the galleys. For a
-few minutes the Roman soldiers are dismayed and dare not leap from their
-ships. Then Cæsar orders up his warships and stations them on the flank
-of the enemy. Slings and catapults open fire, and the Britons, assailed
-as they have never been assailed before, draw back in confusion. Still
-the Romans hesitate, but the situation is saved by the standard-bearer
-of the famous Tenth Legion. “Leap, fellow-soldiers,” he cries, “unless
-you wish to betray your Eagle to the enemy. I at least will do my duty
-to the Republic and to my general.” Roused by his example, the Romans
-leap from their ships, and immediately a fierce fight rages in the
-water.
-
-The waves are red with blood; mailed Roman and naked Briton hack and hew
-at each other in confused combat; and slowly but surely the invaders
-gain the beach. There they form into ranks, shoulder to shoulder, and
-against that solid wall of disciplined valour nothing can stand. The
-scythe-wheeled chariots thunder towards the Roman array, the evening sun
-glinting from their outstretched blades; but the fiery horses are
-impaled on the iron points of the Roman spears. Step by step the Britons
-are forced from the strand; fainter and fainter sound the voices of the
-Druids singing their frenzied war-chants; and ere darkness has settled
-down the islanders have retreated, and the Roman victors remain on the
-beach which they have so hardly won.
-
-Next day come chiefs with offers of submission; but four days later,
-when Cæsar’s cavalry transports are nearing the coast, a great storm
-arises. The anchored galleys are wrecked; the newcomers are driven back
-to Gaul. Cæsar is in perilous plight. He has no provisions for his
-soldiers, no materials with which to repair his shattered ships. The
-autumn storms have begun, and he is on a treacherous coast, harassed by
-a fierce, unrelenting foe.
-
-These disasters give new hope to the Britons. They rapidly muster their
-men, and form an ambush in an uncut field of grain not far from the
-Roman camp. When the Seventh Legion comes out to reap the corn it is
-suddenly beset on all sides by a host of horsemen and charioteers. The
-cloud of dust raised by the chariot wheels betrays the fight to the
-sentinels of the camp. Cæsar hurries to the spot, and just manages to
-save the reapers from utter destruction and convey them back to his
-stronghold. The Britons follow, and make the grievous mistake of
-attacking the Romans in their trenches. Beaten back time after time,
-they again retreat to their fastnesses in the woods, and once more offer
-submission.
-
-Cæsar is quite ready for peace. His troops are weary, for they have been
-seventeen or eighteen days on the island, and the struggle has never
-ceased. His twelve thousand men are all too few to overcome the
-obstinate Britons. He does not wait even to receive the promised
-hostages, but, taking advantage of the first fair wind that blows, he
-returns to Gaul, baffled and beaten, without a single token of conquest.
-
-Next year he comes again. The warm spring days that bring the swallows
-bring the Roman galleys once more. This time he does not despise his
-enemy. Twenty-five thousand foot and two thousand horse, embarked on
-eight hundred ships, speed towards the threatened shore. He lands
-without striking a blow, and stray prisoners inform him that his advance
-is to be challenged at a ford on the Stour twelve miles away. He is
-determined not to lose an hour. Through the night his legions tramp over
-the unknown country, and in the cold gray of the early dawn they find
-themselves on the bank of a reedy river, with the foe drawn up on the
-opposite side.
-
-The charge is sounded, and the Roman cavalry dash into the river with
-the utmost impetuosity. They break through and through the ranks of the
-British infantry, their bronze swords being no match for the tempered
-iron of the Roman brands and javelins. Again the Britons give way, and
-betake themselves to their woodland fortresses barricaded with the
-trunks of felled trees. Here Cassivellaunus, behind his stockade, holds
-out stoutly. But his fortifications are carried at last, and the four
-“kings” of Kent, who have failed in an attack on the Roman camp, come
-once more in humble guise to offer their submission. Cæsar is again
-ready for peace. Forest fighting is too perilous for his taste. Amidst
-the mazes of the woodland the Roman formations are broken up, and in
-hand-to-hand combats the Britons are the equals of his best and most
-highly-trained soldiers. So he yields to the inevitable. He receives
-hostages and empty promises of annual tribute. Again he departs, leaving
-nothing to mark his so-called conquest but the earthworks of his
-deserted camps.
-
-Once more he has failed. He may not describe his campaign as he does a
-later victory—“I came, I saw, I conquered.” He is fain to confess that
-his usual good fortune has deserted the “eagles” in Britain. A few
-hostages, a girdle of British pearls for Venus, and a lordly triumph in
-Rome—these are the only fruits which Cæsar reaps from his toils and
-perils on this side of the Channel. He vanishes from the pageant to win
-plentiful laurels on other fields. He has failed in Britain, but
-elsewhere he becomes unchallenged master of the Roman world. Ten years
-later, having attained the very summit of his ambition, he falls beneath
-the daggers of his erstwhile friends.
-
-Cæsar vanishes, and with his departure twilight once more settles down
-on the land. For nearly a hundred years no Roman soldier sets foot on
-the island. Nevertheless, Britain is nearer to the masterful city on the
-Tiber than she has been before. Roman gossips talk of the island in
-their streets. Adventurous Romans and equally adventurous Britons
-exchange visits. Trade increases between the far-off island and the
-heart of the world. Roman huntsmen prize their British hounds, and
-British slaves are fashionable in the patrician homes of Rome. Britain
-moves onward in the march of civilization, and ere the century of peace
-comes to an end she is a real prize of conquest—a laurel worthy of the
-imperial brow itself.
-
-[Illustration: =THE FIRST INVASION OF BRITAIN BY JULIUS CÆSAR.=
- (_From the cartoon by Edward Armitage, R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II.
- THE SHADOW OF ROME.
-
-
- CARACTACUS.
-
- “_What though the field be lost?_
- _All is not lost._”
-
-THE real conqueror of Britain now approaches. We know that British
-“kings” in distress more than once appealed to Augustus, and that he
-seriously thought of invading the island. The real conqueror, however,
-was the Emperor Claudius, who in 43 A.D. sent an army under a trusted
-leader. On the road to Britain the troops mutinied. Where Cæsar had
-failed, how could they hope to succeed? Besides, the Britons were now
-united under Caractacus, a valiant and skilful warrior. The mutiny,
-however, was crushed, and again the Romans landed without opposition.
-They pushed across the Medway to the Thames, which was forded, and
-thence to the capital of Caractacus, deep in the Essex woods. The Roman
-legions stormed the British stronghold, and, flushed with victory, the
-Emperor Claudius proudly dubbed himself _Britannicus_. But the work of
-conquest had only begun. Britain was far from subdued, and probably she
-would never have been the prey of the forty thousand or fifty thousand
-Romans who accomplished the task had the Britons fully understood that
-“union is strength.” Their divisions were worth many legions to the
-Romans, who met and conquered various bands of islanders, and never met
-a united army. One Roman general is said to have fought three-and-thirty
-battles south of the Thames, and to have captured more than twenty
-stockaded towns. The gallant Caractacus could make no headway against
-his foes, and leaving a brother dead among the Essex swamps, he sought
-refuge in the trackless mountains of South Wales.
-
-Here Caractacus rallied the broken tribes for a last stand. He chose his
-ground with great skill in the centre of steep and difficult hills, and
-raised ramparts of massive stones where an ascent was possible, while
-between his army and the road by which the Romans must approach there
-flowed a river deep and wide. As the terrible Romans drew near
-Caractacus addressed his men, bidding them remember how their sires had
-driven back great Cæsar himself, and encouraging them to strike for home
-and freedom. The Britons, however, were again conquered. Roman
-discipline, Roman armour, and Roman swords were too much for them.
-Caractacus escaped, and fled to the court of his step-mother,
-Cartismandua, who to her eternal shame basely betrayed him to the foe
-against whom he had waged an unceasing struggle for nine years. Roman
-chains fettered the limbs of the British champion, and his capture was a
-triumph. To Rome he must go, where his exploits were well known, and the
-citizens were agog to see him.
-
-With his wife, brother, and child he “graced the chariot wheels” of the
-Roman general. Through the majestic city he strode, noble in his simple
-dignity, and still unconquered. While his companions in fear begged for
-mercy, he, proudly erect, and his eye, which had never quailed before a
-Roman brand, boldly bright, recked not of death, deeming honour a
-greater prize than life itself. As the triumphal procession passed along
-the Sacred Way he saw the stately temples, the massive arches, the
-beautiful statues, and the luxurious dwellings of the great city, and
-asked, “Why should these Romans, with all their grandeur, covet my poor
-hut at home?”
-
-Brought before Claudius, he made a noble defence and a proud appeal for
-clemency. Claudius was moved. He bade his lictors strike off the
-Briton’s chains and set him free. His after-career is unknown. In his
-noblest hour he vanishes from the pages of history.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Caractacus in Rome.=
- (_From the drawing by G. F. Watts, R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- A WARRIOR QUEEN.
-
-“_Me they seized and me they tortured, me they lashed and humiliated;_
-_Me the sport of ribald veterans, mine of ruffian violators._”
-
-Now move we on. Roman arms triumph in the field, but there is no peace
-in the land while the Druids, amidst the shadowy groves of Mona
-(Anglesea), cease not to stir the Britons to “mutiny and rage.”
-
-Suetonius Paulinus determines to extirpate them root and branch. He
-marches to the shores of Menai Strait, and at nightfall his men essay to
-cross in flat-bottomed boats. As they near the other side an
-awe-inspiring scene meets their eyes. The Britons are drawn up in dense
-array. To and fro run black-robed women, brandishing torches, “fierce as
-the Furies,” their long hair streaming in the sea breeze. Behind them
-the assembled Druids are lifting their hands to high heaven and calling
-down terrible curses on the invaders. Huge fires crackle and blaze, as
-though impatient of their victims. The frantic women, the cursing
-priests, the flaming torches, the roaring flames paralyze the Romans.
-They shudder at the sight, and hesitate to land. But discipline
-prevails; they answer to the appeals of their general, and sweep forward
-in resistless attack. The carnage is dreadful; the sacred groves are
-fired; the Druids perish in their own flames; and the setting sun sinks
-on a scene of desolation and death. As the gray embers die out, Druidism
-perishes.
-
-But elsewhere the flame of freedom still burns in many a British breast.
-While Suetonius is slaughtering the Druids, Boadicea, Queen of the
-Iceni, is rousing her followers to fury by the tale of her terrible
-wrongs. Her dying husband, to appease his conquerors, bequeathed half
-his wealth to them, in the hope that his wife and daughters might enjoy
-the rest in peace. He reckoned without his hosts. They seize the whole
-of the treasure; they scourge Boadicea with rods; they shamefully wrong
-her children, and goad her to madness.
-
-See her now in her war-chariot, her long yellow hair unbound, and
-falling below the golden girdle that encircles her waist, her eyes
-flashing vengeance as she pours forth burning words and pleads for
-revenge. Her men arm themselves, and almost every hut on the wide plain
-east of the Chilterns sends forth its warrior sworn to vengeance. They
-swoop upon the feebly garrisoned town of Camulodunum, and every Roman in
-it—man, woman, and helpless infant—is put to the sword. The Ninth
-Legion, coming to the rescue, is cut to pieces, and the whole East of
-England is in a blaze of rebellion. London falls before the conquering
-tribes, and seventy thousand Romans are butchered by the bloodthirsty
-victors. At last it seems that the yoke of Rome is broken, and Britain
-is once more free.
-
-The dread news at last reaches Suetonius. By forced marches he hastens
-to London. Too late to save the city, he turns north, and takes up a
-strong position, with woods and the sea behind and the open plain in
-front. The Britons are eager for the fight. So sure of victory are they
-that they have brought their women to the field as spectators, and have
-placed them in a row of wagons in the rear, so that their shrill cries
-of encouragement shall ring in their ears as they charge down on the
-foe.
-
-Boadicea, spear in hand, her daughters by her side, hurries from tribe
-to tribe in her chariot, exhorting her followers to conquer or die.
-“This,” she cries, “is a woman’s resolve; as for men, they may live to
-be slaves.” Maddened by her words, the Britons charge the foe, only to
-be repulsed with awful slaughter. They recoil from the brazen wall, and
-the legions carve their way through the disordered ranks, while the
-masterless steeds of the chariots, dashing hither and thither, add to
-the slaughter. The Romans are pitiless; they spare not even the women.
-
-The battle is over; Rome has triumphed, and Boadicea, heart-broken and
-hopeless, flies from the scene, and in shuddering horror at the fate
-which awaits her, ends her life and that of her children with poison.
-Cowper, in his well-known poem, represents a Druid in the hour of her
-death prophesying the fall of the Roman Empire and the far-off greatness
-of her stricken land,—
-
- “Ruffians, pitiless as proud,
- Heaven awards the vengeance due:
- Empire is on us bestowed,
- Shame and ruin wait for you.”
-
-[Illustration: =THE INVASION OF THE EMPEROR CLAUDIUS.=
- (_From the painting by Thomas Davidson._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE IRON HAND.
-
- “_Rome was the whole world, and all the world was Rome._”
-
-The next figure in our pageant to attract attention is again a Roman,
-but a man cast in a very different mould from the harsh and tyrannical
-Suetonius. In distant Rome the emperor has taken to heart the moral of
-the terrible rising led by Boadicea. He now knows that the Britons will
-never yield to severity. Consequently Agricola, the new governor, is a
-firm, just man, who strives by every means in his power to make the
-Roman yoke press as lightly as possible on British shoulders. He rules
-Britain much as a British Viceroy governs our Indian Empire to-day. He
-fosters the peaceful arts; he introduces the British nobles and their
-sons to the pastimes, the dress, the luxuries, and the manners of Rome.
-In course of time Britain sullenly submits to her bondage, though she is
-still held down by force of arms. The art and practice of war are now
-forbidden to the Britons, except to the flower of the youth, who are
-drafted into legions which garrison lands far from the call of home and
-kindred. The fiery Briton no longer wields the claymore; he becomes a
-skilled craftsman, a patient farmer, a delver in the mines.
-
-Still, Agricola has his share of fighting. The Britons of North Wales
-are subdued in the first year of his governorship. In the second year
-several tribes in North Britain feel the weight of his hand; and in the
-succeeding year he pushes into Caledonia, and carries his “eagles” to
-the Tay. During the following summer he builds a chain of forts from the
-Clyde to the Firth of Forth, vainly hoping that by this means he will
-pen the fierce Caledonians in their northern fastnesses. His greatest
-campaign is undertaken in the year 84 A.D., when he pushes into what is
-now Forfarshire and inflicts a terrible defeat on a host of Caledonians
-under their doughty chief Galgacus.
-
-Meanwhile his galleys are creeping northward along the coast. They touch
-at the Orkneys, they round Cape Wrath, run down the western coast with
-its maze of islands, see the Irish hills on the starboard, and follow
-the shores of South Britain until they espy Land’s End, and find
-themselves once more in the familiar waters of the Channel. This voyage
-proves without a doubt that Britain is an island.
-
-Agricola’s government, wise, firm, and prosperous, comes to an untimely
-end. The emperor is jealous of him, and recalls him to Rome on a
-trumped-up charge. What befalls him we do not know, but probably he
-comes to a violent end. At all events, he fades out of our history,
-leaving behind him a fame which emperors cannot dim nor unjust tribunals
-take away. Farewell, Agricola! We salute thee as the greatest governor
-which Britain ever knew while Rome held sway.
-
-And now the land is happy in having little history to record. A
-generation comes and goes, and all the time Rome is building up her
-government, carrying out her great military works, and bowing the neck
-of the enfeebled Briton to her yoke.
-
-What, you ask, is the appearance of Britain during the long years when
-the Roman peace has settled down on the land? Let us suppose that we are
-suddenly planted down in the island during the period Britain is part
-and parcel of the Roman Empire. Our first impression is that a great
-change has taken place in the appearance of the country. In many places
-the dense woods have disappeared; broad fields have been carved out of
-the forests, and are being carefully tilled by gangs of British slaves.
-Britain has become one of the great granaries of the Empire. Cattle and
-sheep by the hundred feed on the hillsides; and in Rome they speak of
-this land as _Britannia Felix_, “Britain the Happy.”
-
-With the disappearance of the forests the weather has improved. No
-longer is the island wrapped in steaming mists; no longer is the sky
-always clouded. Many of the rivers which formerly lost themselves in
-reedy marshes are carefully banked in, and now flow on as broad, fair
-streams. The morasses are crossed by causeways, the fens are drained,
-the rivers are bridged, the fords are easy, and the Britons loudly
-complain that their hands and bodies are worn out in the toilsome work.
-
-Look at the road beneath your feet. Broad and straight, it runs over
-hill and valley, across stream and moor and bog. British labourers,
-under the eye of Roman road-engineers—never surpassed before or
-since—have dug down to the rocky crust, and upon this have built three
-or four layers of squared or broken stones mixed with gravel, lime, and
-clay. The upper surface is closely paved, especially in the middle, with
-large flag-stones. This is one of the military highways, all spreading
-out, as our modern railways do, from London, and enabling the legions to
-pass with speed through the length and breadth of the province. Watling
-Street, Fosse Way, Hermen Street, Ikenild Street—the chief military
-roads of the island—may still be traced, and in parts are used to-day.
-
-While we are examining the road, we hear the tramp of armed men, and a
-legion swings by. Swarthy Italian, yellow-haired German, and dusky Moor
-march side by side armed with brazen shield, heavy javelin, and short,
-thick sword. In the midst is the glittering “eagle,” which the Roman
-would rather die than yield to a foe.
-
-Let us follow the legion towards yonder city. On we go, traversing the
-broad, white road, now crossing a stream by a bridge, now wading
-waist-deep through the ford of a broad river. Here and there amidst the
-trees we see the white buildings of a villa, the residence of some Roman
-official. Notice the beautiful garden as you pass, and admire the
-orchards of apples, plums, pears, and cherries, and the south wall where
-the clustering grapes are ripening in the sun. Anon we skirt the fringe
-of a cemetery with its mounds of earth marking the hollow graves, each
-with its urn of dark clay containing the ashes of the dead.
-
-On and on we march, swinging to the right or left as some mounted
-messenger bearing dispatches for his general spurs by. At last the roofs
-of the city are seen. Round about it is a great rampart of stone; and
-here and there we see a sentinel, who leans on his javelin and shades
-his eyes as he peers across the plain. We enter through one of the four
-gates, pass the guard, and are at once met with a civilization such as
-the Briton of old never dreamt of. We pass by rows of private dwellings
-of stone and coloured tiles, glorious with pavements and columns. Here
-we see the fluted or leaf-crowned pillars of a temple to Neptune; there
-a stately shrine to Minerva. Yonder are the public baths, with their
-marble halls and inlaid pavements—unequalled in design and workmanship
-outside Rome. Within these heated chambers the chilly Roman official may
-recall the comforting warmth of his Southern home, and dream of the day
-when he shall see the beloved City once more. Yonder is the court-house,
-and in front of it senators in flowing robes, with parchment scrolls in
-their hands, pace to and fro.
-
-Make way for the governor! Before him march his lictors with the axe in
-its bundle of rods, and behind him follows a guard of honour. Now a gang
-of slaves is driven by; and here comes a shock-headed British chieftain
-who has been captured in border warfare, and anon will face the judgment
-seat.
-
-Hard by is the amphitheatre, where the townsfolk throng to see plays
-performed, or better still to see the trained gladiators who fight to
-the death “to make a Roman holiday.” Here on the seats, tier above tier,
-sit the wealthier Britons of the town, aping their masters in dress,
-speech, and manner. No longer do they delight in the battle and the
-chase; they love the pleasures of the town. Their golden locks are shorn
-and their beards are trimmed in the Roman fashion; they vie with each
-other in the fold of a toga and the fit of a sandal; their days are
-spent in a weary quest of amusement. They bathe; they drink their wine;
-they feast; they dice; they go to the shows; and consider themselves
-fine fellows indeed, because they can lisp the tongue of their masters.
-
-The gleaming marble portico of the governor’s residence invites us.
-Within, the ladies of his household sew and spin, while their lord
-directs the affairs of his town and sits on the judgment seat. On their
-dressing-tables are mirrors of polished steel, combs of boxwood, and
-pins of bone for their long tresses. They gird up their robes with
-brooches of gold and silver; they wear jewelled bracelets on their arms
-and dainty shoes of silk on their feet. Supper is at three. Then the
-gentlemen will join them, and they will recline on the couches and feast
-on the dainties of the island, which they will wash down with a
-favourite wine trodden out in the presses of the distant home-land.
-
-Then we pass on to the “poor quarter,” where the workshops of the
-multifarious workers are situated and the huts of the humblest part of
-the population abound. Here there are squalor and misery in plenty, but
-still a touch of Roman manners.
-
-Such is the life of a Brito-Roman town in the palmy days of the Romans
-in Britain.
-
-And now let the pageant move on to the closing scenes of Roman sway.
-Rome is sinking fast. Within, her citizens have lost their old courage
-and genius for government. Without, the fierce Goths and Vandals are
-assailing her provinces. Rome’s grip on her Empire is being loosened
-more and more every day, and the wild hordes on her frontiers grow
-bolder and bolder as the Roman garrisons are withdrawn to defend the
-great city itself. So it is in Britain, where the Caledonians swarm over
-Hadrian’s Wall and fall upon the Britons of the south. The Roman troops
-mutiny, and set up their general as emperor, and even follow him to
-Gaul, where stout-hearted Severus, who now appears on the scene, makes
-short work of them and their leader.
-
-Meanwhile the ravages of the Caledonians increase, and to save the
-province old Severus, now sixty-two years of age and racked with the
-gout, crosses the Channel, and, carried in a litter before his army,
-sets his face for the border, in the hope of teaching the northern
-tribes a terrible lesson. Through the trackless swamps, the woods, the
-moorlands, and the wild mountains beyond the Wall, the old general hews
-his way until he reaches the shores of the Moray Firth, where the tribes
-make peace. Severus has accomplished nothing. His victory is a disaster;
-a few more such victories and he will have no army left. When the
-watchers on the Wall greet his approach with shouts of welcome, the
-bleaching bones of fifty thousand Romans mark his long line of march. He
-repairs the Wall, and then, grievously sick, retreats to York, where, on
-his deathbed, he plans a new campaign which will never be made.
-
-His death is the beginning of the end. Two hundred years of misery and
-constant strife set in. General after general makes himself emperor;
-they come and go in blood; and all the time Britain, despoiled of her
-youth to rot on foreign fields, is the prey of a pitiless foe. The
-Caledonians, who are now known as Picts and Scots, actually march on
-London and carry off its citizens as slaves. A new and even more dreaded
-foe, the terrible Saxon pirate, has also appeared; there are desperate
-attempts at defence, but they are one and all in vain. The hour of doom
-has struck, alike for Empire and Province. The Goth is thundering at the
-very gates of Rome. All the available troops of the Empire, wherever
-stationed, are called in to defend the city.
-
-The last of the legions leaves British shores in the year 407 amidst the
-sighs and tears of the defenceless inhabitants, who are now as sheep
-without a shepherd. Pitiful appeals—“the groans of the Britons”—are
-sent to Rome; but the weak and indolent emperor merely pauses in the
-absorbing pastime of feeding his pigeons to tell the despairing
-islanders that they must provide for their own safety. Thus Britain is
-left to her fate, and for two long centuries darkness closes round her.
-
-“The eagles have flown.” Their glory has departed, and they disappear
-from the pageant of our history. Rome found the natives warlike, though
-untrained; she left them helpless and feeble. True, she gave them the
-benefits of peace; she taught them arts and crafts; she gave them
-education, and a measure of comfort and prosperity. But she did not
-teach them how to defend themselves, and so, when overwhelmed by hardier
-foes, they perished miserably by fire and sword.
-
-[Illustration: =THE EMPEROR HADRIAN VISITING A POTTERY IN BRITAIN.=
- (_From the picture by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, R.A. By kind permission
- of the Artist._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III.
- THE COMING OF THE ENGLISH.
-
-
- KING ARTHUR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE.
-
- “_In twelve great battles overcame_
- _The heathen hordes, and made a realm and reigned._”
-
-THE light burns low on our pageant, and the scene grows dim and
-confused; yet we know only too well that a desperate struggle is going
-on. The battle-cries of warriors and the shrieks of the wounded are ever
-in our ears. The glare of blazing roof-trees lights up for a moment the
-ghastly scene, and reveals the pitiless work of slaughter. As it
-flickers out all is gloom and silence; it is the only peace that the
-stricken land knows.
-
-The scene shifts, but the drama is ever the same. There seems to be no
-end to the hordes of attackers. They come by sea and they come by land;
-most terrible of all are they whose serpent-headed ships are now seen
-faintly on the strand. The tide of war sets in their favour, though they
-are beaten back from time to time before the despairing onset of the
-Britons.
-
-Now you see amidst the press the noble form of that gallant British
-prince who is the very soul of the island defence. Arthur, the peerless
-knight, steps before us, “every inch a king.” He shines like a star in
-the gloom. Legend, song, and story have so woven themselves about his
-name and fame, so many fables have been told about him, so many wondrous
-deeds and miracles have been ascribed to him, that historians dispute
-his very existence.
-
-What do the old chroniclers tell us of him? They tell us that he was the
-son of Uther Pendragon, a valiant British king, who kept the Saxons at
-bay through many hard-fought years. Arthur’s birth had been kept a
-secret, and the child had been placed by the great wizard Merlin in the
-care of a knight named Sir Ector, who brought him up as his son. The
-ruin of the country seemed to be at hand, when Merlin induced the
-Archbishop of Canterbury to summon a meeting of all the great barons and
-nobles in London on Christmas Eve, in order that a king might be chosen.
-To this meeting came Sir Ector, his son Sir Kay, and Arthur.
-
-While they were at prayers a huge block of marble uprose in the
-churchyard. On the top of it was an anvil of solid steel, in which was
-embedded by the point a sword of marvellous brightness, bearing on its
-jewelled hilt these words, “Whoso pulleth me out of this stone and anvil
-is rightwise king born of England.” In vain did ambitious knights and
-squires, day after day, strive to draw forth the magic sword. All
-failed, and men despaired of discovering the rightful king. Now it
-chanced that on New Year’s Day a tournament was held, and amongst the
-knights who rode to take part therein was Sir Kay, who was accompanied
-by Arthur as his squire. As they rode towards the field, Sir Kay
-discovered that he had left his sword behind him at his lodging. He
-prayed Arthur to ride back for his sword, and Arthur, as a dutiful
-squire, obeyed. When, however, he came to the lodging he found it
-closed, for all who dwelt there had gone to the jousting.
-
-On his way Arthur had passed the churchyard where the sword was
-upstanding in the anvil. Thither he rode, and, seizing the sword, easily
-pulled it out and carried it to Sir Kay, who did many warlike feats with
-it. Then he showed it to his father, who knew the secret of Arthur’s
-birth, and guessed what had taken place. The sword was replaced, but
-Arthur drew it forth as easily as before. On this the old knight and his
-son knelt before Arthur, and acknowledged him as “rightwise king born of
-England.”
-
-On Twelfth Day, in the presence of all the kings and lords of the land,
-Arthur again drew the sword from the anvil, though no one else could
-move it. Still the great lords were loath to recognize the boy as king;
-and Merlin, seeing that Arthur’s right would not be admitted without
-bloodshed, gathered as many as he could of the best knights of the
-realm, and used all his magic arts to aid the good cause. On one
-occasion the kings and barons besieged Arthur in a strong tower, but
-when he was in the direst peril he sallied forth and attacked his
-besiegers. His horse was slain under him, and he was at the mercy of his
-foes. Then he drew the magic sword which he had taken from the anvil,
-and the fortune of war instantly turned in his favour. His sword—the
-far-famed Excalibur—gleamed like the radiance of thirty torches. Its
-flashing beams half-blinded Arthur’s foes—they could not see to strike;
-and so he vanquished them, and gained his first victory.
-
-Battle after battle was fought before Arthur was acknowledged as king by
-all men in the land, but at length the hour arrived when no one dared to
-dispute his title to supremacy. Then he wedded the beauteous but false
-Guinevere, and set up again the Round Table which his father Uther had
-founded. Around it were a hundred and fifty seats, and on the seats sat
-Arthur’s knights, all of equal degree, none first and none last. The
-chronicle of their deeds is too long to tell: many were the brave deeds
-they did together, many were the battles they fought, many were the
-distressed ladies they succoured, and great was the fame and glory that
-enshrined them. “Britain for the Britons” was their cry, and they
-haughtily sang:——
-
- “Blow trumpet, for the world is white with May;
- Blow trumpet, the long night hath rolled away!
- Blow through the living world. Let the king reign!
-
- “Shall Rome or heathen rule in Arthur’s realm?
- Flash brand and lance, fall battle-axe on helm;
- Fall battle-axe and flash brand! Let the king reign!”
-
-So Arthur leads on the Britons, with the image of the Virgin on his
-shield, and points his sword Excalibur towards the swarming foe. Twelve
-great battles he fights with the English, and for a time holds them at
-bay. Then some of his followers desert to the enemy, and he is sore
-beset. One by one his knights fall around him, and then he, too, is
-stricken to the ground. Sore wounded, Arthur calls the last of his
-knights, and bids him throw Excalibur into a lake. The sword is flung
-high into the air, and as it falls, lo, a hand comes out of the water
-and catches the magic brand by the hilt. Three times it is brandished,
-and then it vanishes for ever beneath the waves.
-
-“Alas!” cries Arthur, “my end draws near. Carry me to the edge of the
-water.” The knight does so, and there, awaiting the dying king, is a
-black barge, his destined bier. On the deck are three queens, with black
-hoods and crowns of gold. “Now, put me in the barge,” says Arthur; and
-when this is done, the queens receive him with great mourning and
-wailing, and one of them cries, “Ah, my dear brother, why hast thou
-tarried so long?” Then Arthur bids the knight farewell, and the barge
-slowly moves across the water. Sad and lonely, the knight watches it
-disappear
-
- “Down that long water, opening on the deep,
- Somewhere far off, pass on and on, and go
- From less to less, and vanish into light,
- And the new sun rose bringing the new year.”
-
-So fades Arthur from our view, a dim and mystical figure in life, a
-vision of undying splendour in death. Let the historians say what they
-will, men will still believe in him; they will still see the wearer of
-his mantle in every true knight, and still hold him a shining example to
-all who “bear without abuse the grand old name of gentleman.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Sir Tristram at the Court of Arthur.=
- (_From the fresco by William Dyer, R.A., in the King’s Robing-Room in the
- Houses of Parliament._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Hengist & Horsa]
-
-
-
-
- “_The blue-eyed race_
- _Whose force rough-handed should renew the world._”
-
-What warriors be these who now pass by? Tall, big-boned, blue-eyed men
-they are, with long yellow hair falling upon their shoulders from
-beneath their winged helmets.
-
-Their home is a sad, barren, overcrowded country, and their poverty
-drives them to a life of plunder on the seas and to the shores of more
-favoured lands. They love fighting as the breath of their nostrils; and
-now, in their long ships, these dreaded pirates harry Britain at a
-hundred points. Death frights them not, for he who falls gloriously in
-battle rides Odin’s horse to Valhalla, where his days will be spent in
-cleaving the helmets and hacking the limbs of like heroes with himself,
-and his nights in feasting on a great boar whose flesh never grows less
-and in drinking great draughts of mead out of the skulls of his enemies.
-For the “niddering” coward who dies ingloriously in his bed these
-English pirates have nothing but scorn and contempt. To avoid the shame
-of a peaceful death they will hurl themselves from the cliffs, or push
-out in a frail craft into tempestuous seas, and perishing amidst the
-wind and the waves, win the right to enter Odin’s halls. A Roman poet
-says of them: “Fierce are they beyond other foes; the sea is their
-school of war and the storm their friend; they are sea-wolves that live
-on the plunder of the world.” Such are the foes against whom Arthur
-fights and falls.
-
-The warriors whom we now greet are Hengist and Horsa, the two English
-chiefs who first won a foothold for themselves on the soil of Britain.
-An old legend tells us that they were scouring the coasts of Kent what
-time Vortigern, the British king, was sore beset by the Picts and Scots.
-Half beside himself with terror at their raids, he calls on these
-adventurers to aid him. If they will drive back the northern barbarians,
-they shall have food and pay for their services. The bargain is struck.
-Hengist and Horsa beach their keels on the gravel spit at Ebbsfleet and
-land their warriors. The Picts and Scots are driven back, and the
-victorious English return from the fray. Then they ask a whimsical
-boon—namely, as much land as a bull’s hide can encompass. The request
-is granted, and Hengist cuts his bull’s hide into long strips, and with
-them engirdles a rocky place, whereon he erects a fortress. Thus the
-English secure their first foothold in Britain.
-
-The news is wafted across the sea, and a new swarm of “sea-wolves”
-appears. They come in seventeen ships, and on the stern of the leading
-vessel the banner of the White Horse waves in the breeze. With the
-newcomers arrives a new conqueror, wearing no helmet and carrying no
-battle-axe, but armed only with a pair of beautiful blue eyes and a face
-of surpassing loveliness. She is Hengist’s fair daughter Rowena, the
-English princess who is destined to win more British acres by her bright
-glances than the “sea-wolves” have won by their swords and numberless
-forays. Vortigern feasts with her father, and she hands him the cup of
-greeting which she has kissed, and bids him “Waes hael.” He falls a
-willing victim to her charms; he woos and wins her, and as a marriage
-gift Vortigern bestows upon her brothers a large part of his kingdom.
-
-Bitterly resenting this gift, the jealous Britons gather in arms and
-attack the English. Horsa is slain at the battle of the
-Fort-of-the-Eagles, and for a time the banner of the White Horse is
-trailed in the dust. Hengist, driven to his ships, returns with
-reinforcements, offering peace to the British chiefs, whom he invites to
-a feast. Both sides are to come unarmed to the hospitable board; but
-Hengist orders his followers to conceal their swords beneath their
-garments, and when the wine-cup has gone round, the fatal signal is
-given, and they fall upon their guests and slaughter every Briton
-present save Vortigern. The legends vary, but the truth remains that the
-English mastered the Britons on the south and east coasts, and
-established large settlements. Hengist’s success was the signal for a
-host of other English adventurers to put their fortune to the test. They
-swarmed across the North Sea, and the work of conquest and settlement
-began.
-
-Little boots it to tell of the savage and gory strife that raged in this
-island during the century and a half which followed. “Some of the
-Britons,” says an old chronicler, “were caught in the hills and
-slaughtered; others were worn out with hunger, and yielded to a
-life-long slavery. Some passed across the sea; others trusted their
-lives to the clefts of the mountains, to the forests, and to the rocks
-of the sea.” One hundred and fifty years after Hengist and Horsa landed
-on the Isle of Thanet the English ruled in this land from the North Sea
-to the Severn, and from the English Channel to the Firth of Forth.
-
-Britain had become England. No longer was it the land of the Britons but
-the land of the English. In the wild, rugged western part of the island
-the Britons alone remained independent. Gradually their land was shorn
-from them till only the hills and valleys of Wales were left to them.
-There they remain to this day, speaking the speech of Arthur, and
-singing the lays of those far-off ages when the whole fair land of
-Britain was theirs from sea to sea.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- ETHELBERT AND BERTHA.
-
- “_Our clock strikes when there is a change from hour to hour;
- but no hammer in the Horologe of Time peals through the Universe
- when there is a change from Era to Era._”
-
-Hand in hand a king and queen pass by, linked in wedded love and in
-undying fame. She is a sweet Frankish princess, with the light of tender
-affection in her eye, and the sweet serenity of an uplifting faith on
-her brow. He is a tall, bearded Saxon, with the martial air of one who
-has fought battles from his youth up; yet withal he is calm and
-reflective, equally at home on the battlefield, in the council chamber,
-and on the judgment seat. He is a pagan and she is a Christian; he bows
-before Odin, she before Christ.
-
-Well-nigh a century and a half have gone since Hengist and Horsa sped
-their keels to these shores as the advance-guard of those great
-invasions which planted a new race on the soil. Generations of English
-men and women have come and gone since their sires with battle-axe and
-brand reft the land from its old inhabitants. No longer do the English
-war with the Britons, the remnant of whom dwell safely in the wild
-mountains and valleys of the west, or serve their new masters as slaves.
-They now war with each other. Ambitious kings strive to make themselves
-supreme in the land, and many a fierce fight is fought between the
-rivals. Now and then a powerful king reduces his fellow-kings to
-obedience, but frequently the conqueror of one month is the hunted
-fugitive of the next. Ethelbert, the king who now passes by with Bertha
-his wife, has made himself overlord of all the land except Northumbria.
-With this exception, his sceptre is supreme from the Forth to the
-English Channel.
-
-Rome, once the proud and ruthless “mistress of the world,” has lost for
-ever her ancient sway. No longer does the wide world stand in awe of
-her. But on the ruins of her lost dominion a new, a merciful, and a
-blessed power is springing up. She has become the centre of the
-Christian religion, and ere long she stretches out her missionary arms
-to the isles of the west. St. Patrick is commissioned as the ambassador
-of God to convert the Scots in Ireland to the new faith. Devoted men in
-skin-clad boats of wicker-work cross the channel from the Emerald Isle
-to carry the good news to the natives of south-west Scotland. Amongst
-them is the great Columba of Donegal, prince in the eyes of his fellows,
-but in his own a meek bondsman of Christ. With his twelve companions he
-steers for the rising sun, and his barks run ashore on the little bare
-island of Iona, where he lands and builds his wattled church and the
-rude huts of his infant monastery. From this retreat, which has become
-one of the most sacred spots on earth, Columba’s friends go fearlessly
-through the land into the wildest glens and the remotest clachans,
-preaching the gospel, and slowly and surely winning the Picts and Scots
-to Christianity.
-
-But England is still in her pagan darkness; she knows nothing except by
-vague rumour of the new faith which is slowly transforming the world.
-The English still worship their fierce old deities; still swear by oak,
-thorn, and ash; still look to Valhalla as the meed of the warrior who
-dies in hard-fought battle. Men of kindred blood still struggle for
-mastery under their kings, and the vanquished are still found in the
-slave-markets of the Continent.
-
-It is the sight of English lads exposed for sale in Rome which touches
-the heart of a young deacon, and stirs him to cherish the conversion of
-these islanders as the great ideal of his life. He sees the white limbs,
-the fair faces, the blue eyes, and the yellow hair of the lads, and asks
-the merchant whence they come. “From Britain,” is the answer. “Are they
-Christians or pagans?” is his next question; and when he learns that
-they are pagans, he sighs heavily and exclaims, “Ah! grief of griefs
-that the prince of darkness should lay claim to beings of such fair
-form; that there should be so much grace in the countenance, yet none in
-the soul.”
-
-When he learns that they are of the race of Angles, his propensity to
-pun—ever the weakness of the scholar—finds a rare opportunity. “The
-Angles,” cried he, “should be _angels_. From Deira come they? They shall
-be snatched _de ira Dei_—from the wrath of God. And their king, say
-you, is Ella? _Hallelujah_ shall be sung in Ella’s land.” Thus out of
-his infinite pity for the afflicted and distressed, Gregory’s heart
-begins to yearn towards the far-off islanders still in heathen bondage.
-The old stories tell us that he purchased the slaves, clothed them and
-taught them, and sent them back to England. Several times he begs to be
-allowed to visit England in order to realize his old wish, but Rome
-cannot spare him. In the fullness of time he becomes Pope, and though
-the triple crown is on his head and he is surrounded with the splendour
-of a sovereign, he does not forget the beautiful barbarians in their
-island home, and he only waits a favourable opportunity to send a
-mission to them.
-
-The long-looked-for opportunity soon arrives. Ethelred of Kent weds the
-fair daughter of the King of the Franks, and the marriage contract
-guarantees the Christian princess the right to exercise her religion
-unmolested. She brings in her train a single priest, and in the little
-church of St. Martin’s, Canterbury—built in Roman times, and still
-remaining as the oldest Christian church in the land—she kneels before
-the altar, and prays oft and earnestly that the land of her adoption may
-be won for Christ. She pleads with her noble-minded husband to forsake
-his gods and embrace the new faith. He hears, and he ponders, and at
-length, in answer to her prayers, sends a message to Rome, inviting
-Gregory to send the mission which he has long contemplated.
-
-And now let the pageant proceed. Splendid and imposing it is. Somewhere
-on the Isle of Thanet, where Cæsar’s legions had landed, and Hengist and
-Horsa had drawn their keels ashore, a double throne is set up beneath
-the open sky. Ethelbert and his chiefs will meet the monks under no
-roof, lest witchcraft should prevail. Beneath the canopy of heaven king
-and queen—he willing to be convinced, but withal calmly critical; she,
-prayerfully expectant—seat themselves. They have hardly done so before
-the voices of the monks chanting a psalm are borne on the breeze. Louder
-and louder it swells as the procession draws near, headed by a picture
-of the Saviour and a silver crucifix.
-
-Halting at the foot of the throne, the head of the mission, Augustine,
-begins to declare with all the fervour of his nature the blessings and
-hopes of the new faith, and earnestly beseeches the king to forswear his
-gods. Ethelbert listens, but the hour of his conversion is not yet. His
-answer reveals his clear judgment and his open mind. “Your promises are
-fair, but new and uncertain. I cannot abandon the rites which my people
-have hitherto observed, but I will hold you harmless and treat you
-hospitably. Nor will I forbid any one whom you can convince to join in
-your faith.” No fairer answer can be expected, and Augustine begins his
-labours under happy auspices. Ere long Ethelbert is baptized with ten
-thousand of his subjects, and Augustine has done his greatest and most
-enduring work; he has won a kingdom for his Master.
-
-Pass on, Ethelbert and Bertha, linked in wedded love and in undying
-fame! It is your blessed privilege to plant the cross of Christ in the
-southern shires of this our England. Long and sore will be the struggle
-ere its beams irradiate the whole land, but it will conquer at last, and
-in the long roll of saints and martyrs who have striven valiantly in the
-divine work your twin names shall stand proud and high.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =COLUMBA PREACHING.=
- (_From the picture by William Hole, R.S.A._)]
-
-[Illustration: =Augustine preaching to Ethelbert and Bertha.=
- (_From the picture by Stephen B. Carlill._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE SINGER OF THE FIRST ENGLISH SONG.
-
- “_Then felt I like some watcher of the skies_
- _When a new planet swims into his ken._”
-
-Who comes hither? A simple, shy monk, half-withdrawing from the gaze of
-the bystanders, and unwitting that it is he whom men greet with such
-resounding acclaim. Kings and knights have flaunted their plumed helms
-and storied banners before us; but here is a conqueror in the realm of
-peace, a paladin of the mind and heart. His home was in the abbey which
-royal Hilda had founded on the wind-swept east cliff of Whitby. Not
-always did he wear the cowl of the monk. When the divine gift which
-placed him first in the muster-roll of English poets descended upon him
-he was an obscure cowherd who tended the cattle and slept in the byre.
-When the day’s work was done, and the servants of the abbey feasted
-together, he was wont to flee abashed as the harp came towards him and
-his turn arrived to tune the simple lay for the entertainment of his
-fellows.
-
-Once when he had risen from the feast and crept quietly to his shed, he
-fell asleep and dreamed that One came to him and said, “Cædmon, sing Me
-something.” “I know not how to sing,” replied the man; “and for this
-cause left I the feast.” “Yet,” said the Vision, “you must sing to Me.”
-“What shall I sing?” he asked. “Sing,” the Vision said, “about the
-beginning of created things.” At once Cædmon began a hymn in praise of
-the Creator of the world. Beautiful images flashed into his mind, noble
-words flew to his lips. He had won a victory far beyond that of any
-conqueror in any age; he had marshalled in triumph the legions that most
-surely sway the hearts and inspire the deeds of his countrymen; he had
-composed the first great English song.
-
-We salute thee, Cædmon. Thy name will ever be dear to those who cherish
-their noble English tongue, and rejoice in the majestic literature which
-has glorified it for all time.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV.
- THE VIKING INVASIONS.
-
-
- THE COMING OF THE SEA-KINGS.
-
- “_What sea-worn barks are those which throw_
- _The light spray from each rushing prow?_
- _Their frozen sails, the low, pale sun_
- _Of Thule’s night has shone upon._”
-
-ROOM for the Vikings! the sons of the creek, the bluff, stalwart rovers
-who love the salt sea with a consuming passion, and shout with glee as
-the waves foam beneath them and tempest roars about them. Mighty
-warriors are they, wild and untamed as the element they love, swift as
-the falcon, remorseless as the vulture, fierce as the wolf. From the
-shores of the Baltic they come, swarming out of their barren homelands,
-and descending with fire and sword upon all the coasts of Western
-Europe. Every champion amongst them ardently desires to be a _Berserk_,
-and thus to be regarded as the bravest of the brave, utterly
-contemptuous of death. These Berserks within sight of the foe are wont
-to lash themselves into a frenzy, so that they bite their shields and
-rush to the fray, wielding club or battle-axe with almost superhuman
-strength.
-
-No Christian message of peace and brotherhood has touched their hearts;
-they still swear by the Asir, and still glory in their descent from the
-grim gods of their dark and hopeless creed. They lust for blood, and
-their fiercest loathing is reserved for them who have abandoned Odin and
-Thor for the mild faith of the “White Christ.” They shed with unholy joy
-the blood of priests; they glory in the plunder and the burning of
-churches. They are a scourge, not only to England, Scotland, and
-Ireland, but to the whole of Europe; and men pray in their churches,
-“From the fury of the Northmen, good Lord, deliver us.”
-
-Never in the whole history of the world have men “followed the sea” with
-such fearlessness and keen delight as these Vikings. The sea is their
-“swan road,” their “Viking path,” their “land of the keel,” their
-“glittering home.” Their ships are “deer of the surf” and “horses of the
-sea.” Frail barks they seem to us, small and not very seaworthy; but the
-men who man them are consummate sailors, and they make astounding
-voyages with nothing but a thin plank between them and destruction. The
-Orkneys know them; they have seen Hecla shoot out its fiery lava in
-remote Iceland; they have even trodden the icy shores of Greenland, far
-across the dreaded Western Ocean.
-
-A Viking fleet is even now heading for our shores. Look at the long
-black ships, with their high prows curved in the semblance of a serpent.
-The sun glints on the bright shields which protect their bulwarks, on
-the mail which the warriors wear, and on the battle-axes and spears
-which they wield. The great sails flaunt painted devices—the eagle, the
-bear, the wolf, and the raven. Fierce are these creatures, but fiercer
-still the men who now come to harry these shores.
-
-Yonder little village is happy and peaceful in the morning sunshine. The
-cosy farmhouses and the smiling fields with their rich promise of
-harvest tell the tale of comfort and contentment. Alas! the scene will
-change when these sea-wolves arrive. They will sail up the river-mouth,
-throw up stockaded earthworks to secure their retreat, and then begin
-the congenial work of pillage and slaughter. Men, women, and innocent
-babes will be slain, cattle will be driven off, and the smoke of burning
-roof-trees will darken the sky. Yonder minster, where the frightened
-monks are trembling before the altar, will be raided; its treasures, the
-gifts of generations of pious souls, will be seized; the gilded cross
-will be torn down and trampled upon, and blood-eagles will be carved on
-the backs of the hated priests. Then torch and flame will do their work;
-and the Vikings, having devastated the countryside like locusts, will
-retire to their ships glutted with blood and laden with booty.
-
-Again and again they will return, bolder and bolder, and at length they
-will covet the fair land as their home. They will come in such force
-that they will reave half the land from the English, and then a Viking
-will rule the realm. Ay, and Englishmen will come to honour and love
-him. Then the Viking settlers will disappear, absorbed into the mass of
-the nation, and endowing the national character with a new strain of
-courage, daring, and adventure. But before that happy day dawns the land
-will run red with blood, many homes will be ruined, many patriotic
-hearts will break, and the star of England will seem to have set for
-ever.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: ALFRED THE GREAT]
-
-
-
-
- “_Behold a pupil of the monkish gown,_
- _The pious Alfred, king to Justice dear;_
- _Lord of the harp and liberating spear,_
- _Mirror of princes!_”
-
-Now, amidst the gloom, the greatest of all our kings appears. “England’s
-Darling,” and “Truth-Teller,” men called him in his lifetime, and these
-proud titles well attest the affection and esteem in which the men of
-his own age justly held him. Nor has his glory faded with the passing of
-centuries. The more his career is studied, the greater he grows and the
-brighter shines his peerless fame. His nature was a beautiful blend of
-courage and tenderness, perseverance and patience. He loved justice and
-mercy, and he lived and died for his people. Warrior, statesman,
-scholar, lawgiver, and true patriot, he stands for all time as the type
-and model of the perfect king. A thousand years have sped since his pure
-spirit departed, but still he is one of the greatest glories of our
-land. His life was one long struggle against fierce foes, against the
-darkness of ignorance, against the desolation of ruin and the cruel
-pangs of bodily pain, but he triumphed over all—
-
- “Not making his high place the lawless perch
- Of wing’d ambitions, nor a vantage-ground
- For pleasure; but through all this tract of years
- Wearing the white flower of a blameless life.”
-
-And now for his story, which writers have loved to dwell upon in every
-succeeding age. Born in royal Wantage, where his statue now stands, he
-was but three years of age when the Vikings made their first settlement
-in England. In that year a great army of Danes, with three hundred and
-fifty ships, swept up the Thames, sacked London and Canterbury, and put
-to flight an English army. Two years later, Alfred’s father, Ethelwulf,
-and his elder brother, Ethelbald, met them in battle, and after a
-stubborn fight won a great victory. Such a desperate struggle had not
-taken place in England for many years, and more than half the Danish
-army perished on the field. Another victory followed, and for a time the
-Danes were checked. So far, their coming had been but the low mutterings
-of the fierce storm which was soon to burst in all its fury. Alfred was
-cradled in an hour of terrible anxiety and ever-present danger.
-
-Almost the first incident which his biographer recounts is the pretty
-story of how his mother sought to encourage her sons to learn to read.
-Showing the lads a beautifully-illuminated volume of English verse, and
-reading aloud some of its contents, she promised the volume to the first
-of them who could read it for himself. Fired by the desire to possess
-the volume, and also to learn something more of its wondrous pages,
-Alfred sought out a tutor, and ere long was able to claim it as his own.
-The love of letters, thus early demonstrated, grew with the years. In
-his later and more peaceful days he surrounded himself with scholars,
-and loved their company and converse better than aught else. Asser, the
-Welsh monk, who was his devoted friend, tells us that as “Alfred
-advanced through the years of infancy and youth, he appeared more comely
-in person than his brothers, and his countenance, speech, and manners
-were more pleasing than theirs. His noble birth and noble nature
-implanted in him from his cradle a love of wisdom above all things.”
-
-In his twentieth year Alfred married a noble Mercian lady named Mercill.
-Meanwhile, the Danes, growing bolder and bolder, had become a grievous
-peril to the land. In the year of Alfred’s marriage they marched on
-York, and capturing it, pushed into Mercia and wintered at Nottingham.
-In the twenty-second year of Alfred’s life they triumphed over Edmund,
-King of the East Angles. Him they dragged forth and bound to a tree.
-Then with fiendish glee they shot arrows into his limbs, and at length,
-unable to break his proud and confident spirit, they struck off his
-devoted head. They parted his realm amongst themselves, and placed their
-chief, Guthrum, on his throne.
-
-Next year King Ethelred and Alfred were overcome by the Danes at
-Reading. Roused by grief and shame at the loss of this battle, the
-English mustered in force and advanced against their foes at Ashdown.
-While Ethelred remained in his tent at prayer, Alfred led his men to the
-fight, and “with the rush of a wild boar,” charged up the slopes on
-which the Danes had stationed themselves. Long and fierce was the fray,
-but at nightfall victory rested with the English.
-
-Their joy was short-lived; a fortnight later the Danes were again
-victorious, and soon another Viking army from across the sea joined
-them. In the same year died Ethelred of his wounds, and Alfred was
-crowned king of a realm which was little more than a name. A month later
-his small army was overcome, and black indeed was the outlook. “Let no
-one be surprised,” says Asser, “that the English had but a small number
-of men, for they had been all but worn out by eight battles in this
-self-same year; in the which there died one king, nine chieftains, and
-innumerable troops of soldiers.”
-
-Two years of desperate fighting followed, and the Danes were victorious
-almost everywhere. At length Alfred was forced to withdraw with the
-little band which still followed him to the marshes of Somersetshire.
-Here, in the midst of a vast morass where the Tone and the Parret join
-their waters, lay a low lift of ground some two acres in extent, girded
-in by almost impassable fen-lands. This was the island of Athelney, and
-here Alfred threw up a fort, and waited and longed for happier days. It
-was about this time that the fugitive king, flying from his foes,
-entered the hut of a cowherd and begged for shelter. In the hut occurred
-that incident which is so familiar to every reader of English history.
-Asser tells the story, and doubtless he had it from Alfred’s own lips.
-It happened that on a certain day the wife of the cowherd prepared to
-bake her bread. The king, sitting near the hearth, was making ready his
-bows and arrows and other warlike implements, when the rough
-countrywoman beheld her loaves burning at the fire. She ran forward and
-hastily removed them, scolding the king for his inattention and
-carelessness:—
-
- “Casn’t thee mind the ca-akes, man, and doossen zee ’em burn?
- I’m bound thee’s eat ’em vast enough, zo zoon as ’tis thee turn.”
-
-“The unlucky woman,” continues Asser, “little thought that she was
-addressing the King Alfred.” We can readily imagine the momentary anger
-of the king as he heard the shrill clamour of the angry housewife, and
-the good-natured smile that almost immediately followed when he
-recognized the justice of the reproof. Legend, which has been very busy
-with this period of eclipse in Alfred’s career, tells us that he
-persuaded his host to study, and that in after and happier years the
-cowherd held high office in the Church.
-
-Though apparently at his last extremity, Alfred did not abandon the
-struggle. Scarcely a day passed but he sallied forth at the head of his
-little band, to assail such forces of the enemy as approached his
-neighbourhood. In this guerilla warfare, amidst the swamps whose secret
-paths were quite unknown to the stranger, Alfred schooled himself in the
-arts of surprise, rapid onset, and equally rapid retreat. Patriotic
-Englishmen joined him in his fastness, and day by day his forces grew.
-
-At length the dark night passed away, and the dawn of a new day began to
-flash the horizon. The hour of deliverance had arrived.
-
-The Danes had established themselves in a strongly fortified camp at
-Chippenham, in Wiltshire. The hill which they occupied is still pointed
-out, and from the neighbouring plain it still appears rugged, abrupt,
-and difficult of ascent. The English forces were too few to venture on
-an unpremeditated attack; therefore Alfred arrayed himself as a
-wandering minstrel, and, harp in hand, approached the enemy’s outposts.
-The _scald_ would be right welcome, for the Danes ever loved a song, and
-camp life was dull. Alfred sang and played to the Danes, and was led
-even to the tent of Guthrum, the chief. As he struck the chords and
-trolled the lay, his keen eyes were busy photographing the defences of
-the camp on the sensitive plate of his memory. Dismissed with praise and
-gifts from the Danish entrenchments, he hastened to his island retreat,
-and there matured his plan of attack. The naked sword and the war-arrow
-were borne by loyal hands through the length and breadth of the
-south-western counties, and soon all was ready for the fateful battle.
-
-Alfred drew up his forces on the plain, and Guthrum marshalled his men
-in front, with Bratton Hill, crowned by its strong encampment, as a
-secure retreat in the rear. Massing his men in a close shield-wall, the
-English king gave the signal for battle. His soldiers rushed on the
-enemy; they broke the Danish ranks, and a fierce hand-to-hand fight
-raged on the plain. Furious was the _mêlée_ of sweeping sword, crashing
-battle-axe, and sharp javelin, and slowly the Danes began to gain
-ground, when a storm of arrows suddenly fell upon them, followed by an
-impetuous charge of English spearmen. The Danes were swept to earth; and
-through the island ranks ran the inspiring rumour that a renowned
-English saint had joined the fray, and that angelic hosts were fighting
-for the stricken land. The English had fought stoutly before; now they
-were irresistible. The Danes fell before their onslaught like corn
-before the reaper’s sickle. All was over; the shattered remnant of the
-Vikings turned and fled to their hill-top camp, leaving the field strewn
-with their dead and dying.
-
-Then Alfred girdled the hill with his forces, and for fourteen days
-closely besieged the Danes. Hunger, cold, fear, and despair gradually
-undermined the resolution of the besieged, and every day Alfred’s
-triumphant army was swelled by new recruits. On the fourteenth day
-Guthrum yielded, and humbly sued for peace. “They engaged to give the
-king as many hostages as he pleased, and to receive none from him in
-return—in which manner they had never before made peace with any one.”
-
-“The king took pity on them, and received from them hostages, as many as
-he would. Thereupon the Danes swore that they would straightway leave
-the kingdom, and their king, Guthrum, promised to embrace Christianity
-and receive baptism.” Alfred himself was Guthrum’s sponsor at the
-ceremony, “receiving him as a son by adoption, and raising him up from
-the holy font of baptism. After this he remained twelve days with the
-king, who, together with all his companions, gave him rich gifts.”
-
-In the year 879 the Danes left Chippenham, and after a time retired into
-East Anglia and settled down quietly in the Danelaw, according to the
-solemn treaty which the two kings had made. Again and again Viking
-fleets assailed Alfred, but he was more than a match for them. He no
-longer awaited their onsets, but built ships stronger and swifter than
-those of his foes, and thus was enabled to meet them on their own
-element. Alfred built the first English navy, and inaugurated that
-policy of naval defence which Britons of every succeeding age have
-recognized as the wisest and best. The foe who threatens our island
-shores must be met and vanquished on the encircling sea.
-
-Right nobly did Alfred bestir himself during the few years of life
-remaining to him. He restored the towns, he founded monasteries, he
-gathered learned men about him, and laboured to build up England anew.
-Studious from his early years, he endeavoured to enrich his own mind and
-to encourage his people to learn the arts of reading and writing. Into
-the homely language understanded of the people he translated the best
-and most useful works of the Latin writers of his time, and founded
-schools, that the sons of his nobles might not grow up unlettered as
-their fathers. He gave the best of his attention to the four greatest
-things of national life—law, justice, religion, and education. He
-collected and studied the old laws of the nation: what was good he
-retained, what was bad he rejected. Never was king more eager to advance
-learning and make new discoveries. He sent embassies to the remotest
-parts of the then known world, and our earliest accounts of Arctic
-exploration are from his pen.
-
-Method and order were the rule of his life. One portion of his income he
-allotted to his warriors and attendants; another to the buildings which
-his architects from beyond the seas erected for him; a third for the
-relief of foreigners; and the remainder for the Church, the schools, and
-the poor. His time, too, was methodically bestowed on good works. Eight
-hours each day were devoted to rest and refreshment; another eight hours
-to affairs of state; the remaining eight hours to study and religious
-exercises. To enable him rightly to apportion the time which he deemed
-so precious, he fashioned wax candles, six of which, burned in
-succession, marked the lapse of twenty-four hours. To guard against the
-irregularities caused by draughts, he enclosed his candles in lanterns
-of thin, transparent horn. Thus he measured his time, zealous that the
-golden sands should not run out unheeded, and that no day should pass
-without its tale of duty done, opportunities seized, and benefits
-conferred.
-
-And now we must bid farewell to this peerless king. A thousand summers
-have come and gone since his countrymen bore him to his tomb, deeming
-that the light of their land had been extinguished. They loved and
-honoured him, and we revere his memory as that of probably the most
-perfect character in history. He remains as the mirror of monarchs in
-which they may perceive the elements of true majesty, and an inspiring
-example to all of triumphant devotion, fortitude, and faith.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Alfred in the Camp of the Danes.=
- (_From the design by H. A. Bone. By permission of Antony Gibbs, Esq._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- KING CANUTE.
-
-“_Canute o’ercame the race of Ethelred, and Danes wielded the dear realm
- of Angle-land, eight-and-twenty of winters numbered._”
-
-No saint he who now strides by—a thrice-crowned king, with the Viking
-blood surging tumultuously in his veins. England, Norway, and Denmark
-own his sway; but though Denmark is the land of his birth, England is
-the land of his love and pride. Dane he is in form and feature, but his
-lust of strife and fierce Berserk rage are controlled by cool judgment
-and the generous instincts of a good but wayward heart, so that in his
-later days he grows wise and temperate. His father, Sweyn, “lighting his
-war-beacons in blazing homestead and town,” has harried the realm of
-England in revenge for a cruel massacre of his kinsmen by a weak and
-ruthless king, and Canute, ere his beard has grown, has entered into a
-glorious heritage.
-
-Not without fierce strife has this kingdom of England come to him. He
-has met his match in Edmund Ironside, true hero and true Englishman. But
-Edmund is dead, and the young Dane is unchallenged master of the land.
-And now, secure in the possession of three kingdoms, he sets himself to
-win the confidence of his new subjects. The armed bands with which he
-has conquered his new realm are sent home, save for a stalwart
-bodyguard. He will trust his Englishmen, and will link his fortunes with
-theirs. He marries the beautiful widow of the late king, and labours to
-hold the balance even between Dane and native. As the years go by his
-new subjects come to be his best supporters, and England is England
-still, though a Dane sits on the throne.
-
-A pagan born, he nevertheless becomes a zealous Christian, and many a
-fair monastery is reared and endowed by him. He strives to do justice to
-all men, and he pledges himself to rule according to the old and
-cherished law of the realm. One day, however, the fierce spirit within
-him suddenly flames up, and he slays with his own hand a soldier of his
-guard. When his wrath has died down he bitterly repents of the deed, and
-deplores the evil example which he has set to others. Then he descends
-from his throne and bids the Witan judge him and punish him, regardless
-of his rank and power. Flinging himself prostrate on the ground, he
-awaits the verdict which his judges dare not give, despite his promise
-of free pardon. They bid him appoint his own judgment. The fine for
-slaying a man is forty talents of silver. Canute sentences himself to
-pay nine times the sum, and nine talents of gold in addition. Some see
-in this act a mere theatrical display, a crafty method of re-enforcing
-the law which he, the lawgiver, had violated. Let us be charitable, and
-believe that he was sincere and honest in desiring to atone for his
-crime.
-
-Better known is the story of the rebuke which he administered to the
-flattering courtiers who crowded round his throne. They, recounting his
-mighty deeds of valour, his conquests, his glories, were not ashamed to
-say, “Great lord, even the sea obeys you. The rising tide dare not wet
-the hem of your garment.” On the seashore Canute set up his throne, and
-as the waters rolled in and splashed about his feet he cried, “Confess
-ye now how frivolous and vain is the might of an earthly king compared
-with the Great Power who rules the elements, and can say unto the ocean,
-‘Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther.’”
-
- “And he strongly bade them never more to kneel to human clay,
- But alone to praise and worship that which earth and seas obey;
- And his golden crown of empire never wore he from that day.
- King Canute is dead and gone; parasites exist alway.”
-
-An old chronicler tells us a pleasing story of his love of minstrelsy.
-It was on the eve of a feast which he desired to keep in the abbey at
-Ely. As his barge sped through the maze of waters by which the island
-was approached, the voices of the chanting monks were borne faintly on
-the breeze. Bidding the rowers cease their work, Canute listened with
-unfeigned delight to the strain, rendered all the more harmonious by
-distance and the intervening waters. Then as the boat shot forward once
-more he composed the following verse, keeping time with the beat of the
-oars:——
-
- “Merrily sang the monks of Ely,
- As Cnut the king rowed by;
- Row, knights, near the land,
- And let us hear these good monks sing.”
-
-In Rome, the heart of Christendom, the Viking was still regarded as a
-heathen pirate, a deadly enemy alike of civilization and true religion.
-Canute was eager to remove this impression, and to bring his empire into
-union with the greatest spiritual power of the world. He therefore
-undertook a pilgrimage to Rome. West Saxon kings for three hundred years
-past had visited the Pope and the tombs of the saints, but now, for the
-first time, a Dane set out on the pious journey. A long train of
-attendants accompanied him, but he himself wore a pilgrim’s robe and
-carried a pilgrim’s staff in his hand. As he journeyed along the
-pilgrims’ route, he bethought him of those who should hereafter follow
-him, and made treaties with the masters of the Alpine passes, so that
-his subjects should come and go unmolested. Arrived in Rome, he prayed
-before the altars, placed rich gifts on every shrine, and purchased
-relics for the churches at home.
-
-From Rome he wrote to the Witan a letter which reveals him in a most
-favourable light. Ere Canute passes by and our pageant knows him no
-more, let us extract one passage from the message which he sent to his
-people: “I would have you know that I have made a vow to Almighty God to
-regulate my life by the dictates of virtue, and to govern my people with
-judgment. If during the rashness of youth I have done anything contrary
-to justice, I will for the future, with the help of God, amend this to
-the best of my power. Wherefore I require and command all my counsellors
-to lend themselves to no injustice, either in fear of me or to favour
-the powerful. I recommend them, if they prize my friendship and their
-own lives, to do no harm or violence to any man, rich or poor. Let every
-one, in his place, enjoy that which he possesses, and not be disturbed
-in that enjoyment, either in the king’s name or in the name of any other
-person, nor under pretext of levying money for my treasury, for I need
-no money obtained by unjust means.”
-
-Truly a kingly resolve! Looking down the long avenue of time, we
-recognize Canute as a “conscious creator of England’s greatness.” His
-empire was destined to fall to pieces at his death, and ere seven years
-had sped his line was extinct. A brief space more, and another tide of
-conquest swept over his beloved England. Another king of Viking breed
-held the sceptre which had fallen from his hand. Once more the English
-bowed their necks to a foreign lord; but Canute’s work was never undone,
-and the England of to-day acclaims him as her benefactor.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =A GREAT VIKING.=
- (_From the picture by H. W. Koekkoek._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V.
- THE COMING OF THE NORMANS.
-
-
- HAROLD OF ENGLAND AND WILLIAM OF NORMANDY.
-
- “_Yet shall a third both these and thine subdue;_
- _There shall a lion from the sea-bord wood_
- _Of Neustria come roring, with a crew_
- _Of hungry whelpes._”
-
-NOW a remarkable scene diversifies our pageant. You see before you the
-great hall of the Norman castle of Bayeux. Baron, knight, bishop, and
-priest fill up the background, and you perceive at once that an
-important crisis has arrived. Your eye instantly fastens on the two
-chief actors in the scene; and you do well to study them closely, for
-rarely in the history of our land have two such notable men stood face
-to face.
-
-The one, albeit he betrays some signs of anxiety, claims, at first
-sight, your admiration and sympathy. He is tall and comely, with the
-blue eyes and the golden beard and flowing locks of the Saxon. You
-picture him as a bluff, good-humoured Englishman, proud of his strength
-of arm, his prowess in the chase, his skill in warfare, and his sense of
-fair play. You can readily believe him to be winning and courteous in
-public life, calm and cool in the hour of danger, easy and sociable when
-the fight is over. He is Harold of England, the most gifted of the sons
-of old Earl Godwin, that dogged earl who, in his lifetime, was the
-champion of Englishmen at the court of the feeble but pious King Edward,
-now reigning in England. Edward loves the Norman and despises the
-Englishman, and his court swarms with aliens, on whom he lavishes land
-and wealth. Men say he has bequeathed his sceptre to a Norman, but his
-subjects will have none of it. Yonder fair-haired Englishman is their
-pride and choice, and him they will seat on the throne when Edward is
-dead. King Edward is now fast sinking into his grave, his last hours
-disquieted by the appearance of a comet which the priests assure him
-betokens ruin for his country.
-
-Now turn your attention to the other chief actor in the scene. You know
-at a glance that he is a great man, and that he is destined to make
-history. He is a giant in stature; no man living but he can bend his
-mighty bow. Rough and hard has been his upbringing, and rough and hard
-is his temper. He, too, is of Viking blood. His ancestor was that fierce
-outlaw Rollo, so long of leg and so heavy of frame that no horse could
-carry him. This fierce and crafty Viking had wrested a province from the
-imbecile King of France, on condition of doing homage to the poor
-simpleton. But Rollo would bow the knee to none save the rugged gods of
-his fierce Northern creed, nor would any of his chieftains so demean
-themselves. A common soldier was Rollo’s deputy, and even he disdained
-to bow, but seized the foot of the king and in bringing it to his mouth
-jerked the poor monarch off his throne!
-
-Rollo lives again in William, this mighty Norman duke at whom you are
-now gazing. His father’s nature is well set forth in the nickname which
-his followers gave him—Robert the Devil. William’s mother was a
-tanner’s daughter, and his haughty nobles once sneered at his base
-origin. They dare not do so now, for they know full well the weight of
-his mighty arm. As a boy he was heir to the most turbulent dukedom in
-Europe, but while in his teens he curbed the wild lawlessness of the
-barons and put a hook in their proud nostrils. Full well they remember
-the fate of those townsmen of Alençon who insulted his mother’s memory
-by hanging hides from their walls as a fitting welcome to “the tanner.”
-They will not soon forget how, in his wrath, he lopped off the feet and
-hands of his prisoners, and bade his slingers hurl the ghastly trophies
-into the town. Watchful, patient, cunning, ruthless, yet withal clear
-and sure of vision, he stands before you as by far the greatest warrior
-and statesman of his time.
-
-What manner of man this masterful Norman duke is, you may learn from the
-story of his wooing. He did not seek his wife with smiles and honeyed
-words, nor did he deign to display his best graces to win her heart.
-That is not his way. When Matilda, daughter of the Earl of Flanders,
-rejected his suit, both on account of his birth and because she loved
-another, he was not daunted—not he. He waited for her in the streets of
-Bruges, and forthwith rolled her in the dirt and soundly cuffed her
-ears. Strange to say, his new mode of wooing was successful. Matilda
-went home, changed her attire, put ointment on her bruises, and when
-next her lover presented himself declared that “the marriage pleased her
-well.”
-
-And now his mind is bent on quite another conquest, but the same
-masterful method will prevail. He has visited England. He has embraced
-the old king, who owes a debt of gratitude to Normandy; for was it not
-in that civilized land that he found shelter, succour, and education
-when Sweyn the Dane drove him as a callow boy into exile? William sees
-with his own eyes that the poor old king is not long for this world; and
-he notes with satisfaction that Normans surround his throne, tend him at
-table, and administer to him the rites of the Church. William has
-willing allies now, and he will have helpers, he thinks, when the time
-comes. So he returns to Normandy, and announces that Edward has named
-him as successor to the English throne.
-
-But how come William and Harold, these rivals for a throne, to be under
-the same roof? Sooth to tell, the one is the captive of the other.
-Harold’s bonds are very real, though not apparent. Some months ago he
-was cruising in the Channel, when an unlucky storm drove him on the
-Norman shore. The neighbouring baron seized him, and rejoiced at the
-prospect of a heavy ransom; but William claimed him, and welcomed him to
-his court with a show of cordiality. Together they have waged war on the
-Bretons, and Harold has done prodigies of valour. They have shared the
-same tent and have fed at the same table. To the outward eye they are
-brothers.
-
-But why does Harold’s countenance betray signs of anxiety? William has
-deemed the hour ripe for displaying the iron hand beneath the velvet
-glove. He now declares that Edward has bequeathed him the English crown,
-and bids Harold swear to assist him in securing it. The Englishman knows
-not what to do. An oath will be demanded, and this he must give, or
-death or life-long imprisonment will be his fate. Yet he knows full well
-that once in England he will forswear the oath, and ascend the throne
-which his countrymen deem him worthy to fill. The oath, he argues, can
-be of none effect, for he _must_ swear or perish.
-
-His decision is made. A crucifix lies on a cloth of gold, and Harold is
-bidden to place his hand on it and swear to aid his captor to obtain the
-kingdom of England after the death of Edward. Reluctantly he does so,
-and then the cloth of gold is removed, and beneath it are discovered all
-the sacred relics which William has collected from a score of churches.
-Harold grows pale at the sight; his strong limbs tremble, and his heart
-fails him. He has sworn to befriend the Norman duke by an oath of the
-most terrible solemnity. Even the Normans standing by cry, “God help
-him.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE EVE OF THE INVASION.
-
-Homeward speeds Harold, and as he crosses the Channel his terror gives
-way to wrath at the knavery practised upon him. Speedily he banishes the
-hateful memory of his enforced oath; he must be up and doing, for the
-aged king lies on his deathbed. With his dying breath Edward declares
-that Harold is the most worthy to reign, and the chiefs of the land
-concur in his choice. Edward is buried with the utmost solemnity in his
-great new church at Westminster, where you may see his shrine to this
-day. Then, amidst the loud shouts of the English nobles who throng the
-minster, Harold is elected king. Forthwith he takes up the reins of
-office, and his subjects rejoice daily in his wisdom, justice, and
-unsparing devotion to the good of his country.
-
-But what of William, the rejected candidate for the throne? He is in his
-park near Rouen when the trembling messenger breaks the news. His face
-grows clouded; he strings and unstrings his bow. Suddenly he hands it to
-an attendant, and hurries to his castle. In the great hall he strides to
-and fro, sits down and rises again, unable to remain still in any place,
-none daring to approach him lest the tempest of his rage should burst on
-them. At length a privileged baron addresses the brooding duke. “Sire,”
-says he, “why should you conceal from us your news? It is commonly
-reported that the King of England is dead, and that Harold, breaking
-faith with you, has seized the kingdom.” “They say true,” replies the
-duke; “my grief and anger are caused by Edward’s death and Harold’s
-wrong.” “Sire,” returns the courtier, “for Edward’s death there is no
-remedy, but for Harold’s wrong there is. Strike boldly; well begun is
-half done.”
-
-At once William made his resolve, and began to battle with the myriad
-difficulties which beset him. He interviewed his barons, and wrung from
-them their reluctant consent to the enterprise and their grudging
-promises of aid, and persuaded the Pope to send him a consecrated banner
-and a bull recognizing him King of England. Then far and wide he
-published his proclamation of war, promising liberal pay and the plunder
-of England to all who would strike in his cause. Forthwith from every
-part of France knights, spearmen, and cross-bowmen flocked to him. The
-bulk of them were hardy adventurers, actuated by every kind of greed and
-covetousness. During the autumn of 1065 and the spring of the following
-year Normandy was as busy as a hive of bees. The woodmen felled the
-forests; the shipwrights wrought at the seaports; every armourer’s shop
-rang with the blows of artisans fashioning coats of mail, spears, and
-swords. Speedily all was ready for the invasion of England.
-
-Meanwhile, what was happening in that threatened land? While the great
-armament of the Norman was wind-bound in port, a vast Viking host under
-Harold Hardrada, King of Norway, and Tostig, the English king’s brother,
-had doubled Spurn Head, and was sailing up the Humber and into the Ouse,
-bound for York. Why, you ask, should Harold’s own brother take arms
-against him when William of Normandy was arraying a mighty host for his
-undoing? Tostig had been Earl of Northumbria, and had ruled his earldom
-with harshness and injustice. He had forced peace on a land of feuds and
-outrages by taking life and by maiming limb. Loud had been the outcry
-against him, and Tostig had been driven from Northumbria by his incensed
-subjects. Harold had supported the claim of a rival; and now Tostig, at
-the instigation of his brother-in-law, Duke William, had persuaded the
-Norse king to join him in a descent upon North England. Harold, whom he
-had not forgiven, was to be taken between two fires, and victory seemed
-sure.
-
-Harold had mustered his forces on the southern shore, and during the
-summer lay in wait for the coming of the Norman. Summer passed, and
-autumn arrived when the news reached him that the Vikings were in the
-Ouse. Believing that William would not sail until the spring, Harold set
-out for York to smite the Northern host before the Norman was ready to
-attack. With wonderful speed his troops marched northward, and York was
-reached on the fourth day after his departure from London.
-
-The Norsemen were taken by surprise. It was inconceivable that Harold
-could be nigh, and so they advanced to York, which had promised
-surrender, leaving their coats of mail on board their ships in the
-river. As they marched towards the gates, which were to be flung wide at
-their approach, they beheld a cloud of dust and the glitter of arms in
-the distance. “Who are these advancing towards us?” asked Hardrada.
-“Only Englishmen craving pardon and beseeching friendship,” answered
-Tostig; but the words had scarcely been uttered before the dust-cloud
-resolved itself into an army, headed by King Harold himself. “The
-enemy!—the enemy!” muttered the Norwegians. They formed in line of
-battle, ready for the fray.
-
-Harold feared not the issue, but he was loath to shed his brother’s
-blood, and sent forward a messenger to offer Tostig his old
-earldom—one-third of the kingdom—if he would yield. “And what,” asked
-Tostig, “will he give my faithful ally, the King of Norway?” “He,”
-replied the English messenger, “shall have seven feet of ground for a
-grave, or, as he is a very tall man, perhaps a little more.” Tostig bade
-the messenger depart, and battle was joined.
-
-Hardly had the fray begun before Hardrada fell with a random arrow in
-his throat. The fury of the English onset could not be resisted. The
-Norwegians fell back and crossed the Derwent by Stamford Bridge, and the
-English followed. For a time a gigantic Norseman, like Horatius of old,
-“kept the bridge;” but he was slain at last, and the English swarmed
-after the retreating foe. At nightfall the Norsemen were overthrown, the
-raven banner of the Vikings was taken, and Tostig and most of his
-captains were dead. Harold had triumphed. His foes came in three hundred
-ships; they fled in twenty-four.
-
-[Illustration: =THE DEATH OF HAROLD.=
- (_From the drawing by Daniel Maclise, R.A. By permission of the Art Union
- of London._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS.
-
- “_Norman saw on English oak,_
- _On English neck a Norman yoke,_
- _Norman spoon in English dish,_
- _And England ruled as Normans wish;_
- _Blithe world in England never will be more,_
- _Till England’s rid of all the four._”
-
-And now, in mimic strife, let that great battle which gave England for
-the last time to foreign foes be fought again. The first act of the
-drama which we are about to witness takes place on the Sussex shore near
-Pevensey, on the spot where Roman and Saxon alike landed when they too
-coveted the possession of our isle.
-
-It is the twenty-ninth day of September, in the year of grace 1066. The
-wind that is even now fluttering the victorious banners of Harold at
-York is wafting to our coast an even more terrible foe. You see the vast
-armada of the Norman approaching the beach. Amidst the crowd of vessels
-which cover the sea you discern a ship with the prow fashioned like a
-brazen child loosing an arrow from a bended bow. That ship bears Duke
-William and his fortunes. Speedily the vessels run aground, planks are
-thrust ashore, and the work of landing begins.
-
-“Out archers!” is the cry, and the shaven and shorn cross-bowmen in
-their short habits spring ashore and form up on the beach. They scour
-the neighbourhood, but no armed foe is in sight. Now the knights, clad
-in hauberk, helmet, and shining cuirass, with their shields slung round
-their necks, step ashore, and their bustling squires, with many a tug
-and strain and muttered curse, lead their high-mettled chargers down the
-creaking gangways. In a trice the knights are mounted, their swords
-girded on, and their lances in hand. You see their glittering ranks form
-and wheel upon the shore.
-
-Here come the carpenters, with their axes, planes, and adzes, seeking a
-suitable spot for the erection of a castle, which was completely
-fashioned in Normandy, and now only needs fitting together. Great frames
-are carried ashore, and like magic a wooden fortress is deftly reared on
-the strand. Ere set of sun the stores are landed and safely bestowed
-within its walls. The guards are set, and the evening meal is served.
-
-Last of all to tread the soil of the land that is soon to be his comes
-Duke William. As he steps ashore he stumbles, and falls upon his face. A
-cry of consternation runs through the superstitious host. “God preserve
-us! this is a bad sign.”—“Nay,” he shouts lustily, and with that
-readiness of retort which never fails him; “see, my lords, I have taken
-possession of England with both my hands! It is now mine, and what is
-mine is yours.”
-
-At dawn he marches along the seashore to Hastings, where other wooden
-castles are erected, and every precaution is taken against surprise. The
-foragers are busy in every neighbouring village, and as they appear the
-unarmed English flee, driving their cattle before them to secret places
-of safety. Mounted scouts push far into the country, and fall back on
-the main body as the English army draws near.
-
-Now the scene changes, and you see Harold’s footmen hurrying forward in
-the vain hope of smiting the Norman ere he has made good his landing.
-But the surprise of Stamford Bridge is not to be repeated, and Harold
-halts seven miles from Hastings and sends forward his spies. Speedily
-they return with the astonishing news that there are more priests in
-William’s camp than fighting-men. They are mistaken; they do not know
-the Norman custom of shaving the beard and cropping the poll. Harold
-smiles at their report. “Those whom you have seen in such numbers,” says
-he, “are not priests but good soldiers, who will make us feel what they
-are.” Now a council of war is held, and several of his captains, with
-rare good sense, advise the English king to avoid a battle and retreat
-towards London, leaving a desert behind him. “No,” says the chivalrous
-Harold. “Ravage the country which has been committed to my care! Never!
-I will try the chances of battle with the few men I have, and trust to
-their courage and the goodness of my cause.”
-
-But here comes a Norman monk, big with a message from his duke, bidding
-Harold do one of three things—resign his kingdom in favour of William,
-yield it to the Pope for his award, or determine the issue by single
-combat. “Tell your master,” says Harold abruptly, “I will not resign my
-title, I will not refer it to the Pope, nor will I accept the single
-combat.” Again William tempts him by the promise of all the land north
-of the Humber; but Harold is proof against the bribe, and his captains
-swear a unanimous oath to make neither peace, truce, nor treaty with the
-invader, but to drive away the Norman, or perish in the attempt.
-
-Now the scene shifts once more. On a spur of the South Downs, where
-Battle Abbey now stands, you see the embattled array of the English. The
-hill of Senlac, on which they have posted themselves, slopes steeply in
-front, less steeply on the right, and gently on the left. On the summit
-of the hill the host of the English is thickly gathered behind a rough
-trench and a stockade. There is marshy ground on the right, but the left
-is the weakest part of the position, and here are mustered Harold’s
-stout hus-carles, doughty warriors in full armour, wielding huge axes.
-Here, too, are the banners of the king—the Golden Dragon of Wessex and
-the Fighting Man. The rest of the ground is occupied by the half-armed
-rustics who have flocked to Harold, and are bent on striking a good blow
-against the invader.
-
-Out from the Norman host spurs the minstrel Taillefer, singing the song
-of Roland, and Oliver, and the peers who died at Roncesvalles. As he
-sings he tosses his sword into the air and juggles with it famously.
-Then he puts his horse to the gallop, and strikes his lance through an
-English breast. He smites another with his sword, shouting challenges to
-the foe. The English close round him, and the first Norman has fallen on
-the fatal field.
-
-A shower of arrows from the archers begins the fray, and then the
-footmen and the Norman knights, to the loud braying of horns, charge up
-the slopes, crying, “God be our help!” The charge breaks vainly on the
-stockade and shield-wall, behind which the English ply axe and javelin
-with fierce shouts of “Out! out!” Back go the footmen and back go the
-knights, leaving dead and wounded before that fatal barrier. Again and
-again the duke rallies them; the fury of fight surges in his veins, and
-with headlong valour he spurs up the slopes to the fierce attack. No
-breach can be made in that wall. His Bretons, entangled in the marshy
-ground, break into disorder, and panic seizes his army as the cry goes
-round that the duke is slain. William bars the way and checks the flight
-of the fugitives with savage blows. He tears off his helmet. “I am
-alive,” he shouts, “and by God’s will I will conquer yet.”
-
-Maddened by another repulse, he spurs right into the thick of the fight.
-His horse goes down beneath him, but his terrible mace circles in the
-air, and his assailants are felled, never to rise again. Again he
-mounts, again he is unhorsed, and a blow of his hand hurls to the ground
-an unmannerly rider who will not lend him a steed. William’s terrible
-onslaughts have dispelled the panic, but the issue of the battle still
-hangs in the balance.
-
-It is three in the afternoon, and the English shield-wall is yet
-unbroken. Frontal attacks having failed, William will now try what the
-cunning of strategy can accomplish. Hitherto his archers have done but
-little mischief. With their great shields the English ward off the
-arrows that beat upon them like hail. “Shoot upwards,” he commands,
-“that your arrows may fall on their heads.” The archers obey, and with
-shields raised aloft to protect their faces, the English are at a
-manifest disadvantage in their encounters with the Norman knights.
-Almost the first to suffer in that iron storm is Harold himself. An
-arrow pierces his right eye. In agony he plucks it out, snaps it in two,
-and flings it from him; but the pain is so great that he leans heavily
-upon his shield.
-
-Meanwhile another stratagem is equally successful. William orders a
-thousand horse to advance, and then to turn and flee. At the sight, the
-English behind their stockade leap forward and set off in wild pursuit,
-their axes suspended from their necks. When they are well away from
-their defences, the fleeing Normans wheel about, and the pursuers find
-themselves assailed on all sides with spear and sword. They are cut to
-pieces, and William speedily makes himself master of the position which
-they have abandoned. On either flank his horsemen also make good their
-ascent, and now a fierce hand-to-hand combat rages on the crest of the
-hill. Loud is the clamour, great is the slaughter, and the _mêlée_ is
-thickest round the standard where the hus-carles encircle the body of
-their king with a wall of living valour. One by one they fall, the rest
-betake themselves to flight, and the night falls on a stricken and
-wailing England.
-
-Now see the torches flit about the field as the conquerors rifle the
-dead. Duke William’s tent is pitched on the spot where the fight has
-raged fiercest. Amidst the grisly mounds of slain he gives thanks for
-his victory, and eats and drinks and rests himself. The Sabbath morning
-dawns, and mournful parties of noble ladies, clad in the black robes of
-mourning, search the field for the bodies of their fathers, sons,
-husbands, or brothers. Two monks from the Abbey of Waltham, which Harold
-has founded, approach the conqueror and humbly offer him ten marks of
-gold for leave to carry away the remains of their benefactor. William
-grants them permission, and to and fro they go, anxiously and vainly
-searching the field for the body of the dead king. At length they call
-upon the “swan-necked Edith,” who loved him well, to assist in the
-search. She is more successful than they, and the mangled and disfigured
-corpse is given hurried burial beneath the high altar of Waltham Abbey.
-
-While the conqueror plans a memorial fane on the blood-sodden ground,
-and marshals his forces for the march on London, the English are sunk in
-the depths of bitterness and despair. “England, what shall I say of
-thee?” wails the monkish scribe. “Thou hast lost thy national king, and
-sinkest under the foreigner, bathed in the blood of thy defenders!” The
-conqueror marches in triumph to London without striking a blow, and on
-Christmas Day an English archbishop places the crown upon his head in
-the Abbey of Westminster. There is bloodshed even on that day. When,
-according to the old English custom, Stigand, the archbishop, asks the
-assembled thanes if they will have the Norman for their king, loud
-shouts of assent are raised. The Norman guards surrounding the minster
-mistake the shouting within the abbey for the noise of strife, and
-immediately fire the neighbouring houses and slay the innocent
-spectators.
-
-Hard and heavy will be the hand of the conqueror; harsh and cruel, but
-withal not unjust, will be his rule. Now that he has won the kingdom, he
-will strive to reign as a lawful king. Heavy fines will be exacted from
-the large landowners who have resisted him, but otherwise he will
-endeavour to rule as the rightful successor to Alfred and Edward the
-Confessor. But he will soon discover that England is yet unconquered.
-Revolts will spring up in all parts of the land, and there will be hard
-fighting, and harrying, and burning and slaying for many a year ere he
-is acknowledged king from the Cheviots to the Channel. After every
-revolt the lands of the insurgents will change hands, and Norman knights
-will gradually secure the fairest estates in the country. Grim castles
-of stone will spring up, and where they arise the Norman will rule as
-lord. The discontented amongst William’s followers will goad the English
-whose lands they covet into rebellion. They will treat the highspirited
-English to every insult and outrage which they can conceive, and when
-the maddened thanes lie stricken on the field they will be rewarded with
-their possessions. Thus the Norman will enter into the land to possess
-it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Coronation of William the Conqueror.=
- (_From the picture by John Cross._)]
-
- When William was being crowned in Westminster Abbey, the
- archbishop, according to the old custom, asked the Norman and
- English nobles if they would have William for their king. They
- replied with loud shouts. The Norman soldiers outside the abbey
- thought that William was being attacked. They therefore fell on
- the people and set fire to the neighbouring houses. The picture
- shows the scene of alarm within the abbey. After a time order
- was restored, and the archbishop placed the crown on William’s
- head.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: HEREWARD THE WAKE]
-
-
-
-
- “_Such is the patriot’s boast, where’er we roam,_
- _His first, best country ever is at home._”
-
-This burly Englishman, with his long, flowing locks, his mighty thews
-and sinews, his undaunted heart, his craft and skill in warfare, needs
-no introduction. His name and fame are enshrined in every English heart,
-thanks to the splendid romance which Charles Kingsley has woven about
-his heroisms. Legend and tradition, song and story, have cast their
-spell about him, and none can read his thrilling adventures without a
-tribute of admiration and esteem. Wild and wayward he ever was, but
-mingled with the ferocity and craftiness of his nature was a childlike
-simplicity which endeared him to all. As a guerilla leader he was the
-keenest thorn in William’s side. “Were there but three men in England
-such as he,” said a chronicler, “William would never have won the land.”
-
-The old stories describe him as a self-willed, boisterous lad, who
-caused his mother many a heartache and his father many an embarrassment,
-until at length he was outlawed and driven across the seas, where his
-mighty deeds of daring won him great renown. He may have been present at
-Hastings, though the chroniclers are silent on this point; but soon
-after the battle he was in Flanders, and only returned home when he
-learnt that his ancestral lands at Bourne in Lincolnshire had been
-granted to one Taillebois, who was even then in possession of them.
-Taillebois, by his insolence and cruelty, had made himself bitterly
-hated, and the men of the Fens were only waiting for a leader to rise in
-rebellion and thrust him out. Hereward suddenly arrived amongst them,
-and, so the story goes, swept his home clean of Frenchmen with his
-single sword. Eagerly the Fen men flocked to him, and acclaimed him as
-their leader. Soon the terror of his name spread far and wide, and the
-wild Fenland became a camp of refuge for those who would not bow the
-neck to the Norman yoke.
-
-No part of England was better adapted for the purpose. It was a vast,
-low-lying wilderness of slow-moving rivers, spreading meres, and
-treacherous swamps, whose secret paths were known only to the natives.
-Here and there “islands” of firmer ground arose, and on these the towns
-and abbeys of Fenland were built. One of these “islands” was Ely, a
-matchless place of refuge, engirdled by waters and morasses. Here
-Hereward made his camp, and defied the Normans. Daily his forces grew,
-and daily he swooped down on his foes, appearing so suddenly and
-disappearing so magically into his reedy recesses that none could stay
-him or follow him. William soon perceived that he would never be master
-of England while the bold and watchful Hereward was at large.
-
-Hereward had allied himself with the Danes, who swarmed into Fenland,
-and having burnt the “golden borough” of Peterborough, retired across
-the North Sea laden with its wondrous treasures—the gold crucifixes,
-the jewelled vessels, the costly vestments—which were the pride and
-glory of the abbey. Now that Hereward had rid himself of his troublesome
-allies, William determined to strike his blow.
-
-Forthwith he marched an army to Cambridge, and invested the island of
-Ely on every side. The besieged built a great fortress of turf,
-collected food, and prepared to resist to the death. William determined
-to storm the island from Aldreth, between which place and Ely lay half a
-mile of reedy swamp. Collecting all the peasants of the countryside, he
-busied them in making a floating bridge, over which his army might pass
-to the capture of the beleaguered isle. Tradition tells us that
-Hereward, with his golden locks shorn and his beard shaved, laboured at
-the task, and that every night before he departed he set fire to the
-day’s work. At length, however, the bridge was finished, and William’s
-army began to march across it. The besieged watched the vast array crowd
-upon the frail bridge. Suddenly they saw it give way, and thousands were
-hurled into the thick slime, which speedily engulfed them. The first
-attack had hopelessly failed, and William himself had barely escaped
-destruction.
-
-He was not daunted. With that wonderful perseverance and dogged
-determination which bore down every obstacle in his path, he built his
-bridge anew, profiting by his former experience. A huge floating sow
-protected the Ely end of the bridge, and was pushed forward as the work
-proceeded. Slowly but surely it grew until the sow was but fifty yards
-from Hereward’s fortress. A high wooden tower was erected at the farther
-end of the great work, and on this William planted a witch, who yelled
-and gibbered foul curses at the English as the Normans advanced.
-
-The bridge was speedily covered with armed men. The front of the sow was
-let down, and gave footing to within a dozen yards of the wall of
-Hereward’s fort. As the Normans swarmed out with their scaling-ladders,
-the besieged hurled heavy stones upon them, and shot them down by
-scores, until the ditch was full of dead bodies. The besiegers planted
-their ladders on the corpses of the slain, and proceeded to mount them,
-but only one knight ever entered the fort.
-
-Afar off a puff of smoke and a thin wisp of yellow flame were seen.
-Hereward had fired the reeds. “On came the flame, leaping and crackling,
-laughing and shrieking like a live fiend. The archers and slingers in
-the boats cowered before it, and fell, scorched corpses, as it swept on.
-It reached the causeway, surged up, recoiled from the mass of human
-beings, then sprang over their heads and passed onwards, girding them
-with flame. The reeds were burning around them; the timbers of the
-bridge caught fire; the peat and fagots smouldered beneath their feet.
-They sprang from the burning footway, and plunged into the fathomless
-bog, covering their faces and eyes with scorched hands, and then sank in
-the black, gurgling slime.”
-
-Taillebois dragged William back, regardless of curses and prayers from
-his soldiery; and they reached the shore just in time to see between
-them and the water a long black, smouldering, writhing line; the morass
-to right and left, which had been a minute before deep reed, an open
-smutty pool, dotted with boats full of shrieking and cursing men; and at
-the causeway end, the tower with the flame climbing up its posts, and
-the witch of Brandon throwing herself desperately from the top, and
-falling dead upon the embers, a motionless heap of rags. “Fool that thou
-art! Fool that I was!” cried the great king, as he rolled off his horse
-at his tent door, cursing with rage and pain.
-
-But he was not yet beaten. The lion in William having been defeated, the
-fox had his day. What force could not accomplish, craft and cunning
-might. No longer did he attempt to capture the island. He would starve
-it into submission, and meanwhile test the temper of the timorous monks
-who trembled in their cells. With lavish promises for their own safety
-and the possession of their abbey and its lands, they were beguiled, and
-at length they revealed the secret paths that led to the isle. One by
-one his friends deserted him, until at length the day arrived when
-Hereward too was forced to come in to the king—the last Englishman in
-the land to submit to the Norman. William received him gladly, for his
-heart ever warmed to a brave foe.
-
-What the actual end of Hereward was we do not know, but we can readily
-believe that he died fighting, overborne by the number of his
-treacherous foes, and in his dying struggle doing miracles of valour. So
-he fades out of our pageant, but his memory will ever be dear to all
-Britons who love the gallant and brave, and deem the pure patriot the
-glory of his land.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =HEREWARD YIELDING TO WILLIAM.=
- (_From the drawing by H. C. Selous. By permission of the Art Union of
- London._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI.
- ENGLAND UNDER THE NORMANS.
-
-
- WILLIAM THE RED.
-
- “_There is no peace, saith the Lord, unto the wicked._”
-
-LOOK upon the scene which now unfolds itself. You are gazing into the
-depths of that Hampshire forest which the Conqueror set apart for his
-kingly sport. It is cursed to his line by reason of the cruelties which
-he wreaked upon the forest dwellers when he burnt their roof-trees over
-their heads, and scattered them afar, to make a solitude for his deer.
-Two scions of his house have already perished in its glades.
-
-The forest is silent. It is late afternoon, and the setting sun is even
-now gilding the upper branches of the spreading trees. Suddenly the
-silence is dispelled. You hear the sound of horns, the baying of dogs,
-the shouts of hunters, and a lordly stag flies past you. Now a pair of
-horsemen gallop up, and your eye is instantly arrested by the Red King.
-You recognize him instantly as a son of the Conqueror, though he seems
-but a caricature of his father.
-
-Of middle stature, he is square and heavy of frame, with a restless eye,
-and a stammering tongue that can, nevertheless, rap out ready witticisms
-and biting sarcasms on occasion. Evil living and unbridled passion have
-left their marks on his ruddy and bloated countenance. He fears neither
-God nor man. His crafty ministers wring heavy fines from his barons, and
-he does not even spare the Church. Archbishop Anselm, that
-tender-hearted poet-dreamer, who showed the courage of a lion when fraud
-and wrong were brewing, alone held him in check. Now that Anselm is in
-exile, there is no wickedness that he will not do. Vicious, vain,
-boastful, and puffed up with pride, he has not an honest friend in the
-land.
-
-Men hate him and mock him. With what gibes and sneers they tell that
-story of the chamberlain and the boots! Once his chamberlain brought him
-a pair of boots, saying that they had cost but three shillings. “Take
-them away,” roared the vainglorious fool, “they are not worthy of a
-king’s foot. Bring a pair that costs a mark of silver.” The cunning
-chamberlain, thereupon, brings a worse pair, and these the Red King
-pronounces worthy of his majesty. What a king! Ay, but far worse remains
-behind. There is no baseness, no cruelty, no injustice which he has not
-practised. Even now the revenues of bishops and abbots are flowing into
-his pocket, while “the hungry flock look up, and are not fed.” When
-disease attacks him he repents; when he recovers he is himself again.
-
-But withal he is no craven. He fights like a man, and reveals much of
-the Conqueror’s skill and cunning. Fear he knows not. Men tell with
-wonder of the day when he set forth to subdue Normandy in the teeth of a
-storm. His mariners trembled, but not he. “Kings never drown, ye
-varlets!” he cried, and forthwith hove out on the tempestuous waters of
-the Channel.
-
-Watch him closely. Behind his reckless air of gaiety there is an anxious
-foreboding. Last night he tossed on his couch and dreamed an ugly dream.
-He thought he was in a gorgeous minster hung with velvet and purple. All
-around were the shrines of the saints gleaming with gold and gems and
-ivory. Such riches even he, the despoiler of churches, had never looked
-upon, and his hands itched to clutch them. But when he tried to seize
-them they vanished, and an altar rose before him, whereon was lying a
-naked man. A lust to feed on the man’s flesh overcame him, and he ate of
-the body that lay before him. At length the victim spoke in accents
-stern beyond words, “Is it not enough that thou hast thus far grieved me
-with so many wrongs? Henceforth thou shalt eat of me no more.”
-
-The horror of the dream is still at the back of his mind, though he has
-quaffed the wine-cup until the disquieting vision no longer terrifies
-him. His counsellors have besought him not to venture into the forest
-to-day; but no man save Anselm, and he is beyond the seas, ever turned
-him from his purpose. Such is the man who now rides into the forest
-glade.
-
-While he jokes and jests with his companion, a startled stag springs out
-of the brushwood. Rufus slips from his horse and fits an arrow to his
-bow. He shoots, and the quarrel strikes the prey and wounds it slightly.
-“Shoot, man; shoot!” he shouts to his companion, shading his eyes with
-his hand to see the effect of another shot. The second bow twangs, and
-down goes the king with an arrow in his heart. What has happened no man
-can say. Some tell you that his companion’s shaft has glanced from a
-tree and has found its billet in the Red King’s breast. Some speak of an
-Englishman, cowering in the undergrowth, who has seized the moment to
-let fly the arrow of retribution. Some even aver that the deadly missile
-was sped by his own brother’s hand.
-
-No one knows, and no one cares. It is enough for all that a king whose
-life has been that of a wild beast perishes like a beast among the
-beasts. His companion, horrified at the sight of the dying king, and
-fearing that he will be accused of the crime, spurs his horse out of the
-forest, and does not check his steed till he is on the seashore, with a
-bark at hand to carry him to a foreign strand.
-
-There lies the king, the red blood ebbing from his false heart. “That
-arrow, by whomsoever shot, set England free from oppression such as she
-never felt before or after at the hand of a single man.”
-
- “Then a creaking cart came slowly, which a charcoal-burner drove;
- He found the dead man lying, a ghastly treasure-trove.
- He raised the corpse for charity, and on his wagon laid,
- And so the Red King drove in state from out the forest glade.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- MATILDA, “LADY” OF ENGLAND.
-
- “_Old, unhappy, far-off things,_
- _And battles long ago._”
-
-Now you shall witness a striking scene. You are gazing at the castle of
-Oxford, that stands up grim and square in the midst of its encircling
-waters. Oxford is already renowned as the abode of quiet scholars and
-learned men; for “Beauclerc,” who has now gone to his rest, made it an
-academy and a sanctuary of letters. He it was who built this grim
-castle, in which to sojourn when he came to Oxford to enjoy the converse
-of the bookish men who dwelt beneath its shadow. It is, however, no
-learned concourse of scholars, no peaceful trial of wits, which we are
-about to witness, but an incident of stern warfare.
-
-The castle is undergoing a siege, which has already lasted three months.
-An iron girdle of armed men forbids entrance or exit. You see, however,
-no great engines for hurling missiles into the fortress; you perceive no
-battering-rams; no pent-houses for undermining its walls; no
-scaling-ladders and towers for assault. Hunger and cold are the weapons
-of the besiegers; within, starvation and disease are fighting their
-battle. It is early morning of the vigil of St. Thomas, a cold, gray
-day, with a sharp frost in the air. In the camp of the besiegers a white
-flag is raised in token of truce, and presently you see a stalwart
-knight clad in full armour bestride his charger. Behind him assembles a
-train of abbots and priests bearing Church banners and crucifixes.
-Slowly they wend their way over the powdery snow to the edge of the
-castle moat, and presently the loud blast of a trumpet startles the ear.
-Now you see on the battlements of the castle a warder appear and inquire
-the meaning of the summons. “Say to thy mistress that I beseech a
-parley,” cries the knight, and the warder disappears.
-
-There is a pause, and presently on the battlements you see a woman, pale
-and gaunt, but proud and haughty as angry Juno. You notice her flashing
-eye, her hard, resolute look, and you know that she will never yield to
-mortal man. “Why come ye?” she asks in imperious tones, and the Lord
-Abbot of Reading answers her. He bids her yield the castle, and he
-promises, in the name of the king, that no harm shall befall her or any
-that are with her. She shall have honourable escort to the coast, lands
-and money shall be hers, and no vengeance of any kind shall be wreaked
-on her adherents. “Gracious lady,” he concludes, “I implore thee to
-yield and end this cruel war, which is a reproach to Christendom and
-ruin to the people of England. Thy famishing state is well known, and
-all hope of escape is gone.”
-
-“Who told thee, thou meddling monk, that I thought of escape?” she
-answers. “Wherefore should I escape? My brother, Earl Robert, is at
-hand, and ye wot well how the foul usurper was forced to yield to him at
-Lincoln. The like will happen again here at Oxenford, so let the false
-recreant begone. I will not throw open my gates nor quit these walls
-until thy perjured master is in chains, pleading at my feet for the life
-I have once too often granted him.”
-
-“Madam, madam, I beseech thee,” begins the abbot in reproof, but the
-wrathful figure on the wall waves him away. “Get thee gone!” she screams
-in a fierce passion, “or I will remember to hang thee on the gate of thy
-abbey when this rebellion is over.” So the knight and the churchman
-depart, and anon you see the former riding from post to post urging his
-men to keep closer watch on the besieged, and doubling the guards that
-lie in wait near every exit from the castle.
-
-The early dusk arrives, and the snow begins to fall, and you can scarce
-see the dark mass of the fortress. The cold wind drives the falling snow
-into the eyes of the sentinels; they grow numb and drowsy, and their
-vigilance is relaxed. Now, strain your eyes, and watch the postern of
-yonder tower. Slowly the door opens, and dimly you perceive five
-white-clad figures flit out and descend into the moat. You see their
-ghost-like forms reappear and make all speed for the river. Across its
-ice-bound surface they hasten, and as they draw near you perceive that
-one of them is a woman. Now they plunge into the snowdrifts on the other
-side, and struggle on towards Abingdon. There they will find friends and
-horses, and speedily they will make for the coast and hie them to the
-shores of friendly France.
-
-What is the meaning of the incidents which you have witnessed? The woman
-who has just escaped is Matilda, sole surviving child of Beauclerc. When
-Henry’s only son went down in the _White Ship_, she alone remained as
-heir to the realm. Forthwith Henry called his barons together, and bade
-them swear fealty to his daughter as “Lady” of England. They did his
-bidding reluctantly, for they scorned to be ruled by a woman. Amongst
-the knights who swore the oath was Henry’s nephew Stephen, he whom you
-saw directing the siege of Oxford. He is handsome, tall, strong, and one
-of the most renowned knights in all Christendom. Even while the barons
-obeyed the king’s behest, many of them deemed Stephen far worthier to
-rule them than the haughty, passionate Dame Matilda.
-
-Ere Henry died, many of the barons had determined to forswear their oath
-and throw in their lot with Stephen. They knew him as easy-going,
-soft-hearted, “unstable as water,” and, as such, he was the very king
-for them. With Stephen on the throne, every baron might be king in his
-own domain, free to raid and harry and fight as he listed. So when the
-old king was carried to his tomb, Stephen seized the crown, and, after
-the fashion of usurpers, strove to win friends to his side. He scattered
-Henry’s treasure in lavish bribes, he promised men all they asked, he
-hired foreign soldiers, and was crowned king. Right well pleased were
-the barons, and right soon they built them those strong castles which
-they had not dared to rear while Henry was alive. Then they quarrelled
-and fought, and robbed, and tortured, and hanged to their hearts’
-content.
-
-Sad indeed was the condition of England at that time. Turn to the old
-Chronicle and read:—“They put the wretched country folk to sore toil
-with their castle-building; and when the castles were made, they filled
-them with devils and evil men. Then they took all those that they deemed
-had any goods, both by night and by day, men and women alike, and put
-them in prison to get their gold and silver, and tortured them with
-tortures unspeakable, for never were martyrs so tortured as they
-were. . . . All this lasted nineteen winters while Stephen was king, and
-ever it was worse and worse. Thou mightest easily fare a whole day’s
-journey, and shouldest never find a man living in a village nor land
-tilled. Then was corn dear, and flesh and cheese, for there was none in
-the land. Wretched men starved for hunger, and some were begging alms
-that were once rich men, and some fled out of the land.”
-
-And to add to all this horror, Matilda, aided by her noble half-brother,
-Robert of Gloucester, and her kinsman, David of Scotland, waged war
-against the usurper. The fortune of battle wavered, now to this side,
-now to that. Sometimes Stephen was victor, sometimes Matilda. You
-remember how she taunted Stephen from the battlements of Oxford Castle
-about the affair at Lincoln. The story is worth telling. Stephen was
-besieging Lincoln Castle when a superior force of his foes assailed him.
-With only three faithful followers he fought like a lion at bay,
-disdaining either to fly or yield. At length his sword-blade snapped;
-but one of his companions handed him a two-handed Danish axe, with which
-he did terrible execution. Then the axe-helve splintered in his hand;
-but all feared to seize him until he was hurled to the ground by a stone
-thrown by an unknown hand. A knight, greatly daring, ran up and laid
-hands on the fallen king; but Stephen shook him off, and it was only to
-Robert of Gloucester that he would deign to surrender. Stephen was put
-in ward at Bristol, and a great Council elected Matilda queen in his
-stead.
-
-Ere long her haughty behaviour, her self-will, her revengeful spirit,
-and the injustice with which she treated the Londoners, disgusted even
-her best friends. One day, while she was sitting at dinner, the city
-bells rang out a call to arms, and the Londoners, “like angry wasps from
-their comb,” swarmed into her palace. She had barely time to escape on a
-swift steed to Winchester. Then the Londoners arrayed themselves under
-Stephen’s brave queen and laid siege to Matilda. She was forced to
-retreat, and in the strife that followed the King of Scots and Robert of
-Gloucester were captured. Matilda fled on horseback to Devizes; but
-enemies thronged about her, and her friends only got her safely out of
-the town by covering her with grave-clothes and carrying her forth on a
-bier. Robert was now exchanged for Stephen, and once more the tide of
-war turned in his favour. This brings us up to the incidents which we
-have just witnessed in front of Oxford Castle.
-
-Little remains to be said. Robert died, and Matilda found that she had
-lost her best and most gallant champion. Her son Henry, however, was now
-of an age to take his part in the strife. Strong, able, and rich, he
-sailed from France with an army, but was too wise to fight a pitched
-battle. He could afford to wait; and so he made peace with Stephen, who
-was to reign in England until his death, when Henry was to succeed him.
-A year later Stephen died, and all good men rejoiced. Peace was coming
-to the distracted realm, and the old days of “war, wickedness, and
-waste” were over, men fondly hoped, never to return.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE GREAT ARCHBISHOP.
-
- “_Fame’s loudest trump upon the ear of Time_
- _Leaves but a dying echo; they alone_
- _Are held in everlasting memory_
- _Whose deeds partake of heaven._”
-
-Once more the scene changes. We are standing in the High Street of
-Canterbury watching a notable procession pass by. Listen to the clanging
-bells, and when they cease, hear the organ rolling forth its waves of
-harmony from the cathedral. The old timbered houses are decked with
-streamers and garlands; groups of priests with banners are threading the
-street towards the ancient gate. It is very evident that some great
-personage is about to visit the city. Is it the king? Not so; it is some
-one even greater than the king—it is the archbishop, Thomas Becket. You
-wonder that an archbishop should be more powerful than a king, but in
-these early days the Church is the greatest power on earth. Even kings
-must submit to its decrees.
-
-Now the trumpets blow, and a long procession winds its way towards the
-cathedral. As the archbishop comes in sight loud shouts of welcome rend
-the air. Look at him as he sits his charger, prouder than the boldest
-knight in the land. There was a time when he could joust and use sword
-and lance with the most skilful warrior in the kingdom. Ah! he was a
-boon companion of the king’s then. What merry jests, what jovial days
-and nights they spent together! They were Jonathan and David in their
-friendship. Becket was the king’s right-hand man in all affairs of
-State. Clever and learned, he seconded the king in all his strenuous
-endeavours to rid the land of lawlessness and misery. In return, Henry
-heaped riches and honours upon his chancellor.
-
-What state and ceremony he loved in those days! His palace was far
-grander than the king’s; a hundred and forty knights followed in his
-train. None wore such magnificent robes as he; none made so brave a
-display. As for the king, he cared nothing for those things in which
-Becket’s soul delighted. Often when the chancellor sat down to feast
-with his followers, Henry would gallop up to the door of the palace,
-toss his bridle to a groom, stride into the great hall, vault the table,
-and in his rough riding-dress take his place by the side of his gorgeous
-chancellor.
-
-What stories they tell of the pranks these two used to play! One winter
-day, when the pair were riding through the streets of London, the king
-saw an old man shivering in his rags. “Look at that poor beggar,” said
-he. “Would it not be a kind act to give him a good warm coat?”
-
-“Certainly, sire,” replied Becket; “and you are a good Christian to
-bethink yourself of such a generous deed.”
-
-“Then give him yours,” laughed the king, and seized the rich robe which
-the chancellor was wearing. Becket was loath to bestow his rich crimson
-coat on a beggar man; but the king would have his way, and a pretty
-tussle ensued between them. At last the chancellor’s cloak was pulled
-from his shoulders, and Henry handed it to the astonished beggar. How
-hugely he laughed all the way home at the wry face which Becket pulled!
-
-But all this has suffered a “sea-change” long ago. When the king had
-quelled the robber barons and had pulled down their strongholds about
-their ears, he found that there was lawlessness in the Church needing
-his grave attention. The Conqueror had given the bishops the right to
-hold courts, in which they alone could try the clergy, no matter what
-crimes they committed. In course of time the bishops claimed
-jurisdiction, not only over priests, but over all clerks—that is,
-persons who could read. But who cared for the bishop and his judgments?
-He could not imprison or hang; he could simply drive a man out of the
-Church. Many a bold rogue has saved his neck by pulling out a writing
-from his pocket and gravely reading a certain verse from the Psalms,
-mayhap while he held the scroll upside down.
-
-Since Henry has sat on the throne more than a hundred murders have been
-committed by clerks, and not one of the murderers has graced the
-gallows. This is intolerable; Henry will brook this state of things no
-longer. He will have justice and order in his land, come what may. Ah!
-but to meddle with the rights of the Church is no light matter, as he is
-ere long to discover to his cost. He cannot even make a beginning of
-reform unless the head of the Church in England is in sympathy with his
-plans. Good thought! he will make Becket archbishop, and then all will
-be well.
-
-But when the consecration is over, Henry finds to his dismay that Becket
-is another man. He dismisses his gay followers; he throws off his costly
-robes; he abandons his feasting, his gold plate, his tapestries, and his
-jewels. He mortifies himself with the coarsest food, drinks bitter
-water, wears sackcloth next his skin, and has himself flogged for his
-sins. A little cell is his home, and every day, to emulate the meekness
-of his Master, he washes the feet of thirteen beggars. All the world
-wonders, and Henry grows angry. His anger increases when Becket resigns
-the chancellorship, and lets it be known that he now lives for Mother
-Church, and Mother Church alone.
-
-Henry now tries to carry out his reforms, and make all men, priest and
-layman alike, answerable for their crimes to the king’s court. For a
-moment Becket wavers; the king shall have his wish. But a day’s
-reflection convinces him that in yielding he is betraying the Church.
-Then his resolution stiffens. He prays the Pope to release him from his
-promise, and when he is absolved he boldly defies the king. Picture
-Henry’s rage. You must know the man to imagine the fury of it. When
-thwarted, he is wont to fling himself on the floor and bite the rushes
-with which it is strewn.
-
-Becket has made many enemies by his arrogance in the old days, and now
-they take care to fan the king’s wrath. Some one accuses him of having
-denied justice, and forthwith he is found guilty and heavily fined.
-Other punishments are in store for him; but he sweeps into the Council
-chamber in full robes, with his crosier in his hand, and dares them to
-pass sentence upon him. He and the Church, he says, are in the keeping
-of God, and the Pope, and none other, shall judge him. Angry indeed are
-the king’s friends at these bold words. One of them shouts “Traitor!”
-and others take up the rushes from the floor and fling them at him.
-Turning to one of his assailants, he fiercely cries, “If I might bear
-arms, I would quickly prove on you that you lied!” With this he leaves
-the hall.
-
-Full well he knows that there is no safety for him in England, so,
-disguised as a simple monk, and calling himself “Brother Dearman,” he
-hastens from the kingdom, and for seven long years he dwells abroad.
-Discontented nobles in Henry’s wide French dominions—he is lord from
-the Pyrenees to the Tweed—threaten to take up arms in Becket’s cause,
-and at length a kind of peace is patched up between archbishop and king.
-
-But ere Becket can return home, Henry does a deed which again angers the
-proud archbishop and rouses all the old enmity between them. Following
-the French fashion, Henry desires to have his son crowned king in his
-lifetime. The Archbishop of York is persuaded to undertake the ceremony.
-Now, the crowning of the king is the privilege of the Archbishop of
-Canterbury, and of him alone. Becket’s anger flames up at the slight,
-and he crosses to England in a bitter frame of mind.
-
-And now you stand in the streets of Canterbury watching his return. The
-people welcome him gladly, for they remember his old kindnesses to them.
-The nobles, however, stand aloof; they dread his reappearance, and
-rightly believe that it means trouble to the realm. Becket passes on to
-his cathedral, and in solemn tones excommunicates the Archbishop of York
-and the bishops who have crowned the young prince.
-
-Henry is in Normandy, but the news speedily reaches him, and then his
-passion knows no bounds. “Here,” he shouts to the knights about him,
-“here is a man that has eaten my bread, a pitiful fellow that came to my
-court on a sorry hackney, and owes all he has to me, lifting his hand
-against me, and insulting my kingdom and my kindred, and not one of the
-cowardly, sluggish knaves I feed and pay so well has the heart to avenge
-me!”
-
-Fatal words! Four of the knights who listen to the king’s bitter reproof
-steal away from his court and hurry to Canterbury. While cool reflection
-has brought wiser counsels to the king, they are bursting into the
-archbishop’s chamber at Canterbury, and are commanding him to absolve
-the bishops without delay. He argues with them, and they threaten him,
-but he is obdurate. “Then we will do more than threaten,” they say, and
-outside they go to don their coats of mail. Meanwhile the frightened
-monks run to the archbishop and beg him to take shelter in the
-cathedral. He laughs at their fears. “Methinks,” he says, “all you monks
-are cowards.” Not a step will he stir till the bell summons him to
-vespers. Then he walks serenely to the cathedral.
-
-Soon the knights are thundering at the barred door. “Unbolt the door,”
-cries Becket; “I will not have God’s house made a fortress for me.” The
-timid monks dare not obey him, and he flings back the bolt himself. Then
-the knights enter, and one of them attempts to drag him outside, so that
-the murderer’s work may not be done within consecrated walls. Becket
-clings to the great pillar, and Grim, the only brave monk in the
-chapter, holds him fast. “Strike! strike!” shouts one of the knights,
-and the sword descends. The devoted Grim catches the blade on his arm,
-and falls back wounded. Then the blows fall thick and fast, and the
-archbishop sinks to the ground, crying out that he dies for the cause of
-God and the Church. And here we leave him in the gloom and silence of
-his cathedral.
-
-Becket is dead; but though he goes hence and is no more seen, he is
-mightier in death than he was in life. He conquers as his heart’s blood
-drips from him.
-
-All Christendom stands aghast at the murder. Henry is horrified when he
-learns the news, and his grief is real and profound. He instantly sends
-explanations to the Pope, and, fearing that his enemies will unite
-against him, embarks for Ireland. In due course he returns to Normandy,
-and swears that he had no foreknowledge of the archbishop’s death. There
-is no more talk of curbing the Church; it has proved far too strong for
-him.
-
- “O’er the rough stones that pave the ancient way,
- Barefoot, a king in penitent array,
- Crawls humbly to the canonizèd bones.
- Doffing his state, he eagerly atones,
- Performs the penance haughty priests decide,
- And stills the throbbings of rebellious pride.
- Prostrate, he feels the stroke of chastening rod,
- And cleansed, he rises, reconciled with God.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Death of Becket.=
- (_After the painting by John Cross, in Canterbury Cathedral._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- STRONGBOW.
-
- “_The lovely and the lonely bride_
- _Whom we have wedded but have never won._”
-
-Now, for the first time, let Ireland figure in our pageant. So far
-England has never intruded upon this “green isle of the west.” Centuries
-have come and gone since the Kelts first crossed into Erin and subdued
-the primitive inhabitants by force of arms. Legends, many and wondrously
-beautiful, still remain of those early times, and men read them to-day
-with a new and kindling interest. A strange dreamland it is of gods and
-wizards, heroes and beauteous ladies.
-
- “The isle is full of noises,
- Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.”
-
-We do not, however, tread the solid ground of history until the coming
-of St. Patrick, who “preached, baptized, and prayed; from the praise of
-God he ceased not.” In the days of his successors Ireland became the
-_Isle of Saints_, and sent forth her missionaries to less favoured
-lands. At length invaders arrived; the Vikings descended with fire and
-sword, and after terrible conflicts settled in certain coastwise towns
-of the eastern shore. Bold Brian Boru, however, clipped their wings at
-Clontarf, and Ireland still remained unsubdued. When, however, King
-Henry of England began to meditate on the conquest of the sister isle,
-Ireland had long fallen from her high estate. All that St. Patrick and
-his successors had done to civilize the island had disappeared during
-the long and desperate struggle with the Danes. Ireland was a sad,
-despairing land, where peace never reigned and men never ceased from
-foray and slaughter.
-
-Now, turn your eyes to the historic figures who pass us by. Foremost
-among them you see a dark-visaged “king,” with his collar of gold and
-his mantle of fur. He is Diarmid, King of Leinster, though his kingdom
-is shadowy enough at present; for he has been driven out of Ireland by
-the high-king and a chief whom he has grievously wronged. This Diarmid,
-smitten by the charms of Devorgilla, wife of the one-eyed chief of
-Breffni, has carried off the lady, and now he is suffering for his
-gallantry. He has posted to King Henry, offering him homage in return
-for assistance in recovering his throne. Henry has other business on
-hand just now, and he cannot entertain the enterprise in person. He
-gives the errant king, however, letters-patent permitting all liegemen
-of the English crown to assist him in recovering his territory.
-
-So Diarmid hies him to Bristol, the great western seaport, and there
-meets with the second figure in the group now passing before us. Look
-well at this tall, ruddy, gray-eyed Norman knight, for he is the first
-to set up English rule in Ireland. He is Richard Strongbow of Clare,
-Earl of Pembroke, a “landless resolute,” a man of no very good
-character, but warlike, and with the courage and cunning of his race.
-You would not think so to speak with him. His voice is soft and gentle,
-his manner is courteous, but behind it all there is unmistakable
-determination and daring. Strongbow agrees to throw in his lot with
-Diarmid, and the price of his assistance is the fair maiden who walks by
-her father’s side. Eva is nothing loath to accept the debonair Norman
-knight as her husband, so all goes well.
-
-The buds are bursting into leaf on the Irish trees when the
-advance-guard of the invaders see the blue hills of Wicklow before them.
-After some dubious fighting, they seize Wexford, and begin to harry the
-surrounding country. Raymond the Fat, Strongbow’s nephew, a stout, rosy,
-valiant knight, arrives in May with reinforcements, and several
-hard-fought successes are gained. Then comes Strongbow with the main
-force, and a combined attack is made on Waterford, which is, in sooth, a
-hard nut to crack. It is Raymond who perceives the means of shelling the
-kernel. In his reconnoitring he observes a small wooden house built on
-props and clinging with its timbers to the stones of the walls. His men
-hew down the posts which support it, and as the building falls it
-reveals a gap in the wall, through which the besiegers enter. The town
-is seized, a pitiless slaughter follows, and the dead lie in heaps in
-the streets.
-
-Strongbow and Eva are forthwith wedded. And now begins a period of
-fierce strife amidst the woods and bogs, where the Irish can strike
-shrewd blows at the invader and vanish into security by secret paths.
-When, emboldened by success, they leave the broken ground and meet the
-enemy on the plain, they are crushed and scattered by the whirlwind
-charge of the mailed horsemen. Slowly but surely the newcomers gain
-ground, and at length Dublin falls. Then Diarmid, “the traitor,” sinks
-into his grave. His work is done, and no longer will his hoarse voice
-urge on the enemies of his country. Strongbow is his heir, and he now
-calls himself King of Leinster.
-
-By this time Henry is alarmed, for Strongbow bids fair ere long to be
-King of Ireland. He issues a proclamation forbidding Englishmen to
-engage in warfare in the distracted isle, and Strongbow soon perceives
-that Henry will brook no vassal of his building up a rival kingdom.
-Raymond the Fat is at once dispatched with a humble letter of homage;
-but Henry receives the messenger coldly, and disdains to reply.
-
-Henry himself now prepares to invade Ireland. The month of October, in
-the year 1171, sees his great fleet of four hundred ships laden with
-soldiers set sail from Milford Haven. The fame of this fierce,
-bullet-headed king with the bloodshot eyes and the dark red hair has
-preceded him, and at his landing all Ireland hastens to do him homage.
-In a wicker-work hall with walls of peeled osiers, Henry holds his court
-in Dublin during one of the stormiest winters ever known. He feasts the
-Irish chieftains on dainty Norman dishes; he grants charters bestowing
-all the soil of Ireland on ten of his leading knights, and, leaving
-Strongbow out in the cold, invests Hugh de Lacy with cap and sword as
-the first governor of Dublin. When the April showers begin to fall, the
-royal Plantagenet embarks his host and returns to England.
-
-But what of Strongbow? Conscious of the royal displeasure, he joins
-Henry in Normandy, and fights bravely against the king’s rebel sons.
-Then once more the sun of royalty deigns to smile on him, and at length
-he is rewarded with the long-coveted governorship of Dublin. In Ireland
-he discovers that Raymond the Fat is most popular with the soldiery, and
-is likely to prove a troublesome rival. A marriage is arranged between
-Strongbow’s sister and the popular knight, and Strongbow feels that he
-has staved off a disaster. The wedding festivities are rudely
-interrupted by news of native risings, and away goes Raymond to the
-congenial work of quelling the revolting chieftains. He gains success
-after success. The soldiers will have no other leader but him; and all
-the while Strongbow jealously intrigues against him. One day when
-Raymond is in the south he receives this message from his wife: “Be it
-known unto your sincere love that the great jaw-tooth which used to give
-me such uneasiness has fallen out. If you have any care or regard for me
-or yourself, return with all speed.”
-
-The “great jaw-tooth” is none other than Strongbow, who has just died
-from the effects of an ulcer in his foot. So passes the man who ushers
-the English race into Ireland. He came to bring not peace but a sword,
-and with his advent began five long centuries of battle and murder,
-oppression, confiscation, rebellion, famine, crime, and misery
-unspeakable.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- RICHARD OF THE LION HEART.
-
- “_The knight’s bones are dust,_
- _And his good sword rust;_
- _His soul is with the saints, I trust!_”
-
-Almost the best-known character in all our pageant now makes his
-appearance. Clad in coat of mail, his shield blazoned with the leopards
-of England, his surcoat broidered with the Red Cross, he is the very
-_beau-ideal_ of a knight. Tall, stalwart, handsome, fair-haired, and
-blue-eyed, the gaze of all men lingers admiringly on him. A good
-general, a skilful engineer, a wise judge of men, he might have been a
-renowned king; but, alas, his lust for war, his thirst for adventure,
-his fierce delight in conflict made him a mere soldier—the foremost of
-his time, it is true, but nevertheless a killer of men, and not a
-builder of states or a benefactor of his land. Still, he shines beyond
-all other English kings as the hero of song and story, and as the mirror
-of the knighthood which prevailed in his day.
-
-Richard figures in history as the outstanding hero of the third Crusade.
-Well-nigh a century before he was crowned king at Westminster, Peter the
-Hermit had harrowed men’s hearts by a recital of the infamies done by
-the Saracen to Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land. With frenzied words
-he bade his hearers, “Go, deliver the sepulchre of the Lord;” and
-everywhere arose the answering cry, “God wills it!” A tumultuary horde,
-burning with enthusiasm, plundered its way to the East, but perished
-without touching Asiatic shores. Behind it came an organized army, which
-suffered terribly on the burning sands of Syria, but nevertheless
-achieved its object, and set up a Latin kingdom in the Holy Land. Half a
-century went by, and the Crescent was once more in the ascendant. Again
-a Crusade was preached, and again an immense army set forth to deliver
-the tomb of our Lord from the infidel. It had to fight against treachery
-of the worst type, and its career was inglorious in the extreme.
-
-Sixteen years ago a new conqueror arose in the East, the great Sultan
-Saladin, a knight worthy to cross swords with Richard himself. Jerusalem
-was now in his hands, and pious Christians felt a deep pang of shame
-that it should be so. Once more a Crusade was preached, and once more
-the good and the bad, the pious and the impious, the just and the unjust
-of Christendom swore to drive the Saracen from the holy soil which his
-foot polluted. Religious enthusiasm blazed up fiercely, and its
-first-fruits in England was an awful massacre of Jews on the coronation
-day of Richard. “Down with the foes of the Lord!” shouted the mob, and
-thousands of innocent Israelites were murdered in cold blood. At Lincoln
-the brave Jews defended themselves in the castle until all hope was
-gone. Then they slew their women and children, lest a worse fate should
-befall them, and perished by their own hands rather than surrender to
-their Christian foes.
-
-But all this was forgotten in the bustle and tumult of warlike
-preparation. Never was Richard so busy, never was he in higher spirits.
-He worked all day, snatching an hour or two in the evening to spend with
-his loved troubadours. In the August of the year 1189 his galley
-_Trenche-mer_ set sail from Marseilles, and spread its sails for
-Messina, where Richard and Philip of France were to forgather. Winter
-was to be spent peacefully under Sicilian skies; but trouble was not
-long in brewing. The townsfolk having beaten and insulted his men,
-Richard forthwith stormed their city. As a notable squire of dames, he
-then took up the cause of his widowed sister Joan, who had been
-despoiled of her dowry by her brother-in-law, the new king. Restitution
-was made perforce, and Richard by his gallantry and lavish bounty soon
-became the theme of all tongues. Philip of France, as proud and haughty
-as Richard himself, looked on sullenly, and a passionate jealousy of the
-English king began to take possession of him.
-
-At last Richard sailed for Cyprus, where he proposed to land and await
-the coming of his bride, the fair Berengaria of Navarre. But a storm
-overtook his fleet, and two of his vessels were driven ashore. Isaac
-Comnenus, the churlish ruler of the island, little guessing with whom he
-had to deal, seized the cargoes and imprisoned the crews. This was
-intolerable, and Richard’s hot blood boiled with rage. To avenge the
-insult, he pounced upon the capital of the island and captured it. Then,
-to crown his triumph, came Berengaria, and, amidst scenes of splendour,
-his marriage was celebrated. He spent his honeymoon in conquering the
-rest of the island, nor did he rest until Isaac, loaded with silver
-chains, was sent into banishment.
-
-Twice he had fought and conquered since leaving Marseilles, and yet a
-third adventure awaited him before the real business of his enterprise
-began. During the voyage to Acre a big merchant ship was sighted flying
-false colours. Speedily she was discovered to be a Saracen vessel
-striving to run the blockade of Acre, now besieged by the Crusaders.
-Forthwith Richard mustered his crew. “I will hang every mother’s son of
-you if you let yonder dromond go,” was the burden of his speech, and
-having thus heartened his men, he bore down on the foe. The Saracens let
-fly a shower of arrows and threw Greek fire aboard the _Trenche-mer_,
-but, nothing daunted, Richard rammed the Saracen vessel with the sharp
-prow of his galley. Through the gaping rent in the dromond’s side the
-sea poured in, and down she went with all her rich cargo and most of her
-crew.
-
-There were no more adventures before Acre was reached. The ancient town
-was closely beleaguered by the Crusaders, but little progress had been
-made. A change came over the spirit of the attackers when Cœur de Lion
-arrived. Up rose a great wooden castle to top the walls; here and there
-huge catapults hurled missiles into the town; while beneath the
-pent-houses was heard the sound of pick and spade as the sappers
-undermined the walls. Now ague seized the king, but his ardent spirit
-would not let him rest. Carried in a litter to the trenches, he himself
-pulled a bow against the Saracens on the ramparts, and by example,
-stirring words, and promises of reward encouraged his soldiers to press
-the siege with all possible vigour.
-
-Early in July the town was yielded, and in the first moment of success
-bickerings began amongst the Christian leaders.
-
-When the Crusaders entered the city, Richard perceived Leopold of
-Austria’s flag planted side by side with his own on St. George’s Mount.
-“Who has dared,” he said, laying his hand upon the Austrian standard,
-and speaking in a voice like the sound which precedes an earthquake,
-“who has dared to place this paltry rag beside the banner of England?”
-
-“It was I, Leopold of Austria.”
-
-“Then shall Leopold of Austria presently see the rate at which his
-banner and his pretensions are held by Richard of England.”
-
-So saying, he pulled up the standard-spear, splintered it to pieces,
-threw the banner itself on the ground, and placed his foot upon it.
-
-“Thus,” said he, “I trample on the banner of Austria.”
-
-In these words does Sir Walter Scott recount the story. Peace was
-ultimately made between the two, but Richard had made another foe, who
-was soon to take ample revenge on the haughty island king.
-
-The fame of Richard dwarfed that of every knight who wore the Cross in
-Palestine, and the bruit of his valorous deeds made him a terror to
-every Saracen in the land. For years after, an Arab would cry to the
-steed that stumbled, “Fool, dost thou think thou sawest King Richard?”
-But the odds were fearfully against him. Every day disease thinned his
-ranks, and in the long march from Acre along the coast his men suffered
-terribly, though they turned in wrath and smote, hip and thigh, the
-Saracens who harried them. Barely, too, did Richard escape the daggers
-of the assassins sent to do their murderous work by the Old Man of the
-Mountain, who dwelt at Lebanon. One of them entered Richard’s tent, and
-was about to strike when the English king caught up the stool on which
-he had been sitting, and with it crashed in his assailant’s skull. No
-wonder men believed that he bore a charmed life.
-
-And now he turned his steps to Jerusalem itself, but the Frenchmen
-forsook him, lest it should be said that an English king had recovered
-the Holy Sepulchre. Never was he so cast down as at this defection.
-Without their aid his little army could not hope to succeed. As he
-wrestled with his grievous disappointment, a knight begged him to ascend
-a mount from which he might gaze upon Jerusalem. But the king snapped
-the switch which he held in his hand, and cast his surcoat over his
-head, while the angry tears gushed forth. “O Lord God,” he prayed,
-“suffer not mine eyes to behold Thy holy city, since Thou wilt not grant
-that I deliver it from the hands of Thy foes!”
-
-Back again over the weary sands of the desert he toiled, sick at heart
-and sick of body, but not so sick that he could not again drive the
-enemy before him. But he had failed, though he had done all that man
-could do. Saladin agreed to a truce of three months, three days, and
-three hours, and with this poor result Richard was forced to be content.
-So he left the Holy Land, never to return.
-
-Richard, however, was never long without the adventures which he so
-ardently sought. On the homeward voyage he landed at Ragusa, on the
-Adriatic shore, meaning to pass through Germany in disguise. But the
-gloves in the belt of his page betrayed him as a great personage, and he
-fell into the hands of his foe, Leopold of Austria, who at length found
-himself able to pay off old scores. Ultimately Richard was sold to the
-emperor, who put him in chains, and raked the past for offences
-wherewith to accuse his royal captive. For a time Richard disappeared
-entirely from view, but the place of his captivity leaked out at last.
-An old story tells us that his whereabouts were discovered by the
-minstrel Blondel, who loved the king, and set out on a weary quest to
-seek him. From castle to castle he passed, singing under the walls a
-song which Richard had composed. One day, to his great delight, he heard
-a voice which he knew full well troll out the second verse of the song
-from a dungeon cell. Forthwith he hastened to England and told the news.
-Historians, however, frown upon this pleasing story.
-
-Richard was tried at a Great Council, where he defended himself boldly,
-and cleared himself of all the charges urged against him. Nevertheless,
-his captor would not let him go without ransom, which was valued at
-twenty-seven times the king’s weight, and amounted to the colossal sum
-for those days of £100,000. Richard wrote home to his ministers and
-begged them to collect the money as speedily as possible, as he was
-weary of captivity. While they were raising the ransom, which was a
-grievous burden even to rich England, Richard whiled away the weary
-hours by writing ballads, one of which ran thus:——
-
- “Never can captive make a song so fair
- As he can make that has no cause for care,
- Yet may he strive by song his grief to cheer.
- I lack not friends, but sadly lack their gold!
- Shamed are they, if unransomed I lie here a second Yule in hold.”
-
-But his people were not “shamed.” The Pope and other Christian powers
-were indignant at the ill-usage to which the champion of the Cross had
-been subjected, and the Emperor thought it wise to yield to that public
-opinion which almost unanimously condemned him. So when three-fourths of
-the ransom had been paid, Richard was set free, and sailed with all
-speed for England.
-
-Not even now was peace to be his lot, for his false brother John was in
-arms against him. John, however, was soon pleading that forgiveness
-which Richard of the generous heart was always ready to grant. Then he
-was crowned afresh, to rid him of the stain of his captivity; and now
-that his kingdom was regained and all was peaceful, he looked about for
-new battles to fight.
-
-He had not far to look. Philip of France was an old enemy, and he had
-treacherously supported John in his endeavours to gain the English crown
-while Richard was “in hold.” An uneasy peace followed a French defeat,
-but a few years later war broke out again, and once more a truce was
-proclaimed. Soon after, Richard’s subjects in Poitou were in rebellion,
-and Richard went south to quell the rising. By chance he learned that
-one of his vassals had unearthed a rich treasure-trove in the shape of a
-golden chess-table and men. Richard claimed the prize, but his vassal
-was unwilling to surrender it, whereupon the king laid siege to his
-castle of Chaluz.
-
-During the siege an archer in the beleaguered keep shot at the king and
-hit him in the breast. The wound was not serious, but the doctor who
-attended him soon made it mortal. Ere long the king knew that he must
-die. As he lay on his deathbed the keep was taken, and the archer who
-had shot the fatal arrow was brought before him.
-
-“What have I done to thee, that thou shouldest slay me?” demanded the
-dying king.
-
-“Thou hast slain my father and my brothers with thine own hand,” replied
-the man undauntedly. “Torture me as thou wilt, I shall die gladly, since
-I have slain him who did me so much ill.”
-
-“Well, I forgive thee,” said Richard, always generous to a bold foe.
-Then he bade his servants give the man money and dismiss him unhurt. Let
-us ever remember that, with all his faults, all his pride, his love of
-pleasure, his vainglory, his animal passion for warfare, Richard’s dying
-request was for mercy to the man who had robbed him of life. When the
-breath was out of the king’s body his soldiers flayed the bowman alive,
-but that foul deed may not be laid to Richard’s charge.
-
-So they buried the Lion’s heart at Rouen, and laid his body at
-Fontevraud, beside that of the father whose gray hairs he had brought
-down long years ago with sorrow to the grave.
-
-[Illustration: =“GOD WILLS IT!”=
- (_From the picture by James Archer, R.S.A. By permission of the Autotype
- Co._)]
-
-[Illustration: =Crusaders on the March.=
- (_From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the South Kensington
- Museum._)]
-
-[Illustration: =King Richard and the Young Archer.=
- (_From the fresco by John Cross in the Houses of Parliament._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- KING JOHN AND MAGNA CHARTA.
-
- “_Magna Charta is such a fellow that he will have no sovereign._”
-
-Runnymede spreads before you, the famous field on which the English
-people wrested from a tyrannous monarch their great table of laws. You
-see a green meadow stretching along the marge of “silver-footed Thames,”
-a pasturage in no degree distinguished from scores of others in that
-fair valley. Fronting it is a little island, set like an emerald in the
-shining waters. Meadow and island should enchain your attention, for
-here a deed is to be done of deep and solemn import, immeasurable in its
-effects upon the lives and fortunes of generations yet unborn.
-
-Here you shall see the seed sown which is to shoot up into a goodly
-tree, bearing as its fruits that liberty, civilization, and knowledge in
-which we rejoice to-day. Long centuries of toil and struggle will elapse
-before it is deep-rooted in the soil; the weeds of error and wrong will
-threaten to choke it; the fierce sun of tyranny will scorch it; the
-piercing winds of privilege will numb it: but the hardy plant will not
-succumb. It will be tended by devoted hands, and watered with blood and
-tears, until it spreads its branches far and wide, and is reckoned the
-glory of the land. New-graffed with every generation, and branching into
-offshoots which bear little semblance to the parent stock, it still
-remains, worthy of all our reverence and regard as the sturdy root of
-the Constitution under which Britons dwell as the freest nation of the
-world.
-
-Look at the meadow on this side of the Thames. Busy hands are setting up
-a pavilion of white and gold, for the sojourn of a king. Other pavilions
-are rising on Runnymede itself, and on the island too, where a canopied
-throne is set up. Now the actors in the scene begin to arrive. Mail-clad
-barons armed as for the fray, grim and determined, solemn of port and
-sober of converse, draw near. An archbishop with his train of priests
-joins the armed throng. All the magnates of England, spiritual and
-secular, are here—and they are here to coerce a king.
-
-All is ready, and now the king leaves his bannered pavilion, and
-crossing the narrow waters to the isle proceeds towards the throne.
-Watch him closely, for his like has never before worn the English crown,
-and—please God—never will again. Look at his fierce, dark countenance,
-over which waves of passion continually spread, like the ripples on
-yonder waters. He is the scourge of his land, the worst monarch with
-which England has been cursed—worse even than Rufus. Bad son, bad
-husband, bad father, bad king, there is scarce a crime in the whole
-black calendar of which he may not be justly accused. He is cruel,
-false, greedy, untruthful, and vile; yet out of his wickedness wondrous
-good shall come.
-
-He has fought his father, he has wronged his brother, and he has
-murdered the little nephew who stood in his way. The poor child Arthur,
-heir to the English throne and to England’s wide realms in France, fell
-into his hands twelve years ago. John offered him terms, but the lad,
-brimful of the spirit of his race, would strike no bargain with the
-“shameless king.” He was close pent in a Norman castle, and thither John
-dispatched his unwilling minister, Hubert de Burgh, to put out the lad’s
-eyes. But the frenzied appeals of the little prince so moved Hubert’s
-heart that he forswore his foul commission, preferring to brave the
-wrath of his ruthless master than to suffer the sting of conscience. But
-there were others with no bowels of compassion, and by their aid the lad
-was slain. How he actually died we do not know. Perhaps John inveigled
-the boy into a boat and there stabbed him and flung his body overboard,
-or perhaps he compassed his death by subtler means. Shakespeare tells us
-that, goaded to madness, the little prince leaped from the walls of his
-prison, crying,—
-
- “O me! my uncle’s spirit is in these stones—
- Heaven take my soul, and England keep my bones.”
-
-At any rate, the king you now see approaching has murder on his soul.
-But this is only the beginning of his villainy. Seven years ago the
-Archbishop of Canterbury went to his rest, and the monks of the
-cathedral elected another and sent him to Rome for his pall. John chose
-for the high office a minion of his own, “a servant of Mammon, and an
-evil shepherd that devoured his own sheep.” Pope Innocent, the proudest
-and most powerful man who ever wore the triple crown, set both
-candidates aside and appointed Stephen Langton, a wise and pious
-Englishman, against whom no word of scandal could be breathed. But John
-would have none other but his own nominee. He defied the Pope, and then
-the thunders of Rome were heard in the land. For the king’s sins a
-religious boycott was imposed upon the people.
-
-The most dreaded terror in the Papal armoury—an interdict—was placed
-on the land. The churches were closed, no bell rang for prayers, all
-rites were withheld from the people, and even the dead lay in
-unconsecrated ground. But John was not yet brought to his knees; he
-seized the goods and lands of the Church, and then Innocent in wrath
-cast him out of its pale. Still John was unsubdued; he plundered the
-Church even more remorselessly.
-
-He treated the Jews as a money-sucking sponge, squeezing them by every
-conceivable cruelty until they gave up their wealth. One rich Jew, so
-the story goes, was forced to disgorge by the simple process of having a
-tooth drawn every day until he had to choose between his remaining
-molars and his money bags. Others were starved in cages fastened to
-castle walls until their spirit of resistance was broken.
-
-Military success did not fail the wicked king at this crisis. He
-compelled William the Lion of Scotland to do homage and pay heavy
-tribute, and he did the only really good work of his life in Ireland.
-From that country, which had been destined as his principality, John had
-been driven in the lifetime of his father by an onslaught of the Irish
-chiefs, whom he had abominably insulted and goaded into rebellion. Now
-he returned, and made short work of them and of the quarrelsome
-Anglo-Normans. He pacified the distracted land, made good laws,
-appointed capable officers, and sailed home in triumph. Then he turned
-his victorious arms against his son-in-law, Llewellyn, and forced the
-Welsh prince to do homage in the midst of his mountain fastnesses. And
-all the time John snapped his fingers at the Pope.
-
-Innocent’s patience being now well-nigh exhausted, he sent to England
-his legate Pandulf, who solemnly declared John’s subjects free of their
-oath of fealty. But most of the nobles and many of the more worldly
-clergy still stuck to John, and his hired troops feared neither Pope nor
-devil. So John still held out, and even began to win the goodwill of his
-subjects by regulating the seaport trade, and by pardoning offenders
-against the barbarous forest laws of the time. Now came the Pope’s final
-sentence—John was to be hurled from the throne, and another and a
-worthier king should reign in his stead.
-
-Philip of France was chosen to carry out the decree, and speedily he
-mustered an army for the venture. On all hands foes arose, and though
-the English barons and people were quite ready to fight for their king,
-John was for the first time thoroughly frightened. He feared to die
-outside the Church, and he was terrified by a monkish prophecy that he
-should lose his crown ere next Ascension Day. So he begged forgiveness
-of Innocent, knelt before Pandulf, and gave up his kingdom, which he
-received back on promise of amendment and a yearly tribute as vassal of
-the Pope. The anger of the English people at this base act knew no
-bounds. “He has become the Pope’s man,” they sneered; “he is no longer a
-king, but a slave.” Still more angry did they become when John sent an
-expedition to France, which, after capturing Philip’s fleet and burning
-his stores, was hopelessly beaten and driven back to England.
-
-Many of the barons had refused to join this ill-fated expedition, and
-now John began to punish them. This was the last straw. They met in
-wrath, and Stephen Langton showed them the charter which Henry the First
-had granted to his people one hundred years before. The barons, utterly
-disgusted with John and all his works, now knelt before the high altar
-of St. Edmund’s minster and swore that they would make the king put his
-seal to a similar charter, even if they had to plunge the land in civil
-war. They girded on their armour, and under Robert Fitzwalter, “marshal
-of the army of God and of holy Church,” marched on London, where the
-citizens threw open the gates to receive them. “These articles,” cried
-the king, when they were presented to him, “are pure foolishness. Why do
-they not ask me for the kingdom at once? I will never give them such
-freedom as would make me their slave.” Brave words these, but when John
-perceived that all his knights but seven had deserted him he saw that he
-had no alternative but to yield.
-
-And now let us turn again to the scene on the little island in the
-Thames. John has ascended his throne, and, holding the sword of state in
-his hand, battles hard with the fierce rage that is gnawing in his
-heart. Now he must repress his feelings, but to-night he will give them
-full fling. He will throw himself on the ground, gnash his teeth, and in
-a torrent of rage utter curses loud and deep. But here he must dissemble
-his wrath. Around him are the barons in full armour, their hearts as
-hard and their wills as unyielding as the mail which clothes them. A
-monk reads the charter, but the king is not listening. He is plotting
-and planning how to make these barons eat dirt for the insult they are
-putting upon him. By his side is Pandulf, urging him to defy them; but
-the king knows the resistless might of angry Englishmen better than any
-foreign churchman. He is in a trap; he must yield, but woe betide those
-who have made him do so!
-
-The reading of the charter is finished, and John cries reluctantly, “Let
-it be sealed.” Then the charter is placed on the table in front of him,
-the wax is melted and placed on the parchment, the seal is screwed down,
-and the great charter becomes, for all time, the law of the land.
-
-Now, what is this charter which has just been sealed? It is really a
-treaty of peace between king and people. “We will retain you as king,”
-they say, “only on condition that you swear to keep the law thus written
-down.” It is no new thing this law, but the old rights and the old
-liberties of the people collected together, and for the first time put
-into black and white. All the freemen of the land have united to extort
-this charter from the king, and the rights of all classes are laid down
-in it. Naturally, much of the charter deals with the rights of the
-barons and the clergy, for they have had the chief hand in securing it,
-but one-third of it contains promises and guarantees for the people in
-general. All praise to the barons! Unlike those of some foreign lands,
-they are not selfish now that they have got the upper hand of the king.
-Of course they take very good care of themselves, but to their credit be
-it said that they do not neglect the welfare of the nation at large.
-
-In days to come men will regard this charter as the cure for every kind
-of royal lawlessness and tyranny. Well-nigh forty times will our kings
-be forced to sign it, and every time the national faith in the
-principles laid down in it will grow stronger and stronger. It will be
-greatly changed in form as the years run by, for new conditions will
-bring the need for new applications of its provisions. Nevertheless, the
-three main principles of the charter which you have witnessed in the
-making have been carried into every land where the British flag waves,
-and to every shore where the spirit of British freedom has penetrated.
-Let them be set down here before the scene closes and the pageant moves
-on:—_The people can only be taxed with the consent of their
-representatives. There shall be justice for all, and it must not be
-sold, delayed, or refused. No freeman shall be taken, imprisoned, or in
-any way hurt, unless he be tried by his peers or equals according to the
-law._
-
-In our days of widespread freedom these priceless principles seem to us
-the merest commonplaces, yet we must never forget that stout hearts,
-strong wills, and eternal vigilance were needed before they became the
-unchallenged possession of all who glory in the name of Briton.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Hubert and Arthur.=
- (_From the picture by William F. Yeames, R.A. By permission of the
- Corporation of Manchester._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII.
- THE THREE EDWARDS.
-
-
- THE FIRST PRINCE OF WALES.
-
- “_God bless the Prince of Wales._”
-
-AND now “gallant little Wales” shall supply a scene to our pageant.
-History may not sanction the subject of it, but it may not be omitted.
-You are spectators within the gray walls of Carnarvon Castle, that grim
-old fortress which overlooks the fair waters of Menai Strait. From its
-soaring towers your eye takes in the wild mountain region of Snowdonia,
-a land of hoary summits and green valleys, in the recesses of which the
-old Celtic inhabitants of Britain stubbornly maintained their
-independence for more than five long centuries. You are now to see the
-nation subdued and an English king assert his sway. But you will not see
-it lose those essential things which mark its nationality—its language,
-its literature, its genius. To-day they are still dear to the Welsh
-nation, and are more jealously guarded and fostered than ever. Go to an
-Eisteddfod and hear twice a thousand Welsh voices unite in the stirring
-strains of _Hen Wlad fy Nhadau_ (“Land of my fathers.”) You will then
-understand how ardently the flame of patriotism burns in the breast of
-the men and women who have been reared in this ancient land of beauty
-and song.
-
-As the scene opens, you perceive that the death-knell of the nation’s
-independence has tolled. You gaze upon an assembly of
-chieftains—handsome, active men with long hair and moustaches and
-shaven chins. Their arms, their coats of mail, their helms and shields
-are laid aside, and they are clad simply in tunic and cloak, bare-kneed,
-and shod with brogues of hide. All are depressed, all are sorrowful, for
-they are here to acknowledge the surrender of their land.
-
-As they wait the coming of the English king their minds fly back over
-the long story of resistance which they and their sires before them have
-made against their persistent and greedy foes. As they cast their
-thoughts back they recall the awful slaughter of Roman times, when the
-Druids of Mona were sacrificed on their own altars; they dimly remember
-how the deep snow of their hills baffled the haughty Conqueror, who, not
-to be beaten, planted his barons on their borders, and bade them win the
-land by never-ceasing strife. It was Griffith ap Rees—was it not?—who
-made the Norman bite the dust, and taught him to respect the might of
-the Cymric arm and the fury of the Cymric onset. Then they remember what
-their bards have told them of the brave days of Owen Gwynedd and the
-Lord Rees—how these twain drove back the Norman who called himself
-“Fine Scholar,” and baffled him too. For all his scholarship, he could
-not add the laurel of Wales to the wreath that encircled his brow.
-
-Then they would think of Llywelyn the Great, and of that golden age
-which their fathers were never tired of recalling—how that wise and
-powerful prince strove to unite all Wales, and live on good terms with
-the Saxon on his borders. ’Twas Llywelyn, they remind one another, who
-married King John’s daughter, and aided the Saxon barons to make that
-false sovereign swear to observe the rights of the Cymry and keep their
-laws inviolate. ’Twas in his day, too, that the monk and the friar came
-into their land with a blessed ministry to the poor and the outcast.
-Strange that the great Llywelyn should have begotten so feeble a son as
-David, he who weakly threw in his lot with the Saxon and sent his
-patriot brother Griffith in chains to the Tower of London. Ah! it was a
-sad day when the rope broke by which that gallant prince was trying to
-escape, and he was killed by the fall!
-
-But his son Llywelyn, their late king, was worthy of his sire, look you!
-He and the great Simon de Montfort had fought shoulder to shoulder, and
-the Saxon king had been obliged to recognize Llywelyn as Prince of
-Wales. And now he has gone too—slain by a foe who knew him not, in a
-mere skirmish down by Builth. Yes, and the old prophecy has come
-true—that Llywelyn should ride crowned through London. Crowned he was,
-in very sooth, but, alas, the crowned head was carried on a spear. Woe
-worth the day! David, his brother, had been caught too, and had suffered
-the awful death penalty of a traitor. Even now his head was rotting over
-Shrewsbury gate. Had Llywelyn but lived, even Edward’s great army might
-have been driven back, especially as winter was coming on, and the
-storms and the snows would fight on their side. But with Llywelyn’s
-death all hope has vanished, and what can they do but submit?
-
-And now Edward, the Saxon king before whom they are to bow, comes on the
-scene. The chieftains scan him closely. Some of them have never seen him
-eye to eye before; but his warlike fame has long been familiar to them.
-As he strides into the courtyard, towering above his attendants, they
-can readily believe those wonderful stories which they have heard of his
-mighty prowess and physical strength—how, for example, he slew the
-assassin in the Holy Land, and how he bore himself at Châlons when the
-Burgundian knight strove to drag him from his saddle. What a fool the
-fellow must have looked when Edward clapped spurs to his horse and shook
-the man to the ground as though he had been a bag of straw! He is
-pitiful, too, and boasts—does he not?—that no man ever begged his life
-of him in vain. And what is that device which he bears so proudly on his
-shield? “Keep faith.” Ah, but will he keep faith with stricken Wales?
-Has he not slaughtered the very bards, lest their songs should keep the
-memory of the old free days fresh and green in their hearts?
-
-And now the handsome, stern king with the drooping eyelid begins to
-speak in deep, vibrant tones, and the interpreter turns his words into
-the tongue of old Britain. He will give them a prince of their own.
-“Nay,” they cry out, “we will have no prince but one born in our own
-land and speaking our own tongue.” Edward turns to the nurse who stands
-by, takes from her his newly-born son, and holds him aloft to the
-astonished gaze of the chieftains. “Here is your prince,” he cries; “he
-was born in Wales, and he knows not a word of the English tongue.”
-
-The humour of it appeals to the assembled throng. Yes, yes, they will
-swear fealty to him, but he must have a Welsh nurse, and he must learn
-to speak their language. Edward gladly agrees, and swears on the hilt of
-his sword to “keep faith.” So the Welsh have once more a prince of their
-own, and thus it comes about that the eldest son of an English king
-bears the proud title Prince of Wales.
-
-Now Edward betakes himself to the more serious work of settling the
-government of the land. Wales is to keep her old customs and laws, and
-Welshmen are to retain the freedom and the estates which they enjoyed
-under their own princes. All is done that can be done to make the
-foreign yoke easy and the burden light; but many a wicked deed will be
-perpetrated and many an injustice will be wrought before Welshmen are
-reconciled to the loss of their independence. But the day will come
-when, secure in their freedom and reinforced by their union with the
-mightier land on their borders, there will be no more loyal and
-stauncher hearts in the whole Empire than those which beat in “gallant
-little Wales.”
-
-[Illustration: =THE FIRST PRINCE OF WALES.=
- (_From the picture by P. R. Morris, A.R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- WILLIAM WALLACE.
-
- “_At Wallace’ name what Scottish blood_
- _But boils up in a spring-time flood._”
-
-Now let the scene shift to Scotland, where the masterful Edward, having
-subdued Wales, is seeking to lay his hands upon yet another kingdom.
-Truly the condition of the land invites him to conquest. The Scottish
-king, on a night ride along the cliffs of the Fifeshire coast, has
-fallen over the black rocks, and he is no more. The sceptre passes to a
-frail little grandchild in far-off Norway; but ere she can tread the
-soil of her kingdom, she too has gone the way of all flesh. The royal
-line is extinct, and the throne of Scotland is without an heir.
-
-Forthwith a round dozen of eager aspirants set up their claims to the
-vacant throne. All save two are men of straw, with hardly the colour of
-a right to the kingship. But Robert Bruce, Lord of Annandale, and John
-Baliol, Lord of Galloway, both come of the royal stock, and both have
-their clamorous supporters. Who shall judge betwixt them? Edward seizes
-the opportunity. He—so he declares—is overlord of Scotland, and he and
-none other will decide. So chronicles and title-deeds and charters are
-collected from many a muniment chest, and he and his councillors are
-soon busy examining them. When all is ready, he arrays an army and
-marches north to the Border castle of Norham, on the Tweed. To this
-place come the magnates of Scotland to hear his award. But before it is
-pronounced he claims that they shall recognize him as lord paramount.
-Some of the Scottish chiefs demur, but the English king cries, “By St.
-Edward, whose crown I wear, I will maintain my just right or die in the
-cause.” Might is right in his case, and the Scottish nobles, in the
-distracted state of the kingdom, are forced to admit his claim.
-
-And now, having secured the first point in the game, Edward gives
-judgment in favour of John Baliol, a lamb-like person, the least
-stalwart and the least Scottish of all the claimants. He is a weak
-creature, and Edward knows that he will be a pliant tool. So Baliol bows
-to Edward, and receives the crown of Scotland.
-
-Ere long Baliol begins to feel Edward’s bit gall his mouth. He is
-continually being pulled up and jerked hither and thither by the strong
-hand of his rider. Baliol submits time after time, but at length even
-his sluggish spirit is roused, and one day he throws off his allegiance
-and declares war. Edward has long been waiting for this turn of
-fortune’s wheel; he has long been working for this fatal outburst.
-Speedily he marches north with a great army and sweeps through the
-country, a ruthless conqueror. None can stand against him, and the
-“puppet king” least of all.
-
-See Baliol now, about to do public penance for his so-called misdeeds.
-The English barons are assembled in a churchyard, and thither they lead
-the king of the Scots mounted on a sorry nag. A herald proclaims his
-treason. His crown is snatched from his head, the sceptre from his hand,
-the royal robes from his person. A humble penitent, clad only in his
-body garments and holding a white rod in his hand, he meekly confesses
-his fault and acknowledges the justice of his punishment. A few days
-later he gives up his crown to Edward, and is dispatched a prisoner to
-the Tower of London. So Edward returns to his kingdom, leaving Scotland
-beaten to the ground, sore and humiliated, but passionately longing for
-revenge. With him he carries every token and memorial of Scottish
-independence—the crown and the sceptre, and the Stone of Destiny, on
-which Scottish kings have been crowned from time immemorial.
-
-Now let the great patriot hero whom Scotland delights to honour, even
-after the lapse of six centuries, tread the scene. He is William Wallace
-of Elderslie, a young knight of some twenty-seven years, massive of
-build and mighty of thew and sinew, fit foe for Edward himself. His face
-is long and fair, his hair light-brown, his eye clear and piercing, his
-expression solemn and sad. A foul outrage has driven him to the hills,
-where he is nursing his wrath and biding his time. An English officer
-has encountered him and his nine followers in the streets of Lanark and
-has taunted him with insulting words. His long sword has leaped from its
-scabbard and the insulter has been laid low. The alarm has been sounded,
-and armed men have rushed to the spot; but Wallace has fought his way
-through them, and has found a refuge in the woods, where the news of a
-dastardly crime speedily reaches him. His young and dearly-loved wife
-has been seized and slain by his cruel foes. Terrible indeed is his
-agony of grief, but tears avail nothing. “Cease,” he cries to his
-followers, “cease this bootless pain. We cannot bring her back to life,
-but no man shall ever see me rest till I have avenged the wanton
-slaughter of her so blithe and bright.”
-
-That very night he slays the slayer of his love, and day after day he
-swoops down on his foes like a hawk on its quarry. The fame of his
-daring deeds spreads abroad, and patriots seek him in his retreat and
-array themselves under his banner. Now it is an English convoy that is
-despoiled, now an English foraging party that is cut up. Every day
-brings its exploit, and throughout the south-western counties the
-English are everywhere harassed and harried by a foe who comes and goes
-mysteriously, and leaves no token but slaughtered men and burning
-roof-trees.
-
-Now see him, no longer the lurking outlaw, but the leader of an army,
-marching proudly at the head of his men, and fearlessly displaying the
-broad banner of Scotland. The best and bravest of the land are with him.
-Not a fortress north of the Tay save Dundee is in English hands. Only a
-year has sped since Edward left Scotland, in the vain belief that the
-northern kingdom is a cowed and tamed land. Now he perceives that the
-work must be done all over again. He gathers an army of fifty thousand
-men, and speeds northward for Stirling, where high on its rock sits the
-ancient fortress, the key to the centre of Scotland. Wallace hears of
-the English advance, and marches to Stirling with all speed. On and
-about the Abbey Craig, where his noble memorial tower now stands, he
-encamps, and awaits the coming of his foes.
-
-Ere long their banners are seen approaching. The Earl of Surrey, an old
-man broken in health, is in command, but the real leader is “fat and
-foolish” Sir Hugh Cressingham, Edward’s Lord-Treasurer in Scotland, a
-haughty and insolent priest, who wears his corselet with a better grace
-than his cassock. The English halt on the south side of the river, and
-are eager for an immediate attack, but wiser counsels prevail. So the
-watch-fires are lighted, and the two armies lie in sight of each other
-through the silent night, with the deep and sluggish Forth flowing
-between.
-
-Now the trumpets sound, and Sir Marmaduke Twenge leads his squadron of
-mail-clad knights to the bridge across the Forth, while Cressingham
-follows hard behind. The spearmen of Wallace, posted on the high ground,
-are in no hurry to attack. They make no sign as the knights cross the
-bridge and form up on the opposite shore, ready to charge the Scots on
-the hillside. Half the English army has crossed ere you perceive the
-trap into which it has fallen. Look yonder at that strong force of
-Scottish spearmen fetching a wide circuit and keeping near to the river.
-Now they begin to run towards the bridge. They cut through the line of
-the advancing English and block the bridge-head with a hedge of
-bristling steel. They drive back in a tumultuous heap the advancing
-horsemen on the crowded bridge, and now the moment for which Wallace has
-so long waited arrives. He charges furiously down the hillside, and
-hurls back the English squadrons in dire confusion. Horse and foot are
-inextricably mingled; hundreds go down before the Scottish spears, and
-vast numbers are driven into the river, which is lashed into foam by the
-drowning struggles of thousands of men and horses.
-
-Surrey, horror-stricken at the sight, now advances the royal standard of
-England, and his strong reserve of knights charge the bridge with the
-cry “For God and St. George.” The bridge is carried, but on the opposite
-shore there is no room to form, and they only increase the confusion and
-swell the slaughter. Of all that have crossed that fatal bridge only
-three return. All is over, and Surrey on the farther shore sets spurs to
-his horse. Keen and fierce is the pursuit, and terrible is the
-slaughter. Edward’s proud host is scattered like chaff before the wind,
-and Scotland is free again.
-
-The victorious Wallace is hailed by his countrymen as Governor of
-Scotland. But he has not done with the implacable Edward yet. The
-English king has appeased his revolting nobles, he has made a truce with
-the French, and has marshalled the might of his realm for another
-invasion of Scotland. A vast English army rolls northward. Eighty
-thousand men, including a large array of archers armed with the terrible
-long-bow which the men of South Wales have taught them to use, follow
-his banners. They enter the Lowlands, but Wallace has made it a desert.
-The houses are bare and empty; no cattle are in the fields; the crops
-have been reaped, the hay and corn stacks have been carried off.
-Edward’s army “marches on its stomach,” but Wallace has taken good care
-that there shall be nothing to fill it. By the time Edward draws near to
-Edinburgh symptoms of mutiny begin to appear amongst his soldiers, and
-he begins to meditate retreat.
-
-Then come traitors from the Scottish camp telling him that Wallace lies
-in the forest of Falkirk, and is about to attack his foes that very
-night. Edward is filled with joy at the tidings. “Thanks be to God!” he
-cries. “They need not wait for me, for I shall go instantly and meet
-them.” There is no delay. In an hour’s time his army is in motion.
-Linlithgow is reached, and he bivouacs for the night on the moor. Every
-man sleeps in his armour, his horse ready harnessed by his side. The
-king himself lies down on the bare ground and shares discomfort with his
-men. In the night his frightened charger kicks out, and its hoofs break
-two of the king’s ribs. But with the dawn Edward mounts bravely, and
-leads his army to rising ground beyond Linlithgow. Here the fighting
-Bishop of Durham says mass, and as the sun rises Edward’s keen eye sees
-its rays reflected from the spears of the Scots, now taking ground on
-the slope of a small hill not far from Falkirk.
-
-Wallace has drawn up his spearmen in four _schiltrons_ or circles.
-Between these schiltrons are his tall, handsome archers from the forests
-of Selkirk and Ettrick. His small and doubtful force of cavalry is
-marshalled in the rear. It includes the Scottish knights, many of whom
-are jealous of Wallace, and only half-hearted in Scotland’s cause. “I
-have brought you to the ring,” says the Scottish leader, “now dance as
-you may.”
-
-The trumpets sound, and the English cavalry charge. At the first onset
-the Scottish horsemen, led by traitor lords, turn bridle and ride from
-the field. Then the English knights swoop down upon the Scottish
-archers, and after a terrible struggle slay them to a man. But again and
-again they recoil from the “dark, impenetrable wood” of the spearmen.
-The bristling hedge of spears cannot be broken by the shock of horse and
-man, but there are other and deadlier means available. The English
-archers are to win the first of those signal victories which will make
-them the terror of the age. Drawn up in security scarce a hundred paces
-away, they shoot their cloth-yard shafts with unerring aim. Thick and
-fast they fall amidst the spearmen, and soon the living walls are
-breached. The English cavalry charge into the gaps where the dead and
-dying lie, and an awful slaughter rages. The battle is over; the Scots
-betake themselves to flight, and Wallace barely escapes into Torwood
-Forest.
-
-But even this victory has not laid Scotland at Edward’s feet. Everywhere
-he finds the country devastated, and he must either retreat or starve.
-Less than a month after the battle of Falkirk he sullenly leads his
-army, stricken by famine and disease, southward to England. But he
-withdraws like the panther, only to spring again. Five successive times
-he leads his army northward, and Scotland, exhausted by her long and
-heartrending struggles, at length lies at the conqueror’s feet.
-
-Once more Wallace is an outlaw on the hills. Edward has marked him down
-for death, and there is a price on his head. He lurks in the greenwood,
-hunted from cover to cover, with scarce a comrade to trust, and none to
-aid him. His former friend, Sir John Menteith, at length wins the
-blood-money. Wallace is seized in his sleep, bound with cords, and
-hurried south. As he enters London the streets swarm with spectators,
-all eager to see this renowned warrior of the North. His trial is a
-mockery. Vainly he protests that he is no traitor, for he has never
-sworn fealty to the English king. But he is doomed already, and all
-argument is vain. He is condemned of murder, sacrilege, and treason, and
-suffers the ghastly and revolting death which was meted out to David of
-Wales twenty-two years before. His head is set up on London Bridge, his
-right arm at Newcastle, his left at Berwick, one leg at Perth, and the
-other at Aberdeen.
-
-So perishes the national hero of Scotland, his body dispersed to “every
-airt” that the wind blows, but his name and fame cherished for ever in
-the hearts of his countrymen. He rises like a star in the darkness; he
-sets in gloom, but not before his radiance has rekindled the torch of
-Scottish patriotism, the flame of which is nevermore to be extinguished.
-Wallace cannot die; he lives again in every free and unselfish
-aspiration of unconquered Scotland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Trial of Wallace.=
- (_From the picture by Daniel Maclise, R.A., in the Guildhall Art Gallery.
- By Permission of the Corporation of London._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- ROBERT THE BRUCE.
-
- “_They thought to die in the mêlée,_
- _Or else to set their country free._”
-
-Not yet may “our stern alarums change for peaceful meetings, our
-dreadful marches to delightful measures.” Grim-visaged war must still be
-our portion, if our pageant is to depict the outstanding landmarks in
-our nation’s story. The victories of peace are for the future; now we
-must hear again the clash of arms, and share once more the joy of
-victory and the anguish of defeat.
-
-We are still in Scotland, where a successor to Wallace has arisen even
-before his scattered limbs have rotted away. The new champion is the
-grandson of that Bruce whom Edward set aside in favour of Baliol. His
-father, in the old days, was a friend of “Longshanks,” and young Robert
-Bruce has been trained in all the arts of war and the exercises of
-chivalry under the eye of the man whose mortal enemy he is destined to
-be. He comes upon the scene in the dark days succeeding the judicial
-murder of Wallace, in those bitter months when England’s iron grip is on
-Scotland. He sees with deep indignation the wretched condition of his
-countrymen, and cautiously and secretly lays his plans for throwing off
-the English yoke. He makes a compact with his friend Comyn, who too has
-royal blood in his veins; but Comyn is a traitor, and reveals the plot
-to the English king. Bruce receives warning, and ere long he settles
-accounts with Comyn. In the church of the Gray Friars at Dumfries the
-two meet face to face. Angry words pass, and Bruce strikes down his
-treacherous friend on the very steps of the altar. He rushes outside to
-his comrades. “I doubt I have slain Comyn!” he cries. “You doubt!” says
-one of them, “I mak’ siccar;” and entering the church he dispatches the
-unhappy man with many fierce blows.
-
-And now the Bruce has taken the plunge. There is no turning back; he
-must go forward to a crown, or suffer the fate of Wallace wight. A few
-faithful friends stand by him, and he hastens to Scone, the coronation
-place of Scottish kings. A friendly bishop lends him robes, the abbot
-provides a chair, and the statue of some saint is temporarily despoiled
-of its circlet to provide a crown.
-
-The news of the outbreak speedily reaches Edward, and throws him into
-ungovernable rage. He swears that he will never rest until he has
-hanged, drawn, and quartered the presumptuous knave who has forsworn his
-oaths and seized the crown. Edward’s nut-brown hair is snow-white now,
-and his once mighty arm is weak with age, but his determined spirit
-burns as fiercely as of yore. An advance-guard is pushed on with all
-speed, and near Perth it comes into touch with the Bruce, who barely
-escapes from it.
-
-The Bruce must now follow in the footsteps of Wallace, and wander, a
-hunted fugitive, over many a league of forest and hill. How true now
-seem the words of his wife at their hasty and impromptu coronation:
-“Alas! we are but king and queen of the May, such as boys crown with
-flowers and rushes in their summer sports.” Deserted and distressed, he
-lives the life of an outlaw, shooting his own venison and catching his
-own fish. But he is not sad and gloomy, as Wallace was wont to be. He
-cheers his little company by many a good-humoured sally and the recital
-of heroic deeds. Summer passes, and the pageantry of autumn descends
-upon the woods; but still he is a king without a throne, a wanderer
-without a home. The wild life of a hunted fugitive may not be borne
-during the dread winter by the ladies of his company, so he sends them
-with many a dark foreboding of evil to the care of his brother, and then
-takes ship for the remote island of Rathlin, off the north Irish coast,
-where he winters safe from his foes.
-
-Here, in his island retreat, bitter news reaches him. His wife and
-daughters have been seized and imprisoned in England. His brother and
-his relatives have been captured and hanged, his estates have been
-forfeited and given to others, and the Pope has driven him out of the
-Church for his sacrilege at Dumfries. No wonder the Bruce sits under his
-juniper tree “steeped to the lips in misery.”
-
-But with the kindly spring he makes another bid for fortune. He sails to
-the Isle of Arran, and has hardly landed before he well-nigh walks into
-a trap laid for him. Then begins a fresh period of difficulty and
-danger, of hairbreadth escapes and desperate deeds. Slowly but surely
-the tide turns in his favour. The preachers are with him; a prophecy has
-been discovered which assures him of victory; stout hearts begin to
-flock to his side; his cause gains ground every day. By the middle of
-May he is no longer a hunted fugitive but a leader of forces. He has
-defeated two English earls in the field, and they are shut up in the
-castle of Ayr, which he is closely besieging.
-
-Now old Edward begins to move. He is too weak and ill to throw his long
-limbs across a horse, so they carry him on a litter in front of his
-army. At Carlisle the prospect of the strife he loves so well gives him
-a slight renewal of strength. He mounts his horse for the last time, and
-leads the march in the old way. But it is the final flicker of life’s
-flame, and at Burgh-on-Sands, within sight of the tossing Solway, he
-yields him to the power that conquers even kings. To his bedside he
-calls his vain, pleasure-loving son, and bids him swear a solemn oath
-never to cease from strife until the Scots are thoroughly subdued. “Boil
-the flesh off my bones,” he is said to have cried, “and keep them safe,
-and as oft as the Scots assemble their forces, let my bones lead the
-van.” So he dies, fierce and implacable to the last, and the breath is
-hardly out of his body ere his degenerate son sighs for his jugglers and
-minstrels and the careless pleasures of the court he has left behind.
-
-He advances half-heartedly to Ayr; but the Bruce has retreated before
-him, knowing well the temper of his foe. At the first decent opportunity
-Edward hies him southward, and Bruce resumes his work of ridding the
-land of the English. One by one the castles are captured by storm or
-stratagem; day by day the English power grows weaker and weaker, and the
-Bruce grows stronger and stronger. At last the flag of England, once to
-be seen everywhere, flies only over the castle of Stirling. Its
-stout-hearted defender is almost starved into submission. He will
-surrender on midsummer day, unless he is relieved before it dawns by an
-English army.
-
-The new Edward must leave his elegant trifling and bestir himself,
-unless Scotland is to be hopelessly lost. Hitherto his reign has been
-singularly inglorious, and his barons have made him, as he says, no
-longer master in his own house. But he will show them that the spirit of
-his sire still lives in him. He will invade Scotland, and the Bruce
-shall feel the weight of his heavy hand. Stirling shall be relieved; he
-will take up the wager of battle that Scotland has thrown down.
-
-Forthwith he assembles the most powerful army that has ever yet menaced
-Scotland. Mindful of the archers’ victory at Falkirk, he scours the
-country for bowmen, and every man of them boasts that he “carries the
-lives of four-and-twenty Scotsmen at his belt.” Forty thousand mounted
-men are with him, and a prouder and more confident array never took the
-field.
-
-Bruce has chosen his ground well. His front and right are defended by
-the Bannock burn, which winds through two morasses, and at one place has
-steep, wooded banks. On the left, where the ground is open, he has
-honeycombed the field with pits that look firm and level to the eye, but
-are terrible snares for cavalry. Only one way of approach is open, and
-that is strewn with caltrops to lame the horses.
-
-It is the Sabbath morning of June 23rd, in the year 1314. On comes the
-English host, with its countless banners, standards, and pennons waving
-in the breeze. The sun glints from burnished helmet and spear as the
-dense battalions draw near. To an observer on the castle walls it would
-seem that they were about to make an immediate attack. The Bruce is
-arraying his men, clad in full armour, and carrying a battle-axe in his
-hand, but riding a light palfrey in place of the heavy charger that is
-to carry him to-morrow. That panoply of armour which he wears hides the
-real man from you. Were you to see him out of harness, you would mark
-his strong and powerful frame, his close, curly hair, his full, broad
-forehead, his high cheek-bones, and the square and massive jaw that
-tells of determination and dogged courage.
-
-Now the English army halts, and a vainglorious knight, one Sir Henry
-Bohun, seeing the Bruce so poorly horsed, thinks to do a deed of
-valorous renown. So he spurs his charger, and levelling his spear bears
-down upon the Scottish king. As he comes rushing on at full speed, the
-Bruce twitches his palfrey’s bridle, and the little creature obediently
-starts aside. Then, as the knight goes rushing by, Bruce rises in his
-stirrups and smites him fiercely on the helmet with his battle-axe. It
-crashes through helmet and skull, and the riderless steed gallops wildly
-away. The first stroke of the great fight has been struck, and the Bruce
-has won. As he rides back to his lines his knights take him to task for
-his adventure, reminding him that an accident would have robbed them of
-their leader. Bruce listens to their chidings, and only replies, “I have
-broken my good battle-axe.”
-
-Another misfortune befalls the English. Three hundred young horsemen,
-eager for the fray, see a clear way lying before them to the castle. On
-they spur towards it, but find their road blocked by a party of Scottish
-spearmen, who form a deadly circle of bristling steel. In vain the
-knights spur their horses to the attack; the schiltron remains unbroken,
-though hidden from sight by the cloud of dust and heat which rises from
-the plain. Now the spearmen advance and drive back the weary and
-disheartened horsemen. Grim foreboding this of the great fight
-to-morrow.
-
-The short summer night falls on the battlefield, and loud sounds of
-revelry come from the English camp. The Scots sleep in the open, and
-when the sun has risen Edward sees them massed in schiltrons beneath
-their banners. “Will yon Scotsmen fight?” he asks of a veteran by his
-side. “Yea, siccarly, sire,” he replies, and at the moment the Scots
-bend the knee as the crucifix is borne along their line. “Yon folk kneel
-for mercy,” says the king; and again the veteran replies, “Yea, sire,
-but not of you. Yon men will win or die.” “So be it,” cries Edward, and
-gives the signal for his trumpeters to sound the charge.
-
-On dash the English horsemen with levelled spears, and now you hear the
-loud crash as lance clangs on shield. Down go men and horses, only to be
-trodden under foot by the ranks behind. Nothing can break the Scottish
-ranks.
-
-But where are the archers who wrought such havoc at Falkirk? Now is
-their time. Alas, they have been badly posted, and are unsupported by
-men-at-arms. A few hundred Scots horsemen are sufficient to send them
-flying hither and thither without the hope of ever rallying again.
-
-Meanwhile a great hand-to-hand contest is raging. You hear the shouts
-and cries of the warriors, the groans of the wounded and dying, the loud
-clash of meeting weapons, as the vast, dense mass of the English rises
-and falls like waves of the sea. It is a mob that fights on the narrow
-field, and not an army. The ground is cumbered with fallen men and
-horses. Many a good knight has no room to swing his weapon. He cannot
-advance, and the pressure behind will not let him retreat. But slowly
-and surely the throng is pushed back by the Scottish spears, and the day
-looks black for England.
-
-All discipline is now lost, and the battle is a series of individual
-struggles. Lifting their eyes, the hard-pressed English see a fresh host
-marching down a neighbouring hill, and hear their slogans peal out above
-the din and tumult of battle. They are camp followers who have cut down
-saplings for banner-poles and spread their blankets for standards; but,
-in sooth, they look a warlike and formidable band in the distance. The
-hearts of the English fail them at the sight; they waver, and the Scots
-press on with redoubled vigour. The retreat has begun; it will soon be
-an utter rout.
-
-The English king gallops to Dunbar without drawing rein. His followers
-scatter hither and thither. All is over. The great battle is lost and
-won. The Bannock burn is choked with the dead bodies of the slain;
-thirty thousand English lie dead on that fatal field. The great task
-which Wallace had set himself is accomplished. Scotland has won her
-independence, thanks to the skill of Bruce, the courage of his men, and
-the incompetence of King Edward. “From the dust and reek of that burning
-day Scotland emerges a people, firm in a glorious memory.”
-
-[Illustration: =THE BATTLE OF BANNOCKBURN.=
- (_From the picture by Allan Stewart specially painted for this book._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Burghurs of Calais]
-
-
- THE MERCIFUL QUEEN.
-
- “_The quality of mercy is not strain’d,—_
- _It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven_
- _Upon the place beneath: it is twice blest;_
- _It blesseth him that gives and him that takes:_
- _’Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes_
- _The thronèd monarch better than his crown._”
-
-Now let a tableau lend variety to our pageant. On the dais of a royal
-pavilion outside the walls of Calais you see a warrior king, his noble
-countenance transfigured with wrath. Around him are his nobles, and
-before him kneel six notable citizens of the town, gaunt with long
-fasting and worn with strife and anxiety. Their heads and feet are bare,
-and the rope of shame is round their necks. The foremost citizen
-proffers the keys of the fortress. You are witnessing the surrender of
-Calais, “the open doorway to France.”
-
-The actual scene which is being re-enacted before you took place more
-than five and a half centuries ago, and thirty-three years after the
-battle of Bannockburn. In the interval the English king who fled from
-that fatal field had been deposed in favour of his young son, who grew
-up to be one of the most remarkable men of his time. The spirit of the
-first Edward lived again in Edward the Third, and like a new Alexander
-he was ever seeking fresh worlds to conquer.
-
-He positively thirsted for martial glory, and above all things he
-coveted the fair land of France. Through his mother he put forth a claim
-to the French throne; and though it was scouted by the French lawyers,
-he meant to see what English bills and bows could do to enforce it. In
-the year 1345 he shot his bolt, and at Crécy his archers won for him one
-of the most brilliant victories that ever graced English arms. Then he
-moved on Calais, and laid close siege to it. Outside the walls he reared
-a temporary village, which he called Newtown the Bold. It had houses and
-lodgings roofed with reed and broom, streets, and a market-place where
-flesh and fish, mercery, cloth, bread, and wine were sold.
-
-Eleven long months the siege endured, and many a time and oft the
-gallant defenders beheld the approach of French armies coming, as they
-thought, to their succour. But never did the Frenchmen dare to attack
-King Edward. They came, they saw, they retreated. Lamentable indeed was
-the state of the besieged; food failed them, starvation gnawed them, and
-pestilence swept them away. Then came the hour when all hope departed,
-and they hauled down the standard which had so long floated above their
-highest tower.
-
-Shortly afterwards news was brought to the king that the governor was on
-the battlements, and desired a parley with him. Sir Walter de Mauny and
-Ralph Lord Bisset were sent to confer with the governor. “Sirs,” said
-he, “ye be right valiant knights in deeds of arms, and ye know well how
-the king, my master, hath sent me to keep this town in his behoof. We
-have done all that lieth in our power. Now our succours have failed us,
-and we be sore strained; we must all die, or else go mad with famine. I
-therefore entreat that you will beg your king to have compassion on us,
-and to have the goodness to let us depart in the state we are in; and
-that he will be satisfied with having possession of the town and castle,
-with all that is within them.”
-
-Thereupon the two knights returned to the king and told him all that had
-passed. But the king heeded them not: the men of Calais should
-surrender, and he would do with them as he listed. Then Sir Walter
-braved the royal wrath and told his sovereign that he was setting a very
-bad example by his severity. All the other nobles who were present
-pleaded with the king, and at length he yielded in some degree. “Sir
-Walter,” said he, “you will inform the governor that the only grace he
-must expect from me is, that six of the principal citizens of Calais
-march out of the town with bare heads and feet, with ropes round their
-necks, and the keys of the town and castle in their hands. These six
-must yield themselves to my will, and to the rest I will show mercy.”
-
-Sir Walter returned to the battlements and told the governor what grace
-he had been able to obtain from the king. “I beg of you,” said he, “to
-remain here a little, while I go into the town and tell the townsmen
-your king’s conditions.” So he went to the market-place, the bell was
-sounded, and immediately a multitude of men and women gathered in the
-town hall to hear what he had to say. When they learnt the sad news they
-began to weep and to show such distress that the hardest heart would
-have had compassion on them. Even the governor himself was moved to
-tears.
-
-At last the richest burgess in the town, by name Eustace de St. Pierre,
-rose up and said, “Sirs, high and low, it would be grievous for so many
-people to die of famine when there is a means to save them. I think they
-who should save them from such a pass would have great merit in the eyes
-of our Lord God. For my part I have so great a trust in Him that I will
-be the first to offer myself for the rest.” When he had said this, the
-people rose up and almost worshipped him, many casting themselves at his
-feet with tears and groans. Then another rich citizen arose and said, “I
-will keep company with my comrade Eustace.” His name was John Daire.
-After him, James Wisant, who was also very rich in merchandise, said he
-would hold company with his two cousins; as also did Peter Wisant, his
-brother. Then two others offered themselves, and the six citizens,
-having apparelled themselves as the King of England desired, marched
-towards the gate.
-
-When Sir Walter Mauny had presented the citizens to the king they fell
-on their knees and with uplifted hands cried, “Most gallant king, we
-bring you the keys of the castle and of the town. We surrender ourselves
-to your absolute will and pleasure, in order to save the remainder of
-the people of Calais, who have suffered such great pain. Sir, we beseech
-your grace to have mercy and pity upon us.”
-
-All the barons, knights, and squires that were assembled around wept at
-the sight. But the king, remembering their piracies, eyed them with
-angry looks, for he greatly hated the men of Calais. Then he commanded
-that their heads should be struck off. All present entreated the king
-that he would be merciful to them, but he would not listen. At last the
-good Sir Walter made yet another appeal for grace. “Noble king,” he
-cried, “let me beseech you to restrain your anger. You are rightly famed
-for greatness of soul; do not tarnish it by such an act as this.
-Henceforth every man will speak of your great cruelty, if you put to
-death these burgesses, who have of their own free will offered their
-lives for their fellow-citizens.”
-
-At this the king scowled and bade them send for the headsman. “These
-knaves,” said he, “have slain many of my men, and they shall die for
-it.”
-
-At this moment the good Queen Philippa, who had been weeping bitterly,
-cast herself upon her knees before her pitiless lord. “Ah! gentle sir,”
-she cried, “since I have crossed the sea in great peril I have never
-asked you one favour; now I humbly beg you, in the name of the Son of
-the Virgin Mary, and for your love of me, that you be merciful to these
-six men.”
-
-The king looked upon her in silence for a moment, and then replied,
-“Lady, I would that you had not been here. You have begged of me so
-earnestly that I cannot refuse you, though it grieves me sore to yield.
-I give them to you; do with them as you will.”
-
-Joyous and glad was the queen that she had moved the king to pity. She
-rose from her knees, and bidding the citizens rise too, ordered the
-ropes to be taken from their necks, and caused them to be new clothed.
-Then she took them to her own apartments and gave them a plentiful
-dinner, after which she presented each of them with six nobles and set
-them at liberty. The town was surrendered, and the English king fed the
-starving multitudes liberally.
-
-Merciful queen, your generous pity for the stricken foe shall ever be
-the brightest jewel in your crown. In ages to come men will cherish the
-fame of your womanly tenderness, and will tell their children in many a
-tale and song the glorious story of your gracious clemency.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Edward the Third at the Siege of Calais.=
- (_From the painting by Sir John Gilbert, R.A. By permission of the
- Corporation of London._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE BLACK PRINCE.
-
- “_Witness our too much memorable shame,_
- _When Cressy battle fatally was struck,_
- _And all our princes captived, by the hand_
- _Of that black name, Edward, black prince of Wales._”
-
-Now you are transported to the streets of fourteenth-century London. You
-stand at the upper window of a lofty timbered house, and from your coign
-of vantage see the ancient city donning its festive array. There is an
-air of rejoicing and there is a buzz of expectation everywhere. The
-houses of the wealthier citizens are hung with gay carpets, rich silks,
-and fine tapestry. Streamers are flying, garlanded poles are reared, and
-here and there you see trophies of arms—shields, helmets, breastplates,
-lances, swords, sheaves of arrows, maces, and battle-axes. Anon you hear
-the rattle of drum and the blare of trumpet as the City companies, clad
-in their liveries, take up the places assigned to them. Now a procession
-of clergy, habited in their richest vestments, winds by. Gay gallants in
-their blue or green tunics and hoods, their hose of diverse hues, and
-their _Cracow_ shoes with long, curving toes laced to the knee with
-silver chains, come and go, and lend colour and vivacity to the scene.
-Many a fair maiden in a gay kirtle gazes out of her casement with
-sparkling eyes, and hard by you see no less interested matrons, in all
-the bravery of their best attire.
-
-Now, afar off, you hear the huzzas of the crowd, and as you watch and
-wait nearer and nearer come the salvoes of applause. The cannon of the
-Tower roar out their welcome, trumpets sound, and bells clash from the
-steeples. Right royally does London greet those whom she delights to
-honour to-day.
-
-Ah! here come the archers, the pride of England, a goodly array of
-stalwart yeomen, bronzed and hardened by long campaigning on French
-fields. Look at them as they swagger along, conscious of their prowess,
-the rings of conquered knights on their horny hands, and the jewelled
-baldrics of French nobles across their shoulders. See how they bandy
-many a merry jest with the maidens on the causeway, and shout their
-jovial greetings to the citizens, who wave their caps and cheer wildly
-in response. There is not a lad in London who does not yearn to be an
-archer. With his six-foot bow in his hand and a sheaf of arrows at his
-belt, your archer envies neither knight nor king. He has won great fame,
-and his pouch is filled with rose nobles; and when these are gone, there
-are plenty more to be won in Poitou and Gascony. And if the Prince—God
-bless him!—has no more wars on hand, why, there are always the Free
-Companies ready and willing to welcome a stalwart bowman who can “clap
-in the clout” at fourscore yards, and use a bill right yeomanly when it
-comes to handstrokes.
-
-Behind the rollicking archers come the mail-clad knights, a noble and
-more sedate company, flashing back the May-day sun from their shining
-armour and their gleaming lance-points. Yonder is Chandos, the wise and
-watchful general whose keen eye perceived the critical moment in the
-great fight—he who cried to the Prince, “Now, sir, ride forward, and
-the day is yours.” And there is Audley, pale and weak from his wounds,
-but gallant as ever. Was it not he whom the Prince greeted by the
-glorious name of _Preux_, and dubbed the best knight on the field? Right
-proud must he feel to-day. And who be these? In sooth, they are the
-premier nobles of France, rich prizes of war, though they bear, neither
-by sign nor by look, the semblance of defeat.
-
-And now the air is rent with still louder shouts as a noble figure on a
-superb white charger rides by. It is the King of France, bearing himself
-as a conqueror, yet knowing full well that he is a captive gracing a
-victor’s triumph. But not for him are the shouts. Look at that simple
-knight in black armour, quietly riding by his side on a palfrey. He is
-the hero of the day, the cynosure of all eyes, the praise of all
-tongues. He would seem to be no more than the French king’s squire; yet
-he is the victor of Poitiers, a name of terror in France, the idol of
-his knights, the boast of his archers, the pride of his land.
-
-The stately procession moves on to the great hall at Westminster, where
-Edward the king waits the coming of his noble captive and his gallant
-son. With knightly courtesy he rises from his throne and embraces his
-unfortunate brother of France, and gives him gracious welcome to his
-court. He bids him be of good cheer; and the French king, who has borne
-the ordeal with manly fortitude, is right glad that the public parade is
-over. With gracious tact the English king conceals his triumphant joy;
-he does everything in his power to play the gracious host to the
-honoured guest; but nothing that he can do will remove the shame and
-grief that rack the proud heart of the “Fortune of France.”
-
-Now let us turn to the Black Prince and learn why the Londoners so
-enthusiastically greet him. He is but twenty-seven years of age, yet he
-has many a hard-fought campaign to his credit. At thirteen years of age
-he was made Prince of Wales, and invested with the symbols of his
-office—the coronet of gold, the ring, and the silver wand. In his
-honour the king, his royal father, then held a Feast of the Round Table,
-and from every country of Europe came the most renowned knights to
-commemorate the fame of King Arthur, and to pledge themselves to emulate
-his chivalry, his courtesy, and his feats of arms. Never before had
-there been so splendid a pageant seen as that which King Edward arrayed
-beneath the ancient walls of Windsor Castle. The Black Prince that day
-yearned for the hour when he, too, might take spear and shield and break
-a lance in the tourney as a preparation for winning renown on the
-battlefield. Long before he was out of his teens he made acquaintance
-with the dangers and rigours of war in real earnest. In his sixteenth
-year the longed-for moment arrived. He accompanied his father to France,
-and as he landed at La Hogue he received the honour of knighthood,
-though he had yet his “spurs to win.” But forthwith, as the chronicler
-tells us, he “made a right good beginning” by burning and ravaging the
-neighbouring country, and by fighting valiantly when Godemar du Fay
-endeavoured to prevent the English army from crossing the Somme. Then
-came the never-to-be-forgotten battle of Crécy, in which he won his
-spurs.
-
-When he rode into London after the battle of Crécy, every man, woman,
-and child in the great city loved him, and prophesied a wondrous future
-for him. And they were true prophets, for his fame grew with the years;
-and now they see him among them once more, victor in his own right, and
-bringing in his train the “Fortune of France.” What stories of his
-prowess and gallantry and modesty they tell! Listen to yon burly archer
-now released from duty. “I mind,” says he, “that after yonder king had
-yielded himself, the prince led him to his own tent, took off his helmet
-with his own hands, brought him drink, and gave him comfortable words,
-and served him at table as he had been a base serving-man and not the
-heir of Merry England. What think ye of that?”
-
-And now, while all England is singing his praises and he is at the very
-summit of his fame, let us peep into the future and see what fate has in
-store for him. Again and again he will harry the fair land of France;
-and, greedy of warfare, will ally himself with Pedro the Cruel, and win
-a victory for that bloodthirsty tyrant in distant Spain. And when the
-victory is won he will beseech Pedro to spare the lives of the
-conquered. Before long, however, the Spanish king will refuse to pay him
-the price agreed upon, and will send him on wild-goose errands, until he
-sees his men fall around him stricken by pestilence, and scarce one in
-five of them will return with him across the Pyrenees. He, too, will be
-seized with a painful sickness from which he will never recover.
-
-But still he will go on fighting, and every year his heart will harden
-within him, until one day he will stain his fair fame by a deed of
-pitiless cruelty. In his rage at the long defence of Limoges he will
-order no quarter to be given to the gallant defenders. Piteous appeals
-will be made to him for mercy; but he will not hearken, and three
-thousand defenceless men, women, and children will be massacred in the
-streets. “Pity ’tis, ’tis true.”
-
-His sickness will increase, and he will return home to die, but not
-before he does something for the people of England in a peaceful and
-more useful sphere. He will drive from his father’s court the greedy,
-unscrupulous men who are oppressing the land, and he will strive to
-better the condition of the people in many ways. Knowing his end is
-nigh, he will give himself to prayer and good works; his sickness will
-rack him sore, but he will bear his sufferings patiently and will make
-“a very noble end, remembering God his Creator in his heart,” and
-bidding his people pray for him. He will die in his forty-sixth year, to
-the unbounded grief of the nation. And so he passes, a man of war from
-his youth up, not untainted by cruelty, not unsullied by martial pride,
-but, in spite of all, the very mirror of the knighthood of his day.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Black Prince being made a Knight of the Garter.=
- (_From the picture by C. W. Cope, R.A., in Westminster Palace._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII.
- ON FRENCH FIELDS.
-
-
- KING HARRY THE FIFTH.
-
- “_Now all the youth of England are on fire,_
- _And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies;_
- _Now thrive the armourers, and honour’s thought_
- _Reigns solely in the breast of every man._”
-
-YOU are gazing upon the death-chamber of a king. He lies upon his bed in
-the silent, darkened room, and sleep comes and goes from his troubled
-pillow. Conscience smites him and disease racks his bones. He has been a
-man of blood all his days, and many crimes are laid to his charge. He
-has murdered the king whose crown he wears; the blood of an archbishop
-is upon his head. As fitful slumber seizes him, you perceive a noble
-youth enter the room. Comely is he in face and figure, though he bears
-the marks of recent grief. He stands by his father’s couch, and watches
-the sufferer. As he does so, his eye falls on the king’s crown, and he
-muses on the weight and cares of majesty. Then he glances again at the
-prostrate form on the bed, and a great grief surges into his heart, for,
-to all seeming, the king, his father, is dead. He bursts into tears, and
-taking up the crown places it on his own head.
-
- “My due from thee is this Imperial crown,
- Which, as immediate from thy place and blood,
- Derives itself to me. Lo! here it sits,
- Which God shall guard: and put the world’s whole strength
- Into one giant arm, it shall not force
- This lineal honour from me: this from thee
- Will I to mine leave, as ’tis left to me.”
-
-But while he speaks, the king awakes, and his roving eye sees the crown
-which his son is even now wearing. “Sire,” cries the young prince, “I
-never thought to hear thee speak again.” Then the dying king reproves
-him:——
-
- “Thy wish was father, Harry, to that thought:
- I stay too long by thee, I weary thee.
- Dost thou so hunger for mine empty chair
- That thou wilt needs invest thee with my honours
- Before thy hour be ripe? O foolish youth!
- Thou seek’st the greatness that will overwhelm thee.
- Stay but a little; for my cloud of dignity
- Is held from falling with so weak a wind
- That it will quickly drop: my day is dim.
- Thou hast stolen that which, after some few hours,
- Were thine without offence.”
-
-The prince, stricken to the heart by his father’s reproaches, flings
-himself upon his knees to ask pardon for his presumption, and to assure
-the king of the innocence of his deed. He swears that no rebel or vain
-spirit has prompted him to seize the crown.
-
- “Coming to look on you, thinking you dead,——
- And dead almost, my liege, to think you were,——
- I spake unto this crown as having sense....
- Accusing it, I put it on my head,
- To try with it, as with an enemy
- That had before my face murdered my father,
- The quarrel of a true inheritor.”
-
-The dying king gladly accepts his son’s explanation, and blessing him
-passes away; while the new king, in an agony of grief, swears to throw
-off the waywardness and wildness of his ways. And so, amidst the loud
-acclaim of his subjects, the crown is placed for the second time on his
-head, and he begins to reign. Never king will be better loved; he will
-give his people their fill of martial glory, and loudly they will
-boast:——
-
- “Oh, when shall Englishmen
- With such acts fill a pen,
- Or England breed again
- Such a King Harry!”
-
-And now two years have flown, and you see him again following the will
-o’ the wisp of that French dominion which the third Edward vainly
-sought. It is easy to pick a quarrel with France; her king has lost his
-wits, and his selfish kinsmen are tearing the realm in twain with their
-enmities and quarrels. So with the might of England at his back Harry
-crosses the Channel, and his great guns begin to thunder before the
-walls of Harfleur. Before the town falls his army is fearfully wasted by
-hunger and disease; nevertheless, he does not mean to return without
-doing a deed that “will dazzle all the eyes of France.” From Harfleur he
-writes to the Dauphin and offers to fight him man to man for the
-kingdom, pleading that the quarrel may thus be settled without the
-shedding of innocent blood. But the sluggish, mean-spirited Dauphin
-makes no answer, so Harry cries:——
-
- “The game’s afoot;
- Follow your spirit, and, upon this charge,
- Cry, ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint George.’”
-
-It is the evening of October 24th, in the year of grace 1415. Five
-thousand English bowmen and five thousand men-at-arms, weary,
-half-starved, wasted, ragged, and footsore, are stumbling on through
-French fields for Calais, dreaming of the homes they are never likely to
-see again. Suddenly the news comes in that a huge French army bars the
-way. Out go the scouts, and one of them, a Welshman, speedily returns
-with the brave report: “There are enough to be killed, enough to be
-taken, and enough to run away.” In sooth, there are 60,000 of them,
-fresh, well-equipped, and in the most confident of spirits; the odds are
-six to one. “Oh that we now had here but one ten thousand of those men
-in England who do no work to-day!” cries a noble, but King Harry
-reproves him,——
-
- “No, my fair cousin:
- If we are marked to die, we are enow
- To do our country loss; and if to live,
- The fewer men, the greater share of honour.”
-
-So the night rolls down, and the English few betake themselves to
-prayers; while in the French camp the knights are revelling and feasting
-and dicing for the ransoms of the captives they hope to take on the
-morrow. The morning sun sees the English army drawn up in a field of
-freshly-sown corn, face to face with the French host, that stretches
-across the plain by the hamlet of Agincourt. Every archer carries a
-five-foot stake as a protection against cavalry; every man of them is
-stripped to the waist, and has one shoe off, the better to keep firm
-footing on the slippery ground.
-
-And now the gallant king, in full armour, with a jewelled crown
-glittering on his helmet, rides along the ranks. He prays aloud for
-victory, and turning to his men bids them fight boldly, for God is on
-their side. England, he declares, shall never pay ransom for him; he
-will conquer, or leave his bones on the field. Then he reminds his
-archers that their foes have sworn to put out the right eye and cut off
-the left hand of every bowman whom they capture, so that he shall never
-loose arrow again. A momentary hush falls on the English as they kneel
-to commend their souls to high heaven. Then their lips tighten, their
-thews and sinews become steel, and their hearts bound in expectation of
-the fray.
-
-“What time is it?” asks the king. “The bells are ringing prime, my
-lord,” is the reply. “Now is good time,” says he; “England prayeth for
-us, so let us be of good cheer. Banners advance!”
-
-With a loud shout the English bowmen advance twenty paces, and firmly
-plant their stakes to form a formidable palisade. On come the
-heavy-armed cavalry of the enemy in dense masses, thirty deep. The
-archers step forward a few yards, and slowly and steadily begin to
-shoot. Not an arrow is wasted; every shaft flies home. To stand still on
-the French side is to be shot down like a dog; to turn back is
-impossible with the huge press of soldiery behind. So, as the death-hail
-falls, the French men-at-arms spur their heavy chargers through the mire
-of the freshly-ploughed field. The deadly arrows never cease to fall,
-and down go horse and man until they lie in ghastly heaps two spears
-high. The French army is a helpless, heaving mass.
-
-“Now’s the day and now’s the hour” for the English archers. They sling
-their bows on their backs, they leap forward, and throwing themselves on
-the struggling heaps ply sword and mace, axe and bill, with almost
-superhuman strength. The living fall on the dead, the dead on the
-living, and the English climb the horrible, writhing mounds and hew and
-hack at the high-born French knights. King Harry is in the thickest
-press. Certain French knights swear to take or slay the English king.
-They hew their way to him; a shrewd blow slices the crown from his
-helmet, but it is the last blow ever struck by that arm.
-
-The first line is swept to earth, the second line has fallen like wheat
-before the reaper’s sickle, and now the third line advances. Taken in
-flank by the archers, it turns and flees. In three hours the battle is
-over. Eleven thousand Frenchmen lie dead upon the field, prince and
-peasant “in one red burial blent.” Agincourt is won, and the English
-archer has gained a renown that shall not dim its lustre while the name
-of Britain endures.
-
-Once more King Harry is in France, and again none may stand against him.
-Rouen, after horrible sufferings, has surrendered; the French princes
-are busy murdering one another; the young King of Burgundy throws in his
-lot with the English, and the kingdom is at Henry’s feet. So a treaty is
-made: Henry is to marry the fair Katherine, daughter of the poor,
-witless King of France; he is to rule in his father-in-law’s name, and
-succeed him at his death. So Henry begins his wooing, and right merrily
-it goes despite his bad French and Katherine’s broken English. On
-Trinity Sunday in the year 1420 he leads the princess to the high altar
-of the church at Troyes, and they are married. Then the hero of
-Agincourt and his bride enter Paris amidst the approving shouts of the
-populace, many of whom wear the red cross, the badge of England. But a
-third campaign is necessary before the French and their Scottish allies
-are beaten and all north France up to the Loire owns Henry’s sway.
-
-And now, in the midst of his splendour, his health fails, and the
-doctors are mystified at his malady. As he sinks day by day, he learns
-that a son has been born to him at Windsor. At once an old prophecy
-flashes into his mind——
-
- “I, Henry, born at Monmouth,
- Shall small time reign and much get;
- But Henry of Windsor shall long reign and lose all.
- But as God wills, so be it.”
-
-His last hour has come. He busies himself with prayer, and the priests
-sing psalms over him. When they reach the second verse of the 147th
-Psalm he cries, “Good Lord, Thou knowest that my mind was to build up
-the walls of Jerusalem.” He speaks no more. His life is done; his
-comet-like career is over. So he dies, leaving his infant son to reap
-the bitter harvest that he has sown.
-
-[Illustration: =THE MORNING OF AGINCOURT.=
- (_From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, P.R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- JOAN, THE MAID.
-
- “_King of France!”_
- _She cried, “at Chinon, when my gifted eye_
- _Knew thee disguised, what inwardly the spirit_
- _Prompted, I promised, with the sword of God,_
- _To drive from Orleans far the English wolves_
- _And crown thee in the rescued walls of Rheims._
- _All is accomplished. I have here this day_
- _Fulfilled my mission, and anointed thee_
- _King over this great nation._”
-
-Seven years have sped by, and the scene shifts to the ancient cathedral
-of Rheims. A great concourse of nobles in glittering armour with pennons
-and banners fills the nave. Trumpets are sounding, and outside the crowd
-raises cheer upon cheer. The sun streams in through the painted windows,
-casting rainbow hues on the exultant throng. Ten thousand candles are
-burning, and the smoke of incense is ascending. At the high altar, clad
-in the ermine robe of state, kneels the Dauphin of France. An
-archbishop, wearing his mitre and the splendid robes of his high office,
-places the crown upon the prince’s head, and anoints him with the sacred
-oil out of the ancient flask which the priests say came straight from
-heaven. The Dauphin is king in very deed, and a great shout of joy
-echoes and re-echoes from the vaulted roof. And now all eyes turn to the
-striking figure by the side of the newly-made king. You see a noble
-maiden, clad in knightly armour, and holding a drawn sword in one hand
-and a white banner in the other. She kneels at her prince’s feet, and
-tears of joy fall from her eyes as she greets him “King” for the first
-time. “Now,” she says, “is the will of God fulfilled.”
-
-Who is this maiden, and why holds she such an honoured place amidst this
-noble throng? Let the old chroniclers relate her story. It is one of the
-most wondrous ever told. What Wallace did for Scotland this maid has
-done for France.
-
-In the year 1429 there was a young girl living in Domremy, a village in
-the east of France. She was named Joan, and was the daughter of James
-Darc and Isobel, his wife. Joan was but a country maid that was wont to
-herd the cattle by day and sew and spin in the evening. She was a
-strong, handsome girl, nobly formed, with dark hair and lustrous eyes.
-About her thirteenth year she grew silent and dreamy, and loved to steal
-away from her companions to the village church, where she knelt for
-hours together in silent prayer. One day she was standing in her
-father’s garden when she heard a Voice, and saw a great light. The Voice
-bade her be diligent in work and prayer, for God had chosen her to save
-France. She replied that she was but a poor girl who could not ride, or
-lead soldiers in the wars; but the Voice spoke to her again and again,
-telling her that she must go. The saints appeared to her, too, and they
-gave her the same message, and added words of counsel and warning. The
-Visions and the Voices were with her night and day, and at length she
-felt that she _must_ do their bidding.
-
-Truly her land was in a piteous condition at the time. King Harry of
-England was dead, and so was the old French king, his father-in-law, and
-the English baby born at Windsor had been crowned King of France. His
-uncle, the Duke of Bedford, the famous Talbot, and many another knight
-of renown, were leading English armies to and fro, besieging towns,
-burning villages, and filling the land with slaughter. Woeful tales of
-death, plunder, and famine found their way to the quiet little village
-of Domremy, and Joan’s heart was filled with grief at the miseries of
-her beloved France. The Scots had come to the help of their old friends,
-the French, and though they managed to win a great victory, they were
-badly beaten at Verneuil, where the field was dyed with Scottish blood.
-
-As for the Dauphin, the rightful King of France, he only held the
-country south of the Loire, and did not hold even that securely. His
-strongest fortress was the city of Orleans, which was even now closely
-besieged by the English. To make matters worse, the Dauphin was a man of
-no spirit and enterprise. He was half-hearted in his own cause, and,
-indeed, was not fully assured that he was the son of the late king, and
-therefore lawfully entitled to the crown. It is said that he had prayed
-secretly that a sign might be given to him to prove that he was the
-rightful heir, and that hitherto no sign had been vouchsafed. He had
-very little hope of beating the English, for, like the rest of his
-countrymen, he had lost heart and deemed his foes unconquerable. A
-handful of English archers by their very presence could send five
-hundred Frenchmen flying in terror to the woods.
-
-By this time the Voices and the Visions had so wrought upon the Maid
-that she left home without taking leave of her father and mother (not
-that she did not hold them in honour and respect, but lest they should
-hinder her intent), and went to Vaucouleurs hoping for an audience with
-Robert de Baudricourt, the commander of the town. Now, her uncle lived
-in the town, and to him she betook herself, and told him how the saints
-and angels had urged her on her mission, and how the Voices had said,
-“Daughter of God, go on! We will be with you.” The uncle listened and
-believed, and led her to the captain, who laughed at her, and bade her
-uncle chastise her for a foolish maiden.
-
-But again she came to him and told him how a terrible misfortune had
-happened that very day to the Dauphin’s army near Orleans. As
-Vaucouleurs was many leagues from Orleans, and even the swiftest runner
-could not have brought the news so quickly, the captain gave ear to her;
-and when he knew that she had spoken the truth, he saw that she was no
-mere hysterical country girl, but one endowed with supernatural gifts.
-“My lord captain,” she said, “know that for some years back, at divers
-times, God hath made known to me and commanded me to go to the gentle
-Dauphin, who should be and is the true King of France, that he may give
-me men-at-arms, whereby I may raise the siege of Orleans, take him to be
-anointed at Rheims, win back Paris, and drive the English from the
-realm.” Robert hearkened to her words, and furnished her with man’s
-attire. A young knight gave her a horse, which to the surprise of all
-she rode well; and, dressed in a gray doublet and black hose, she rode
-away to seek the Dauphin, who was then at Chinon. To test her, the
-Dauphin dressed one of his knights in his princely attire, and himself,
-in a plain and sober dress, mingled with his courtiers. But Joan went
-straight to him, and kneeling on one knee, cried, “Fair sir, you are the
-Dauphin, to whom I am come.”
-
-“Nay,” said he, “yonder is the Dauphin,” pointing to a richly-dressed
-knight in the company.
-
-“No, fair sir,” repeated the maid, “it is to you that I am sent.”
-
-The Dauphin was surprised, but he did not yet believe in her. One day
-she took him aside where nobody could hear and whispered to him the
-purport of his secret prayer, and assured him that he was the rightful
-king. Then the Dauphin had faith in her, and when his council and the
-clergy had examined her straitly, and at last had reported that “to
-doubt the maid would be to resist the Holy Spirit,” he agreed to send
-her with a train of provisions which he hoped to be able to get secretly
-into Orleans. While armour was being made for her, she bade the
-Dauphin’s servants dig behind the altar of the Chapel of St. Catherine
-at Fierbois, and there they would find a sword with five crosses on the
-blade. The sword was found, and she girt herself with it, and taking her
-banner of white with the image of the Lord and two angels on it, thus
-she led her small company towards Orleans.
-
-As she lay at Blois she sent a letter to the English captain who was
-besieging Orleans, bidding him depart in peace, or else she would fall
-upon him with blows, and “we shall see who hath the better right, God or
-you.” The English laughed at her words, and threatened to burn her as a
-witch if they caught her. Nevertheless she advanced, and entered the
-town, whereat the spirits of the citizens rose and their confidence
-returned. And now, being strengthened by fresh troops and fresh stores,
-they no longer acted merely on the defensive, but began to assault the
-English forts, and with Joan as leader captured two of them. Then Joan
-led them against the Bulwark and the Round Towers. All morning they
-fought without success, and at one o’clock in the afternoon a bolt from
-an English cross-bow wounded her in the shoulder. The arrow was
-extracted, and still the fight went on.
-
-After sunset the captain wished to withdraw for the night, but Joan
-begged him to fall to again. She mounted her horse and rode to a quiet
-place and prayed, and then returned to the fight. She alighted from her
-horse, and taking her standard in her hand, waved it to and fro so that
-all men saw it. “Take heed,” she said, “when the float of my banner
-shall touch the Bulwark.” “It touches! it touches!” they cried. Then
-said she to her men, “All is yours; enter in.”
-
-With a great rush the French climbed the scaling-ladders, captured the
-Round Towers, stormed the Bulwark, and put to the sword most of the
-defenders. That night the English, terrified by the reappearance of the
-Maid, raised the siege and departed, leaving their big guns and much
-victual behind them. So the town of Orleans was delivered, and Frenchmen
-everywhere began to believe that the Maid was really an angel of God
-sent to deliver France.
-
-Without delay Joan rode to the Dauphin and besought him to make ready to
-be crowned at Rheims, the old coronation place of the French kings. But
-he would not set forth until the way was cleared of English. So with six
-hundred lances and some infantry Joan led an attack on them, and drove
-them before her. And now in June the Dauphin at her entreaty gat him on
-the road for Rheims, Joan warning him that “she would only last for a
-year, or not much longer, and that he must make haste.” At Troyes the
-garrison yielded, and ere long the Dauphin was in Rheims, and the scene
-in which you saw the Maid for the first time took place.
-
-Hardly was the coronation over ere Joan urged the king to march on
-Paris. As he advanced, town after town opened its gates to him, and
-Bedford dared not give him battle. But when the first attack on Paris
-failed, he withdrew, like the coward that he was, and would not
-persevere, in spite of all Joan’s prayers and tears. Almost
-broken-hearted, she hung up her arms in the church of St. Denis, and
-begged leave to go home to her father and mother and herd the cattle as
-of yore. The king, however, would not let her go, but gave her a pension
-and a title of nobility.
-
-Now in Easter week of this fateful year the Voices spoke again to her
-and said that she should be taken prisoner before Midsummer Day. They
-encouraged her to be resigned to her fate, for God would help her. The
-Maid knew full well that to be captured meant being burned as a witch;
-nevertheless she halted not in her purpose, deeming her end glorious if
-only she could give her body to be burned for her country.
-
-The town of Compiègne was closely besieged by the English and the
-Burgundians, and was likely to yield. So the Maid rode thither with her
-brothers and two or three hundred men to raise the siege. She charged
-the Burgundians, but was surrounded and taken prisoner and held to
-ransom. The French would not pay a franc for her, and so her captors
-sold her to the English, who “feared not any captain, not any chief in
-war, as they had feared the Maid.” She was brought before the Bishop of
-Beauvais and tried for witchcraft. After a long and tedious trial, and
-after suffering every kind of insult and hardship, she was found guilty,
-and was tricked into signing a paper confessing her guilt. And all the
-time the miserable French king made no sign, and lifted not his little
-finger to save her.
-
-On May 30, 1431, they led her into the market-place of Rouen and burnt
-her alive. With her dying words she testified to the truth of her
-Visions, and underwent her awful doom with the courage of a martyr. So
-she died, pressing to her lips a rude cross which a pitiful soldier held
-out to her. The old legends tell that as the flames leaped round her,
-and her spirit departed, a pure white dove, the harbinger of peace, rose
-from out the smouldering pile and winged its way towards heaven. In very
-truth peace did spring from her ashes. Her heroic example gave new life
-to the crushed spirit of her countrymen, who rose and drove the invader
-from their shores. Four years later, nothing was left of all the English
-conquests in France but the town of Calais.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =THE CORONATION OF CHARLES VII. AT RHEIMS.=
- (_From the painting by J. E. Lenepveu in the Pantheon, Paris._)]
-
-[Illustration: =JOAN OF ARC STORMING THE “BULWARK” (ORLEANS).=
- (_From the painting by J. E. Lenepveu._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX.
- THE WARS OF THE ROSES.
-
-
- THE KING-MAKER.
-
- “_Heard ye the din of battle bray,_
- _Lance to lance, and horse to horse?_
- _Long years of havoc urge their destined course,_
- _And through the kindred, squadrons mow their way._”
-
-A GREAT noble now rides by on a magnificent coal-black steed. At once
-your eye is attracted by him, and you feel that here is a Paladin worthy
-of the pen of poet and romancer. Mark his great stature; his vast width
-and depth of chest; his high forehead; his black, curling hair fretted
-from the temples by the friction of his helmet; his handsome oval face;
-his bold features; and his massive jaw, which speaks only too plainly of
-his masterful nature and inflexible determination. You can readily
-believe that he is the idol of thousands of his countrymen, and “a
-setter up and plucker down” of kings.
-
-Who is this remarkable man? He is none other than Richard Neville, Earl
-of Warwick, the richest and most powerful noble in England. Thirty
-thousand men eat his bread daily at the tables of his various great
-castles; his retainers alone constitute an army, all clad in scarlet
-coats with the “ragged staff” worked on back and front. His boundless
-wealth, his profuse hospitality, his great family connections raise him
-head and shoulders above his peers. He is the premier noble of England,
-the arbiter of her destinies, and the “last of the barons.”
-
-He lives in an age of battle, murder, and sudden death. His land is torn
-by the long and fierce quarrels of two great families which are
-selfishly and ruthlessly fighting for the crown. Henry the Sixth, a
-mild, merciful, long-suffering, pious man, weak of health and weak of
-purpose, a hater of strife and bloodshed and a lover of religion and
-learning, sits insecurely on the throne, bolstered thereon by his
-strong-willed, indomitable queen, Margaret of Anjou. He is the grandson
-of that Lancastrian king who thrust from the throne the grandson of
-Edward the Third. His hereditary right to the crown is inferior to that
-of Richard, Duke of York; but his family has now been in possession of
-the throne for more than half a century, and the brilliant victories of
-his father have made men proud of the Lancastrian lineage. But feeble
-son has succeeded valiant sire. France has been lost; there is no child
-to succeed him; and he is surrounded by ambitious, quarrelsome nobles,
-who make him a pawn in their selfish game. Already the great houses of
-the realm have taken sides, and are sporting either the red or the white
-rose. The citizens of London, the wealthy traders and craftsmen now
-rising into a powerful caste, throw in their lot with York, and the
-yeomen of the South and Midlands are for him too. And now, in the year
-1453, the poor king goes mad, and York is made Protector of the realm.
-He quite expects to be king when Henry passes away.
-
-But a new arrival comes on the scene to dash all his hopes and force him
-to the arbitrament of the sword. Queen Margaret bears a son, Henry
-recovers, and York is dismissed from his post. He appeals to his friend
-the great Warwick, and soon a large force rallies to his standard. The
-rival armies meet at the old town of St. Albans, but ere the fight
-begins York seeks the king and endeavours to make terms. But Henry, who
-is as clay in the hands of his implacable wife—“the foreign woman” as
-the English folk call her—is for the moment moulded into something
-resembling courage. “I will live and die this day in the quarrel,” he
-exclaims, and York is cavalierly dismissed. The royalists barricade the
-streets, and bid the foe come on. The great earl by skilful generalship
-breaks into the gardens behind the houses, and his archers gain the
-streets with trumpets blowing and the war-cry “A Warwick! a Warwick!” A
-tough street fight follows, but it is soon over. The king’s chief
-supporter is dead, and he himself is in the hands of York. The wars of
-the Roses have begun, and for more than thirty years the realm will be
-plunged in a civil war so ghastly and unrelenting that even now it marks
-the blackest page in our national history.
-
-Not that the people generally will join in the strife. The family feuds
-of great nobles concern them but little; they merely desire peace and
-good government, that they may till their lands, labour in their
-workshops, buy and sell, and fill their exhausted purses without
-distraction. Right willingly would they let the sword rust in its
-scabbard and the unstrung bow hang idly on the wall. But the land is
-full of men who have made war their trade in France, and they are eager
-to be hired for any adventure that is going. These roving mercenaries,
-the gentry, and their hosts of retainers constitute the armies which
-will maintain the long and bitter contest. But despite the bloody duels
-of factious nobles, the business of the country is not interrupted. The
-judges go on circuit as of old, taking their commissions from whichever
-king is in the ascendant; and the peasant pauses in his hillside furrow
-and leans on the handles of his plough to view the nobles of the land
-dashing themselves to pieces in battle on the plain below. The war is a
-war of nobles, and not of the commonalty.
-
-The wild northern levies triumph, and the king is recovered. Then
-Margaret arrays her prisoners, and sets up the little prince, her son,
-to judge them. “Fair son,” she cries, “what deaths shall they die?” and
-the lad forthwith orders their heads to be struck off. The wild, lawless
-host tarries eight days at St. Albans, and this delay enables Warwick to
-unite with the new Duke of York and reach London. The king and queen
-gain nothing from their victory. They are forced to march north, and the
-Londoners, glad to be saved from Margaret and her Border freebooters,
-welcome York’s heir, and sing:—
-
- “He that could London forsake, we will no more to us take.”
-
-They crown the young man at Westminster, and as Edward the Fourth he
-takes up the sceptre. It is Warwick who has made him king.
-
-Now comes the story of a great quarrel and its dramatic sequel. Edward
-has fallen in love with beautiful Elizabeth Woodville, the daughter of a
-Red Rose father, and the widow of a Red Rose husband. He marries her
-secretly, and all the while Warwick is negotiating a foreign marriage
-for him with the French king’s sister. When Edward’s marriage to
-Elizabeth Woodville is announced, Warwick’s annoyance and disgust know
-no bounds. He dissembles, however, though day by day he grows angrier
-and angrier as he sees power slipping from him and passing to the
-“upstart” relatives of the new queen.
-
-Edward, instigated by his new domestic circle, is bent on throwing off
-the Neville yoke. So he heaps honours, high offices, lands, and wealth
-on the Greys and the Woodvilles, and Warwick is furious. Such treatment
-he will not brook. He who has set up the king can pull him down again.
-So he seeks “false, fleeting, perjured Clarence,” who is now jealous of
-his brother, the king, and eager for a throne. Clarence marries
-Warwick’s daughter, and the strings of insurrection are vigorously
-pulled by the wily earl. Edward rouses himself at last and hastens
-northward, where his cannon soon put the rebels to flight, and their
-captured leader reveals Warwick’s plot to make Clarence king. At once
-the pair of conspirators flee to France.
-
-Warwick and that crafty intriguer, Louis the Eleventh, now concoct a
-plan for driving their common enemy, King Edward, off the throne, and
-restoring Henry the Sixth. Queen Margaret at first indignantly refuses
-to accept the support of the man who has driven her into exile, and cast
-foul aspersions on her character; but Warwick goes on bended knee to
-her, and withdraws every charge. The queen keeps him in this humiliating
-position for a quarter of an hour, and then relents. She agrees that her
-son shall marry Warwick’s daughter, but only when he has restored Henry
-to his throne. Then the king-maker, who has broken so many solemn oaths,
-swears on a piece of the true cross to remain faithful to the
-Lancastrian cause. A fleet is fitted out, Warwick lands at Dartmouth,
-proclaims King Henry, and summons the national levies to his banner. As
-Edward lies in bed at Doncaster, two friends burst into his chamber and
-bid him rise and flee, for his foes are within an hour’s march. He
-flings on his clothes, and without armour or money rides at breakneck
-speed to Lynn, where he sets sail for Holland. Once more the king-maker
-has made and unmade a king.
-
-The old king is clad in a robe of blue velvet, brought out of the Tower,
-set on horseback, and led to St. Paul’s amidst crowds of Londoners who
-shout “God save King Henry.” The poor old king knows full well that the
-proud noble who bears his train in the state procession is his and
-England’s master, and that he must do his bidding or return whence he
-came. Warwick has again triumphed, but his hold on power is far from
-secure. The Lancastrians have no desire for a puppet king whose strings
-are worked by their old enemy, and the Yorkists are busy preparing for
-the return of Edward. Next spring he appears in the Humber, and pushes
-on to London, where the gates are opened to him, and he secures the
-person of King Henry. Warwick is in battle-array to the north of Barnet,
-his forces “under a hedge-side.” Clarence, who has made peace with his
-brother, offers mediation; but Warwick, angry at his double
-faithlessness, contemptuously rejects his advances.
-
-“Last scene of all, to end this strange, eventful history.” Raw, cold,
-and dismal dawns the morning on Easter Sunday in the year 1471. A heavy
-mist, which many a soldier ascribes to magical arts, rolls over the
-field and hides the opposing armies from each other. The battle begins,
-and men fight as in a dream, striking wildly at each other, and scarce
-distinguishing friend from foe. Now Warwick thinks the day is his; now
-Edward believes victory to be in his grasp. Then comes a lift of the
-cloud, and both generals perceive that their hopes are vain. For three
-hours the desperate fight rages; the bombards roar, and sword and arrow
-do their deadly work. Now deluded by the mist, the two wings of
-Warwick’s army are busy fighting each other, and the fatal cry “Treason!
-treason!” is heard on the field. Warwick’s men give way, his brother is
-slain, and there is only safety for the great earl in flight. He leaps
-on horseback and gallops to a neighbouring wood, from which there is no
-egress. He is followed and surrounded, and though he plies his great
-battle-axe fiercely he is overborne by superior numbers and slain. The
-king-maker will never make or unmake kings again.
-
- “Now lies he there,
- And none so poor to do him reverence.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =DEATH OF WARWICK.=
- (_From the picture by T. A. Houston, R.S.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE LITTLE PRINCES IN THE TOWER.
-
- “_Let us sit upon the ground_
- _And tell sad stories of the death of kings._”
-
-Now hand in hand two pathetic figures appear. They are victims marked
-for the slaughter; their tender age and innocence will not save them,
-for they stand between a bold, unscrupulous man and the throne. You have
-already made acquaintance with their father, the fourth Edward, he who
-owed all to the king-maker, whom he left dead on Barnet Field. But
-Edward has gone to his account, leaving his two young sons and their
-mother to the tender mercies of selfish, intriguing nobles, brutalized
-by a long course of civil war. As Protector of the realm, their father’s
-brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, aims at the throne, and his first
-step is to secure the custody of the two royal lads, who are now in the
-guardianship of their maternal uncle, Earl Rivers, and of Lord Richard
-Grey. The elder—a boy of thirteen—is seized and brought to London by
-his Uncle Richard, while the lad’s guardians are flung into prison. The
-false uncle treats his young charge with every show of loyal and
-submissive regard, and brings him in great state to London for his
-coronation. The wretched mother knows instinctively the fate in store
-for her offspring, and takes sanctuary at Westminster with her second
-son, the little Duke of York, a boy of eleven years of age. With fair
-and specious words a prince of the Church persuades the widow to
-surrender the lad, and forthwith he joins his brother in the Tower.
-
-And now Gloucester ruthlessly hurries to the block those who by the ties
-of kindred and friendship are likely to befriend the boys, and ere long
-no man dares raise his voice against any of his bloodthirsty acts. He is
-a dictator—and dictators easily develop into kings. His minions offer
-him the crown, which, after a slight show of refusal, he accepts. Then
-with consummate skill he proceeds to bolster up the throne which his
-successful villainy has won. He is crowned with great pomp and ceremony,
-and soon after the little princes disappear. What becomes of them is not
-clearly known, but gradually a rumour spreads that the unnatural uncle
-has done them to death. His crime profits him little; a great wave of
-pity for the untimely fate of the unhappy boys swells up in the land,
-and men recoil in horror from a murderer king. Two years later avenging
-justice smites him; he lies dead on the battlefield, and another fills
-his throne.
-
-Sir Thomas More, writing twenty-eight years after Richard’s death, tells
-the story of the crime, and there is no good reason to dispute its
-substantial accuracy. He tells us that the king plotted the death of the
-young princes while making a holiday progress through the country. From
-Gloucester he dispatched one of his pages to Sir Robert Brackenbury, the
-governor of the Tower, commanding him to make away with the lads quietly
-and speedily. Brackenbury indignantly refused the office of assassin,
-but a more facile tool was found in Sir James Tyrell, who had already
-stained his hands in secret crime. The princes were confined in the
-Portcullis Tower, under the constant supervision of four keepers, their
-personal attendant being a fellow known as Black Will or Will Slaughter.
-
-Richard roused Tyrell from his bed at midnight, and sent him to the
-Tower with an order commanding Brackenbury to give up the keys of the
-fortress. “Then,” says Sir Thomas More, “Sir James Tyrell desired that
-the princes should be murdered in bed, to the execution whereof he
-appropriated Miles Forest, one of their keepers, a fellow flesh-bred in
-murder, and to him joined John Dighton, his own horse-keeper, a big,
-broad, square knave. The young king had certainly a clear apprehension
-of his fate, for he was heard sighingly to say, ‘I would mine uncle
-would let me have my life, though he taketh my crown.’ After which time
-the prince never tied his points nor anything attended to himself, but
-that young babe, his brother, lingered in thought and heaviness till the
-traitorous deed delivered them from their wretchedness.
-
-“All their other attendants being removed from them, and the harmless
-children in bed, these men came into their chamber, and suddenly lapping
-them in the clothes smothered and stifled them till thoroughly dead.
-Then laying out their bodies on the bed, they fetched Sir James to see
-them, who caused the murderers to bury them at the stairfoot, deep in
-the ground, under a heap of stones. Then rode Sir James in great haste
-to King Richard, and showed him the manner of the murder, who gave him
-great thanks.”
-
-More than two centuries later the skeletons of two young lads were found
-under a staircase leading to the chapel in the White Tower. In all
-probability they were the mortal remains of the unhappy princes.
-
-On the eve of the battle which resulted in the overthrow and death of
-the murderer king, Shakespeare depicts him as visited by the ghosts of
-the many whom he has foully slain. The spirits of the murdered boys
-appear hand in hand:—
-
- “Dream on thy cousins smothered in the Tower:
- Let us be lead within thy breast, Richard,
- And weigh thee down to ruin, shame, and death.
- Thy nephews’ souls bid thee despair and die!”
-
-And thus do they hearten the avenger, whose forces are even now
-marshalled on Bosworth Field:—
-
- “Sleep, Richmond, sleep in peace, and wake in joy;
- Good angels guard thee from the boar’s annoy!
- Live, and beget a happy race of kings.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Little Princes in the Tower.=
- (_From the picture by Paul Delaroche._)]
-
-[Illustration: =RICHARD III. AT THE BATTLE OF BOSWORTH.=
- (_From the picture by A. Cooper. By permission of Messrs. Henry Graves
- and Co._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter X.
- TUDOR TIMES.
-
-
- JOHN AND SEBASTIAN CABOT.
-
- “_The white man landed;—need the rest be told?_
- _The New World stretched its dusk hand to the Old;_
- _Each was to each a marvel, and the tie_
- _Of wonder warmed to better sympathy._”
-
-NOW the procession halts, while a momentous scene is enacted before our
-eyes. We are in the old seaport of Bristol, on a May morning in the year
-1497, treading the rough cobbles of the quay whereat the good ship
-_Matthew_ and her consort lie. Stout, staunch vessels they are, fitted
-out and provisioned for the most adventurous voyage ever undertaken by
-Bristol ships. The royal blazon glistens on their mainsails, the flag of
-England flies from their mastheads. Some of the boldest and most skilful
-mariners in the land are on board, busy making everything ship-shape,
-“Bristol fashion,” for the voyage which is to begin to-day. Now you see
-a procession approaching. The Lord Mayor in his robes of state, with his
-chain of office about his neck, leads the way, and behind him troop the
-city fathers; then comes the bishop, with his attendant train of
-priests; and behind them, the observed of all observers, you see a
-father and his three sons. They are John, Lewis, Sebastian, and Santius
-Cabot—the father a citizen of Venice, the sons men of Bristol. The old
-city is saying farewell to them to-day, and the lusty cheers that greet
-them as they traverse the narrow streets show how deeply every Bristol
-man is interested in their enterprise. What is this enterprise? Whither
-are they bound?
-
-Any urchin in the streets will tell you. “Why, master, have you not
-heard of the Genoese seaman, Christopher Columbus?—he who five years
-ago set sail from Palos in three ships, and sailed to the west’ard
-across the ocean, seeking a new sea-road to far-off India and Cathay. Do
-you not know that he lighted on marvellous new lands, which he seized in
-the name of Spain, and then returned home to tell the wondrous news?
-There’s gold by the bucketful across the Western Ocean, and we Bristol
-folks mean to have our share of it. So we have fitted out the _Matthew_
-and the other ship which you see yonder, and this very day John Cabot
-and his sons are to set sail. Would that I could sail with them too!”
-Many an English lad, in many a seaport, echoes his wish.
-
- “Westward! westward! westward!
- The sea sang in his head,
- At morn in the busy harbour,
- At nightfall on his bed.
-
- “Westward! westward! westward!
- Over the line of breakers,
- Out of the distance dim,
- For ever the foam-white fingers,
- Beckoning, beckoning him.”
-
-And now the procession halts on the quay, and the mariners kneel while
-the bishop with uplifted hand blesses them and their enterprise. John
-Cabot, he with the brown face and the close-cropped white hair, proudly
-unfolds the scroll which he carries, and begins to read his royal
-commission:——
-
- “Henry, by the grace of God, King of England and France, and
- Lord of Ireland, to all to whom these presents shall come,
- Greeting:
-
- “Be it knowen that we haue giuen and granted, and by these
- presents do giue and grant, for VS and our heires, to our well
- beloued Iohn Cabot, citizen of Venice, to Lewis, Sebastian, and
- Santius, sonnes of the sayd Iohn, and to the heires of them and
- euery of them, and their deputies, full and free authority,
- leaue and power, to saile to all parts, countreys, and seas of
- the East, of the West, and of the North, under our banners and
- ensignes, with fiue ships of what quantity or burden soever they
- may be, and as many manners or men as they will haue with them
- in the sayd ships, upon their owne proper costs and charges to
- seeke out, discouer and finde, whatsoeuer isles, countreys,
- regions or prouinces, of the heathens and infidels, whatsoeuer
- they be, and in what part of the world soeuer they be, which
- before this time haue been unknowen to all Christians.”
-
-So the letters-patent of his gracious Majesty King Henry the Seventh
-run. The reading is finished. The last farewells are taken. The wives
-and children of the adventurous mariners weep aloud. The Lord Mayor
-clasps John Cabot warmly by the hand, and the captain goes on board.
-Deafening cheers are raised as the hawsers are cast off and the good
-ships are warped out. Now you see them threading the deep gorge of the
-Avon. Anon they will be out on the heaving waters of the Bristol
-Channel; then sail will be made, and in the golden sunset glow they will
-fade away into the unknown.
-
-For months there will be sad hearts in many a humble Bristol home, and
-white-faced women will haunt the quay, eagerly questioning incoming
-sailors for news of their husbands and sons who have sailed with the
-Cabots. Then one glad day the blazoned sails, torn and worn with
-tempestuous winds and the rough usage of the sea, appear again in the
-Avon, and all England rings with the story of the marvellous voyage. The
-Bristol bells ring out merry peals; the city fathers feast the returning
-adventurers in the Council chamber; and every lad in the good old city
-holds his head high because of the new fame that Bristowe men have won.
-What visits are paid to the _Matthew_ and her consort! The Church of St.
-Mary Redcliffe is thronged with eager citizens gaping at the whale’s rib
-which Sebastian Cabot has deposited there in memory of his voyage.
-
-Here is one of the heroes of the expedition. Let us buttonhole him and
-bid him spin his yarn. Like the true sailor that he is, he readily
-consents. “Marry, sirs, ’twas a long and dull voyage outward; but the
-winds were fair, and in two moons we reached a sea with monstrous great
-lumps of ice floating about like fairy castles. And mark ye, the sun set
-not, and there was daylight all the clock round. On the twenty-fourth
-day of June we sighted land. _Prima Vista_ the captain called it, that
-being the Latin lingo, so I’m told, for ‘first seen.’ ’Twas an island,
-thick covered with woods, lying out from the mainland. We went ashore
-right speedily, and now there’s a bit of England seven hundred leagues
-to the west’ard across the great ocean.
-
-“The men of that land are savages dressed in skins of beasts. They carry
-bows and arrows, wooden clubs and slings; and fine hunters they be,
-every man of them. Their land is barren, and no fruits grow, but there
-are big white bears in plenty and stags that would make two of ours. Off
-the island the sea swarms with fish, some as much as an ell long, and
-sea-wolves, such as ye may see now and then in Bristol Channel.
-
-“The birds are black-hawks and partridges and eagles. When we left the
-isle we coasted a dreary shore for three hundred leagues, and ’tis my
-belief, comrades, that we have discovered a rich, new continent, with
-mines of copper and wonders untold. We sail again next year, and when we
-come back—if God wills—I’ll tell ye more about it. And now come along
-with me and see the three savages that the captain has brought home with
-him to show the king.”
-
-There will be no lack of adventurers now to dare the Western Ocean. Ship
-after ship will push across the “black waters,” and every year will
-bring the New World into closer touch with the Old. Pass on, ye great
-pilots of Bristowe! Your flag is struck, your sails are furled, your
-ship is beached, but your work is done. In centuries to come the vast
-continent which ye have revealed shall be peopled by a great race,
-largely sprung from British loins, and speaking the brave English
-tongue. “Westward the star of Empire takes its way,” and ye are the
-first of our seamen to follow the star!
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Departure of John and Sebastian Cabot on the First
- Voyage of Discovery, 1497.=
- (_From the picture by Ernest Board. By permission of the Bristol
- Corporation and the Artist._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- KING AND CARDINAL.
-
- “_I charge thee, fling away ambition;_
- _By that sin fell the angels._”
-
-A stately procession now files by, headed by shaven and tonsured priests
-carrying silver crosses. Behind them a bareheaded noble carries the
-Great Seal of England, and another a cardinal’s hat on a cushion. Now
-you hear gentlemen ushers shout, “Make way for my lord’s grace!” and a
-splendid figure stalks past you with the air of a king. He wears the
-scarlet robe of a cardinal, with a tippet of fine sable and a gold chain
-about his neck, while on his feet are shoes of gold studded with jewels.
-In his hand he carries an orange-skin with a scented sponge in the
-midst. This he sniffs from time to time, lest he should catch some
-infection from the crowd that throngs his path. Behind him two great
-pillars of silver and a gilt mace are borne, and so he proceeds through
-Westminster Hall to the seat of justice. At his coming, suitors kneel to
-present their petitions and beg his favour. Anon he will devote himself
-diligently to the business of his high office, and will spare neither
-high nor low, but will judge all who come before him according to their
-merits and deserts.
-
-No man in the kingdom, not even the king, lives in such splendour and
-magnificence. His palace is always filled with noblemen, gentlemen, and
-ambassadors from foreign countries, and his banquets and entertainments
-are the wonder of the age. Bluff King Hal and he are boon companions,
-and ofttimes you may see the monarch lean lovingly on the shoulder of
-his splendid chancellor. Sometimes he will visit his palace, and the
-cardinal will spare neither money nor ingenuity to divert the king.
-
-A writer of the time tells us that “the banquets were set forth, with
-masks and mummeries, in so gorgeous a sort and costly manner that it was
-a heaven to behold. I have seen the king suddenly come in thither in a
-mask, with a dozen of other maskers, all in garments like shepherds,
-having sixteen torch-bearers, besides their drums. Ye shall understand
-what joy and delight the cardinal had to see his prince and sovereign
-lord in his house so nobly entertained and pleased.”
-
-Who is this favoured mortal? He is Thomas Wolsey, the son of a wealthy
-wool-merchant of Ipswich. By his great ability and his zeal in the
-king’s service, he has raised himself from a comparatively humble
-position to be the envy of the greatest nobles in the land. “He is the
-person,” writes the Venetian ambassador, “who rules both the king and
-the kingdom. He is very handsome, learned, extremely eloquent, of vast
-ability, and indefatigable. He alone transacts all the business that
-occupies all the magistrates, offices, and councils of Venice. He has
-the reputation of being extremely just. He favours the people
-exceedingly, and especially the poor, hearing their suits and making the
-lawyers plead gratis for them.” But if he has friends among the poor,
-his pomp and pride have made him hosts of enemies among the proud and
-rich. The old nobles hate him, and would fain bring his haughty head to
-the dust. Nevertheless, even his enemies are forced to admit that he is
-the ablest statesman of his time, and the chief prop of the kingdom.
-
-Truly, he treads all the ways of glory, and sounds all the depths and
-shoals of honour; but the knell of his greatness is soon to toll. The
-sun will no longer usher forth his honours, or gild again the noble
-troops that wait upon his smiles. Even now a woman’s bright eyes are
-weaning Henry from him, and soon he will be fain to say—
-
- “The king has gone beyond me; all my glories
- In that one woman I have lost for ever.”
-
-Listen to the story of his fall.
-
-Never king came to his throne more blessed by nature, fortune, and
-circumstance than the eighth Henry. Nature had fashioned him as the
-handsomest and ablest monarch in Christendom. “He was tall and well
-proportioned . . . his complexion very fair and bright, with auburn hair
-combed straight and short in the French fashion, and a round face that
-would become a pretty woman.” But there was no effeminacy about him. He
-was devoted to tennis and extremely fond of jousting and hunting—“never
-taking his diversion without tiring eight or ten horses.” Nor was there
-a more accomplished king living. He spoke good French, Latin, and
-Spanish; he was a musician and an author, and even as a boy his ability
-and address most favourably impressed the great scholar Erasmus. With
-all these gifts and graces, Henry began his reign with the highest
-promise; but as the years went by he steadily changed for the worse. His
-unbridled self-will grew upon him until he became a cold-hearted despot,
-who made his whim the law of the land, and ruthlessly sent to the
-scaffold all on whom his displeasure fell. From the first he was
-absolute master of the realm, and could say, _L’état, c’est moi!_
-Nevertheless, he was always careful to make his acts legal by getting
-Parliament to endorse them. He greatly valued his popularity with the
-people, and his ministers had to bear the blame of all his unpopular
-acts.
-
-During the later years of Henry the Seventh’s reign, Arthur, the heir to
-the throne, had been married to Catherine, the daughter of Ferdinand and
-Isabella of Spain. Arthur died young, and the miserly old king,
-unwilling to part with Catherine’s rich dowry, proposed to marry her to
-her brother-in-law, Henry, who was six years her junior. Such an
-alliance was against the law of the Church, but a dispensation was
-readily obtained, and shortly after his accession Henry married her. For
-many years they lived happily together. “The king adores her, and her
-Highness him,” wrote her confessor, and never had any man a more
-faithful helpmeet. She was a fair-haired, gentle, pious woman, of a
-lively and gracious disposition, but not beautiful. As she grew older
-her health failed, and she became prematurely old and lost much of her
-attraction. All her children died except one—the Princess Mary. After
-eighteen years of married life Henry fell violently in love with Anne
-Boleyn, one of the queen’s maids of honour.
-
-“Madame Anne,” wrote an eye-witness, “is not one of the handsomest women
-in the world. She is of middling stature and swarthy complexion, and has
-nothing but the king’s great love, and her eyes, which are black and
-beautiful.” She was, however, bright and lively, and had “wonderful long
-hair.” Soon Henry pretended to have scruples about the lawfulness of his
-marriage with his brother’s widow, and he persuaded himself that the
-death of his children was a visitation of God for his sin. Further, he
-argued that a son was necessary in the interests of his kingdom, for
-hitherto the rule of women had always provoked civil war. The real fact
-of the matter was that the selfish, self-willed king wanted to cast off
-Catherine in favour of a new, young wife. Before long Henry asked Pope
-Clement to declare that his marriage was null and void from the
-beginning.
-
-Wolsey, as the Pope’s legate in England, was the natural channel of
-communication between the king and the Pope. Wolsey could not believe
-that Henry desired a dissolution of his marriage tie in order to
-contract an alliance with a giddy, insignificant lady of the court.
-Rather, he assumed, Henry was contemplating a union with some lady of
-the royal house of France, and this fell in with his pet scheme for
-securing the friendship of that powerful state. Believing this, he used
-his influence with the Pope. But the wearer of the triple crown was then
-in a parlous state. He was in the power of Charles the Fifth, nephew of
-Queen Catherine, and that monarch was determined that his aunt should
-not be divorced. At the same time, Clement was an ally of Henry’s, and
-was naturally anxious to assist him. In his dilemma the Pope sought to
-gain time, and therefore appointed Wolsey and the Italian Cardinal
-Campeggio to inquire into the case. In June 1529 the two cardinals
-opened their court in the great hall of the Black Friars’ Monastery in
-London. Catherine refused to plead, but knelt at the feet of her husband
-and made a touching appeal to him to spare her the indignity and
-injustice of divorce.
-
- “Heaven witness,
- I have been to you a true and humble wife,
- At all times to your will conformable;
- Ever in fear to kindle your dislike,
- Yea, subject to your countenance, glad or sorry
- As I saw it inclined.”
-
-She appealed to the Pope himself; then rising, bowed to the king, and
-refused to face the court again. The trial dragged on, and Henry became
-impatient and demanded speedy judgment.
-
-Meanwhile Clement had made a treaty with the Emperor, and was no longer
-solicitous to retain the goodwill of the English king. He therefore
-revoked the commission, and ordered the cause to be transferred to Rome
-for a new trial. Henry, baffled and beaten, was furious, and Anne Boleyn
-skilfully fanned the flame of his wrath. She suggested that Wolsey had
-bungled the matter, and forthwith his doom was sealed. He was dismissed
-from his office as chancellor, and brought to trial for breaking an old
-law which forbade appeals to Rome. Wolsey said truthfully that he had
-only appealed to the Pope at the king’s request. Henry, however, denied
-that he had sanctioned the proceeding, and Wolsey, to the joy of his
-enemies, was found guilty. All his property was seized, and after he had
-made an abject submission, he was ordered to withdraw to his diocese of
-York.
-
-Here he flung himself with all his old energy into his work as
-archbishop, and soon won the affection of the north-country folk. But he
-hungered and thirsted for his former greatness, and made the serious
-error of communicating with the ambassadors of the French king and the
-Emperor. When Henry heard of it his anger blazed forth once more. This
-was treason and nothing less, and Wolsey’s arrest was immediately
-ordered. Early in November he began his journey southward under an armed
-guard. Sick and heart-broken, with his health undermined, he travelled
-as far as Leicester, where at his coming the abbot of the place met him
-with the light of many torches and received him with great reverence.
-“Father abbot,” said he, “I am come to lay my bones among you.” Truer
-words were never spoken. A few days later he died, lamenting with his
-failing breath—
-
- “Had I but served my God with half the zeal
- I served my king, He would not in my age
- Have left me naked to mine enemies.”
-
-So died the victim of a headstrong, selfish sovereign, who remorselessly
-flung away even the most devoted of his servants as soon as they had
-ceased to be useful to him.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Cardinal Wolsey on his Way to Westminster Hall.=
- (_From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A. in the Guildhall Art
- Gallery, London._)]
-
-[Illustration: =TRIAL OF QUEEN CATHERINE.=
- (_From the picture by Henry O’Neill, A.R.A. By permission of the Art
- Gallery Committee of the Corporation of Birmingham._)]
-
-[Illustration: =PORTRAIT OF HENRY VIII.=
- (_By Hans Holbein the Younger. From the Royal Gallery at Windsor._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE NEW WORSHIP.
-
- “_The old order changeth, yielding place to new,_
- _And God fulfils Himself in many ways._”
-
-There is a pause in our pageantry. While the next scene is preparing,
-let the story of the intervening period be briefly told. Twenty-eight
-years, long and fateful, have come and gone since Wolsey died of a
-broken heart, and in the interval a new England with a new destiny and a
-new faith has arisen. The years that have sped have been marked by
-religious upheaval, and by an extraordinary outburst of persecuting
-zeal. The fires of Smithfield have blazed, and the thumb-screw and the
-rack have done their fiendish work “for the glory of the Lord.” Henry in
-his rage against the Pope has swept away the monasteries, sent the monks
-adrift, and plundered them of their lands and riches. Year by year the
-doctrines of Church reformers have gained ground, and ere Henry’s long
-reign of terror and crime draws to a close, Protestantism is a powerful
-force in England. His son, Edward the Sixth, a precocious, consumptive
-lad of ten, succeeds, and then the reformers gain the upper hand. A new
-Prayer Book “in the vulgar tongue, understanded of the people at large,”
-is issued, and the Reformation is hurried on with undue speed. There is
-a ruthless and irreverent destruction of images, pictures, and stained
-glass in the churches, and many pious persons, otherwise favourable to
-the “new worship,” are shocked into opposition. To secure the triumph of
-Protestantism, Edward is persuaded on his deathbed to make a will
-excluding his Catholic sister Mary from the throne, and naming Lady Jane
-Grey as his successor.
-
-The young king dies in his sixteenth year, and three days later Queen
-Jane is proclaimed. Not a hat is tossed in the air, not a cheer is
-raised. London declares for Mary; the nobles and gentry flock to her.
-The poor “eleven days’ queen”—young, innocent, and beautiful—is
-utterly deserted. She vanishes into the Tower, and her head pays the
-penalty of her father-in-law’s ambition.
-
-Mary is now queen, and she sets herself immediately to undo the work of
-the Reformation and to restore England to the power of the Pope. She
-makes the fatal mistake of marrying Philip of Spain, whose horrible
-outrages on the Dutch have made him an object of terror and loathing in
-England. Soon he deserts her, and the miserable queen, racked by painful
-disease, throws her whole heart into a frenzied attempt to stamp out
-Protestantism in her realm. Martyrs perish at the stake, and the nation
-is horrified at the queen’s cruelty. And yet one cannot but be sorry for
-the wretched woman. In feeble health, miserable, and soured by the
-desertion of her husband, filled with anxious fears for the future of
-her kingdom, and conscious of the hatred of her people, she honestly
-believes that she is doing the will of Heaven in burning and torturing
-those of her subjects who do not see eye to eye with her in matters of
-religion. Every week her people grow more and more discontented; every
-week her health and spirits grow worse.
-
-At length the climax is reached. Her husband drags her into war with
-France, and in the struggle “the chief jewel of the realm”—Calais—is
-lost. For two hundred years it has been in English hands, and its
-possession has meant the command of the “narrow seas.” Now England is
-without a foot of soil on French ground, and Englishmen grow bitterly
-angry at the thought. Mary has enough national spirit to understand the
-magnitude of the disaster. “When I am dead,” she cries, “you will find
-‘Calais’ written on my heart!”
-
-Ten months later, on the eve of a great national revolt, the miserable
-Mary dies, conscious that she has been a hopeless, helpless failure. She
-has striven to re-establish Romanism in the land, but has only succeeded
-in ringing its death-knell. Protestantism is again in the ascendant.
-While Mary’s obsequies are preparing, a great burst of joy sweeps over
-the country, for Elizabeth, her Protestant sister, is now queen.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XI.
- A TRAGIC STORY.
-
-
- MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.
-
- “_And from the top of all my trust_
- _Mishap hath thrown me in the dust._”
-
-A DARK and murderous scene now awaits your eyes. It is about seven
-o’clock on a Saturday evening in March 1566. A beautiful queen is
-supping with her friends in the inner boudoir of the ancient Palace of
-Holyrood. Some eightscore armed men stealthily enter the courtyard and
-close the gates behind them. Within the supper-chamber only one person
-is cognizant of the foul deed which is even now preparing—and he is the
-queen’s husband! The queen herself is blithe and gay, according to her
-wont. She strives to rally her husband, who sits by her side; but he is
-full of drink and jealousy. But a swarthy Italian present responds to
-every sally with nimble wit and easy grace. Mary smiles upon him, for he
-alone in that gloomy palace reminds her of the light-hearted merriment
-and the brilliant frivolity of her dearly-loved France. And as she
-smiles the queen’s husband scowls darkly, and ever and anon glances
-furtively towards a door behind the arras.
-
-Suddenly the arras is pushed aside, and a man in armour, his face
-corpse-like in its pallor, steps into the room, and behind him you see
-three others. The queen, cool and fearless, rises and demands the
-meaning of this intrusion. The Italian knows its meaning full well; he
-has long been bitterly hated by the nobles, and now he fears that his
-hour has come. He cowers for protection behind the queen, who confronts
-the armed men without a tremor. “What do ye here, my Lord Ruthven?” she
-cries, and the intruder roughly replies that he comes to drag the
-Italian from the queen’s chamber, where he has been overlong.
-
-In a flash the queen perceives a plot, and turning to her wretched
-husband demands if he knows anything of this enterprise. The ready lie
-comes to his lips, and he says that he knows nothing of it. “Go,” cries
-the queen to Ruthven, and points to the door. But he moves not, and bids
-the accomplice who has disowned him, “Take the queen, your wife and
-sovereign, to you.” But the royal dastard stands dazed, and wists not
-what to do; while the Italian, with his drawn dagger in his trembling
-hand, clings to the queen’s gown, crying, “Save me! save me!” Now one of
-the guests strives to seize Ruthven, who draws his sword and cries
-fiercely, “Lay no hands on me, for I will not be handled!”
-
-Then the chamber is filled with armed men, the table and chairs are
-overthrown, the lights are extinguished save one, and a wild rush is
-made for the victim. Ruthven flings the queen into the arms of her
-husband, and the shrieking Italian is dragged from the room with curses
-and threats and blows. You hear his screams grow fainter and fainter, as
-his foes plunge their daggers into him. Now all is silent, and the
-queen’s favourite lies dead with fifty-six wounds in his body. Her
-husband’s dagger is sticking in the breast of the corpse in testimony of
-his consent to the deed!
-
-The ghastly scene which you have just witnessed serves to introduce the
-moving tragedy of Mary Queen of Scots. She was born in the hour of
-calamity, and conflict, contention, sorrow, and disaster dogged her
-footsteps from the cradle to the grave. Her heart-broken father, James
-the Fifth, had turned his face to the wall when her birth was announced.
-Ere she was christened he was dead, and Scotland was torn with the
-strife of contending factions. Scotland’s weakness was England’s
-opportunity, and Henry the Eighth lost no time in proposing his delicate
-little son, afterwards Edward the Fifth, for the hand of the
-five-year-old queen. The Scots refused the match, and an English army
-marched north and sacked Leith and Edinburgh. The invasion was “too much
-for a wooing and too little for a conquest.”
-
-Four years later an English army again made an attempt to compel the
-Scots to marry their queen to young Edward. At Pinkie there was a great
-slaughter, but it was all in vain. The little queen was hurried to
-France, where she grew up with her four Maries at the gay court of King
-Henry the Second, and became far more French than Scottish. As she
-advanced in years, her grace and beauty, her _esprit_ and her
-accomplishments, were the talk of France, and at sixteen she wedded the
-Dauphin, a sickly weakling, who only survived his marriage a little more
-than a year. At the age of nineteen Mary was a widow, about to set sail
-for her northern kingdom.
-
-She was now the most charming princess of her time, fond of music,
-dancing, laughter, and gaiety, yet eager for risk and adventure, and
-always rejoicing in the clash of arms. Often she wished she were a man
-“to know what life it was to lie all night in the fields, or to walk on
-the causeway with a jack and knapsack, a Glasgow buckler, and a
-broadsword.” In statecraft she was the equal of Queen Elizabeth, and in
-person and charm she far exceeded her royal kinswoman. Her beauty,
-grace, and easy cordiality won the hearts of all with whom she came in
-contact.
-
-She left France most reluctantly, and as long as the shores of that gay,
-joyous land remained in sight she riveted her gaze on them. As they
-gradually faded from her sight she sighed, and said again and again,
-“Adieu, France! I shall never see thee more!” She arrived at Leith
-unexpectedly on a dismal day of thick fog and incessant rain. Never was
-a more unpropitious home-coming. She had returned to a stern, poor,
-unruly kingdom, which had adopted Reformation doctrines with remarkable
-zeal and austerity. The guiding spirit of the time was John Knox, the
-most implacable and fearless Reformer who ever lived. Well indeed did he
-deserve the eulogy spoken at his graveside, “Here lyeth a man who in his
-life never feared the face of man.” The Covenant had been signed, the
-authority of the Pope had been thrown off, and Protestantism had taken
-deep root in the land. Mary was a strong Romanist, and she meant to
-restore her kingdom to the old faith. In this she failed utterly, for
-almost the whole of her people were bitterly opposed to Romanism in any
-shape or form.
-
-While in France, Mary and her husband had assumed the style and title of
-King and Queen of England, and Elizabeth was naturally aggrieved. Now
-Mary offered to give up her claim if Elizabeth would recognize her as
-heir to the English throne. The Scottish queen said that she asked for
-nothing more than her due. Should Elizabeth—the Virgin Queen—die
-without children, Mary would be heir to her throne by right of birth,
-though her claim had been barred by Henry the Eighth. Elizabeth,
-however, flatly refused to make any such agreement.
-
-For a time Mary was popular with her subjects, but soon the heather was
-on fire. All sorts of suitors aspired to her hand, and the rival
-factions were eager to marry her to a Catholic or a Protestant,
-according to the character of their respective beliefs. At length,
-however, she decided to marry Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, “a long lad
-. . . beardless and lady-faced,” and only nineteen years of age. He was
-a Roman Catholic like herself.
-
-The inevitable rising took place, but it was ineffective, and for a
-while the Protestant cause was undone and Mary triumphed. Meanwhile the
-queen had discovered that her youthful husband was vain, spiteful,
-foolish, untrustworthy, and drunken. He was eager for the “crown
-matrimonial,” and yearned to rule in her name; but Mary consistently
-refused his request, and Darnley believed that her Italian secretary,
-David Riccio, was at the back of her refusal. Some of the nobles were
-bitterly jealous of the foreigner, who was supposed to sway the queen’s
-counsels, and with these malcontents Darnley came to an understanding.
-The result you have witnessed in the savage scene with which this
-chapter opened.
-
-Riccio was dead, and Mary, maddened with rage at the night’s work,
-determined to have her revenge. Within a year Darnley was murdered in
-the lonely house of “Kirk of Field,” which stood on the site of the
-present University of Edinburgh. No one knew exactly how Darnley had
-perished, though thousands heard the roar of the explosion which blew up
-the house in which he was lying. His murderer was unknown, though
-anonymous placards on the walls of the Tolbooth accused the Earl of
-Bothwell of the foul deed. This earl was a masterful, bold, and vicious
-man, with whom Mary had fallen over head and ears in love. He was the
-very antithesis of Darnley with his “heart of wax,” and Mary needed a
-strong arm to lean upon. So flinging every prudential consideration to
-the winds, she gave her whole heart to the dangerous and showy man who
-was accused of murdering her husband. Bothwell was tried for the crime,
-but the trial was a mere mockery, and the accused rode to the court of
-justice on Darnley’s favourite steed. No witnesses were called, and the
-jury, composed of Bothwell’s partisans, triumphantly acquitted him.
-
-Bothwell had already been divorced, and now he was free to marry the
-queen. The ceremony took place in the presence-chamber at Holyrood, and
-when the news leaked out men’s hearts were hot with shame and
-indignation. For a brief time Mary and her new husband seemed happy, but
-Bothwell’s fierce and brutal nature soon revealed itself. There were
-angry quarrels between the pair, and on one occasion Mary called for a
-knife with which to kill herself.
-
-Ere long a rebellion broke out, and the insurgents marched to battle
-beneath a banner painted with the figure of a murdered king with an
-infant prince kneeling beside the body, crying, “Judge and avenge my
-cause, O God.” At Carberry Hill, on the longest day of the year 1567,
-Bothwell offered to decide the contest by single combat, but this the
-queen would not allow. Her forces melted away. Bothwell fled, and she
-was a captive in the hands of an exasperated people. A month later she
-was rowed across Loch Leven to the castle which still stands upon its
-little island. Here she was imprisoned, and here she was forced to
-abdicate the throne in favour of her infant son James. The Earl of
-Moray, her half-brother, was named regent, and the Protestant party was
-once more supreme.
-
-Within a year Mary was free again. She found a knight-errant in the
-person of “pretty George Douglas,” younger brother of the Laird of Loch
-Leven. He fell deeply in love with the deposed queen, and ere long he
-had planned her escape. The story goes that when all was ready Douglas
-sent Mary a signal in the shape of a pearl fashioned like a pear. The
-key of the castle was obtained by the ruse of Willie Douglas, a page
-boy. It was the custom of the governor of the castle to have the key of
-the great gate placed on the table beside him when at supper. The page,
-who served at table, placed a plate before the governor, and at the same
-time dropped a napkin on the key, and then lifted key and handkerchief
-together. He slipped out to the queen, who was waiting for him. They
-gained the gate unperceived, locked it behind them, and threw the key
-into the water. The lad put Mary and her companion, a little maid of
-ten, into a boat, cast off, and plied his oars manfully. The queen waved
-a white veil to and fro, and at the signal George Douglas rose up from
-the reeds by the side of the lake and hurried to the village, from which
-he soon afterwards returned with a troop of armed men and some led
-horses. By the time the boat touched the shore the horsemen were waiting
-for the queen, and in a few minutes she was galloping southwards towards
-the ferry across the Forth. On the way she was joined by another troop
-of horse. That night she slept in Niddrie Castle, and next day reached
-Hamilton in safety.
-
-The news of her escape spread like wildfire through the land, and
-speedily many of the barons and nobility flocked to her with offers of
-support and service. Before long she had five or six thousand men about
-her, while the regent, who was at Glasgow, mustered some four thousand.
-With this force, inferior as it was, he decided on an immediate battle.
-As the queen advanced from Hamilton towards Dumbarton, where she
-proposed to take ship for France, she had to pass through a narrow lane
-leading up to the hill on which the village of Langside stands. Moray
-posted his main battle on Langside Hill, and stationed his hagbutters or
-matchlock men along the hedges on both sides of the lane and amongst the
-cottages of the village. The queen took her station on an eminence half
-a mile distant and watched the battle which now began. She saw her
-troops charge up the hill and endeavour to force the passage of the
-lane. She saw them roll back under the heavy fire of the hagbutters, and
-then make a second attempt to storm the village. This, too, was
-unsuccessful, and soon she saw Moray’s pikemen and his Highlanders
-sweeping down on her friends with the utmost fury. With a cry of anguish
-she saw them break before the flashing claymores of the yelling
-Macfarlanes, and betake themselves to headlong flight. All was over, and
-the miserable queen put spurs to her horse and galloped away. She tried
-to reach Dumbarton, but she was too late. So hot was the pursuit that
-she was obliged to gallop for the wilds of the south-west. On and on she
-rode, and never halted until she reached Sanquhar, where she drank a
-bowl of milk at a cottage door. Then her wearied horse was urged on
-again until she reached the remote and lonely Abbey of Dundrennan, on
-the Solway, sixty miles from the field of battle.
-
-On Sunday afternoon, May 16, 1568, she made the fatal mistake of her
-life. She determined to throw herself upon the generosity of Elizabeth,
-and no argument of her attendants could make her change her purpose.
-That reckless decision practically signed her death-warrant. She crossed
-the Solway and arrived at Workington. The next day she was brought by
-Richard Lowther to Cockermouth, and thence to Carlisle Castle, where she
-arrived in great distress and mean attire, and by the instructions of
-Elizabeth’s council was detained as a prisoner.
-
-Elizabeth was by no means pleased at the turn which events had taken.
-Mary was a most embarrassing guest. Many of Elizabeth’s Catholic
-subjects regarded the Queen of Scots as the rightful sovereign of
-England, and now this dangerous rival was within her kingdom. Obviously,
-Mary could not be permitted to go to and fro unrestrained, gathering her
-adherents about her, the centre of a movement which might hurl Elizabeth
-from the throne. Equally obviously, Elizabeth could not send the refugee
-back to Scotland, where the scaffold or a life-long imprisonment awaited
-her. It would similarly be the height of folly to permit her to return
-to France and there raise an army to subdue the Protestants of the
-kingdom which had rejected her. Elizabeth was in a dilemma, and for the
-moment she saw no way out of it. Meanwhile, she wrote to Mary that she
-would be careful of “her life and honour,” and regretted that she could
-not receive her as a royal guest until she had been acquitted of the
-hideous crime charged against her. She would be the gladdest in the
-world to see her Grace well purged of this crime, that thereby she might
-aid her fully and amply to regain her throne.
-
-At length, after much discussion and negotiation, a trial was agreed
-upon, and three sets of commissioners—one set for Elizabeth, one for
-Mary, and one for the confederate Scottish lords—were appointed to
-inquire into the complaints which the Scottish queen brought against
-those who had risen in arms against her, seized her, and imprisoned her,
-forced her to abdicate, and crowned her infant son. The conference began
-at York and ended at London. The Regent Moray appeared before the
-commissioners, and, as a last resort, produced a silver casket
-containing letters which were alleged to be written by Mary to Bothwell.
-These letters, if their genuineness could be proved, clearly showed her
-to be the accomplice of Bothwell in the murder of her husband. Mary
-constantly declared that the casket letters were forgeries, and to this
-day no man can positively say that she did not speak the truth. Mary
-demanded that the letters should be shown to her, but most unfairly her
-demand was refused. Then she indignantly broke off the conference, and
-the commissioners reported that nothing dishonourable had been proved
-against Moray and his friends, and nothing against Mary that could lead
-Elizabeth to take any evil opinion of her good sister. Nevertheless,
-Mary remained a prisoner in England, while Moray returned to Scotland
-and resumed his regency.
-
-And now began Mary’s long captivity of nineteen years. She was moved
-about from castle to castle, and at first was permitted as much liberty
-as was consistent with the safe custody of her person. We read that she
-had a stud of sixteen horses, and frequently went hunting. She amused
-herself with needlework, in which she was very skilful, and kept dogs,
-turtle doves, and Barbary fowls. She practised her religion with great
-devotion, and she did not fail to charm all who came in contact with her
-by her gracious condescension.
-
-But all the while she was ceaselessly plotting and intriguing, not only
-with Elizabeth’s disaffected subjects, but with her French friends, the
-King of Spain, and the Pope. Elizabeth’s life was in hourly danger, and
-her councillors constantly warned her that Mary was a terrible menace to
-her safety. In 1569 news arrived that the Pope was about to depose
-Elizabeth, and declare Mary Queen of England. Almost immediately there
-was a great rising of the Catholics of the north. The Earls of
-Northumberland and Westmorland marched into Durham, and mass was once
-more said in the cathedral. The insurgents, however, received but little
-support, and some of the leaders perished on the scaffold. Next year the
-long expected Bull of Deposition arrived. While most of the Catholics
-remained loyal, some of the more violent schemed to depose and even
-murder Elizabeth.
-
-One of the plots, known as the “Ridolfi Plot” from the name of an
-Italian banker who played an important part in it, was headed by the
-Duke of Norfolk, an ambitious noble of thirty-two, who undertook to
-seize Elizabeth and marry Mary, who had now obtained a divorce from
-Bothwell. Norfolk was the leader of the English Catholics, and had the
-support of many noblemen in the northern counties. Some of his papers,
-however, fell into the hands of Burleigh, and the whole plot was
-exposed. Norfolk, who said truly that nothing done for Mary ever
-prospered, paid the penalty with his head on Tower Hill. Both Houses of
-Parliament now petitioned that the Queen of Scots should share his fate,
-but Elizabeth replied that “she could not put to death the bird that had
-fled to her for succour from the hawk.” Henceforth Mary was more
-strictly confined.
-
-At length in 1583 another great plot was unmasked. France and Spain were
-to unite in an invasion of England, the English Catholics were to rise,
-Elizabeth was to be murdered, and Mary was to ascend the throne. Six
-desperate fanatics undertook to dispatch the English queen by steel or
-poison as a service pleasing to Heaven. Mary was in the plot up to the
-eyes. She had corresponded with Anthony Babington, a vain fool who was
-the chief agent in the plot, and had accepted his offer to assassinate
-Elizabeth. In extenuation it must be said that she was now desperate.
-She felt no compunction in lending her support to the murderous project,
-for she had the wrongs of a lifetime to revenge, and she knew that she
-would ultimately come to the scaffold if Elizabeth were permitted to
-live. Walsingham knew every move of the plot, and encouraged it to
-develop until he had sufficient evidence to bring Mary to trial on the
-capital charge.
-
-She was arrested at a neighbouring seat, whither she had been allowed to
-go on the pretext of a stag-hunt, and was there detained until her
-papers had been secured. Then she was removed to Fotheringhay Castle and
-brought to trial. Mary faced the court with great tact and dignity, and
-defended herself with the utmost skill. She totally denied all knowledge
-of the Babington plot; but her case was hopeless, both because the court
-had what it considered sufficient evidence of her complicity, and
-because it was considered necessary for political purposes that she
-should be found guilty.
-
-On October 25, 1586, the commissioners reported that she had contrived
-“divers matters tending to the hurt, death, and destruction of the Queen
-of England.” Therefore both Houses of Parliament again petitioned for
-Mary’s speedy execution. Elizabeth replied that she was unwilling to
-shed the blood of that wicked woman, the Queen of Scots, though she had
-so often sought her life. She wished that she and Mary were two
-milkmaids with pails upon their arms, and then she would forgive her all
-her wrongs. As for her own life, she had no desire on her own account to
-preserve it. She had nothing left worth living for; but for her people
-she could endure much. She was most reluctant to sign the death-warrant,
-and endeavoured to evade the painful task by all sorts of shifts and
-devices, even going so far as to make the cowardly suggestion that
-Mary’s guardians should act upon their own responsibility. At length she
-put her name to the document, and her councillors hurried on the
-execution lest their mistress should change her mind.
-
-The Earl of Shrewsbury, who had been Mary’s guardian for nineteen years,
-broke the news to her. She heard her fate with the utmost calmness,
-saying that she was content and even happy that she was so soon to be
-freed from so many miseries and afflictions, and rejoicing that God had
-given her grace to die for the honour of His name and for His Church.
-Finally she asked when she was to suffer. “To-morrow morning at eight
-o’clock,” was the reply.
-
-Let us not linger over the painful scene of her execution. She laid her
-head upon the block with calm fortitude, the axe descended, and the long
-tragedy of her life was over. She sinned grievously, but she suffered
-greatly, and she will never lack champions who will stoutly maintain
-even to the crack of doom that she was more sinned against than sinning.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Murder of Rizzio.=
- (_From the picture by John Opie, R.A., in the Art Gallery of the
- Corporation of London._)]
-
-[Illustration: =AT SEA. “FAREWELL, FRANCE!”=
- (_From the picture by Robert Herdman, R.S.A._)]
-
-[Illustration: =ESCAPE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS FROM LOCH LEVEN CASTLE.=
- (_From the picture by Thomas Danby, R.A., in Bethnal Green Museum._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Spanish Armada]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XII.
- IN THE SPACIOUS DAYS.
-
-
- THE SPANISH ARMADA.
-
- “_Attend, all ye who list to hear our noble England’s praise;_
- _I tell of the thrice famous deeds she wrought in ancient days,_
- _When the great fleet invincible against her bore in vain_
- _The richest spoils of Mexico, the stoutest hearts of Spain._”
-
-IT is the afternoon of July 19, in the year of grace 1588. You are
-gazing at the terraced bowling-green of the Pelican Inn that looks down
-upon the blue waters of Plymouth Sound. A group of admirals and captains
-is gathered on the closely-shaven lawn, men of mark every one of them,
-and sea-dogs all. They are waiting, “as lions in their lair wait for the
-passing of a herd of deer.”
-
-“See those five talking earnestly in the centre of a ring which longs to
-overhear and yet is too respectful to approach close. Those soft, long
-eyes and pointed chin you recognize already; they are Walter Raleigh’s.
-The fair young man in the flame-coloured doublet, whose arm is round
-Raleigh’s neck, is Lord Sheffield. Opposite them stands, by the side of
-Sir Richard Grenville, a man as stately as he, Lord Sheffield’s uncle,
-the Lord Charles Howard of Effingham, Lord High Admiral of England; next
-to them is his son-in-law, Sir Robert Southwell, captain of the
-_Elizabeth Jonas_. But who is that short, sturdy, plainly-dressed man
-who stands with legs a little apart and hands behind his back, looking
-up with keen gray eyes into the face of each speaker? His cap is in his
-hands, so you can see the bullet head of crisp brown hair and the
-wrinkled forehead, as well as the high cheek-bones, the short square
-face, the broad temples, the thick lips, which are yet as firm as
-granite—a coarse, plebeian stamp of man. Yet the whole figure and
-attitude are that of boundless determination, self-possession, energy;
-and when at last he speaks a few blunt words, all eyes are turned
-respectfully upon him—for his name is Francis Drake.
-
-“A burly, grizzled elder, in greasy, sea-stained garments contrasting
-oddly with the huge gold chain about his neck, waddles up, as if he had
-been born, and had lived ever since, in a gale of wind at sea. The upper
-half of his sharp, dogged visage seems of brick-red leather, the lower
-of badger’s fur; and as he claps Drake on the back, and, with a broad
-Devon twang, shouts, ‘Be you a-coming to drink your wine, Francis Drake,
-or be you not?—saving your presence, my lord!’ the Lord High Admiral
-only laughs, and bids Drake go and drink his wine with John Hawkins,
-admiral of the port.”
-
-As they lift their long-necked Dutch glasses a rough-bearded old sea-dog
-bursts in upon them and cries to the Lord Admiral,—
-
-“My lord! My lord! They are coming! I saw them off the Lizard last
-night.”
-
-“Who, my good sir?”
-
-“The Armada, your worship—the Spaniard! You’ll find them here before
-nightfall, my lord.”
-
-“Then we must haste,” observes the Lord High Admiral; and turning to
-Drake, he says, “I must command the help of your counsel, vice-admiral.”
-
-“And it’s this, my good lord,” replies Drake, who has taken up a bowl
-and is now aiming it at the jack: “they’ll come soon enough for us to
-show them sport, and yet slow enough for us to be ready; so let no man
-hurry himself. And as example is better than precept, here goes.” So
-saying he aims his bowl. Hawkins follows suit, and the game is played to
-a finish.
-
-“There, vice-admiral,” cries the veteran, “you’re beaten, and that’s the
-rubber. Pay up three dollars, old high-flyer, and go and earn more, like
-an honest adventurer.”
-
-“Well,” says Drake, pulling out his purse, “we’ll walk down now and see
-about these young hotheads. As I live, they are setting to tow the ships
-out already!—breaking the men’s backs overnight to make them fight the
-lustier in the morning! Well, well, they haven’t sailed round the world,
-John Hawkins.”
-
-And John Hawkins, with a hearty “bye-bye” to the bystanders, waddles off
-with the remark, “We’re going to blow the Dons up now in earnest.”
-
- “Night sank upon the dusky beach and o’er the purple sea;
- Such night in England ne’er has been, nor e’er again shall be!
- From Eddystone to Berwick bounds, from Lynn to Milford Bay,
- That time of slumber was as bright and busy as the day.”
-
-Meanwhile the lordly fleet of Spain, swelling in white clouds of sail to
-the heavens, speeds on towards the shores of our threatened land.
-
-Why, you ask, is the Spaniard bent on invading England?
-
-Who does not know something of the exploits of the sea-dogs—how they
-harried King Philip’s territories in America, and how no treasure ship
-put out from the ports save in fear and trembling? Philip, the most
-powerful monarch of Europe, and the champion of the Pope, had been hard
-hit by Drake and his fellows. He saw clearly that unless England were
-crushed he could not retain his empire in the New World. Further, his
-Flemish subjects were in desperate revolt against him, and English
-troops had now joined them. How he hated England! She should bite the
-dust, and he would stake the whole strength of his kingdom, the wealth
-of the two Indies, the flower of Spanish chivalry on the enterprise. It
-was a Crusade—nothing less. The Pope had excommunicated the heretic
-Elizabeth, and the martyred Queen of Scots had bequeathed England to him
-on the scaffold. Holy Church would fight for him, and victory was
-already assured. So every dockyard in Spain rang with the hammers of
-shipwrights, and all Latin Christendom sent him volunteers. The sea was
-covered with vessels freighted with arms and provisions streaming to the
-mouth of the Tagus. Cadiz harbour was thronged with transports,
-provision ships, powder vessels—a hundred sail of them—many of a
-thousand tons and over, loading with stores for the Armada.
-
-Drake begged Elizabeth to let him fit out a fleet and sail along the
-coast of Spain to see what was going on. Very reluctantly she consented,
-but ere his vessels were hull down a courier galloped into Plymouth with
-orders that under no condition was he to enter a Spanish port or haven.
-The courier arrived too late—Drake, knowing the mind of his mistress,
-had sailed, and recall was impossible. In five days he was at Cape St.
-Vincent, and a day later he saw before him the forest of masts in the
-harbour of Cadiz. In dashed Drake, with a fair wind and flood tide, past
-the batteries, which hurled a storm of shot and shell at him. He did not
-pause to reply, but pushed on, seized and sank the guardship, took
-possession of the Spanish shipping, and looted everything of the
-slightest service to him. Then he set the hulls on fire, cut the cables,
-and left them blazing beneath the walls of the town. He had, in his own
-pleasant phrase, “singed the King of Spain’s beard.” He had delayed the
-Armada for a whole year, and had spoiled his Catholic Majesty to the
-tune of a million ducats, without losing a boat or a man!
-
-Home came Drake, begging the queen to let him play the same game on the
-Tagus, where fifty great galleons, the main strength of the fighting
-naval force of Spain, were assembled. But the queen would not consent;
-she would provoke the King of Spain no further. Negotiations for peace
-had begun, and must not be interrupted.
-
-In the spring of the next year the Armada was ready, and the whole
-Spanish nation, smarting under the indignity of Drake’s exploit, was
-burning to revenge itself on England. It consisted of one hundred and
-thirty vessels, half of them being galleons of the largest size. The
-ships were manned by eight thousand sailors, and overcrowded with twenty
-thousand soldiers, besides slaves, servants, and priests. Every noble
-family in Spain sent a son to fight for the holy cause. The ships,
-however, were ill-found and ill-provisioned, and were commanded by a
-modest gentleman who confessed that he was no seaman, that he hardly
-knew a mast from an anchor, and that when he ventured out in a boat he
-was always seasick. To meet this vast fleet England had but thirty-four
-ships in the royal navy, but almost every seaport and many rich
-merchants and noblemen fitted out craft to fight the Spaniard. Their
-crews numbered eighteen thousand men, all good seamen, and their
-commanders were sea-dogs all.
-
-The Spanish Lord High Admiral—the Duke of Medina Sidonia—received his
-orders directly from Philip. He was to fight no battle, but was to haste
-with all speed to the North Foreland and there communicate with the Duke
-of Parma, who was in the Netherlands with thirty thousand men waiting to
-cross. The army would be landed, and England would be at his feet! So
-much for instructions. On May 14, 1588, the Armada dropped down the
-Tagus, and as the galleons came out the blustering north wind met them,
-and day by day they drifted to leeward until they were off Cape St.
-Vincent. The wind changed at last, and the ships steered northward
-again, their crews in a terrible state owing to the stinking water and
-the putrid pork, fish, and bread which fraudulent contractors had
-foisted on them. The ships were obliged to put into Corunna, with crews
-too weak to man the yards, and ready to desert in shoals.
-
-At last the Armada got under way again, and the old seaman who burst in
-upon the admirals and captains on the Pelican bowling-green told a true
-tale: the Armada was coming without a doubt. Badly, indeed, was the
-English fleet prepared to meet them. Elizabeth’s niggardly soul would
-not permit her to provide sufficient stores and provisions for the
-fleet. The English sailors were ill-clothed and ill-provided in every
-way, but they did not complain. They tightened their belts and prayed
-for the speedy coming of the enemy. Their prayer was soon to be
-answered.
-
-The Armada was now in the Channel, sailing crescent-wise. As it passed
-by, out went the Plymouth fleet, hanging on to its rear like grim death.
-The English guns were far more powerful than those of the Spaniards, and
-they poured in broadsides at a safe distance with deadly effect.
-Further, they could fire five shots to the Dons’ one. Every broadside
-told, and the effect of the shot and splinters on the overcrowded
-Spanish ships was terrible.
-
-So the Armada pursued its way, and Howard “plucked out its feathers one
-by one.” For a week the running fight was kept up. During the first few
-days the English were badly hampered by want of powder and provisions,
-but now that danger was imminent there was no lack of ammunition and
-stores. Off Calais the fleets faced each other, and a long day’s battle
-was fought. On the night of Sunday, July 28, a memorable council of war
-was held in the _Ark’s_ main cabin, attended by Howard, Drake, Seymour,
-Hawkins, Martin Frobisher, and others. The conference was short, for
-there was no time to lose. Eight useless vessels were immediately coated
-with pitch—hulls, spars, and rigging. Pitch was poured on the decks and
-over the sides, and men were told off to steer them. The night was dark
-as the grave; a faint westerly wind was curling the waters; and towards
-midnight the look-outs on the Spanish galleons saw several phantom-like
-vessels bearing down on them.
-
-Suddenly the ships broke into a blaze from water-line to truck, and
-lighted up the scene like noonday. The Spaniards lost their heads, and
-in their panic they slipped their cables and put to sea, uncertain which
-way to steer. Drake and Hawkins now bore down upon them, pouring in
-cataracts of round shot. The decks of the Spanish ships were like
-slaughter-houses. The Spanish shot flew high over the low hulls of the
-enemy, while every English broadside found its billet. Not until his
-magazines were empty and his last cartridge was fired did Drake draw
-off.
-
-Then a gale sprang up and the Dons were forced to steer up the North
-Sea. The English closely followed them, and “the Lord sent His wind and
-scattered them.” Of the proud fleet which left Spain for the conquest of
-the heretic isle only fifty-three shattered vessels returned to Spain.
-Thousands of Spanish corpses strewed the shores of the Orkneys, the
-Western Isles, and the Atlantic coast of Ireland. Scarcely a noble
-family in Spain but mourned a relative slain or drowned.
-
-Thus England and English liberty were saved. All honour to you, noble
-sea-dogs! May Britain never lack sons of your breed! To you we owe
-freedom, literature, commerce, and empire, and above all the mastery of
-that
-
- “KINGDOM none can take,
- The realm of the circling sea.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Armada in Sight.=
- (_From the Picture by Seymour Lucas, R.A. By permission of Mr. Arthur
- Lucas._)]
-
-[Illustration: =QUEEN ELIZABETH AT TILBURY FORT.=
- (_From the picture by Daniel Maclise, R.A. By permission of the Council
- of the Art Union of London._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
-
- “_For ’tis the sunrise now of zeal,_
- _And faith and hope are in their prime_
- _In great Eliza’s golden time._”
-
-Once more Queen Elizabeth figures in our pageant. She is passing to her
-barge amidst a crowd of courtiers, who buzz round her like bees seeking
-the honey of her smile. Amongst the spectators of her progress you
-observe a young man, comely of person, handsome of face, and gallant of
-bearing. Suddenly her Majesty pauses; the ground is miry, and she
-hesitates to soil her dainty shoes. In a moment the young man has pulled
-off his rich plush cloak and has thrown it upon the ground for the queen
-to walk upon. She is flattered by the attention; she smiles graciously
-on the young man and says, “You have this day spoiled a gay mantle in
-our behalf. We thank you for your service, though the manner of offering
-it was unusual and something bold.”
-
-“In a sovereign’s need,” he replies, “it is each liegeman’s duty to be
-bold.”
-
-“That is well said,” the queen remarks, and at a bound the young man
-springs into her royal favour. It was afterwards said that the spoiling
-of his cloak gained him a good many _suits_.
-
-The young man whose introduction to the queen you have just witnessed is
-Walter Raleigh, a Devonshire gentleman who has already seen much warlike
-service, and has shown himself to be possessed of many qualities besides
-personal bravery and prowess in battle. In sooth he is one of the most
-heroic and brilliant men of that brilliant and heroic age—explorer,
-soldier, sailor, poet, prose writer, and true-hearted gentleman—“a
-spirit without spot,” as Shelley finely calls him. Let us learn
-something of his career.
-
-Raleigh was not yet thirty when he first attracted the attention of
-Elizabeth. He was then a tall, well-built man with thick, dark hair, a
-bright complexion, and an expression full of life. His dress was always
-magnificent, and he had the faculty of displaying himself and his
-capacities to the best possible advantage. His speech was bold and
-plausible; he was fearless and dashing, a man of a stout heart, a sound
-head, and a strong right hand. Now that Elizabeth had admitted him to
-her favour, she speedily raised him from the position of a poor
-gentleman adventurer to one of the most wealthy of her courtiers. He was
-knighted in 1584, and subsequently sat in Parliament for Devonshire.
-
-Soon, however, he wearied of a life of luxury and busy idleness at the
-court, and arranged with his half-brother, Sir Humphrey Gilbert, to join
-him in his projected voyage to Newfoundland. But Elizabeth positively
-forbade him to go, and reluctantly he bowed to the royal command.
-Gilbert never returned from Newfoundland. On the homeward voyage he
-stuck to his little, unseaworthy vessel, the _Squirrel_, and declined to
-take his passage on board the _Golden Hind_, the larger vessel which
-convoyed him. To all arguments he had but one reply, “I will not forsake
-my little company, with whom I have passed through so many storms and
-perils.” When the ships were to the north of the Azores terrible seas
-arose, and the _Squirrel_ was well-nigh swamped. Through all the foul
-weather Sir Humphrey, gallant gentleman that he was, sat on deck, calm
-and unmoved, reading a book. When they besought him to board the _Golden
-Hind_ he said, “We are as near to heaven by sea as by land.” During the
-night of Monday, September 9, 1583, the watchers on the _Golden Hind_
-suddenly missed the lights of the _Squirrel_. She had gone down with all
-her crew.
-
-Raleigh applied for the patent which Sir Humphrey, his half-brother, had
-held, and was accorded the royal permission to discover unknown lands,
-take possession of them in the queen’s name, and hold them to his own
-profit for six years. At once he fitted out an expedition, which coasted
-northward from Florida and took possession of Roanoke Island, within the
-lagoons of what is now North Carolina. His captains returned with a
-glowing account of the “good land” which they had discovered, and
-Raleigh took immediate steps to colonize it. He called it Virginia, in
-honour of the Virgin Queen.
-
-Accordingly, in the year 1585, he sent out Sir Richard Grenville with
-one hundred and eight men, and on Roanoke Island a little colony was
-established. Ralph Lane was left in charge of the party, and Grenville
-sailed for home, hoping for the best but fearing the worst. Unhappily
-the wrong sort of men had been sent out—soft-handed gentlemen who could
-not dig, and were ashamed to beg. Before long there were bitter quarrels
-in the little hive between the drones and the workers, food ran short,
-and the colonists were on the verge of starvation.
-
-In the next year Drake touched at Roanoke after his attack on Cartagena,
-and seeing what a helpless, shiftless crew the colonists were, he
-carried them all back to England save fifteen. The colony had thus
-proved a costly failure, but the experiment was notable, because it was
-the first attempt to found a greater Britain beyond the seas. He who
-writes the history of British expansion must never forget to give
-Raleigh a foremost place in the roll of Empire-makers.
-
-One of the immediate results of the voyage was the introduction into
-this country of the potato and the tobacco plant. Raleigh grew potatoes
-in his garden at Youghal, and thus gave Ireland the staple food of her
-peasantry. According to an old story, he was the first man to smoke
-tobacco in England. It is said that his servant, seeing volumes of smoke
-issuing from his mouth, concluded that he was on fire, and promptly
-poured a bucket of water over him, thus effectually putting out his
-pipe.
-
-A second attempt to found a colony on Roanoke Island failed, and Raleigh
-was terribly disappointed. He could do no more; so in 1589, the year
-after he helped to repel the Armada, he disposed of his rights to a
-company of merchants, who made no attempt to found a new colony on the
-ruins of the old. Thus the sixteenth century came to an end, and England
-had no colony of any kind in America.
-
-In the year 1592 Raleigh fell into disgrace with his royal mistress. She
-discovered that the man she had delighted to honour and enrich had
-actually dared to love one of her maids of honour. An excuse was
-speedily found by the jealous queen for sending Raleigh and his
-lady-love, Elizabeth Throgmorton, to the Tower. At length, however, the
-queen relented and restored Raleigh to liberty, but forbade him the
-court. The lovers were married and settled at Sherborne, where Raleigh
-busied himself in erecting a magnificent mansion and laying out its
-grounds with great taste.
-
-About this time he made acquaintance with the Spanish legend of the
-fabulous wealth of El Dorado, the city of Manoa, in South America. The
-story fascinated his romantic nature, and he could not rest until he had
-attempted its discovery. Yielding to his wife’s entreaties, he refrained
-from going in search of it himself, and sent his tried and trusty
-servant, Jacob Whiddon, in his stead. Whiddon returned without having
-discovered anything, and Raleigh now essayed the adventure himself. With
-a fleet of five ships he sailed in February 1595, and in the next month
-arrived at the island of Trinidad. He seized the capital and captured
-the governor, who confirmed the stories of the richness and wonder of
-Manoa, and told him of its remarkable inhabitants, the dog-headed men
-“whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders.”
-
-Early in April Raleigh started on the quest with a little flotilla of
-five boats, a hundred men, and provisions for a month. He entered the
-Orinoco, but found the labour of rowing against the vast and powerful
-stream most exhausting. Sometimes his boats did not progress a
-stone’s-throw in an hour. After struggling onwards for nearly four
-hundred miles he was obliged to own himself beaten. He brought back with
-him some pieces of quartz showing grains of gold and the earliest
-specimens of mahogany ever seen in this country. Subsequently he
-attacked several Spanish settlements and then returned to England, where
-his enemies declared that the story of his river voyage was an
-invention. As a matter of fact, Guiana is rich in gold, and more than
-one famous mine has been worked in the country which Raleigh endeavoured
-to explore.
-
-Raleigh lived peacefully at home for nearly two years, and then played a
-brilliant part in Drake’s daring attack on Cadiz. He commanded the
-_Warspite_, the leading ship, and though severely wounded, landed with
-his men for the storming of the town. His gallantry won him the queen’s
-forgiveness, and once more he was a familiar figure about the court.
-Under Essex he commanded a ship in the fleet which sailed for Flores, in
-the Azores, to lie in wait for Spanish treasure galleons. His
-disobedience of orders in his capture of Fayal earned for him the enmity
-of Essex, who now became one of his bitterest enemies. Essex, however,
-came to the block, but not before he had done Raleigh considerable
-mischief.
-
-Queen Elizabeth died in 1603, and James the Sixth of Scotland became
-James the First of England. There were plots to prevent his accession
-and to put Lady Arabella Stewart, an Englishwoman of the royal house, on
-the throne. The cowardly Lord Cobham was at the head of the Main Plot,
-and when arrested he made a lying confession implicating Raleigh, who
-was tried and found guilty of compassing the death of the king, of
-endeavouring to set Arabella Stewart on the throne, of receiving bribes
-from the court of Spain, and of seeking to deliver the country into the
-hands of its enemy. Raleigh’s execution was ordered, and he wrote a
-touching farewell to his wife; but on the eve of the fatal day he was
-reprieved and committed to the Tower with the death sentence hanging
-over his head. For about twelve years he remained a prisoner. He was
-treated leniently, and given apartments in the Bloody Tower, where he
-lived with his wife and son and his attendants. Frequently the young
-Prince Henry visited him, and the lad grew fond of his gallant and
-brilliant friend. “No man but my father,” he once said, “would keep such
-a bird in a cage.”
-
-Raleigh now busied himself in a variety of occupations: he designed a
-model of a ship, he condensed fresh water from salt, he compounded
-drugs, he began his “History of the World,” and wrote verses and
-political pamphlets. About the year 1610 he revived his old project for
-discovering Manoa. Twenty years had now passed since he had returned
-from Guiana, but during his long solitude in the Tower his mind returned
-again and again to the fabulous riches of El Dorado, and he devised plan
-after plan for securing its wealth. He now made a proposition to certain
-lords of the Council, and they listened to it. “If I bring them not to a
-mountain covered with gold and silver ore,” he wrote, “let the commander
-have commission to cut off my head there.” All he stipulated for was
-that if half a ton of precious ore should be brought home he should have
-a free pardon. At length the king was persuaded to agree to the
-proposal, and in March 1617 the order for his release was signed.
-
-Raleigh and his wife adventured all they had in fitting out the
-expedition. Ere it sailed the Spanish ambassador intervened. He
-protested loudly that Guiana belonged to Spain, and that Raleigh’s
-expedition proposed an invasion of Spanish territory, and was simply a
-cloak for piracy on a gigantic scale. The ambassador believed that
-Raleigh had his eye on the Mexican Plate fleet, and as after events
-proved, he was right. James warned Raleigh that he was not to fight the
-Spaniards, and on this understanding he was permitted to sail.
-
-Misfortune dogged him from the outset. Foul winds and storms drove him
-back, and afterwards scattered his fleet and sank one of his vessels. He
-had difficulty in getting water at the Canaries, and a hurricane drove
-him from the Cape Verde Islands. For forty days he lay in the doldrums,
-while his men fell a prey to scurvy and fever and grew mutinous. At
-length, when the remnant of his ten ships arrived off the mouth of the
-Orinoco, Raleigh was prostrate with fever, and his men had lost all hope
-of success. But his courageous spirit was equal to the occasion. “We can
-make the adventure,” he cried; “and if we perish, it shall be no honour
-to England or gain to his Majesty to lose one hundred as valiant men as
-England hath in it.”
-
-While he remained off the mouth of the river, his lieutenant, Thomas
-Keymis, with five ships and four hundred men, undertook the great quest.
-For three weeks they battled against the mighty current, but when they
-approached the proposed landing-place they found a Spanish settlement
-blocking their path. This they stormed and burnt, Raleigh’s son being
-killed in the attack. Though the settlement was captured, the Spaniards
-were still in the woods, and Keymis, having done all that man could do,
-was forced to retreat. Raleigh met him with a bitter reproach——“You
-have undone me by your obstinacy.” Keymis said not a word, but betook
-himself to his cabin, where he ran a dagger through his heart.
-
-Raleigh was now desperate. He proposed to go himself in search of the
-mine, but his men would not follow him. Then he suggested the capture of
-the Mexican Plate fleet; but they refused, saying that, even if they
-succeeded, the king would hang them when they got home. There was no
-help for it, so Raleigh was obliged to return to England. With angry
-reproaches to his “rabble of idle rascals,” he set sail, knowing well
-the fate which awaited him.
-
-In June 1618 he was back at Plymouth, and was at once arrested. James
-was courting the favour of his “dear brother of Spain,” and the Spanish
-ambassador had obtained a promise from him that, “if Raleigh returned
-loaded with gold acquired by an attack on the subjects of the King of
-Spain, he would surrender it all, and would give up the authors of the
-crime to be hanged in the public square of Madrid.” Now the Spaniard
-claimed his victim, and James actually proposed to keep his word; but he
-dared not do so, for England now regarded Raleigh as a champion of
-English interests against Spanish tyranny. He was thereupon brought to
-trial. In the course of it the Attorney-General said, “Sir Walter
-Raleigh hath been as a star at which the world hath gazed; but stars may
-fall—nay, they must fall when they trouble the sphere where they
-abide.” There was a legal difficulty in the way: Raleigh was under
-sentence of death, and therefore could not be legally tried. The easiest
-way out of the difficulty was to order his execution on the old charge
-of treason. This was done. As Raleigh returned to his prison he
-remarked, “The world itself is but a larger prison, out of which some
-are daily selected for execution.”
-
-On October 19, 1618, he was brought to the scaffold, which had been
-erected in Old Palace Yard. He met his fate cheerfully, and jested
-pleasantly even on the way to the block. He addressed the crowd in a
-well-known speech, thanking God heartily that He had brought him to die
-in the light, and not left him to perish obscurely in the dark prison of
-the Tower. He denied all accusations of treason, and defended himself
-against other charges. When he had finished he said, “And now I have a
-long journey to go, and must take my leave.” As he laid his head on the
-block the executioner bade him turn his head to the east. “What matter,”
-he answered, “how the head lies, so that the heart be right?” These
-noble words had hardly fallen from his lips when the axe descended.
-
-[Illustration: =THE BOYHOOD OF SIR WALTER RALEIGH.=
- (_From the picture by Sir J. E. Millais, Bart., P.R.A., in the National
- Gallery of British Art._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIII.
- THE GREAT REBELLION.
-
-
- CHARLES THE FIRST.
-
- “_He nothing common did or mean_
- _Upon that memorable scene,_
- _But with his keener eye_
- _The axe’s edge did try;_
- _Nor called the gods with vulgar spite_
- _To vindicate his helpless right,_
- _But bowed his comely head_
- _Down, as upon a bed._”
-
-THE incident you are now to witness is without a parallel in the history
-of our land. The scene opens in Westminster Hall, the vast building
-erected for the judicial courts of the realm by William the Second.
-There is a troop of horse in the courtyard, and armed men guard the
-doors. Now a procession enters, and as the doors open to admit it you
-hear loud shouts of “Justice! justice!” from the mob in the courtyard.
-At the head of the procession are officers bearing the mace and the
-sword of state; behind them, in black robes, you see John Bradshaw, and
-with him a number of members of Parliament. He takes his seat on a chair
-of crimson velvet, and his companions range themselves to the right and
-left of him. The sword and the mace are placed on the table at which the
-clerk sits, and the doors are flung open. At once a tumultuous crowd
-rushes in, eager to witness the dread ceremony. They struggle for
-places, and the hall rings with their shouts. At length order is
-restored, and the clerk reads the Act of Parliament constituting the
-court. Then the roll of judges is called over. Out of one hundred and
-thirty-five on the list only sixty-nine answer to their names.
-
-“Mr. Sergeant,” says the president, “bring in the prisoner.”
-
-There is a deep hush, and you hear the tramp of armed men and the clank
-of scabbards on the pavement. A guard of thirty-two officers leads the
-prisoner to a chair of crimson velvet at the bar. Now you see him
-clearly; he is none other than CHARLES STUART, KING OF ENGLAND.
-
-Look at him well. He is tall, dark, and handsome, with a long, fine
-face, large black eyes, thick eyebrows, a pointed beard, and black,
-curly hair streaked with silver. His whole aspect is noble, dignified,
-and refined. He is a chaste, temperate man, devout at prayers, a good
-father, and a fond husband, a lover of music and painting. Nevertheless
-he is faithless by nature, and addicted to dark and crooked ways. Seldom
-or never is he straightforward in his dealings. He is firmly convinced
-that between him and his subjects there can be no agreement which will
-bind him, and he holds that whether he keeps a promise or breaks it is a
-matter for him to decide, and for him alone. He has inherited his
-father’s beliefs in the doctrines of the Divine right and the absolute
-power of kings, and he has pushed these doctrines to such utmost
-extremes that he has plunged the nation into civil war, and in the
-contest has irretrievably ruined himself.
-
-He is not a clever man, and he is incurably obstinate. He cannot
-understand the great movements which have been going on around him. He
-has never been able to perceive that the time has gone by when men will
-allow the king to be a tyrant, and permit him to override both the law
-and the will of the people. For eleven years he has ruled the land
-without a Parliament, aided by subservient ministers, who have been very
-geniuses of tyranny, and have goaded and maddened the people by all
-sorts of illegal expedients. These ministers have gone to the block, and
-he has been powerless to save them. One of them has died with the
-ominous words on his lips, “Put not your trust in princes.”
-
-Charles has endeavoured to make himself absolute alike in Church and
-State. The Puritans, who are now very strong, have been the especial
-object of his hatred. They have been tormented, fined, whipped,
-pilloried, and imprisoned. His wife is a Roman Catholic princess, whose
-intrigues have still further brought him into bad odour, and he has
-showed such favour to those of her faith that the Puritans bitterly
-denounce him. Many earnest men of less fanatical mind have long ago come
-to the conclusion that unless he is removed all freedom will be banished
-from the land.
-
-Fifteen years ago John Hampden refused to pay an illegal tax, and though
-he was heavily fined, his resistance thrilled all England and made him
-“the argument of all tongues.” The patience of the Scots also broke
-down, and they indignantly refused to permit the king to alter their
-mode of worship. In the churchyard of Greyfriars, Edinburgh, they signed
-their bond of resistance with blood and tears. Charles would gladly have
-chastised them, but his soldiers were unwilling to fight and his
-treasury was empty. In this plight he was forced to call a Parliament,
-which was full of opponents, who were determined to grant no supplies
-until the causes of all grievances were pulled up by the roots. But when
-this Parliament had done much good work for liberty, the members split
-on religious questions, and Charles, profiting by their dissensions, was
-safe for a time.
-
-Suddenly terrible news arrived from Ireland. The native Irish, who were
-Roman Catholics to a man, had attacked the Protestant English colonists,
-and had slaughtered five thousand of them with horrible cruelty. The
-leader of the Irish had showed his followers a letter purporting to come
-from the king and encouraging him to the massacre. The letter had the
-royal seal attached to it, and looked genuine, but it was a forgery. The
-English Puritans, however, were now ready to think the worst of Charles,
-and they firmly believed that he had instigated the Irish to slaughter
-their fellow-countrymen and his own subjects. When Parliament
-reassembled, the Puritan leaders drew up a long list of all the illegal
-acts which the king had done, and issued it as a manifesto to the
-nation. Tact and conciliation might have worked wonders at this time,
-but Charles was in no mood for pacific measures. His wife urged him to
-go to Parliament and seize the five Puritan leaders. “Pull the rascals
-out by the ears,” she cried, and in fatal hour Charles took her advice.
-He went down to Westminster at the head of five hundred men, and entered
-the House only to discover that “the birds had flown.” The five members
-had escaped to the city, and the king was foiled and humiliated. He left
-the House amidst low mutterings of fierce discontent and loud cries of
-“Privilege! privilege!” The London militia rose in arms to protect the
-five members, and war could no longer be avoided.
-
-In April 1642 the king rode to Hull, where there was a large magazine of
-arms and gunpowder, and demanded admittance. The gates were shut in his
-face, and the governor declared that he would only take orders from
-Parliament. This was the first act of war.
-
-On the stormy evening of August 22 the king raised his standard at
-Nottingham, and when it was blown down there were many who saw in the
-occurrence an evil omen. Then began a series of miserable years, during
-which father fought against son and brother against brother. The fortune
-of war at first favoured the king; but the tide turned, and the forces
-of the Parliament gradually gained the upper hand. It was inevitable
-that they should win: London and the most populous and wealthy part of
-the country were with them; the great military genius, Cromwell, rose
-amongst them; and a deep, religious fervour inspired them.
-
-For three years the land rang with the tumult of battle, but on one June
-day in the year 1645 the crisis arrived. The Parliamentary horsemen
-scattered the Cavaliers of the king like chaff before the wind, and they
-were never dangerous again. The king fled from the field, and in his
-captured baggage the victors found damning proof of his intrigues with
-the French and the Irish, and proposals that foreign armies should come
-over and subdue his revolting subjects.
-
-The king’s cause was now desperate, and he rode to the camp of the
-Scots, who had come to the assistance of the English Parliament, and
-yielded himself to them. The Scots were glad to have him, and were ready
-to restore him to his throne if he would promise to support
-Presbyterianism in Scotland and make the Church of England a
-Presbyterian Church. Charles indignantly refused to make the Church
-which he loved so well the price of his freedom, and the Scots handed
-him over to the Parliament. At this time the Parliament was divided in
-opinion. The Presbyterians, who were the stronger party and had the
-custody of the king, were eager for peace, so they offered to set
-Charles on his throne again if he would agree to their demands, which
-included the abolition of bishops in the English Church. Charles had
-sworn that he would never sacrifice his crown or his Church even to save
-his life, and he kept his word. But for months he would not give a
-straightforward answer. He tried every sort of shift and trick to gain
-time, and in doing so disgusted many of those who would gladly have been
-his friends.
-
-Now the army, which was largely composed of Independents, took matters
-into its own hands. It seized the king, marched to London, expelled the
-members of Parliament opposed to it, and so obtained a majority. But
-even the stern men who had overthrown the king on the field of battle
-were ready to offer him terms which he might easily have accepted. He
-refused them, because he was still hopeful of regaining his throne
-without making terms. It was an evil hour when he rejected the final
-olive branch. When a Royalist rising took place in Scotland, and a
-second and quite unnecessary civil war broke out in England, the army
-felt that the end of his tether had come. They hopelessly crushed the
-royal forces in less than three months, and the king’s doom was sealed.
-The Independent remnant of Parliament passed a Bill for bringing him to
-trial, and appointed a High Court of Justice for the purpose.
-
-Now you know why Charles faces a court of his subjects in Westminster
-Hall. Now you know why the members keep their hats on their heads, and
-refuse to show him honour. To them he is a malefactor, a “man of blood.”
-He is now sitting in his chair waiting for the proceedings to begin.
-Bradshaw rises and says:—
-
-“Charles Stuart, King of England, the Commons of England assembled in
-Parliament, taking notice of the effusion of blood in the land, which is
-fixed on you as the author of it, and whereof you are guilty, have
-resolved to bring you to a trial and judgment, and for this cause the
-tribunal is erected. The charges will now be read by the
-Solicitor-General.”
-
-As the Solicitor-General rises to speak, the king touches him with his
-cane on the shoulder and cries “Silence!” The head of the king’s cane
-falls off! It is a ghastly portent, and the king himself shows a
-momentary sign of emotion. Then the Solicitor-General reads out a long
-indictment, and concludes by demanding that justice be done upon the
-king as a tyrant, traitor, and murderer. At these words Charles laughs
-in the face of the court.
-
-Usually he hesitates in his speech, but to-day he is very fluent. He
-refuses to plead before such a court. He tells his judges that they are
-an illegal meeting appointed by a mere remnant of the House of Commons.
-Again and again he declares that they have no authority to sit in
-judgment on him.
-
-Then Bradshaw cries, “Take away the prisoner. The court adjourns to
-Monday next.” The escort marches up, and the king rises to depart with
-them. As he does so his eye falls on the sword placed on the table. “I
-do not fear that,” he says, pointing to it with his cane. Then he is led
-forth, and the populace greet him with mingled cries of “Justice!
-justice!” and “God save the king!” “God save your Majesty!”
-
-On Monday the court sits again, and the king makes the same protest. On
-Tuesday the same scene is enacted, and meanwhile popular sympathy for
-the royal prisoner is growing rapidly. The shouts of “Justice!” and
-“Execution!” are now only raised by the soldiers. The crowd cries “God
-save the king!” whenever it can do so with impunity. As the hours pass
-by the same cry is heard amongst the troops. A soldier of the guard who
-has dared to say to the king, “Sire, God bless you!” is struck by his
-officer. “Methinks,” says Charles, “the punishment exceeds the offence.”
-
-On Wednesday and Thursday the court meets to hear evidence, and then
-retires to consider its verdict. On the 27th, at noon, it assembles
-again, and all men notice that Bradshaw wears a red robe in place of the
-customary black. As the roll of judges is called over there is no
-response to the name of Fairfax. Suddenly the silence is broken by the
-voice of his wife in the gallery, “He has too much wit to be here.” The
-king enters, and loud shouts of “Justice!” “Execution!” are raised by
-the soldiers, but the crowd is silent.
-
-The president harangues the prisoner; but when he speaks of the crimes
-charged against him in the name of the people of England, he is cut
-short by the voice which has answered to the name of Fairfax, “Where are
-they or their consents? Oliver Cromwell is a traitor!”
-
-Excitement and confusion break out for a space, but the cry of “Justice!
-execution!” is again raised. The king, almost beside himself,
-passionately cries, “Hear me! hear me!” but he is not permitted to
-speak. Then Bradshaw delivers a long and solemn address, the clerk reads
-the sentence, and the judges stand in their places to signify their
-assent. The king again tries to speak, but being considered dead in law
-is not permitted to do so. He is led away, and as he leaves the hall the
-soldiers on the stairs puff smoke in his face and hurl the grossest
-insults at him. But outside the mob shouts, “God save your Majesty!”
-“God deliver your Majesty from the hands of your enemies!” The soldiers
-retort with cries of “Justice!” “Execution!” and the king, who has now
-regained his serenity, observes, “Poor souls! for a piece of money they
-would do so to their commanders.”
-
-The condemned king is lodged in St. James’s Palace, where he is allowed
-to take a last fond farewell of his weeping children. He takes the
-little boy on his knee, and says, “My dear heart, they will soon cut off
-thy father’s head. Mark, child, what I say: they will cut off my head,
-and perhaps make thee king; but thou must not be king so long as thy
-brothers Charles and James live. I charge thee, do not be made a king by
-them.” To which the child replies amidst its tears, “I will be torn in
-pieces first.” The children are removed, and the king spends the few
-remaining hours in prayer with his good friend Bishop Juxon. On January
-30, between two and three in the afternoon, he is led by armed men
-through the leafless avenues of St. James’s Park to his palace of
-Whitehall, before which a scaffold draped with black has been erected.
-All marvel at the calm dignity which he displays.
-
-The scaffold is hedged round with soldiers, and the headsman stands
-beside the block. The king, with head erect, steps through an opening in
-the wall of the banqueting hall on to the scaffold. He addresses himself
-to the bystanders, and in the last words he utters he shows clearly that
-he has not abandoned his fatal theory of kingship. Then he turns to the
-good Juxon, who says, “There is but one stage more, sire; it is full of
-trouble and anguish, but it is a very short one, and it will carry you a
-great way—from earth to heaven!” “I go,” returns the king, “from a
-corruptible to an incorruptible crown, where I shall have no trouble to
-fear.” Then with a mysterious admonition—“_Remember!_”—he lays his
-head on the block. The axe falls, and a deep groan of pity and horror
-goes up from the people.
-
-A blood-red line has been ruled across the page of our national
-history—the Old Rule has gone; the New Rule has yet to appear.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Charles I. leaving Westminster Hall after his Trial.=
- (_From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the Mappin Art Gallery,
- Sheffield. By permission of the Corporation of Sheffield._)]
-
-[Illustration: =CROMWELL AT MARSTON MOOR.=
- (_From the picture by Ernest Crofts, A.R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- OLIVER CROMWELL.
-
- “_Cromwell, our chief of men, who through a cloud_
- _Not of war only, but detractions rude,_
- _Guided by faith and matchless fortitude._”
-
-Six years have come and gone since the execution of Charles the First,
-and England has had no king in the interval. The great, strong man,
-Oliver Cromwell, who by his military genius has overthrown the king and
-made the army supreme, has crushed all opposition by the weight of his
-iron hand. At the head of his buff-coated Ironsides—men with psalms on
-their lips and ruth in their hearts—he has stamped the very life out of
-Ireland, and by a happy accident, which he believes to be an
-interposition of Providence, he has reduced Scotland to impotence. Now
-he is master of three kingdoms, and only the remnant of an old
-Parliament stands in his way. The “Rump,” as it is contemptuously
-called, refuses to dissolve, so Cromwell strides into the House and,
-after roundly rating the members, stamps on the floor. At the signal
-armed men enter and proceed to drive out the occupants of the chamber.
-The Speaker refuses to leave the chair, and tries to speak, but his
-voice is drowned in the uproar. Then one of Cromwell’s friends offers to
-lend him a hand to come down, and the Speaker, yielding to force, does
-so. Pointing to the mace, the symbol of the authority of the House of
-Commons, Cromwell cries, “What shall we do with this bauble? Here, take
-it away!” and a soldier removes it. Then he locks the door and strides
-away with the key in his pocket, while a wag chalks up on the building,
-“This house to let.”
-
-Six weeks later he summons another Parliament, and finds it composed of
-fanatics and doctrinaires who are passionate admirers of his, but
-propose to overturn every established custom. Under the leadership of
-“Praise-God Barebone” it actually suggests that the law of England shall
-be superseded in favour of the law of Moses! The members quarrel
-fiercely, and at last give up to the Lord-General the powers which they
-have received from him. The Council of State begs him to become Lord
-Protector, with rights and duties which differ very little from those of
-a king, and he accepts the proffered honour. Nine months elapse, and
-another Parliament is called; but it is a hindrance to the Lord
-Protector’s schemes, and is dissolved. Another takes its place, and
-offers to make Cromwell king. He refuses, for the name of king is
-loathsome to him, and he is already king in all but name. Then this
-Parliament goes the way of the others, and Cromwell never calls another.
-
-You see him now an even more absolute ruler than “martyred Charles:” he
-is a despot, but with a difference. Whatever his detractors may say of
-him, this cannot be disputed, that never was the sceptre of England
-wielded by a more vigorous or sagacious hand. His protectorship,
-compared with any preceding age, or with several ages succeeding it, was
-an era of toleration, justice, and law. Weakened though she was by the
-Civil Wars, England rose to respect and greatness abroad, and foreign
-tyrants and persecutors trembled at her name. “We always reckon,” said a
-Royalist bishop, “those eight years of the usurpation as a time of great
-peace and prosperity.” Trade and commerce increased, and the land grew
-wealthy and great; yet all the while Cromwell was bitterly hated, and
-his life was always in peril. He wore mail beneath his clothes, and
-slept in a different room almost every night. Despite his ever-present
-danger, he went his way fearlessly, though expecting a pistol-shot from
-every dark corner.
-
-Now let us witness a scene which shows Cromwell at his best. You see
-before you the interior of a room in the palace of Whitehall. Seated
-carelessly on a table is the Lord Protector. He is a man of massive
-build, with a “figure of sufficient impressiveness: not lovely to the
-man-milliner species, nor pretending to be so.” A massive “head so
-shaped as you might see in it a storehouse and shop of a vast treasury
-of natural parts. . . . On the whole, a right noble lion-face and
-hero-face; and to me royal enough.” He is careless in his dress, utterly
-indifferent to externals, and wholly without affectation. He is the man
-who warned Lely, when painting his picture, to put in all the
-roughnesses, pimples, and warts of his countenance, or he would not pay
-a farthing for the work. Hard, stern, implacable in warfare, he is
-nevertheless simple, loving, and pure in his private life, sincerely and
-ardently religious, and convinced to the bottom of his soul that he is a
-chosen instrument “to do God’s people some good.” True, he owes his
-power to the sword; but he wields that power so well, and stoops to so
-little that is mean or base, that future generations will have good
-cause to rejoice that the guidance of the state was for a brief space of
-years entrusted to him.
-
-At the other end of the table sits John Milton, that inspired poet of
-whom Wordsworth wrote:——
-
- “His soul was like a star, and dwelt apart;
- So didst thou travel on life’s common way
- In cheerful godliness.”
-
-Look at his noble face, which reflects in its every expression the
-splendid mind with which he is gifted and the noble thoughts which flit
-through it. No man ever served the Muses with such exquisite devotion.
-He comes to his desk as a knight to his vigil, believing that no man can
-worthily write of great things unless his life is worthily lived. He
-loves virtue with all the passion of his nature——
-
- “She can teach ye how to climb
- Higher than the sphery chime.”
-
-And now he is engaged on a task which enlists all his sympathy, and
-sends a throb of righteous indignation through his veins.
-
-He is Latin Secretary to the Council, and it is his task to Latinize all
-communications to foreign states. Cromwell has heard that in the valleys
-of Piedmont the Waldenses, a body of dogged Puritans, are being
-persecuted by the Duke of Savoy, who is harrying them with savage
-cruelty, and has already slain thousands of them. Cromwell is greatly
-moved by the news, and his anger breaks forth in a torrent of
-inconsequent words. The upshot, however, is clear to Milton: France
-shall receive those attentions which have made the English fleet the
-terror of the Mediterranean, unless an immediate end is put to the
-persecution. Milton has already written the most sublime of all his
-sonnets on this subject:——
-
- “Avenge, O Lord! Thy slaughtered saints, whose bones
- Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold;
- Even them who kept Thy truth so pure of old,
- When all our fathers worshipped stocks and stones,
- Forget not; in Thy book record their groans
- Who were Thy sheep, and in their ancient fold
- Slain by the bloody Piedmontese that rolled
- Mother with infant down the rocks. Their moans
- The vales redoubled to the hills, and they
- To heaven. Their martyred blood and ashes sow
- O’er all the Italian fields, where still doth sway
- The triple Tyrant; that from these may grow
- A hundredfold, who, having learned Thy way,
- Early may fly the Babylonian woe.”
-
-Cromwell has already sent £2,000 out of his own purse to the sufferers.
-Now he dictates his stern message, and Milton translates it into
-resounding Latin of such force and fervour that Cardinal Mazarin dare
-not ignore its purport. The Duke of Savoy and the cardinal may gnash
-their teeth with rage, but, with the whole power of France at their
-command, they dare not again lift a finger against the Waldenses while
-Cromwell lives. No incident in the whole history of the Commonwealth
-reveals more clearly the salutary fear which the name of Cromwell
-excites on the Continent.
-
-But his days are numbered. In three short years he will go hence, and in
-two years more a Stuart will sit on the throne, and at his coming
-England will be “reduced to a nullity”—aye, and worse, to reproach and
-shame. Worn out with constant anxiety, the death of a favourite daughter
-brings him speedily to the valley of the shadow. “I would be willing to
-live,” murmurs the dying man, “to be further serviceable to God and His
-people; but my work is done.” He lies on his deathbed while a great
-storm rages over England. In the morning calm succeeds tempest, and on
-the anniversary of his great victories at Dunbar and Worcester he
-breathes his last. They bury him in Westminster Abbey, amidst the kings;
-but his bones are not long to rest in that hallowed fane. The Stuart
-king, to his everlasting shame, will tear the unoffending body from its
-coffin and gibbet it in unavailing contempt. But ages to come will do
-him tardy justice, and men will come to honour his memory even while
-they lift their hats and pray, “God save the king!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Cromwell dictating Dispatches to Milton.=
- (_From the picture by Ford Madox Brown, in the Manchester Art Gallery. By
- permission of the Manchester Corporation._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- ROBERT BLAKE.
-
- “_Where Blake and mighty Nelson fell_
- _Your manly hearts shall glow,_
- _As ye sweep through the deep,_
- _While the stormy winds do blow,_
- _While the battle rages loud and long,_
- _And the stormy winds do blow._”
-
-An admiral sits writing at a table in the cabin of his dismasted
-flagship, the _Triumph_. He is a short, squat, ungainly man, but within
-that unprepossessing exterior there is one of the most heroic and purely
-patriotic souls that ever existed. His heavy face is clouded by deep
-depression. He is a beaten man, and he is even now inditing the frank
-and ungarnished story of his defeat to the Lords of the Council. “Your
-honours,” he writes, “I hope it will not be unreasonable for me to
-desire your honours that you would think of giving me, your unworthy
-servant, a discharge from this employment so far too great for me, that
-so I may be freed from that burden of spirit which lies upon me, arising
-from the sense of my own insufficiency.” He finishes his task, signs it
-“Robert Blake, Admiral,” strews the sand upon the wet ink, folds the
-missive, and dispatches it.
-
-What is the meaning of this scene? You see a man of the sublimest
-courage and the most ardent patriotism humiliated and vexed with himself
-because he has failed to achieve the impossible. A little more than a
-month ago he met the Dutch fleet, and fought a furious battle which
-raged until nightfall, when the foe, too severely handled to continue
-the struggle, drew off and sailed for home. “Nothing in this to be
-ashamed of,” you will say; but you do not yet know the whole story.
-
-After the victory—for such it was—the Commonwealth, feeling secure,
-dispersed the fleet either on various detached services or to refit, and
-left Blake with only thirty-seven ships to guard the Channel. The
-Dutchmen, on the other hand, flung themselves heart and soul into the
-work of preparing a fleet which should speedily cancel their reverse and
-restore that great prestige which they then enjoyed as the first of
-maritime nations. Yesterday this fleet of eighty ships of war, convoying
-three hundred merchantmen, appeared off the Goodwins, standing to the
-southward, and evidently about to force the strait in defiance of its
-guardian. As the vast and well-equipped fleet of the Dutchmen hove in
-sight Blake called a hasty council of war, and announced his
-determination of attacking it with the wholly inadequate forces at his
-command. It was a venture rash almost to the verge of madness, but Blake
-could not sit still and see the proudly defiant foe go by without
-attempting to chastise it. Twice before he had met the Dutchman and
-belaboured him; he would do so again.
-
-In the battle which followed, the wind blew Blake’s leading ships into
-the midst of the enemy. A stout fight was stubbornly maintained against
-tremendous odds; but the Dutchmen were overwhelmingly strong, and by
-evening two English ships had been captured, one had been burnt, another
-had blown up, and the remainder, under cover of the darkness, had
-staggered into Dover for safety. And now the Channel is full of Dutch
-ships, and their admiral, in the arrogance of victory, has hoisted a
-broom at his masthead to signify that he has swept the narrow seas
-clean! No wonder Blake is sick at heart; no wonder he writes himself
-down failure, and begs to be relieved of his command. But to-morrow he
-will be himself again. The Council will refuse to supersede him; they
-will cheer him with tokens of their confidence; they will immediately
-set about repairing their errors, and will speedily give him a fleet
-adequate to the work which they expect him to do. They know full well
-the splendid courage and the unswerving fidelity of their admiral, and
-they repudiate the “insufficiency” which, with the modesty of the truly
-brave, he ascribes to himself.
-
-And now, before we relate the story of his subsequent exploits, let us
-learn something of his earlier career. As a young Oxford scholar he
-coveted a fellowship, but his appearance offended the artistic eye of
-the warden of his college and he was passed over. When the Civil War
-broke out he was forty-three years of age, and his sentiments were
-strongly republican. Joining the Parliamentary army, he was entrusted
-with the defence of a post at Bristol, which was then besieged by the
-Royalists. The town was yielded by the governor after a feeble
-resistance, but Blake resolutely held on to his post for twenty-four
-hours after the capitulation was signed. He was compelled to yield, and
-narrowly escaped hanging; but the eye of the Parliament was now upon
-him, and before long he found himself entrusted with the defence of
-Taunton town.
-
-The place was wholly without defences. It had no forts, no walls, and
-only a meagre garrison of eighty men. Nevertheless, it was a most
-important strategic post, situated at a point on which all the main
-roads converged, and Blake saw that it must be defended at all costs. He
-worked like a Trojan, and inspired his men to similar efforts. Roads
-were barricaded, breastworks were thrown up, guns were mounted, houses
-loopholed, and the Royalists, unable to carry it by storm, were forced
-to invest it and wait for famine to do its deadly work. The little
-garrison grew terribly hungry, but Blake was as blithe as a lad on a
-holiday escapade. When only one pig remained, he had it driven about the
-town and whipped from time to time, so that its squeals might delude the
-besiegers into the belief that he still possessed a whole herd of
-porkers. When the Royalist captain sent in a ragged messenger to treat
-for terms, Blake dismissed him with a new suit of clothes! Taunton never
-yielded. After the battle of Naseby the siege was raised, and Blake
-emerged from his heap of ruins a man of mark. He had delayed a whole
-army in the west, and had enabled the Parliamentary army in the Midlands
-to win the decisive battle of the Civil War.
-
-When the second Civil War broke out, part of the fleet declared for the
-king, and, under Prince Rupert, the “mad Cavalier,” was giving much
-trouble. A fleet was fitted out to meet this new danger, and, somewhat
-inexplicably, Blake was chosen as one of the generals-at-sea. Probably
-Cromwell thought that the man who could defend Taunton town could defend
-anything. Blake knew little more about naval matters than the Duke of
-Medina Sidonia; but he was a born sailor, and before long he was a
-master of seamanship in all its intricacies. Rupert was a most difficult
-man to catch; but Blake cornered him at last, and at Cartagena drove his
-ships ashore and set fire to them. For this exploit Blake received the
-grateful thanks of Parliament and a sum of one thousand pounds.
-
-Blake had now to meet a much more powerful foe than Rupert. The Dutch
-and the English, old allies against Spain, were now at daggers drawn.
-Ill-feeling between the two nations had been long rife; now it came to a
-head. Holland swarmed with Royalist exiles, and the Government showed
-them much friendship. A Commonwealth envoy was murdered, and the Dutch
-Government would give no satisfaction for the outrage. Further, and
-beyond all, the two nations were rivals in trade, and the Dutch were
-going ahead every day. The bulk of the carrying trade of the world was
-in their hands; they waxed fat and kicked. The heads of the Commonwealth
-knew that war with Holland would be popular, and in spite of Cromwell’s
-opposition they proceeded to provoke it. A Navigation Act was passed,
-aimed directly at Dutch trade. Henceforth no goods were to be imported
-into England unless they came in English ships or in those of the
-country which produced them. This hit the Dutch hard, and war began.
-
-Under Van Tromp, a genuine son of the Vikings, who had risen from
-cabin-boy to admiral, the Dutch sent to sea a magnificent fleet of one
-hundred sail, which the raw English navy could scarcely hope to beat.
-The first shot was fired off Dover in May 1652, and you already know
-something of the course of events up to that bitter day in November of
-the same year, when Blake was beaten by a largely superior force of the
-enemy, and wrote despairingly to the Council of State to suggest that he
-should be retired on account of his “insufficiency.” You know, too, what
-their answer was. They were true to their promise, and by the middle of
-February 1653 Blake was provided with more than seventy sail, ready to
-renew the contest.
-
-He had not long to wait for a chance of retrieving his credit. Tromp,
-with ninety ships, was returning with the home-coming fleet from the
-Indies, and Blake was scouring the Channel looking for him. On Friday,
-February 18, Blake sighted him; but Tromp took him at a disadvantage,
-and he had to bear the brunt of the fighting with his single division of
-twelve ships, the remaining divisions under Penn and Monk being then at
-a considerable distance from the scene of the battle.
-
-The battle raged fiercely round the _Triumph_, and Blake was in the
-utmost peril. He himself was severely wounded, and large numbers of his
-men fell around him. Four ships were captured, and the end seemed near,
-when Penn and Monk arrived. At once the fight assumed a different
-complexion, and the captured ships were retaken before nightfall
-suspended the battle. Neither side could yet claim the victory, and the
-loss of both, though very great, was fairly equal. In the night Tromp
-slipped off; but he was followed, and the battle was resumed. The “four
-days’ battle” ended on Sunday the 20th. Five Dutch ships had been sunk
-and four captured, as well as some thirty or forty merchant vessels.
-Tromp, however, got the remainder away safely by dint of clever
-seamanship. The Dutch had been beaten, but they were by no means
-dismayed, and immediately began to make preparations for a renewal of
-the struggle.
-
-While Blake was making a slow recovery from his wound news arrived that
-the Dutch were again at sea. Before, however, he could reach the fleet a
-great battle had been fought. He and his squadron did not arrive till
-late in the afternoon, but their coming turned the victory into a rout.
-Tromp’s vessel was boarded; but to save her from falling into the hands
-of his foes, he blew her up, and by a miracle saved both himself and his
-ship. Another English victory followed, in which the gallant Tromp was
-killed, and then the war was brought to a close. Holland paid a war
-indemnity, and agreed that the English were masters of the sea.
-Henceforth the Dutch might only pass through the Strait of Dover by the
-kind permission of England. Blake and Monk received the thanks of
-Parliament, gold medals, and gold chains valued at £300. A few weeks’
-rest restored Blake to health so far as to enable him to return to the
-fleet, and all was ready for his next exploit.
-
-Cromwell, now dictator, turned his attention to Spain, which was the
-most dangerous trade rival of the English Puritans in America.
-Accordingly, in 1654, he sent out two fleets, one to the Mediterranean
-under Blake, the other to the West Indies under Penn and Venables. Blake
-had a general commission to protect British commerce, and this he
-interpreted as permission to attack the Barbary pirates, who levied
-blackmail on all the commerce of Europe passing their shores. Scores of
-luckless merchantmen bound for the Levant were boarded and rifled, and
-their crews carried off as slaves. Possibly the compilers of the English
-Church Litany had the sufferings of thousands of their fellow-countrymen
-in mind when they wrote, “That it may please Thee to show Thy pity upon
-all prisoners and captives.” Blake ran into the harbour of Tunis in
-spite of fleet, castles, moles, batteries, and musketeers, and in a few
-hours nine vessels of the pirate fleet were in flames, and he was
-outward bound, congratulating himself on a good work well done. This
-gallant exploit made the British name a terror in the Mediterranean. He
-now visited the chief ports of the western Mediterranean “to show his
-flag” and everywhere he was received with fear and trembling.
-
-He returned to England in October 1655, but spent little time ashore,
-for the Protector had now a daring task to set him. Penn and Venables
-had failed miserably in the West Indies, and British arms had suffered a
-discreditable reverse. Cromwell was not the man to overlook failures of
-this sort. He promptly sent the quarrelsome officers to the Tower, and
-dispatched Blake to the Spanish Main to do the work properly. In a
-preliminary cruise off the Spanish coast he captured several Plate
-ships, and in 1657 he set sail for Santa Cruz, in Teneriffe, where he
-accomplished his last and most brilliant feat. Within the
-horseshoe-shaped harbour, belted with forts mounting the heaviest
-artillery then known, lay sixteen great galleons, all well armed. The
-Spaniards boasted that within that death-trap their treasure-ships were
-absolutely safe. The historian of the time wrote truly: “All men who
-knew the place concluded that no sober men, with whatever courage soever
-endued, would ever undertake it.”
-
-Blake discovered that the six largest galleons were drawn up in line,
-commanding the entrance to the harbour, and that behind them were the
-other ships. When he learnt this he might have repeated Cromwell’s
-exulting cry at Dunbar, “The Lord hath delivered them into my hands.” If
-he ran in with a fair wind and a flowing tide beneath the walls of the
-great fort at the entrance, little harm could come to him, for its great
-guns could not readily be depressed so as to stay his progress. Further,
-the massing of the largest galleons at the harbour mouth covered the
-fire of the ships behind, and prevented several of the forts from firing
-lest they should injure friend and foe alike.
-
-To make a long story short, Blake dashed into the harbour, attacked at
-the very closest quarters, and before evening had burnt, blown up, or
-sunk every Spanish ship in it. Then, under cover of the dense masses of
-smoke blowing seaward, the British ships crept out into safety, with not
-above fifty men slain outright and one hundred and twenty wounded.
-Nothing so daring or so brilliant had ever been accomplished before, not
-even by Drake when he “singed the King of Spain’s beard.” The sea-power
-of Spain was absolutely annihilated, and England rang with the praises
-of the man who had done it.
-
-A public thanksgiving was held, and the Protector wrote to the
-victorious admiral: “We cannot but take notice how eminently it hath
-pleased God to make use of you in this service, assisting you with
-wisdom in the conduct and courage in the execution; and have sent you a
-small jewel”—his own portrait set in gold and diamonds—“as a testimony
-of our own and the Parliament’s good acceptance of your courage in this
-action.”
-
-Blake now sailed for home, and his countrymen eagerly waited his coming.
-Alas, he was never to tread the shores of his native land again, never
-to see the fields and hedgerows, the hills and moorlands of his
-dear-loved West Country. Worn out by the fatigues and anxieties of
-warfare, he grew feebler day by day, and constantly asked if the shores
-of England were in sight. When at last the look-out at the masthead
-cried “Land O!” Blake was a dying man. He called his captains to him and
-bade them farewell. Then just as his ship entered Plymouth Sound he
-breathed his last.
-
-In what lay the great glory and inspiration of Blake’s life? Not so much
-in his brilliant achievements, not so much in the care and forethought
-which he exhibited, as in his chivalrous character and splendid
-patriotism. His men loved him and honoured him because his honour and
-honesty of purpose were unimpeachable, and because he had no trace of
-self-seeking in his character. His first and only thought was for the
-honour and glory of his land. He was a British sailor—nothing more and
-nothing less. To him was entrusted the sacred jewel of the national
-honour, and never was it placed in cleaner or more zealous hands. “It is
-not for us,” he once declared, “to mend state affairs, but to keep
-foreigners from fooling us.” This was the watchword of his life, and
-this was his fame.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIV.
- FROM THE RESTORATION TO THE REVOLUTION.
-
-
- THE RESTORATION OF CHARLES THE SECOND.
-
- “_Who comes with rapture greeted, and caressed_
- _With frantic love,—his kingdom to regain?_”
-
-IT is the 29th of May, 1660, and London is a gala city. The streets are
-hung with tapestry; flags and banners wave from the housetops; the
-citizens in their best attire throng the streets; the mayor, aldermen,
-and the gilds in all their bravery of ceremonial robes and gold chains
-hie them to the city gates; every balcony is full of lords and ladies
-clad in the sumptuous trappings of state; drums roll, trumpets sound,
-and bells clash from the steeples. The guns of the Tower roar out a
-welcome, and loud cries of “The king! the king!” are heard. His
-procession approaches “with a triumph of twenty thousand horse and foot,
-brandishing their swords and shouting with inexpressible joy.” Now you
-see him sitting his horse with easy grace, and bowing calmly as he
-responds to the acclamations of the crowd. He is tall and graceful, his
-countenance somewhat swarthy and forbidding. He smiles as maidens strew
-flowers in his way and men cheer until they can cheer no more. “It must
-be my own fault,” he says, “that I have not come back sooner, for I find
-nobody who does not tell me that he has always longed for my return.”
-
-He passes on to Whitehall and takes possession of the palace from which
-his father stepped on to the scaffold. Courtiers and sycophants, and
-honest men with tears in their eyes, crowd the presence-chamber to kiss
-his hands and wish him a long and happy reign, while the citizens
-outside give themselves up to unrestrained joy. A special Lord Mayor’s
-show is paraded as part of the festivities, and several of the pageants
-represent scenes from the life of the king who has just come into his
-own again.
-
-Look at this device now passing on a great wheeled platform. It is a
-scene in Boscobel Wood. In the midst is a spreading oak, and high in the
-branches you see a figure representing Charles hiding from the
-Commonwealth soldiers, who are searching for him below. This incident
-actually happened just nine years ago, after the “crowning mercy” of
-Worcester, when Cromwell thoroughly routed the Royalists and the young
-prince was a hunted fugitive. Another scene in the show represents him
-riding towards safety as the servant of faithful Jane Lane, who sits
-behind him trembling with anxiety. The fugitive is now receiving the
-obeisance of a gay, glittering throng in the palace of his sires. As he
-does so he recalls the shifts and subterfuges, the hairbreadth escapes,
-the privations and perils of those dark days, and bitterly contrasts the
-glorious present with the long years of his shabby and penurious exile.
-
-And now he is crowned and anointed king—hailed with enthusiasm by the
-very men who overthrew his father and consented unto his death. How has
-this wondrous change come about? Cromwell built his power on the sand,
-and with his last breath it fell to pieces like a house of cards. His
-son Richard, an easy-going country squire devoted to hawking, hunting,
-and horse-racing, hated the greatness which was thrust upon him, and
-within a year laid down his office. Then “Honest George” Monk, in
-command of the army in Scotland, saw that the hour had arrived when his
-countrymen were eager for steady and lawful government in place of the
-harsh and uncertain rule of the sword. He marched south, and the
-Londoners hailed him with wild shouts of delight. Like the Israelites of
-old time they cried, “Give us a king to reign over us,” and Charles was
-invited to return and claim his birthright.
-
-The monarchy has been restored, and what manner of man is he who sets up
-the throne anew? Nature has given him excellent parts and a good temper;
-he has polite and engaging manners and a unique experience of the world;
-but otherwise he is utterly selfish and utterly ungrateful, “without
-desire of renown and without sensibility to reproach.” He is a cynic; he
-has absolutely no faith in human nature; he believes that every man has
-his price; and he values his kingship precisely for the amount of
-selfish indulgence which it can afford him. The father who was sent to
-the block was an angel of light compared with the son who has now been
-recalled to fill the empty throne. Forthwith he tramples all that is
-good as well as all that is harsh and unlovely in Puritanism under foot.
-He sets the nation a shameless example of licence and frivolity, and his
-subjects are not slow to imitate it. His court is filled with every kind
-of open wickedness; religion is scoffed at; morality, honour,
-steadfastness, and justice are fit subjects for the ribald jests of
-reckless roysterers. The pendulum has swung to the other extreme with a
-vengeance. Never before has national virtue been at so low an ebb.
-
-The reign of Charles was one long reaction in Church, State, and
-national life. The efficiency of old Noll’s day became a thing of the
-past. The king wasted huge sums of money on his follies and vices, and
-the services were shamefully starved. Only fourteen years ago the Dutch
-were forced to acknowledge England as mistress of the seas; and now they
-entered the Thames, destroyed Sheerness, sailed up the Medway to
-Chatham, and burnt eight men of war, while the navy, paralyzed by
-corruption and mismanagement, was powerless to chastise them. At this
-humiliation the anger of the nation knew no bounds. “Then at length
-tardy justice was done to the memory of Oliver. Everywhere men magnified
-his valour, genius, and patriotism. Everywhere it was remembered how,
-when he ruled, all foreign powers had trembled at the name of England;
-how the States General, now so haughty, had crouched at his feet; and
-how, when it was known that he was no more, Amsterdam was lighted up as
-for a great deliverance, and children ran along the canals shouting for
-joy that the devil was dead! Even Royalists exclaimed that the State
-could be saved only by calling the old soldiers of the Commonwealth to
-arms. . . . Tilbury Fort, the place where Elizabeth had, with manly
-spirit, hurled foul scorn at Parma and Spain, was insulted by the
-invaders. The roar of foreign guns was heard, for the first and last
-time, by the citizens of London.”
-
-While this ignominious war was raging, London suffered two disasters of
-such a terrible character that men openly spoke of them as the
-well-deserved scourges of Almighty God. Turn to the diary of Samuel
-Pepys, the Admiralty clerk who so faithfully mirrored the loose,
-careless life of the time, and read the entry of July 7, 1665: “This
-day, much against my will, I did in Drury Lane see two or three houses
-marked with a red cross upon the doors and ‘Lord, have mercy upon us’
-writ there, which was a sad sight to me, being the first of the kind
-that to my remembrance I ever saw.” The Great Plague had arrived. Those
-who were stricken with the disease began to shiver; then they had
-headaches and were light-headed. On the third or fourth day they fainted
-suddenly, and spots broke out on the breast. As soon as these appeared,
-all hope was gone; the poor victim was dead within an hour.
-
-As we follow Pepys’s pages we see alarm spreading, the clergy taking
-flight to the country, the stoppage of all work and trading, grass
-growing in the deserted streets, the bells tolling all day long,
-searchers going about to discover infected houses, dreaded death-carts
-rumbling over the stones to the mournful cry of “Bring out your dead;”
-then the last scene of all—the carts shooting their contents into huge
-pits dug at St. Martin’s in the Fields and at Mile-End. It is a terrible
-picture, and we shudder as we realize it.
-
-All infected houses become prisons, with watchers at the doors so that
-none might come out or go in. Pepys tells us that a complaint was
-brought against a man for taking a child from an infected house, and the
-case was inquired into by the magistrates. They discovered that the
-child was the little daughter of a saddler. All his other children had
-died of the plague, and the saddler and his wife were shut up in their
-house, never expecting to leave it alive. They had one only wish in
-their despair, and that was to save the life of their little girl. At
-last they managed to communicate with a friend, who promised to take her
-away from London. The child was handed down from the window stark naked,
-and the friend, having dressed it in fresh clothes, took it to
-Greenwich, where, when the story was known, it was permitted to remain.
-
-In all, the death-roll of that terrible year reached nearly 100,000, or
-about one-fifth of the total population. The worst time of all was in
-the first fortnight of September, when the deaths were over a thousand a
-day. As the summer passed, and the cold, high winds of winter blew, the
-plague gradually passed away.
-
-Scarcely, however, had the dead-cart ceased to go its rounds when fire
-laid well-nigh the whole city in ruins. It broke out at one o’clock on
-Sunday morning, September 2, 1666, at the house of a baker in Pudding
-Lane, not far from the Monument which now commemorates the visitation.
-Most of the city was then built of wood, and as a high wind was blowing
-at the time the flames spread rapidly. The citizens could do nothing to
-stop the fire, and before long the city from the Tower to the Temple,
-and from the river to Smithfield, was one sheet of flame. A great terror
-seized the people, but as soon as they recovered from their fright they
-endeavoured to save what they could from the flames. Five, ten, and even
-fifty pounds were given for a cart, and the barges and boats on the
-river were laden to the gunwale with fugitives and their belongings. The
-fields round London were full of furniture and of people camping out
-amidst the pitiful remnants of property which they had saved. On Monday
-night the streets were as light as noonday, and the flames had reached
-St. Paul’s.
-
-John Evelyn tells us in his diary that the stones flew like bombs,
-melting lead ran down the streets in streams, and the very pavements
-were red hot. “God grant,” says he, “my eyes may never behold the like.
-I now saw about ten thousand houses all in one flame. The noise and
-cracking and thunder of the flames, the shrieking of women and children,
-the hurry of the people, the fall of towers, houses, and churches, was
-like an awful storm. The air was so hot that at last men were not able
-to approach the fire, and were forced to stand still and let the flames
-burn on, which they did for nearly two miles in length and one in
-breadth. The clouds of smoke were dismal, and reached nearly fifty-six
-miles in length. London was, but is no more!”
-
-At last the fire was checked by blowing up a number of houses with
-gunpowder. The wind fell, and on Wednesday morning the fire ceased, “as
-it were by a command from Heaven.” It began at Pudding Lane, and it
-ended at Pie Corner in Giltspur Street. Actually 13,000 houses and 89
-churches were burnt down, but only fourteen persons were killed. Every
-dwelling and building over an area of 436 acres was destroyed. The fire,
-however, was a blessing in disguise, for it swept away the foul courts
-and alleys and destroyed the plague germs lingering in the soil. Wider
-and more open streets were built, and new and stately churches arose.
-The genius of Sir Christopher Wren was afforded a unique opportunity. He
-re-created St. Paul’s, his chief monument, and erected fifty-four
-churches, each with its own special features, yet all in harmony with
-the great mother-church of the city.
-
-The restoration of Charles was a triumph for the Church of England, and
-marked the downfall of that religious toleration which Cromwell had
-established. At the instigation of Clarendon, the only man of real zeal
-and probity about the king, the Cavalier Parliament passed a series of
-spiteful Acts against the Puritans, or Nonconformists, as they may now
-be called. Henceforth all mayors, aldermen, councillors, and other
-borough officers must renounce the Solemn League and Covenant, deny the
-lawfulness of taking up arms against the king, and receive the sacrament
-according to the rites of the Church of England. This harsh and unfair
-Act was a great blow to the Nonconformists, and it practically drove
-them out of local government. They were next excluded from the Church by
-the Act of Uniformity; and then the expelled ministers began to form
-congregations outside the pale. But a new Act of Parliament forbidding
-the holding of all religious services except those of the Church of
-England, under pain of fine and imprisonment, was speedily passed to
-keep them forcibly within the fold. This shocking law actually made
-family worship a crime if more than five persons not belonging to the
-family were present. Then came another Act which forbade ministers
-expelled under the Act of Uniformity from teaching in a school or living
-within five miles of a city or corporate town. Thus the Church system
-which Laud had lost his head in trying to establish in the reign of
-Charles the First became the law of the land by the will of the people
-in the reign of his indifferent and cynical son.
-
-The author of these cruel Acts was not long to sit high in the king’s
-favour. He was a grave, ponderous man, with the utmost scorn for the
-idle triflers and wicked spendthrifts amongst whom the king wasted his
-days. Frequently he took Charles to task for his misdemeanours, and by
-his importunity goaded him into keeping his promises. “He often said it
-was the making those promises which had brought the king home, and the
-keeping of them must keep him at home.” The king’s friends hated the
-solemn, long-winded Polonius, and one of them used to whisper in
-Charles’s ear, “There goes your schoolmaster.”
-
-After the second Dutch War, in which England was covered with disgrace,
-Clarendon was a convenient scapegoat, and Charles dismissed him without
-a shade of regret and no single mark of gratitude for the long and
-faithful service which the deposed chancellor had rendered him both in
-exile and after the Restoration. Clarendon’s fall was the signal for
-great rejoicing amongst the shameless crew which surrounded the king. As
-he left Whitehall, disgraced and abandoned, a courtier assured Charles
-“that this was the first time he could ever call him King of England,
-being freed from this great man.”
-
-And now, “freed from this great man,” Charles began to descend deeper
-and deeper into the mire. He formed a ministry of his friends, and laid
-deep plans for ruling as an absolute king, but without running any undue
-risks. Hitherto he had laughed at religion; now, when sick and serious,
-he turned to the Church of Rome, and desired to re-establish it in his
-land, but again without running undue risks. On one principle and one
-principle alone Charles was absolutely fixed—he would never go on his
-travels again. Then he perpetrated his last and foullest piece of
-infamy—he sold himself to Lewis of France for a miserable £200,000 a
-year. Henceforth he was the pensioner of the French king and a secret
-traitor to his own subjects.
-
-No king so absolute as Charles when suddenly he was stricken with
-apoplexy. On his deathbed he was openly received into the Roman Catholic
-Church, to which he had long secretly belonged. He lingered until
-Friday, February 6, 1685. As the morning light began to peep through the
-windows he apologized to those who had watched him through the night for
-all the trouble which he had caused them. “He had been,” he said, “a
-most unconscionable time dying, but he hoped they would excuse it.”
-
-So passes Charles. One of his friends had previously suggested this
-epitaph:—
-
- “Here lies our sovereign lord the king,
- Whose word no man relies on;
- Who never said a foolish thing,
- And never did a wise one.”
-
-There was, however, another and a better side to Charles’s character. He
-frequented the society of the most learned men of his time, founded the
-Royal Society, and attended its meetings. He had undeniable talents and
-a taste for arts and sciences, but his talents only served to bring into
-high relief his grovelling vices and sordid treasons.
-
-[Illustration: =JANE LANE HELPING PRINCE CHARLES TO ESCAPE.=
- (_From the fresco by C. W. Cope, R.A., in the Houses of Parliament._)]
-
-[Illustration: =RESCUED FROM THE PLAGUE, LONDON, 1665.=
- (_From the picture by Frank W. W. Topham, R.I. By permission of the
- Artist._)]
-
-[Illustration: =The Fall of Clarendon.=
- (_From the picture by E. M. Ward, R.A., in the National Gallery of
- British Art._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- JAMES, DUKE OF MONMOUTH.
-
- “_Step by step, and word by word: who is ruled may read,_
- _Suffer not the old kings—for we know the breed._”
-
-Once more the scene is laid in Whitehall. James, the brother of Charles,
-is king, and he is now about to grant an audience to a nephew who has
-unsuccessfully rebelled against him and lies under sentence of death.
-Look at the king’s face. You see at once that he is a slow, narrow man,
-singularly obstinate, harsh, and implacable. His heart is as hard as the
-marble chimney-pieces of his own palace. He never forgets and he never
-forgives an injury. As you glance at his hard, cruel face you feel that
-he will be deaf to every cry of mercy and relentless to every touch of
-pity. Now the door of an antechamber is thrown open and the Duke of
-Monmouth, a handsome man, pale as death, is ushered in. His arms are
-bound behind him with a silken cord. At once he throws himself on the
-ground, and in an agony of weeping crawls to the king’s feet. He
-begs—oh, how passionately he begs—for life, only life—life at any
-price. In frenzied tones he beseeches his uncle to show him mercy for
-the sake of the late king, his father. If he is spared, he will never,
-never offend again.
-
-“I am sorry for you,” says the king in icy tones, “but you have brought
-all this upon yourself. You have called yourself king, you have raised
-rebellion, and foully aspersed me in your Declaration. Your treasons are
-black and many. There is no hope of pardon for you this side the grave.”
-
-At once the wretched prisoner cries out that he signed the Declaration
-without reading it; that it was the work of a villain.
-
-“Do you expect me to believe,” says James with contempt, “that you set
-your hand to a paper of such moment without knowing what it contained?”
-
-Now Monmouth makes his final and most abject appeal. He who has been the
-champion of Protestantism, and has called men to arms against a Catholic
-king, now offers to be reconciled with the Church of Rome! The king,
-always eager to make converts, immediately offers his spiritual
-assistance, but not a word does he say of pardon or respite.
-
-“Is there no hope?” asks Monmouth.
-
-The king turns away in silence, and the prisoner rises from his knees.
-The bitterness of death is past; his craven weakness has gone; he leaves
-the room with a firm step. In the Tower he takes farewell of his
-children and of the brave wife who has reclaimed him from a life of
-vice. Then he goes to the block, and his head is hacked off by an
-executioner whose nerve has failed him.
-
-Let the story of the ill-starred rising be told. Monmouth was the son of
-King Charles and Lucy Walters, the daughter of a Welsh Royalist. In his
-thirty-first year he was probably the most popular man in England,
-extremely handsome, and gifted with the most charming manners. His
-father had conferred all possible honours on him, and as there was a
-movement to exclude his Roman Catholic uncle James from the succession
-he had come to regard himself as heir to the throne. He had proved
-himself no mean soldier on battlefields in the Netherlands and in
-Scotland, where he had shown mercy to the vanquished. He neglected no
-opportunity of making himself popular with the people. “He stood
-godfather to the children of the peasantry, mingled in every rustic
-sport, wrestled, played at quarter-staff, and won foot races in his
-boots against fleet runners in shoes.”
-
-His great claim, however, to the sympathy of the people was his staunch
-Protestantism. As a matter of fact, he had no settled religious
-opinions. His private life was bad, and his Protestantism was but a
-means to an end. He had taken part in a reckless plot towards the close
-of his father’s reign, and had been obliged to take refuge in the
-Netherlands, with a sentence of death hanging over his head. On his
-deathbed, when Charles blessed his children, his eldest and best-loved
-son was an exile and a wanderer. The dying king never mentioned his
-name.
-
-James began his reign by promising to “preserve the government both in
-Church and State as by law established.” There was no opposition to him;
-men were ready to rely upon “the word of a king who was never worse than
-his word.” They remembered his good work at the Admiralty and praised
-his personal courage, while they hated and feared his religion. Really,
-James was a stronger and better man than Charles; but while the late
-king was witty, gracious, good-natured, and easy-going, James was dull,
-suspicious, sullen, and silent. A contemporary said, “Charles could have
-been a great king if he would, and James would have been a great king if
-he could.” While Charles cared nothing for religion, and would risk
-nothing for the Church which he favoured, James was a zealous Roman
-Catholic, and was prepared to risk his crown for the sake of his Church.
-
-The Protestantism of the nation was soon alarmed. The king openly heard
-mass, and a week or two later the rites of the Church of Rome, after an
-interval of a hundred and twenty-seven years, were once more performed
-at Westminster. Then came a proclamation suspending the penal laws
-against Nonconformists, and thousands of prisoners, including the author
-of “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” were released. Parliament showed no anger;
-it was packed with the king’s friends. They granted James a most liberal
-income, which almost made him independent of further Parliamentary
-grants.
-
-Meanwhile, Monmouth in Holland was busy hatching a plot to oust James
-and secure the throne for himself. His fellow-conspirator was Archibald
-Campbell, Earl of Argyll, the leader of the Covenanters who had suffered
-persecutions many and sore during the last reign. Two years after the
-Restoration Episcopacy had been re-established in Scotland, and more
-than three hundred ministers had given up their livings rather than
-conform. Severe fines were inflicted on all who dared to abstain from
-public worship in the parish churches, and troopers rode about the
-country cursing and swearing, harrying and plundering, wounding and
-killing to their hearts’ content. Many of the ejected ministers
-continued to preach in the open air, and their flocks, greatly daring,
-attended their secret ministrations. “Conventicles” increased daily in
-number. With a Bible in one hand and a sword in the other, the
-blue-bonneted Covenanters gathered on lonely hillsides for worship,
-while scouts kept watch for the coming of the dreaded troopers.
-Persecution at last drove them to arms. After a victory at Drumclog,
-they were utterly defeated at Bothwell Bridge, and a terribly cruel time
-of shooting and hanging, torture and transportation set in.
-
-Argyll’s father had been leader of the Covenanters in the days of
-Charles the First, and after the Restoration he lost his head. The son,
-Monmouth’s fellow-conspirator, refused to take the oath of the Scottish
-Test Act without adding a statement that thereby he was not precluded
-from trying to amend both Church and State. For this he was brought to
-trial, and on evidence that would not hang a dog condemned to death.
-Fortunately, however, he escaped in disguise, and found a refuge in
-Amsterdam, where the leading English and Scottish exiles were assembled.
-Though there was not much sympathy between Monmouth and Argyll, they
-joined hands, and arranged that the great MacCallum More should rouse
-his clansmen and head a rising in Scotland. This was to be promptly
-followed by Monmouth’s descent on England.
-
-The Scottish expedition was doomed to failure from the first, because it
-was commanded, not by a single general, but by a committee, which
-disputed and quarrelled on every possible occasion. The expedition
-reached Campbeltown, on the coast of Kintyre, and here Argyll issued a
-proclamation declaring that King James had murdered King Charles, and
-that Monmouth was the rightful king. His clansmen flocked to him; but
-the Lowland leaders despised them, and endeavoured to raise the
-Cameronians of Ayrshire, who showed not the slightest disposition to
-take up arms. Soon the committee was at loggerheads, and all was
-confusion and despondency. Food ran short, and the Highlanders deserted
-in hundreds. Argyll now yielded to the committeemen, who urged him to
-march into the Lowlands. Ere a battle could be fought his army had
-melted away, and his only safety lay in flight.
-
-Argyll disguised himself as a peasant, and pretended to be the guide of
-Major Fullarton. The friends journeyed through Renfrewshire until they
-reached the junction of the Black Cart and the White Cart. Here they
-found that the only practicable ford was held by a party of militia. The
-travellers were challenged, their answers were evasive, and an attempt
-was made to seize the supposed guide. He broke loose and sprang into the
-water, where for a short time he held his own against five assailants.
-His pistols, however, had been wetted and were useless. Struck down with
-a broadsword, he was easily overcome, and his captors learnt to their
-dismay that the champion of the Protestant religion, the heir of a great
-and honoured name in Scotland, was in their hands.
-
-On June 20, 1685, Argyll was dragged through the streets of Edinburgh
-bareheaded, his hands tied behind his back, guards surrounding him, and
-the hangman walking in front. Up the Canongate and the High Street he
-passed, and when the castle was reached he was put in irons and informed
-that he had but a few days to live. No new trial was necessary; he was
-to be executed on his old sentence. He heard his fate with majestic
-resignation, for he did not fear death. Torture was threatened, but the
-threat did not move him, and not a word would he say to betray a friend.
-He composed his own epitaph, and spent the short remaining hours in
-devotion.
-
-On the very day on which he was to die he dined well, and according to
-his wont, lay down for a short slumber after the meal. A Lord of the
-Council who came with a message insisted on seeing him. He was told that
-the earl was asleep, but could not believe that such was the case. The
-door of the cell was softly opened, “and there lay Argyll on his bed,
-sleeping in his irons the placid sleep of infancy.” In his last hour he
-wrote a most loving and cheering letter to his wife, and at the call of
-his jailers mounted the scaffold with undaunted courage. He made a short
-speech to the people, declaring that he died “not only a Protestant, but
-with a heart-hatred of Popery, of Prelacy, and of all superstition.” He
-then embraced his friends, gave them tokens of remembrance, prayed a few
-moments, and the axe fell.
-
-Now, having seen a noble man pay the price of failure, let us turn to
-the progress of Monmouth. On the morning of June 11, 1685, a week before
-the capture of Argyll, three ships appeared off the little port of Lyme
-Regis, in Dorsetshire. The inhabitants from the cliffs saw eighty
-well-armed men land on the shore, kneel down, and pray for a blessing on
-their venture. Then they saw a gallant figure draw his sword and lead
-his men over the cliffs into the little town. His name and the character
-of his mission were soon known, and there was great excitement in the
-place. The fishermen flocked to him shouting, “A Monmouth! a Monmouth!
-the Protestant religion!” Meanwhile a blue flag had been set up in the
-market-place, and now Monmouth’s Declaration was read. It was full of
-wild charges against James, and accused him of burning London and
-poisoning the late king, his brother. James was denounced as a tyrant,
-murderer, and usurper. Monmouth said that he had come as captain-general
-of the English Protestants in arms against tyranny and Popery.
-
-The news of his coming spread like wildfire through the West Country.
-Many of the people were Dissenters, who had suffered all kinds of petty
-persecution, and they hailed the advent of Monmouth with the utmost
-eagerness. They remembered how he had endeared himself to them when he
-made his progress through the country five years before, and they rushed
-to his banner with alacrity. By the time he reached Exeter nearly all
-Devonshire had flocked to him, and nine hundred young men in white
-uniform marched before him into the city. Recruits came in by hundreds
-daily; there were not enough clerks to take down their names. Arming and
-drilling went on all day, and everything promised well.
-
-On June 18, Monmouth reached the pleasant and prosperous town of
-Taunton, which gave him a right royal welcome. The children of the men
-who had helped Blake to hold out against the Cavaliers now welcomed
-Monmouth with unrestrained joy. Every door and window was adorned with
-wreaths of flowers, and no man appeared in the streets without the badge
-of the popular cause in his hat. Damsels of the best families in the
-town wove colours for the rebels. One flag in particular was embroidered
-with the royal arms, and was offered to Monmouth by a party of
-school-girls. Their school-mistress presented the duke with a small
-Bible of great price. He took it with a show of reverence. “I come,” he
-said, “to defend the truths contained in this book, and to seal them, if
-it must be so, with my blood.”
-
-Now let us hasten on to the final scene. It is Sunday morning, July 5,
-1685, and “King” Monmouth is standing on the lofty tower of Bridgwater
-parish church, looking out over an expanse of fertile and well-wooded
-country, with the Mendip Hills to the north-east and the Quantocks to
-the south-west. He turns his eyes anxiously towards the south-east,
-where there is a wide extent of dreary morass known as Sedgemoor. In the
-villages round the moor the royal troops are encamped, and are rapidly
-drinking themselves drunk with Somerset cider. Monmouth is in a
-despondent mood; his heart has failed him, and he has already meditated
-flight. The trainbands of the surrounding counties and the life-guards
-of the king are closing in upon him in overwhelming force, and if
-victory is to be secured a battle must be fought without delay. He
-forthwith determines to march that very night, under cover of the
-darkness, and fall on the surprised enemy before dawn.
-
-As the clock strikes eleven, Monmouth and his men march out of Taunton,
-the moon shining brightly and the northern streamers flashing in the
-sky. By one o’clock his half-armed rabble is on the moor, where the
-marsh-fog lies so thick that nothing can be seen fifty paces away.
-Between him and the enemy are three broad ditches or rhines full of mud
-and water. Monmouth knows of two of these ditches, and has planned the
-advance so as to cross them by the causeways. He is, however, ignorant
-of the third, and when his army reaches its brink it is powerless to
-cross and attack the king’s troops, only a few paces away. A random
-pistol-shot has already aroused the Royalists; their drums beat to arms,
-and the cavalry and foot, scrambling into order, advance towards the
-rhine which separates them from the enemy. “For whom are you?” shouts an
-officer of foot-guards. “For the king,” is the reply from the rebel
-ranks. “For which king?” is then demanded. The answer is a loud shout of
-“King Monmouth! God be with us!” The royal troops fire; the rebel
-horsemen flee, and the drivers of the ammunition wagons hasten after
-them with the powder and ball.
-
-Now the sun rises and the battle begins in earnest. It resolves itself
-into two rows of men firing at each other across a broad ditch of inky
-water. The Somersetshire rustics fight like veterans, but all in vain.
-The unequal contest is soon decided, and Monmouth, seeing that all hope
-has gone, turns and runs away. His deserted followers, however, make a
-gallant stand, but their scythes and pitchforks are useless against the
-swords of the king’s troopers. The arrival of the artillery brings the
-engagement to a speedy close. The rebel battalions waver, break, and
-flee, the Mendip miners alone remaining to stain the marshy ground with
-their blood. More than one thousand of the rebels lie dead on the field.
-The last battle has been fought on English ground.
-
-But what of Monmouth? He did not draw rein until he reached Chedzoy,
-where he stopped a moment to mount a fresh horse and hide his blue
-ribbon and his George. He rode on all day towards the south-east, hoping
-to gain the New Forest, where he might lurk in the cabins of
-deer-stealers until an opportunity arrived to escape to the Continent.
-The night was passed in the open air; in the morning he and his
-companions found themselves ringed in by their foes. Monmouth changed
-clothes with a peasant and betook himself into a field, partly of rye,
-pease, and oats, partly overgrown with furze and brambles.
-
-A woman reported that she had seen two strangers enter the field, and
-soldiers, stimulated by the offer of £5,000 for the capture of the duke,
-were told off to watch the fences while dogs were turned out among the
-bushes. At nightfall no capture had been made. The fugitives lay close
-behind a thick hedge; thirty times they ventured to look out, and thirty
-times they saw an armed sentinel watching for them. At sunrise the
-search began again, and not a yard of the field went unexamined. At
-length a gaunt figure in a shepherd’s dress was discovered in a dry
-ditch. In his pockets were some raw pease, a watch, a purse of gold, and
-the George which he had received from the hands of his father in the
-days when he was the spoiled darling of the court.
-
-The wretched man was conveyed to London in a state of abject terror. He
-begged for an interview with his uncle, and what happened at that
-interview you already know. The scene with which this chapter opened was
-the sequel to his capture, the painful episode which preceded his
-execution.
-
-“Woe to the vanquished!” James now wreaked such a vengeance on
-Monmouth’s poor, deluded followers that his name has become a byword of
-inhuman cruelty. A brutal soldier named Kirke was sent down to the west
-with his “lambs,” and the savage sport began. You may still see at
-Taunton the house in which he lodged. It was formerly an inn, and on its
-signpost he hanged scores of peasants, while his drums struck up and his
-trumpets sounded “so that they should have music to their dancing!” “My
-lord,” said the Bishop of Bath and Wells to Lord Feversham, who was
-equally ferocious, “this is murder, not law; the battle being over,
-these poor wretches should be tried.”
-
-Then came Judge Jeffreys, a drunken, foul-mouthed, degraded wretch, with
-a forehead of brass and lungs of leather. Nothing more revolting than
-his so-called trials have ever disgraced our annals. He roared, he
-bullied, he blasphemed, he laughed, joked, and swore until men believed
-him to be drunk from morning till night. So he was—drunk with blood.
-When the “Bloody Assize” was concluded, Jeffreys openly boasted that he
-had hanged more traitors than all the Chief-justices since the Conquest.
-“At every spot where two roads met, and every market-place, on the green
-of every large village which had furnished Monmouth with soldiers,
-ironed corpses clattering in the wind, or heads and quarters stuck on
-poles, poisoned the air and made the traveller sick with horror. In many
-parishes the peasantry could not assemble in the house of God without
-seeing the ghastly face of a neighbour grinning at them over the porch.”
-
-Perhaps the most infamous sentence of this ermined fiend was that on
-Alice Lisle, the widow of a man who had been one of the regicides, and
-had filled high posts under the Commonwealth. Her crime was that she had
-sheltered two fugitives from Sedgemoor. She was old and deaf; she had no
-counsel to defend her; and she pleaded that what she had done was simply
-an act of common charity. So innocent and devoid of offence did she seem
-that the jury were inclined to acquit her. Jeffreys turned on them with
-the utmost fury, and at length they brought in a craven verdict of
-“guilty.” “Gentlemen,” said he, “in your place I would find her guilty
-were she my own mother.” It was the only word of truth which fell from
-his lips during the trial. Then he condemned her to be burnt alive that
-very afternoon.
-
-Appeals for mercy came to him on all hands and from all classes. He
-consented to postpone the execution for five days, during which ladies
-of high rank interceded with James for the poor old lady, but all in
-vain. The only mercy wrung from the pitiless king was to forgo the
-burning in favour of hanging. She went to her death with serene courage,
-and good men and women held up their hands in horror throughout the
-length and breadth of the land. Elizabeth Gaunt, a pious and charitable
-Baptist, was actually burnt alive at Tyburn on a like charge.
-
-The judicial murders reached in all three hundred and twenty; the number
-of persons transported as slaves to the West Indies was eight hundred
-and forty-one. The poor wretches destined to the plantations were
-distributed into gangs and bestowed on courtiers, who made huge sums by
-this traffic in the flesh and blood of their fellow subjects. The
-Chief-justice traded largely in pardons, and managed to accumulate a
-fortune in this way. No wonder the popular name for the estate which he
-bought with the money was _Aceldama_, “the field of blood.” The ladies
-of the queen’s household were specially prominent in this odious work of
-selling pardons. The little girls who had presented the banner to
-Monmouth became the portion of the queen’s maids of honour. Two of them
-died in prison, and the rest were only released upon payment of a heavy
-ransom.
-
-And now James stands triumphant; his throne seems unassailable. He is at
-the height of his power and prosperity, and Jeffreys is his Lord
-Chancellor; yet already the writing appears on the wall, and the day of
-his doom is fast approaching. His terrible vengeance in the west has
-sent a thrill of horror through the whole country, and has made men
-loathe his very name.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Last Sleep of Argyll.=
- (_From the fresco by E. M. Ward., in Westminster Palace._)]
-
-[Illustration: =The Arrest of Alice Lisle.=
- (_From the picture by E. M. Ward, R.A._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XV.
- AFTER THE REVOLUTION.
-
-
- WILLIAM THE THIRD.
-
- “_I am constant as the northern star,_
- _Of whose true-fixed and resting quality_
- _There is no fellow in the firmament._”
-
-A PRINCE now passes by on horseback. He is small, almost diminutive, but
-by no means insignificant. His figure is slender and apparently feeble,
-but few men have borne such hardships and sustained such reverses of
-fortune as he. His forehead is ample, his nose aquiline, his eye bright
-and keen, his lips thin and compressed, his cheek pale and deeply
-furrowed by the marks of sickness and care. His whole aspect is pensive,
-severe, almost morose. At a glance you judge him to be neither a happy
-nor a good-humoured man. His bearing is simple; he cares nothing for
-pomp and parade, and he has no particular desire for popularity; yet
-there is an unmistakable dignity in his presence, and you feel as you
-gaze upon him that here is a man of high spirit and of great
-intellectual power, of constant and lofty soul, of unshaken courage and
-calm fortitude.
-
-This is William of Orange, the man whom the exasperated English people
-called upon to invade their country in order to preserve their liberties
-and the Protestant faith. He accepted the invitation, and without
-striking a blow marched from Torbay to London, where he and his wife
-became King and Queen of Great Britain and Ireland.
-
-You are once more standing outside Whitehall. It is the thirteenth day
-of February, in the year of grace 1689. All London is agog with
-excitement. Trumpets sound and kettledrums roll as the Garter King of
-Arms in tabard and plumed hat rides up to the gates, followed by
-officials carrying the maces of the two Houses of Parliament, the Lord
-Chancellor and the Speaker, the chief officers of state, and a long
-train of coaches filled with noblemen and gentlemen. Then in loud, clear
-tones he proclaims the Prince and Princess of Orange King and Queen of
-England, and charges all Englishmen to bear, from that moment, true
-allegiance to the new sovereigns. He concludes by praying that God, who
-has already wrought a signal deliverance for Church and nation, will
-bless William and Mary with a long and happy reign.
-
-Loud cheers break forth, and the procession re-forms and winds its way
-along the Strand to Temple Bar. The streets, the balconies, the very
-housetops are crowded with gazers, and all the steeples from the Abbey
-to the Tower ring out a joyous peal. The proclamation is repeated at
-Temple Bar and in front of the Royal Exchange, amidst the shouts of
-citizens and the din of trumpets.
-
-In the evening every window from Whitechapel to Piccadilly is
-illuminated. The state rooms of the palace are thrown open, and are
-filled with a brilliant company of courtiers eager to see and to do
-homage to their new sovereigns. The features of the Prince of Orange are
-familiar to them from his portraits, but now for the first time most of
-them see him in the flesh. They cannot fail to note, even in this scene
-of gaiety, his cold, reserved manner and his lack of kingly grace. The
-new queen, however, charms all beholders. She is beautiful, winning, and
-gracious, with a good heart, an excellent disposition, and an affection
-for her sullen husband which nothing can daunt. It is clear from the
-first that Mary’s popularity will be great, and that William, though he
-may be respected, will never be loved by his new subjects.
-
-Look at yonder graybeard gazing up at the gay lights glittering in the
-windows. He has seen many changes in his sixty-five years of life, and
-he cannot but reflect on the strange vicissitudes through which the
-Stuart kings, now barred for ever from the British throne, have passed.
-Listen to him as he talks to the youth at his side. “My lad,” he says,
-“I remember well the Scotchman James the First feasting in this very
-hall, and expounding to his son Charles and the courtiers in right
-learned language the pestilent principles of what he called ‘statecraft’
-and the divine right of kings to rule and to suspend the laws of the
-land at their will and pleasure. Right well did young Charles learn the
-lesson, and perchance we should blame his father and not him for all
-that happened. He held by the hateful doctrines which he had sucked in
-as a youth, like the obstinate man that he was, and ruthlessly destroyed
-our liberties till we were forced to take up arms and fight him for
-seven long, miserable years. I got this wound, that makes me go lame, at
-Naseby, the last great battle of the war. That was forty-three years ago
-save three months. I mind well seeing King Charles step through a hole
-in yonder wall on to the black-draped scaffold and lay his head on the
-block. It was a pitiful sight. I did not hold with killing him, mark
-you, but perchance it was better so.
-
-“Then came the Commonwealth and the days of ‘Old Noll.’ It was not a
-‘Merrie England’ in his time, I warrant you. There were no Maypoles and
-no Bartholomew fairs in his day; it was almost a sin to eat a mince pie.
-You young fellows would think yourselves hardly done by if those times
-were to return. But we were a strong nation then, my lad. Foreigners
-feared us, the Dutchmen had to eat humble pie, and money flowed right
-merrily into our coffers. It was a harsh and cheerless time, no doubt,
-and there was no liberty to speak of, but trade was brisk, and this land
-has never seen such good prosperous days since.
-
-“When Cromwell died—the night after the great storm—and his son Dick
-couldn’t be bothered with business of state, we sent across the sea for
-Charles’s son, and I remember well the joy with which these fickle folk
-greeted him as he rode into London on Oak-apple Day. But, my lad, I
-blush with shame to think of the foreign wickedness he brought with him,
-of the way he squandered the public money and ‘made Israel to sin.’ Not
-to my dying day shall I forget standing in the Strand—the very year in
-which you were born—and hearing the Dutch guns roaring in the Thames.
-It was a bitter disgrace; we all felt it, and we all longed for Blake
-and Old Noll again to send the Dutchman to the right about in
-double-quick time. Aye, and the second Charles did worse than that; he
-sold himself and us to the French king for a dirty pension, and plotted
-to overturn the Church and rob us of our liberties. But, thank God! he
-went to his own place before he had time to do his worst. And then came
-his brother, James the Second. Well, you know all about him. Two short
-months ago he lay within these very walls. Now they say he’s with the
-French king, and here’s his son-in-law standing in his shoes. The
-Dutchman is welcome, lad; he is the saviour of the country, and he has
-secured our liberties. Please God, under him the old days of good
-government and prosperity shall come back again.”
-
-The liberties of the land were indeed secured, for no future British
-king would dare to tread the path which the Stuarts had trod to their
-destruction. William and Mary now ruled in England by virtue of a solemn
-contract made between themselves and their subjects. Before the crown
-was offered to them they were required to assent to the Declaration of
-Rights, which branded as illegal all the arrogant pretensions of the
-Stuarts. This Declaration asserted anew the national liberties, and is
-the third great charter of British liberty.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Prince of Orange landing at Torbay.=
- (_From the picture by J. M. W. Turner, R.A. in the National Gallery._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- THE GREAT DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.
-
- “_If I lose mine honour,_
- _I lose myself._”
-
-Who comes hither? A soldier of commanding stature and strikingly
-handsome face; dignified, yet winning in manner; blessed, it would seem,
-with all possible gifts and graces. He is John Churchill, Duke of
-Marlborough, Prince of the Holy Roman Empire—one of the greatest
-military geniuses who ever lived, the victor of one of the decisive
-battles of the world, the man who overthrew the vast fabric of power
-which Lewis the Fourteenth had erected, the general who never fought a
-battle that he did not win and never besieged a place that he did not
-take! But do not be dazzled by his noble appearance and his military
-glory. His genius is transcendent, his courage is of the highest order,
-his personal graces are remarkable, yet he goes down to posterity as one
-of the greatest and meanest of mankind. Treacherous, ungrateful, sordid,
-and miserly, he is despicable as a man though unrivalled as a
-diplomatist and glorious as a soldier.
-
-William the Third died before his work was done. The long duel between
-him and Lewis was only at its opening stages when he passed away, after
-a life of stubborn resistance to his invincible foe. His mantle fell on
-the shoulders of John Churchill, and he it was who finished the task
-which William did not live long enough to accomplish. Churchill was the
-son of a Devonshire cavalier, and early became a man of fashion and
-pleasure at the court of Charles the Second. At seventeen years of age
-he was an ensign in the army, and at twenty-two the colonel of an
-English regiment in the service of France. By this time the “handsome
-Englishman,” as Marshal Turenne dubbed him, had already shown the
-qualities of a great soldier. When an advance post was given up to the
-enemy, Turenne actually wagered a supper that Marlborough would recover
-it with half the number of men who had abandoned it, and the wager was
-won. He was absolutely fearless, bold and adventurous, cool and
-unruffled in temper, calm and far-seeing in judgment, and capable of
-enduring all sorts of fatigue.
-
-Thanks to the friendship of the Duke of York, afterwards James the
-Second, to whose fortunes he attached himself, he was raised to the
-peerage. At the time of Monmouth’s rising he was major-general of the
-forces, and the victory at Sedgemoor was largely due to his coolness and
-resource in rallying the royal troops when thrown into confusion by the
-night attack of the rebels.
-
-Marlborough owed much of his rapid promotion to his wife. In 1678 he
-married a penniless beauty of the court named Sarah Jennings. She was a
-lady of violent temper and a most domineering disposition, but she also
-possessed a strange power of winning and retaining affection.
-Marlborough’s love for his wife “ran like a thread of gold through the
-dark web of his career.” He hated letter-writing, chiefly because his
-spelling was so bad, yet in the midst of his marches and sieges, and
-even from the battlefield itself, he constantly wrote his wife letters
-breathing the most passionate devotion.
-
-When Marlborough wooed and won Sarah Jennings, she was the bosom friend
-and constant companion of the Princess Anne, whom she had known from
-girlhood. Soon she obtained complete mastery over the weak and feeble
-nature of the princess, who became a mere puppet in her hands. The
-friends laid aside all the formalities of rank in their intercourse;
-Anne was Mrs. Morley, and the duchess Mrs. Freeman. Anne saw with her
-favourite’s eyes, heard with her ears, and spoke with her tongue. If she
-attempted to show one spark of independence, she was immediately crushed
-and deafened by the violent reproaches of the woman who was nominally
-her servant but really her tyrant. Anne’s husband, Prince George of
-Denmark, did not count. He was considered the most harmless and stupid
-man in the three kingdoms. “I have tried him drunk,” said Charles the
-Second, “and I have tried him sober, and there is nothing in him.”
-
-Counting upon his wife’s complete control of the princess, Marlborough
-soon began to plot against William. His plan was to take advantage of
-the king’s unpopularity and drive him from the throne in favour of Anne.
-The plot was discovered, and William, usually calm and cool, was roused
-to the utmost indignation. “Were I and my Lord Marlborough private
-persons,” he cried, “the sword would have to settle between us.” At once
-the earl was stripped of his offices, and his wife was driven from St.
-James’s. Anne, however, refused to be parted from her friend, and left
-the court with her. Then Marlborough opened a treacherous correspondence
-with the deposed king at St. Germains. He basely revealed the plan of
-William’s intended expedition to Brest, expressed his deep sorrow at
-having deserted his rightful sovereign, and obtained a written promise
-of pardon. The attack on Brest was a complete failure; the enemy, thanks
-to Marlborough, was forewarned and forearmed, and more than a thousand
-Englishmen were slain. This piece of foul treachery is the blackest
-stain on Marlborough’s character.
-
-Queen Mary died childless in 1694, and Anne became the acknowledged
-heiress to the throne. William was obliged to recall her to court, and
-with her returned the Marlboroughs, who were reluctantly received into
-favour once more. William hated the earl’s baseness and treachery, but
-he was obliged to recognize his splendid gifts, and to declare that he,
-of all men, was the fittest to carry on the great work of checking the
-ambition of Lewis. Marlborough was therefore sent to Flanders at the
-head of the army, and had only just taken command when William met with
-the accident which was the immediate cause of his death.
-
-The succession of Anne practically made the Marlboroughs King and Queen
-of England. Three days later Marlborough was appointed captain-general
-of the British forces at home and abroad, and was entrusted with the
-entire direction of the war. Offices and gifts were showered upon his
-wife, and the ministers were chosen from his friends and adherents. Most
-of these men had been in treasonable correspondence with James; but now,
-in accordance with the loose notions of honour prevalent at the time,
-they abandoned him, and for their own selfish ends determined to keep
-Anne on the throne, secure the Protestant succession, and proceed with
-the war.
-
-Great Britain, Holland, Austria, and most of the smaller states of
-Germany were soon leagued in arms against France, and in 1703 Lewis
-found armies arrayed against him in the Spanish Netherlands, in South
-Germany, in North Italy, and Spain. Marlborough was in command of the
-allied British, Dutch, and Germans in the Netherlands. Though he had not
-yet displayed his superb military genius, he had already exhibited his
-unrivalled powers of conciliating the jarring elements which formed his
-army. In North Italy the Austrian forces were under Prince Eugene of
-Savoy, a man of extraordinary courage and talent, who was worshipped by
-his soldiers, and still lives as a hero in song. No two such generals
-had ever commanded armies against Lewis before.
-
-The beginning of the war was uneventful. Marlborough, however, managed
-to capture a number of fortresses along the line of the Meuse, and by
-doing so cut off the French from the Lower Rhine and made the invasion
-of Holland impossible. For the rest, the campaign was indecisive. On his
-return to England he was created Duke of Marlborough, the title by which
-he is best known.
-
-Marlborough was now on the threshold of his great career. He was
-fifty-four years old, and was about to win victories at an age when the
-work of most men is done. Like his predecessor William, he owed little
-to early training and much to his natural abilities. The keynote of his
-greatness as a general was the vigour and audacity of his plans. His
-greatest obstacle was the slowness and timidity of the Dutch, who
-refused again and again to co-operate in the brilliant movements which
-he suggested. Calm and unruffled, patient and tactful, he composed all
-the differences of his allies, and proved himself even greater in the
-council chamber than on the battlefield.
-
-Lewis now began a campaign on a scale of grandeur which was only
-equalled by Napoleon himself. He sent the flower of his army into
-Bavaria, where the local troops joined them. Then the army of the
-Danube, in massed and irresistible might, began its march on Vienna.
-Marlborough saw that Austria was bound to be conquered unless prompt
-action was taken, so, early in 1704, he made a dash for the Danube. To
-do this he had to march right across Germany from the Lower Rhine, while
-Prince Eugene had to cross the Alps from Italy. Both undertakings were
-full of difficulty, but the difficulties were overcome. By his boldness
-and secrecy he completely deceived his enemy, and not until he had
-crossed the Neckar and united his forces with those of Eugene was his
-real object revealed.
-
-Marlborough was bound to fight a battle speedily, though his chances of
-success were doubtful, and the consequences of defeat fatal. If Lewis
-won, beyond all doubt “a universal despotic dominion would be
-established over the bodies, a cruel spiritual thraldom over the minds
-of men.” France and Spain, united in a close family alliance, would
-prove irresistible. Protestantism would be destroyed, a despotism worse
-than that of the Roman Empire would be set up, and the British race
-would be arrested in its mission to overspread the earth. Marlborough
-was not unaware of the consequences of defeat. “I know the danger,” he
-said, “yet a battle is absolutely necessary; and I rely on the bravery
-and discipline of the troops, which will make amends for our
-disadvantages.”
-
-On August 13, 1704, the armies faced each other. The enemy, numbering
-fifty-six thousand men, was posted in a strong position, with the Nebel,
-a marshy stream, in front, hill country on the left, and the Danube on
-the right. A short distance from the great river stood the village of
-Blenheim, which had been strongly defended by a palisade and trench, and
-was occupied by Marshal Tallard’s infantry. At sunrise the allies were
-in motion, but their movements were covered by a thick haze, and not
-until the allied right and centre were nearly within cannon-shot of the
-enemy was Tallard aware of their approach. Eugene, with twenty thousand
-men, marched through broken and wooded country towards the Nebel, which
-had to be crossed before he could attack the Bavarians opposed to him.
-Not until midday did his troops cross the stream, and when they faced
-the enemy they were so weary that they could do little more than hold
-their own.
-
-While Eugene was struggling on the right, the remainder of the allies
-were inactive. During this interval, Marlborough ordered divine service
-to be performed by the chaplains at the head of each regiment, for with
-all his faults he was sincerely religious. Then he rode along the lines
-and found officers and men in the highest spirits, waiting impatiently
-for the signal to attack. At length an aide-de-camp galloped up from the
-right with the welcome news that Eugene was across the stream. At once a
-strong brigade of infantry under Lord Cutts was sent to assault the
-village of Blenheim, and Marlborough himself led the main body down the
-eastward slope of the valley of the Nebel, and crossed the stream.
-
-Brigadier Rose led the British infantry to the assault of Blenheim under
-a shower of grape and musketry. He ordered his men to reserve their fire
-until he struck his sword against the palisades. The troops advanced
-with great steadiness, but they were repulsed with severe loss; and
-Marlborough, finding how strongly Blenheim was held, gave up the attempt
-to capture it, and bent all his energies to breaking through the centre.
-The ground which he had to traverse was very swampy; but he constructed
-something like an artificial roadway, and late in the afternoon, despite
-artillery fire and cavalry charges, he crossed the blood-stained stream
-with eight thousand horsemen. The infantry were then brought across to
-“hold up” the French troops in Blenheim.
-
-Marlborough chiefly relied on his cavalry, and by means of this arm
-Blenheim was won. Leading two furious charges in person, he completely
-broke the squadrons of the enemy. They discharged their carbines,
-wheeled round, and spurred from the field, leaving the infantry to be
-ridden down by the victorious allies. Marlborough then drove the French
-southward to the Danube, where they were obliged to drown or yield. The
-troops in Blenheim, after several gallant but unsuccessful attempts to
-cut their way out, laid down their arms. The French army was almost
-entirely destroyed. About twelve thousand men were killed and fourteen
-thousand taken prisoners; all the cannon, a vast number of colours and
-standards, tents and equipages, were captured; and the French general
-and twelve hundred officers of rank were in the hands of the conqueror.
-
-“It was a famous victory.” Austria was saved, the French were driven out
-of Germany, and the Elector of Bavaria was forced to make peace. The
-moral effect of the battle, however, was still greater. For half a
-century the French had been considered invincible; now the spell was
-broken, and the prestige of France had vanished. For the rest of the war
-Lewis had to act on the defensive, and “Malbrook” became a name of fear
-to every child in France. The British nation in gratitude presented
-Marlborough with £500,000, with which to purchase the manor of
-Woodstock, and erect a house which should be named after the battle.
-Blenheim Palace still remains one of the most magnificent of England’s
-“stately homes,” and a not unworthy monument to Marlborough’s great
-military genius.
-
-Next year Marlborough began to attack the great line of fortifications
-which then extended almost from Antwerp to Namur. He proposed to fight a
-decisive action near to the field of Waterloo, but was prevented from
-doing so by the persistent opposition of the Dutch. At the end of 1705
-the position of affairs was “as you were.” Next year, however,
-Marlborough again covered himself with glory by destroying a French army
-at Ramillies. The effect of the victory was enormous. The French
-garrisons were panic-stricken, and place after place fell. “It really
-looks more like a dream than the truth,” wrote Marlborough. Before long
-he was master of the whole of Belgium. Prince Eugene also fared well in
-Italy, where lie drove the French troops across the Alps. Austrian and
-British troops also entered Spain, where they met with a stubborn
-resistance and made but little progress.
-
-In 1708 Marlborough and Eugene won another great victory at Oudenarde.
-The French generals would not act together, and consequently their
-troops were thrown into disorder. A long, running fight on the heights
-of Oudenarde followed, and the French right wing was cut to pieces. The
-remainder of the army, flying back to France, was pursued, and the
-fortress of Lille was captured. Lewis begged for peace; but the allies
-offered him terms which he could not accept, and so, much against his
-will, the war went on.
-
-Next year (1709) Marlborough fought his last battle, and again defeated
-the French at Malplaquet, in what he called a “very murdering battle.”
-The French position was very strong, with a narrow front protected on
-both sides by thick woods and heavy batteries. Nevertheless, after a
-series of desperate assaults, he met with his usual success, though his
-victory was dearly bought with a great sacrifice of life. Marlborough
-was deeply affected by the horrors of the scene, and spoke with real
-feeling of his misery at seeing so many of his old comrades killed. The
-British nation was now weary of the war, and ready to bring it to a
-close. Peace was signed at Utrecht in 1713.
-
-Long before the treaty was signed, Marlborough, once the darling of the
-nation, was in dire disgrace. He had gone into the war as a Tory, but
-during its continuance had allied himself with the Whigs, and by 1708
-the ministry almost entirely consisted of men of his new party. Anne was
-at heart a Tory, and she greatly disliked the change. Indeed, she only
-agreed to the appointment of the Whig leader, Lord Sunderland, because
-Marlborough threatened to resign and the duchess fiercely upbraided her
-for daring to have inclinations of her own. Anne was now tired of the
-Marlboroughs, and was only waiting for an opportunity to throw off their
-yoke. A Mrs. Masham, cousin of the duchess, had contrived to usurp the
-position of “Mrs. Freeman,” and she now encouraged the queen to rebel. A
-bitter quarrel broke out between the queen and the duchess on the
-occasion of the “Te Deum” for the victory of Oudenarde. The duchess had
-selected certain jewels for the queen to wear, but Anne rejected them,
-whereupon there was a furious scene. Violent quarrels and angry letters
-followed, but peace was patched up for a time, though the end was fast
-drawing near.
-
-In 1710 a clergyman, named Dr. Sacheverell, in the course of a dull,
-foolish sermon at St. Paul’s, preached the old Tory doctrine of the
-divine right of kings. Very injudiciously, and against Marlborough’s
-advice, the Whig ministers determined to prosecute him for the sermon.
-The trial resolved itself into a great struggle between the two parties,
-and Sacheverell became a martyr. The nation generally supported him, and
-a storm of hatred arose against the Whigs. Thereupon the queen dismissed
-them from office, restored the Tories, sent “Mrs. Freeman” about her
-business, and removed Marlborough from his command. It is said that he
-actually went on his knees to the queen and begged her to let him retain
-the gold key which was the symbol of his office. There was a final
-interview between the queen and the duchess, at which the latter shed
-floods of tears, but could not shake Anne’s new-found determination. All
-was over, and “Mrs. Freeman” set about removing the brass locks from her
-apartments in the palace, and giving orders for the removal of the
-marble mantel-pieces and other fixtures.
-
-The Tories, headed by Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, a subtle
-traitor in secret correspondence with the “old Pretender,” now wreaked
-their vengeance on Marlborough. He was charged with embezzling public
-money, and the charge was only too true, though it is but fair to say
-that sums of money thus obtained were generally regarded as the
-customary perquisites of his office. With all his greatness, Marlborough
-had a mean and miserable soul. It has been said that he was perhaps the
-only really great man who ever loved money for its own sake. He was
-actually accused of sending officers unnecessarily into the thick of the
-fight, so that he might fill his pocket by selling the commissions of
-those who fell.
-
-Instead of answering his accusers he fled to the Continent, where he
-remained in voluntary exile until news reached him of Anne’s last
-illness. He landed at Dover on the day of her death. The new king,
-George the First, restored him to his command and his honours; but two
-years later he had a paralytic stroke, followed by another. His great
-physical strength, hardly tried by the fatigues of his many campaigns,
-and his brilliant intellect, broken down by the stress and anxieties of
-his labours and responsibilities, began to give way. He spent his
-declining days in riding, playing with his grandchildren, and keeping
-minute accounts of his most trifling expenditure. Even when old and
-infirm, it was said that he walked in order to save sixpence for a
-chair. He died on June 16, 1722, and was buried with great splendour in
-Westminster Abbey. So passes Marlborough. He leaves a stained memory, it
-is true, but let us not dwell upon his vices and failings. Let us rather
-remember how—
-
- “Calm and serene, he drives the furious blast;
- And pleased th’ Almighty’s orders to perform,
- Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The British Assault on the Village of Blenheim.=
- (_From the picture by Allan Stewart, specially painted for this book._)]
-
-Brigadier Rose led the British infantry to the assault under a shower of
-grape and musketry, and ordered them not to fire a shot until he struck
-his sword against the palisades. While the flower of the French troops
-were thus “held up” in the village, Marlborough broke the center with
-the allied cavalry.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVI.
- BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE.
-
-
- “_Come weal, come woe, we’ll gather and go,_
- _And live and die for Charlie._”
-
-THE scene shifts to the shores of a remote loch in the Western Highlands
-of Scotland. Great, gloomy hills rise from the water’s edge; the whole
-aspect of the place is wild and solitary. At the head of the loch is a
-little plain, from which a narrow, rocky glen runs far inland. Not a
-soul is in sight; not a sound breaks the stillness. Now you see a small
-company of men appear on the plain. In the centre of them is a gallant
-young soldier, tall and slim, with a high, broad forehead, a shapely
-nose, rich, dark-brown eyes, and chestnut hair. He carries himself right
-nobly, and you feel as you gaze upon him that here at last is a real
-hero of romance. Full of hope and eager anticipation he comes upon the
-scene; but as he waits, and the minutes lengthen into hours, his
-light-hearted gaiety gives place to dejection. The glen remains silent
-and deserted. Those who have sworn to meet here have not kept tryst. The
-young prince—for such he is—retires with a sinking heart to the
-shelter of a barn. Suddenly he hears the faint sound of distant
-bagpipes. His eyes light up, he springs to his feet, and hastily quits
-his shelter. His heart beats fast as he listens. Louder and louder grows
-the sound of the pibroch, and now on the skyline of yonder hill you see
-Lochiel with seven or eight hundred Camerons. As soon as they sight the
-prince they raise loud huzzas, which echo and re-echo from the hills.
-
-The clansmen form up, and the feeble old Marquis of Tullibardine,
-supported by a man on each side, proudly unfurls a royal standard. As
-its white, blue, and red folds lift upon the wind, cheer after cheer is
-raised, and the greatest enthusiasm prevails. A commission of regency is
-read, and the prince, baring his head, makes a brief but gallant speech.
-“I knew,” he says, “that I should find in Scotland brave gentlemen,
-fired with the noble example of their predecessors, and jealous of their
-own and their country’s honour, to join me in so glorious an enterprise.
-For my own part I do not doubt of bringing the affair to a happy issue.”
-The cheers which greet the prince’s speech have scarcely died away
-before the Macdonalds, to the number of three hundred, arrive. Others
-follow, and before the camp fires are lighted fifteen hundred men have
-sworn to follow the prince to the death.
-
-Who is this prince, and why has he invaded this remote and desolate part
-of Scotland? He is Prince Charles Edward Stuart, the grandson of James
-the Second, the son of the “old Pretender,” a gay, light-hearted,
-active, robust, adventurous young man of twenty-five, who since boyhood
-has cherished the hope of winning back the throne of his fathers. There
-has already been one attempt, but it was a dismal failure. Fifty-seven
-years ago his grandfather fled from the kingdom, and William and Mary
-began to reign in his stead. Then followed his aunt, Queen Anne; and at
-her death the Tories very nearly made his father king. The activity of
-the Whigs foiled them just in the nick of time, and the King of Hanover,
-“a wee German lairdie,” who claimed descent through his mother from
-James the First, was brought over and crowned. Now his son, the second
-George, was King of Great Britain and Ireland.
-
-A fierce continental war was now raging, and Britain was foolish enough
-to take a hand in it. To the exiled court, then established in Rome,
-England’s embarrassment was the Jacobites’ opportunity, and our young
-hero, “bonnie Prince Charlie,” saw that he must shoot his bolt now or
-never. To his father he said, “I go in search of three crowns, which I
-doubt not but to have the honour and happiness of laying at your
-Majesty’s feet. If I fail in the attempt, your next sight of me shall be
-in my coffin.” “Heaven forbid,” replied James, “that all the crowns in
-the world should rob me of my son.”
-
-Some months of delay elapsed, and then an expedition was fitted out; but
-the winds and waves, never kindly disposed to the Stuarts, drove it
-back. Weary of waiting for further French assistance, Prince Charlie
-determined to stake all on a desperate venture. “I will go to Scotland,”
-he said to Lord George Murray, one of the wisest and most trusted of his
-advisers, “if I take with me only a single footman.” His equipment makes
-us smile. He was about to challenge the might of Britain with a few
-hundred muskets, some broadswords, twenty small field-guns, a war-chest
-of £4,000, and a barrel or two of brandy. The whole story would be a
-farce had not the splendid spirit of young Charles lifted it into a
-romance. Sailing from Nantes with a little privateer and a fast brig
-called the _Doutelle_, he soon lost the privateer, which was driven back
-to harbour by a British ship. The _Doutelle_, however, skirted the
-eastern shores of Scotland, rounded the tempestuous north, sailed amidst
-the islands of the west, and landed him with seven followers at Eriskay,
-a little island of the Hebrides, on July 25, 1745.
-
-Let us picture the scene. The French frigate lies off the little rocky
-isle, and the prince is eager to go ashore. During the brief voyage he
-has exercised that extraordinary personal magnetism with which he is
-endowed, and every man on board is his willing slave. No one, not even
-Napoleon, ever possessed so much of that strange attraction which can
-capture the imagination of men and women, and make them leave home,
-kindred, and friends in order to throw themselves into a perilous and
-ruinous cause. As the needle points to the pole, so do all men’s hearts
-turn to him, whether in sunshine or in storm, in defeat or in victory.
-As the French frigate comes to her anchorage an eagle hovers over the
-ship. “Sire,” says old Tullibardine, “the king of birds has come to
-welcome your royal highness.”
-
-A few hours later Charles trod the soil of Scotland for the first time.
-The day was wet and stormy, and the opening of the campaign was most
-inauspicious. Next day a neighbouring chief, Macdonald of Boisdale, was
-sent for. He came “over the water to Charlie,” but bluntly advised the
-prince to return home. With that readiness of speech which marked him,
-the prince replied, “I am come home, sir, and I will entertain no notion
-of returning to that place from whence I came. I am persuaded that my
-faithful Highlanders will stand by me.” He refused to be rebuffed, and
-forthwith crossed in the French ship to the coast of Inverness, where he
-summoned the gallant Lochiel and other leading chiefs to meet him. And
-now his fate seemed to rest on the goodwill of a single man. Lochiel had
-already denounced Charles’s invasion as a rash and desperate
-undertaking, and he was in no mood to join the prince. Other leading men
-shook their heads, though Charles pleaded his cause with all the
-earnestness of despair, pacing up and down the deck, and pouring forth a
-torrent of eloquent words.
-
-As he did so he espied a young Highlander listening attentively with
-flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes. Here was a kindred spirit. The prince
-suddenly turned to him and said, “You, at least, will not forsake me.”
-“I will follow you to the death,” said the lad. “I would follow you to
-the death, even were there no other to draw a sword in your cause.” The
-lad’s speech had an excellent effect on his hearers. Their Highland
-pride was touched, their Highland chivalry was aroused. Most of them
-flung their caution to the winds and eagerly embraced his cause.
-Lochiel, however, had yet to be persuaded, and Charles, tired of
-pleading, tried reproach. “In a few days,” he said, “with the few
-friends that I have, I will erect the royal standard and proclaim to the
-people of Britain that Charles Stuart is come to claim the crown of his
-ancestors, and to win it or perish in the attempt. Lochiel can stay at
-home and learn from the newspapers the fate of his prince.” This was
-more than Lochiel could bear. “No,” he cried; “I’ll share the fate of my
-prince, come what may.” Forthwith arrangements were made for the meeting
-at Glenfinnan. You have already witnessed the gathering of the clansmen
-and the unfurling of the royal standard.
-
-On the very day that the prince’s banner first waved in the northern
-breeze, Sir John Cope, the commander of the royal forces in Scotland,
-moved towards the Highlands with three thousand men, mainly raw
-recruits, for well-nigh the whole British army was overseas in Flanders.
-Cope was a dull man of the stock-and-pipeclay school, and a thoroughly
-incompetent general. His object was to relieve the small garrisons of
-royal troops stationed at Fort William and Fort Augustus. When, however,
-he reached the rocky steeps of Corry Arrack he found the clansmen in
-possession of the pass. Rumours were rife that every zigzag path was
-commanded by big guns, and that every rock concealed an armed
-Highlander. Turning aside, he marched towards Inverness, and thus left
-the southern road open.
-
-With banners flying, bagpipes skirling, and drums beating, the Highland
-host, shaggy and unkempt as their own cattle, with a meagre equipment
-and a strange assortment of weapons, pushed on towards Perth. The prince
-rode at their head, and every day he grew in favour with his followers.
-His frank, manly air and his gallant bearing knit him to them with
-“hooks of steel,” and their spirits rose with every mile they marched.
-Opposition melted away before him. Leaving Perth, he marched on
-Stirling. The castle sent a few ineffective shots towards him as he
-crossed the Forth and proceeded towards Edinburgh. On the 17th September
-he was in possession of the Scottish capital without striking a blow.
-
-Forthwith “King James the Eighth” was proclaimed at the Mercat Cross by
-the heralds in all their finery, and the prince took up his abode in
-Holyrood Palace, where balls and banquets and other brilliant
-festivities were held. The time, however, was not suitable for such
-scenes of gaiety. Cope had embarked his troops at Inverness, and had
-sailed south for Dunbar, where he had landed his forces. He was now
-ready to march on Edinburgh, and Charles determined to give him battle
-at once. On the night of the 20th he led his army along the ridge of
-high ground towards Inveresk, where he expected to meet the enemy. It
-was wise to keep to the high ground, for, as one of his captains said,
-“Even a haggis could charge down hill.” As the troops moved off Charles
-drew his sword and said, “Gentlemen, I have flung away the scabbard.” At
-Prestonpans Cope’s army was discovered on the narrow plain between the
-hills and the sea. A deep morass lay between the two hosts, and Cope
-prided himself that his position was secure. Both armies slept on the
-field, and through the night watched each other. The prince lay amongst
-his men with a bundle of pease-sticks for a pillow.
-
-During the night a local gentleman, who knew every inch of the ground,
-remembered that a path led from the height through the morass and round
-the left wing of the enemy. The prince was roused and told the good
-news, and immediately the order was given to advance. In deep silence
-the march was commenced, Lochiel leading the way. The stars shone
-brightly overhead, but as the men advanced the mist gathered and
-concealed their movements. So, unseen, they threaded the narrow path,
-their soft brogues making no sound. The path had been left unguarded,
-and the Highlanders gained the plain, and were beginning to form when
-the mist lifted and disclosed them to their foes. Cope’s men were taken
-by surprise. The Highlanders charged furiously, and in six minutes the
-battle was lost and won. Cope’s army was in flight, and Charles had
-captured his cannon and baggage and seventeen hundred prisoners.
-
-For six weeks after his victory Charles lay in Edinburgh, holding
-councils and drilling his troops by day, and dancing gaily by night in
-the oaken gallery of Holyrood, where his kinswoman, the unhappy Mary
-Queen of Scots, had held her court. Not until the last days of October
-did he begin his march on England, in the full expectation that his easy
-conquest of Scotland would be repeated over the Border. No sign of the
-expected rising, however, met the invaders as they marched southward.
-The Highlanders began to desert, and his troops dwindled in number
-daily. A few recruits joined his standard at Preston, but it was already
-evident that his dream of an English rising was vain.
-
-Throughout the long, disappointing march the prince was the life and
-soul of his army. His tact, his endurance, and unfailing good-humour
-endeared him more and more to his faithful followers. The farther his
-army marched south the colder was his reception, until by the time he
-reached Derby it was plain that he had come to the end of his tether.
-The Duke of Cumberland had an army at Lichfield; there was a second army
-in his rear; and a third on Finchley Common. The wiser of the Jacobite
-leaders now advised a retreat to Scotland. Charles, however, had not yet
-lost hope; all his talk at Derby was about the manner in which he should
-enter London, whether on foot or on horseback, in the Highland or in the
-Lowland dress. Lord George Murray pressed upon the prince the absolute
-necessity of returning to Scotland, and at length Charles was very
-reluctantly forced to give the order to retreat. Homeward in straggling,
-sullen groups the Highlanders retraced their steps, with the foe hard at
-their heels. Charles showed obvious signs of dejection, and constantly
-lingered behind his men. On the 20th December the Highland army stood
-once more on Scottish ground.
-
-Eight days later Charles marched to Stirling at the head of the largest
-army which he had ever commanded. Leaving a small party to watch the
-castle, he hurried to Falkirk, where he met General Hawley, who was
-advancing to the relief of Stirling. Here again the young prince was
-victorious; but hardly had the smoke cleared away from the battlefield
-before quarrels broke out amongst the Highland leaders, and Charles was
-forced to retreat. The Highlanders, laden with booty, returned to their
-homes, and Charles pushed on to Inverness, followed by the Duke of
-Cumberland with a strong force of Royalist troops. Cumberland encamped
-at Nairn, nine miles from the moor of Culloden, on which the remains of
-Charles’s army lay.
-
-They were ill-prepared for battle. The war-chest was empty, food was
-scarce, and the men were worn out with fatigue and privation. Lord
-George Murray proposed a night attack on the royal army, and suggested
-the 15th April as the most suitable date, because it was Cumberland’s
-birthday, and sure to be an occasion for revelry in the English camp.
-Charles agreed to the proposal, and the march began; but so fatigued and
-hungry were his men that no less than fifty halts had to be called in
-eight miles. At two in the morning, the time fixed for the attack, the
-Highlanders were still four miles from the English camp. Cumberland’s
-men had already aroused themselves, and the Jacobite host had to plod
-back wearily to Culloden once more.
-
-The final hour had come. Cumberland advanced with his 10,000 troops,
-fresh, ardent, well-fed, and well-equipped, and the battle was decided
-before it was begun. At a distance of a third of a mile his guns opened
-fire, making blood-red lanes through the Jacobite regiments. They stood
-their ground with wonderful courage; but they were obliged to give way,
-and as dusk settled over the moor the cause of the Stuarts was lost for
-ever.
-
-Then came the grim sequel. “Butcher” Cumberland took such a cruel
-vengeance on the defeated foe that he well deserves his nickname.
-Several Scottish lords were beheaded, and measures were taken to prevent
-a similar rising in future. The tartan and kilt were proscribed articles
-of dress, the clan system was broken up, and military roads opened the
-Highlands to the rapid march of troops.
-
-Meanwhile “bonnie Prince Charlie” was a fugitive, with a price of
-£30,000 on his head. For months he encountered hairbreadth escapes and
-perils by land and sea. His life was made up of days of hiding in the
-heather, and nights of hunger, cold, fatigue, and anxiety in dim
-mountain caves. Yet, though his whereabouts were known to scores of
-people who might easily have earned the money and a pardon into the
-bargain, no one betrayed him, no one revealed his hiding-place. Men and
-women at the risk of their lives befriended him, and ultimately, by the
-aid of those whom he had brought to ruin and to the verge of the
-scaffold, he managed to escape.
-
-History reveals no more splendid example of unswerving loyalty. The
-whole story of Prince Charlie’s wanderings is one of the proudest
-traditions of the land of mountain and of glen. As a memorial of his
-gallant but hopeless attempt to overthrow King George the Second we have
-those spirited and tender Jacobite songs which have become an
-imperishable part of our literature. They are a monument not so much to
-the young man whom they commemorate as to the race which saw in him its
-best and most inspiring ideals.
-
-Before we say farewell to Prince Charlie, the story of a woman’s superb
-heroism and devotion must be told. When Charles was hiding in the
-heather in South Uist, and the redcoats were within a couple of miles of
-him, a young lady, named Flora Macdonald, was introduced to him. She had
-lately come from Skye to visit her brother in South Uist, and Charles’s
-faithful henchman, O’Neil, had heard of her and of her friendship for
-the Stuart cause. He met her secretly, and begged her to convey the
-prince to her mother’s house in Skye, where he might be safe until he
-could be got away to France. The plan was most difficult and daring, for
-Flora’s chief was then with Cumberland, and her stepfather was an
-officer in the Skye militia, and was at that instant scouring South Uist
-for the fugitive. Nevertheless Flora undertook the task, and O’Neil made
-her known to the prince. O’Neil proposed that Flora should obtain a pass
-from her stepfather for herself and her maid, Betty Burke, to go and
-visit her mother in Skye. Flora’s stepfather was a Jacobite at heart,
-and he furnished her with the passports. Betty Burke was none other than
-the prince, who was now to don petticoats and follow Flora as her
-servant. The prince made but a poor maid; he walked with such manly
-strides that his disguise only served to attract attention. Further, he
-could not manage his skirts; at one time they trailed in the mud, at
-another time he held them above his knees. However, the boat was reached
-in safety, and “over the sea to Skye” went Charlie. The night was
-stormy, but Flora slept, and the prince watched over her and sang songs
-to hearten the crew. In the morning they only just managed to escape the
-boats of the enemy.
-
-While the prince hid in the heather, Flora went to the house of a
-friend, Lady Margaret Macdonald, and arrived at a sadly ill-timed
-moment, for the militia were in the neighbourhood and their officer was
-in the house. Nevertheless, arrangements were made, and Macdonald of
-Kingsburgh undertook to get the prince to Portree. The night was spent
-at Macdonald’s house, and next day Charles managed to get to Portree,
-where he doffed his petticoats. Here he hid for some time in a cave, and
-here, too, he said good-bye to his brave preserver. He kissed her and
-said, “For all that has happened, I hope, madam, we shall meet at St.
-James’s yet.” He called her “our lady,” and his last thought was for
-her. Thus he parted from the courageous woman who had ventured all for
-his sake. From this moment she fades out of history, but her place
-amongst the heroines is assured for ever.
-
-Months of flitting to and fro, of lurking in the heather and hiding in
-caves and ruined huts, followed, and at last news came to him that two
-French vessels were off the coast. Losing no time, he started off for
-the very spot where fourteen months before he had landed so full of
-hope. The ships were riding at anchor, a boat moored to a rock awaited
-him. The prince jumped in, and in a few moments was climbing the sides
-of the vessel, safe at last. And here we leave him while his ship is
-rocking on the wave, and the stern men upon whom he has brought such
-sorrow and suffering wave him a last farewell amidst their streaming
-tears. We will not dwell upon the later years of his life—years of
-misery and degradation, when the once gay, kind, brave, and loyal prince
-sank into a fierce, shabby, homeless, and almost friendless adventurer.
-For many years he moved about like a shadow, finding his way more than
-once to England. Giving way to drink, he sank deeper and deeper into the
-mire. Let us not dwell upon the sad scenes of his later life. Let us
-think of him in his best moments, as the man who ennobled the Highland
-race for all time by calling forth a devotion, loyalty, and love the
-fame of which can never die.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE.=
- (_From the painting by John Pettie, R.A._)]
-
-[Illustration: =AFTER CULLODEN: ROYALIST SOLDIERS SEARCHING FOR JACOBITE
- FUGITIVES.=
- (_From the picture by John Seymour Lucas, R.A., in the Tate Gallery. By
- permission of Messrs. Frost and Reed._)]
-
-[Illustration: =A Royal Fugitive.=
- (_From the picture by Allan Stewart. Exhibited in the Royal Academy,
- 1907._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVII.
- MAKERS OF EMPIRE.
-
-
- ROBERT CLIVE, THE DARING IN WAR.
-
- “_War, disguised as commerce, came;_
- _Britain, carrying sword and flame,_
- _Won an empire._”
-
-YOU are now permitted to peep into the citadel of Arcot, the old capital
-of the Carnatic. Its walls are ruinous, its ramparts unfitted for guns,
-its battlements too low to protect soldiers. The town is in the hands of
-four thousand native troops, assisted by one hundred and fifty
-Frenchmen. Within the fort there are but a hundred and twenty Europeans
-and two hundred Sepoys. Their stock of provisions is very low. At the
-request of the Sepoys the Europeans take the rice, while the faithful
-natives contrive to keep body and soul together on the water in which it
-has been boiled. The defenders are daily diminishing in number from
-starvation, disease, and the musketry fire of the enemy, but there is no
-talk of surrender. You judge that their leader must be a man of no
-common courage and resolution, and you are right. Within yonder room
-their young English captain is placidly sleeping, though he knows that
-the enemy is about to assault his feeble post.
-
-Already he has been offered honourable terms and a bribe of money if he
-will but yield. He has rejected both with the utmost scorn and defiance,
-though he knows full well that the capture of the fort means the death
-of every man in it. In haughty tones the young Englishman has told the
-prince who commands the besieging army that his father is a usurper,
-that his forces are a mere rabble, and that he will do well to think
-twice before he sends such poltroons against English soldiers. It is now
-the 14th day of November, and on the 30th of August last he and his
-little army marched through a violent storm of thunder and rain, and
-captured the fort without striking a blow. He has already held out for
-seventy-five days, hoping hourly for relief. But he has not been
-inactive. Time after time he and his little band have sallied forth and
-inflicted considerable damage on the besiegers. The artillery of the
-enemy has already made much havoc; two great breaches gape in the walls.
-Every attempt to storm them has failed. Now the enemy is in overwhelming
-force, and to-day an assault is to be made; yet the commander of the
-post lies calmly sleeping, though a touch on the shoulder will awaken
-him and bring him on to the walls to direct the defence. He has made all
-arrangements; he has done all that man can do. Now he is recruiting his
-exhausted strength for the critical struggle that awaits him.
-
-To-day is the most solemn festival in the Mohammedan calendar, a day on
-which the followers of Mohammed believe that he who falls in fight
-against the infidel will enter at once into Paradise. The religious
-enthusiasm of the besiegers is almost a frenzy, and they have further
-increased their madness by a free use of the intoxicating drug which
-they call bhang. They are ready to go to death with eager joy; no man of
-them will flinch from the most dangerous duty; all are zealous for the
-privilege of sacrificing their lives.
-
-Suddenly you hear the discharge of three bombs. It is the signal for the
-attack. Our young Englishman is awake now, and you get your first
-glimpse of him. One glance at his face convinces you that he is a
-warrior of warriors, that there is not a particle of fear in his whole
-composition, that he is a born leader of men. His Sepoys positively
-worship him. They believe him to be more than mortal. Whatever he
-commands they obey. Their devotion to him exceeds that of the Tenth
-Legion to Cæsar and of the Old Guard to Napoleon.
-
-Such is Robert Clive, a young man of twenty-five, who left his
-Shropshire home as the scapegrace of the family. In his home at Styche
-and in the grammar school of Market Drayton he acquired a most
-unenviable reputation—always in mischief, ready to use his fists on the
-slightest provocation, an idle, worthless dunce. In desperation his
-father packed him off to India as a book-keeper; but he has exchanged
-the pen for the sword, and has now found his vocation. It is he who
-suggested this desperate enterprise, and to-day he is about to lay the
-foundations of his great fame.
-
-The attack has begun. A vast multitude of besiegers is beneath the walls
-carrying ladders, while against the four points where the fort is
-weakest—the two gates and the two breaches—organized and simultaneous
-attacks are preparing. Huge elephants, with their foreheads armed with
-iron plates, are driven forward, and you expect that the gates will be
-smashed to matchwood by the impact of these living battering-rams. But
-watch! Now you see Clive directing his men to pour their fire into the
-elephants. They do so, and the huge beasts, stung by the bullets, turn
-round and trample under foot the dense masses of men behind them. The
-enemy has been hoist with his own petard.
-
-There is a wild rush into the north-west breach, which is blocked with
-yelling natives. Suddenly you hear a volley, and down go scores of the
-assailants. Clive has dug trenches behind the breaches, and his men are
-in them pouring a murderous fire on the living, struggling mass that
-swarms through the gap in the wall. As soon as the guns are discharged
-they are handed to the rear-rank men to be loaded, and others charged
-and primed are received in exchange. Three field-pieces now open fire,
-and every shot tells. After three desperate onsets the enemy is driven
-back.
-
-Meanwhile the south-west breach is attacked. Water fills one part of the
-ditch which protects it, and on this the foe has launched a raft crowded
-with soldiers, who are urging it towards the shattered walls. The
-gunners at this post fire wildly and their aim is bad. Clive springs to
-the gun and works it himself. In three discharges he has cleared the
-raft and torn it asunder. Many of its occupants are drowning in the
-ditch, the remainder are swimming back to the bank.
-
-The fight has now lasted an hour, and four hundred of the assailants are
-dead. The grand attack has failed. There is firing during the night, but
-when day breaks the besiegers are nowhere to be seen. They have
-hurriedly abandoned the town, leaving their artillery and ammunition
-behind them.
-
-At once India rings with the praises of Clive. Reinforced, he proceeds
-upon his victorious career, and the natives tremble at his name. Within
-the next three years, by his marvellous energy and skill, he will
-establish British supremacy in India.
-
-Now we must hark back in order to understand the meaning of the struggle
-which we have just witnessed. The East India Company, in whose service
-Clive had enlisted, was established as far back as the days of Queen
-Elizabeth. It was founded for trade, and it attended closely to
-business. When Clive arrived in India its territory consisted of a few
-square miles of land, for which rent was paid to native rajas. Its
-troops were scarcely sufficient to man the ill-constructed forts which
-had been erected at Madras, Bombay, Calcutta, and a few other places to
-protect the warehouses. Most of the soldiers in the service of the
-Company were natives, and were neither furnished with European weapons
-nor disciplined according to European methods. The white servants of the
-Company were simply traders, whose business it was to make advances to
-manufacturers, ship cargoes, and in other ways push the business
-interests of their employers. Most of the younger clerks, of whom Clive
-was one, were miserably paid, while the older ones enriched themselves
-by trading on their own account.
-
-A French East India Company had also been founded, but at the outset it
-met with much less success than the English Company. At the close of the
-seventeenth century it possessed little more than the small town of
-Pondicherry, which still remains in French hands. At this time the
-Moguls, the descendants of the Mohammedan conquerors of Northern India,
-dominated the land; but a few years later their power fell to pieces,
-and India was splintered into little independent kingdoms. The land was
-given over to civil war; every nawab, or governor, quarrelled and fought
-with his neighbours. The feebleness of the native rulers and the
-disturbed state of the country positively invited the European traders,
-both English and French, to conquest. Hitherto they had been merely
-competitors for commerce; soon they were to become rivals for dominion.
-
-Such was the condition of affairs when Clive sailed for India. He was
-very homesick and depressed during the long voyage round the Cape, and
-when he arrived he had spent all his money and contracted some debts. He
-was stationed at Fort George, Madras, where he was wretchedly lodged and
-badly paid, and engaged in duties ill-suited to his daring, ardent
-nature. On more than one occasion he got into scrapes and received
-reprimands. Twice he attempted suicide, and twice the pistol which he
-snapped at his own head failed to go off. “It appears I am destined for
-something,” he said, and, as you already know, his prophecy proved true.
-In the year of his arrival in India (1744) war was declared by Britain
-against France, and the struggle in Europe led to the long fight for
-supremacy in India.
-
-Dupleix, the French Governor of Pondicherry, was a man of great
-ambition, and he now conceived the idea of founding a great French
-empire in India. Himself an able soldier, he made two most important
-discoveries. First, he observed that the native armies could not stand
-against men disciplined in the European fashion; and, secondly, he
-perceived that the natives could be brought under European discipline by
-European officers. Forthwith he began to enlist Sepoys, or native
-soldiers, and to arm and discipline them after the French manner. With
-these Sepoys he intended to intervene in the disputes of the native
-rulers, and by taking first this side, and then that, gradually win
-India for France.
-
-A French expedition appeared before Madras, captured Fort George, and
-seized the contents of the warehouses as prize of war. Some of the
-servants of the Company, including Clive, were paraded through the
-streets of Pondicherry in triumphal procession, and treated with great
-indignity. Clive, in the disguise of a Mohammedan, managed to escape
-from the town by night and make his way to Fort St. David, a small
-British settlement one hundred miles south of Madras. Here he begged an
-ensign’s commission in the service of the Company, and at twenty-one
-entered upon his military career.
-
-He took part in Admiral Boscawen’s unsuccessful siege of Pondicherry,
-where he distinguished himself, and in his twenty-fifth year was
-promoted to be a captain. Shortly after the failure at Pondicherry peace
-was proclaimed. Nevertheless, there was but a short cessation of
-hostilities in India; for though British and French were supposed to
-have sheathed the sword, a great struggle for power was about to begin
-both in India and in America. Before long there was open war, which at
-first went greatly in favour of France.
-
-Dupleix, continuing his rapid and brilliant career, had intervened in
-the affairs of the two great native states of Hyderabad and the
-Carnatic, and had managed to get his own candidates placed on the
-thrones of both these states. Thus he was practically master of South
-India. Civil war, however, continued in the Carnatic, where the French
-nominee was besieging Trichinopoly, the last stronghold of his rival.
-Trichinopoly was about to fall, and its fall would mean the complete
-supremacy of the French in India. At the critical moment Clive persuaded
-the Governor of Madras to entrust him with a small force to attack
-Arcot, the capital of the nawab whom Dupleix was supporting. By doing
-so, he hoped to draw off the nawab’s forces from the siege of
-Trichinopoly. You already know how splendidly he defended Arcot, and how
-he forced the enemy to raise the siege. By 1753 he had completely undone
-the work of Dupleix.
-
-Worn out by anxiety and fatigue, he now returned to England. He had gone
-out ten years before, a friendless, wayward boy; he now returned, at the
-age of twenty-eight, to find himself greeted as one of Britain’s most
-famous soldiers. Naturally, his father and mother and the other members
-of his family were overjoyed to learn that naughty, idle Bobby had
-developed into a famous man, the theme of all tongues, honoured and
-praised by the greatest in the land. The East India Company thanked him
-for his services in the warmest terms, and offered him a sword set with
-diamonds. This he refused to accept unless a similar one was given to
-his friend and commander Lawrence. With his prize-money Clive helped to
-pay off some of his father’s debts, and to redeem the family estate.
-
-In 1755 Clive returned to India. He had only just arrived when terrible
-news reached him. Suraj-ud-Dowlah, the Nawab of Bengal, a fiend in human
-shape, whose amusement as a child was to torture beasts and birds, and
-his pastime as a man to watch the sufferings of his fellow-creatures,
-had attacked the British settlement at Calcutta, and had seized one
-hundred and forty-six Europeans. These he thrust into a chamber known as
-the “Black Hole.” It was eighteen feet by fourteen, and its cubical
-content was twenty feet square. When ordered to enter the cell the
-prisoners imagined that the soldiers were joking, and as the nawab had
-promised them their lives they laughed aloud at the absurdity of the
-idea that they could possibly exist during the stifling heat of a Bengal
-June night in such a confined space. They discovered their error when
-they were driven in at the point of the sword. The windows were small
-and barred, and soon the air was poisonous. The horrors that followed
-are almost too terrible to recount. The poor creatures cried for mercy,
-they strove to break in the door, they offered large bribes to their
-jailers; but all to no purpose. Nothing could be done without the
-nawab’s orders, and he was asleep and could not be awaked. Many went
-mad; they trampled each other down, and fought like wild beasts for
-places at the windows. The murderers outside mocked at their agonies,
-holding lights to the bars, and shouting with laughter as they beheld
-the struggles of their victims. When day broke and the doors were opened
-only twenty-three ghastly figures staggered out into the sunlight. A
-hundred and twenty-three corpses were flung promiscuously into a pit dug
-for the purpose.
-
-The rage and anger of the British in India can well be imagined. Clive
-hastened to Bengal to avenge the awful outrage. He had nine hundred
-Europeans and fifteen hundred Sepoys with which to oppose
-Suraj-ud-Dowlah’s huge army. After a short, sharp fight the enemy fled
-in confusion, leaving baggage, guns, and cattle in the hands of the
-victors. This battle of Plassey, fought on June 23, 1757, secured for
-the British the province of Bengal, the richest and most populous
-province of India.
-
-The battle, however, was not won without grave treachery. Prior to the
-battle Clive learned that Mir Jaffier, Suraj-ud-Dowlah’s chief
-commander, had formed a plot against his master. He managed to get into
-communication with the disaffected general through the agency of one
-Omichand, a wily, unscrupulous Bengali merchant. This man held the
-thread of the whole plot in his hands; one word whispered by him in the
-ear of Suraj-ud-Dowlah would have meant the lives of all the
-conspirators. Omichand claimed £300,000 sterling as the price of his
-secrecy and assistance, and insisted that an article regarding his
-claims should be inserted in the treaty between Clive and Mir Jaffier.
-Clive now descended to conduct for which he cannot be defended, though
-excuses may be made. He knew he had to do with a villain, and he
-determined to defeat him by his own knavish acts. Two treaties were
-drawn up—the one, on white paper, was real; the other, on red paper,
-was a sham. The red paper contained the promise to pay Omichand’s
-demand; there was no mention of it in the white paper. Clive now added
-his signature, and forged that of Admiral Watson to the red paper, which
-was handed to Omichand. The treaty to which Mir Jaffier agreed was on
-the white paper.
-
-When Suraj-ud-Dowlah was overcome, Mir Jaffier received the throne of
-Bengal as his reward. According to the terms of the treaty, he granted
-territorial and other rights to the East India Company, and gave Clive a
-gift of £200,000. “It is now time,” said Clive, “to undeceive Omichand.”
-Turning to the man, Clive’s interpreter said, “Omichand, the red treaty
-is a trick. You are to have nothing.” Omichand fell back insensible, and
-afterwards relapsed into a state of idiocy. Soon after, Mir Jaffier was
-besieged by the eldest son of the Great Mogul; but Clive marched to his
-relief, and the besiegers melted away. Then Mir Jaffier in gratitude
-made over to Clive the yearly rent, amounting to £30,000, which the
-British paid for the lands which they occupied about Calcutta. Probably
-Clive was justified in accepting this present, but it gave his enemies a
-powerful handle against him. In 1760 Clive returned to England, and was
-everywhere greeted as a “heaven-born general.” He became member of
-Parliament for Shrewsbury, and received an Irish peerage. His fortune,
-acquired by spoils, presents, and grants, actually yielded him £40,000 a
-year.
-
-In 1765 he returned to India as governor-general, and set himself the
-task of purifying the administration of the Company. The officials and
-military commanders received very small salaries; but these they turned
-into fortunes by “shaking the pagoda tree”—that is, by blackmail,
-extortion, and corruption of all kinds. Clive attempted to stop these
-practices, and though his reforms were bitterly opposed, he left the
-Company’s service much purer than he found it. In the process he raised
-up a host of enemies, who in 1767, when he finally returned to England
-in shattered health, brought about his impeachment for corrupt
-practices, especially with reference to the Omichand affair and the
-present from Mir Jaffier. During the Parliamentary inquiry, Clive, when
-confronted by hostile evidence, remarked, “Mr. Chairman, at this moment
-I stand astonished at my own moderation!” The House of Commons evaded a
-decision on his conduct by passing a resolution that Lord Clive “had
-rendered great and meritorious services to his country.” He was
-acquitted, but the acquittal was really a vote of censure. Clive, broken
-in health, keenly sensitive to the disgrace of the verdict, and
-enfeebled in mind by the use of opium, felt the disgrace keenly. During
-one of the fits of deep depression to which he was subject, he ended his
-life by his own hand (November 1774).
-
-Thus perished, in his forty-ninth year, the great Clive. His faults were
-many, but his merits outweighed them, and he must always stand high in
-the roll of British empire-makers. “Our island has scarcely ever
-produced a man more truly great either in arms or in council.” Let this
-be his epitaph.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Clive at Bay.=]
-
-The natives of India believed that Clive bore a charmed life. On one
-occasion, when he was resting along with several of his men, a party of
-Frenchmen fired into the room which he occupied, killing the man next to
-him. Clive rushed out, and finding himself confronted by six Frenchmen,
-loudly ordered them to lay down their arms as they were surrounded. The
-native allies of the French fled, and the assailants themselves took
-refuge in a temple. Next day they surrendered.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- JAMES WOLFE, CONQUEROR OF CANADA.
-
- “_Wolfe, where’er he fought,_
- _Put so much of his heart into his act_
- _That his example had a magnet’s force,_
- _And all were swift to follow whom all loved._”
-
-Once more you see a young soldier advancing. He is a hero of heroes, yet
-never was the soul of a hero enshrined in a more unhero-like frame. His
-features are homely, his hair is fiery-red, his shoulders are narrow,
-and his limbs are veritable spindle-shanks. But look at his eyes, and
-you will instantly forget his plain features and his rickety body. They
-are bright, searching, brimful of intelligence and vivacity, and speak
-eloquently of the indomitable spirit within. This is James Wolfe, the
-man who gave us Canada—“eldest daughter of the Empire”—that vast land
-of fertile prairie, dense forest, widespreading pasture, rich mines,
-unrivalled waterways, fine cities, and, above all, of a sturdy nation,
-heart-warm towards the mother-country, and eager to give her tangible
-proofs of kinship and affection. Wolfe gave Canada to the Empire at the
-price of his heart’s blood. In one “crowded hour of glorious life” he
-gave us the heritage of this majestic land, already the greatest and
-most prosperous of all British lands beyond the seas, and yearly
-advancing towards a mighty destiny.
-
-James Wolfe was a soldier from his youth. His father was an officer of
-distinction; his mother a woman of great sweetness and charm, deeply
-beloved by her two sons, of whom James was the elder. He was born on
-June 2, 1727, at Westerham in Kent. Of his brief boyhood’s days we know
-little—indeed, there are but meagre details of his whole life. We know,
-however, that he was a delicate, sensitive, highly-strung boy, who
-inherited his mother’s frailty though not her beauty. We know, too, that
-he saw little of his father, who was almost constantly absent from home
-on active service. Nevertheless, he was tenderly and judiciously reared
-by his devoted mother.
-
-When a mere schoolboy—a little over fifteen years of age—he became an
-ensign, and carried the colours in one of his Majesty’s regiments. From
-the beginning of his career he set himself to study the art of war, and
-at sixteen he was adjutant of his regiment, then serving in Flanders. He
-discharged his duties with great intelligence, and very early
-demonstrated his capacity for leading men. Even though an adjutant, he
-had not lost his schoolboy tastes, for we find him writing to his mother
-warmly thanking her for a plum-cake which she had sent him.
-
-At twenty-one he had seen seven campaigns, and was a major. He had been
-present at the victories of Dettingen and Culloden, and it is said that
-on the latter battlefield he proved the nobility of his nature by
-refusing to shoot a wounded Highlander when ordered to do so by
-“Butcher” Cumberland. It is also said that he recommended the enlistment
-of Highlanders as soldiers in the British army. This may or may not be
-true, but it is certain that the Highland regiments first began to win
-their great renown under his command.
-
-At thirty years of age he had acquired the reputation of a capable,
-active, zealous officer, but so far he had given little indication of
-the great fame which was soon to be his. In 1758 he first crossed the
-Atlantic; and here we may interrupt the narrative in order to explain
-the condition of affairs at that time in America. By the middle of the
-eighteenth century the British had established themselves in thirteen
-colonies along the Atlantic coast from Florida to Nova Scotia. The
-French had chosen Quebec as their capital, and had occupied Acadia (now
-the provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick) and the valley of the
-St. Lawrence from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes. A new England and a
-new France had thus grown up in the New World.
-
-New England grew rapidly in population and wealth. New France also
-prospered, though in a lesser degree. Its progress was hindered by
-constant warfare with the Indians, by the trading enterprise of the
-British, and by the interference of the home government. The two white
-races constantly advanced their frontiers, and their outposts drew
-nearer and nearer to each other every year. Border strife between the
-rival nations soon became frequent. In 1690, for example, the British
-settlers invaded New France to revenge themselves for the plunder of
-certain frontier stations. The invaders were driven back, but for years
-afterwards the French and the British kept up an irregular warfare.
-During the War of the Spanish Succession a powerful British fleet which
-was protecting the colonies seized that part of Acadia now known as Nova
-Scotia.
-
-Though Britain had colonized the whole Atlantic seaboard from Florida to
-Nova Scotia, her territories had not advanced inland beyond the great
-barrier of the Alleghany Mountains. France, in addition to Canada,
-possessed the colony of Louisiana at the mouth of the Mississippi. She
-claimed that Louisiana stretched to the head-waters of the Mississippi
-and its tributary the Ohio. Had this claim been allowed, the British
-seaboard colonies would have been shut in on the west, and prevented
-from extending to the rich plains of the interior. Already the British
-needed elbow-room, for they numbered some 2,000,000, while the French in
-all the vast territory which they claimed could only muster 180,000.
-
-The French now proposed to link Louisiana with Canada by a chain of
-forts along the Mississippi and the Ohio. The three northern links in
-the chain were Fort Ticonderoga, at the end of Lake Champlain; Fort
-Niagara, near the great falls; and Fort Duquesne, on the Ohio River,
-where the great manufacturing town of Pittsburg now stands. The first
-and last of these forts were close to the English back settlements,
-which were constantly ravaged by Indians in the pay of France. In 1754,
-while Britain was ringing with the fame of Clive fresh from his great
-defence of Arcot, a party of Virginian militia made a dash at Fort
-Duquesne under the leadership of George Washington, soon to be the
-greatest name in American history. The attack, however, was
-unsuccessful. This was the beginning of the great struggle between the
-French and the British for the possession of North America.
-
-Next year General Braddock, who had been sent out to be
-commander-in-chief in America, marched against the French at the head of
-2,200 British regulars and American settlers. He cut his way through
-almost impenetrable forest, but when eight miles from the fort fell into
-an ambuscade. The Indians and French were hidden in bushes and behind
-trees, and they poured volley after volley into the British ranks. The
-settlers wished to fight in the Indian fashion, and take cover behind
-the trees; but Braddock thought this mode of warfare cowardly, and so
-they fought in the open until so many of the British were killed that a
-retreat had to be sounded. Soon the retreat became a flight, and but for
-Washington and his Virginians, Braddock’s little army would probably
-have been cut off to a man. The consequences of this defeat were
-terrible. The French let loose the Indians on the outlying British
-settlements, and the woods rang with the screams of tortured victims.
-For a time France was supreme on the American continent.
-
-In 1758 the British outlook was black indeed, and at home men trembled
-in hourly expectation of a French invasion. England was in a very bad
-way indeed; but the hour found the man, and that man was William Pitt.
-He sketched out a bold plan of campaign in America. Simultaneous attacks
-were to be made on Fort Ticonderoga and Fort Niagara, and on Quebec, the
-key to New France. Pitt looked around for a general after his own heart.
-He found him in James Wolfe, a young soldier with the daring, skill, and
-determination to accomplish what the great statesman planned. Merit and
-merit alone decided Pitt’s choice, and a better choice was never made.
-
-Wolfe had just returned from the capture of the chief fort in Acadia,
-where as brigadier under General Amherst he had covered himself with
-glory, and had earned the proud title of “hero of Louisbourg.” When Pitt
-offered the command of the new expedition to Wolfe he jumped at the
-chance. “Mr. Pitt,” he said, “may dispose of my slight carcass as he
-pleases.” The Duke of Newcastle, then Prime Minister, was shocked at
-Pitt’s choice. He told the king that Wolfe was mad. “Mad is he?” said
-George; “then I hope he will bite some others of my generals.”
-
-On February 17, 1759, Wolfe sailed for Canada with a strong fleet and
-9,000 troops. During the voyage he suffered tortures from sea-sickness.
-In May he was in the harbour of Louisbourg, and on the sixteenth of June
-he weighed anchor for Quebec, the troops cheering and the officers
-drinking this toast, “British colours on every French fort, port, and
-garrison in America.”
-
-Quebec, the most historic spot in all the New World, has not inaptly
-been called the Gibraltar of America. It stands on the nose of a rocky
-peninsula shaped like a bull’s head and facing eastward. On the south
-and east sides it rises by steep cliffs to a rocky summit. On south,
-east, and north it is defended by rivers: to the south flows the great
-St. Lawrence River, which expands on the east into a broad basin upon
-which the navies of the world might ride; while on the north the
-peninsula is protected by the estuary of the river St. Charles. The town
-itself consists of two parts—a lower town, which huddles by the water
-side, and an upper town, which climbs the cliffs. High on the summit is
-the grim and frowning citadel. Let us ascend to this historic fortress
-and gaze in admiration on the scene which unfolds itself. The lower
-town, with its steep streets, its old gabled houses, its public
-buildings, and numerous churches with their tin-covered cupolas and
-minarets, rises sharply from the water’s edge. Opposite to us, on the
-other side of the river, is Point Levis, and to the east is the
-beautiful Isle of Orleans. On our left, across the basin, is the
-Montmorency River, which hurls itself over a precipice to mingle its
-waters with those of the great river. To our right extend the famous
-Plains of Abraham, now purchased and preserved as a national park
-consecrated to great historical memories. Such is the Quebec of to-day.
-In the year 1759 it presented a much ruder aspect, though it was then
-lively and important, and had been made almost impregnable by walls,
-bastions, and fortified gates.
-
-Within this city Vaudreuil, its bombastic, corrupt governor, and his
-gang of unscrupulous officials kept up a feeble imitation of the
-luxurious court of France. They robbed the king, their master, and they
-robbed the Canadians committed to their protection. “Are the walls of
-Quebec made of gold?” asked Lewis when official after official returned
-to France bloated with wealth. New France was honeycombed with
-peculation and fraud, and there was but one honest, incorruptible man
-amongst the greedy horde. He was Lewis Joseph, Marquis of Montcalm, a
-soldier of unblemished repute and no mean scholar. His life was one long
-struggle with the governor, who thwarted him in every possible way, and
-arrogated to himself all the credit and honour which his noble colleague
-managed to win.
-
-Montcalm had early news of Wolfe’s errand, and he hastily collected
-every able-bodied man and every boy who could hold a gun within the
-walls of the town. “Never,” said he, “was Canada in a state so critical
-and full of peril.” Quebec was already strong by nature, and Montcalm
-proceeded to make it stronger still by art. Redoubts, batteries, and
-lines of entrenchment were thrown up along the lofty, curving shores
-from the St. Charles River to the Montmorency, and a boom of logs and
-hulks mounted with cannon barricaded the former river. Fourteen thousand
-men lined the earthworks, and one or two thousand more manned the guns
-of the fortress. When Wolfe arrived on the 21st of June, Quebec was
-well-nigh impregnable.
-
-Wolfe landed his men on the Isle of Orleans, and soon realized the
-desperate character of the task which he had undertaken. To take Quebec
-seemed impossible. The cliffs to his left were edged with palisades and
-capped with redoubts, while on his right was a far-extended line of
-entrenchments, ending at the foaming cataract of Montmorency. There
-seemed to be no chink in the wall of defence. For weeks Wolfe lay
-inactive, wearing himself to a shadow in the attempt to find a weak spot
-against which he might hurl his army.
-
-He seized Point Levis, and from it bombarded the city, only a mile away.
-Fierce as his fire was, it did nothing to help him to capture the place.
-At length, tired of inactivity, he attempted on the 31st of July to gain
-a footing on the north shore of the St. Lawrence by landing his men at
-the Montmorency Falls and climbing to the plateau above. In this he was
-successful; but though his guns now played on the flank of Montcalm’s
-entrenchments, the city of his desire was as far off as ever. “You may
-demolish the town,” said the bearer of a flag of truce, “but you shall
-never get inside it.” “I will take Quebec,” replied Wolfe, “if I stay
-here until November.”
-
-A frontal attack on the Beauport Heights was a complete failure, and
-Wolfe lost more than two hundred men. He was now almost worn out. His
-pale face and tall, lean form were no more seen going to and fro amongst
-his soldiers. He lay dangerously ill, and his life was almost despaired
-of. He felt his failure intensely, especially as news now arrived that
-the attacks on Ticonderoga and Niagara had been successful. Meanwhile
-the British fleet had accomplished a great feat. Despite a furious
-cannonade from the guns of Quebec, ship after ship had managed to sail
-up the river past the forts, and now were able to threaten the city from
-a position which the French believed to be unattainable by the enemy.
-
-On the 20th of August the young general was about again, and was
-diligently searching the steep, rocky shore above Quebec for a possible
-landing-place. At last, about three miles from the city, at a place now
-called Wolfe’s Cove, he discovered a goat track that wound up the wooded
-precipice for two hundred and fifty feet above the St. Lawrence. A
-French guard was stationed at the top, but Wolfe thought it could easily
-be surprised. Had he known that the captain in charge had gained a
-reputation for cowardice, and had allowed his men to go home to dig up
-their potatoes, his hopes would have been higher. At any rate he was now
-resolved to climb the Heights of Abraham and meet Montcalm’s army at the
-very gates of Quebec.
-
-Now let us pass on to the fateful night of September 13, 1759. Under
-cover of the darkness the British flotilla of boats moved silently with
-muffled oars towards the landing-place. Wolfe, who was in the leading
-boat, began in a low whisper to recite the beautiful lines of Gray’s
-“Elegy.” He came to the noble verse—
-
- “The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power,
- And all that beauty, all that wealth e’er gave,
- Await alike the inevitable hour;
- The paths of glory lead but to the grave.”
-
-“Now, gentlemen,” he said, “I would rather have written those lines than
-take Quebec.”
-
-The boats drifted on in death-like silence. Suddenly, as the tide bore
-them inshore and the mighty wall of rock loomed above them, they were
-sharply challenged by a sentry. “Qui vive?” he cried. A Highland officer
-replied in good French, “La France.” “Of what regiment?” demanded the
-sentry. “The Queen’s,” answered the Highlander, and the sentry was
-satisfied. A sigh of relief escaped from the commander, and the boats
-glided on. Presently another sentry challenged, but he too was deceived.
-In a few moments more the boats lightly ran aground in a little cove.
-The men disembarked silently and scrambled up the wooded precipice on
-their hands and knees. The French guard at the top was captured, and
-loud British huzzas proclaimed that at last a footing had been gained on
-the coveted spot. Before the day broke Wolfe had marshalled his men on
-the Heights of Abraham, and in the gray dawn they saw the city almost
-within their grasp. When they became visible, Montcalm was greatly
-alarmed. “This is a serious business,” he said. Bugles and mounted
-messengers called in his troops. To save the citadel he was obliged to
-abandon his entrenchments and give fight in the open.
-
-The battle that followed was singularly brief in duration, yet it
-settled the fate of Canada. The French advanced, firing rapidly; but the
-British reserved their fire until the enemy was within close range. Then
-a fearful hail of bullets sped from their muskets. The French wavered,
-and as the British reloaded and advanced, they turned and fled. Wolfe
-was wounded in the wrist as he led the charge, but he wrapped a
-handkerchief about the wound and pushed on. Soon after another bullet
-struck him in the breast. “Don’t let my men see me drop,” he said as
-they carried him to the rear. Here he lay, his eyes glazed, and his life
-fast ebbing away. Suddenly one of the little group about him cried,
-“They run; see, they run!” The dying man roused himself as though from
-sleep. “Who run?” he asked. “The enemy, sir,” was the reply; “they give
-way everywhere.” The dying flame of life flickered up for a moment, and
-he gave a clear, emphatic order for cutting off the retreat. This done,
-he turned on his side, murmuring, “Now God be praised, I die happy.”
-Wolfe was dead.
-
-His gallant foe, Montcalm, was also stricken down in the fight. “How
-long have I to live?” he asked of his surgeon. “Twelve hours, more or
-less,” was the reply. “So much the better,” said the dying man; “I shall
-not live to see the surrender of Quebec.” Before passing away, he wrote
-to the British commander beseeching him to show mercy to the townsfolk.
-“Do not let them perceive,” he said, “that they have changed masters. Be
-their protector, as I have been their father.” It is to Britain’s honour
-that she has observed this dying request of a great and good man with
-scrupulous care. The French Canadian of to-day would be the first to say
-that under the Union Jack he retains his faith and language, his old
-laws and cherished institutions, and that under British rule his liberty
-has been enlarged and his prosperity established.
-
-On September 18, 1759, the British flag was hoisted on the citadel of
-Quebec. At home the news was received with rapturous joy. “The whole
-nation rose up and felt itself the stronger for Wolfe’s victory.” The
-scattered remnants of the French fell back on Montreal, and in the next
-autumn they were surrounded and forced to surrender. The victory of the
-British was complete; the destiny of Canada was fixed for ever.
-
-A tribute to the joint memory of the two leaders who in death were not
-divided now stands in the public gardens of Quebec, and on the
-battlefield is a simple obelisk with the plain inscription, “Here died
-Wolfe, victorious.”
-
-And here we leave James Wolfe “alone with his glory.” He died, as he
-wished to die, a soldier’s death, and he leaves to future ages a noble
-example of high honour, strict integrity, and noble devotion to duty.
-
-[Illustration: =DEATH OF WOLFE.=
- (_From the picture by Benjamin West, P.R.A._)]
-
-[Illustration: =The Battle of Trafalgar, and the Victory of Lord Nelson
- over the French and Spanish Fleets,= =October 21, 1805.=
- (_From the picture by Clarkson Stanfield, R.A., in the National Gallery
- of British Art._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XVIII.
- NELSON OF THE NILE.
-
-
- “_Admirals all, for England’s sake,_
- _Honour be yours, and fame!_
- _And honour, as long as waves shall break,_
- _To Nelson’s peerless fame._”
-
-IT is a gray, melancholy spring day in the year 1771. You are at
-Chatham, looking on to the deck of his Majesty’s ship _Raisonnable_,
-commanded by Captain Maurice Suckling. The sixty-four is not yet ready
-for sea; her chief officers are not yet aboard. On the quay you see a
-thin, delicate-looking lad of twelve years of age dressed in a “middy’s”
-uniform. The wind bites shrewdly; the lad shivers in his thin jacket,
-and there is something like a tear in his eye. This morning his father
-left him in London to make the best of his way to Chatham and there join
-his ship. He has wandered about, friendless and alone, for hours; he is
-hungry, footsore, and weary, and he cannot discover the vessel to which
-he is posted. You feel sorry for the lonely little fellow, but his
-troubles are now over. A kindly officer accosts him, and brings him on
-board. The lad’s eyes gleam as he gazes on the ship which is to be his
-home. He glances down at the almond-white decks; he looks around at
-grinning lines of black cannon; he turns his eyes aloft to the
-symmetrical fabric of spars and sails and rigging. It is a wonder-world
-of delight. There is fascination everywhere—in the red muzzles of the
-guns, in their white tompions, in the petticoat trousers and long
-pigtails of the sailors. His young eyes, brilliant with intellect, dart
-hither and thither; he is astonished and delighted by all the novel
-sights which he sees.
-
-This frail weakling is Horatio Nelson, the proudest name in the naval
-annals of his land. He is to develop into the “unique sailor,” the great
-hero of his race, the man whose statue is decked with laurel and whose
-fame is eagerly commemorated year by year, though well-nigh a century
-has elapsed since he passed away.
-
-Horatio Nelson was born in the year before Wolfe captured Quebec. He was
-the son of a plain country parson with a quiver full of children and a
-modest income. The future hero first saw the light in the pleasant
-rectory of Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk. At nine years of age his mother
-died, and the weak, sickly lad grew up under the care of his
-grandmother. There was nothing remarkable about the boy’s school days,
-though many stories are told of his mischievous exploits, his
-fearlessness, and his high sense of honour. The best-known story relates
-that as a little boy he strayed from the house on a birds’-nesting
-excursion, and was absent so long that his grandmother grew alarmed and
-sent out servants to look for him. At length young Horatio was
-discovered sitting placidly by the side of a stream which he could not
-cross. When brought back his grandmother said, “I wonder that you were
-not driven home by hunger and fear.” “Fear! grandma,” said the boy.
-“Fear! what is that? I never saw it!” Truly the boy was father to the
-man. To the end of his life he never saw fear or knew what it meant.
-
-You already know that at twelve years of age Nelson began his naval
-career as a midshipman on board his uncle’s ship, the _Raisonnable_. At
-twenty-one he was a captain in the Royal Navy—“the merest boy of a
-captain,” as Prince William, afterwards William the Fourth, described
-him. Nevertheless, there was no better seaman or more gallant officer in
-the service.
-
-Now let us pass on to the year 1789, when Nelson was thirty-one years of
-age, and was regarded by those who knew him best as one of the finest
-commanders in the service. In this year that huge upheaval known as the
-French Revolution took place. For centuries the kings and nobles of
-France had grossly mismanaged the country and had bitterly oppressed the
-people. The State was well-nigh bankrupt, and the land was full of
-starving and despairing men. In July of this fateful year Paris rose,
-the Bastille, or State prison, was stormed, the prisoners were released,
-and the garrison slain. All over the country the peasants revolted,
-murdered the nobles, and burned their castles. The king was powerless to
-interfere, and the National Assembly, which had now seized the reins of
-power, passed laws sweeping away the privileges of the nobles and the
-rights of the Church. Before long the king and his family tried to
-escape from the country, but they were brought back and treated as
-prisoners. Meanwhile large numbers of the nobles had sought refuge
-abroad, and were urging foreign governments to declare war on France.
-When the German sovereigns threatened invasion, the French declared war
-against Austria and Prussia.
-
-Now we must introduce the most dominant figure of the modern
-world—Napoleon Bonaparte. He was born in Corsica in the year which saw
-the American colonists beginning to rise against the British Government.
-In the first year of American independence he was a “gentleman cadet” in
-the military school at Paris. Here he was chiefly noteworthy as a
-silent, haughty lad, full of self-love and of great ambition. He was
-studious and very fond of mathematics and geography, but his abilities
-were not striking. None of his teachers prophesied for him the
-astonishing genius which he afterwards displayed. When Nelson was
-twenty-seven years of age, Napoleon became a lieutenant of artillery. He
-was a zealous republican, and was placed in command of the artillery
-which was to besiege the naval port of Toulon, then in possession of the
-British, who had been called in by the royalist inhabitants of the town.
-Napoleon conducted the siege with such skill that the British were
-forced to evacuate the place, not, however, without burning the French
-fleet which lay in the harbour and destroying the arsenal.
-
-At this juncture Nelson was detailed to besiege certain coast towns of
-the island of Corsica. He captured Bastia and Calvi, but at the latter
-place he lost the sight of an eye. A period of dangerous and exhausting
-service followed. Napoleon was now in command of the army of Italy, and
-was at the beginning of his extraordinary career. He was marching along
-the narrow coast-road of the Riviera, and Nelson’s task was to harass
-his shoreward march. Scarcely a day passed without a skirmish of some
-kind with a battery, a gunboat, or an armed cruiser. Nelson’s force,
-however, was inadequate, and Napoleon accomplished his purpose. His
-victories in Italy were extraordinary, and speedily he was acclaimed on
-all hands as the greatest general of the republic. As he rose in fame
-and influence new vistas opened before him, and he soon perceived that
-the highest office in the State was his to grasp. Next he advanced into
-Austria itself, and carried all before him. When he was within eighty
-miles of Vienna the emperor begged for peace, and obtained it at the
-price of Belgium and Lombardy. Prussia now deserted the allies, and
-Holland and Spain had already purchased peace by promising the republic
-the use of their navies. Great Britain was in a state of “splendid
-isolation,” and all eyes turned to the fleet as the only hope of
-succour. The banks stopped cash payments, alarm was at its height, and
-Consols fell to fifty-one. Great Britain had her back to the wall.
-
-Before long, however, the British fleet had its first great success. On
-February 14, 1797—that glorious St. Valentine’s Day—Admiral Jervis won
-a splendid victory over the Spanish fleet off Cape St. Vincent. In that
-confused scene of roaring cannon, rolling clouds of smoke, crash of
-falling spars, shrieks of the wounded, and stormy huzzas of the
-half-naked sailors wrestling at the guns, Nelson stands out as _the_
-conspicuous figure of the day. At one time he was engaging nine Spanish
-ships. A little later he was abreast of the _San Josef_, pouring in such
-a murderous fire that speedily she was unmanageable. The _San Nicolas_
-drifted on to the _San Josef_, and Nelson manœuvred to foul the _San
-Nicolas_. He hooked his sprit-sail yard into her rigging, and then
-boarded. The ship yielded, but at this moment a fierce fire of musketry
-was opened from the _San Josef_—only a jump away. Instantly Nelson and
-his men sprang aboard the _San Josef_, and as they did so a Spanish
-officer called out that the ship had surrendered. Thus on the deck of a
-Spanish man-of-war, which he had boarded across the deck of another then
-in his possession, Nelson received the swords of the vanquished
-Spaniards. Already he was the darling of his sailors and a source of
-pride to the nation.
-
-In a daring but unsuccessful attack on Cadiz he lost an arm, and sank
-into a state of deep depression, thinking that he had become a burden on
-his friends and useless to his country. For a time our little one-armed,
-one-eyed hero retired to a quiet country home; but on April 1, 1798, he
-was afloat in command of a fleet scouring the Mediterranean with orders
-to seek the French fleet, and use his best endeavours to take, sink,
-burn, and destroy it. After a long and anxious quest he at last
-discovered it anchored in Aboukir Bay. “We are moored in such a manner,”
-wrote the French admiral, “as to bid defiance to a force more than
-double our own.” How vain the boast was will shortly appear. The French
-ships were anchored in single file along the shore, with three miles of
-shoal water between them and the land, and the admiral believed that no
-man-of-war could possibly get to the shoreward of him. He had actually
-piled up his mess gear on the shoreward side of his ships, thus
-rendering the guns on that side unworkable. As the British fleet drew
-near, under a press of sail, during the afternoon of August 1, Nelson
-observed that the enemy’s ships were moored five hundred yards apart, so
-as to permit them to swing at anchor. Instantly he perceived that where
-the enemy’s ship could swing there was room enough for one of his
-squadron to anchor. The French were trapped, and Nelson cried, “Before
-this time to-morrow I shall have gained a peerage or Westminster Abbey!”
-
-Five ships with men in the chains, heaving the leads, now bore down,
-rounded the bows of the leading vessel, and got inshore of the French
-fleet. The rest of Nelson’s ships took up their stations on the seaward
-side, and at half-past six, just as the sun was setting, the action
-began. In twelve minutes the leading ship of the enemy was dismasted,
-and almost at the same instant the third ship of the line suffered the
-same fate. Black night came on at seven, and only the flash of guns,
-crimsoning the heavens, lit up the darkness. At half-past eight the
-fourth and fifth ships of the enemy’s line surrendered. At ten minutes
-past nine the flagship, the _Orient_, caught fire. She lay between two
-British ships, and was almost cut in halves by shot. Her gallant admiral
-lay dying on the deck, and every moment the flames raged higher.
-
-The burning of the _Orient_ was the most terribly grand spectacle ever
-seen in naval warfare. Her magazine was full of powder, and an explosion
-was inevitable. Such, however, was the heroism of her crew that while
-the lower decks were in flames, her men continued to work the guns on
-the upper deck. Huge forked flames and living sheets of fire leapt up as
-though from the heart of a volcano. She had ceased to fire now, and the
-remnants of her crew crawled out on the spars like flies. The flames lit
-up the scene so vividly that even the Arabs could be seen on the shore.
-At a quarter past eleven she blew up with a thunderous roar, and the
-battle of the Nile was over. All that remained was to render the victory
-complete. By three in the morning two ships alone of that proud French
-fleet had escaped. Next morning Nelson, with a deep wound on his
-forehead, called the fleet to return public thanksgiving to Almighty God
-for the most decisive victory that has ever blessed British arms at sea.
-The number of the enemy taken, drowned, burnt, and missing was 5,225. On
-the English side 218 were killed and 677 wounded.
-
-Napoleon was at this time in Egypt, which he proceeded to conquer as the
-first step towards striking at India. The disaster at Aboukir Bay cooped
-him up in the East. He crossed the desert into Syria, and drove the
-Turks out of the southern part of the land. Before the walls of Acre,
-however, his victorious march was checked. The Turks within, and a
-British fleet under Sir Sidney Smith outside, completely baffled him. In
-later years Napoleon said, “That man made me miss my destiny.” But for
-Sir Sidney Smith, Napoleon would have been Emperor of the East. As it
-was, he was forced to raise the siege of Acre and retire into Egypt,
-where news reached him that the French armies had suffered some
-reverses. He left his army in Egypt to get home as best it might, and
-returned to France, where his friends arranged a revolution. On December
-24, 1797, a new French constitution was proclaimed, and shortly
-afterwards Napoleon became First Consul. He took up his abode in the
-Tuileries, and was now on the direct highroad to the lofty position
-which he meant to attain.
-
-Napoleon had pledged his word to save France from her host of enemies,
-and in May 1800 he took the field once more. Crossing the Great St.
-Bernard Pass, never before traversed by a large army, he succeeded in
-planting himself in the rear of the Austrians, and at the battle of
-Marengo achieved a brilliant victory. Later in the year the French
-general, Moreau, crushed another Austrian army at Hohenlinden, and then
-Austria sued for peace.
-
-The Tsar Paul had already abandoned the allies, and now confessed to
-great admiration for Napoleon, who proceeded to form a league for the
-purpose of subduing Britain by striking at her trade. He persuaded the
-northern powers—Russia, Denmark, and Sweden—to mass their fleets and
-close all their ports against British ships. This was a deep-laid
-scheme, but it was doomed to failure.
-
-On March 12, 1801, Nelson left Yarmouth Roads as second in command to
-Sir Hyde Parker, a man of unflinching bravery but of no original ideas.
-The fleet which these admirals commanded was detailed to destroy the
-ships of the allies which lay at Copenhagen, backed by formidable
-batteries. Parker was irresolute as to the route to be taken through the
-dangerous channels that led to the town. “Let it be by the Sound, by the
-Belt, or anyhow,” cried Nelson, “only lose not an hour.” We cannot stay
-to recount the progress of the terrible battle that followed. When
-twenty of the enemy’s ships were almost destroyed, Nelson offered a
-truce, which was gladly accepted, and
-
- “All amidst her wrecks and her gore,
- Proud Denmark blest our chief
- That he gave her wounds relief;
- And the sounds of joy and grief
- Filled the shore.”
-
-In the very height of the engagement, Parker, greatly alarmed for the
-safety of his fleet, battered furiously by incessant broadsides, made
-the signal to retreat. Nelson’s attention was drawn to it. “What does it
-mean?” asked a colonel of marines standing by. “Why, to leave off
-action,” said Nelson; “but hang me if I do! You know,” he went on, “I
-have only one eye. I have a right to be blind sometimes.” Putting his
-telescope to his blind eye, he exclaimed, “I really do not see the
-signal.” So he nailed his colours to the mast, and in the midst of the
-most terrible cannonade to which a British fleet has ever been
-subjected, Nelson’s signal for “Close action” streamed high aloft, as
-clear to every man’s sight as a star in the sky.
-
-Napoleon had thus failed in his attack on the obstinate islanders, and
-he was now ready for a breathing-space in which to recruit his armies
-and build a navy powerful enough to beat Britain. Accordingly peace was
-signed, and Great Britain restored all the colonial conquests which she
-had made during the war, except Ceylon and Trinidad. This was all she
-gained from a struggle which had cost her thousands of lives, and had
-added two hundred and seventy millions to the National Debt.
-
-Before the ink was dry on the treaty, Napoleon was busy planning the
-establishment of a vast colonial empire, and aiming at the downfall of
-the one power which thwarted him at every turn. The English press
-bitterly attacked him, coarse and insulting caricatures of him were
-constantly appearing, and French exiles in England frequently plotted
-against him. He now demanded the suppression of the hostile newspapers
-and the expulsion of the plotters, but the British Government refused.
-Every day the relations between the two countries grew more and more
-strained, and the breaking-point was not far off.
-
-On May 12, 1803, war was again declared. Napoleon speedily forced Spain
-to join him, and then began preparations for an invasion of Great
-Britain. One hundred thousand men were marched to Boulogne, and every
-road by which the soldiers passed bore the signpost, “To England.” A
-huge flotilla of flat-bottomed boats was collected, and exercises in
-embarking and disembarking went on within sight of the white cliffs of
-Dover. “The Channel,” said Napoleon, “is but a ditch, and any one can
-cross it who has but the courage to try.” He meant to put his courage to
-the test as soon as the Channel was clear of the British fleet. From
-June 1803 to September 1805 his men were waiting the word of command to
-cross. It was never given.
-
-The prospect of invasion roused every patriotic man in Great Britain.
-Volunteers flocked to the standards, and soon, out of a nation of
-fifteen million souls, including the people of Ireland who were not
-allowed to volunteer, 300,000 men were in arms, besides 120,000 regular
-troops and 78,000 militia. The dockyards worked night and day, and
-before the end of the year one hundred and sixty-six new vessels had
-been added to the fleet. The fortresses were strengthened, martello
-towers were erected along the coast, and every possible preparation was
-made. Nevertheless the year 1803 was one of alarm and terror. Next year
-Napoleon attained the summit of his ambition—he crowned himself Emperor
-of the French.
-
-Still the projected invasion hung fire, and now Napoleon devised a plan
-for securing the six hours’ command of the Channel on which the success
-of his enterprise depended. His fleet was then in the harbour of Toulon,
-which was being watched by a British fleet, with Nelson in chief command
-for the first time. Napoleon ordered his ships to slip out of harbour
-and sail for the West Indies, in order to decoy Nelson away from Europe.
-Arrived at the West Indies, the French fleet was to put about and return
-with all speed for Brest, where an attack was to be made on the British
-squadron blockading that port while Nelson was far away. The defeat of
-the British squadron at Brest would clear the Channel, and then the
-grand invasion was to take place.
-
-The plan nearly succeeded. Villeneuve, the French admiral, did slip out
-of Toulon. Nelson was deceived, and went off on a false scent. When,
-however, news arrived that the French fleet had sailed for the West
-Indies, Nelson dashed after it in hot pursuit, and went half-way round
-the world and back again before he caught it up. Villeneuve had
-thirty-five days’ start, but Nelson arrived at Gibraltar on the return
-voyage only three days after the French fleet sighted Cape Finisterre.
-Here it found a British squadron under Admiral Calder. An indecisive
-battle took place; and though the result was considered in England as a
-failure, and almost a disgrace, it ended the grand invasion scheme.
-Villeneuve was obliged to put into Ferrol to refit, and, meanwhile,
-Nelson had arrived. Napoleon’s plan had failed, and Britain could
-breathe freely once more.
-
-In disgust, Napoleon broke up his camp at Boulogne, and rapidly marched
-his army across France into Germany, where he met the Austrians and
-Russians, who had formed a new league against him. Now began a series of
-triumphs which laid the Austrian empire open to the invaders. While
-Napoleon was rejoicing in his victories, terrible news reached him. The
-greatest sea-fight in the history of the world had been fought, and the
-combined fleets of France and Spain were no more. The beginning of the
-end had arrived for the “terror of Europe.”
-
-Villeneuve, with thirty-three Franco-Spanish vessels, lay in Cadiz
-harbour, and outside was Nelson with twenty-seven British ships. The
-French admiral had been stung to the quick by a bitter, taunting letter
-from the emperor, accusing him of cowardice. To vindicate his courage,
-Villeneuve gave the order to put to sea. On the morning of October 20,
-1805, the fleets came in sight of each other.
-
-“The sun never rose on a grander and more impressive ocean-picture. As
-the courses and hulls of the hindmost of the British vessels floated up
-the sea-line, the blue girdle of the deep became a field of ships; giant
-structures bristling with guns, canvas swelling in clouds to the heavens
-from their tall sides black with grim and formidable defences, crowds of
-sailors motionless in expectation, quarter-decks glittering with
-uniforms, and stillness everywhere, broken only by the creaming wash of
-the bow-surge as it was shouldered off into yeast by the towering
-battleships.”
-
-At daybreak, after a night clouded with the presentiment that he would
-die on the morrow, Nelson arrayed himself in his full admiral’s uniform,
-and came on deck blazing with orders. Watching the fleet of the enemy
-forming line of battle, he exclaimed several times, “I’ll give them such
-a dressing as they never had before.” He advanced in two columns,
-intending to crash into the enemy’s line, thus breaking it and
-destroying the ships in the centre before those on the wings could come
-to their relief. Undoubtedly there _was_ a plan of attack, though modern
-critics have questioned the fact. The battle perhaps looked like a
-“heroic scramble,” but behind the apparent confusion there was a subtle,
-daring, and unexpected plan.
-
-Just before the battle began Nelson went to his cabin, and there on his
-knees wrote a beautiful and touching prayer. Coming on deck again, he
-ordered that signal to be made which is his greatest bequest to his
-country—a signal which stirs the pulses of every true Briton even after
-the lapse of a century. High above the _Victory’s_ deck flew the
-colours, and as the words, =England expects every man to do his
-duty=, were interpreted, a great huzza rose from the fleet. “Now,”
-said Nelson, “I can do no more. We must trust to the great Disposer of
-all events and to the justice of our cause.”
-
-The British ships now bore down, Collingwood in the _Royal Sovereign_
-being the first to engage. He was twenty minutes in the midst of a
-furious cannonade before he received support. The whole British fleet
-now came into action, but not near enough for Nelson, and he signalled,
-“Engage the enemy more closely,” and set the example by dashing into the
-enemy’s line. Seven or eight of the weathermost ships immediately opened
-a terrific fire on him. So fierce was it that for a few minutes the
-_Victory_ made no reply. Her mizzen top-mast went over the side, her
-wheel was knocked away, and a double-headed shot killed eight marines at
-one stroke. Amidst this hail of death the hero moved with the utmost
-indifference. As a splinter tore the buckle from his shoe he remarked
-smilingly to his captain, “This is too warm work, Hardy, to last long.”
-But now the gallant old ship got to work, and with a broadside that
-disabled her immediate enemy, drove into the _Redoutable_ so closely
-that the muzzles of the _Victory’s_ guns touched the enemy’s side.
-
-At half-past one, when Nelson was walking the deck, a musket-shot from
-the _Redoutable_ mizzen-top struck him, and he fell with his face to the
-deck. “They have done for me at last, Hardy,” he exclaimed. “I hope
-not,” answered the captain. “Yes,” said Nelson; “my backbone is shot
-through.” They bore him to the cockpit, and on the way he drew a
-handkerchief over his face that his sailors might not see him and be
-discouraged. The gloomy cockpit was a shambles, resounding with the
-groans of anguished men. Dr. Beatty flew to his side. “Ah, Mr. Beatty,”
-said Nelson, “you can do nothing for me. I have but a short time to
-live; my back is shot through.” And so it was. The decorations with
-which he had adorned himself were too good a mark for the French
-sharpshooters.
-
-The hero lay a-dying while the storm of crashing artillery continued to
-rage. High above the thunder came the huzzas of his seamen as ship after
-ship of the enemy struck. The dying man turned and smiled. “Will no one
-bring Hardy to me?” he asked, but the captain could not be spared. All
-the beauty, the magnanimity, and tenderness of Nelson’s disposition
-shone out in those dying hours. At last Hardy came. “Well, Hardy, how
-goes the day with us?” “Very well, my lord,” was the reply; “we have got
-twelve or fourteen of the enemy’s ships.” “I hope,” said Nelson
-anxiously, “that none of our ships have struck.” “No fear of that, my
-lord,” replied Hardy. And now the surgeon tearfully told him that his
-life was done. “God be praised,” he whispered. “Now I am satisfied.
-Thank God I have done my duty!” Nelson was dead.
-
-As his breath floated away, the cannonading ceased, and Trafalgar was
-won. Of the French and Spanish fleet that rose and fell upon the waves
-on that October morning all that remained was a huddle of hulks rolling
-helplessly in the trough of the sea, with the British colours flying on
-the stumps of the wreckage, and a trail of beaten ships staggering
-portwards for safety. Nelson had not spent his life’s blood in vain. He
-had ensured his land a century’s command of the sea, during which time
-she spread her empire far and wide, and developed her commerce to an
-extraordinary degree.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Death of Nelson.=
- (_By Benjamin West, P.R.A. By permission of the Corporation of
- Liverpool._)]
-
-[Illustration: =Napoleon on Board the “Bellerophon.”=
- (_From the picture by W. Q. Orchardson, R.A., in the National Gallery of
- British Art. By permission of the Berlin Photographic Co._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XIX.
- WELLINGTON.
-
-
- “_Lead out the pageant: sad and slow,_
- _As fits an universal woe,_
- _Let the long long procession go,_
- _And let the sorrowing crowd about it grow,_
- _And let the mournful martial music blow:_
- _The last great Englishman is low._”
-
-IT is a bleak November day in the year 1852. Vast multitudes, most of
-them in the garb of mourning, throng the streets of London, and stand
-for hours waiting for a great funeral procession to pass by. The muffled
-bells of the churches are tolling a knell, cannon are booming their last
-farewells, buildings are draped with black, the flags fly at half-mast,
-and all business is suspended. Now you see the long procession
-approaching, soldiers with reversed arms leading the way, and marching
-with slow, reluctant step to the roll of drums and the solemn wail of
-the “Dead March.” Behind them come men representing all the rank,
-talent, and dignity of Great Britain, as well as the distinguished
-mourners which foreign sovereigns have sent to represent them on the
-solemn occasion. Many of the older spectators barely stifle their sobs
-as a riderless steed is led by, with reversed jack-boots in the
-stirrups. He who has bestridden this war-charger was well known to them.
-They remember all his greatness in the past; they recall him as a
-familiar figure in the streets and in Parliament. But, hush! here is the
-towering car upon which lies all that remains of him. Every head is
-bared, and in deep, solemn silence the sad pageant passes.
-
- “All is over and done:
- Render thanks to the Giver,
- England, for thy son.
- Let the bell be toll’d.
- Render thanks to the Giver,
- And render him to the mould.
- Under the cross of gold
- That shines over city and river,
- There he shall rest for ever,
- Among the wise and the bold.”
-
-Side by side with that Mighty Seaman, “saviour of the silver-coasted
-isle,” they bury the Great Duke “to the noise of the mourning of a
-mighty nation.”
-
-Who was this Great Duke, and why does “sorrow darken hamlet and hall” at
-his passing? Let the story of his life and fame be told.
-
-Arthur Wellesley, afterwards Duke of Wellington, was born in 1769, less
-than four months before Napoleon. His father was the Earl of Mornington,
-an Irish peer, and Dublin still shows the house, 24 Upper Merrion
-Street, where he was born. In 1787, when eighteen years of age,
-Wellesley became an ensign in the army, but was at first quite
-undistinguished, and was, indeed, considered dull, idle, and rather
-frivolous. Not until 1793, when he was appointed to the command of his
-regiment, did he show that he had found the vocation in which he was to
-win such renown.
-
-In 1798 his eldest brother sailed for India as governor-general, and
-Arthur Wellesley accompanied him. Soon afterwards he was given a
-military command, and speedily proved himself a most active and
-successful general. In 1805 Wellesley was back in England, and for the
-next few years he was employed in various capacities. During the year
-after his return he became a member of Parliament, and was frequently
-consulted on military matters by the ministry of the day.
-
-The little kingdom of Portugal was almost the last European nation which
-refused to join Napoleon. He therefore overran the country and entered
-Lisbon. The king was deposed, and Joseph, Napoleon’s brother, was placed
-on the throne. Thus the whole Iberian Peninsula passed into Napoleon’s
-power. These high-handed proceedings roused the nations to another
-struggle against him. An insurrection broke out in Spain and Portugal,
-which even Napoleon could not stamp out. The British Government eagerly
-seized the opportunity of waging a land-war with Napoleon. Arms and
-money were sent to the Spaniards, and on August 1, 1808, an army was
-landed in Portugal. Wellesley was given the command of a force of some
-9,000 men, and was instructed to assist either the Spaniards or the
-Portuguese at his discretion. He sailed on the 12th of July, and,
-landing his men, moved towards Lisbon. This was a bold step, for the
-French general, Junot, had been in occupation of the Portuguese capital
-since November.
-
-On the 21st of August he defeated Junot on the hillside at Vimiera, and
-Lisbon would have been captured and the whole French army destroyed had
-Wellesley been permitted to pursue. A superior officer, however, had now
-arrived, and Wellesley was no longer first in command. Nevertheless, so
-decisive was the fight that Junot offered to leave Portugal altogether,
-provided he and his troops were permitted to return unmolested to
-France. This offer was accepted, greatly to the annoyance of the British
-people, who were sorely disappointed that the whole French army had not
-been captured.
-
-Wellesley and his superior officer were recalled and tried for not
-capturing Lisbon. The latter was deprived of his command; the former was
-sent back to Portugal. And now Wellington began that long, dogged
-struggle known as the Peninsular War, a six years’ contest in which he
-displayed wonderful generalship, foresight, and tenacity, and finally
-drove the French out of Spain and captured Toulouse. Before it was over
-he had been raised to the peerage, and as Viscount Wellington was
-universally regarded as Britain’s greatest soldier.
-
-In the fourth year of Wellington’s struggle in Spain the Tsar Alexander,
-tired of submitting to Napoleon’s mastery, defiantly opened his ports to
-trade with Britain. Napoleon thereupon declared war on him, and marched
-a vast army of 600,000 men into Russia. A miserable, crushed remnant of
-20,000 men was all that struggled back to Germany. This terrible blow
-led to a general rising of European powers against Napoleon. Russia,
-Prussia, Austria, and Sweden allied their forces, and Napoleon found
-himself beset on all sides, and with no army to meet his foes.
-
-After the first outburst of dismay, France rallied to him as of old, and
-gave him the new army for which he asked. The terrible waste of life
-during the stormy years since the Revolution had pressed heavily on his
-people, and now half-grown lads of seventeen were called to the
-standards. They came willingly, and once more the old enthusiasm
-prevailed. Within six months Napoleon had 200,000 men ready to meet the
-Russians and Prussians on the Elbe. Twice he smote the allies, and
-forced them to seek an armistice. Then the fortune of war abandoned him,
-and at Leipzig, in what the Germans call “the battle of the nations,” he
-was defeated and forced to retreat to France.
-
-By this time success had crowned Wellington’s efforts in Spain. He had
-made satisfactory soldiers of the Portuguese, and the Spaniards had
-greatly improved. While Napoleon was marching into Russia, Wellington
-had stormed Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz, and had won a great battle at
-Salamanca, where he “beat 40,000 men in forty minutes.” This battle was
-his masterpiece. “There was no mistake,” he said; “everything went as it
-ought, and there never was an army so beaten in so short a time.”
-
-Then Wellington took Madrid, which had been four years in the hands of
-the enemy; but as the French massed their forces against him, he had to
-retire towards the Portuguese border. In 1813 he attacked the French at
-Vittoria, routed them, cut off their retreat, and drove them back across
-the Pyrenees with the loss of every cannon and wagon which they
-possessed. While the allies were swarming into France, Wellington, with
-100,000 veteran troops, stood ready to fall upon her.
-
-The end now rapidly approached. Napoleon struggled heroically with the
-remnant of the army which had been defeated at Leipzig, but in vain.
-Time after time he checked the invaders; but numbers triumphed at last,
-and the allies entered Paris on March 31, 1814, where the fickle
-populace received them with shouts of joy.
-
-Napoleon was now sent to the little Italian island of Elba, where he
-played at being king for eight or nine months. All the time he was
-watching affairs in France very closely and was biding his time. In 1814
-ambassadors from nearly all the Powers assembled at Vienna to settle the
-affairs of Europe. There were constant wrangles, and at one time the
-tension was so acute that war seemed likely to break out again.
-Suddenly, on March 7, 1815, a messenger arrived with news that
-immediately ended their quarrels and, in the face of a new and alarming
-danger, brought them shoulder to shoulder. The Tsar said to Wellington,
-who was one of the commissioners, “It is for you to save Europe.” What
-had happened?
-
-Napoleon had landed in France, and was making a triumphant progress
-towards Paris. The Bourbon Government, which had been installed by the
-Powers, melted away like snow before the summer sun. Everywhere
-Napoleon’s old soldiers donned the cockade and flocked to his standards.
-Whole regiments deserted; the wonderful fascination which the emperor
-exercised upon his followers once more asserted itself. Marshal Ney, who
-had promised King Lewis to bring back the invader in an iron cage, fell
-a victim to the charm of his old chief as soon as he met him. Lewis and
-his friends fled the country, and Napoleon once more occupied the
-Tuileries. During the next hundred days he displayed all his old energy
-and daring. By the 13th of June he had nearly 200,000 men available for
-war.
-
-Meanwhile the Powers had not been idle. They bound themselves to raise a
-million armed men, and never to rest from their labours until Napoleon
-was finally crushed. In a few months an overwhelming force of allies
-would be marshalled. In the meantime, the only troops available were
-those of the British and Prussian armies, now in Belgium, and commanded
-by Wellington and Blücher respectively.
-
-Now let us pay a visit to the most renowned battlefield in all the
-world, the field on which the destinies of Europe were changed and the
-great Emperor of the French was hurled from a throne to a prison and a
-grave. We are in the village of Waterloo, eleven miles south of
-Brussels, the capital of Belgium. Leaving Waterloo, we traverse a road
-bordered on both sides by houses, and after having walked a couple of
-miles we arrive at the village of Mont St. Jean. Here two roads meet,
-both of which cross the battlefield.
-
-Now we push on beyond the cross-roads to an obelisk in memory of the
-Germans who fell in the battle. A quarter of a mile to the right rises
-the mound of the Belgian Lion. It is two hundred feet in height, and was
-thrown up on the spot where the Prince of Orange was wounded in the
-battle. Surmounting it is a lion made out of the metal of captured
-French cannon. We ascend the mound, and facing south find ourselves in
-the best position to survey the battlefield. Unfortunately, the levels
-of the ground have been much altered by the earth removed to form the
-mound. Still from our coign of vantage we may get a good general idea of
-the position occupied by both armies on June 18, 1815.
-
-We are now on the ridge of a long chain of low hills with gentle slopes.
-On this ridge Wellington extended his first line of troops. The ridge,
-as you will observe, is narrow, so that the second line was enabled to
-occupy a sheltered position on the sloping ground behind us. One mile
-distant, across a shallow valley, is another line of hills. These were
-occupied by the French. Now notice a farmhouse on the main road to our
-left. This is La Haye Sainte, which was occupied by German troops, and
-protected the allied centre. Follow the road across the battlefield, and
-you will come to the farm of La Belle Alliance. During the greater part
-of the battle Napoleon took up his station a little to the right of this
-house, where a French monument now stands. Were you to push on along
-this road for seven or eight miles you would come to Quatre Bras (“four
-arms”), from which place two roads lead to the river Sambre.
-
-Now look along the road to our right front and observe the chateau of
-Hougoumont, which was an old ruined place even in 1815. This building,
-which still bears traces of the fearful scenes that took place about it,
-was on the right of the allied line, and formed the key to the position.
-Hougoumont was strengthened by Wellington, and though continually
-assaulted was never captured. Had Napoleon once gained possession of it,
-the battle would probably have had quite a different ending. Now that we
-have surveyed the chief points of interest on the field, let us turn to
-the battle itself.
-
-By the beginning of June Napoleon had concentrated one hundred and
-twenty thousand men on the Sambre at Charleroi, ready to advance when he
-should arrive to take command. Wellington’s army was scattered in
-various places from Nivelles westward, while Blücher’s was extended from
-the same place eastward. Wellington’s plan was to unite his forces with
-those of Blücher at Quatre Bras, and block Napoleon’s advance. Napoleon,
-however, was determined to prevent the allied generals from uniting
-their forces. His plan was to fall upon them before they could
-concentrate, and defeat them piecemeal.
-
-When Blücher reached Ligny, with eighty thousand men, Napoleon met him,
-and a desperate battle ensued in which the Prussian general suffered
-terrible loss, but, still undefeated, retreated in good order on Wavre,
-so that he might join Wellington at Waterloo, according to a previous
-arrangement which he had made with Wellington. Napoleon thought that the
-Prussians were retreating on the Rhine, and detached thirty-three
-thousand men under Grouchy to hang on their rear. Grouchy missed the
-Prussians, and his troops took no part in the great battle.
-
-On the same day Ney, with twenty thousand men, appeared before Quatre
-Bras, where only ten thousand British and an equal force of Belgians had
-been able to assemble. The Belgians fled before the French cavalry, but
-the British infantry kept up a dogged resistance while corps after corps
-was hurried up. At the close of the day Ney saw that he was outnumbered,
-and withdrew, while Wellington retreated to the line of heights upon
-which we are now gazing.
-
-Napoleon now pushed on to measure swords with Wellington in person for
-the first time. On Sunday morning, the 18th of June, the two armies
-faced each other. As Napoleon looked across the valley and saw the
-British redcoats on the rising ground opposite, he cried, “I have them.”
-He had good reason to believe that he would win. His forces numbered
-between seventy and eighty thousand men, and he was superior both in
-guns and in cavalry to his foes. Wellington had about sixty-seven
-thousand men; but his British troops were mainly raw recruits, and the
-rest of his forces were very mixed, and included the Belgians who had
-already fled before the French cavalry.
-
-The preceding night had been wet and stormy, and when morning broke
-Napoleon considered the ground too heavy for cavalry. He therefore
-delayed the opening of the battle until between eleven and twelve in the
-forenoon. This delay was fatal. Time was most important to both
-commanders. Napoleon knew well that he must beat Wellington before
-Blücher could join him; Wellington, on the other hand, was determined to
-hold his ground to the last man, so as to give the Prussians time to
-come up in force and settle the issue of the day.
-
-The battle began with a fierce attack on Hougoumont; but it was held
-right manfully by the British Guards, and though the French won the
-gardens and orchards, they could not drive the defenders from the
-buildings. Then Napoleon sent his heavy columns against the British
-left, but they were utterly routed. His third effort was against the
-British centre, which he tried to break by heavy artillery fire and
-furious cavalry charges.
-
-The British formed square, and, though assailed for five hours, held
-fast. They seemed, said an onlooker, “rooted” to the earth. Every
-attempt to pierce them failed, until even the British privates saw the
-uselessness of the attempt, and cried, as Napoleon’s squadrons charged
-them, “Here come those fools again.” Every attempt to take the ridge was
-repulsed with terrible slaughter. At last, in the thick of the fighting,
-the cannon of the advancing Prussians were heard, and Napoleon made one
-last desperate effort to break the British line.
-
-La Haye Sainte was captured about six in the evening, and Napoleon’s
-cannon were now so near that Wellington’s centre was in dire danger.
-Blücher was rapidly drawing near, and already he was threatening the
-French right and rear. Like a desperate gambler, Napoleon now staked all
-on a charge of the Old Guard. A little after seven he gave the word, and
-six thousand of his veterans, led by Marshal Ney, were hurled at the
-long-tried British. As the French rushed up the slope, the British
-Guards, who had been lying down behind the top of the ridge, sprang to
-their feet and poured a volley into the enemy. Their columns wavered,
-and our soldiers charged with the bayonet, hurling the enemy down the
-hill in utter confusion. Soon after eight o’clock the Prussians made
-their appearance on the scene, and speedily Napoleon found himself
-assailed on his flank by forty thousand men.
-
-At this juncture, “on the ridge, near the Guards, his figure standing
-out amidst the smoke against the bright north-eastern sky, Wellington
-was seen to raise his hat with a noble gesture—the signal for the
-wasted line of heroes to sweep like a dark wave from their covered
-positions, and roll out their lines and columns over the plains. With a
-pealing cheer the whole line advanced just as the sun was sinking.” In
-vain the French Guards rallied, only to be swept away by the fierce
-British charges. When darkness fell, the whole French army was in
-flight. The Prussians went in hot pursuit, and before long the proud
-French army of the morning was almost annihilated. Wellington and
-Blücher had lost twenty-two thousand men. The French loss will never be
-known.
-
-The battle was decisive; the long struggle was at an end; and Napoleon’s
-star had set. He put spurs to his horse, and rode hard through the
-midsummer night to escape capture. Fearing death at the hands of the
-Prussians, he surrendered himself to the captain of the British
-man-of-war _Bellerophon_. The British Government banished him to the
-lonely isle of St. Helena, where he languished in captivity until his
-death in 1821.
-
-But what of the victor of Waterloo—
-
- “Foremost captain of his time,
- Rich in saving common sense,
- And, as the greatest only are,
- In his simplicity sublime.”
-
-He was no callous victor, regarding his men merely as pawns in the great
-game. When he learnt the death-roll of the battle he burst into tears.
-Scarcely one of those who had fought side by side with him in the
-Peninsula remained to share the joy of victory. To the end of his days
-he was an ardent advocate of peace. “Only those who have seen it,” he
-said, “can possibly know how terrible war is.” The nation’s gratitude
-flowed out to him as a river; the meanest intelligence could appreciate
-the overwhelming importance of the victory which he had won. Never did
-such vast issues rest on a single battle; never did Britain stand so
-high among the nations as after Waterloo. All possible honours were
-heaped upon him. He received the thanks of both Houses of Parliament and
-a vote of £200,000 wherewith to purchase the estate of Strathfieldsaye;
-while foreign nations vied with each other in awarding him gifts and
-titles.
-
-He was but forty-six years of age when the crowning victory of his life
-was accomplished, and for the next quarter of a century he was rightly
-regarded as one of the pillars of the State. In 1828 he became Prime
-Minister; but though wise, moderate, and inspired by a high sense of
-duty, he did not prove himself a great statesman. At one time he was
-actually the subject of the nation’s wrath; but as the years went by he
-recovered all his old popularity, and that without striving in the least
-to regain it.
-
-He died in his eighty-third year, and you already know how this “last
-great Englishman” was borne to his grave amidst sorrowing crowds. And
-here, side by side with Nelson, we leave him—the two great captains of
-the British race, who teach to all future times that the “path of duty”
-is “the way to glory.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher after the Battle of
- Waterloo.=
- (_From the fresco by Daniel Maclise, R.A., in the Houses of
- Parliament._)]
-
-[Illustration: =QUEEN VICTORIA IN HER CORONATION ROBES.=
- (_From the picture by Sir George Hayter in the Royal Collection._)]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XX.
- VICTORIA THE GOOD.
-
-
- “_Their thoughts shall be my thoughts, their aims my aim,_
- _Their free-lent loyalty my right divine;_
- _Mine will I make their triumphs, mine their fame,_
- _Their sorrows mine._”
-
-IT is five o’clock on a June morning in the year 1837. London is not yet
-awake, nevertheless four high officers of state are knocking lustily and
-ringing loudly at the outer gate of Kensington Palace. They have come
-straight from the deathbed of William the Fourth, and they have news of
-the highest importance for the young princess who resides within. But at
-this early hour of the day the whole palace is wrapped in slumber, and
-the knocking and ringing have to be repeated many times before the
-drowsy porter is awakened. You see him rubbing his eyes and reluctantly
-throwing open the gate. Now the little party, which includes the Primate
-and the Lord High Chamberlain, enters the courtyard, and another long
-wait follows. At length the distinguished visitors are admitted to a
-lower room of the palace, and there they seem to be quite forgotten.
-They ring the bell, and when it is answered the Lord High Chamberlain
-requests that the attendant of the Princess Victoria be sent to inform
-her Royal Highness that high officials of state desire an audience on
-business of the utmost importance.
-
-There is another long delay, and again the bell is rung, this time with
-pardonable impatience. The attendant of the princess is summoned, and
-she declares that her royal charge is in such a sweet sleep that she
-cannot venture to disturb her. “We are come on business of state to the
-Queen,” says the Lord High Chamberlain, “and even her sleep must give
-way to that.”
-
-A few minutes later the door opens again, and a young girl of eighteen,
-fresh as a newly-opened rosebud, enters the room. She has not waited to
-dress. Her hair falls loose upon her shoulders; she has hurriedly thrown
-a shawl round herself, and thrust her feet into slippers. There are
-tears in her eyes as she learns that her uncle the king is dead and that
-she is queen!
-
-At once she turns to the archbishop, and with simple, unaffected piety
-says, “Pray for me!” All kneel together, and the venerable prelate
-supplicates the Most High, who ruleth over the kingdoms of men, to give
-the young sovereign an understanding heart to judge so great a people.
-
-Thus Victoria, before she is out of her teens, takes up the arduous and
-exacting duties of her high office. Read the letters which she wrote in
-those early days to her relatives and statesmen, and you will marvel at
-the clear judgment, the strong will, and the sound common sense of the
-girl-queen. Her reign opens in times of national distress and political
-unrest, and below a certain social level there is no sentiment of
-loyalty to the Crown. But all this will suffer a wondrous change in the
-years that are to come. Prosperity hitherto undreamed of will bless the
-land, and year by year freedom will slowly broaden down from precedent
-to precedent; and through all the changes and chances of national life
-Victoria will play her part with a courage, steadfastness, and rectitude
-that will evoke universal approbation and passionate loyalty. The time
-will come when she will be the idol of her people, and the richest jewel
-in her crown will be a nation’s love.
-
- * * * * *
-
- SIXTY YEARS AFTER.
-
- “_And ever when mid-June’s musk roses blow_
- _Our race will celebrate Victoria’s name,_
- _And even England’s greatness gain a glow_
- _From her pure fame!_”
-
-You are in London on the twenty-second day of June in the year 1897, and
-again it is in festal array. The whole nation is making holiday to
-rejoice in the completion of sixty years of peace and prosperity under
-the beneficent sway of a dearly-loved queen. Ten years ago great public
-thanksgivings signalized her jubilee; now that she has occupied the
-throne longer than any of her predecessors, and has reigned for more
-years than any other monarch known to history, the nation’s delight and
-gratitude know no bounds.
-
-You are standing in a favoured position gazing on the front of St.
-Paul’s Cathedral. Afar off you hear the dull roar of cheering. The queen
-is making her progress through the capital of her vast Empire. She rides
-in state to-day amidst evidences of almost filial loyalty, and her eyes
-are wet with tears of love and gratitude as she perceives how dear she
-is to the hearts of her people. On the steps of the cathedral are the
-City Fathers, the Colonial Premiers, and a white-robed throng of
-bishops, priests, and choristers, the aged Archbishop of Canterbury at
-their head. The noise of cheering grows louder and louder, a troop of
-Household Cavalry clatters by, and you hear the loud cry, “THE QUEEN!
-THE QUEEN!” Every head is bared as the state carriage with its eight
-horses appears; the huzzas that go up from thousands of throats almost
-deafen you.
-
-And now the carriage halts, and the old archbishop offers simple and
-fervent thanks to Almighty God for the signal mercies vouchsafed through
-such long years to Victoria and her people. Then, as a climax, the whole
-concourse bursts into the strains of “God save the Queen.” Never has the
-National Anthem been so heartily sung, never before has it been so
-little of a demonstration and so much of a prayer. There is no
-lip-service here: Victoria’s throne is in the hearts of her people; she
-is theirs, and they are hers.
-
-Look at this little, old lady, whom all men, from duke to
-crossing-sweeper, are to-day hailing as their pride and joy. Look at
-her, and strive to realize the splendour of the great office which she
-has filled so long and so worthily. She is the sovereign lady of a
-dominion so wide in extent and so rich in resources that nothing like it
-has ever been seen before in the history of the world. Glance at the
-colonial procession which is even now wending its way through the
-streets, and you will marvel at the world-wide character of her sway.
-Here you see men of British race, dwellers in the most distant parts of
-the earth, all come from afar to grace their queen’s pageant, and all
-bearing themselves proudly in the eyes of their kinsfolk “at home.”
-Here, too, you see numerous foreign subjects of the queen, men of almost
-every variety of colour, creed, and language, equally proud to do her
-honour, equally ready to praise her beneficent sway.
-
-It is almost impossible for the aged monarch on this red-letter day of
-her life not to reflect on the wonderful changes which have transformed
-the world since that June morning sixty years ago when they waked her
-out of sleep and told her that she was queen. The vast Empire, for
-example, which has been so vividly brought before the minds of the
-British people to-day is very largely the creation of her reign. In
-extent it has nearly doubled itself since she came to the throne, and
-now covers almost one-fifth of the globe. In 1837 the colonial
-population was under 4,000,000. Now, excluding India, more than
-18,000,000 of colonists are subject to her. India under her sway has
-doubled its native population, and to-day one-fifth of all the people on
-earth acknowledge her as their sovereign.
-
-The railways which have brought tens of thousands of visitors rapidly
-and cheaply to town were only in their infancy when she rode through
-London to her coronation, the steamships which have carried her brave
-colonials across countless leagues of sea were unknown. The electric
-telegraph, which is even now flashing the news of her pageant through
-thousands of miles of wire and cable to every part of the civilized
-world, was then but a toy. The penny post, which to-night will convey
-tens of thousands of letters to every town in the land and to most parts
-of her wide Empire, did not exist. There were no omnibuses, no tramcars,
-no district railways, no “twopenny tubes,” no motor cars. To-night
-London will blaze with electric lights. What a contrast to the
-flickering oil lamps of her childhood!
-
-And what a vast improvement has taken place in the condition of her
-people! She reflects that there is still plenty of poverty and misery in
-her land, but not a tithe of that which existed when she came to the
-throne. Wages are far better, food is far cheaper, housing has greatly
-improved, and men are kings to what they were. The barbarous old
-criminal laws have been abolished; work-people are no longer the helots
-of their masters; education is universal, and as free as air and
-sunlight; and every householder has a voice in the government of his
-country. She casts her mind back over sixty years, and rejoices that all
-things have worked together for this great good, and that the result is
-a proud, self-respecting, orderly, and deeply-patriotic people.
-
-Truly in retrospect her reign appears one long, triumphal march; yet
-there have been reverses, checks, and disasters in plenty, though shame
-never. War has been waged in almost every quarter of the globe, and
-plentiful laurels have been won. Her thoughts revert for a moment to the
-great struggle in the Crimea, which took place forty-three years ago,
-and to the splendid British courage and endurance there displayed.
-“Alma,” “Balaclava,” “Inkerman,” “Sevastopol”—what heroic memories
-these names recall to her! And then she remembers the terrible period of
-anxiety which followed, when the Sepoys rose, and India almost fell from
-our grasp. “Delhi,” “Lucknow,” “Cawnpore”—what anguish and heroism
-these names import! As for the rest of her wars, she rejoices to know
-that they have been, for the most part, punitive expeditions against
-savage neighbours and revolting tribesmen. How fervently she prays that
-peace at home and abroad may ever be the lot of her people!
-
-The great day draws to a brilliant close, and from end to end of the
-Empire runs her gracious message of gratitude:—
-
-“_From my heart I thank my beloved people. May God bless them!_”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: =Saving the Colours: An Incident of the Battle of
- Inkermann.=
- (_From the picture by Robert Gibb, R.S.A. By permission of Mr.
- Bruce-Low._)]
-
-In the neighbourhood of the Sandbag Battery the British Guards were
-surrounded by a strong Russian force, through which they cut their way,
-with the colours carried high as a rallying point. The moment selected
-for representation is that when the Guards are first entering their own
-lines.
-
-[Illustration: =Queen Victoria at St. Paul’s.=
- (_An Incident of the Diamond Jubilee. From a photograph._)]
-
-[Illustration: =Jessie’s Dream.=
- (_From the picture by F. Goodall, R.A., in the Mappin Art Gallery. By
- permission of the Corporation of Sheffield._)]
-
-[Illustration: =_Edward VII., King of Great Britain and Ireland and of
-the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India._=]
-
-
-
-
- Chapter XXI.
- EDWARD THE PEACEMAKER.
-
-
-AND now let our pageant draw to a close with the figure of our present
-gracious and genial king. Long may he reign! He has laid his subjects
-under a deep debt of gratitude. Every inch a constitutional king, he has
-been by no means a mere figurehead of state, but a real and potent
-factor in the affairs of his land. His watchword has been Peace, and in
-its service he has won notable victories. It has been his great glory to
-bring the nations of Europe into closer friendship with this country
-than they have ever been before.
-
-Let us present Edward the Peacemaker in a characteristic scene. For two
-years seven months and nineteen days the British nation has been engaged
-in a desperate struggle with the Boers of the Transvaal Republic and
-Orange Free State, and the resources of the British Empire have been
-strained to the utmost. Then, one blessed May day, peace is signed at
-Pretoria, and with a great sigh of relief the British nation learns that
-the war is at an end.
-
-Three of the Boer generals, Botha, De la Key, and De Wet, come to
-England to meet the King. They have no knowledge of sovereigns and
-courts, and they have no experience to guide them in the presence of
-royalty. But their misgivings are speedily dispelled, for as they step
-on the deck of the royal yacht, King Edward comes forward to greet them
-with an ease and urbanity that is all his own. In simple, homely phrases
-he says that he is glad to meet them; he tells them that they have been
-brave enemies, and now he hopes they are to be good friends. And the
-Boer generals respond no less heartily. They reply that they hope so
-too; that they are happy to see him recovered from his illness; that
-their people had heard of it with great regret, and are glad to know
-that the Lord has given him back his health.
-
-Then they chat frankly and freely with him and the Queen—God bless
-her!—and thus he wins the hearts of these simple, brave men, who in the
-years to come shall be his loyal subjects, and shall add a new pillar of
-strength to the British Empire. As they leave the ship a friend asks,
-“And what are you going to tell our people about the King, Oom Koos?” “I
-shall tell them this: that I think that if we had sooner known the King,
-and the King us, many things might have been different.”
-
-Here is a kingly triumph indeed! We raise our hats as this royal lover
-of Peace passes by, and from our grateful hearts send up the prayer:
-
- “GOD SAVE THE KING!”
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where multiple
-spellings occur, majority use has been employed.
-
-Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer errors
-occur.
-
-Some illustrations were moved to facilitate page layout.
-
-Corrections to text: —“. . . Easter Sunday in the year 1491.” was
-corrected to 1471 to reflect the actual date of the Earl of Warwick’s
-death in battle.
-
-—“In the year 1788” was corrected to 1759 to reflect the year in which
-Wolfe sailed for Canada, arriving in Quebec in May that same year.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pageant of British History, by
-J. Edward Parrott
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-
-Project Gutenberg's The Pageant of British History, by J. Edward Parrott
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Pageant of British History
-
-Author: J. Edward Parrott
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2019 [EBook #60524]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PAGEANT OF BRITISH HISTORY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines, Cindy Beyer &amp; the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
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-</pre>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='bold'>* A Project Gutenberg eBook *</span></p>
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-
-<div class='lgl' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Title:</span> The Pageant of British History</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Date of first publication:</span> 1908</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Author:</span> Sir (James) Edward Parrott (1863-1921)</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Date first posted:</span> Sep. 11, 2018</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Date last updated:</span> Sep. 11, 2018</p>
-<p class='line0'>Faded Page eBook #20180916</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>This ebook was produced by: Al Haines, Cindy Beyer
-&amp; the online Project Gutenberg team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:350px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style='margin-top:2em;'>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';bold;' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0' style='font-weight:bold;'>“<span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>History is a pageant,</span></span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>and not a philosophy.</span>”</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0' style='font-weight:bold;'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;<span style='font-size:larger'><span class='sc'>Augustine Birrell.</span></span></p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illofront.jpg' alt='' id='ifront' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Henry the Eighth and Cardinal Wolsey.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the Guildhall Art Gallery, London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';bold;' -->
-<p class='line' style='margin-top:1em;font-size:2.5em;font-weight:bold;'>THE &nbsp;PAGEANT &nbsp;OF</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:2.5em;font-weight:bold;'>BRITISH &nbsp;HISTORY</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:.9em;font-weight:bold;'>DESCRIBED &nbsp;BY</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:.9em;font-weight:bold;'>J. &nbsp;EDWARD &nbsp;PARROTT, &nbsp;M.A., &nbsp;LL.D.,</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:.7em;font-weight:bold;'>AND &nbsp;DEPICTED &nbsp;BY</p>
-<p class='line' style='margin-bottom:.5em;font-size:.7em;font-weight:bold;'>THE &nbsp;FOLLOWING &nbsp;GREAT &nbsp;ARTISTS</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>J. M. W. Turner</span>, <span class='it'>G. F. Watts</span>, <span class='it'>Benjamin West</span>, <span class='it'>Lord Leighton</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>Sir John Gilbert</span>, <span class='it'>Daniel Maclise</span>, <span class='it'>C. W. Cope</span>, <span class='it'>John Opie</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>William Dyce</span>, <span class='it'>Sir L. Alma-Tadema</span>, <span class='it'>Sir John Millais</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>Paul Delaroche</span>, <span class='it'>W. Q. Orchardson</span>, <span class='it'>E. M. Ward</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>Stanhope Forbes</span>, <span class='it'>F. Goodall</span>, <span class='it'>Seymour Lucas</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>Ford Madox Brown</span>, <span class='it'>W. F. Yeames</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>Clarkson Stanfield</span>,</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='margin-bottom:-1.5em;font-weight:bold;'><span style='font-size:x-small'><span class='it'>etc.</span>, <span class='it'>etc.</span></span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/title.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:30px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:.9em;font-weight:bold;'><span class='gesp'>THOMAS NELSON AND SONS</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:.9em;font-weight:bold;'>London, &nbsp;Edinburgh, &nbsp;Dublin, &nbsp;and &nbsp;New &nbsp;York</p>
-<p class='line' style='margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;font-weight:bold;'>1908</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illov.jpg' alt='' id='iv' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.5em;font-weight:bold;font-style:italic;'><span class='gesp'>FOREWORD.</span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='it'>The Master of the Pageant spurs into the arena; he
-waves his baton, and the trumpets sound. In the
-distance you see a long procession begin to wind its
-way across the greensward, and as it draws nearer
-and nearer you recognize the form and fashion of
-men and women whose names are writ large in the
-annals of our land. Here they come—king and queen,
-statesman and priest, warrior and merchant, poet and
-man of law, shipman and craftsman, yeoman and
-peasant—a motley throng, all sorts and conditions of
-men and women, high and low, rich and poor, gentle
-and simple, noble and base, hero and craven; yet each
-in his or her several degree a maker of history. These
-are the “counterfeit presentments” of the men and women
-who through twice a thousand years have made us
-what we are, and our glorious land what it is.</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>As they troop by, let a humble chronicler—who
-prays that he may not be considered intrusive—recall
-the story of their heroisms, their trials, their sufferings,
-their glories, or, it may be, their failures, their
-treacheries, and their shames. Perchance ’twill be a
-twice-told tale, “familiar as household words” yet it
-is a recital that can never lack hearers while men love
-the land that bore them, and would fain find example
-and warning, inspiration and guidance, from the
-story of the past. The chronicler pretends to no
-philosophy save this—that since we have, under Providence,
-been created a “noble and puissant nation” and
-entrusted with a heritage without peer in the history
-of the world, we should be false to our sires, false to
-ourselves, and false to our destiny were we, by selfishness,
-sloth, or ignorance, to neglect to be great through
-“craven fears of being great.” And since the best
-and only true foundation of patriotism is knowledge,
-he would fain hope that these sketches may stimulate
-in some who are growing towards manhood and womanhood
-a humble pride in the greatness of their land
-and a fervent desire so to play their part that Britain
-may be what she was meant to be—the Vicegerent of
-the Almighty in the uplifting and ennoblement of the
-world. In this belief he echoes the prayer of the
-poet:</span>—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Land of Hope and Glory, Mother of the Free,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>How shall we extol thee, who are born of thee?</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Wider still, and wider, shall thy bounds be set;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>God, who made thee mighty, make thee mightier yet.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illovi.jpg' alt='' id='ivi' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 22.5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2.5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col4 tdStyle0' colspan='4'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='bold'><span class='it'><span class='gesp'>CONTENTS.</span></span></span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col4 tdStyle0' colspan='4'>——••——</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>I.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Britain before the Roman Conquest.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Phœnicians</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Ancient Britons</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_12'>12</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Druids</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_17'>17</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Coming of Cæsar</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>II.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Shadow of Rome.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Caractacus</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_27'>27</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>A Warrior Queen</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Iron Hand</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>III.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Coming of the English.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Hengist and Horsa</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_46'>46</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Ethelbert and Bertha</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_50'>50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Singer of the First English Song</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_55'>55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>IV.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Viking Invasions.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Coming of the Sea-Kings</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_57'>57</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Alfred the Great</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_60'>60</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>King Canute</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_69'>69</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>V.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Coming of the Normans.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Harold of England and William of Normandy</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_74'>74</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Eve of the Invasion</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Battle of Hastings</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Hereward the Wake</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_91'>91</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>VI.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>England under the Normans.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>William the Red</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_96'>96</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Matilda, “Lady” of England</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Great Archbishop</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_106'>106</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Strongbow</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_113'>113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Richard of the Lion Heart</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_118'>118</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>King John and Magna Charta</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_127'>127</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>VII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Three Edwards.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The First Prince of Wales</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_135'>135</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>William Wallace</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Robert the Bruce</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Merciful Queen</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_157'>157</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Black Prince</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_163'>163</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>VIII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>On French Fields.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>King Harry the Fifth</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_169'>169</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Joan, the Maid</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_176'>176</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>IX.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Wars of the Roses.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The King-Maker</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_184'>184</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Little Princes in the Tower</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_191'>191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>X.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Tudor Times.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>John and Sebastian Cabot</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_195'>195</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>King and Cardinal</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_200'>200</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The New Worship</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_207'>207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XI.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>A Tragic Story.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Mary Queen of Scots</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_210'>210</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>In the Spacious Days.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Spanish Armada</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_224'>224</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Sir Walter Raleigh</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_232'>232</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XIII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>The Great Rebellion.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Charles the First</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_242'>242</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Oliver Cromwell</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_252'>252</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Robert Blake</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_258'>258</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XIV.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>From the Restoration to the Revolution.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Restoration of Charles the Second</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_268'>268</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>James, Duke of Monmouth</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_278'>278</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XV.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>After the Revolution.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>William the Third</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_292'>292</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>The Great Duke of Marlborough</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_297'>297</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XVI.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Bonnie Prince Charlie.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_310'>310</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XVII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Makers of Empire.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>Robert Clive, the Daring in War</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_323'>323</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle3'><span class='it'>James Wolfe, Conqueror of Canada</span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XVIII.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Nelson of the Nile.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_347'>347</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XIX.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Wellington.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_363'>363</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XX.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Victoria the Good.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_376'>376</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>XXI.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c2 tab1c2-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Edward the Peacemaker.</span></span></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle4'><a href='#Page_383'>383</a></td></tr>
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-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 33.5em;'/>
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-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle0'><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='bold'><span class='gesp'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</span></span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle0'>———••———</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle0'>IN COLOUR.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#ifront'>Henry the Eighth and Cardinal Wolsey,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i10'>Hunters and Traders,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i26'>Caractacus in Rome,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i44'>Sir Tristram at the Court of Arthur,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i54'>Augustine preaching to Ethelbert and Bertha,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i64'>Alfred in the Camp of the Danes,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i88'>Coronation of William the Conqueror,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i107'>Death of Becket,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i122'>Crusaders on the March,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i126'>King Richard and the Young Archer,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i132'>Hubert and Arthur,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i146'>The Trial of Wallace,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i160'>Edward the Third at the Siege of Calais,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i166'>The Black Prince being made a Knight of the Garter,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i192'>The Little Princes in the Tower,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i198'>The Departure of John and Sebastian Cabot on their First Voyage of Discovery, 1497,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i202'>Cardinal Wolsey on his Way to Westminster Hall,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i211'>The Murder of Rizzio,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i225'>The Armada in Sight,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i243'>Charles the First leaving Westminster Hall after his Trial,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i256'>Cromwell dictating Dispatches to Milton,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i276'>The Fall of Clarendon,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i282'>The Last Sleep of Argyll,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i294'>The Prince of Orange landing at Torbay,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i302'>The British Assault on the Village of Blenheim,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i320'>A Royal Fugitive,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i346'>The Battle of Trafalgar, and the Victory of Lord Nelson over the French and Spanish Fleets, October 21, 1805,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i356'>The Death of Nelson,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i362'>Napoleon on Board the <span class='it'>Bellerophon</span>,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i368'>The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher after the Battle of Waterloo,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i377'>Saving the Colours: An Incident of the Battle of Inkermann,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i380'>Jessie’s Dream,</a></td></tr>
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-<hr class='tbk100'/>
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-<table id='tab3' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 33.5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle0'>IN BLACK AND WHITE.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i21'>The First Invasion of Britain by Julius Cæsar,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i32'>The Invasion of the Emperor Claudius,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i38'>The Emperor Hadrian visiting a Pottery in Britain,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i51'>Columba preaching,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i70'>A Great Viking,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i82'>The Death of Harold,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i94'>Hereward yielding to William,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i119'>“God Wills It!”</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i138'>The First Prince of Wales,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i154'>The Battle of Bannockburn,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i172'>The Morning of Agincourt,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i177'>The Coronation of Charles the Seventh at Rheims,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i180'>Joan of Arc storming the “Bulwark” (Orleans),</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i188'>Death of Warwick,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i194a'>Richard the Third at the Battle of Bosworth,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i204'>Trial of Queen Catherine,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i206'>Henry the Eighth,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i214'>At Sea. “Farewell, France!”</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i218'>Escape of Mary Queen of Scots from Loch Leven Castle,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i230'>Queen Elizabeth at Tilbury Fort,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i236'>The Boyhood of Sir Walter Raleigh,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i246'>Cromwell at Marston Moor,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i269'>Jane Lane helping Prince Charles to escape,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i272'>Rescued from the Plague, London, 1665,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i290'>The Arrest of Alice Lisle,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i311'>Bonnie Prince Charlie,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i318'>After Culloden: Royalist Soldiers searching for Jacobite Fugitives,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i328'>Clive at Bay,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i344'>Death of Wolfe,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i374'>Queen Victoria in her Coronation Robes,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i378'>Queen Victoria at St. Paul’s,</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle3'><a href='#i383'>Edward the Seventh,</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo9.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0002' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter I.<br/> BRITAIN BEFORE THE ROMAN CONQUEST.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE PHŒNICIANS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The bond of commerce was designed</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>To associate all the branches of mankind;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And if a boundless plenty be the robe,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Trade is the golden girdle of the globe.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/t.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='T'/>HE procession advances. Who, you ask, are these
-swarthy, Jewish-looking men leading the way? They
-are Phœnicians, the first visitors from civilized shores
-to our island. These restless wanderers are keen traders,
-who have sped their barks from distant Tyre or Carthage
-in quest of merchandise. One of them, urging his ship
-northward towards this fabled happy land of the western
-ocean, has sighted through the clearing mists the distant
-line of an unknown shore. He has landed and come into
-touch with the natives. Spreading out his tempting treasures
-of purple cloth, glittering trinkets, and gleaming glass
-to the astonished gaze of the Britons, he has begun to
-barter his wares for the native products of the isle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His keen eyes soon discover that the Britons possess
-something far more precious than the furs which they
-proffer. Tin, the most precious metal of the ancient world,
-abounds here. The Phœnician’s eyes gleam as he makes
-the discovery; visions of untold wealth flash before him.
-Tin to him is the most desirable of all metals. In due
-proportion it will transform soft, yielding copper into
-bronze, which makes the best weapons of the age. The
-art of tempering iron is still unknown, and swords and
-spear-heads of bronze still decide the battles of the ancient
-world. Alike in peace or war, tin is sought and prized as
-gold is to-day. The statues of the temples, the urns that
-hold the ashes of the dead, the ornaments with which
-men and women delight to adorn themselves, owe their
-beauty and value to tin. All this the Phœnician knows
-full well; he has discovered a Klondyke which will make
-him rich beyond the dreams of avarice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again and again he visits this land of Britain, and every
-voyage he grows richer and richer. He takes infinite precautions
-lest his secret treasure-house should be discovered.
-He comes and goes mysteriously. Other traders, greedy
-for similar gains, follow in his wake and closely beset him;
-he even runs his ship on a foaming reef, and escapes by
-swimming, rather than betray the source of his wealth.
-But all in vain; his secret is discovered, and other barks
-in quick succession steer for the Tin Islands. An important
-trade springs up between Britain and Southern Europe.
-Thus, by means of those mineral treasures which have
-made Britain what she is, our land becomes known to the
-civilized world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some three hundred years before Christ, an explorer
-from Marseilles pays the island a visit, and on his return
-writes a brief account of what he has seen. He tells us
-of the Kentish farms, with their granaries piled high with
-golden grain; and he describes the mead of honey and wheat
-which the islanders drink. More than two long centuries
-pass away before another explorer arrives to lift the veil
-still further. He pushes into the interior and makes
-acquaintance with the rustic Britons, rough and uncouth,
-the hunters and graziers of the island. He visits the mines
-of Cornwall, and tells us that the tin is found in earthy
-veins in the rocks; that it is extracted, ground down,
-smelted and purified, and exported in knuckle-shaped slabs.
-Packed into wagons, it is carried during ebb-tide to a
-neighbouring island, which may be St. Michael’s Mount
-or the Isle of Wight, and there sold and shipped to Gaul,
-whence it is carried overland on the backs of pack-horses to
-Marseilles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pass on, ye Phœnicians! We salute you as the fathers
-of that vast British commerce which has built up the
-mighty Empire in which we rejoice to-day. Our busy
-hives of industry with their great factories and roaring
-looms; our myriad ships that carry, over every sea to every
-land, the woven fabrics of our workshops, the coal of our
-mines, and the iron and steel of our furnaces and forges,
-all owe their beginnings to you who first set ajar for us the
-golden gates of trade.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo10.jpg' alt='' id='i10' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Hunters and Traders.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by Lord Leighton, P.R.A., in the Royal Exchange, London.</span><br/> <span class='it'>By permission of Mr. Matthews.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='12' id='Page_12'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo12.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0003' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE ANCIENT BRITONS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Where the maned bison and the wolf did roam,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The ancient Briton reared his wattled home;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Paddled his coracle across the mere;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>In the dim forest chased the antlered deer;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Pastured his herds within the open glade;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Played with his ‘young barbarians’ in the shade;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And when the new moon o’er the high hills broke,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Worshipped his heathen gods beneath the sacred oak.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here come your first Britons, tall, blue-eyed, fair-haired,
-long of limb, and ruddy of countenance. Some, from the
-dense forest interior, are clad in the skins of the bears and
-other wild animals which they have slain; others wear
-garments of the rough cloth which they have woven on
-their own rude looms, or have obtained by barter from
-traders of distant and more civilized lands. None of them
-are mere yelling savages, bedaubed with blue war-paint;
-they have long passed that stage. They are all warriors
-born and bred, fierce in fight but sociable and friendly in
-peace. They live in tribes under their “kings;” they
-graze their cattle, till the land, and search the gravels of
-the rivers for tin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us visit a British “town” of Kent, a century or so
-before the coming of the Romans, and learn something of
-the old British mode of life. We plunge into the dark
-shades of the forest, and follow a narrow track that winds
-hither and thither through the dense undergrowth. We
-are armed, for in the thickets and in the caves of the rocky
-hillocks lurk the gray wolf, the fierce boar, the black bear,
-and the wild cat. Now and then a startled deer gazes at
-us for a moment, and bounds away into safety. In the
-stream which we ford herons are fishing and beavers are
-building. Overhead the hawks are sailing by, and from a
-neighbouring marsh comes the boom of a bittern.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On we go, and at length reach a great cleared space.
-The trees have been felled, and some of the land is under
-tillage. Horses, sheep, oxen, and swine are quietly feeding,
-and here and there are strips of grain and barley. Half
-a mile away is the town. All round it is a moat, with
-an earthen wall topped by a stockade of oak logs. As we
-approach the narrow entrance, we see the pointed roofs of
-many huts, from which thin lines of blue smoke are curling
-up into the summer air.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We enter the town by a zigzag road, and pass the
-homesteads, square or round in shape, and built of unhewn
-or roughly hewn trees placed on end, with roofs of interlaced
-boughs thatched with rushes or covered with turf.
-Each homestead consists of one room, large enough to
-contain the whole family. The floor is of earth, or perhaps
-covered with thin slates. In the middle of it is the family
-fire, which continues to burn night and day all the year
-round; when it dies out, the home is deserted. The
-smoke escapes by a hole in the roof. Round the fire, along
-the sides of the room, is a bed made of rushes and covered
-with hides or coarse rugs. On this the members of the
-family sit at meals, and sleep at night with their feet towards
-the fire. The rushes and green grass which are placed
-between the family fire and the family bed serve as a table,
-and on this at meal times are placed large platters containing
-oatmeal cakes, meat, and broth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In front of the entrance to one of the homesteads a blue-eyed,
-fair-haired woman, in a tunic of dark-blue cloth, sits
-grinding corn with a quern or handmill. Little boys, clad
-in strips of bear-skin, engage in a wrestling match hard by.
-Sturdy little lads they are, for their rearing has been of
-a Spartan character; they were plunged into the water
-of the stream at birth, and they received their first taste
-of food on the point of their father’s sword. Yonder old
-woman is boiling water by making pebbles red-hot in the
-fire and dropping them into an earthen water-pot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Passing on, we reach a long, low dwelling, which by
-its size indicates the superior condition of its owner. It is,
-indeed, the home of the chieftain of the tribe. Big mastiffs
-and wolf-hounds growl over their bones at the door.
-Within, the walls are covered with skins. Round shields
-of hide with shining metal bosses and rims of iron, spears
-with bronze or iron heads, and bows with quivers of reed
-arrows tipped with flint adorn the walls. One sword in
-particular holds the place of honour as a rare prize; it is
-of iron, with a sheath of bronze studded with red coral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The chieftain comes forward to welcome us—a tall,
-well-made man, blue of eye, with long, fair hair and a
-tawny moustache of which he is vastly proud. Over his
-flame-red blouse, which is belted at the waist, is a twisted
-<span class='it'>torque</span> of gold, cunningly fashioned and adorned with
-beautiful tracery; across his blouse is thrown a tartan plaid
-fastened at the shoulder by a brooch of polished boar tusk.
-His trousers fit closely to the ankles, and are so characteristic
-an article of his attire that he is known as “wearer of
-breeches” in distant Rome. Where his skin is bare, we
-notice that it is painted with patterns of blue. He greets
-us heartily, and a slave at his direction hands us a great
-silver-rimmed horn filled with mead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His wife shares in the welcome. She is a robust, healthy
-matron, fit mother of her stalwart sons, who she prays may
-grow up as heroes, and do ere long some doughty deed
-which shall entitle them to the heroic names which they
-have yet to possess. When the day’s work is done, she will
-gather them about her knees and recite the wild legends of
-their sires, whose mighty feats of war still inspire young
-Britons to the fray. She wears a tunic with a scarf of
-red-striped plaid fastened by a pin of bronze. A string
-of dusky pearls hangs about her neck, and spiral rings of
-silver adorn her fingers. The ivory bracelets and the amber
-beads which she proudly wears have been brought from
-afar by the traders who visit the town from time to time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wife is mistress of the home. She has the management
-not only of all household affairs, but, as she is
-the wife of a warrior, the care and direction of the whole
-concerns of the family both indoors and out. She and her
-sisters spin, knit, weave, dye, sow, cook, grind corn, and
-milk the cows—indeed do most of the hard work that is
-done. Her husband considers field-labour and farm-work
-entirely beneath his dignity. War and hunting are his
-work, and right well does he excel in both. Probably safely
-housed in a hut hard by is his precious scythe-wheeled
-chariot, in which he goes forth to war when the horn is
-sounded, the shield is struck, and the <span class='it'>cran-tara</span>—the “fiery
-cross”—is sent through the tribe as a call to arms. He
-and his fellow-warriors spend much time in their warlike
-exercises; the slaves, the weaklings, and the old men tend
-the flocks and herds and conduct the tillage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us continue our tour of the town. Here is a man
-cleverly weaving baskets of wicker-work; yonder is a
-fisherman returning from the river, his broad back bearing
-a coracle, such as you may see on the Dee at Llangollen
-or on the rivers of South Wales to-day. Not far away
-is the metal-worker’s hut, where the craftsman is busy
-mixing his bronze, and moulding it into axes, lance-heads,
-and sword-blades. Another worker is busy chipping flints
-brought from the quarry in yonder chalk hills. The potter
-who labours close at hand kneads out his yellow clay and
-fashions his pots by hand, ornamenting them by pressing
-a notched stick or braid against the wet clay. Such is a
-British town in the most civilized part of the land a century
-or so before the coming of the Romans.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo16.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0004' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='17' id='Page_17'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo17.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0005' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'> </h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Room for the Druids! Their solemn
-progress, their patriarchal beards, their
-white robes of office, and the chaplets of
-oak leaves on their brows proclaim them
-at once. Priests, judges, magicians, and instructors of youth,
-they rule the Britons with a rod of iron. Their altars and
-idols are set deep in the gloomy shades of dense forests
-amidst the gnarled and twisted stems of aged oaks. The
-secrets of their cruel creed are close locked in their bosoms,
-and over all their words and works they cast a dread
-mystery that chills the heart of the boldest Briton in the
-land. Their word is law, their curse is death. Their
-richest treasures go unguarded save for the awe which
-they inspire. Deep in their forest shades they offer
-their mysterious sacrifices; sometimes human beings, imprisoned
-in huge wicker-work images, are burnt to death
-to appease the angry gods. The Druids claim to hold
-sway even over the spirits of the departed, and the Briton
-trembles as he hears the voices of tormented souls wailing
-in the night wind. Every shadow is a terror; every flying
-cloud is an omen of good or ill; every spring, river, and
-fountain has its guardian deity. Fire is the element which
-the Druids hold in the highest reverence; the sacred flame
-on their altars never dies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four times a year solemn festivals are held. On Midsummer
-Eve, New Year’s Day, May Day, and Hallowe’en
-the great Beltane fires are lighted, and Britons from near
-and far assemble for worship. The mistletoe growing on
-an oak is held sacred in the highest degree, and on the sixth
-day of the moon a feast is prepared beneath the hallowed
-branches. White bulls are dragged to the tree, and their
-broad foreheads are bound to its stem, their loud bellowings
-mingling with the strain of the wild anthem which the worshippers
-raise. When the beasts have been slaughtered as
-sacrifices, the chief Druid, clad in his flowing white robes,
-his golden collar and bracelets, ascends the oak, treading
-on the backs and broad shoulders of blindfolded slaves.
-With a golden pruning-knife he severs the mistletoe, and
-beneath him attendant Druids receive it on a white linen
-cloth. It is then distributed to the awed and expectant
-multitude, who carry home and carefully preserve a sprig
-of the all-healing plant. The Christmas mistletoe beneath
-which youths and maidens now make merry at the most
-sacred season of the Christian year annually recalls this
-heathenish rite.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Much of the Druids’ lore is imposture, but they have
-wrested from Nature some of her secrets. They know the
-stars in their courses; they are skilled in the lore of plants
-and the healing properties of herbs and simples. They
-practise the arts of public speaking and poesy. Their bards
-sing the songs of heroes, and inflame warriors with the lust
-of battle. But over all broods the cruel shadow of death,
-and men tremble as they pray.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dread and mighty as these Druids are, the day of their
-doom is coming. Even now the Roman galleys are on
-the sea, and their prows are rising and falling as they
-furrow the heaving waters towards the white cliffs of
-Albion. Centuries will elapse before the gospel of love
-and mercy sweeps away the blood-stained rites of the
-Druids’ creed. The gods of Rome will destroy the deities
-of the isle. Jupiter and Mars will dethrone them; and
-in their train, how or when we know not, the message of
-Christianity will be whispered, until at length the daystar
-rises, never to set, on the forests of Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gone are the Druids, but their name still survives in
-the mountains and valleys of Wales, where the ancient
-Britons found their refuge in a later age. Our modern
-Druids love letters and music, and the other beautiful
-arts which touch and kindle souls. Theirs it is to
-encourage men and women to build the lofty rhyme, to
-weave the golden strands of melody, and to limn the loveliness
-of earth and sea and sky. Thus transformed, the
-Druid is a prophet of sweetness and light, not an enslaver
-of souls.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo19.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0006' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo20.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0007' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE COMING OF CÆSAR.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The foremost man of all the world.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>A king amongst men now draws near. As he strides
-by, a proud and majestic figure, you know that you are in
-the presence of one of the world’s greatest men. He bears
-himself like a conqueror, yet he is far more than a mere
-victorious general. Scholar, statesman, writer, orator, and
-architect, he is the “noblest Roman of them all.” Look
-at his stern, powerful face, his eagle-like nose, his thin,
-firm-set lips, his lofty brow, and his massive head crowned
-with a wreath of laurel. “<span class='it'>Cæsar!</span>” you cry, and it is none
-other than he.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He has subdued Gaul, and now he looks across the
-narrow strait towards the white, gleaming cliffs of Dover.
-A new arena opens before him, a land untrodden by Roman
-feet, an island of fabled wealth of pearl and tin, of waving
-cornfields and rich pastures, peopled by sturdy warriors
-worthy to cross swords even with him. He remembers
-the fiery charge of the British on many a Gaulish battlefield,
-and his wrath rekindles as he thinks of the havoc
-they have wrought amongst his legions, and of the welcome
-and shelter they have afforded his flying foes in their unconquered
-island only a few leagues away. Right well do
-they deserve to feel the weight of the Roman hand. He
-has received invitations, too. The tribes on yonder coveted
-island are ever at war with each other; ambitious chiefs are
-ever seeking to subdue their weaker neighbours. Refugees
-have fled to him beseeching his assistance against their
-enemies. Ambition, revenge, and the prospect of easy
-victory over a disunited foe, all urge him on to the new
-enterprise now shaping itself in his busy brain. “The die
-is cast.” He will invade and conquer Britain, and add
-another laurel to his wreath of fame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He consults the chief merchants of the Gallic coast, and
-endeavours to learn the military strength, the resources, the
-landing-places of the island; but they are dumb, and only
-find their tongues when they secretly and hurriedly send off
-messengers to warn the islanders of the threatened invasion.
-Envoys from Britain speedily arrive, eager to appease the
-wrath of great Cæsar by humbly offering to submit. They
-are too late. “The die is cast.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A Roman galley pushes out to survey the British coast
-and to fix upon a suitable landing-place. Meanwhile Cæsar
-masses his legions and hies him to <span class='it'>Portus Itius</span>, where his
-transports lie. The return of the scout is the signal for
-embarkation, and on the morning of August 26, in the
-year 55 <span style='font-size:smaller'>B.C.</span>, anchors are weighed and the galleys stream
-out of the harbour. By ten o’clock they are under the
-cliffs of the British shore, and then they perceive that no
-easy victory awaits them. Heavy fighting must be done
-ere the legions form up on the British shore. The cliffs
-are black with warriors, chariots, and horsemen ready to
-oppose their landing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a favouring breeze and the tide in his favour,
-Cæsar skirts the shore eastward, until a shelving strand
-somewhere near Romney Marsh promises him convenient
-landing. As his galleys move eastward, the British on
-the cliffs move eastward too. There is a long pause; the
-transports containing the cavalry are still miles away. They
-have not appeared at three in the afternoon; the day is
-wearing on, and Cæsar determines to attempt a landing
-without them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With difficulty his ships approach the shallow shore,
-only to find the full force of the island-army, with horsemen
-and chariots, drawn up in battle-array to receive
-him. The British horsemen spur their steeds into the
-waves; and many a half-naked footman, with sharp javelin,
-heavy club, or rough-hewn war-hatchet, presses on towards
-the galleys. For a few minutes the Roman soldiers
-are dismayed and dare not leap from their ships. Then
-Cæsar orders up his warships and stations them on the
-flank of the enemy. Slings and catapults open fire,
-and the Britons, assailed as they have never been assailed
-before, draw back in confusion. Still the Romans hesitate,
-but the situation is saved by the standard-bearer of the
-famous Tenth Legion. “Leap, fellow-soldiers,” he cries,
-“unless you wish to betray your Eagle to the enemy.
-I at least will do my duty to the Republic and to my
-general.” Roused by his example, the Romans leap from
-their ships, and immediately a fierce fight rages in the
-water.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The waves are red with blood; mailed Roman and
-naked Briton hack and hew at each other in confused
-combat; and slowly but surely the invaders gain the
-beach. There they form into ranks, shoulder to shoulder,
-and against that solid wall of disciplined valour nothing can
-stand. The scythe-wheeled chariots thunder towards the
-Roman array, the evening sun glinting from their outstretched
-blades; but the fiery horses are impaled on the
-iron points of the Roman spears. Step by step the Britons
-are forced from the strand; fainter and fainter sound the
-voices of the Druids singing their frenzied war-chants; and
-ere darkness has settled down the islanders have retreated,
-and the Roman victors remain on the beach which they
-have so hardly won.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next day come chiefs with offers of submission; but
-four days later, when Cæsar’s cavalry transports are nearing
-the coast, a great storm arises. The anchored galleys
-are wrecked; the newcomers are driven back to Gaul.
-Cæsar is in perilous plight. He has no provisions for
-his soldiers, no materials with which to repair his shattered
-ships. The autumn storms have begun, and he is on a
-treacherous coast, harassed by a fierce, unrelenting foe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These disasters give new hope to the Britons. They
-rapidly muster their men, and form an ambush in an
-uncut field of grain not far from the Roman camp.
-When the Seventh Legion comes out to reap the corn
-it is suddenly beset on all sides by a host of horsemen
-and charioteers. The cloud of dust raised by the chariot
-wheels betrays the fight to the sentinels of the camp.
-Cæsar hurries to the spot, and just manages to save the
-reapers from utter destruction and convey them back to his
-stronghold. The Britons follow, and make the grievous
-mistake of attacking the Romans in their trenches. Beaten
-back time after time, they again retreat to their fastnesses
-in the woods, and once more offer submission.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cæsar is quite ready for peace. His troops are weary,
-for they have been seventeen or eighteen days on the island,
-and the struggle has never ceased. His twelve thousand
-men are all too few to overcome the obstinate Britons.
-He does not wait even to receive the promised hostages,
-but, taking advantage of the first fair wind that blows, he
-returns to Gaul, baffled and beaten, without a single token
-of conquest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next year he comes again. The warm spring days
-that bring the swallows bring the Roman galleys once
-more. This time he does not despise his enemy. Twenty-five
-thousand foot and two thousand horse, embarked on
-eight hundred ships, speed towards the threatened shore.
-He lands without striking a blow, and stray prisoners inform
-him that his advance is to be challenged at a ford on the
-Stour twelve miles away. He is determined not to lose
-an hour. Through the night his legions tramp over the
-unknown country, and in the cold gray of the early dawn
-they find themselves on the bank of a reedy river, with
-the foe drawn up on the opposite side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The charge is sounded, and the Roman cavalry dash
-into the river with the utmost impetuosity. They break
-through and through the ranks of the British infantry,
-their bronze swords being no match for the tempered
-iron of the Roman brands and javelins. Again the
-Britons give way, and betake themselves to their woodland
-fortresses barricaded with the trunks of felled trees. Here
-Cassivellaunus, behind his stockade, holds out stoutly. But
-his fortifications are carried at last, and the four “kings” of
-Kent, who have failed in an attack on the Roman camp,
-come once more in humble guise to offer their submission.
-Cæsar is again ready for peace. Forest fighting is too
-perilous for his taste. Amidst the mazes of the woodland
-the Roman formations are broken up, and in hand-to-hand
-combats the Britons are the equals of his best and most
-highly-trained soldiers. So he yields to the inevitable. He
-receives hostages and empty promises of annual tribute.
-Again he departs, leaving nothing to mark his so-called
-conquest but the earthworks of his deserted camps.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more he has failed. He may not describe his
-campaign as he does a later victory—“I came, I saw, I
-conquered.” He is fain to confess that his usual good fortune
-has deserted the “eagles” in Britain. A few hostages,
-a girdle of British pearls for Venus, and a lordly triumph
-in Rome—these are the only fruits which Cæsar reaps from
-his toils and perils on this side of the Channel. He vanishes
-from the pageant to win plentiful laurels on other fields.
-He has failed in Britain, but elsewhere he becomes unchallenged
-master of the Roman world. Ten years later, having
-attained the very summit of his ambition, he falls beneath
-the daggers of his erstwhile friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cæsar vanishes, and with his departure twilight once
-more settles down on the land. For nearly a hundred years
-no Roman soldier sets foot on the island. Nevertheless,
-Britain is nearer to the masterful city on the Tiber than
-she has been before. Roman gossips talk of the island in
-their streets. Adventurous Romans and equally adventurous
-Britons exchange visits. Trade increases between the far-off
-island and the heart of the world. Roman huntsmen
-prize their British hounds, and British slaves are fashionable
-in the patrician homes of Rome. Britain moves onward in
-the march of civilization, and ere the century of peace comes
-to an end she is a real prize of conquest—a laurel worthy
-of the imperial brow itself.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo21.jpg' alt='' id='i21' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE FIRST INVASION OF BRITAIN BY JULIUS CÆSAR.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the cartoon by Edward Armitage, R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo27.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0008' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter II.<br/> THE SHADOW OF ROME.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>CARACTACUS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“<span class='it'>What though the field be lost?</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>All is not lost.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/t.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='T'/>HE real conqueror of Britain now approaches. We
-know that British “kings” in distress more than
-once appealed to Augustus, and that he seriously
-thought of invading the island. The real conqueror,
-however, was the Emperor Claudius, who in 43 <span style='font-size:smaller'>A.D.</span>
-sent an army under a trusted leader. On the road to
-Britain the troops mutinied. Where Cæsar had failed, how
-could they hope to succeed? Besides, the Britons were now
-united under Caractacus, a valiant and skilful warrior. The
-mutiny, however, was crushed, and again the Romans
-landed without opposition. They pushed across the
-Medway to the Thames, which was forded, and thence to
-the capital of Caractacus, deep in the Essex woods. The
-Roman legions stormed the British stronghold, and, flushed
-with victory, the Emperor Claudius proudly dubbed himself
-<span class='it'>Britannicus</span>. But the work of conquest had only begun.
-Britain was far from subdued, and probably she would never
-have been the prey of the forty thousand or fifty thousand
-Romans who accomplished the task had the Britons fully
-understood that “union is strength.” Their divisions were
-worth many legions to the Romans, who met and conquered
-various bands of islanders, and never met a united army.
-One Roman general is said to have fought three-and-thirty
-battles south of the Thames, and to have captured more
-than twenty stockaded towns. The gallant Caractacus could
-make no headway against his foes, and leaving a brother
-dead among the Essex swamps, he sought refuge in the
-trackless mountains of South Wales.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here Caractacus rallied the broken tribes for a last stand.
-He chose his ground with great skill in the centre of steep
-and difficult hills, and raised ramparts of massive stones
-where an ascent was possible, while between his army and
-the road by which the Romans must approach there flowed
-a river deep and wide. As the terrible Romans drew near
-Caractacus addressed his men, bidding them remember how
-their sires had driven back great Cæsar himself, and encouraging
-them to strike for home and freedom. The
-Britons, however, were again conquered. Roman discipline,
-Roman armour, and Roman swords were too much
-for them. Caractacus escaped, and fled to the court of
-his step-mother, Cartismandua, who to her eternal shame
-basely betrayed him to the foe against whom he had waged
-an unceasing struggle for nine years. Roman chains fettered
-the limbs of the British champion, and his capture was a
-triumph. To Rome he must go, where his exploits were
-well known, and the citizens were agog to see him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With his wife, brother, and child he “graced the chariot
-wheels” of the Roman general. Through the majestic
-city he strode, noble in his simple dignity, and still unconquered.
-While his companions in fear begged for mercy,
-he, proudly erect, and his eye, which had never quailed
-before a Roman brand, boldly bright, recked not of death,
-deeming honour a greater prize than life itself. As the
-triumphal procession passed along the Sacred Way he saw
-the stately temples, the massive arches, the beautiful statues,
-and the luxurious dwellings of the great city, and asked,
-“Why should these Romans, with all their grandeur, covet
-my poor hut at home?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brought before Claudius, he made a noble defence and
-a proud appeal for clemency. Claudius was moved. He
-bade his lictors strike off the Briton’s chains and set him
-free. His after-career is unknown. In his noblest hour he
-vanishes from the pages of history.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo29.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0009' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo26.jpg' alt='' id='i26' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Caractacus in Rome.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the drawing by G. F. Watts, R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo30.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0010' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>A WARRIOR QUEEN.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Me they seized and me they tortured, me they lashed and humiliated;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Me the sport of ribald veterans, mine of ruffian violators.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now move we on. Roman arms triumph in the field,
-but there is no peace in the land while the Druids, amidst
-the shadowy groves of Mona (Anglesea), cease not to stir the
-Britons to “mutiny and rage.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suetonius Paulinus determines to extirpate them root
-and branch. He marches to the shores of Menai Strait,
-and at nightfall his men essay to cross in flat-bottomed boats.
-As they near the other side an awe-inspiring scene meets their
-eyes. The Britons are drawn up in dense array. To and
-fro run black-robed women, brandishing torches, “fierce
-as the Furies,” their long hair streaming in the sea breeze.
-Behind them the assembled Druids are lifting their hands
-to high heaven and calling down terrible curses on the
-invaders. Huge fires crackle and blaze, as though impatient
-of their victims. The frantic women, the cursing priests,
-the flaming torches, the roaring flames paralyze the Romans.
-They shudder at the sight, and hesitate to land. But discipline
-prevails; they answer to the appeals of their general,
-and sweep forward in resistless attack. The carnage is
-dreadful; the sacred groves are fired; the Druids perish
-in their own flames; and the setting sun sinks on a scene of
-desolation and death. As the gray embers die out, Druidism
-perishes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But elsewhere the flame of freedom still burns in many a
-British breast. While Suetonius is slaughtering the Druids,
-Boadicea, Queen of the Iceni, is rousing her followers to
-fury by the tale of her terrible wrongs. Her dying husband,
-to appease his conquerors, bequeathed half his wealth to
-them, in the hope that his wife and daughters might enjoy
-the rest in peace. He reckoned without his hosts. They
-seize the whole of the treasure; they scourge Boadicea
-with rods; they shamefully wrong her children, and goad
-her to madness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>See her now in her war-chariot, her long yellow hair
-unbound, and falling below the golden girdle that encircles
-her waist, her eyes flashing vengeance as she pours forth
-burning words and pleads for revenge. Her men arm themselves,
-and almost every hut on the wide plain east of the
-Chilterns sends forth its warrior sworn to vengeance. They
-swoop upon the feebly garrisoned town of Camulodunum,
-and every Roman in it—man, woman, and helpless infant—is
-put to the sword. The Ninth Legion, coming to the
-rescue, is cut to pieces, and the whole East of England is in
-a blaze of rebellion. London falls before the conquering
-tribes, and seventy thousand Romans are butchered by the
-bloodthirsty victors. At last it seems that the yoke of Rome
-is broken, and Britain is once more free.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dread news at last reaches Suetonius. By forced
-marches he hastens to London. Too late to save the city, he
-turns north, and takes up a strong position, with woods and
-the sea behind and the open plain in front. The Britons
-are eager for the fight. So sure of victory are they that
-they have brought their women to the field as spectators, and
-have placed them in a row of wagons in the rear, so that
-their shrill cries of encouragement shall ring in their ears as
-they charge down on the foe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Boadicea, spear in hand, her daughters by her side,
-hurries from tribe to tribe in her chariot, exhorting her
-followers to conquer or die. “This,” she cries, “is a
-woman’s resolve; as for men, they may live to be slaves.”
-Maddened by her words, the Britons charge the foe, only
-to be repulsed with awful slaughter. They recoil from
-the brazen wall, and the legions carve their way through
-the disordered ranks, while the masterless steeds of the
-chariots, dashing hither and thither, add to the slaughter.
-The Romans are pitiless; they spare not even the women.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle is over; Rome has triumphed, and Boadicea,
-heart-broken and hopeless, flies from the scene, and in
-shuddering horror at the fate which awaits her, ends her
-life and that of her children with poison. Cowper, in
-his well-known poem, represents a Druid in the hour of
-her death prophesying the fall of the Roman Empire and
-the far-off greatness of her stricken land,—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Ruffians, pitiless as proud,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Heaven awards the vengeance due:</p>
-<p class='line0'>Empire is on us bestowed,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Shame and ruin wait for you.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo32.jpg' alt='' id='i32' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE INVASION OF THE EMPEROR CLAUDIUS.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by Thomas Davidson.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='33' id='Page_33'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo33.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0011' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE IRON HAND.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Rome was the whole world, and all the world was Rome.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next figure in our pageant to attract attention is
-again a Roman, but a man cast in a very different mould
-from the harsh and tyrannical Suetonius. In distant Rome
-the emperor has taken to heart the moral of the terrible
-rising led by Boadicea. He now knows that the Britons
-will never yield to severity. Consequently Agricola, the new
-governor, is a firm, just man, who strives by every means
-in his power to make the Roman yoke press as lightly
-as possible on British shoulders. He rules Britain much as
-a British Viceroy governs our Indian Empire to-day. He
-fosters the peaceful arts; he introduces the British nobles
-and their sons to the pastimes, the dress, the luxuries, and
-the manners of Rome. In course of time Britain sullenly
-submits to her bondage, though she is still held down by
-force of arms. The art and practice of war are now forbidden
-to the Britons, except to the flower of the youth,
-who are drafted into legions which garrison lands far from
-the call of home and kindred. The fiery Briton no longer
-wields the claymore; he becomes a skilled craftsman, a
-patient farmer, a delver in the mines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still, Agricola has his share of fighting. The Britons of
-North Wales are subdued in the first year of his governorship.
-In the second year several tribes in North Britain
-feel the weight of his hand; and in the succeeding year he
-pushes into Caledonia, and carries his “eagles” to the Tay.
-During the following summer he builds a chain of forts
-from the Clyde to the Firth of Forth, vainly hoping that
-by this means he will pen the fierce Caledonians in their
-northern fastnesses. His greatest campaign is undertaken
-in the year 84 <span style='font-size:smaller'>A.D.</span>, when he pushes into what is now
-Forfarshire and inflicts a terrible defeat on a host of
-Caledonians under their doughty chief Galgacus.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile his galleys are creeping northward along the
-coast. They touch at the Orkneys, they round Cape Wrath,
-run down the western coast with its maze of islands, see the
-Irish hills on the starboard, and follow the shores of South
-Britain until they espy Land’s End, and find themselves once
-more in the familiar waters of the Channel. This voyage
-proves without a doubt that Britain is an island.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Agricola’s government, wise, firm, and prosperous, comes
-to an untimely end. The emperor is jealous of him, and
-recalls him to Rome on a trumped-up charge. What
-befalls him we do not know, but probably he comes to
-a violent end. At all events, he fades out of our history,
-leaving behind him a fame which emperors cannot dim nor
-unjust tribunals take away. Farewell, Agricola! We salute
-thee as the greatest governor which Britain ever knew while
-Rome held sway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the land is happy in having little history to
-record. A generation comes and goes, and all the time
-Rome is building up her government, carrying out her great
-military works, and bowing the neck of the enfeebled
-Briton to her yoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What, you ask, is the appearance of Britain during the
-long years when the Roman peace has settled down on the
-land? Let us suppose that we are suddenly planted down in
-the island during the period Britain is part and parcel of the
-Roman Empire. Our first impression is that a great change
-has taken place in the appearance of the country. In many
-places the dense woods have disappeared; broad fields have
-been carved out of the forests, and are being carefully tilled
-by gangs of British slaves. Britain has become one of the
-great granaries of the Empire. Cattle and sheep by the
-hundred feed on the hillsides; and in Rome they speak of
-this land as <span class='it'>Britannia Felix</span>, “Britain the Happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the disappearance of the forests the weather has
-improved. No longer is the island wrapped in steaming
-mists; no longer is the sky always clouded. Many of the
-rivers which formerly lost themselves in reedy marshes are
-carefully banked in, and now flow on as broad, fair streams.
-The morasses are crossed by causeways, the fens are drained,
-the rivers are bridged, the fords are easy, and the Britons
-loudly complain that their hands and bodies are worn out
-in the toilsome work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at the road beneath your feet. Broad and straight,
-it runs over hill and valley, across stream and moor and bog.
-British labourers, under the eye of Roman road-engineers—never
-surpassed before or since—have dug down to the
-rocky crust, and upon this have built three or four layers
-of squared or broken stones mixed with gravel, lime, and
-clay. The upper surface is closely paved, especially in the
-middle, with large flag-stones. This is one of the military
-highways, all spreading out, as our modern railways do,
-from London, and enabling the legions to pass with speed
-through the length and breadth of the province. Watling
-Street, Fosse Way, Hermen Street, Ikenild Street—the
-chief military roads of the island—may still be traced,
-and in parts are used to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While we are examining the road, we hear the tramp
-of armed men, and a legion swings by. Swarthy Italian,
-yellow-haired German, and dusky Moor march side by
-side armed with brazen shield, heavy javelin, and short,
-thick sword. In the midst is the glittering “eagle,” which
-the Roman would rather die than yield to a foe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us follow the legion towards yonder city. On we
-go, traversing the broad, white road, now crossing a stream
-by a bridge, now wading waist-deep through the ford of a
-broad river. Here and there amidst the trees we see the
-white buildings of a villa, the residence of some Roman
-official. Notice the beautiful garden as you pass, and
-admire the orchards of apples, plums, pears, and cherries,
-and the south wall where the clustering grapes are ripening
-in the sun. Anon we skirt the fringe of a cemetery with
-its mounds of earth marking the hollow graves, each with
-its urn of dark clay containing the ashes of the dead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On and on we march, swinging to the right or left as
-some mounted messenger bearing dispatches for his general
-spurs by. At last the roofs of the city are seen. Round
-about it is a great rampart of stone; and here and there
-we see a sentinel, who leans on his javelin and shades his
-eyes as he peers across the plain. We enter through one
-of the four gates, pass the guard, and are at once met
-with a civilization such as the Briton of old never dreamt
-of. We pass by rows of private dwellings of stone and
-coloured tiles, glorious with pavements and columns.
-Here we see the fluted or leaf-crowned pillars of a temple
-to Neptune; there a stately shrine to Minerva. Yonder are
-the public baths, with their marble halls and inlaid pavements—unequalled
-in design and workmanship outside
-Rome. Within these heated chambers the chilly Roman
-official may recall the comforting warmth of his Southern
-home, and dream of the day when he shall see the beloved
-City once more. Yonder is the court-house, and in front
-of it senators in flowing robes, with parchment scrolls in
-their hands, pace to and fro.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Make way for the governor! Before him march his
-lictors with the axe in its bundle of rods, and behind him
-follows a guard of honour. Now a gang of slaves is driven
-by; and here comes a shock-headed British chieftain who
-has been captured in border warfare, and anon will face
-the judgment seat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hard by is the amphitheatre, where the townsfolk
-throng to see plays performed, or better still to see the trained
-gladiators who fight to the death “to make a Roman holiday.”
-Here on the seats, tier above tier, sit the wealthier
-Britons of the town, aping their masters in dress, speech,
-and manner. No longer do they delight in the battle and
-the chase; they love the pleasures of the town. Their
-golden locks are shorn and their beards are trimmed in the
-Roman fashion; they vie with each other in the fold of a
-toga and the fit of a sandal; their days are spent in a weary
-quest of amusement. They bathe; they drink their wine;
-they feast; they dice; they go to the shows; and consider
-themselves fine fellows indeed, because they can lisp
-the tongue of their masters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gleaming marble portico of the governor’s residence
-invites us. Within, the ladies of his household sew and
-spin, while their lord directs the affairs of his town and
-sits on the judgment seat. On their dressing-tables are
-mirrors of polished steel, combs of boxwood, and pins
-of bone for their long tresses. They gird up their robes
-with brooches of gold and silver; they wear jewelled bracelets
-on their arms and dainty shoes of silk on their feet.
-Supper is at three. Then the gentlemen will join them,
-and they will recline on the couches and feast on the
-dainties of the island, which they will wash down with a
-favourite wine trodden out in the presses of the distant
-home-land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we pass on to the “poor quarter,” where the
-workshops of the multifarious workers are situated and
-the huts of the humblest part of the population abound.
-Here there are squalor and misery in plenty, but still a touch
-of Roman manners.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such is the life of a Brito-Roman town in the palmy
-days of the Romans in Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now let the pageant move on to the closing scenes
-of Roman sway. Rome is sinking fast. Within, her
-citizens have lost their old courage and genius for government.
-Without, the fierce Goths and Vandals are assailing
-her provinces. Rome’s grip on her Empire is being
-loosened more and more every day, and the wild hordes on
-her frontiers grow bolder and bolder as the Roman garrisons
-are withdrawn to defend the great city itself. So it is in
-Britain, where the Caledonians swarm over Hadrian’s Wall
-and fall upon the Britons of the south. The Roman troops
-mutiny, and set up their general as emperor, and even follow
-him to Gaul, where stout-hearted Severus, who now appears
-on the scene, makes short work of them and their leader.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile the ravages of the Caledonians increase, and
-to save the province old Severus, now sixty-two years of age
-and racked with the gout, crosses the Channel, and, carried
-in a litter before his army, sets his face for the border, in
-the hope of teaching the northern tribes a terrible lesson.
-Through the trackless swamps, the woods, the moorlands,
-and the wild mountains beyond the Wall, the old general
-hews his way until he reaches the shores of the Moray Firth,
-where the tribes make peace. Severus has accomplished
-nothing. His victory is a disaster; a few more such victories
-and he will have no army left. When the watchers
-on the Wall greet his approach with shouts of welcome,
-the bleaching bones of fifty thousand Romans mark his
-long line of march. He repairs the Wall, and then, grievously
-sick, retreats to York, where, on his deathbed, he plans a
-new campaign which will never be made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His death is the beginning of the end. Two hundred
-years of misery and constant strife set in. General after
-general makes himself emperor; they come and go in blood;
-and all the time Britain, despoiled of her youth to rot on
-foreign fields, is the prey of a pitiless foe. The Caledonians,
-who are now known as Picts and Scots, actually march on
-London and carry off its citizens as slaves. A new and even
-more dreaded foe, the terrible Saxon pirate, has also appeared;
-there are desperate attempts at defence, but they are one
-and all in vain. The hour of doom has struck, alike for
-Empire and Province. The Goth is thundering at the very
-gates of Rome. All the available troops of the Empire,
-wherever stationed, are called in to defend the city.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last of the legions leaves British shores in the year
-407 amidst the sighs and tears of the defenceless inhabitants,
-who are now as sheep without a shepherd. Pitiful appeals—“the
-groans of the Britons”—are sent to Rome; but the
-weak and indolent emperor merely pauses in the absorbing
-pastime of feeding his pigeons to tell the despairing islanders
-that they must provide for their own safety. Thus Britain
-is left to her fate, and for two long centuries darkness closes
-round her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The eagles have flown.” Their glory has departed,
-and they disappear from the pageant of our history. Rome
-found the natives warlike, though untrained; she left
-them helpless and feeble. True, she gave them the benefits
-of peace; she taught them arts and crafts; she gave
-them education, and a measure of comfort and prosperity.
-But she did not teach them how to defend themselves, and
-so, when overwhelmed by hardier foes, they perished miserably
-by fire and sword.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo38.jpg' alt='' id='i38' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE EMPEROR HADRIAN VISITING A POTTERY IN BRITAIN.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, R.A. By kind permission of the Artist.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='41' id='Page_41'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo41.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0012' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter III.<br/> THE COMING OF THE ENGLISH.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>KING ARTHUR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“<span class='it'>In twelve great battles overcame</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The heathen hordes, and made a realm and reigned.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/t.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='T'/>HE light burns low on our pageant, and the scene
-grows dim and confused; yet we know only too
-well that a desperate struggle is going on. The
-battle-cries of warriors and the shrieks of the wounded are
-ever in our ears. The glare of blazing roof-trees lights
-up for a moment the ghastly scene, and reveals the pitiless
-work of slaughter. As it flickers out all is gloom and
-silence; it is the only peace that the stricken land knows.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The scene shifts, but the drama is ever the same. There
-seems to be no end to the hordes of attackers. They come
-by sea and they come by land; most terrible of all are they
-whose serpent-headed ships are now seen faintly on the
-strand. The tide of war sets in their favour, though they
-are beaten back from time to time before the despairing
-onset of the Britons.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now you see amidst the press the noble form of that
-gallant British prince who is the very soul of the island
-defence. Arthur, the peerless knight, steps before us, “every
-inch a king.” He shines like a star in the gloom. Legend,
-song, and story have so woven themselves about his name
-and fame, so many fables have been told about him, so many
-wondrous deeds and miracles have been ascribed to him,
-that historians dispute his very existence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What do the old chroniclers tell us of him? They tell
-us that he was the son of Uther Pendragon, a valiant British
-king, who kept the Saxons at bay through many hard-fought
-years. Arthur’s birth had been kept a secret, and the child
-had been placed by the great wizard Merlin in the care of a
-knight named Sir Ector, who brought him up as his son.
-The ruin of the country seemed to be at hand, when Merlin
-induced the Archbishop of Canterbury to summon a meeting
-of all the great barons and nobles in London on Christmas
-Eve, in order that a king might be chosen. To this meeting
-came Sir Ector, his son Sir Kay, and Arthur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While they were at prayers a huge block of marble
-uprose in the churchyard. On the top of it was an
-anvil of solid steel, in which was embedded by the point
-a sword of marvellous brightness, bearing on its jewelled
-hilt these words, “Whoso pulleth me out of this stone
-and anvil is rightwise king born of England.” In vain
-did ambitious knights and squires, day after day, strive
-to draw forth the magic sword. All failed, and men
-despaired of discovering the rightful king. Now it
-chanced that on New Year’s Day a tournament was held,
-and amongst the knights who rode to take part therein was
-Sir Kay, who was accompanied by Arthur as his squire.
-As they rode towards the field, Sir Kay discovered that he
-had left his sword behind him at his lodging. He prayed
-Arthur to ride back for his sword, and Arthur, as a dutiful
-squire, obeyed. When, however, he came to the lodging he
-found it closed, for all who dwelt there had gone to the
-jousting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On his way Arthur had passed the churchyard where the
-sword was upstanding in the anvil. Thither he rode, and,
-seizing the sword, easily pulled it out and carried it to Sir
-Kay, who did many warlike feats with it. Then he showed
-it to his father, who knew the secret of Arthur’s birth, and
-guessed what had taken place. The sword was replaced,
-but Arthur drew it forth as easily as before. On this the
-old knight and his son knelt before Arthur, and acknowledged
-him as “rightwise king born of England.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Twelfth Day, in the presence of all the kings and
-lords of the land, Arthur again drew the sword from the
-anvil, though no one else could move it. Still the great
-lords were loath to recognize the boy as king; and Merlin,
-seeing that Arthur’s right would not be admitted without
-bloodshed, gathered as many as he could of the best knights
-of the realm, and used all his magic arts to aid the good
-cause. On one occasion the kings and barons besieged
-Arthur in a strong tower, but when he was in the direst
-peril he sallied forth and attacked his besiegers. His horse
-was slain under him, and he was at the mercy of his foes.
-Then he drew the magic sword which he had taken from
-the anvil, and the fortune of war instantly turned in his
-favour. His sword—the far-famed Excalibur—gleamed like
-the radiance of thirty torches. Its flashing beams half-blinded
-Arthur’s foes—they could not see to strike; and
-so he vanquished them, and gained his first victory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Battle after battle was fought before Arthur was acknowledged
-as king by all men in the land, but at length the
-hour arrived when no one dared to dispute his title
-to supremacy. Then he wedded the beauteous but false
-Guinevere, and set up again the Round Table which his
-father Uther had founded. Around it were a hundred and
-fifty seats, and on the seats sat Arthur’s knights, all of equal
-degree, none first and none last. The chronicle of their
-deeds is too long to tell: many were the brave deeds they
-did together, many were the battles they fought, many were
-the distressed ladies they succoured, and great was the fame
-and glory that enshrined them. “Britain for the Britons”
-was their cry, and they haughtily sang:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Blow trumpet, for the world is white with May;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Blow trumpet, the long night hath rolled away!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Blow through the living world. Let the king reign!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Shall Rome or heathen rule in Arthur’s realm?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Flash brand and lance, fall battle-axe on helm;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Fall battle-axe and flash brand! Let the king reign!”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>So Arthur leads on the Britons, with the image of the
-Virgin on his shield, and points his sword Excalibur towards
-the swarming foe. Twelve great battles he fights with the
-English, and for a time holds them at bay. Then some of
-his followers desert to the enemy, and he is sore beset. One
-by one his knights fall around him, and then he, too, is
-stricken to the ground. Sore wounded, Arthur calls the
-last of his knights, and bids him throw Excalibur into a
-lake. The sword is flung high into the air, and as it falls,
-lo, a hand comes out of the water and catches the magic
-brand by the hilt. Three times it is brandished, and then
-it vanishes for ever beneath the waves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Alas!” cries Arthur, “my end draws near. Carry me
-to the edge of the water.” The knight does so, and there,
-awaiting the dying king, is a black barge, his destined bier.
-On the deck are three queens, with black hoods and crowns
-of gold. “Now, put me in the barge,” says Arthur; and
-when this is done, the queens receive him with great
-mourning and wailing, and one of them cries, “Ah, my
-dear brother, why hast thou tarried so long?” Then Arthur
-bids the knight farewell, and the barge slowly moves across
-the water. Sad and lonely, the knight watches it disappear</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Down that long water, opening on the deep,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Somewhere far off, pass on and on, and go</p>
-<p class='line0'>From less to less, and vanish into light,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And the new sun rose bringing the new year.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>So fades Arthur from our view, a dim and mystical
-figure in life, a vision of undying splendour in death. Let
-the historians say what they will, men will still believe
-in him; they will still see the wearer of his mantle in
-every true knight, and still hold him a shining example
-to all who “bear without abuse the grand old name of
-gentleman.”</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo44.jpg' alt='' id='i44' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Sir Tristram at the Court of Arthur.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the fresco by William Dyer, R.A., in the King’s Robing-Room in the Houses of Parliament.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='46' id='Page_46'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo46.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0013' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'> </h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“<span class='it'>The blue-eyed race</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Whose force rough-handed should renew the world.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>What warriors be these who now pass by? Tall, big-boned,
-blue-eyed men they are, with long yellow hair
-falling upon their shoulders from beneath their winged
-helmets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their home is a sad, barren, overcrowded country,
-and their poverty drives them to a life of plunder on the
-seas and to the shores of more favoured lands. They love
-fighting as the breath of their nostrils; and now, in their
-long ships, these dreaded pirates harry Britain at a hundred
-points. Death frights them not, for he who falls gloriously
-in battle rides Odin’s horse to Valhalla, where his days will
-be spent in cleaving the helmets and hacking the limbs
-of like heroes with himself, and his nights in feasting on
-a great boar whose flesh never grows less and in drinking
-great draughts of mead out of the skulls of his enemies.
-For the “niddering” coward who dies ingloriously in his
-bed these English pirates have nothing but scorn and contempt.
-To avoid the shame of a peaceful death they will
-hurl themselves from the cliffs, or push out in a frail craft
-into tempestuous seas, and perishing amidst the wind and
-the waves, win the right to enter Odin’s halls. A Roman
-poet says of them: “Fierce are they beyond other foes;
-the sea is their school of war and the storm their friend;
-they are sea-wolves that live on the plunder of the world.”
-Such are the foes against whom Arthur fights and falls.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The warriors whom we now greet are Hengist and
-Horsa, the two English chiefs who first won a foothold for
-themselves on the soil of Britain. An old legend tells us
-that they were scouring the coasts of Kent what time
-Vortigern, the British king, was sore beset by the Picts and
-Scots. Half beside himself with terror at their raids, he
-calls on these adventurers to aid him. If they will drive
-back the northern barbarians, they shall have food and pay
-for their services. The bargain is struck. Hengist and
-Horsa beach their keels on the gravel spit at Ebbsfleet and
-land their warriors. The Picts and Scots are driven back, and
-the victorious English return from the fray. Then they ask
-a whimsical boon—namely, as much land as a bull’s hide can
-encompass. The request is granted, and Hengist cuts his
-bull’s hide into long strips, and with them engirdles a rocky
-place, whereon he erects a fortress. Thus the English secure
-their first foothold in Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The news is wafted across the sea, and a new swarm of
-“sea-wolves” appears. They come in seventeen ships, and
-on the stern of the leading vessel the banner of the White
-Horse waves in the breeze. With the newcomers arrives a
-new conqueror, wearing no helmet and carrying no battle-axe,
-but armed only with a pair of beautiful blue eyes and a
-face of surpassing loveliness. She is Hengist’s fair daughter
-Rowena, the English princess who is destined to win more
-British acres by her bright glances than the “sea-wolves”
-have won by their swords and numberless forays. Vortigern
-feasts with her father, and she hands him the cup of greeting
-which she has kissed, and bids him “Waes hael.” He falls
-a willing victim to her charms; he woos and wins her, and
-as a marriage gift Vortigern bestows upon her brothers a
-large part of his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bitterly resenting this gift, the jealous Britons gather in
-arms and attack the English. Horsa is slain at the battle
-of the Fort-of-the-Eagles, and for a time the banner of the
-White Horse is trailed in the dust. Hengist, driven to his
-ships, returns with reinforcements, offering peace to the
-British chiefs, whom he invites to a feast. Both sides are
-to come unarmed to the hospitable board; but Hengist
-orders his followers to conceal their swords beneath their
-garments, and when the wine-cup has gone round, the fatal
-signal is given, and they fall upon their guests and slaughter
-every Briton present save Vortigern. The legends vary,
-but the truth remains that the English mastered the Britons
-on the south and east coasts, and established large settlements.
-Hengist’s success was the signal for a host of other
-English adventurers to put their fortune to the test. They
-swarmed across the North Sea, and the work of conquest
-and settlement began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Little boots it to tell of the savage and gory strife that
-raged in this island during the century and a half which
-followed. “Some of the Britons,” says an old chronicler,
-“were caught in the hills and slaughtered; others were
-worn out with hunger, and yielded to a life-long slavery.
-Some passed across the sea; others trusted their lives to the
-clefts of the mountains, to the forests, and to the rocks of the
-sea.” One hundred and fifty years after Hengist and Horsa
-landed on the Isle of Thanet the English ruled in this land
-from the North Sea to the Severn, and from the English
-Channel to the Firth of Forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Britain had become England. No longer was it the
-land of the Britons but the land of the English. In the
-wild, rugged western part of the island the Britons alone
-remained independent. Gradually their land was shorn from
-them till only the hills and valleys of Wales were left to
-them. There they remain to this day, speaking the speech
-of Arthur, and singing the lays of those far-off ages when
-the whole fair land of Britain was theirs from sea to sea.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo49.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0014' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='50' id='Page_50'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo50.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0015' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>ETHELBERT AND BERTHA.</h2>
-
-<div class='blockquote100percent'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>“<span class='it'>Our clock strikes when there is a change from hour to hour; but no
-hammer in the Horologe of Time peals through the Universe when there is
-a change from Era to Era.</span>”</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hand in hand a king and queen pass by, linked in
-wedded love and in undying fame. She is a sweet Frankish
-princess, with the light of tender affection in her eye, and
-the sweet serenity of an uplifting faith on her brow. He
-is a tall, bearded Saxon, with the martial air of one who
-has fought battles from his youth up; yet withal he is calm
-and reflective, equally at home on the battlefield, in the
-council chamber, and on the judgment seat. He is a pagan
-and she is a Christian; he bows before Odin, she before
-Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well-nigh a century and a half have gone since Hengist
-and Horsa sped their keels to these shores as the advance-guard
-of those great invasions which planted a new race
-on the soil. Generations of English men and women have
-come and gone since their sires with battle-axe and brand
-reft the land from its old inhabitants. No longer do the
-English war with the Britons, the remnant of whom dwell
-safely in the wild mountains and valleys of the west, or serve
-their new masters as slaves. They now war with each other.
-Ambitious kings strive to make themselves supreme in the
-land, and many a fierce fight is fought between the rivals.
-Now and then a powerful king reduces his fellow-kings to
-obedience, but frequently the conqueror of one month is
-the hunted fugitive of the next. Ethelbert, the king who
-now passes by with Bertha his wife, has made himself
-overlord of all the land except Northumbria. With this
-exception, his sceptre is supreme from the Forth to the
-English Channel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rome, once the proud and ruthless “mistress of the
-world,” has lost for ever her ancient sway. No longer does
-the wide world stand in awe of her. But on the ruins of her
-lost dominion a new, a merciful, and a blessed power is
-springing up. She has become the centre of the Christian
-religion, and ere long she stretches out her missionary arms
-to the isles of the west. St. Patrick is commissioned as the
-ambassador of God to convert the Scots in Ireland to the
-new faith. Devoted men in skin-clad boats of wicker-work
-cross the channel from the Emerald Isle to carry the good
-news to the natives of south-west Scotland. Amongst them
-is the great Columba of Donegal, prince in the eyes of his
-fellows, but in his own a meek bondsman of Christ. With
-his twelve companions he steers for the rising sun, and his
-barks run ashore on the little bare island of Iona, where he
-lands and builds his wattled church and the rude huts of his
-infant monastery. From this retreat, which has become
-one of the most sacred spots on earth, Columba’s friends
-go fearlessly through the land into the wildest glens and
-the remotest clachans, preaching the gospel, and slowly and
-surely winning the Picts and Scots to Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But England is still in her pagan darkness; she knows
-nothing except by vague rumour of the new faith which is
-slowly transforming the world. The English still worship
-their fierce old deities; still swear by oak, thorn, and ash;
-still look to Valhalla as the meed of the warrior who dies in
-hard-fought battle. Men of kindred blood still struggle for
-mastery under their kings, and the vanquished are still found
-in the slave-markets of the Continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is the sight of English lads exposed for sale in Rome
-which touches the heart of a young deacon, and stirs him to
-cherish the conversion of these islanders as the great ideal of
-his life. He sees the white limbs, the fair faces, the blue
-eyes, and the yellow hair of the lads, and asks the merchant
-whence they come. “From Britain,” is the answer. “Are
-they Christians or pagans?” is his next question; and when
-he learns that they are pagans, he sighs heavily and exclaims,
-“Ah! grief of griefs that the prince of darkness should
-lay claim to beings of such fair form; that there should be
-so much grace in the countenance, yet none in the soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he learns that they are of the race of Angles, his
-propensity to pun—ever the weakness of the scholar—finds
-a rare opportunity. “The Angles,” cried he, “should be
-<span class='it'>angels</span>. From Deira come they? They shall be snatched
-<span class='it'>de ira Dei</span>—from the wrath of God. And their king, say you,
-is Ella? <span class='it'>Hallelujah</span> shall be sung in Ella’s land.” Thus out
-of his infinite pity for the afflicted and distressed, Gregory’s
-heart begins to yearn towards the far-off islanders still in
-heathen bondage. The old stories tell us that he purchased
-the slaves, clothed them and taught them, and sent them
-back to England. Several times he begs to be allowed to
-visit England in order to realize his old wish, but Rome
-cannot spare him. In the fullness of time he becomes Pope,
-and though the triple crown is on his head and he is
-surrounded with the splendour of a sovereign, he does not
-forget the beautiful barbarians in their island home, and he
-only waits a favourable opportunity to send a mission to
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The long-looked-for opportunity soon arrives. Ethelred
-of Kent weds the fair daughter of the King of the Franks,
-and the marriage contract guarantees the Christian princess
-the right to exercise her religion unmolested. She brings
-in her train a single priest, and in the little church of
-St. Martin’s, Canterbury—built in Roman times, and still
-remaining as the oldest Christian church in the land—she
-kneels before the altar, and prays oft and earnestly that the
-land of her adoption may be won for Christ. She pleads
-with her noble-minded husband to forsake his gods and
-embrace the new faith. He hears, and he ponders, and at
-length, in answer to her prayers, sends a message to Rome,
-inviting Gregory to send the mission which he has long
-contemplated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now let the pageant proceed. Splendid and imposing
-it is. Somewhere on the Isle of Thanet, where Cæsar’s
-legions had landed, and Hengist and Horsa had drawn their
-keels ashore, a double throne is set up beneath the open
-sky. Ethelbert and his chiefs will meet the monks under
-no roof, lest witchcraft should prevail. Beneath the canopy
-of heaven king and queen—he willing to be convinced,
-but withal calmly critical; she, prayerfully expectant—seat
-themselves. They have hardly done so before the voices
-of the monks chanting a psalm are borne on the breeze.
-Louder and louder it swells as the procession draws near,
-headed by a picture of the Saviour and a silver crucifix.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Halting at the foot of the throne, the head of the mission,
-Augustine, begins to declare with all the fervour of his
-nature the blessings and hopes of the new faith, and earnestly
-beseeches the king to forswear his gods. Ethelbert listens,
-but the hour of his conversion is not yet. His answer
-reveals his clear judgment and his open mind. “Your
-promises are fair, but new and uncertain. I cannot
-abandon the rites which my people have hitherto observed,
-but I will hold you harmless and treat you hospitably. Nor
-will I forbid any one whom you can convince to join in
-your faith.” No fairer answer can be expected, and
-Augustine begins his labours under happy auspices. Ere
-long Ethelbert is baptized with ten thousand of his subjects,
-and Augustine has done his greatest and most
-enduring work; he has won a kingdom for his Master.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pass on, Ethelbert and Bertha, linked in wedded love
-and in undying fame! It is your blessed privilege to
-plant the cross of Christ in the southern shires of this our
-England. Long and sore will be the struggle ere its
-beams irradiate the whole land, but it will conquer at last,
-and in the long roll of saints and martyrs who have striven
-valiantly in the divine work your twin names shall stand
-proud and high.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo51.jpg' alt='' id='i51' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>COLUMBA PREACHING.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by William Hole, R.S.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo54.jpg' alt='' id='i54' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Augustine preaching to Ethelbert and Bertha.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Stephen B. Carlill.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='55' id='Page_55'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo55.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0016' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE SINGER OF THE FIRST ENGLISH SONG.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Then felt I like some watcher of the skies</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>When a new planet swims into his ken.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who comes hither? A simple, shy monk, half-withdrawing
-from the gaze of the bystanders, and unwitting
-that it is he whom men greet with such resounding acclaim.
-Kings and knights have flaunted their plumed helms
-and storied banners before us; but here is a conqueror in
-the realm of peace, a paladin of the mind and heart. His
-home was in the abbey which royal Hilda had founded on
-the wind-swept east cliff of Whitby. Not always did he
-wear the cowl of the monk. When the divine gift which
-placed him first in the muster-roll of English poets descended
-upon him he was an obscure cowherd who tended the cattle
-and slept in the byre. When the day’s work was done, and
-the servants of the abbey feasted together, he was wont to
-flee abashed as the harp came towards him and his turn
-arrived to tune the simple lay for the entertainment of his
-fellows.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once when he had risen from the feast and crept quietly
-to his shed, he fell asleep and dreamed that One came to
-him and said, “Cædmon, sing Me something.” “I know
-not how to sing,” replied the man; “and for this cause left I
-the feast.” “Yet,” said the Vision, “you must sing to Me.”
-“What shall I sing?” he asked. “Sing,” the Vision said,
-“about the beginning of created things.” At once Cædmon
-began a hymn in praise of the Creator of the world.
-Beautiful images flashed into his mind, noble words flew
-to his lips. He had won a victory far beyond that of
-any conqueror in any age; he had marshalled in triumph
-the legions that most surely sway the hearts and inspire the
-deeds of his countrymen; he had composed the first great
-English song.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We salute thee, Cædmon. Thy name will ever be dear
-to those who cherish their noble English tongue, and rejoice
-in the majestic literature which has glorified it for all time.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo56.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0017' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='57' id='Page_57'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo57.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0018' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter IV.<br/> THE VIKING INVASIONS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE COMING OF THE SEA-KINGS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>What sea-worn barks are those which throw</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The light spray from each rushing prow?</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Their frozen sails, the low, pale sun</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of Thule’s night has shone upon.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/r.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='R'/>OOM for the Vikings! the sons of the creek, the
-bluff, stalwart rovers who love the salt sea with
-a consuming passion, and shout with glee as the
-waves foam beneath them and tempest roars about them.
-Mighty warriors are they, wild and untamed as the
-element they love, swift as the falcon, remorseless as the
-vulture, fierce as the wolf. From the shores of the Baltic
-they come, swarming out of their barren homelands, and
-descending with fire and sword upon all the coasts of
-Western Europe. Every champion amongst them ardently
-desires to be a <span class='it'>Berserk</span>, and thus to be regarded as the
-bravest of the brave, utterly contemptuous of death.
-These Berserks within sight of the foe are wont to lash
-themselves into a frenzy, so that they bite their shields and
-rush to the fray, wielding club or battle-axe with almost
-superhuman strength.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No Christian message of peace and brotherhood has
-touched their hearts; they still swear by the Asir, and still
-glory in their descent from the grim gods of their dark and
-hopeless creed. They lust for blood, and their fiercest
-loathing is reserved for them who have abandoned Odin
-and Thor for the mild faith of the “White Christ.” They
-shed with unholy joy the blood of priests; they glory in
-the plunder and the burning of churches. They are a
-scourge, not only to England, Scotland, and Ireland, but
-to the whole of Europe; and men pray in their churches,
-“From the fury of the Northmen, good Lord, deliver us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never in the whole history of the world have men
-“followed the sea” with such fearlessness and keen delight
-as these Vikings. The sea is their “swan road,” their
-“Viking path,” their “land of the keel,” their “glittering
-home.” Their ships are “deer of the surf” and “horses
-of the sea.” Frail barks they seem to us, small and not very
-seaworthy; but the men who man them are consummate
-sailors, and they make astounding voyages with nothing but
-a thin plank between them and destruction. The Orkneys
-know them; they have seen Hecla shoot out its fiery lava
-in remote Iceland; they have even trodden the icy shores
-of Greenland, far across the dreaded Western Ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A Viking fleet is even now heading for our shores.
-Look at the long black ships, with their high prows curved
-in the semblance of a serpent. The sun glints on the bright
-shields which protect their bulwarks, on the mail which the
-warriors wear, and on the battle-axes and spears which they
-wield. The great sails flaunt painted devices—the eagle,
-the bear, the wolf, and the raven. Fierce are these creatures,
-but fiercer still the men who now come to harry these shores.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yonder little village is happy and peaceful in the
-morning sunshine. The cosy farmhouses and the smiling
-fields with their rich promise of harvest tell the tale of
-comfort and contentment. Alas! the scene will change
-when these sea-wolves arrive. They will sail up the river-mouth,
-throw up stockaded earthworks to secure their
-retreat, and then begin the congenial work of pillage and
-slaughter. Men, women, and innocent babes will be slain,
-cattle will be driven off, and the smoke of burning roof-trees
-will darken the sky. Yonder minster, where the
-frightened monks are trembling before the altar, will be
-raided; its treasures, the gifts of generations of pious souls,
-will be seized; the gilded cross will be torn down and
-trampled upon, and blood-eagles will be carved on the backs
-of the hated priests. Then torch and flame will do their
-work; and the Vikings, having devastated the countryside
-like locusts, will retire to their ships glutted with blood
-and laden with booty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Again and again they will return, bolder and bolder,
-and at length they will covet the fair land as their home.
-They will come in such force that they will reave half
-the land from the English, and then a Viking will rule
-the realm. Ay, and Englishmen will come to honour and
-love him. Then the Viking settlers will disappear, absorbed
-into the mass of the nation, and endowing the national
-character with a new strain of courage, daring, and adventure.
-But before that happy day dawns the land will run
-red with blood, many homes will be ruined, many patriotic
-hearts will break, and the star of England will seem to have
-set for ever.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='60' id='Page_60'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo60.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0019' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'> </h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Behold a pupil of the monkish gown,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The pious Alfred, king to Justice dear;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Lord of the harp and liberating spear,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Mirror of princes!</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, amidst the gloom, the greatest of all our kings
-appears. “England’s Darling,” and “Truth-Teller,” men
-called him in his lifetime, and these proud titles well attest
-the affection and esteem in which the men of his own age
-justly held him. Nor has his glory faded with the passing
-of centuries. The more his career is studied, the greater he
-grows and the brighter shines his peerless fame. His nature
-was a beautiful blend of courage and tenderness, perseverance
-and patience. He loved justice and mercy, and he
-lived and died for his people. Warrior, statesman, scholar,
-lawgiver, and true patriot, he stands for all time as the
-type and model of the perfect king. A thousand years
-have sped since his pure spirit departed, but still he is one
-of the greatest glories of our land. His life was one long
-struggle against fierce foes, against the darkness of ignorance,
-against the desolation of ruin and the cruel pangs of
-bodily pain, but he triumphed over all—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Not making his high place the lawless perch</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of wing’d ambitions, nor a vantage-ground</p>
-<p class='line0'>For pleasure; but through all this tract of years</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wearing the white flower of a blameless life.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now for his story, which writers have loved to dwell
-upon in every succeeding age. Born in royal Wantage,
-where his statue now stands, he was but three years of age
-when the Vikings made their first settlement in England.
-In that year a great army of Danes, with three hundred and
-fifty ships, swept up the Thames, sacked London and Canterbury,
-and put to flight an English army. Two years later,
-Alfred’s father, Ethelwulf, and his elder brother, Ethelbald,
-met them in battle, and after a stubborn fight won a great
-victory. Such a desperate struggle had not taken place in
-England for many years, and more than half the Danish
-army perished on the field. Another victory followed, and
-for a time the Danes were checked. So far, their coming
-had been but the low mutterings of the fierce storm which
-was soon to burst in all its fury. Alfred was cradled in an
-hour of terrible anxiety and ever-present danger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Almost the first incident which his biographer recounts
-is the pretty story of how his mother sought to encourage
-her sons to learn to read. Showing the lads a beautifully-illuminated
-volume of English verse, and reading aloud
-some of its contents, she promised the volume to the first
-of them who could read it for himself. Fired by the desire
-to possess the volume, and also to learn something more of
-its wondrous pages, Alfred sought out a tutor, and ere long
-was able to claim it as his own. The love of letters, thus
-early demonstrated, grew with the years. In his later and
-more peaceful days he surrounded himself with scholars, and
-loved their company and converse better than aught else.
-Asser, the Welsh monk, who was his devoted friend, tells
-us that as “Alfred advanced through the years of infancy
-and youth, he appeared more comely in person than his
-brothers, and his countenance, speech, and manners were
-more pleasing than theirs. His noble birth and noble
-nature implanted in him from his cradle a love of wisdom
-above all things.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In his twentieth year Alfred married a noble Mercian
-lady named Mercill. Meanwhile, the Danes, growing
-bolder and bolder, had become a grievous peril to the land.
-In the year of Alfred’s marriage they marched on York,
-and capturing it, pushed into Mercia and wintered at
-Nottingham. In the twenty-second year of Alfred’s life
-they triumphed over Edmund, King of the East Angles.
-Him they dragged forth and bound to a tree. Then with
-fiendish glee they shot arrows into his limbs, and at length,
-unable to break his proud and confident spirit, they struck
-off his devoted head. They parted his realm amongst themselves,
-and placed their chief, Guthrum, on his throne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next year King Ethelred and Alfred were overcome by
-the Danes at Reading. Roused by grief and shame at the
-loss of this battle, the English mustered in force and
-advanced against their foes at Ashdown. While Ethelred
-remained in his tent at prayer, Alfred led his men to the
-fight, and “with the rush of a wild boar,” charged up the
-slopes on which the Danes had stationed themselves. Long
-and fierce was the fray, but at nightfall victory rested with
-the English.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their joy was short-lived; a fortnight later the Danes
-were again victorious, and soon another Viking army from
-across the sea joined them. In the same year died Ethelred
-of his wounds, and Alfred was crowned king of a
-realm which was little more than a name. A month
-later his small army was overcome, and black indeed was
-the outlook. “Let no one be surprised,” says Asser, “that
-the English had but a small number of men, for they had
-been all but worn out by eight battles in this self-same
-year; in the which there died one king, nine chieftains,
-and innumerable troops of soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two years of desperate fighting followed, and the Danes
-were victorious almost everywhere. At length Alfred was
-forced to withdraw with the little band which still followed
-him to the marshes of Somersetshire. Here, in the midst
-of a vast morass where the Tone and the Parret join their
-waters, lay a low lift of ground some two acres in extent,
-girded in by almost impassable fen-lands. This was the
-island of Athelney, and here Alfred threw up a fort, and
-waited and longed for happier days. It was about this time
-that the fugitive king, flying from his foes, entered the hut
-of a cowherd and begged for shelter. In the hut occurred
-that incident which is so familiar to every reader of English
-history. Asser tells the story, and doubtless he had it from
-Alfred’s own lips. It happened that on a certain day
-the wife of the cowherd prepared to bake her bread. The
-king, sitting near the hearth, was making ready his bows
-and arrows and other warlike implements, when the rough
-countrywoman beheld her loaves burning at the fire. She
-ran forward and hastily removed them, scolding the king
-for his inattention and carelessness:—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Casn’t thee mind the ca-akes, man, and doossen zee ’em burn?</p>
-<p class='line0'>I’m bound thee’s eat ’em vast enough, zo zoon as ’tis thee turn.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>“The unlucky woman,” continues Asser, “little thought
-that she was addressing the King Alfred.” We can readily
-imagine the momentary anger of the king as he heard the
-shrill clamour of the angry housewife, and the good-natured
-smile that almost immediately followed when he recognized
-the justice of the reproof. Legend, which has been very
-busy with this period of eclipse in Alfred’s career, tells us
-that he persuaded his host to study, and that in after and
-happier years the cowherd held high office in the Church.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though apparently at his last extremity, Alfred did not
-abandon the struggle. Scarcely a day passed but he sallied
-forth at the head of his little band, to assail such forces
-of the enemy as approached his neighbourhood. In this
-guerilla warfare, amidst the swamps whose secret paths
-were quite unknown to the stranger, Alfred schooled himself
-in the arts of surprise, rapid onset, and equally rapid
-retreat. Patriotic Englishmen joined him in his fastness,
-and day by day his forces grew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At length the dark night passed away, and the dawn
-of a new day began to flash the horizon. The hour of
-deliverance had arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Danes had established themselves in a strongly fortified
-camp at Chippenham, in Wiltshire. The hill which
-they occupied is still pointed out, and from the neighbouring
-plain it still appears rugged, abrupt, and difficult of
-ascent. The English forces were too few to venture on
-an unpremeditated attack; therefore Alfred arrayed himself
-as a wandering minstrel, and, harp in hand, approached the
-enemy’s outposts. The <span class='it'>scald</span> would be right welcome, for
-the Danes ever loved a song, and camp life was dull.
-Alfred sang and played to the Danes, and was led even to
-the tent of Guthrum, the chief. As he struck the chords
-and trolled the lay, his keen eyes were busy photographing
-the defences of the camp on the sensitive plate of his
-memory. Dismissed with praise and gifts from the Danish
-entrenchments, he hastened to his island retreat, and there
-matured his plan of attack. The naked sword and the
-war-arrow were borne by loyal hands through the length
-and breadth of the south-western counties, and soon all
-was ready for the fateful battle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Alfred drew up his forces on the plain, and Guthrum
-marshalled his men in front, with Bratton Hill, crowned
-by its strong encampment, as a secure retreat in the
-rear. Massing his men in a close shield-wall, the English
-king gave the signal for battle. His soldiers rushed on
-the enemy; they broke the Danish ranks, and a fierce
-hand-to-hand fight raged on the plain. Furious was the
-<span class='it'>mêlée</span> of sweeping sword, crashing battle-axe, and sharp
-javelin, and slowly the Danes began to gain ground, when
-a storm of arrows suddenly fell upon them, followed by
-an impetuous charge of English spearmen. The Danes
-were swept to earth; and through the island ranks ran the
-inspiring rumour that a renowned English saint had joined
-the fray, and that angelic hosts were fighting for the stricken
-land. The English had fought stoutly before; now they
-were irresistible. The Danes fell before their onslaught
-like corn before the reaper’s sickle. All was over; the
-shattered remnant of the Vikings turned and fled to their
-hill-top camp, leaving the field strewn with their dead and
-dying.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Alfred girdled the hill with his forces, and for
-fourteen days closely besieged the Danes. Hunger, cold,
-fear, and despair gradually undermined the resolution of
-the besieged, and every day Alfred’s triumphant army was
-swelled by new recruits. On the fourteenth day Guthrum
-yielded, and humbly sued for peace. “They engaged to
-give the king as many hostages as he pleased, and to receive
-none from him in return—in which manner they had never
-before made peace with any one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The king took pity on them, and received from them
-hostages, as many as he would. Thereupon the Danes
-swore that they would straightway leave the kingdom, and
-their king, Guthrum, promised to embrace Christianity and
-receive baptism.” Alfred himself was Guthrum’s sponsor
-at the ceremony, “receiving him as a son by adoption, and
-raising him up from the holy font of baptism. After this
-he remained twelve days with the king, who, together with
-all his companions, gave him rich gifts.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the year 879 the Danes left Chippenham, and after
-a time retired into East Anglia and settled down quietly in
-the Danelaw, according to the solemn treaty which the two
-kings had made. Again and again Viking fleets assailed
-Alfred, but he was more than a match for them. He no
-longer awaited their onsets, but built ships stronger and
-swifter than those of his foes, and thus was enabled to
-meet them on their own element. Alfred built the first
-English navy, and inaugurated that policy of naval defence
-which Britons of every succeeding age have recognized as
-the wisest and best. The foe who threatens our island
-shores must be met and vanquished on the encircling sea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Right nobly did Alfred bestir himself during the few
-years of life remaining to him. He restored the towns, he
-founded monasteries, he gathered learned men about him,
-and laboured to build up England anew. Studious from his
-early years, he endeavoured to enrich his own mind and
-to encourage his people to learn the arts of reading and
-writing. Into the homely language understanded of the
-people he translated the best and most useful works of the
-Latin writers of his time, and founded schools, that the sons
-of his nobles might not grow up unlettered as their fathers.
-He gave the best of his attention to the four greatest things
-of national life—law, justice, religion, and education. He
-collected and studied the old laws of the nation: what
-was good he retained, what was bad he rejected. Never
-was king more eager to advance learning and make new
-discoveries. He sent embassies to the remotest parts of the
-then known world, and our earliest accounts of Arctic
-exploration are from his pen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Method and order were the rule of his life. One
-portion of his income he allotted to his warriors and
-attendants; another to the buildings which his architects
-from beyond the seas erected for him; a third for the
-relief of foreigners; and the remainder for the Church,
-the schools, and the poor. His time, too, was methodically
-bestowed on good works. Eight hours each day
-were devoted to rest and refreshment; another eight
-hours to affairs of state; the remaining eight hours to
-study and religious exercises. To enable him rightly to
-apportion the time which he deemed so precious, he
-fashioned wax candles, six of which, burned in succession,
-marked the lapse of twenty-four hours. To guard
-against the irregularities caused by draughts, he enclosed
-his candles in lanterns of thin, transparent horn. Thus he
-measured his time, zealous that the golden sands should not
-run out unheeded, and that no day should pass without its
-tale of duty done, opportunities seized, and benefits conferred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now we must bid farewell to this peerless king.
-A thousand summers have come and gone since his countrymen
-bore him to his tomb, deeming that the light of their
-land had been extinguished. They loved and honoured
-him, and we revere his memory as that of probably the
-most perfect character in history. He remains as the
-mirror of monarchs in which they may perceive the elements
-of true majesty, and an inspiring example to all
-of triumphant devotion, fortitude, and faith.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo68.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0020' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo64.jpg' alt='' id='i64' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Alfred in the Camp of the Danes.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the design by H. A. Bone. By permission of Antony Gibbs, Esq.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo69.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0021' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>KING CANUTE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Canute o’ercame the race of Ethelred, and Danes wielded the dear realm of Angle-land, eight-and-twenty of winters numbered.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>No saint he who now strides by—a thrice-crowned
-king, with the Viking blood surging tumultuously in his
-veins. England, Norway, and Denmark own his sway; but
-though Denmark is the land of his birth, England is the
-land of his love and pride. Dane he is in form and feature,
-but his lust of strife and fierce Berserk rage are controlled
-by cool judgment and the generous instincts of a good but
-wayward heart, so that in his later days he grows wise and
-temperate. His father, Sweyn, “lighting his war-beacons
-in blazing homestead and town,” has harried the realm of
-England in revenge for a cruel massacre of his kinsmen by
-a weak and ruthless king, and Canute, ere his beard has
-grown, has entered into a glorious heritage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not without fierce strife has this kingdom of England
-come to him. He has met his match in Edmund Ironside,
-true hero and true Englishman. But Edmund is
-dead, and the young Dane is unchallenged master of the
-land. And now, secure in the possession of three kingdoms,
-he sets himself to win the confidence of his new
-subjects. The armed bands with which he has conquered
-his new realm are sent home, save for a stalwart bodyguard.
-He will trust his Englishmen, and will link his
-fortunes with theirs. He marries the beautiful widow of
-the late king, and labours to hold the balance even between
-Dane and native. As the years go by his new subjects
-come to be his best supporters, and England is England
-still, though a Dane sits on the throne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A pagan born, he nevertheless becomes a zealous
-Christian, and many a fair monastery is reared and endowed
-by him. He strives to do justice to all men, and
-he pledges himself to rule according to the old and cherished
-law of the realm. One day, however, the fierce spirit
-within him suddenly flames up, and he slays with his own
-hand a soldier of his guard. When his wrath has died
-down he bitterly repents of the deed, and deplores the evil
-example which he has set to others. Then he descends
-from his throne and bids the Witan judge him and punish
-him, regardless of his rank and power. Flinging himself
-prostrate on the ground, he awaits the verdict which his
-judges dare not give, despite his promise of free pardon.
-They bid him appoint his own judgment. The fine for
-slaying a man is forty talents of silver. Canute sentences
-himself to pay nine times the sum, and nine talents of gold
-in addition. Some see in this act a mere theatrical display,
-a crafty method of re-enforcing the law which he, the
-lawgiver, had violated. Let us be charitable, and believe
-that he was sincere and honest in desiring to atone for his
-crime.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Better known is the story of the rebuke which he
-administered to the flattering courtiers who crowded round
-his throne. They, recounting his mighty deeds of valour,
-his conquests, his glories, were not ashamed to say, “Great
-lord, even the sea obeys you. The rising tide dare not
-wet the hem of your garment.” On the seashore Canute
-set up his throne, and as the waters rolled in and splashed
-about his feet he cried, “Confess ye now how frivolous and
-vain is the might of an earthly king compared with the
-Great Power who rules the elements, and can say unto the
-ocean, ‘Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther.’ ”</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“And he strongly bade them never more to kneel to human clay,</p>
-<p class='line0'>But alone to praise and worship that which earth and seas obey;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And his golden crown of empire never wore he from that day.</p>
-<p class='line0'>King Canute is dead and gone; parasites exist alway.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>An old chronicler tells us a pleasing story of his love of
-minstrelsy. It was on the eve of a feast which he desired
-to keep in the abbey at Ely. As his barge sped through
-the maze of waters by which the island was approached,
-the voices of the chanting monks were borne faintly on the
-breeze. Bidding the rowers cease their work, Canute
-listened with unfeigned delight to the strain, rendered all
-the more harmonious by distance and the intervening
-waters. Then as the boat shot forward once more he
-composed the following verse, keeping time with the
-beat of the oars:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Merrily sang the monks of Ely,</p>
-<p class='line0'>As Cnut the king rowed by;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Row, knights, near the land,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And let us hear these good monks sing.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Rome, the heart of Christendom, the Viking was
-still regarded as a heathen pirate, a deadly enemy alike
-of civilization and true religion. Canute was eager to
-remove this impression, and to bring his empire into union
-with the greatest spiritual power of the world. He therefore
-undertook a pilgrimage to Rome. West Saxon kings
-for three hundred years past had visited the Pope and the
-tombs of the saints, but now, for the first time, a Dane set
-out on the pious journey. A long train of attendants
-accompanied him, but he himself wore a pilgrim’s robe
-and carried a pilgrim’s staff in his hand. As he journeyed
-along the pilgrims’ route, he bethought him of those who
-should hereafter follow him, and made treaties with the
-masters of the Alpine passes, so that his subjects should
-come and go unmolested. Arrived in Rome, he prayed
-before the altars, placed rich gifts on every shrine, and
-purchased relics for the churches at home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Rome he wrote to the Witan a letter which
-reveals him in a most favourable light. Ere Canute passes
-by and our pageant knows him no more, let us extract one
-passage from the message which he sent to his people: “I
-would have you know that I have made a vow to Almighty
-God to regulate my life by the dictates of virtue, and to
-govern my people with judgment. If during the rashness
-of youth I have done anything contrary to justice, I will for
-the future, with the help of God, amend this to the best of
-my power. Wherefore I require and command all my
-counsellors to lend themselves to no injustice, either in fear
-of me or to favour the powerful. I recommend them, if
-they prize my friendship and their own lives, to do no harm
-or violence to any man, rich or poor. Let every one, in his
-place, enjoy that which he possesses, and not be disturbed
-in that enjoyment, either in the king’s name or in the name
-of any other person, nor under pretext of levying money for
-my treasury, for I need no money obtained by unjust means.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Truly a kingly resolve! Looking down the long
-avenue of time, we recognize Canute as a “conscious
-creator of England’s greatness.” His empire was destined
-to fall to pieces at his death, and ere seven years had
-sped his line was extinct. A brief space more, and another
-tide of conquest swept over his beloved England. Another
-king of Viking breed held the sceptre which had fallen
-from his hand. Once more the English bowed their necks
-to a foreign lord; but Canute’s work was never undone, and
-the England of to-day acclaims him as her benefactor.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo73.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0022' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo70.jpg' alt='' id='i70' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>A GREAT VIKING.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by H. W. Koekkoek.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo74.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0023' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter V.<br/> THE COMING OF THE NORMANS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>HAROLD OF ENGLAND AND WILLIAM OF NORMANDY.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Yet shall a third both these and thine subdue;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>There shall a lion from the sea-bord wood</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of Neustria come roring, with a crew</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of hungry whelpes.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/n.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='N'/>OW a remarkable scene diversifies our pageant.
-You see before you the great hall of the Norman
-castle of Bayeux. Baron, knight, bishop, and
-priest fill up the background, and you perceive at once
-that an important crisis has arrived. Your eye instantly
-fastens on the two chief actors in the scene; and you do
-well to study them closely, for rarely in the history of
-our land have two such notable men stood face to face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The one, albeit he betrays some signs of anxiety,
-claims, at first sight, your admiration and sympathy. He
-is tall and comely, with the blue eyes and the golden
-beard and flowing locks of the Saxon. You picture him
-as a bluff, good-humoured Englishman, proud of his strength
-of arm, his prowess in the chase, his skill in warfare, and
-his sense of fair play. You can readily believe him to
-be winning and courteous in public life, calm and cool
-in the hour of danger, easy and sociable when the fight
-is over. He is Harold of England, the most gifted of the
-sons of old Earl Godwin, that dogged earl who, in his
-lifetime, was the champion of Englishmen at the court
-of the feeble but pious King Edward, now reigning in
-England. Edward loves the Norman and despises the
-Englishman, and his court swarms with aliens, on whom he
-lavishes land and wealth. Men say he has bequeathed his
-sceptre to a Norman, but his subjects will have none of it.
-Yonder fair-haired Englishman is their pride and choice,
-and him they will seat on the throne when Edward is
-dead. King Edward is now fast sinking into his grave, his
-last hours disquieted by the appearance of a comet which
-the priests assure him betokens ruin for his country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now turn your attention to the other chief actor in the
-scene. You know at a glance that he is a great man, and
-that he is destined to make history. He is a giant in
-stature; no man living but he can bend his mighty bow.
-Rough and hard has been his upbringing, and rough and
-hard is his temper. He, too, is of Viking blood. His
-ancestor was that fierce outlaw Rollo, so long of leg and
-so heavy of frame that no horse could carry him. This
-fierce and crafty Viking had wrested a province from the
-imbecile King of France, on condition of doing homage
-to the poor simpleton. But Rollo would bow the knee to
-none save the rugged gods of his fierce Northern creed, nor
-would any of his chieftains so demean themselves. A
-common soldier was Rollo’s deputy, and even he disdained
-to bow, but seized the foot of the king and in
-bringing it to his mouth jerked the poor monarch off his
-throne!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rollo lives again in William, this mighty Norman duke
-at whom you are now gazing. His father’s nature is well
-set forth in the nickname which his followers gave him—Robert
-the Devil. William’s mother was a tanner’s daughter,
-and his haughty nobles once sneered at his base origin. They
-dare not do so now, for they know full well the weight
-of his mighty arm. As a boy he was heir to the most
-turbulent dukedom in Europe, but while in his teens he
-curbed the wild lawlessness of the barons and put a hook
-in their proud nostrils. Full well they remember the fate
-of those townsmen of Alençon who insulted his mother’s
-memory by hanging hides from their walls as a fitting
-welcome to “the tanner.” They will not soon forget
-how, in his wrath, he lopped off the feet and hands of his
-prisoners, and bade his slingers hurl the ghastly trophies
-into the town. Watchful, patient, cunning, ruthless, yet
-withal clear and sure of vision, he stands before you as by
-far the greatest warrior and statesman of his time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What manner of man this masterful Norman duke is,
-you may learn from the story of his wooing. He did not
-seek his wife with smiles and honeyed words, nor did he
-deign to display his best graces to win her heart. That
-is not his way. When Matilda, daughter of the Earl of
-Flanders, rejected his suit, both on account of his birth and
-because she loved another, he was not daunted—not he.
-He waited for her in the streets of Bruges, and forthwith
-rolled her in the dirt and soundly cuffed her ears. Strange
-to say, his new mode of wooing was successful. Matilda
-went home, changed her attire, put ointment on her
-bruises, and when next her lover presented himself declared
-that “the marriage pleased her well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now his mind is bent on quite another conquest,
-but the same masterful method will prevail. He has visited
-England. He has embraced the old king, who owes a debt
-of gratitude to Normandy; for was it not in that civilized
-land that he found shelter, succour, and education when
-Sweyn the Dane drove him as a callow boy into exile?
-William sees with his own eyes that the poor old king is
-not long for this world; and he notes with satisfaction
-that Normans surround his throne, tend him at table, and
-administer to him the rites of the Church. William has
-willing allies now, and he will have helpers, he thinks,
-when the time comes. So he returns to Normandy, and
-announces that Edward has named him as successor to the
-English throne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But how come William and Harold, these rivals for a
-throne, to be under the same roof? Sooth to tell, the one
-is the captive of the other. Harold’s bonds are very real,
-though not apparent. Some months ago he was cruising
-in the Channel, when an unlucky storm drove him on the
-Norman shore. The neighbouring baron seized him, and
-rejoiced at the prospect of a heavy ransom; but William
-claimed him, and welcomed him to his court with a show
-of cordiality. Together they have waged war on the
-Bretons, and Harold has done prodigies of valour. They
-have shared the same tent and have fed at the same table.
-To the outward eye they are brothers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But why does Harold’s countenance betray signs of
-anxiety? William has deemed the hour ripe for displaying
-the iron hand beneath the velvet glove. He now declares
-that Edward has bequeathed him the English crown, and
-bids Harold swear to assist him in securing it. The Englishman
-knows not what to do. An oath will be demanded,
-and this he must give, or death or life-long imprisonment
-will be his fate. Yet he knows full well that once in England
-he will forswear the oath, and ascend the throne which
-his countrymen deem him worthy to fill. The oath, he
-argues, can be of none effect, for he <span class='it'>must</span> swear or perish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His decision is made. A crucifix lies on a cloth of
-gold, and Harold is bidden to place his hand on it and
-swear to aid his captor to obtain the kingdom of England
-after the death of Edward. Reluctantly he does so, and
-then the cloth of gold is removed, and beneath it are discovered
-all the sacred relics which William has collected
-from a score of churches. Harold grows pale at the sight;
-his strong limbs tremble, and his heart fails him. He has
-sworn to befriend the Norman duke by an oath of the most
-terrible solemnity. Even the Normans standing by cry,
-“God help him.”</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo79.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0024' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE EVE OF THE INVASION.</h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Homeward speeds Harold, and as he crosses the
-Channel his terror gives way to wrath at the knavery
-practised upon him. Speedily he banishes the hateful
-memory of his enforced oath; he must be up and doing,
-for the aged king lies on his deathbed. With his dying
-breath Edward declares that Harold is the most worthy
-to reign, and the chiefs of the land concur in his choice.
-Edward is buried with the utmost solemnity in his great
-new church at Westminster, where you may see his shrine
-to this day. Then, amidst the loud shouts of the English
-nobles who throng the minster, Harold is elected king.
-Forthwith he takes up the reins of office, and his subjects
-rejoice daily in his wisdom, justice, and unsparing devotion
-to the good of his country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But what of William, the rejected candidate for the
-throne? He is in his park near Rouen when the trembling
-messenger breaks the news. His face grows clouded; he
-strings and unstrings his bow. Suddenly he hands it to an
-attendant, and hurries to his castle. In the great hall he
-strides to and fro, sits down and rises again, unable to
-remain still in any place, none daring to approach him lest
-the tempest of his rage should burst on them. At length
-a privileged baron addresses the brooding duke. “Sire,”
-says he, “why should you conceal from us your news? It
-is commonly reported that the King of England is dead, and
-that Harold, breaking faith with you, has seized the kingdom.”
-“They say true,” replies the duke; “my grief and
-anger are caused by Edward’s death and Harold’s wrong.”
-“Sire,” returns the courtier, “for Edward’s death there is
-no remedy, but for Harold’s wrong there is. Strike boldly;
-well begun is half done.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At once William made his resolve, and began to battle
-with the myriad difficulties which beset him. He interviewed
-his barons, and wrung from them their reluctant
-consent to the enterprise and their grudging promises of
-aid, and persuaded the Pope to send him a consecrated
-banner and a bull recognizing him King of England. Then
-far and wide he published his proclamation of war,
-promising liberal pay and the plunder of England to all
-who would strike in his cause. Forthwith from every part
-of France knights, spearmen, and cross-bowmen flocked to
-him. The bulk of them were hardy adventurers, actuated
-by every kind of greed and covetousness. During the
-autumn of 1065 and the spring of the following year
-Normandy was as busy as a hive of bees. The woodmen
-felled the forests; the shipwrights wrought at the seaports;
-every armourer’s shop rang with the blows of artisans
-fashioning coats of mail, spears, and swords. Speedily
-all was ready for the invasion of England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile, what was happening in that threatened
-land? While the great armament of the Norman was
-wind-bound in port, a vast Viking host under Harold
-Hardrada, King of Norway, and Tostig, the English king’s
-brother, had doubled Spurn Head, and was sailing up the
-Humber and into the Ouse, bound for York. Why, you
-ask, should Harold’s own brother take arms against him
-when William of Normandy was arraying a mighty host
-for his undoing? Tostig had been Earl of Northumbria,
-and had ruled his earldom with harshness and injustice.
-He had forced peace on a land of feuds and outrages by
-taking life and by maiming limb. Loud had been the
-outcry against him, and Tostig had been driven from
-Northumbria by his incensed subjects. Harold had supported
-the claim of a rival; and now Tostig, at the
-instigation of his brother-in-law, Duke William, had persuaded
-the Norse king to join him in a descent upon North
-England. Harold, whom he had not forgiven, was to be
-taken between two fires, and victory seemed sure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Harold had mustered his forces on the southern shore,
-and during the summer lay in wait for the coming of the
-Norman. Summer passed, and autumn arrived when the
-news reached him that the Vikings were in the Ouse.
-Believing that William would not sail until the spring,
-Harold set out for York to smite the Northern host before
-the Norman was ready to attack. With wonderful speed
-his troops marched northward, and York was reached on
-the fourth day after his departure from London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Norsemen were taken by surprise. It was inconceivable
-that Harold could be nigh, and so they advanced
-to York, which had promised surrender, leaving their coats
-of mail on board their ships in the river. As they marched
-towards the gates, which were to be flung wide at their
-approach, they beheld a cloud of dust and the glitter of
-arms in the distance. “Who are these advancing towards
-us?” asked Hardrada. “Only Englishmen craving pardon
-and beseeching friendship,” answered Tostig; but the
-words had scarcely been uttered before the dust-cloud resolved
-itself into an army, headed by King Harold himself.
-“The enemy!—the enemy!” muttered the Norwegians.
-They formed in line of battle, ready for the fray.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Harold feared not the issue, but he was loath to shed
-his brother’s blood, and sent forward a messenger to offer
-Tostig his old earldom—one-third of the kingdom—if he
-would yield. “And what,” asked Tostig, “will he give
-my faithful ally, the King of Norway?” “He,” replied
-the English messenger, “shall have seven feet of ground
-for a grave, or, as he is a very tall man, perhaps a little
-more.” Tostig bade the messenger depart, and battle was
-joined.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hardly had the fray begun before Hardrada fell with a
-random arrow in his throat. The fury of the English
-onset could not be resisted. The Norwegians fell back and
-crossed the Derwent by Stamford Bridge, and the English
-followed. For a time a gigantic Norseman, like Horatius
-of old, “kept the bridge;” but he was slain at last, and
-the English swarmed after the retreating foe. At nightfall
-the Norsemen were overthrown, the raven banner of the
-Vikings was taken, and Tostig and most of his captains
-were dead. Harold had triumphed. His foes came in
-three hundred ships; they fled in twenty-four.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo82.jpg' alt='' id='i82' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE DEATH OF HAROLD.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the drawing by Daniel Maclise, R.A. By permission of the Art Union of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo83.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0025' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Norman saw on English oak,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>On English neck a Norman yoke,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Norman spoon in English dish,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And England ruled as Normans wish;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Blithe world in England never will be more,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Till England’s rid of all the four.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, in mimic strife, let that great battle which
-gave England for the last time to foreign foes be fought
-again. The first act of the drama which we are about
-to witness takes place on the Sussex shore near Pevensey,
-on the spot where Roman and Saxon alike landed when
-they too coveted the possession of our isle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is the twenty-ninth day of September, in the year of
-grace 1066. The wind that is even now fluttering the
-victorious banners of Harold at York is wafting to our
-coast an even more terrible foe. You see the vast armada
-of the Norman approaching the beach. Amidst the crowd
-of vessels which cover the sea you discern a ship with the
-prow fashioned like a brazen child loosing an arrow from
-a bended bow. That ship bears Duke William and his
-fortunes. Speedily the vessels run aground, planks are
-thrust ashore, and the work of landing begins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Out archers!” is the cry, and the shaven and shorn
-cross-bowmen in their short habits spring ashore and form
-up on the beach. They scour the neighbourhood, but no
-armed foe is in sight. Now the knights, clad in hauberk,
-helmet, and shining cuirass, with their shields slung round
-their necks, step ashore, and their bustling squires, with
-many a tug and strain and muttered curse, lead their high-mettled
-chargers down the creaking gangways. In a trice
-the knights are mounted, their swords girded on, and their
-lances in hand. You see their glittering ranks form and
-wheel upon the shore.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here come the carpenters, with their axes, planes, and
-adzes, seeking a suitable spot for the erection of a castle,
-which was completely fashioned in Normandy, and now
-only needs fitting together. Great frames are carried ashore,
-and like magic a wooden fortress is deftly reared on the
-strand. Ere set of sun the stores are landed and safely
-bestowed within its walls. The guards are set, and the
-evening meal is served.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Last of all to tread the soil of the land that is soon to
-be his comes Duke William. As he steps ashore he
-stumbles, and falls upon his face. A cry of consternation
-runs through the superstitious host. “God preserve us!
-this is a bad sign.”—“Nay,” he shouts lustily, and with
-that readiness of retort which never fails him; “see, my
-lords, I have taken possession of England with both my
-hands! It is now mine, and what is mine is yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At dawn he marches along the seashore to Hastings,
-where other wooden castles are erected, and every precaution
-is taken against surprise. The foragers are busy in every
-neighbouring village, and as they appear the unarmed English
-flee, driving their cattle before them to secret places
-of safety. Mounted scouts push far into the country, and
-fall back on the main body as the English army draws near.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the scene changes, and you see Harold’s footmen
-hurrying forward in the vain hope of smiting the Norman
-ere he has made good his landing. But the surprise of
-Stamford Bridge is not to be repeated, and Harold halts
-seven miles from Hastings and sends forward his spies.
-Speedily they return with the astonishing news that there
-are more priests in William’s camp than fighting-men.
-They are mistaken; they do not know the Norman
-custom of shaving the beard and cropping the poll.
-Harold smiles at their report. “Those whom you have
-seen in such numbers,” says he, “are not priests but good
-soldiers, who will make us feel what they are.” Now
-a council of war is held, and several of his captains, with
-rare good sense, advise the English king to avoid a battle
-and retreat towards London, leaving a desert behind him.
-“No,” says the chivalrous Harold. “Ravage the country
-which has been committed to my care! Never! I will
-try the chances of battle with the few men I have, and
-trust to their courage and the goodness of my cause.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But here comes a Norman monk, big with a message
-from his duke, bidding Harold do one of three things—resign
-his kingdom in favour of William, yield it to the
-Pope for his award, or determine the issue by single
-combat. “Tell your master,” says Harold abruptly, “I
-will not resign my title, I will not refer it to the Pope, nor
-will I accept the single combat.” Again William tempts
-him by the promise of all the land north of the Humber;
-but Harold is proof against the bribe, and his captains
-swear a unanimous oath to make neither peace, truce, nor
-treaty with the invader, but to drive away the Norman, or
-perish in the attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the scene shifts once more. On a spur of the
-South Downs, where Battle Abbey now stands, you see
-the embattled array of the English. The hill of Senlac,
-on which they have posted themselves, slopes steeply in
-front, less steeply on the right, and gently on the left.
-On the summit of the hill the host of the English is
-thickly gathered behind a rough trench and a stockade.
-There is marshy ground on the right, but the left is the
-weakest part of the position, and here are mustered Harold’s
-stout hus-carles, doughty warriors in full armour, wielding
-huge axes. Here, too, are the banners of the king—the
-Golden Dragon of Wessex and the Fighting Man. The
-rest of the ground is occupied by the half-armed rustics
-who have flocked to Harold, and are bent on striking a
-good blow against the invader.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Out from the Norman host spurs the minstrel Taillefer,
-singing the song of Roland, and Oliver, and the peers who
-died at Roncesvalles. As he sings he tosses his sword into
-the air and juggles with it famously. Then he puts his
-horse to the gallop, and strikes his lance through an English
-breast. He smites another with his sword, shouting challenges
-to the foe. The English close round him, and the
-first Norman has fallen on the fatal field.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A shower of arrows from the archers begins the fray,
-and then the footmen and the Norman knights, to the loud
-braying of horns, charge up the slopes, crying, “God be
-our help!” The charge breaks vainly on the stockade and
-shield-wall, behind which the English ply axe and javelin
-with fierce shouts of “Out! out!” Back go the footmen
-and back go the knights, leaving dead and wounded before
-that fatal barrier. Again and again the duke rallies them;
-the fury of fight surges in his veins, and with headlong
-valour he spurs up the slopes to the fierce attack. No
-breach can be made in that wall. His Bretons, entangled
-in the marshy ground, break into disorder, and panic seizes
-his army as the cry goes round that the duke is slain.
-William bars the way and checks the flight of the fugitives
-with savage blows. He tears off his helmet. “I am
-alive,” he shouts, “and by God’s will I will conquer yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Maddened by another repulse, he spurs right into the
-thick of the fight. His horse goes down beneath him,
-but his terrible mace circles in the air, and his assailants
-are felled, never to rise again. Again he mounts, again
-he is unhorsed, and a blow of his hand hurls to the ground
-an unmannerly rider who will not lend him a steed.
-William’s terrible onslaughts have dispelled the panic, but
-the issue of the battle still hangs in the balance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is three in the afternoon, and the English shield-wall
-is yet unbroken. Frontal attacks having failed, William
-will now try what the cunning of strategy can accomplish.
-Hitherto his archers have done but little mischief. With
-their great shields the English ward off the arrows that beat
-upon them like hail. “Shoot upwards,” he commands,
-“that your arrows may fall on their heads.” The archers
-obey, and with shields raised aloft to protect their faces, the
-English are at a manifest disadvantage in their encounters
-with the Norman knights. Almost the first to suffer in
-that iron storm is Harold himself. An arrow pierces his
-right eye. In agony he plucks it out, snaps it in two, and
-flings it from him; but the pain is so great that he leans
-heavily upon his shield.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile another stratagem is equally successful.
-William orders a thousand horse to advance, and then to
-turn and flee. At the sight, the English behind their
-stockade leap forward and set off in wild pursuit, their
-axes suspended from their necks. When they are well
-away from their defences, the fleeing Normans wheel
-about, and the pursuers find themselves assailed on all
-sides with spear and sword. They are cut to pieces, and
-William speedily makes himself master of the position
-which they have abandoned. On either flank his horsemen
-also make good their ascent, and now a fierce hand-to-hand
-combat rages on the crest of the hill. Loud is
-the clamour, great is the slaughter, and the <span class='it'>mêlée</span> is thickest
-round the standard where the hus-carles encircle the body
-of their king with a wall of living valour. One by one
-they fall, the rest betake themselves to flight, and the night
-falls on a stricken and wailing England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now see the torches flit about the field as the conquerors
-rifle the dead. Duke William’s tent is pitched on
-the spot where the fight has raged fiercest. Amidst the
-grisly mounds of slain he gives thanks for his victory, and
-eats and drinks and rests himself. The Sabbath morning
-dawns, and mournful parties of noble ladies, clad in the
-black robes of mourning, search the field for the bodies
-of their fathers, sons, husbands, or brothers. Two monks
-from the Abbey of Waltham, which Harold has founded,
-approach the conqueror and humbly offer him ten marks
-of gold for leave to carry away the remains of their benefactor.
-William grants them permission, and to and fro
-they go, anxiously and vainly searching the field for the
-body of the dead king. At length they call upon the
-“swan-necked Edith,” who loved him well, to assist in the
-search. She is more successful than they, and the mangled
-and disfigured corpse is given hurried burial beneath the
-high altar of Waltham Abbey.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While the conqueror plans a memorial fane on the
-blood-sodden ground, and marshals his forces for the march
-on London, the English are sunk in the depths of bitterness
-and despair. “England, what shall I say of thee?”
-wails the monkish scribe. “Thou hast lost thy national
-king, and sinkest under the foreigner, bathed in the blood
-of thy defenders!” The conqueror marches in triumph to
-London without striking a blow, and on Christmas Day an
-English archbishop places the crown upon his head in the
-Abbey of Westminster. There is bloodshed even on that
-day. When, according to the old English custom, Stigand,
-the archbishop, asks the assembled thanes if they will
-have the Norman for their king, loud shouts of assent
-are raised. The Norman guards surrounding the minster
-mistake the shouting within the abbey for the noise of
-strife, and immediately fire the neighbouring houses and
-slay the innocent spectators.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hard and heavy will be the hand of the conqueror;
-harsh and cruel, but withal not unjust, will be his rule.
-Now that he has won the kingdom, he will strive to reign
-as a lawful king. Heavy fines will be exacted from the
-large landowners who have resisted him, but otherwise he
-will endeavour to rule as the rightful successor to Alfred
-and Edward the Confessor. But he will soon discover that
-England is yet unconquered. Revolts will spring up in all
-parts of the land, and there will be hard fighting, and
-harrying, and burning and slaying for many a year ere he
-is acknowledged king from the Cheviots to the Channel.
-After every revolt the lands of the insurgents will change
-hands, and Norman knights will gradually secure the fairest
-estates in the country. Grim castles of stone will spring
-up, and where they arise the Norman will rule as lord.
-The discontented amongst William’s followers will goad
-the English whose lands they covet into rebellion. They
-will treat the highspirited English to every insult and outrage
-which they can conceive, and when the maddened
-thanes lie stricken on the field they will be rewarded with
-their possessions. Thus the Norman will enter into the
-land to possess it.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo90.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0026' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo88.jpg' alt='' id='i88' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Coronation of William the Conqueror.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by John Cross.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='blockquote90percent'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>When William was being crowned in Westminster Abbey, the archbishop, according
-to the old custom, asked the Norman and English nobles if they would have William
-for their king. They replied with loud shouts. The Norman soldiers outside the abbey
-thought that William was being attacked. They therefore fell on the people and set
-fire to the neighbouring houses. The picture shows the scene of alarm within the abbey.
-After a time order was restored, and the archbishop placed the crown on William’s head.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='91' id='Page_91'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo91.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0027' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'> </h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Such is the patriot’s boast, where’er we roam,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>His first, best country ever is at home.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>This burly Englishman, with his long, flowing locks, his
-mighty thews and sinews, his undaunted heart, his craft and
-skill in warfare, needs no introduction. His name and fame
-are enshrined in every English heart, thanks to the splendid
-romance which Charles Kingsley has woven about his
-heroisms. Legend and tradition, song and story, have cast
-their spell about him, and none can read his thrilling adventures
-without a tribute of admiration and esteem. Wild
-and wayward he ever was, but mingled with the ferocity
-and craftiness of his nature was a childlike simplicity which
-endeared him to all. As a guerilla leader he was the keenest
-thorn in William’s side. “Were there but three men in
-England such as he,” said a chronicler, “William would
-never have won the land.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old stories describe him as a self-willed, boisterous
-lad, who caused his mother many a heartache and his father
-many an embarrassment, until at length he was outlawed
-and driven across the seas, where his mighty deeds of daring
-won him great renown. He may have been present at
-Hastings, though the chroniclers are silent on this point;
-but soon after the battle he was in Flanders, and only
-returned home when he learnt that his ancestral lands at
-Bourne in Lincolnshire had been granted to one Taillebois,
-who was even then in possession of them. Taillebois, by
-his insolence and cruelty, had made himself bitterly hated,
-and the men of the Fens were only waiting for a leader to rise
-in rebellion and thrust him out. Hereward suddenly arrived
-amongst them, and, so the story goes, swept his home clean
-of Frenchmen with his single sword. Eagerly the Fen men
-flocked to him, and acclaimed him as their leader. Soon
-the terror of his name spread far and wide, and the wild
-Fenland became a camp of refuge for those who would not
-bow the neck to the Norman yoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No part of England was better adapted for the purpose.
-It was a vast, low-lying wilderness of slow-moving rivers,
-spreading meres, and treacherous swamps, whose secret
-paths were known only to the natives. Here and there
-“islands” of firmer ground arose, and on these the towns
-and abbeys of Fenland were built. One of these “islands”
-was Ely, a matchless place of refuge, engirdled by waters
-and morasses. Here Hereward made his camp, and defied
-the Normans. Daily his forces grew, and daily he swooped
-down on his foes, appearing so suddenly and disappearing
-so magically into his reedy recesses that none could stay
-him or follow him. William soon perceived that he would
-never be master of England while the bold and watchful
-Hereward was at large.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hereward had allied himself with the Danes, who
-swarmed into Fenland, and having burnt the “golden
-borough” of Peterborough, retired across the North Sea
-laden with its wondrous treasures—the gold crucifixes, the
-jewelled vessels, the costly vestments—which were the pride
-and glory of the abbey. Now that Hereward had rid himself
-of his troublesome allies, William determined to strike
-his blow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forthwith he marched an army to Cambridge, and invested
-the island of Ely on every side. The besieged built
-a great fortress of turf, collected food, and prepared to resist
-to the death. William determined to storm the island from
-Aldreth, between which place and Ely lay half a mile of
-reedy swamp. Collecting all the peasants of the countryside,
-he busied them in making a floating bridge, over which
-his army might pass to the capture of the beleaguered isle.
-Tradition tells us that Hereward, with his golden locks
-shorn and his beard shaved, laboured at the task, and that
-every night before he departed he set fire to the day’s
-work. At length, however, the bridge was finished, and
-William’s army began to march across it. The besieged
-watched the vast array crowd upon the frail bridge. Suddenly
-they saw it give way, and thousands were hurled
-into the thick slime, which speedily engulfed them. The
-first attack had hopelessly failed, and William himself had
-barely escaped destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was not daunted. With that wonderful perseverance
-and dogged determination which bore down every
-obstacle in his path, he built his bridge anew, profiting by
-his former experience. A huge floating sow protected the
-Ely end of the bridge, and was pushed forward as the work
-proceeded. Slowly but surely it grew until the sow was
-but fifty yards from Hereward’s fortress. A high wooden
-tower was erected at the farther end of the great work, and
-on this William planted a witch, who yelled and gibbered
-foul curses at the English as the Normans advanced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bridge was speedily covered with armed men. The
-front of the sow was let down, and gave footing to within
-a dozen yards of the wall of Hereward’s fort. As the
-Normans swarmed out with their scaling-ladders, the besieged
-hurled heavy stones upon them, and shot them down
-by scores, until the ditch was full of dead bodies. The
-besiegers planted their ladders on the corpses of the slain,
-and proceeded to mount them, but only one knight ever
-entered the fort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Afar off a puff of smoke and a thin wisp of yellow
-flame were seen. Hereward had fired the reeds. “On
-came the flame, leaping and crackling, laughing and shrieking
-like a live fiend. The archers and slingers in the boats
-cowered before it, and fell, scorched corpses, as it swept on.
-It reached the causeway, surged up, recoiled from the mass
-of human beings, then sprang over their heads and passed
-onwards, girding them with flame. The reeds were burning
-around them; the timbers of the bridge caught fire;
-the peat and fagots smouldered beneath their feet. They
-sprang from the burning footway, and plunged into the
-fathomless bog, covering their faces and eyes with scorched
-hands, and then sank in the black, gurgling slime.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Taillebois dragged William back, regardless of curses and
-prayers from his soldiery; and they reached the shore just
-in time to see between them and the water a long black,
-smouldering, writhing line; the morass to right and left,
-which had been a minute before deep reed, an open smutty
-pool, dotted with boats full of shrieking and cursing men;
-and at the causeway end, the tower with the flame climbing
-up its posts, and the witch of Brandon throwing herself
-desperately from the top, and falling dead upon the embers,
-a motionless heap of rags. “Fool that thou art! Fool
-that I was!” cried the great king, as he rolled off his horse
-at his tent door, cursing with rage and pain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But he was not yet beaten. The lion in William having
-been defeated, the fox had his day. What force could not
-accomplish, craft and cunning might. No longer did he
-attempt to capture the island. He would starve it into
-submission, and meanwhile test the temper of the timorous
-monks who trembled in their cells. With lavish promises
-for their own safety and the possession of their abbey and
-its lands, they were beguiled, and at length they revealed the
-secret paths that led to the isle. One by one his friends
-deserted him, until at length the day arrived when Hereward
-too was forced to come in to the king—the last Englishman
-in the land to submit to the Norman. William received
-him gladly, for his heart ever warmed to a brave foe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What the actual end of Hereward was we do not know,
-but we can readily believe that he died fighting, overborne
-by the number of his treacherous foes, and in his dying
-struggle doing miracles of valour. So he fades out of our
-pageant, but his memory will ever be dear to all Britons
-who love the gallant and brave, and deem the pure patriot
-the glory of his land.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo94.jpg' alt='' id='i94' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>HEREWARD YIELDING TO WILLIAM.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the drawing by H. C. Selous. By permission of the Art Union of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo96.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0028' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter VI.<br/> ENGLAND UNDER THE NORMANS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>WILLIAM THE RED.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>There is no peace, saith the Lord, unto the wicked.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/l.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='L'/>OOK upon the scene which now unfolds itself. You
-are gazing into the depths of that Hampshire forest
-which the Conqueror set apart for his kingly sport.
-It is cursed to his line by reason of the cruelties which he
-wreaked upon the forest dwellers when he burnt their roof-trees
-over their heads, and scattered them afar, to make a
-solitude for his deer. Two scions of his house have already
-perished in its glades.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The forest is silent. It is late afternoon, and the setting
-sun is even now gilding the upper branches of the spreading
-trees. Suddenly the silence is dispelled. You hear the
-sound of horns, the baying of dogs, the shouts of hunters,
-and a lordly stag flies past you. Now a pair of horsemen
-gallop up, and your eye is instantly arrested by the Red
-King. You recognize him instantly as a son of the Conqueror,
-though he seems but a caricature of his father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of middle stature, he is square and heavy of frame,
-with a restless eye, and a stammering tongue that can,
-nevertheless, rap out ready witticisms and biting sarcasms
-on occasion. Evil living and unbridled passion have left
-their marks on his ruddy and bloated countenance. He
-fears neither God nor man. His crafty ministers wring
-heavy fines from his barons, and he does not even spare
-the Church. Archbishop Anselm, that tender-hearted poet-dreamer,
-who showed the courage of a lion when fraud and
-wrong were brewing, alone held him in check. Now that
-Anselm is in exile, there is no wickedness that he will not
-do. Vicious, vain, boastful, and puffed up with pride, he
-has not an honest friend in the land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Men hate him and mock him. With what gibes and
-sneers they tell that story of the chamberlain and the boots!
-Once his chamberlain brought him a pair of boots, saying
-that they had cost but three shillings. “Take them away,”
-roared the vainglorious fool, “they are not worthy of a
-king’s foot. Bring a pair that costs a mark of silver.” The
-cunning chamberlain, thereupon, brings a worse pair, and
-these the Red King pronounces worthy of his majesty.
-What a king! Ay, but far worse remains behind. There
-is no baseness, no cruelty, no injustice which he has not
-practised. Even now the revenues of bishops and abbots
-are flowing into his pocket, while “the hungry flock look
-up, and are not fed.” When disease attacks him he repents;
-when he recovers he is himself again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But withal he is no craven. He fights like a man, and
-reveals much of the Conqueror’s skill and cunning. Fear
-he knows not. Men tell with wonder of the day when he
-set forth to subdue Normandy in the teeth of a storm. His
-mariners trembled, but not he. “Kings never drown, ye
-varlets!” he cried, and forthwith hove out on the tempestuous
-waters of the Channel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Watch him closely. Behind his reckless air of gaiety
-there is an anxious foreboding. Last night he tossed on his
-couch and dreamed an ugly dream. He thought he was
-in a gorgeous minster hung with velvet and purple. All
-around were the shrines of the saints gleaming with gold
-and gems and ivory. Such riches even he, the despoiler
-of churches, had never looked upon, and his hands itched
-to clutch them. But when he tried to seize them they
-vanished, and an altar rose before him, whereon was lying a
-naked man. A lust to feed on the man’s flesh overcame him,
-and he ate of the body that lay before him. At length the
-victim spoke in accents stern beyond words, “Is it not
-enough that thou hast thus far grieved me with so many
-wrongs? Henceforth thou shalt eat of me no more.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The horror of the dream is still at the back of his mind,
-though he has quaffed the wine-cup until the disquieting
-vision no longer terrifies him. His counsellors have besought
-him not to venture into the forest to-day; but no
-man save Anselm, and he is beyond the seas, ever turned
-him from his purpose. Such is the man who now rides
-into the forest glade.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While he jokes and jests with his companion, a startled
-stag springs out of the brushwood. Rufus slips from his horse
-and fits an arrow to his bow. He shoots, and the quarrel
-strikes the prey and wounds it slightly. “Shoot, man;
-shoot!” he shouts to his companion, shading his eyes with
-his hand to see the effect of another shot. The second
-bow twangs, and down goes the king with an arrow in his
-heart. What has happened no man can say. Some tell
-you that his companion’s shaft has glanced from a tree and
-has found its billet in the Red King’s breast. Some speak
-of an Englishman, cowering in the undergrowth, who has
-seized the moment to let fly the arrow of retribution.
-Some even aver that the deadly missile was sped by his
-own brother’s hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one knows, and no one cares. It is enough for all
-that a king whose life has been that of a wild beast perishes
-like a beast among the beasts. His companion, horrified at
-the sight of the dying king, and fearing that he will be
-accused of the crime, spurs his horse out of the forest, and
-does not check his steed till he is on the seashore, with a
-bark at hand to carry him to a foreign strand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There lies the king, the red blood ebbing from his false
-heart. “That arrow, by whomsoever shot, set England
-free from oppression such as she never felt before or after
-at the hand of a single man.”</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Then a creaking cart came slowly, which a charcoal-burner drove;</p>
-<p class='line0'>He found the dead man lying, a ghastly treasure-trove.</p>
-<p class='line0'>He raised the corpse for charity, and on his wagon laid,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And so the Red King drove in state from out the forest glade.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo100.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0029' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>MATILDA, “LADY” OF ENGLAND.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Old, unhappy, far-off things,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And battles long ago.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now you shall witness a striking scene. You are gazing
-at the castle of Oxford, that stands up grim and square in
-the midst of its encircling waters. Oxford is already
-renowned as the abode of quiet scholars and learned men;
-for “Beauclerc,” who has now gone to his rest, made it an
-academy and a sanctuary of letters. He it was who built
-this grim castle, in which to sojourn when he came to
-Oxford to enjoy the converse of the bookish men who
-dwelt beneath its shadow. It is, however, no learned concourse
-of scholars, no peaceful trial of wits, which we are
-about to witness, but an incident of stern warfare.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The castle is undergoing a siege, which has already lasted
-three months. An iron girdle of armed men forbids entrance
-or exit. You see, however, no great engines for hurling
-missiles into the fortress; you perceive no battering-rams;
-no pent-houses for undermining its walls; no scaling-ladders
-and towers for assault. Hunger and cold are the weapons
-of the besiegers; within, starvation and disease are fighting
-their battle. It is early morning of the vigil of St.
-Thomas, a cold, gray day, with a sharp frost in the air.
-In the camp of the besiegers a white flag is raised in token
-of truce, and presently you see a stalwart knight clad in full
-armour bestride his charger. Behind him assembles a train
-of abbots and priests bearing Church banners and crucifixes.
-Slowly they wend their way over the powdery snow to the
-edge of the castle moat, and presently the loud blast of a
-trumpet startles the ear. Now you see on the battlements
-of the castle a warder appear and inquire the meaning of
-the summons. “Say to thy mistress that I beseech a
-parley,” cries the knight, and the warder disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is a pause, and presently on the battlements you
-see a woman, pale and gaunt, but proud and haughty as angry
-Juno. You notice her flashing eye, her hard, resolute look,
-and you know that she will never yield to mortal man.
-“Why come ye?” she asks in imperious tones, and the Lord
-Abbot of Reading answers her. He bids her yield the
-castle, and he promises, in the name of the king, that no
-harm shall befall her or any that are with her. She shall
-have honourable escort to the coast, lands and money shall
-be hers, and no vengeance of any kind shall be wreaked on
-her adherents. “Gracious lady,” he concludes, “I implore
-thee to yield and end this cruel war, which is a reproach
-to Christendom and ruin to the people of England. Thy
-famishing state is well known, and all hope of escape is
-gone.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who told thee, thou meddling monk, that I thought
-of escape?” she answers. “Wherefore should I escape?
-My brother, Earl Robert, is at hand, and ye wot well how
-the foul usurper was forced to yield to him at Lincoln.
-The like will happen again here at Oxenford, so let the false
-recreant begone. I will not throw open my gates nor quit
-these walls until thy perjured master is in chains, pleading at
-my feet for the life I have once too often granted him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Madam, madam, I beseech thee,” begins the abbot in
-reproof, but the wrathful figure on the wall waves him
-away. “Get thee gone!” she screams in a fierce passion,
-“or I will remember to hang thee on the gate of thy abbey
-when this rebellion is over.” So the knight and the churchman
-depart, and anon you see the former riding from post
-to post urging his men to keep closer watch on the
-besieged, and doubling the guards that lie in wait near
-every exit from the castle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The early dusk arrives, and the snow begins to fall, and
-you can scarce see the dark mass of the fortress. The cold
-wind drives the falling snow into the eyes of the sentinels;
-they grow numb and drowsy, and their vigilance is relaxed.
-Now, strain your eyes, and watch the postern of yonder
-tower. Slowly the door opens, and dimly you perceive five
-white-clad figures flit out and descend into the moat. You
-see their ghost-like forms reappear and make all speed for
-the river. Across its ice-bound surface they hasten, and as
-they draw near you perceive that one of them is a woman.
-Now they plunge into the snowdrifts on the other side, and
-struggle on towards Abingdon. There they will find friends
-and horses, and speedily they will make for the coast and
-hie them to the shores of friendly France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What is the meaning of the incidents which you
-have witnessed? The woman who has just escaped is
-Matilda, sole surviving child of Beauclerc. When Henry’s
-only son went down in the <span class='it'>White Ship</span>, she alone remained
-as heir to the realm. Forthwith Henry called his barons
-together, and bade them swear fealty to his daughter as
-“Lady” of England. They did his bidding reluctantly, for
-they scorned to be ruled by a woman. Amongst the knights
-who swore the oath was Henry’s nephew Stephen, he whom
-you saw directing the siege of Oxford. He is handsome,
-tall, strong, and one of the most renowned knights in all
-Christendom. Even while the barons obeyed the king’s
-behest, many of them deemed Stephen far worthier to rule
-them than the haughty, passionate Dame Matilda.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ere Henry died, many of the barons had determined to
-forswear their oath and throw in their lot with Stephen.
-They knew him as easy-going, soft-hearted, “unstable as
-water,” and, as such, he was the very king for them.
-With Stephen on the throne, every baron might be king
-in his own domain, free to raid and harry and fight as he
-listed. So when the old king was carried to his tomb,
-Stephen seized the crown, and, after the fashion of usurpers,
-strove to win friends to his side. He scattered Henry’s
-treasure in lavish bribes, he promised men all they asked,
-he hired foreign soldiers, and was crowned king. Right
-well pleased were the barons, and right soon they built them
-those strong castles which they had not dared to rear while
-Henry was alive. Then they quarrelled and fought, and
-robbed, and tortured, and hanged to their hearts’ content.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sad indeed was the condition of England at that time.
-Turn to the old Chronicle and read:—“They put the
-wretched country folk to sore toil with their castle-building;
-and when the castles were made, they filled them with
-devils and evil men. Then they took all those that they
-deemed had any goods, both by night and by day, men and
-women alike, and put them in prison to get their gold and
-silver, and tortured them with tortures unspeakable, for
-never were martyrs so tortured as they were.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. All
-this lasted nineteen winters while Stephen was king, and
-ever it was worse and worse. Thou mightest easily fare a
-whole day’s journey, and shouldest never find a man living
-in a village nor land tilled. Then was corn dear, and flesh
-and cheese, for there was none in the land. Wretched men
-starved for hunger, and some were begging alms that were
-once rich men, and some fled out of the land.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And to add to all this horror, Matilda, aided by her noble
-half-brother, Robert of Gloucester, and her kinsman, David
-of Scotland, waged war against the usurper. The fortune of
-battle wavered, now to this side, now to that. Sometimes
-Stephen was victor, sometimes Matilda. You remember how
-she taunted Stephen from the battlements of Oxford Castle
-about the affair at Lincoln. The story is worth telling.
-Stephen was besieging Lincoln Castle when a superior force
-of his foes assailed him. With only three faithful followers
-he fought like a lion at bay, disdaining either to fly or yield.
-At length his sword-blade snapped; but one of his companions
-handed him a two-handed Danish axe, with which
-he did terrible execution. Then the axe-helve splintered
-in his hand; but all feared to seize him until he was hurled
-to the ground by a stone thrown by an unknown hand.
-A knight, greatly daring, ran up and laid hands on the
-fallen king; but Stephen shook him off, and it was only
-to Robert of Gloucester that he would deign to surrender.
-Stephen was put in ward at Bristol, and a great Council
-elected Matilda queen in his stead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ere long her haughty behaviour, her self-will, her
-revengeful spirit, and the injustice with which she treated
-the Londoners, disgusted even her best friends. One day,
-while she was sitting at dinner, the city bells rang out
-a call to arms, and the Londoners, “like angry wasps from
-their comb,” swarmed into her palace. She had barely time
-to escape on a swift steed to Winchester. Then the Londoners
-arrayed themselves under Stephen’s brave queen and
-laid siege to Matilda. She was forced to retreat, and in
-the strife that followed the King of Scots and Robert of
-Gloucester were captured. Matilda fled on horseback to
-Devizes; but enemies thronged about her, and her friends
-only got her safely out of the town by covering her with
-grave-clothes and carrying her forth on a bier. Robert was
-now exchanged for Stephen, and once more the tide of war
-turned in his favour. This brings us up to the incidents
-which we have just witnessed in front of Oxford Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Little remains to be said. Robert died, and Matilda
-found that she had lost her best and most gallant champion.
-Her son Henry, however, was now of an age to take his
-part in the strife. Strong, able, and rich, he sailed from
-France with an army, but was too wise to fight a pitched
-battle. He could afford to wait; and so he made peace with
-Stephen, who was to reign in England until his death, when
-Henry was to succeed him. A year later Stephen died, and
-all good men rejoiced. Peace was coming to the distracted
-realm, and the old days of “war, wickedness, and waste”
-were over, men fondly hoped, never to return.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='106' id='Page_106'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo106.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0030' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE GREAT ARCHBISHOP.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Fame’s loudest trump upon the ear of Time</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Leaves but a dying echo; they alone</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Are held in everlasting memory</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Whose deeds partake of heaven.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more the scene changes. We are standing in the
-High Street of Canterbury watching a notable procession
-pass by. Listen to the clanging bells, and when they cease,
-hear the organ rolling forth its waves of harmony from
-the cathedral. The old timbered houses are decked with
-streamers and garlands; groups of priests with banners are
-threading the street towards the ancient gate. It is very
-evident that some great personage is about to visit the
-city. Is it the king? Not so; it is some one even
-greater than the king—it is the archbishop, Thomas
-Becket. You wonder that an archbishop should be more
-powerful than a king, but in these early days the Church
-is the greatest power on earth. Even kings must submit
-to its decrees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the trumpets blow, and a long procession winds its
-way towards the cathedral. As the archbishop comes in
-sight loud shouts of welcome rend the air. Look at him as
-he sits his charger, prouder than the boldest knight in the
-land. There was a time when he could joust and use sword
-and lance with the most skilful warrior in the kingdom.
-Ah! he was a boon companion of the king’s then. What
-merry jests, what jovial days and nights they spent together!
-They were Jonathan and David in their friendship. Becket
-was the king’s right-hand man in all affairs of State. Clever
-and learned, he seconded the king in all his strenuous endeavours
-to rid the land of lawlessness and misery. In return,
-Henry heaped riches and honours upon his chancellor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What state and ceremony he loved in those days! His
-palace was far grander than the king’s; a hundred and
-forty knights followed in his train. None wore such
-magnificent robes as he; none made so brave a display.
-As for the king, he cared nothing for those things in which
-Becket’s soul delighted. Often when the chancellor sat
-down to feast with his followers, Henry would gallop up
-to the door of the palace, toss his bridle to a groom,
-stride into the great hall, vault the table, and in his
-rough riding-dress take his place by the side of his gorgeous
-chancellor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What stories they tell of the pranks these two used to
-play! One winter day, when the pair were riding through
-the streets of London, the king saw an old man shivering in
-his rags. “Look at that poor beggar,” said he. “Would it
-not be a kind act to give him a good warm coat?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Certainly, sire,” replied Becket; “and you are a good
-Christian to bethink yourself of such a generous deed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then give him yours,” laughed the king, and seized
-the rich robe which the chancellor was wearing. Becket
-was loath to bestow his rich crimson coat on a beggar man;
-but the king would have his way, and a pretty tussle ensued
-between them. At last the chancellor’s cloak was pulled
-from his shoulders, and Henry handed it to the astonished
-beggar. How hugely he laughed all the way home at the
-wry face which Becket pulled!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But all this has suffered a “sea-change” long ago. When
-the king had quelled the robber barons and had pulled down
-their strongholds about their ears, he found that there was
-lawlessness in the Church needing his grave attention. The
-Conqueror had given the bishops the right to hold courts,
-in which they alone could try the clergy, no matter what
-crimes they committed. In course of time the bishops
-claimed jurisdiction, not only over priests, but over all clerks—that
-is, persons who could read. But who cared for the
-bishop and his judgments? He could not imprison or
-hang; he could simply drive a man out of the Church.
-Many a bold rogue has saved his neck by pulling out a
-writing from his pocket and gravely reading a certain verse
-from the Psalms, mayhap while he held the scroll upside
-down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Since Henry has sat on the throne more than a hundred
-murders have been committed by clerks, and not one of
-the murderers has graced the gallows. This is intolerable;
-Henry will brook this state of things no longer. He will
-have justice and order in his land, come what may. Ah!
-but to meddle with the rights of the Church is no light
-matter, as he is ere long to discover to his cost. He cannot
-even make a beginning of reform unless the head of the
-Church in England is in sympathy with his plans. Good
-thought! he will make Becket archbishop, and then all
-will be well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But when the consecration is over, Henry finds to his
-dismay that Becket is another man. He dismisses his gay
-followers; he throws off his costly robes; he abandons his
-feasting, his gold plate, his tapestries, and his jewels. He
-mortifies himself with the coarsest food, drinks bitter water,
-wears sackcloth next his skin, and has himself flogged for
-his sins. A little cell is his home, and every day, to emulate
-the meekness of his Master, he washes the feet of thirteen
-beggars. All the world wonders, and Henry grows angry.
-His anger increases when Becket resigns the chancellorship,
-and lets it be known that he now lives for Mother Church,
-and Mother Church alone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Henry now tries to carry out his reforms, and make all
-men, priest and layman alike, answerable for their crimes to
-the king’s court. For a moment Becket wavers; the king
-shall have his wish. But a day’s reflection convinces him
-that in yielding he is betraying the Church. Then his
-resolution stiffens. He prays the Pope to release him from
-his promise, and when he is absolved he boldly defies the
-king. Picture Henry’s rage. You must know the man to
-imagine the fury of it. When thwarted, he is wont to fling
-himself on the floor and bite the rushes with which it is
-strewn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Becket has made many enemies by his arrogance in the
-old days, and now they take care to fan the king’s wrath.
-Some one accuses him of having denied justice, and forthwith
-he is found guilty and heavily fined. Other punishments
-are in store for him; but he sweeps into the Council
-chamber in full robes, with his crosier in his hand, and
-dares them to pass sentence upon him. He and the
-Church, he says, are in the keeping of God, and the Pope,
-and none other, shall judge him. Angry indeed are the
-king’s friends at these bold words. One of them shouts
-“Traitor!” and others take up the rushes from the floor
-and fling them at him. Turning to one of his assailants, he
-fiercely cries, “If I might bear arms, I would quickly prove
-on you that you lied!” With this he leaves the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Full well he knows that there is no safety for him in
-England, so, disguised as a simple monk, and calling himself
-“Brother Dearman,” he hastens from the kingdom, and for
-seven long years he dwells abroad. Discontented nobles
-in Henry’s wide French dominions—he is lord from the
-Pyrenees to the Tweed—threaten to take up arms in
-Becket’s cause, and at length a kind of peace is patched
-up between archbishop and king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But ere Becket can return home, Henry does a deed
-which again angers the proud archbishop and rouses all the
-old enmity between them. Following the French fashion,
-Henry desires to have his son crowned king in his lifetime.
-The Archbishop of York is persuaded to undertake the ceremony.
-Now, the crowning of the king is the privilege of
-the Archbishop of Canterbury, and of him alone. Becket’s
-anger flames up at the slight, and he crosses to England in a
-bitter frame of mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now you stand in the streets of Canterbury watching
-his return. The people welcome him gladly, for they remember
-his old kindnesses to them. The nobles, however,
-stand aloof; they dread his reappearance, and rightly believe
-that it means trouble to the realm. Becket passes on to his
-cathedral, and in solemn tones excommunicates the Archbishop
-of York and the bishops who have crowned the
-young prince.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Henry is in Normandy, but the news speedily reaches
-him, and then his passion knows no bounds. “Here,” he
-shouts to the knights about him, “here is a man that has
-eaten my bread, a pitiful fellow that came to my court on
-a sorry hackney, and owes all he has to me, lifting his hand
-against me, and insulting my kingdom and my kindred, and
-not one of the cowardly, sluggish knaves I feed and pay so
-well has the heart to avenge me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fatal words! Four of the knights who listen to the
-king’s bitter reproof steal away from his court and hurry to
-Canterbury. While cool reflection has brought wiser counsels
-to the king, they are bursting into the archbishop’s
-chamber at Canterbury, and are commanding him to absolve
-the bishops without delay. He argues with them, and they
-threaten him, but he is obdurate. “Then we will do more
-than threaten,” they say, and outside they go to don their
-coats of mail. Meanwhile the frightened monks run to the
-archbishop and beg him to take shelter in the cathedral. He
-laughs at their fears. “Methinks,” he says, “all you monks
-are cowards.” Not a step will he stir till the bell summons
-him to vespers. Then he walks serenely to the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Soon the knights are thundering at the barred door.
-“Unbolt the door,” cries Becket; “I will not have God’s
-house made a fortress for me.” The timid monks dare not
-obey him, and he flings back the bolt himself. Then the
-knights enter, and one of them attempts to drag him outside,
-so that the murderer’s work may not be done within consecrated
-walls. Becket clings to the great pillar, and Grim, the
-only brave monk in the chapter, holds him fast. “Strike!
-strike!” shouts one of the knights, and the sword descends.
-The devoted Grim catches the blade on his arm, and falls
-back wounded. Then the blows fall thick and fast, and the
-archbishop sinks to the ground, crying out that he dies for
-the cause of God and the Church. And here we leave him
-in the gloom and silence of his cathedral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Becket is dead; but though he goes hence and is no
-more seen, he is mightier in death than he was in life. He
-conquers as his heart’s blood drips from him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All Christendom stands aghast at the murder. Henry is
-horrified when he learns the news, and his grief is real and
-profound. He instantly sends explanations to the Pope, and,
-fearing that his enemies will unite against him, embarks for
-Ireland. In due course he returns to Normandy, and swears
-that he had no foreknowledge of the archbishop’s death.
-There is no more talk of curbing the Church; it has proved
-far too strong for him.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“O’er the rough stones that pave the ancient way,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Barefoot, a king in penitent array,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Crawls humbly to the canonizèd bones.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Doffing his state, he eagerly atones,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Performs the penance haughty priests decide,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And stills the throbbings of rebellious pride.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Prostrate, he feels the stroke of chastening rod,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And cleansed, he rises, reconciled with God.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo107.jpg' alt='' id='i107' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Death of Becket.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>After the painting by John Cross, in Canterbury Cathedral.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='113' id='Page_113'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo113.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0031' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>STRONGBOW.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The lovely and the lonely bride</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Whom we have wedded but have never won.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, for the first time, let Ireland figure in our pageant.
-So far England has never intruded upon this “green isle of
-the west.” Centuries have come and gone since the Kelts
-first crossed into Erin and subdued the primitive inhabitants
-by force of arms. Legends, many and wondrously beautiful,
-still remain of those early times, and men read them to-day
-with a new and kindling interest. A strange dreamland it
-is of gods and wizards, heroes and beauteous ladies.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“The isle is full of noises,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>We do not, however, tread the solid ground of history
-until the coming of St. Patrick, who “preached, baptized,
-and prayed; from the praise of God he ceased not.” In
-the days of his successors Ireland became the <span class='it'>Isle of Saints</span>,
-and sent forth her missionaries to less favoured lands. At
-length invaders arrived; the Vikings descended with fire and
-sword, and after terrible conflicts settled in certain coastwise
-towns of the eastern shore. Bold Brian Boru, however,
-clipped their wings at Clontarf, and Ireland still remained
-unsubdued. When, however, King Henry of England began
-to meditate on the conquest of the sister isle, Ireland had
-long fallen from her high estate. All that St. Patrick and
-his successors had done to civilize the island had disappeared
-during the long and desperate struggle with the Danes.
-Ireland was a sad, despairing land, where peace never reigned
-and men never ceased from foray and slaughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, turn your eyes to the historic figures who pass
-us by. Foremost among them you see a dark-visaged
-“king,” with his collar of gold and his mantle of fur. He
-is Diarmid, King of Leinster, though his kingdom is
-shadowy enough at present; for he has been driven out
-of Ireland by the high-king and a chief whom he has
-grievously wronged. This Diarmid, smitten by the charms
-of Devorgilla, wife of the one-eyed chief of Breffni, has
-carried off the lady, and now he is suffering for his gallantry.
-He has posted to King Henry, offering him
-homage in return for assistance in recovering his throne.
-Henry has other business on hand just now, and he cannot
-entertain the enterprise in person. He gives the errant
-king, however, letters-patent permitting all liegemen of the
-English crown to assist him in recovering his territory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So Diarmid hies him to Bristol, the great western seaport,
-and there meets with the second figure in the group
-now passing before us. Look well at this tall, ruddy, gray-eyed
-Norman knight, for he is the first to set up English
-rule in Ireland. He is Richard Strongbow of Clare, Earl
-of Pembroke, a “landless resolute,” a man of no very good
-character, but warlike, and with the courage and cunning
-of his race. You would not think so to speak with him.
-His voice is soft and gentle, his manner is courteous, but
-behind it all there is unmistakable determination and daring.
-Strongbow agrees to throw in his lot with Diarmid, and
-the price of his assistance is the fair maiden who walks by
-her father’s side. Eva is nothing loath to accept the debonair
-Norman knight as her husband, so all goes well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The buds are bursting into leaf on the Irish trees when
-the advance-guard of the invaders see the blue hills of
-Wicklow before them. After some dubious fighting, they
-seize Wexford, and begin to harry the surrounding country.
-Raymond the Fat, Strongbow’s nephew, a stout, rosy, valiant
-knight, arrives in May with reinforcements, and several hard-fought
-successes are gained. Then comes Strongbow with
-the main force, and a combined attack is made on Waterford,
-which is, in sooth, a hard nut to crack. It is Raymond who
-perceives the means of shelling the kernel. In his reconnoitring
-he observes a small wooden house built on props
-and clinging with its timbers to the stones of the walls.
-His men hew down the posts which support it, and as
-the building falls it reveals a gap in the wall, through
-which the besiegers enter. The town is seized, a pitiless
-slaughter follows, and the dead lie in heaps in the streets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Strongbow and Eva are forthwith wedded. And now
-begins a period of fierce strife amidst the woods and bogs,
-where the Irish can strike shrewd blows at the invader and
-vanish into security by secret paths. When, emboldened by
-success, they leave the broken ground and meet the enemy
-on the plain, they are crushed and scattered by the whirlwind
-charge of the mailed horsemen. Slowly but surely
-the newcomers gain ground, and at length Dublin falls.
-Then Diarmid, “the traitor,” sinks into his grave. His
-work is done, and no longer will his hoarse voice urge on
-the enemies of his country. Strongbow is his heir, and he
-now calls himself King of Leinster.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By this time Henry is alarmed, for Strongbow bids fair
-ere long to be King of Ireland. He issues a proclamation
-forbidding Englishmen to engage in warfare in the distracted
-isle, and Strongbow soon perceives that Henry will brook
-no vassal of his building up a rival kingdom. Raymond the
-Fat is at once dispatched with a humble letter of homage;
-but Henry receives the messenger coldly, and disdains to
-reply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Henry himself now prepares to invade Ireland. The
-month of October, in the year 1171, sees his great fleet of
-four hundred ships laden with soldiers set sail from Milford
-Haven. The fame of this fierce, bullet-headed king with
-the bloodshot eyes and the dark red hair has preceded him,
-and at his landing all Ireland hastens to do him homage.
-In a wicker-work hall with walls of peeled osiers, Henry
-holds his court in Dublin during one of the stormiest
-winters ever known. He feasts the Irish chieftains on
-dainty Norman dishes; he grants charters bestowing all
-the soil of Ireland on ten of his leading knights, and,
-leaving Strongbow out in the cold, invests Hugh de Lacy
-with cap and sword as the first governor of Dublin.
-When the April showers begin to fall, the royal Plantagenet
-embarks his host and returns to England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But what of Strongbow? Conscious of the royal displeasure,
-he joins Henry in Normandy, and fights bravely
-against the king’s rebel sons. Then once more the sun of
-royalty deigns to smile on him, and at length he is rewarded
-with the long-coveted governorship of Dublin. In Ireland
-he discovers that Raymond the Fat is most popular with
-the soldiery, and is likely to prove a troublesome rival. A
-marriage is arranged between Strongbow’s sister and the
-popular knight, and Strongbow feels that he has staved off a
-disaster. The wedding festivities are rudely interrupted by
-news of native risings, and away goes Raymond to the congenial
-work of quelling the revolting chieftains. He gains
-success after success. The soldiers will have no other leader
-but him; and all the while Strongbow jealously intrigues
-against him. One day when Raymond is in the south he
-receives this message from his wife: “Be it known unto
-your sincere love that the great jaw-tooth which used to
-give me such uneasiness has fallen out. If you have any
-care or regard for me or yourself, return with all speed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The “great jaw-tooth” is none other than Strongbow,
-who has just died from the effects of an ulcer in his foot.
-So passes the man who ushers the English race into Ireland.
-He came to bring not peace but a sword, and with his
-advent began five long centuries of battle and murder,
-oppression, confiscation, rebellion, famine, crime, and misery
-unspeakable.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo118.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0032' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>RICHARD OF THE LION HEART.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The knight’s bones are dust,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And his good sword rust;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>His soul is with the saints, I trust!</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Almost the best-known character in all our pageant now
-makes his appearance. Clad in coat of mail, his shield
-blazoned with the leopards of England, his surcoat broidered
-with the Red Cross, he is the very <span class='it'>beau-ideal</span> of a knight.
-Tall, stalwart, handsome, fair-haired, and blue-eyed, the gaze
-of all men lingers admiringly on him. A good general, a
-skilful engineer, a wise judge of men, he might have been
-a renowned king; but, alas, his lust for war, his thirst for
-adventure, his fierce delight in conflict made him a mere
-soldier—the foremost of his time, it is true, but nevertheless
-a killer of men, and not a builder of states or a benefactor
-of his land. Still, he shines beyond all other English kings
-as the hero of song and story, and as the mirror of the
-knighthood which prevailed in his day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Richard figures in history as the outstanding hero of
-the third Crusade. Well-nigh a century before he was
-crowned king at Westminster, Peter the Hermit had
-harrowed men’s hearts by a recital of the infamies done
-by the Saracen to Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land.
-With frenzied words he bade his hearers, “Go, deliver the
-sepulchre of the Lord;” and everywhere arose the answering
-cry, “God wills it!” A tumultuary horde, burning
-with enthusiasm, plundered its way to the East, but perished
-without touching Asiatic shores. Behind it came an
-organized army, which suffered terribly on the burning
-sands of Syria, but nevertheless achieved its object, and
-set up a Latin kingdom in the Holy Land. Half a century
-went by, and the Crescent was once more in the ascendant.
-Again a Crusade was preached, and again an immense army
-set forth to deliver the tomb of our Lord from the infidel.
-It had to fight against treachery of the worst type, and
-its career was inglorious in the extreme.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sixteen years ago a new conqueror arose in the East, the
-great Sultan Saladin, a knight worthy to cross swords with
-Richard himself. Jerusalem was now in his hands, and
-pious Christians felt a deep pang of shame that it should be
-so. Once more a Crusade was preached, and once more the
-good and the bad, the pious and the impious, the just and
-the unjust of Christendom swore to drive the Saracen from
-the holy soil which his foot polluted. Religious enthusiasm
-blazed up fiercely, and its first-fruits in England was an
-awful massacre of Jews on the coronation day of Richard.
-“Down with the foes of the Lord!” shouted the mob, and
-thousands of innocent Israelites were murdered in cold
-blood. At Lincoln the brave Jews defended themselves in
-the castle until all hope was gone. Then they slew their
-women and children, lest a worse fate should befall them,
-and perished by their own hands rather than surrender to
-their Christian foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But all this was forgotten in the bustle and tumult of
-warlike preparation. Never was Richard so busy, never
-was he in higher spirits. He worked all day, snatching
-an hour or two in the evening to spend with his loved
-troubadours. In the August of the year 1189 his galley
-<span class='it'>Trenche-mer</span> set sail from Marseilles, and spread its sails for
-Messina, where Richard and Philip of France were to forgather.
-Winter was to be spent peacefully under Sicilian
-skies; but trouble was not long in brewing. The townsfolk
-having beaten and insulted his men, Richard forthwith
-stormed their city. As a notable squire of dames, he then
-took up the cause of his widowed sister Joan, who had
-been despoiled of her dowry by her brother-in-law, the
-new king. Restitution was made perforce, and Richard
-by his gallantry and lavish bounty soon became the theme
-of all tongues. Philip of France, as proud and haughty
-as Richard himself, looked on sullenly, and a passionate
-jealousy of the English king began to take possession of
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last Richard sailed for Cyprus, where he proposed to
-land and await the coming of his bride, the fair Berengaria
-of Navarre. But a storm overtook his fleet, and two of his
-vessels were driven ashore. Isaac Comnenus, the churlish
-ruler of the island, little guessing with whom he had to
-deal, seized the cargoes and imprisoned the crews. This
-was intolerable, and Richard’s hot blood boiled with rage.
-To avenge the insult, he pounced upon the capital of the
-island and captured it. Then, to crown his triumph, came
-Berengaria, and, amidst scenes of splendour, his marriage
-was celebrated. He spent his honeymoon in conquering
-the rest of the island, nor did he rest until Isaac, loaded
-with silver chains, was sent into banishment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Twice he had fought and conquered since leaving Marseilles,
-and yet a third adventure awaited him before the
-real business of his enterprise began. During the voyage
-to Acre a big merchant ship was sighted flying false colours.
-Speedily she was discovered to be a Saracen vessel striving
-to run the blockade of Acre, now besieged by the Crusaders.
-Forthwith Richard mustered his crew. “I will hang every
-mother’s son of you if you let yonder dromond go,” was the
-burden of his speech, and having thus heartened his men,
-he bore down on the foe. The Saracens let fly a shower of
-arrows and threw Greek fire aboard the <span class='it'>Trenche-mer</span>, but,
-nothing daunted, Richard rammed the Saracen vessel with
-the sharp prow of his galley. Through the gaping rent in
-the dromond’s side the sea poured in, and down she went
-with all her rich cargo and most of her crew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were no more adventures before Acre was reached.
-The ancient town was closely beleaguered by the Crusaders,
-but little progress had been made. A change came over
-the spirit of the attackers when Cœur de Lion arrived.
-Up rose a great wooden castle to top the walls; here and
-there huge catapults hurled missiles into the town; while
-beneath the pent-houses was heard the sound of pick and
-spade as the sappers undermined the walls. Now ague
-seized the king, but his ardent spirit would not let him
-rest. Carried in a litter to the trenches, he himself pulled
-a bow against the Saracens on the ramparts, and by example,
-stirring words, and promises of reward encouraged
-his soldiers to press the siege with all possible vigour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early in July the town was yielded, and in the first
-moment of success bickerings began amongst the Christian
-leaders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the Crusaders entered the city, Richard perceived
-Leopold of Austria’s flag planted side by side with
-his own on St. George’s Mount. “Who has dared,” he
-said, laying his hand upon the Austrian standard, and
-speaking in a voice like the sound which precedes an
-earthquake, “who has dared to place this paltry rag beside
-the banner of England?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was I, Leopold of Austria.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then shall Leopold of Austria presently see the rate at
-which his banner and his pretensions are held by Richard
-of England.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So saying, he pulled up the standard-spear, splintered it
-to pieces, threw the banner itself on the ground, and placed
-his foot upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thus,” said he, “I trample on the banner of Austria.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these words does Sir Walter Scott recount the story.
-Peace was ultimately made between the two, but Richard
-had made another foe, who was soon to take ample revenge
-on the haughty island king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fame of Richard dwarfed that of every knight who
-wore the Cross in Palestine, and the bruit of his valorous
-deeds made him a terror to every Saracen in the land. For
-years after, an Arab would cry to the steed that stumbled,
-“Fool, dost thou think thou sawest King Richard?” But
-the odds were fearfully against him. Every day disease
-thinned his ranks, and in the long march from Acre along
-the coast his men suffered terribly, though they turned in
-wrath and smote, hip and thigh, the Saracens who harried
-them. Barely, too, did Richard escape the daggers of the
-assassins sent to do their murderous work by the Old Man
-of the Mountain, who dwelt at Lebanon. One of them
-entered Richard’s tent, and was about to strike when the
-English king caught up the stool on which he had been
-sitting, and with it crashed in his assailant’s skull. No
-wonder men believed that he bore a charmed life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now he turned his steps to Jerusalem itself, but
-the Frenchmen forsook him, lest it should be said that an
-English king had recovered the Holy Sepulchre. Never
-was he so cast down as at this defection. Without their
-aid his little army could not hope to succeed. As he
-wrestled with his grievous disappointment, a knight begged
-him to ascend a mount from which he might gaze upon
-Jerusalem. But the king snapped the switch which he
-held in his hand, and cast his surcoat over his head, while
-the angry tears gushed forth. “O Lord God,” he prayed,
-“suffer not mine eyes to behold Thy holy city, since Thou
-wilt not grant that I deliver it from the hands of Thy foes!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Back again over the weary sands of the desert he toiled,
-sick at heart and sick of body, but not so sick that he could
-not again drive the enemy before him. But he had failed,
-though he had done all that man could do. Saladin agreed
-to a truce of three months, three days, and three hours, and
-with this poor result Richard was forced to be content. So
-he left the Holy Land, never to return.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Richard, however, was never long without the adventures
-which he so ardently sought. On the homeward
-voyage he landed at Ragusa, on the Adriatic shore, meaning
-to pass through Germany in disguise. But the gloves
-in the belt of his page betrayed him as a great personage,
-and he fell into the hands of his foe, Leopold of Austria,
-who at length found himself able to pay off old scores.
-Ultimately Richard was sold to the emperor, who put
-him in chains, and raked the past for offences wherewith
-to accuse his royal captive. For a time Richard
-disappeared entirely from view, but the place of his captivity
-leaked out at last. An old story tells us that his
-whereabouts were discovered by the minstrel Blondel, who
-loved the king, and set out on a weary quest to seek him.
-From castle to castle he passed, singing under the walls a
-song which Richard had composed. One day, to his great
-delight, he heard a voice which he knew full well troll
-out the second verse of the song from a dungeon cell.
-Forthwith he hastened to England and told the news.
-Historians, however, frown upon this pleasing story.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Richard was tried at a Great Council, where he defended
-himself boldly, and cleared himself of all the charges urged
-against him. Nevertheless, his captor would not let him
-go without ransom, which was valued at twenty-seven times
-the king’s weight, and amounted to the colossal sum for
-those days of £100,000. Richard wrote home to his
-ministers and begged them to collect the money as speedily
-as possible, as he was weary of captivity. While they were
-raising the ransom, which was a grievous burden even to
-rich England, Richard whiled away the weary hours by
-writing ballads, one of which ran thus:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“Never can captive make a song so fair</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;As he can make that has no cause for care,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Yet may he strive by song his grief to cheer.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;I lack not friends, but sadly lack their gold!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Shamed are they, if unransomed I lie here a second Yule in hold.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>But his people were not “shamed.” The Pope and
-other Christian powers were indignant at the ill-usage to
-which the champion of the Cross had been subjected, and
-the Emperor thought it wise to yield to that public opinion
-which almost unanimously condemned him. So when
-three-fourths of the ransom had been paid, Richard was
-set free, and sailed with all speed for England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not even now was peace to be his lot, for his false
-brother John was in arms against him. John, however,
-was soon pleading that forgiveness which Richard of the
-generous heart was always ready to grant. Then he was
-crowned afresh, to rid him of the stain of his captivity;
-and now that his kingdom was regained and all was peaceful,
-he looked about for new battles to fight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had not far to look. Philip of France was an old
-enemy, and he had treacherously supported John in his
-endeavours to gain the English crown while Richard was
-“in hold.” An uneasy peace followed a French defeat, but
-a few years later war broke out again, and once more a
-truce was proclaimed. Soon after, Richard’s subjects in
-Poitou were in rebellion, and Richard went south to quell
-the rising. By chance he learned that one of his vassals had
-unearthed a rich treasure-trove in the shape of a golden
-chess-table and men. Richard claimed the prize, but his
-vassal was unwilling to surrender it, whereupon the king
-laid siege to his castle of Chaluz.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the siege an archer in the beleaguered keep shot
-at the king and hit him in the breast. The wound was not
-serious, but the doctor who attended him soon made it
-mortal. Ere long the king knew that he must die. As he
-lay on his deathbed the keep was taken, and the archer
-who had shot the fatal arrow was brought before him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What have I done to thee, that thou shouldest slay
-me?” demanded the dying king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thou hast slain my father and my brothers with
-thine own hand,” replied the man undauntedly. “Torture
-me as thou wilt, I shall die gladly, since I have slain him
-who did me so much ill.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I forgive thee,” said Richard, always generous
-to a bold foe. Then he bade his servants give the man
-money and dismiss him unhurt. Let us ever remember
-that, with all his faults, all his pride, his love of pleasure,
-his vainglory, his animal passion for warfare, Richard’s
-dying request was for mercy to the man who had robbed
-him of life. When the breath was out of the king’s body
-his soldiers flayed the bowman alive, but that foul deed
-may not be laid to Richard’s charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So they buried the Lion’s heart at Rouen, and laid his
-body at Fontevraud, beside that of the father whose gray
-hairs he had brought down long years ago with sorrow to
-the grave.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo119.jpg' alt='' id='i119' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>“GOD WILLS IT!”</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by James Archer, R.S.A. By permission of the Autotype Co.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo122.jpg' alt='' id='i122' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Crusaders on the March.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the South Kensington Museum.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo126.jpg' alt='' id='i126' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>King Richard and the Young Archer.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the fresco by John Cross in the Houses of Parliament.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='127' id='Page_127'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo127.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0033' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>KING JOHN AND MAGNA CHARTA.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Magna Charta is such a fellow that he will have no sovereign.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Runnymede spreads before you, the famous field on which
-the English people wrested from a tyrannous monarch their
-great table of laws. You see a green meadow stretching
-along the marge of “silver-footed Thames,” a pasturage
-in no degree distinguished from scores of others in that fair
-valley. Fronting it is a little island, set like an emerald in
-the shining waters. Meadow and island should enchain
-your attention, for here a deed is to be done of deep and
-solemn import, immeasurable in its effects upon the lives
-and fortunes of generations yet unborn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here you shall see the seed sown which is to shoot
-up into a goodly tree, bearing as its fruits that liberty,
-civilization, and knowledge in which we rejoice to-day.
-Long centuries of toil and struggle will elapse before it is
-deep-rooted in the soil; the weeds of error and wrong
-will threaten to choke it; the fierce sun of tyranny will
-scorch it; the piercing winds of privilege will numb it:
-but the hardy plant will not succumb. It will be tended
-by devoted hands, and watered with blood and tears, until
-it spreads its branches far and wide, and is reckoned the
-glory of the land. New-graffed with every generation, and
-branching into offshoots which bear little semblance to the
-parent stock, it still remains, worthy of all our reverence
-and regard as the sturdy root of the Constitution under
-which Britons dwell as the freest nation of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at the meadow on this side of the Thames. Busy
-hands are setting up a pavilion of white and gold, for the
-sojourn of a king. Other pavilions are rising on Runnymede
-itself, and on the island too, where a canopied throne
-is set up. Now the actors in the scene begin to arrive.
-Mail-clad barons armed as for the fray, grim and determined,
-solemn of port and sober of converse, draw near.
-An archbishop with his train of priests joins the armed
-throng. All the magnates of England, spiritual and secular,
-are here—and they are here to coerce a king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All is ready, and now the king leaves his bannered
-pavilion, and crossing the narrow waters to the isle proceeds
-towards the throne. Watch him closely, for his like has
-never before worn the English crown, and—please God—never
-will again. Look at his fierce, dark countenance,
-over which waves of passion continually spread, like the
-ripples on yonder waters. He is the scourge of his land,
-the worst monarch with which England has been cursed—worse
-even than Rufus. Bad son, bad husband, bad
-father, bad king, there is scarce a crime in the whole
-black calendar of which he may not be justly accused.
-He is cruel, false, greedy, untruthful, and vile; yet out
-of his wickedness wondrous good shall come.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He has fought his father, he has wronged his brother,
-and he has murdered the little nephew who stood in his
-way. The poor child Arthur, heir to the English throne
-and to England’s wide realms in France, fell into his
-hands twelve years ago. John offered him terms, but the
-lad, brimful of the spirit of his race, would strike no bargain
-with the “shameless king.” He was close pent in
-a Norman castle, and thither John dispatched his unwilling
-minister, Hubert de Burgh, to put out the lad’s eyes.
-But the frenzied appeals of the little prince so moved
-Hubert’s heart that he forswore his foul commission, preferring
-to brave the wrath of his ruthless master than to
-suffer the sting of conscience. But there were others with
-no bowels of compassion, and by their aid the lad was slain.
-How he actually died we do not know. Perhaps John
-inveigled the boy into a boat and there stabbed him and
-flung his body overboard, or perhaps he compassed his
-death by subtler means. Shakespeare tells us that, goaded
-to madness, the little prince leaped from the walls of his
-prison, crying,—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“O me! my uncle’s spirit is in these stones—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Heaven take my soul, and England keep my bones.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>At any rate, the king you now see approaching has murder
-on his soul. But this is only the beginning of his villainy.
-Seven years ago the Archbishop of Canterbury went to his
-rest, and the monks of the cathedral elected another and
-sent him to Rome for his pall. John chose for the high
-office a minion of his own, “a servant of Mammon, and
-an evil shepherd that devoured his own sheep.” Pope
-Innocent, the proudest and most powerful man who ever
-wore the triple crown, set both candidates aside and appointed
-Stephen Langton, a wise and pious Englishman,
-against whom no word of scandal could be breathed. But
-John would have none other but his own nominee. He
-defied the Pope, and then the thunders of Rome were heard
-in the land. For the king’s sins a religious boycott was
-imposed upon the people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The most dreaded terror in the Papal armoury—an
-interdict—was placed on the land. The churches were
-closed, no bell rang for prayers, all rites were withheld from
-the people, and even the dead lay in unconsecrated ground.
-But John was not yet brought to his knees; he seized the
-goods and lands of the Church, and then Innocent in wrath
-cast him out of its pale. Still John was unsubdued; he
-plundered the Church even more remorselessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He treated the Jews as a money-sucking sponge, squeezing
-them by every conceivable cruelty until they gave up
-their wealth. One rich Jew, so the story goes, was forced
-to disgorge by the simple process of having a tooth drawn
-every day until he had to choose between his remaining
-molars and his money bags. Others were starved in cages
-fastened to castle walls until their spirit of resistance was
-broken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Military success did not fail the wicked king at this
-crisis. He compelled William the Lion of Scotland to
-do homage and pay heavy tribute, and he did the only
-really good work of his life in Ireland. From that country,
-which had been destined as his principality, John had
-been driven in the lifetime of his father by an onslaught
-of the Irish chiefs, whom he had abominably insulted and
-goaded into rebellion. Now he returned, and made short
-work of them and of the quarrelsome Anglo-Normans. He
-pacified the distracted land, made good laws, appointed
-capable officers, and sailed home in triumph. Then he
-turned his victorious arms against his son-in-law, Llewellyn,
-and forced the Welsh prince to do homage in the midst
-of his mountain fastnesses. And all the time John snapped
-his fingers at the Pope.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Innocent’s patience being now well-nigh exhausted, he
-sent to England his legate Pandulf, who solemnly declared
-John’s subjects free of their oath of fealty. But most
-of the nobles and many of the more worldly clergy still
-stuck to John, and his hired troops feared neither Pope nor
-devil. So John still held out, and even began to win the
-goodwill of his subjects by regulating the seaport trade,
-and by pardoning offenders against the barbarous forest
-laws of the time. Now came the Pope’s final sentence—John
-was to be hurled from the throne, and another and a
-worthier king should reign in his stead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Philip of France was chosen to carry out the decree,
-and speedily he mustered an army for the venture. On
-all hands foes arose, and though the English barons and
-people were quite ready to fight for their king, John was
-for the first time thoroughly frightened. He feared to die
-outside the Church, and he was terrified by a monkish
-prophecy that he should lose his crown ere next Ascension
-Day. So he begged forgiveness of Innocent, knelt before
-Pandulf, and gave up his kingdom, which he received back
-on promise of amendment and a yearly tribute as vassal of
-the Pope. The anger of the English people at this base
-act knew no bounds. “He has become the Pope’s man,”
-they sneered; “he is no longer a king, but a slave.” Still
-more angry did they become when John sent an expedition
-to France, which, after capturing Philip’s fleet and
-burning his stores, was hopelessly beaten and driven back
-to England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Many of the barons had refused to join this ill-fated
-expedition, and now John began to punish them. This
-was the last straw. They met in wrath, and Stephen
-Langton showed them the charter which Henry the First
-had granted to his people one hundred years before. The
-barons, utterly disgusted with John and all his works, now
-knelt before the high altar of St. Edmund’s minster and
-swore that they would make the king put his seal to a
-similar charter, even if they had to plunge the land in civil
-war. They girded on their armour, and under Robert
-Fitzwalter, “marshal of the army of God and of holy
-Church,” marched on London, where the citizens threw
-open the gates to receive them. “These articles,” cried
-the king, when they were presented to him, “are pure
-foolishness. Why do they not ask me for the kingdom
-at once? I will never give them such freedom as would
-make me their slave.” Brave words these, but when John
-perceived that all his knights but seven had deserted him
-he saw that he had no alternative but to yield.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now let us turn again to the scene on the little
-island in the Thames. John has ascended his throne, and,
-holding the sword of state in his hand, battles hard with
-the fierce rage that is gnawing in his heart. Now he
-must repress his feelings, but to-night he will give them
-full fling. He will throw himself on the ground, gnash his
-teeth, and in a torrent of rage utter curses loud and deep.
-But here he must dissemble his wrath. Around him are
-the barons in full armour, their hearts as hard and their
-wills as unyielding as the mail which clothes them. A
-monk reads the charter, but the king is not listening. He
-is plotting and planning how to make these barons eat dirt
-for the insult they are putting upon him. By his side is
-Pandulf, urging him to defy them; but the king knows
-the resistless might of angry Englishmen better than any
-foreign churchman. He is in a trap; he must yield, but
-woe betide those who have made him do so!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reading of the charter is finished, and John cries
-reluctantly, “Let it be sealed.” Then the charter is placed
-on the table in front of him, the wax is melted and placed
-on the parchment, the seal is screwed down, and the great
-charter becomes, for all time, the law of the land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, what is this charter which has just been sealed?
-It is really a treaty of peace between king and people.
-“We will retain you as king,” they say, “only on condition
-that you swear to keep the law thus written down.” It
-is no new thing this law, but the old rights and the old
-liberties of the people collected together, and for the first
-time put into black and white. All the freemen of the
-land have united to extort this charter from the king, and
-the rights of all classes are laid down in it. Naturally,
-much of the charter deals with the rights of the barons
-and the clergy, for they have had the chief hand in securing
-it, but one-third of it contains promises and guarantees for
-the people in general. All praise to the barons! Unlike
-those of some foreign lands, they are not selfish now that
-they have got the upper hand of the king. Of course
-they take very good care of themselves, but to their credit
-be it said that they do not neglect the welfare of the
-nation at large.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In days to come men will regard this charter as
-the cure for every kind of royal lawlessness and tyranny.
-Well-nigh forty times will our kings be forced to sign
-it, and every time the national faith in the principles laid
-down in it will grow stronger and stronger. It will be
-greatly changed in form as the years run by, for new
-conditions will bring the need for new applications of
-its provisions. Nevertheless, the three main principles of
-the charter which you have witnessed in the making have
-been carried into every land where the British flag waves,
-and to every shore where the spirit of British freedom has
-penetrated. Let them be set down here before the scene
-closes and the pageant moves on:—<span class='it'>The people can only be
-taxed with the consent of their representatives. There shall be
-justice for all, and it must not be sold, delayed, or refused. No
-freeman shall be taken, imprisoned, or in any way hurt, unless
-he be tried by his peers or equals according to the law.</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In our days of widespread freedom these priceless principles
-seem to us the merest commonplaces, yet we must
-never forget that stout hearts, strong wills, and eternal
-vigilance were needed before they became the unchallenged
-possession of all who glory in the name of Briton.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo132.jpg' alt='' id='i132' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Hubert and Arthur.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by William F. Yeames, R.A. By permission of the Corporation of Manchester.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo135.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0034' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter VII.<br/> THE THREE EDWARDS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE FIRST PRINCE OF WALES.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>God bless the Prince of Wales.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/a.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='A'/>ND now “gallant little Wales” shall supply a scene
-to our pageant. History may not sanction the
-subject of it, but it may not be omitted. You
-are spectators within the gray walls of Carnarvon Castle,
-that grim old fortress which overlooks the fair waters
-of Menai Strait. From its soaring towers your eye
-takes in the wild mountain region of Snowdonia, a land
-of hoary summits and green valleys, in the recesses of
-which the old Celtic inhabitants of Britain stubbornly
-maintained their independence for more than five long
-centuries. You are now to see the nation subdued and
-an English king assert his sway. But you will not see it
-lose those essential things which mark its nationality—its
-language, its literature, its genius. To-day they are still
-dear to the Welsh nation, and are more jealously guarded
-and fostered than ever. Go to an Eisteddfod and hear
-twice a thousand Welsh voices unite in the stirring strains
-of <span class='it'>Hen Wlad fy Nhadau</span> (“Land of my fathers.”) You will
-then understand how ardently the flame of patriotism burns
-in the breast of the men and women who have been reared
-in this ancient land of beauty and song.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the scene opens, you perceive that the death-knell of
-the nation’s independence has tolled. You gaze upon an
-assembly of chieftains—handsome, active men with long
-hair and moustaches and shaven chins. Their arms, their
-coats of mail, their helms and shields are laid aside, and
-they are clad simply in tunic and cloak, bare-kneed, and
-shod with brogues of hide. All are depressed, all are
-sorrowful, for they are here to acknowledge the surrender
-of their land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As they wait the coming of the English king their minds
-fly back over the long story of resistance which they and
-their sires before them have made against their persistent and
-greedy foes. As they cast their thoughts back they recall
-the awful slaughter of Roman times, when the Druids of
-Mona were sacrificed on their own altars; they dimly remember
-how the deep snow of their hills baffled the haughty
-Conqueror, who, not to be beaten, planted his barons on
-their borders, and bade them win the land by never-ceasing
-strife. It was Griffith ap Rees—was it not?—who made the
-Norman bite the dust, and taught him to respect the might
-of the Cymric arm and the fury of the Cymric onset. Then
-they remember what their bards have told them of the brave
-days of Owen Gwynedd and the Lord Rees—how these
-twain drove back the Norman who called himself “Fine
-Scholar,” and baffled him too. For all his scholarship, he
-could not add the laurel of Wales to the wreath that
-encircled his brow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then they would think of Llywelyn the Great, and of
-that golden age which their fathers were never tired of
-recalling—how that wise and powerful prince strove to
-unite all Wales, and live on good terms with the Saxon on
-his borders. ’Twas Llywelyn, they remind one another,
-who married King John’s daughter, and aided the Saxon
-barons to make that false sovereign swear to observe the
-rights of the Cymry and keep their laws inviolate. ’Twas
-in his day, too, that the monk and the friar came into
-their land with a blessed ministry to the poor and the
-outcast. Strange that the great Llywelyn should have
-begotten so feeble a son as David, he who weakly threw
-in his lot with the Saxon and sent his patriot brother
-Griffith in chains to the Tower of London. Ah! it was
-a sad day when the rope broke by which that gallant
-prince was trying to escape, and he was killed by the fall!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But his son Llywelyn, their late king, was worthy of
-his sire, look you! He and the great Simon de Montfort
-had fought shoulder to shoulder, and the Saxon
-king had been obliged to recognize Llywelyn as Prince
-of Wales. And now he has gone too—slain by a foe
-who knew him not, in a mere skirmish down by Builth.
-Yes, and the old prophecy has come true—that Llywelyn
-should ride crowned through London. Crowned he was,
-in very sooth, but, alas, the crowned head was carried on
-a spear. Woe worth the day! David, his brother, had
-been caught too, and had suffered the awful death penalty
-of a traitor. Even now his head was rotting over Shrewsbury
-gate. Had Llywelyn but lived, even Edward’s great
-army might have been driven back, especially as winter
-was coming on, and the storms and the snows would fight
-on their side. But with Llywelyn’s death all hope has
-vanished, and what can they do but submit?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now Edward, the Saxon king before whom they
-are to bow, comes on the scene. The chieftains scan
-him closely. Some of them have never seen him eye to
-eye before; but his warlike fame has long been familiar
-to them. As he strides into the courtyard, towering
-above his attendants, they can readily believe those wonderful
-stories which they have heard of his mighty prowess
-and physical strength—how, for example, he slew the
-assassin in the Holy Land, and how he bore himself at
-Châlons when the Burgundian knight strove to drag him
-from his saddle. What a fool the fellow must have looked
-when Edward clapped spurs to his horse and shook the
-man to the ground as though he had been a bag of straw!
-He is pitiful, too, and boasts—does he not?—that no man
-ever begged his life of him in vain. And what is that
-device which he bears so proudly on his shield? “Keep
-faith.” Ah, but will he keep faith with stricken Wales?
-Has he not slaughtered the very bards, lest their songs
-should keep the memory of the old free days fresh and
-green in their hearts?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the handsome, stern king with the drooping
-eyelid begins to speak in deep, vibrant tones, and the
-interpreter turns his words into the tongue of old Britain.
-He will give them a prince of their own. “Nay,” they cry
-out, “we will have no prince but one born in our own land
-and speaking our own tongue.” Edward turns to the nurse
-who stands by, takes from her his newly-born son, and
-holds him aloft to the astonished gaze of the chieftains.
-“Here is your prince,” he cries; “he was born in Wales,
-and he knows not a word of the English tongue.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The humour of it appeals to the assembled throng.
-Yes, yes, they will swear fealty to him, but he must have a
-Welsh nurse, and he must learn to speak their language.
-Edward gladly agrees, and swears on the hilt of his sword to
-“keep faith.” So the Welsh have once more a prince of
-their own, and thus it comes about that the eldest son of
-an English king bears the proud title Prince of Wales.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now Edward betakes himself to the more serious work
-of settling the government of the land. Wales is to keep
-her old customs and laws, and Welshmen are to retain the
-freedom and the estates which they enjoyed under their own
-princes. All is done that can be done to make the foreign
-yoke easy and the burden light; but many a wicked deed
-will be perpetrated and many an injustice will be wrought
-before Welshmen are reconciled to the loss of their independence.
-But the day will come when, secure in their
-freedom and reinforced by their union with the mightier
-land on their borders, there will be no more loyal and
-stauncher hearts in the whole Empire than those which
-beat in “gallant little Wales.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo138.jpg' alt='' id='i138' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE FIRST PRINCE OF WALES.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by P. R. Morris, A.R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo140.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0035' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>WILLIAM WALLACE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>At Wallace’ name what Scottish blood</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>But boils up in a spring-time flood.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let the scene shift to Scotland, where the masterful
-Edward, having subdued Wales, is seeking to lay his
-hands upon yet another kingdom. Truly the condition
-of the land invites him to conquest. The Scottish king,
-on a night ride along the cliffs of the Fifeshire coast, has
-fallen over the black rocks, and he is no more. The sceptre
-passes to a frail little grandchild in far-off Norway; but ere
-she can tread the soil of her kingdom, she too has gone the
-way of all flesh. The royal line is extinct, and the throne
-of Scotland is without an heir.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forthwith a round dozen of eager aspirants set up their
-claims to the vacant throne. All save two are men of
-straw, with hardly the colour of a right to the kingship.
-But Robert Bruce, Lord of Annandale, and John Baliol,
-Lord of Galloway, both come of the royal stock, and both
-have their clamorous supporters. Who shall judge betwixt
-them? Edward seizes the opportunity. He—so he
-declares—is overlord of Scotland, and he and none other
-will decide. So chronicles and title-deeds and charters
-are collected from many a muniment chest, and he and
-his councillors are soon busy examining them. When all
-is ready, he arrays an army and marches north to the
-Border castle of Norham, on the Tweed. To this place
-come the magnates of Scotland to hear his award. But
-before it is pronounced he claims that they shall recognize
-him as lord paramount. Some of the Scottish chiefs demur,
-but the English king cries, “By St. Edward, whose crown
-I wear, I will maintain my just right or die in the cause.”
-Might is right in his case, and the Scottish nobles, in the
-distracted state of the kingdom, are forced to admit his
-claim.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, having secured the first point in the game,
-Edward gives judgment in favour of John Baliol, a lamb-like
-person, the least stalwart and the least Scottish of all
-the claimants. He is a weak creature, and Edward knows
-that he will be a pliant tool. So Baliol bows to Edward,
-and receives the crown of Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ere long Baliol begins to feel Edward’s bit gall his
-mouth. He is continually being pulled up and jerked hither
-and thither by the strong hand of his rider. Baliol submits
-time after time, but at length even his sluggish spirit is
-roused, and one day he throws off his allegiance and declares
-war. Edward has long been waiting for this turn of fortune’s
-wheel; he has long been working for this fatal outburst.
-Speedily he marches north with a great army and sweeps
-through the country, a ruthless conqueror. None can stand
-against him, and the “puppet king” least of all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>See Baliol now, about to do public penance for his
-so-called misdeeds. The English barons are assembled in
-a churchyard, and thither they lead the king of the Scots
-mounted on a sorry nag. A herald proclaims his treason.
-His crown is snatched from his head, the sceptre from his
-hand, the royal robes from his person. A humble penitent,
-clad only in his body garments and holding a white rod in
-his hand, he meekly confesses his fault and acknowledges
-the justice of his punishment. A few days later he gives
-up his crown to Edward, and is dispatched a prisoner to
-the Tower of London. So Edward returns to his kingdom,
-leaving Scotland beaten to the ground, sore and
-humiliated, but passionately longing for revenge. With
-him he carries every token and memorial of Scottish independence—the
-crown and the sceptre, and the Stone of
-Destiny, on which Scottish kings have been crowned from
-time immemorial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let the great patriot hero whom Scotland delights
-to honour, even after the lapse of six centuries, tread the
-scene. He is William Wallace of Elderslie, a young knight
-of some twenty-seven years, massive of build and mighty of
-thew and sinew, fit foe for Edward himself. His face is long
-and fair, his hair light-brown, his eye clear and piercing, his
-expression solemn and sad. A foul outrage has driven him
-to the hills, where he is nursing his wrath and biding his
-time. An English officer has encountered him and his
-nine followers in the streets of Lanark and has taunted him
-with insulting words. His long sword has leaped from its
-scabbard and the insulter has been laid low. The alarm has
-been sounded, and armed men have rushed to the spot; but
-Wallace has fought his way through them, and has found a
-refuge in the woods, where the news of a dastardly crime
-speedily reaches him. His young and dearly-loved wife has
-been seized and slain by his cruel foes. Terrible indeed is
-his agony of grief, but tears avail nothing. “Cease,” he
-cries to his followers, “cease this bootless pain. We cannot
-bring her back to life, but no man shall ever see me rest till
-I have avenged the wanton slaughter of her so blithe and
-bright.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That very night he slays the slayer of his love, and day
-after day he swoops down on his foes like a hawk on its
-quarry. The fame of his daring deeds spreads abroad, and
-patriots seek him in his retreat and array themselves under
-his banner. Now it is an English convoy that is despoiled,
-now an English foraging party that is cut up. Every day
-brings its exploit, and throughout the south-western counties
-the English are everywhere harassed and harried by a foe
-who comes and goes mysteriously, and leaves no token but
-slaughtered men and burning roof-trees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now see him, no longer the lurking outlaw, but the
-leader of an army, marching proudly at the head of his men,
-and fearlessly displaying the broad banner of Scotland. The
-best and bravest of the land are with him. Not a fortress
-north of the Tay save Dundee is in English hands. Only
-a year has sped since Edward left Scotland, in the vain
-belief that the northern kingdom is a cowed and tamed
-land. Now he perceives that the work must be done all
-over again. He gathers an army of fifty thousand men, and
-speeds northward for Stirling, where high on its rock sits
-the ancient fortress, the key to the centre of Scotland.
-Wallace hears of the English advance, and marches to
-Stirling with all speed. On and about the Abbey Craig,
-where his noble memorial tower now stands, he encamps,
-and awaits the coming of his foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ere long their banners are seen approaching. The
-Earl of Surrey, an old man broken in health, is in command,
-but the real leader is “fat and foolish” Sir Hugh
-Cressingham, Edward’s Lord-Treasurer in Scotland, a
-haughty and insolent priest, who wears his corselet with a
-better grace than his cassock. The English halt on the
-south side of the river, and are eager for an immediate
-attack, but wiser counsels prevail. So the watch-fires are
-lighted, and the two armies lie in sight of each other
-through the silent night, with the deep and sluggish Forth
-flowing between.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the trumpets sound, and Sir Marmaduke Twenge
-leads his squadron of mail-clad knights to the bridge across
-the Forth, while Cressingham follows hard behind. The
-spearmen of Wallace, posted on the high ground, are in no
-hurry to attack. They make no sign as the knights cross
-the bridge and form up on the opposite shore, ready to
-charge the Scots on the hillside. Half the English army
-has crossed ere you perceive the trap into which it has
-fallen. Look yonder at that strong force of Scottish spearmen
-fetching a wide circuit and keeping near to the river.
-Now they begin to run towards the bridge. They cut
-through the line of the advancing English and block the
-bridge-head with a hedge of bristling steel. They drive
-back in a tumultuous heap the advancing horsemen on the
-crowded bridge, and now the moment for which Wallace
-has so long waited arrives. He charges furiously down
-the hillside, and hurls back the English squadrons in dire
-confusion. Horse and foot are inextricably mingled; hundreds
-go down before the Scottish spears, and vast numbers
-are driven into the river, which is lashed into foam by the
-drowning struggles of thousands of men and horses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Surrey, horror-stricken at the sight, now advances the
-royal standard of England, and his strong reserve of knights
-charge the bridge with the cry “For God and St. George.”
-The bridge is carried, but on the opposite shore there is no
-room to form, and they only increase the confusion and
-swell the slaughter. Of all that have crossed that fatal
-bridge only three return. All is over, and Surrey on the
-farther shore sets spurs to his horse. Keen and fierce is the
-pursuit, and terrible is the slaughter. Edward’s proud host
-is scattered like chaff before the wind, and Scotland is
-free again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The victorious Wallace is hailed by his countrymen as
-Governor of Scotland. But he has not done with the implacable
-Edward yet. The English king has appeased his
-revolting nobles, he has made a truce with the French, and
-has marshalled the might of his realm for another invasion
-of Scotland. A vast English army rolls northward. Eighty
-thousand men, including a large array of archers armed with
-the terrible long-bow which the men of South Wales have
-taught them to use, follow his banners. They enter the
-Lowlands, but Wallace has made it a desert. The houses
-are bare and empty; no cattle are in the fields; the crops
-have been reaped, the hay and corn stacks have been carried
-off. Edward’s army “marches on its stomach,” but Wallace
-has taken good care that there shall be nothing to fill it.
-By the time Edward draws near to Edinburgh symptoms
-of mutiny begin to appear amongst his soldiers, and he
-begins to meditate retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then come traitors from the Scottish camp telling him
-that Wallace lies in the forest of Falkirk, and is about to
-attack his foes that very night. Edward is filled with joy at
-the tidings. “Thanks be to God!” he cries. “They need
-not wait for me, for I shall go instantly and meet them.”
-There is no delay. In an hour’s time his army is in motion.
-Linlithgow is reached, and he bivouacs for the night on the
-moor. Every man sleeps in his armour, his horse ready
-harnessed by his side. The king himself lies down on the
-bare ground and shares discomfort with his men. In the
-night his frightened charger kicks out, and its hoofs break
-two of the king’s ribs. But with the dawn Edward mounts
-bravely, and leads his army to rising ground beyond Linlithgow.
-Here the fighting Bishop of Durham says mass,
-and as the sun rises Edward’s keen eye sees its rays reflected
-from the spears of the Scots, now taking ground on the slope
-of a small hill not far from Falkirk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wallace has drawn up his spearmen in four <span class='it'>schiltrons</span>
-or circles. Between these schiltrons are his tall, handsome
-archers from the forests of Selkirk and Ettrick. His small
-and doubtful force of cavalry is marshalled in the rear. It
-includes the Scottish knights, many of whom are jealous of
-Wallace, and only half-hearted in Scotland’s cause. “I have
-brought you to the ring,” says the Scottish leader, “now
-dance as you may.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The trumpets sound, and the English cavalry charge.
-At the first onset the Scottish horsemen, led by traitor
-lords, turn bridle and ride from the field. Then the English
-knights swoop down upon the Scottish archers, and
-after a terrible struggle slay them to a man. But again
-and again they recoil from the “dark, impenetrable wood”
-of the spearmen. The bristling hedge of spears cannot be
-broken by the shock of horse and man, but there are other
-and deadlier means available. The English archers are to win
-the first of those signal victories which will make them the
-terror of the age. Drawn up in security scarce a hundred
-paces away, they shoot their cloth-yard shafts with unerring
-aim. Thick and fast they fall amidst the spearmen, and soon
-the living walls are breached. The English cavalry charge
-into the gaps where the dead and dying lie, and an awful
-slaughter rages. The battle is over; the Scots betake
-themselves to flight, and Wallace barely escapes into Torwood
-Forest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But even this victory has not laid Scotland at Edward’s
-feet. Everywhere he finds the country devastated, and he
-must either retreat or starve. Less than a month after the
-battle of Falkirk he sullenly leads his army, stricken by
-famine and disease, southward to England. But he withdraws
-like the panther, only to spring again. Five successive
-times he leads his army northward, and Scotland,
-exhausted by her long and heartrending struggles, at length
-lies at the conqueror’s feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more Wallace is an outlaw on the hills. Edward
-has marked him down for death, and there is a price on his
-head. He lurks in the greenwood, hunted from cover to
-cover, with scarce a comrade to trust, and none to aid him.
-His former friend, Sir John Menteith, at length wins the
-blood-money. Wallace is seized in his sleep, bound with
-cords, and hurried south. As he enters London the streets
-swarm with spectators, all eager to see this renowned warrior
-of the North. His trial is a mockery. Vainly he protests
-that he is no traitor, for he has never sworn fealty to
-the English king. But he is doomed already, and all
-argument is vain. He is condemned of murder, sacrilege,
-and treason, and suffers the ghastly and revolting death
-which was meted out to David of Wales twenty-two years
-before. His head is set up on London Bridge, his right
-arm at Newcastle, his left at Berwick, one leg at Perth,
-and the other at Aberdeen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So perishes the national hero of Scotland, his body dispersed
-to “every airt” that the wind blows, but his name
-and fame cherished for ever in the hearts of his countrymen.
-He rises like a star in the darkness; he sets in
-gloom, but not before his radiance has rekindled the torch
-of Scottish patriotism, the flame of which is nevermore to
-be extinguished. Wallace cannot die; he lives again in
-every free and unselfish aspiration of unconquered Scotland.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo148.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0036' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo146.jpg' alt='' id='i146' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Trial of Wallace.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Daniel Maclise, R.A., in the Guildhall Art Gallery. By Permission of the Corporation of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='149' id='Page_149'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo149.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0037' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>ROBERT THE BRUCE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>They thought to die in the mêlée,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Or else to set their country free.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not yet may “our stern alarums change for peaceful
-meetings, our dreadful marches to delightful measures.”
-Grim-visaged war must still be our portion, if our pageant
-is to depict the outstanding landmarks in our nation’s story.
-The victories of peace are for the future; now we must
-hear again the clash of arms, and share once more the joy
-of victory and the anguish of defeat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are still in Scotland, where a successor to Wallace
-has arisen even before his scattered limbs have rotted away.
-The new champion is the grandson of that Bruce whom
-Edward set aside in favour of Baliol. His father, in the old
-days, was a friend of “Longshanks,” and young Robert
-Bruce has been trained in all the arts of war and the exercises
-of chivalry under the eye of the man whose mortal
-enemy he is destined to be. He comes upon the scene in
-the dark days succeeding the judicial murder of Wallace, in
-those bitter months when England’s iron grip is on Scotland.
-He sees with deep indignation the wretched condition of his
-countrymen, and cautiously and secretly lays his plans for
-throwing off the English yoke. He makes a compact with
-his friend Comyn, who too has royal blood in his veins;
-but Comyn is a traitor, and reveals the plot to the English
-king. Bruce receives warning, and ere long he settles
-accounts with Comyn. In the church of the Gray Friars
-at Dumfries the two meet face to face. Angry words pass,
-and Bruce strikes down his treacherous friend on the
-very steps of the altar. He rushes outside to his comrades.
-“I doubt I have slain Comyn!” he cries. “You doubt!”
-says one of them, “I mak’ siccar;” and entering the church
-he dispatches the unhappy man with many fierce blows.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the Bruce has taken the plunge. There is no
-turning back; he must go forward to a crown, or suffer
-the fate of Wallace wight. A few faithful friends stand
-by him, and he hastens to Scone, the coronation place of
-Scottish kings. A friendly bishop lends him robes, the
-abbot provides a chair, and the statue of some saint is
-temporarily despoiled of its circlet to provide a crown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The news of the outbreak speedily reaches Edward, and
-throws him into ungovernable rage. He swears that he
-will never rest until he has hanged, drawn, and quartered
-the presumptuous knave who has forsworn his oaths and
-seized the crown. Edward’s nut-brown hair is snow-white
-now, and his once mighty arm is weak with age, but his
-determined spirit burns as fiercely as of yore. An advance-guard
-is pushed on with all speed, and near Perth it comes
-into touch with the Bruce, who barely escapes from it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Bruce must now follow in the footsteps of Wallace,
-and wander, a hunted fugitive, over many a league of forest
-and hill. How true now seem the words of his wife at
-their hasty and impromptu coronation: “Alas! we are but
-king and queen of the May, such as boys crown with
-flowers and rushes in their summer sports.” Deserted and
-distressed, he lives the life of an outlaw, shooting his own
-venison and catching his own fish. But he is not sad and
-gloomy, as Wallace was wont to be. He cheers his little
-company by many a good-humoured sally and the recital of
-heroic deeds. Summer passes, and the pageantry of autumn
-descends upon the woods; but still he is a king without a
-throne, a wanderer without a home. The wild life of a
-hunted fugitive may not be borne during the dread winter
-by the ladies of his company, so he sends them with many
-a dark foreboding of evil to the care of his brother, and then
-takes ship for the remote island of Rathlin, off the north
-Irish coast, where he winters safe from his foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here, in his island retreat, bitter news reaches him.
-His wife and daughters have been seized and imprisoned in
-England. His brother and his relatives have been captured
-and hanged, his estates have been forfeited and given to
-others, and the Pope has driven him out of the Church
-for his sacrilege at Dumfries. No wonder the Bruce sits
-under his juniper tree “steeped to the lips in misery.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But with the kindly spring he makes another bid for
-fortune. He sails to the Isle of Arran, and has hardly landed
-before he well-nigh walks into a trap laid for him. Then
-begins a fresh period of difficulty and danger, of hairbreadth
-escapes and desperate deeds. Slowly but surely the tide turns
-in his favour. The preachers are with him; a prophecy
-has been discovered which assures him of victory; stout
-hearts begin to flock to his side; his cause gains ground
-every day. By the middle of May he is no longer a
-hunted fugitive but a leader of forces. He has defeated
-two English earls in the field, and they are shut up in the
-castle of Ayr, which he is closely besieging.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now old Edward begins to move. He is too weak and
-ill to throw his long limbs across a horse, so they carry him
-on a litter in front of his army. At Carlisle the prospect
-of the strife he loves so well gives him a slight renewal of
-strength. He mounts his horse for the last time, and leads
-the march in the old way. But it is the final flicker of life’s
-flame, and at Burgh-on-Sands, within sight of the tossing
-Solway, he yields him to the power that conquers even
-kings. To his bedside he calls his vain, pleasure-loving son,
-and bids him swear a solemn oath never to cease from strife
-until the Scots are thoroughly subdued. “Boil the flesh off
-my bones,” he is said to have cried, “and keep them safe,
-and as oft as the Scots assemble their forces, let my bones
-lead the van.” So he dies, fierce and implacable to the last,
-and the breath is hardly out of his body ere his degenerate
-son sighs for his jugglers and minstrels and the careless
-pleasures of the court he has left behind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He advances half-heartedly to Ayr; but the Bruce has
-retreated before him, knowing well the temper of his foe.
-At the first decent opportunity Edward hies him southward,
-and Bruce resumes his work of ridding the land of
-the English. One by one the castles are captured by storm
-or stratagem; day by day the English power grows weaker
-and weaker, and the Bruce grows stronger and stronger.
-At last the flag of England, once to be seen everywhere,
-flies only over the castle of Stirling. Its stout-hearted
-defender is almost starved into submission. He will surrender
-on midsummer day, unless he is relieved before it
-dawns by an English army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The new Edward must leave his elegant trifling and
-bestir himself, unless Scotland is to be hopelessly lost.
-Hitherto his reign has been singularly inglorious, and his
-barons have made him, as he says, no longer master in his
-own house. But he will show them that the spirit of his
-sire still lives in him. He will invade Scotland, and the
-Bruce shall feel the weight of his heavy hand. Stirling
-shall be relieved; he will take up the wager of battle that
-Scotland has thrown down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forthwith he assembles the most powerful army that
-has ever yet menaced Scotland. Mindful of the archers’
-victory at Falkirk, he scours the country for bowmen, and
-every man of them boasts that he “carries the lives of four-and-twenty
-Scotsmen at his belt.” Forty thousand mounted
-men are with him, and a prouder and more confident array
-never took the field.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bruce has chosen his ground well. His front and right
-are defended by the Bannock burn, which winds through
-two morasses, and at one place has steep, wooded banks.
-On the left, where the ground is open, he has honeycombed
-the field with pits that look firm and level to the
-eye, but are terrible snares for cavalry. Only one way of
-approach is open, and that is strewn with caltrops to lame
-the horses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is the Sabbath morning of June 23rd, in the year
-1314. On comes the English host, with its countless
-banners, standards, and pennons waving in the breeze. The
-sun glints from burnished helmet and spear as the dense
-battalions draw near. To an observer on the castle walls
-it would seem that they were about to make an immediate
-attack. The Bruce is arraying his men, clad in full armour,
-and carrying a battle-axe in his hand, but riding a light
-palfrey in place of the heavy charger that is to carry him
-to-morrow. That panoply of armour which he wears
-hides the real man from you. Were you to see him out
-of harness, you would mark his strong and powerful frame,
-his close, curly hair, his full, broad forehead, his high
-cheek-bones, and the square and massive jaw that tells of
-determination and dogged courage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the English army halts, and a vainglorious knight,
-one Sir Henry Bohun, seeing the Bruce so poorly horsed,
-thinks to do a deed of valorous renown. So he spurs his
-charger, and levelling his spear bears down upon the Scottish
-king. As he comes rushing on at full speed, the Bruce
-twitches his palfrey’s bridle, and the little creature obediently
-starts aside. Then, as the knight goes rushing by, Bruce
-rises in his stirrups and smites him fiercely on the helmet
-with his battle-axe. It crashes through helmet and skull,
-and the riderless steed gallops wildly away. The first stroke
-of the great fight has been struck, and the Bruce has won.
-As he rides back to his lines his knights take him to task
-for his adventure, reminding him that an accident would
-have robbed them of their leader. Bruce listens to their
-chidings, and only replies, “I have broken my good battle-axe.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another misfortune befalls the English. Three hundred
-young horsemen, eager for the fray, see a clear way
-lying before them to the castle. On they spur towards it,
-but find their road blocked by a party of Scottish spearmen,
-who form a deadly circle of bristling steel. In vain the
-knights spur their horses to the attack; the schiltron
-remains unbroken, though hidden from sight by the cloud
-of dust and heat which rises from the plain. Now the
-spearmen advance and drive back the weary and disheartened
-horsemen. Grim foreboding this of the great fight
-to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The short summer night falls on the battlefield, and
-loud sounds of revelry come from the English camp. The
-Scots sleep in the open, and when the sun has risen Edward
-sees them massed in schiltrons beneath their banners.
-“Will yon Scotsmen fight?” he asks of a veteran by his
-side. “Yea, siccarly, sire,” he replies, and at the moment
-the Scots bend the knee as the crucifix is borne along
-their line. “Yon folk kneel for mercy,” says the king;
-and again the veteran replies, “Yea, sire, but not of you.
-Yon men will win or die.” “So be it,” cries Edward, and
-gives the signal for his trumpeters to sound the charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On dash the English horsemen with levelled spears,
-and now you hear the loud crash as lance clangs on shield.
-Down go men and horses, only to be trodden under foot by
-the ranks behind. Nothing can break the Scottish ranks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But where are the archers who wrought such havoc
-at Falkirk? Now is their time. Alas, they have been
-badly posted, and are unsupported by men-at-arms. A few
-hundred Scots horsemen are sufficient to send them flying
-hither and thither without the hope of ever rallying again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile a great hand-to-hand contest is raging. You
-hear the shouts and cries of the warriors, the groans of the
-wounded and dying, the loud clash of meeting weapons, as
-the vast, dense mass of the English rises and falls like
-waves of the sea. It is a mob that fights on the narrow
-field, and not an army. The ground is cumbered with
-fallen men and horses. Many a good knight has no room
-to swing his weapon. He cannot advance, and the pressure
-behind will not let him retreat. But slowly and surely
-the throng is pushed back by the Scottish spears, and the
-day looks black for England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All discipline is now lost, and the battle is a series of
-individual struggles. Lifting their eyes, the hard-pressed
-English see a fresh host marching down a neighbouring
-hill, and hear their slogans peal out above the din and
-tumult of battle. They are camp followers who have cut
-down saplings for banner-poles and spread their blankets for
-standards; but, in sooth, they look a warlike and formidable
-band in the distance. The hearts of the English fail
-them at the sight; they waver, and the Scots press on with
-redoubled vigour. The retreat has begun; it will soon be
-an utter rout.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The English king gallops to Dunbar without drawing
-rein. His followers scatter hither and thither. All is over.
-The great battle is lost and won. The Bannock burn is
-choked with the dead bodies of the slain; thirty thousand
-English lie dead on that fatal field. The great task which
-Wallace had set himself is accomplished. Scotland has won
-her independence, thanks to the skill of Bruce, the courage
-of his men, and the incompetence of King Edward. “From
-the dust and reek of that burning day Scotland emerges a
-people, firm in a glorious memory.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo154.jpg' alt='' id='i154' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE BATTLE OF BANNOCKBURN.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Allan Stewart specially painted for this book.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='157' id='Page_157'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo157.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0038' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE MERCIFUL QUEEN.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The quality of mercy is not strain’d,—</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Upon the place beneath: it is twice blest;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>It blesseth him that gives and him that takes:</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>’Tis mightiest in the mightiest: it becomes</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The thronèd monarch better than his crown.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let a tableau lend variety to our pageant. On the
-dais of a royal pavilion outside the walls of Calais you see
-a warrior king, his noble countenance transfigured with
-wrath. Around him are his nobles, and before him kneel
-six notable citizens of the town, gaunt with long fasting
-and worn with strife and anxiety. Their heads and feet
-are bare, and the rope of shame is round their necks.
-The foremost citizen proffers the keys of the fortress. You
-are witnessing the surrender of Calais, “the open doorway
-to France.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The actual scene which is being re-enacted before you
-took place more than five and a half centuries ago, and
-thirty-three years after the battle of Bannockburn. In the
-interval the English king who fled from that fatal field had
-been deposed in favour of his young son, who grew up to
-be one of the most remarkable men of his time. The spirit
-of the first Edward lived again in Edward the Third, and
-like a new Alexander he was ever seeking fresh worlds to
-conquer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He positively thirsted for martial glory, and above all
-things he coveted the fair land of France. Through his
-mother he put forth a claim to the French throne; and
-though it was scouted by the French lawyers, he meant to
-see what English bills and bows could do to enforce it. In
-the year 1345 he shot his bolt, and at Crécy his archers
-won for him one of the most brilliant victories that ever
-graced English arms. Then he moved on Calais, and laid
-close siege to it. Outside the walls he reared a temporary
-village, which he called Newtown the Bold. It had houses
-and lodgings roofed with reed and broom, streets, and a
-market-place where flesh and fish, mercery, cloth, bread,
-and wine were sold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Eleven long months the siege endured, and many a
-time and oft the gallant defenders beheld the approach of
-French armies coming, as they thought, to their succour.
-But never did the Frenchmen dare to attack King Edward.
-They came, they saw, they retreated. Lamentable indeed
-was the state of the besieged; food failed them, starvation
-gnawed them, and pestilence swept them away. Then
-came the hour when all hope departed, and they hauled
-down the standard which had so long floated above their
-highest tower.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shortly afterwards news was brought to the king that
-the governor was on the battlements, and desired a parley
-with him. Sir Walter de Mauny and Ralph Lord Bisset
-were sent to confer with the governor. “Sirs,” said he,
-“ye be right valiant knights in deeds of arms, and ye know
-well how the king, my master, hath sent me to keep this
-town in his behoof. We have done all that lieth in our
-power. Now our succours have failed us, and we be sore
-strained; we must all die, or else go mad with famine. I
-therefore entreat that you will beg your king to have
-compassion on us, and to have the goodness to let us depart
-in the state we are in; and that he will be satisfied with
-having possession of the town and castle, with all that is
-within them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereupon the two knights returned to the king and
-told him all that had passed. But the king heeded them
-not: the men of Calais should surrender, and he would
-do with them as he listed. Then Sir Walter braved the
-royal wrath and told his sovereign that he was setting a
-very bad example by his severity. All the other nobles
-who were present pleaded with the king, and at length
-he yielded in some degree. “Sir Walter,” said he, “you
-will inform the governor that the only grace he must
-expect from me is, that six of the principal citizens of
-Calais march out of the town with bare heads and feet,
-with ropes round their necks, and the keys of the town
-and castle in their hands. These six must yield themselves
-to my will, and to the rest I will show mercy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Walter returned to the battlements and told the
-governor what grace he had been able to obtain from the
-king. “I beg of you,” said he, “to remain here a little,
-while I go into the town and tell the townsmen your king’s
-conditions.” So he went to the market-place, the bell
-was sounded, and immediately a multitude of men and
-women gathered in the town hall to hear what he had
-to say. When they learnt the sad news they began to
-weep and to show such distress that the hardest heart
-would have had compassion on them. Even the governor
-himself was moved to tears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last the richest burgess in the town, by name
-Eustace de St. Pierre, rose up and said, “Sirs, high and
-low, it would be grievous for so many people to die of
-famine when there is a means to save them. I think they
-who should save them from such a pass would have great
-merit in the eyes of our Lord God. For my part I have so
-great a trust in Him that I will be the first to offer myself
-for the rest.” When he had said this, the people rose up
-and almost worshipped him, many casting themselves at
-his feet with tears and groans. Then another rich citizen
-arose and said, “I will keep company with my comrade
-Eustace.” His name was John Daire. After him, James
-Wisant, who was also very rich in merchandise, said he
-would hold company with his two cousins; as also did Peter
-Wisant, his brother. Then two others offered themselves,
-and the six citizens, having apparelled themselves as the
-King of England desired, marched towards the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Sir Walter Mauny had presented the citizens to
-the king they fell on their knees and with uplifted hands
-cried, “Most gallant king, we bring you the keys of the
-castle and of the town. We surrender ourselves to your
-absolute will and pleasure, in order to save the remainder
-of the people of Calais, who have suffered such great
-pain. Sir, we beseech your grace to have mercy and pity
-upon us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All the barons, knights, and squires that were assembled
-around wept at the sight. But the king, remembering their
-piracies, eyed them with angry looks, for he greatly hated
-the men of Calais. Then he commanded that their heads
-should be struck off. All present entreated the king that
-he would be merciful to them, but he would not listen.
-At last the good Sir Walter made yet another appeal for
-grace. “Noble king,” he cried, “let me beseech you to
-restrain your anger. You are rightly famed for greatness of
-soul; do not tarnish it by such an act as this. Henceforth
-every man will speak of your great cruelty, if you put to
-death these burgesses, who have of their own free will offered
-their lives for their fellow-citizens.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this the king scowled and bade them send for the
-headsman. “These knaves,” said he, “have slain many of
-my men, and they shall die for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this moment the good Queen Philippa, who had
-been weeping bitterly, cast herself upon her knees before
-her pitiless lord. “Ah! gentle sir,” she cried, “since I
-have crossed the sea in great peril I have never asked you
-one favour; now I humbly beg you, in the name of the
-Son of the Virgin Mary, and for your love of me, that you
-be merciful to these six men.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The king looked upon her in silence for a moment, and
-then replied, “Lady, I would that you had not been here.
-You have begged of me so earnestly that I cannot refuse
-you, though it grieves me sore to yield. I give them to
-you; do with them as you will.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Joyous and glad was the queen that she had moved the
-king to pity. She rose from her knees, and bidding the
-citizens rise too, ordered the ropes to be taken from their
-necks, and caused them to be new clothed. Then she took
-them to her own apartments and gave them a plentiful
-dinner, after which she presented each of them with six
-nobles and set them at liberty. The town was surrendered,
-and the English king fed the starving multitudes
-liberally.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Merciful queen, your generous pity for the stricken
-foe shall ever be the brightest jewel in your crown. In
-ages to come men will cherish the fame of your womanly
-tenderness, and will tell their children in many a tale and
-song the glorious story of your gracious clemency.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo162.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0039' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo160.jpg' alt='' id='i160' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Edward the Third at the Siege of Calais.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by Sir John Gilbert, R.A. By permission of the Corporation of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='163' id='Page_163'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo163.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0040' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE BLACK PRINCE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Witness our too much memorable shame,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>When Cressy battle fatally was struck,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And all our princes captived, by the hand</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of that black name, Edward, black prince of Wales.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now you are transported to the streets of fourteenth-century
-London. You stand at the upper window of a lofty
-timbered house, and from your coign of vantage see the
-ancient city donning its festive array. There is an air of
-rejoicing and there is a buzz of expectation everywhere. The
-houses of the wealthier citizens are hung with gay carpets,
-rich silks, and fine tapestry. Streamers are flying, garlanded
-poles are reared, and here and there you see trophies of
-arms—shields, helmets, breastplates, lances, swords, sheaves
-of arrows, maces, and battle-axes. Anon you hear the
-rattle of drum and the blare of trumpet as the City companies,
-clad in their liveries, take up the places assigned to
-them. Now a procession of clergy, habited in their richest
-vestments, winds by. Gay gallants in their blue or green
-tunics and hoods, their hose of diverse hues, and their
-<span class='it'>Cracow</span> shoes with long, curving toes laced to the knee
-with silver chains, come and go, and lend colour and
-vivacity to the scene. Many a fair maiden in a gay kirtle
-gazes out of her casement with sparkling eyes, and hard by
-you see no less interested matrons, in all the bravery of
-their best attire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, afar off, you hear the huzzas of the crowd, and as
-you watch and wait nearer and nearer come the salvoes of
-applause. The cannon of the Tower roar out their welcome,
-trumpets sound, and bells clash from the steeples.
-Right royally does London greet those whom she delights
-to honour to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ah! here come the archers, the pride of England, a
-goodly array of stalwart yeomen, bronzed and hardened by
-long campaigning on French fields. Look at them as they
-swagger along, conscious of their prowess, the rings of
-conquered knights on their horny hands, and the jewelled
-baldrics of French nobles across their shoulders. See how
-they bandy many a merry jest with the maidens on the
-causeway, and shout their jovial greetings to the citizens,
-who wave their caps and cheer wildly in response. There
-is not a lad in London who does not yearn to be an
-archer. With his six-foot bow in his hand and a sheaf
-of arrows at his belt, your archer envies neither knight
-nor king. He has won great fame, and his pouch is
-filled with rose nobles; and when these are gone, there
-are plenty more to be won in Poitou and Gascony. And
-if the Prince—God bless him!—has no more wars on
-hand, why, there are always the Free Companies ready and
-willing to welcome a stalwart bowman who can “clap in
-the clout” at fourscore yards, and use a bill right yeomanly
-when it comes to handstrokes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Behind the rollicking archers come the mail-clad
-knights, a noble and more sedate company, flashing back
-the May-day sun from their shining armour and their
-gleaming lance-points. Yonder is Chandos, the wise and
-watchful general whose keen eye perceived the critical
-moment in the great fight—he who cried to the Prince,
-“Now, sir, ride forward, and the day is yours.” And there
-is Audley, pale and weak from his wounds, but gallant as
-ever. Was it not he whom the Prince greeted by the
-glorious name of <span class='it'>Preux</span>, and dubbed the best knight on the
-field? Right proud must he feel to-day. And who be
-these? In sooth, they are the premier nobles of France,
-rich prizes of war, though they bear, neither by sign nor
-by look, the semblance of defeat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the air is rent with still louder shouts as a
-noble figure on a superb white charger rides by. It is the
-King of France, bearing himself as a conqueror, yet knowing
-full well that he is a captive gracing a victor’s triumph.
-But not for him are the shouts. Look at that simple
-knight in black armour, quietly riding by his side on a
-palfrey. He is the hero of the day, the cynosure of all
-eyes, the praise of all tongues. He would seem to be no
-more than the French king’s squire; yet he is the victor
-of Poitiers, a name of terror in France, the idol of his
-knights, the boast of his archers, the pride of his land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The stately procession moves on to the great hall at
-Westminster, where Edward the king waits the coming of
-his noble captive and his gallant son. With knightly
-courtesy he rises from his throne and embraces his unfortunate
-brother of France, and gives him gracious welcome
-to his court. He bids him be of good cheer; and the
-French king, who has borne the ordeal with manly fortitude,
-is right glad that the public parade is over. With gracious
-tact the English king conceals his triumphant joy; he does
-everything in his power to play the gracious host to the
-honoured guest; but nothing that he can do will remove
-the shame and grief that rack the proud heart of the
-“Fortune of France.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us turn to the Black Prince and learn why
-the Londoners so enthusiastically greet him. He is but
-twenty-seven years of age, yet he has many a hard-fought
-campaign to his credit. At thirteen years of age he was
-made Prince of Wales, and invested with the symbols of his
-office—the coronet of gold, the ring, and the silver wand.
-In his honour the king, his royal father, then held a Feast
-of the Round Table, and from every country of Europe
-came the most renowned knights to commemorate the
-fame of King Arthur, and to pledge themselves to emulate
-his chivalry, his courtesy, and his feats of arms. Never
-before had there been so splendid a pageant seen as that
-which King Edward arrayed beneath the ancient walls of
-Windsor Castle. The Black Prince that day yearned for
-the hour when he, too, might take spear and shield and
-break a lance in the tourney as a preparation for winning
-renown on the battlefield. Long before he was out of
-his teens he made acquaintance with the dangers and
-rigours of war in real earnest. In his sixteenth year the
-longed-for moment arrived. He accompanied his father
-to France, and as he landed at La Hogue he received the
-honour of knighthood, though he had yet his “spurs to
-win.” But forthwith, as the chronicler tells us, he “made
-a right good beginning” by burning and ravaging the
-neighbouring country, and by fighting valiantly when
-Godemar du Fay endeavoured to prevent the English army
-from crossing the Somme. Then came the never-to-be-forgotten
-battle of Crécy, in which he won his spurs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he rode into London after the battle of Crécy,
-every man, woman, and child in the great city loved him,
-and prophesied a wondrous future for him. And they were
-true prophets, for his fame grew with the years; and now
-they see him among them once more, victor in his own
-right, and bringing in his train the “Fortune of France.”
-What stories of his prowess and gallantry and modesty they
-tell! Listen to yon burly archer now released from duty.
-“I mind,” says he, “that after yonder king had yielded
-himself, the prince led him to his own tent, took off his
-helmet with his own hands, brought him drink, and gave
-him comfortable words, and served him at table as he had
-been a base serving-man and not the heir of Merry England.
-What think ye of that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, while all England is singing his praises and
-he is at the very summit of his fame, let us peep into
-the future and see what fate has in store for him.
-Again and again he will harry the fair land of France;
-and, greedy of warfare, will ally himself with Pedro the
-Cruel, and win a victory for that bloodthirsty tyrant in distant
-Spain. And when the victory is won he will beseech
-Pedro to spare the lives of the conquered. Before long,
-however, the Spanish king will refuse to pay him the price
-agreed upon, and will send him on wild-goose errands, until
-he sees his men fall around him stricken by pestilence, and
-scarce one in five of them will return with him across the
-Pyrenees. He, too, will be seized with a painful sickness
-from which he will never recover.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But still he will go on fighting, and every year his heart
-will harden within him, until one day he will stain his fair
-fame by a deed of pitiless cruelty. In his rage at the long
-defence of Limoges he will order no quarter to be given
-to the gallant defenders. Piteous appeals will be made to
-him for mercy; but he will not hearken, and three thousand
-defenceless men, women, and children will be massacred in
-the streets. “Pity ’tis, ’tis true.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His sickness will increase, and he will return home to
-die, but not before he does something for the people of
-England in a peaceful and more useful sphere. He will
-drive from his father’s court the greedy, unscrupulous men
-who are oppressing the land, and he will strive to better
-the condition of the people in many ways. Knowing his
-end is nigh, he will give himself to prayer and good works;
-his sickness will rack him sore, but he will bear his sufferings
-patiently and will make “a very noble end, remembering
-God his Creator in his heart,” and bidding his people
-pray for him. He will die in his forty-sixth year, to the
-unbounded grief of the nation. And so he passes, a man
-of war from his youth up, not untainted by cruelty, not
-unsullied by martial pride, but, in spite of all, the very
-mirror of the knighthood of his day.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo166.jpg' alt='' id='i166' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Black Prince being made a Knight of the Garter.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by C. W. Cope, R.A., in Westminster Palace.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='169' id='Page_169'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo169.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0041' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter VIII.<br/> ON FRENCH FIELDS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>KING HARRY THE FIFTH.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Now all the youth of England are on fire,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Now thrive the armourers, and honour’s thought</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Reigns solely in the breast of every man.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/y.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='Y'/>OU are gazing upon the death-chamber of a king.
-He lies upon his bed in the silent, darkened room,
-and sleep comes and goes from his troubled pillow.
-Conscience smites him and disease racks his bones. He has
-been a man of blood all his days, and many crimes are laid
-to his charge. He has murdered the king whose crown he
-wears; the blood of an archbishop is upon his head. As
-fitful slumber seizes him, you perceive a noble youth enter
-the room. Comely is he in face and figure, though he
-bears the marks of recent grief. He stands by his father’s
-couch, and watches the sufferer. As he does so, his eye
-falls on the king’s crown, and he muses on the weight and
-cares of majesty. Then he glances again at the prostrate
-form on the bed, and a great grief surges into his heart, for,
-to all seeming, the king, his father, is dead. He bursts
-into tears, and taking up the crown places it on his own
-head.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“My due from thee is this Imperial crown,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Which, as immediate from thy place and blood,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Derives itself to me. Lo! here it sits,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Which God shall guard: and put the world’s whole strength</p>
-<p class='line0'>Into one giant arm, it shall not force</p>
-<p class='line0'>This lineal honour from me: this from thee</p>
-<p class='line0'>Will I to mine leave, as ’tis left to me.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>But while he speaks, the king awakes, and his roving
-eye sees the crown which his son is even now wearing.
-“Sire,” cries the young prince, “I never thought to hear
-thee speak again.” Then the dying king reproves him:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Thy wish was father, Harry, to that thought:</p>
-<p class='line0'>I stay too long by thee, I weary thee.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Dost thou so hunger for mine empty chair</p>
-<p class='line0'>That thou wilt needs invest thee with my honours</p>
-<p class='line0'>Before thy hour be ripe? O foolish youth!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thou seek’st the greatness that will overwhelm thee.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Stay but a little; for my cloud of dignity</p>
-<p class='line0'>Is held from falling with so weak a wind</p>
-<p class='line0'>That it will quickly drop: my day is dim.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thou hast stolen that which, after some few hours,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Were thine without offence.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The prince, stricken to the heart by his father’s
-reproaches, flings himself upon his knees to ask pardon
-for his presumption, and to assure the king of the innocence
-of his deed. He swears that no rebel or vain spirit
-has prompted him to seize the crown.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Coming to look on you, thinking you dead,——</p>
-<p class='line0'>And dead almost, my liege, to think you were,——</p>
-<p class='line0'>I spake unto this crown as having sense....</p>
-<p class='line0'>Accusing it, I put it on my head,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To try with it, as with an enemy</p>
-<p class='line0'>That had before my face murdered my father,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The quarrel of a true inheritor.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dying king gladly accepts his son’s explanation, and
-blessing him passes away; while the new king, in an agony
-of grief, swears to throw off the waywardness and wildness
-of his ways. And so, amidst the loud acclaim of his subjects,
-the crown is placed for the second time on his head,
-and he begins to reign. Never king will be better loved;
-he will give his people their fill of martial glory, and loudly
-they will boast:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Oh, when shall Englishmen</p>
-<p class='line0'>With such acts fill a pen,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Or England breed again</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Such a King Harry!”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now two years have flown, and you see him again
-following the will o’ the wisp of that French dominion
-which the third Edward vainly sought. It is easy to pick
-a quarrel with France; her king has lost his wits, and his
-selfish kinsmen are tearing the realm in twain with their
-enmities and quarrels. So with the might of England at
-his back Harry crosses the Channel, and his great guns
-begin to thunder before the walls of Harfleur. Before the
-town falls his army is fearfully wasted by hunger and
-disease; nevertheless, he does not mean to return without
-doing a deed that “will dazzle all the eyes of France.”
-From Harfleur he writes to the Dauphin and offers to fight
-him man to man for the kingdom, pleading that the quarrel
-may thus be settled without the shedding of innocent blood.
-But the sluggish, mean-spirited Dauphin makes no answer,
-so Harry cries:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“The game’s afoot;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Follow your spirit, and, upon this charge,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Cry, ‘God for Harry, England, and Saint George.’ ”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is the evening of October 24th, in the year of grace
-1415. Five thousand English bowmen and five thousand
-men-at-arms, weary, half-starved, wasted, ragged, and footsore,
-are stumbling on through French fields for Calais,
-dreaming of the homes they are never likely to see again.
-Suddenly the news comes in that a huge French army bars
-the way. Out go the scouts, and one of them, a Welshman,
-speedily returns with the brave report: “There are
-enough to be killed, enough to be taken, and enough to
-run away.” In sooth, there are 60,000 of them, fresh,
-well-equipped, and in the most confident of spirits; the
-odds are six to one. “Oh that we now had here but
-one ten thousand of those men in England who do no work
-to-day!” cries a noble, but King Harry reproves him,——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“No, my fair cousin:</p>
-<p class='line0'>If we are marked to die, we are enow</p>
-<p class='line0'>To do our country loss; and if to live,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The fewer men, the greater share of honour.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>So the night rolls down, and the English few betake themselves
-to prayers; while in the French camp the knights are
-revelling and feasting and dicing for the ransoms of the
-captives they hope to take on the morrow. The morning
-sun sees the English army drawn up in a field of freshly-sown
-corn, face to face with the French host, that stretches
-across the plain by the hamlet of Agincourt. Every archer
-carries a five-foot stake as a protection against cavalry; every
-man of them is stripped to the waist, and has one shoe off,
-the better to keep firm footing on the slippery ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the gallant king, in full armour, with a jewelled
-crown glittering on his helmet, rides along the ranks. He
-prays aloud for victory, and turning to his men bids them
-fight boldly, for God is on their side. England, he declares,
-shall never pay ransom for him; he will conquer, or leave
-his bones on the field. Then he reminds his archers that
-their foes have sworn to put out the right eye and cut off
-the left hand of every bowman whom they capture, so that
-he shall never loose arrow again. A momentary hush falls
-on the English as they kneel to commend their souls to
-high heaven. Then their lips tighten, their thews and
-sinews become steel, and their hearts bound in expectation
-of the fray.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What time is it?” asks the king. “The bells are
-ringing prime, my lord,” is the reply. “Now is good
-time,” says he; “England prayeth for us, so let us be of
-good cheer. Banners advance!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a loud shout the English bowmen advance twenty
-paces, and firmly plant their stakes to form a formidable
-palisade. On come the heavy-armed cavalry of the enemy
-in dense masses, thirty deep. The archers step forward
-a few yards, and slowly and steadily begin to shoot. Not
-an arrow is wasted; every shaft flies home. To stand still
-on the French side is to be shot down like a dog; to turn
-back is impossible with the huge press of soldiery behind.
-So, as the death-hail falls, the French men-at-arms spur
-their heavy chargers through the mire of the freshly-ploughed
-field. The deadly arrows never cease to fall, and
-down go horse and man until they lie in ghastly heaps two
-spears high. The French army is a helpless, heaving mass.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now’s the day and now’s the hour” for the English
-archers. They sling their bows on their backs, they leap
-forward, and throwing themselves on the struggling heaps
-ply sword and mace, axe and bill, with almost superhuman
-strength. The living fall on the dead, the dead on the
-living, and the English climb the horrible, writhing mounds
-and hew and hack at the high-born French knights. King
-Harry is in the thickest press. Certain French knights
-swear to take or slay the English king. They hew their
-way to him; a shrewd blow slices the crown from his
-helmet, but it is the last blow ever struck by that arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first line is swept to earth, the second line has
-fallen like wheat before the reaper’s sickle, and now the
-third line advances. Taken in flank by the archers, it turns
-and flees. In three hours the battle is over. Eleven
-thousand Frenchmen lie dead upon the field, prince and
-peasant “in one red burial blent.” Agincourt is won, and
-the English archer has gained a renown that shall not dim
-its lustre while the name of Britain endures.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more King Harry is in France, and again none
-may stand against him. Rouen, after horrible sufferings, has
-surrendered; the French princes are busy murdering one
-another; the young King of Burgundy throws in his lot
-with the English, and the kingdom is at Henry’s feet. So
-a treaty is made: Henry is to marry the fair Katherine,
-daughter of the poor, witless King of France; he is to rule
-in his father-in-law’s name, and succeed him at his death.
-So Henry begins his wooing, and right merrily it goes
-despite his bad French and Katherine’s broken English.
-On Trinity Sunday in the year 1420 he leads the princess
-to the high altar of the church at Troyes, and they are
-married. Then the hero of Agincourt and his bride enter
-Paris amidst the approving shouts of the populace, many
-of whom wear the red cross, the badge of England. But
-a third campaign is necessary before the French and their
-Scottish allies are beaten and all north France up to the
-Loire owns Henry’s sway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, in the midst of his splendour, his health fails,
-and the doctors are mystified at his malady. As he sinks
-day by day, he learns that a son has been born to him at
-Windsor. At once an old prophecy flashes into his mind——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“I, Henry, born at Monmouth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Shall small time reign and much get;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But Henry of Windsor shall long reign and lose all.</p>
-<p class='line0'>But as God wills, so be it.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>His last hour has come. He busies himself with prayer,
-and the priests sing psalms over him. When they reach
-the second verse of the 147th Psalm he cries, “Good Lord,
-Thou knowest that my mind was to build up the walls
-of Jerusalem.” He speaks no more. His life is done; his
-comet-like career is over. So he dies, leaving his infant
-son to reap the bitter harvest that he has sown.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo172.jpg' alt='' id='i172' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE MORNING OF AGINCOURT.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, P.R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='176' id='Page_176'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo176.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0042' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>JOAN, THE MAID.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“<span class='it'>King of France!”</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>She cried, “at Chinon, when my gifted eye</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Knew thee disguised, what inwardly the spirit</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Prompted, I promised, with the sword of God,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>To drive from Orleans far the English wolves</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And crown thee in the rescued walls of Rheims.</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>All is accomplished. I have here this day</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Fulfilled my mission, and anointed thee</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>King over this great nation.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Seven years have sped by, and the scene shifts to the
-ancient cathedral of Rheims. A great concourse of nobles
-in glittering armour with pennons and banners fills the
-nave. Trumpets are sounding, and outside the crowd raises
-cheer upon cheer. The sun streams in through the painted
-windows, casting rainbow hues on the exultant throng.
-Ten thousand candles are burning, and the smoke of incense
-is ascending. At the high altar, clad in the ermine robe
-of state, kneels the Dauphin of France. An archbishop,
-wearing his mitre and the splendid robes of his high office,
-places the crown upon the prince’s head, and anoints him
-with the sacred oil out of the ancient flask which the
-priests say came straight from heaven. The Dauphin is
-king in very deed, and a great shout of joy echoes and
-re-echoes from the vaulted roof. And now all eyes turn
-to the striking figure by the side of the newly-made
-king. You see a noble maiden, clad in knightly armour,
-and holding a drawn sword in one hand and a white banner
-in the other. She kneels at her prince’s feet, and tears
-of joy fall from her eyes as she greets him “King” for
-the first time. “Now,” she says, “is the will of God
-fulfilled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who is this maiden, and why holds she such an
-honoured place amidst this noble throng? Let the old
-chroniclers relate her story. It is one of the most wondrous
-ever told. What Wallace did for Scotland this
-maid has done for France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the year 1429 there was a young girl living in
-Domremy, a village in the east of France. She was named
-Joan, and was the daughter of James Darc and Isobel, his
-wife. Joan was but a country maid that was wont to herd
-the cattle by day and sew and spin in the evening. She
-was a strong, handsome girl, nobly formed, with dark hair
-and lustrous eyes. About her thirteenth year she grew
-silent and dreamy, and loved to steal away from her companions
-to the village church, where she knelt for hours
-together in silent prayer. One day she was standing in
-her father’s garden when she heard a Voice, and saw a
-great light. The Voice bade her be diligent in work and
-prayer, for God had chosen her to save France. She
-replied that she was but a poor girl who could not ride,
-or lead soldiers in the wars; but the Voice spoke to her
-again and again, telling her that she must go. The saints
-appeared to her, too, and they gave her the same message,
-and added words of counsel and warning. The Visions and
-the Voices were with her night and day, and at length she
-felt that she <span class='it'>must</span> do their bidding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Truly her land was in a piteous condition at the time.
-King Harry of England was dead, and so was the old
-French king, his father-in-law, and the English baby born
-at Windsor had been crowned King of France. His uncle,
-the Duke of Bedford, the famous Talbot, and many another
-knight of renown, were leading English armies to and fro,
-besieging towns, burning villages, and filling the land with
-slaughter. Woeful tales of death, plunder, and famine
-found their way to the quiet little village of Domremy,
-and Joan’s heart was filled with grief at the miseries of her
-beloved France. The Scots had come to the help of their
-old friends, the French, and though they managed to win
-a great victory, they were badly beaten at Verneuil, where
-the field was dyed with Scottish blood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As for the Dauphin, the rightful King of France, he
-only held the country south of the Loire, and did not hold
-even that securely. His strongest fortress was the city
-of Orleans, which was even now closely besieged by the
-English. To make matters worse, the Dauphin was a man
-of no spirit and enterprise. He was half-hearted in his
-own cause, and, indeed, was not fully assured that he was
-the son of the late king, and therefore lawfully entitled to
-the crown. It is said that he had prayed secretly that
-a sign might be given to him to prove that he was the
-rightful heir, and that hitherto no sign had been vouchsafed.
-He had very little hope of beating the English, for,
-like the rest of his countrymen, he had lost heart and
-deemed his foes unconquerable. A handful of English
-archers by their very presence could send five hundred
-Frenchmen flying in terror to the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By this time the Voices and the Visions had so wrought
-upon the Maid that she left home without taking leave of
-her father and mother (not that she did not hold them in
-honour and respect, but lest they should hinder her intent),
-and went to Vaucouleurs hoping for an audience with
-Robert de Baudricourt, the commander of the town. Now,
-her uncle lived in the town, and to him she betook herself,
-and told him how the saints and angels had urged her
-on her mission, and how the Voices had said, “Daughter
-of God, go on! We will be with you.” The uncle listened
-and believed, and led her to the captain, who laughed at
-her, and bade her uncle chastise her for a foolish maiden.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But again she came to him and told him how a terrible
-misfortune had happened that very day to the Dauphin’s
-army near Orleans. As Vaucouleurs was many leagues from
-Orleans, and even the swiftest runner could not have brought
-the news so quickly, the captain gave ear to her; and
-when he knew that she had spoken the truth, he saw that
-she was no mere hysterical country girl, but one endowed
-with supernatural gifts. “My lord captain,” she said,
-“know that for some years back, at divers times, God hath
-made known to me and commanded me to go to the gentle
-Dauphin, who should be and is the true King of France,
-that he may give me men-at-arms, whereby I may raise the
-siege of Orleans, take him to be anointed at Rheims, win
-back Paris, and drive the English from the realm.” Robert
-hearkened to her words, and furnished her with man’s
-attire. A young knight gave her a horse, which to the
-surprise of all she rode well; and, dressed in a gray doublet
-and black hose, she rode away to seek the Dauphin, who
-was then at Chinon. To test her, the Dauphin dressed
-one of his knights in his princely attire, and himself, in
-a plain and sober dress, mingled with his courtiers. But
-Joan went straight to him, and kneeling on one knee, cried,
-“Fair sir, you are the Dauphin, to whom I am come.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nay,” said he, “yonder is the Dauphin,” pointing to
-a richly-dressed knight in the company.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, fair sir,” repeated the maid, “it is to you that I
-am sent.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Dauphin was surprised, but he did not yet believe
-in her. One day she took him aside where nobody could
-hear and whispered to him the purport of his secret prayer,
-and assured him that he was the rightful king. Then the
-Dauphin had faith in her, and when his council and the
-clergy had examined her straitly, and at last had reported
-that “to doubt the maid would be to resist the Holy
-Spirit,” he agreed to send her with a train of provisions
-which he hoped to be able to get secretly into Orleans.
-While armour was being made for her, she bade the
-Dauphin’s servants dig behind the altar of the Chapel of
-St. Catherine at Fierbois, and there they would find a
-sword with five crosses on the blade. The sword was found,
-and she girt herself with it, and taking her banner of white
-with the image of the Lord and two angels on it, thus she
-led her small company towards Orleans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she lay at Blois she sent a letter to the English
-captain who was besieging Orleans, bidding him depart
-in peace, or else she would fall upon him with blows, and
-“we shall see who hath the better right, God or you.”
-The English laughed at her words, and threatened to burn
-her as a witch if they caught her. Nevertheless she
-advanced, and entered the town, whereat the spirits of the
-citizens rose and their confidence returned. And now,
-being strengthened by fresh troops and fresh stores, they
-no longer acted merely on the defensive, but began to
-assault the English forts, and with Joan as leader captured
-two of them. Then Joan led them against the Bulwark
-and the Round Towers. All morning they fought without
-success, and at one o’clock in the afternoon a bolt from
-an English cross-bow wounded her in the shoulder. The
-arrow was extracted, and still the fight went on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After sunset the captain wished to withdraw for the
-night, but Joan begged him to fall to again. She mounted
-her horse and rode to a quiet place and prayed, and then
-returned to the fight. She alighted from her horse, and
-taking her standard in her hand, waved it to and fro so
-that all men saw it. “Take heed,” she said, “when the
-float of my banner shall touch the Bulwark.” “It touches!
-it touches!” they cried. Then said she to her men, “All
-is yours; enter in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a great rush the French climbed the scaling-ladders,
-captured the Round Towers, stormed the Bulwark,
-and put to the sword most of the defenders. That night
-the English, terrified by the reappearance of the Maid,
-raised the siege and departed, leaving their big guns and
-much victual behind them. So the town of Orleans was
-delivered, and Frenchmen everywhere began to believe that
-the Maid was really an angel of God sent to deliver France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without delay Joan rode to the Dauphin and besought
-him to make ready to be crowned at Rheims, the old
-coronation place of the French kings. But he would not
-set forth until the way was cleared of English. So with
-six hundred lances and some infantry Joan led an attack
-on them, and drove them before her. And now in June
-the Dauphin at her entreaty gat him on the road for
-Rheims, Joan warning him that “she would only last for
-a year, or not much longer, and that he must make haste.”
-At Troyes the garrison yielded, and ere long the Dauphin
-was in Rheims, and the scene in which you saw the Maid
-for the first time took place.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hardly was the coronation over ere Joan urged the
-king to march on Paris. As he advanced, town after town
-opened its gates to him, and Bedford dared not give him
-battle. But when the first attack on Paris failed, he withdrew,
-like the coward that he was, and would not persevere,
-in spite of all Joan’s prayers and tears. Almost broken-hearted,
-she hung up her arms in the church of St. Denis,
-and begged leave to go home to her father and mother and
-herd the cattle as of yore. The king, however, would not
-let her go, but gave her a pension and a title of nobility.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now in Easter week of this fateful year the Voices
-spoke again to her and said that she should be taken
-prisoner before Midsummer Day. They encouraged her
-to be resigned to her fate, for God would help her. The
-Maid knew full well that to be captured meant being
-burned as a witch; nevertheless she halted not in her
-purpose, deeming her end glorious if only she could give
-her body to be burned for her country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The town of Compiègne was closely besieged by the
-English and the Burgundians, and was likely to yield. So
-the Maid rode thither with her brothers and two or three
-hundred men to raise the siege. She charged the Burgundians,
-but was surrounded and taken prisoner and held
-to ransom. The French would not pay a franc for her,
-and so her captors sold her to the English, who “feared
-not any captain, not any chief in war, as they had
-feared the Maid.” She was brought before the Bishop
-of Beauvais and tried for witchcraft. After a long and
-tedious trial, and after suffering every kind of insult and
-hardship, she was found guilty, and was tricked into signing
-a paper confessing her guilt. And all the time the
-miserable French king made no sign, and lifted not his
-little finger to save her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On May 30, 1431, they led her into the market-place
-of Rouen and burnt her alive. With her dying words she
-testified to the truth of her Visions, and underwent her
-awful doom with the courage of a martyr. So she died,
-pressing to her lips a rude cross which a pitiful soldier held
-out to her. The old legends tell that as the flames leaped
-round her, and her spirit departed, a pure white dove, the
-harbinger of peace, rose from out the smouldering pile
-and winged its way towards heaven. In very truth peace
-did spring from her ashes. Her heroic example gave new
-life to the crushed spirit of her countrymen, who rose and
-drove the invader from their shores. Four years later,
-nothing was left of all the English conquests in France but
-the town of Calais.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo177.jpg' alt='' id='i177' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE CORONATION OF CHARLES VII. AT RHEIMS.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by J. E. Lenepveu in the Pantheon, Paris.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo180.jpg' alt='' id='i180' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>JOAN OF ARC STORMING THE “BULWARK” (ORLEANS).</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by J. E. Lenepveu.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='184' id='Page_184'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo184.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0043' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter IX.<br/> THE WARS OF THE ROSES.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE KING-MAKER.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Heard ye the din of battle bray,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Lance to lance, and horse to horse?</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Long years of havoc urge their destined course,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And through the kindred, squadrons mow their way.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/a.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='A'/> &nbsp;GREAT noble now rides by on a magnificent coal-black
-steed. At once your eye is attracted by
-him, and you feel that here is a Paladin worthy of
-the pen of poet and romancer. Mark his great stature;
-his vast width and depth of chest; his high forehead; his
-black, curling hair fretted from the temples by the friction
-of his helmet; his handsome oval face; his bold features;
-and his massive jaw, which speaks only too plainly of his
-masterful nature and inflexible determination. You can
-readily believe that he is the idol of thousands of his
-countrymen, and “a setter up and plucker down” of kings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who is this remarkable man? He is none other than
-Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, the richest and most
-powerful noble in England. Thirty thousand men eat his
-bread daily at the tables of his various great castles; his
-retainers alone constitute an army, all clad in scarlet coats
-with the “ragged staff” worked on back and front. His
-boundless wealth, his profuse hospitality, his great family
-connections raise him head and shoulders above his peers.
-He is the premier noble of England, the arbiter of her
-destinies, and the “last of the barons.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He lives in an age of battle, murder, and sudden
-death. His land is torn by the long and fierce quarrels
-of two great families which are selfishly and ruthlessly
-fighting for the crown. Henry the Sixth, a mild, merciful,
-long-suffering, pious man, weak of health and weak
-of purpose, a hater of strife and bloodshed and a lover
-of religion and learning, sits insecurely on the throne,
-bolstered thereon by his strong-willed, indomitable queen,
-Margaret of Anjou. He is the grandson of that Lancastrian
-king who thrust from the throne the grandson
-of Edward the Third. His hereditary right to the
-crown is inferior to that of Richard, Duke of York; but
-his family has now been in possession of the throne for
-more than half a century, and the brilliant victories of his
-father have made men proud of the Lancastrian lineage.
-But feeble son has succeeded valiant sire. France has
-been lost; there is no child to succeed him; and he is surrounded
-by ambitious, quarrelsome nobles, who make him
-a pawn in their selfish game. Already the great houses of
-the realm have taken sides, and are sporting either the red
-or the white rose. The citizens of London, the wealthy
-traders and craftsmen now rising into a powerful caste,
-throw in their lot with York, and the yeomen of the South
-and Midlands are for him too. And now, in the year
-1453, the poor king goes mad, and York is made Protector
-of the realm. He quite expects to be king when Henry
-passes away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But a new arrival comes on the scene to dash all his
-hopes and force him to the arbitrament of the sword.
-Queen Margaret bears a son, Henry recovers, and York is
-dismissed from his post. He appeals to his friend the great
-Warwick, and soon a large force rallies to his standard.
-The rival armies meet at the old town of St. Albans, but
-ere the fight begins York seeks the king and endeavours to
-make terms. But Henry, who is as clay in the hands of
-his implacable wife—“the foreign woman” as the English
-folk call her—is for the moment moulded into something
-resembling courage. “I will live and die this day in the
-quarrel,” he exclaims, and York is cavalierly dismissed.
-The royalists barricade the streets, and bid the foe come on.
-The great earl by skilful generalship breaks into the gardens
-behind the houses, and his archers gain the streets with
-trumpets blowing and the war-cry “A Warwick! a Warwick!”
-A tough street fight follows, but it is soon over.
-The king’s chief supporter is dead, and he himself is in the
-hands of York. The wars of the Roses have begun, and
-for more than thirty years the realm will be plunged in
-a civil war so ghastly and unrelenting that even now it
-marks the blackest page in our national history.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not that the people generally will join in the strife.
-The family feuds of great nobles concern them but little;
-they merely desire peace and good government, that they may
-till their lands, labour in their workshops, buy and sell,
-and fill their exhausted purses without distraction. Right
-willingly would they let the sword rust in its scabbard and
-the unstrung bow hang idly on the wall. But the land is
-full of men who have made war their trade in France, and
-they are eager to be hired for any adventure that is going.
-These roving mercenaries, the gentry, and their hosts of
-retainers constitute the armies which will maintain the
-long and bitter contest. But despite the bloody duels of
-factious nobles, the business of the country is not interrupted.
-The judges go on circuit as of old, taking their
-commissions from whichever king is in the ascendant; and
-the peasant pauses in his hillside furrow and leans on the
-handles of his plough to view the nobles of the land dashing
-themselves to pieces in battle on the plain below. The war
-is a war of nobles, and not of the commonalty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wild northern levies triumph, and the king is
-recovered. Then Margaret arrays her prisoners, and sets
-up the little prince, her son, to judge them. “Fair son,”
-she cries, “what deaths shall they die?” and the lad forthwith
-orders their heads to be struck off. The wild,
-lawless host tarries eight days at St. Albans, and this delay
-enables Warwick to unite with the new Duke of York and
-reach London. The king and queen gain nothing from
-their victory. They are forced to march north, and the
-Londoners, glad to be saved from Margaret and her Border
-freebooters, welcome York’s heir, and sing:—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“He that could London forsake, we will no more to us take.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>They crown the young man at Westminster, and as
-Edward the Fourth he takes up the sceptre. It is Warwick
-who has made him king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now comes the story of a great quarrel and its dramatic
-sequel. Edward has fallen in love with beautiful Elizabeth
-Woodville, the daughter of a Red Rose father, and the
-widow of a Red Rose husband. He marries her secretly,
-and all the while Warwick is negotiating a foreign
-marriage for him with the French king’s sister. When
-Edward’s marriage to Elizabeth Woodville is announced,
-Warwick’s annoyance and disgust know no bounds. He
-dissembles, however, though day by day he grows angrier
-and angrier as he sees power slipping from him and passing
-to the “upstart” relatives of the new queen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Edward, instigated by his new domestic circle, is
-bent on throwing off the Neville yoke. So he heaps
-honours, high offices, lands, and wealth on the Greys and
-the Woodvilles, and Warwick is furious. Such treatment
-he will not brook. He who has set up the king can pull
-him down again. So he seeks “false, fleeting, perjured
-Clarence,” who is now jealous of his brother, the king,
-and eager for a throne. Clarence marries Warwick’s
-daughter, and the strings of insurrection are vigorously
-pulled by the wily earl. Edward rouses himself at last
-and hastens northward, where his cannon soon put the
-rebels to flight, and their captured leader reveals Warwick’s
-plot to make Clarence king. At once the pair
-of conspirators flee to France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Warwick and that crafty intriguer, Louis the Eleventh,
-now concoct a plan for driving their common enemy, King
-Edward, off the throne, and restoring Henry the Sixth.
-Queen Margaret at first indignantly refuses to accept the
-support of the man who has driven her into exile, and cast
-foul aspersions on her character; but Warwick goes on
-bended knee to her, and withdraws every charge. The
-queen keeps him in this humiliating position for a quarter
-of an hour, and then relents. She agrees that her son
-shall marry Warwick’s daughter, but only when he has
-restored Henry to his throne. Then the king-maker, who
-has broken so many solemn oaths, swears on a piece of
-the true cross to remain faithful to the Lancastrian cause.
-A fleet is fitted out, Warwick lands at Dartmouth, proclaims
-King Henry, and summons the national levies to his
-banner. As Edward lies in bed at Doncaster, two friends
-burst into his chamber and bid him rise and flee, for his
-foes are within an hour’s march. He flings on his clothes,
-and without armour or money rides at breakneck speed to
-Lynn, where he sets sail for Holland. Once more the
-king-maker has made and unmade a king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old king is clad in a robe of blue velvet, brought
-out of the Tower, set on horseback, and led to St. Paul’s
-amidst crowds of Londoners who shout “God save King
-Henry.” The poor old king knows full well that the proud
-noble who bears his train in the state procession is his and
-England’s master, and that he must do his bidding or return
-whence he came. Warwick has again triumphed, but his
-hold on power is far from secure. The Lancastrians have
-no desire for a puppet king whose strings are worked by
-their old enemy, and the Yorkists are busy preparing for
-the return of Edward. Next spring he appears in the
-Humber, and pushes on to London, where the gates are
-opened to him, and he secures the person of King Henry.
-Warwick is in battle-array to the north of Barnet, his
-forces “under a hedge-side.” Clarence, who has made
-peace with his brother, offers mediation; but Warwick,
-angry at his double faithlessness, contemptuously rejects his
-advances.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Last scene of all, to end this strange, eventful
-history.” Raw, cold, and dismal dawns the morning on
-Easter Sunday in the year 1471. A heavy mist, which
-many a soldier ascribes to magical arts, rolls over the field
-and hides the opposing armies from each other. The battle
-begins, and men fight as in a dream, striking wildly at
-each other, and scarce distinguishing friend from foe. Now
-Warwick thinks the day is his; now Edward believes victory
-to be in his grasp. Then comes a lift of the cloud, and
-both generals perceive that their hopes are vain. For three
-hours the desperate fight rages; the bombards roar, and
-sword and arrow do their deadly work. Now deluded by
-the mist, the two wings of Warwick’s army are busy fighting
-each other, and the fatal cry “Treason! treason!” is
-heard on the field. Warwick’s men give way, his brother
-is slain, and there is only safety for the great earl in flight.
-He leaps on horseback and gallops to a neighbouring wood,
-from which there is no egress. He is followed and surrounded,
-and though he plies his great battle-axe fiercely
-he is overborne by superior numbers and slain. The king-maker
-will never make or unmake kings again.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“Now lies he there,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And none so poor to do him reverence.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo188.jpg' alt='' id='i188' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>DEATH OF WARWICK.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by T. A. Houston, R.S.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='191' id='Page_191'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo191.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0044' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE LITTLE PRINCES IN THE TOWER.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Let us sit upon the ground</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And tell sad stories of the death of kings.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now hand in hand two pathetic figures appear. They
-are victims marked for the slaughter; their tender age and
-innocence will not save them, for they stand between a bold,
-unscrupulous man and the throne. You have already made
-acquaintance with their father, the fourth Edward, he who
-owed all to the king-maker, whom he left dead on Barnet
-Field. But Edward has gone to his account, leaving his
-two young sons and their mother to the tender mercies of
-selfish, intriguing nobles, brutalized by a long course of civil
-war. As Protector of the realm, their father’s brother,
-Richard, Duke of Gloucester, aims at the throne, and his
-first step is to secure the custody of the two royal lads, who
-are now in the guardianship of their maternal uncle, Earl
-Rivers, and of Lord Richard Grey. The elder—a boy of
-thirteen—is seized and brought to London by his Uncle
-Richard, while the lad’s guardians are flung into prison.
-The false uncle treats his young charge with every show
-of loyal and submissive regard, and brings him in great
-state to London for his coronation. The wretched mother
-knows instinctively the fate in store for her offspring, and
-takes sanctuary at Westminster with her second son, the
-little Duke of York, a boy of eleven years of age. With
-fair and specious words a prince of the Church persuades
-the widow to surrender the lad, and forthwith he joins his
-brother in the Tower.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now Gloucester ruthlessly hurries to the block those
-who by the ties of kindred and friendship are likely to befriend
-the boys, and ere long no man dares raise his voice
-against any of his bloodthirsty acts. He is a dictator—and
-dictators easily develop into kings. His minions offer him
-the crown, which, after a slight show of refusal, he accepts.
-Then with consummate skill he proceeds to bolster up the
-throne which his successful villainy has won. He is crowned
-with great pomp and ceremony, and soon after the little
-princes disappear. What becomes of them is not clearly
-known, but gradually a rumour spreads that the unnatural
-uncle has done them to death. His crime profits him little;
-a great wave of pity for the untimely fate of the unhappy
-boys swells up in the land, and men recoil in horror from a
-murderer king. Two years later avenging justice smites
-him; he lies dead on the battlefield, and another fills his
-throne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Thomas More, writing twenty-eight years after
-Richard’s death, tells the story of the crime, and there is no
-good reason to dispute its substantial accuracy. He tells us
-that the king plotted the death of the young princes while
-making a holiday progress through the country. From
-Gloucester he dispatched one of his pages to Sir Robert
-Brackenbury, the governor of the Tower, commanding
-him to make away with the lads quietly and speedily.
-Brackenbury indignantly refused the office of assassin, but
-a more facile tool was found in Sir James Tyrell, who had
-already stained his hands in secret crime. The princes
-were confined in the Portcullis Tower, under the constant
-supervision of four keepers, their personal attendant being
-a fellow known as Black Will or Will Slaughter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Richard roused Tyrell from his bed at midnight, and
-sent him to the Tower with an order commanding Brackenbury
-to give up the keys of the fortress. “Then,” says Sir
-Thomas More, “Sir James Tyrell desired that the princes
-should be murdered in bed, to the execution whereof he
-appropriated Miles Forest, one of their keepers, a fellow
-flesh-bred in murder, and to him joined John Dighton, his
-own horse-keeper, a big, broad, square knave. The young
-king had certainly a clear apprehension of his fate, for he
-was heard sighingly to say, ‘I would mine uncle would let
-me have my life, though he taketh my crown.’ After
-which time the prince never tied his points nor anything
-attended to himself, but that young babe, his brother,
-lingered in thought and heaviness till the traitorous deed
-delivered them from their wretchedness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All their other attendants being removed from them,
-and the harmless children in bed, these men came into their
-chamber, and suddenly lapping them in the clothes
-smothered and stifled them till thoroughly dead. Then
-laying out their bodies on the bed, they fetched Sir James
-to see them, who caused the murderers to bury them at the
-stairfoot, deep in the ground, under a heap of stones. Then
-rode Sir James in great haste to King Richard, and showed
-him the manner of the murder, who gave him great thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More than two centuries later the skeletons of two young
-lads were found under a staircase leading to the chapel in
-the White Tower. In all probability they were the mortal
-remains of the unhappy princes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the eve of the battle which resulted in the overthrow
-and death of the murderer king, Shakespeare depicts
-him as visited by the ghosts of the many whom he has
-foully slain. The spirits of the murdered boys appear hand
-in hand:—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Dream on thy cousins smothered in the Tower:</p>
-<p class='line0'>Let us be lead within thy breast, Richard,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And weigh thee down to ruin, shame, and death.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thy nephews’ souls bid thee despair and die!”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>And thus do they hearten the avenger, whose forces are
-even now marshalled on Bosworth Field:—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Sleep, Richmond, sleep in peace, and wake in joy;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Good angels guard thee from the boar’s annoy!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Live, and beget a happy race of kings.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo194.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0045' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo192.jpg' alt='' id='i192' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Little Princes in the Tower.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Paul Delaroche.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo194a.jpg' alt='' id='i194a' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>RICHARD III. AT THE BATTLE OF BOSWORTH.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by A. Cooper. By permission of Messrs. Henry Graves and Co.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='195' id='Page_195'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo195.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0046' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter X.<br/> TUDOR TIMES.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>JOHN AND SEBASTIAN CABOT.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The white man landed;—need the rest be told?</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The New World stretched its dusk hand to the Old;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Each was to each a marvel, and the tie</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of wonder warmed to better sympathy.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/n.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='N'/>OW the procession halts, while a momentous scene is
-enacted before our eyes. We are in the old seaport
-of Bristol, on a May morning in the year 1497,
-treading the rough cobbles of the quay whereat the good
-ship <span class='it'>Matthew</span> and her consort lie. Stout, staunch vessels
-they are, fitted out and provisioned for the most adventurous
-voyage ever undertaken by Bristol ships. The royal blazon
-glistens on their mainsails, the flag of England flies from
-their mastheads. Some of the boldest and most skilful
-mariners in the land are on board, busy making everything
-ship-shape, “Bristol fashion,” for the voyage which is to
-begin to-day. Now you see a procession approaching.
-The Lord Mayor in his robes of state, with his chain of
-office about his neck, leads the way, and behind him troop
-the city fathers; then comes the bishop, with his attendant
-train of priests; and behind them, the observed of all
-observers, you see a father and his three sons. They are
-John, Lewis, Sebastian, and Santius Cabot—the father a
-citizen of Venice, the sons men of Bristol. The old city is
-saying farewell to them to-day, and the lusty cheers that
-greet them as they traverse the narrow streets show how
-deeply every Bristol man is interested in their enterprise.
-What is this enterprise? Whither are they bound?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Any urchin in the streets will tell you. “Why, master,
-have you not heard of the Genoese seaman, Christopher
-Columbus?—he who five years ago set sail from Palos in three
-ships, and sailed to the west’ard across the ocean, seeking a
-new sea-road to far-off India and Cathay. Do you not
-know that he lighted on marvellous new lands, which he
-seized in the name of Spain, and then returned home to tell
-the wondrous news? There’s gold by the bucketful across
-the Western Ocean, and we Bristol folks mean to have our
-share of it. So we have fitted out the <span class='it'>Matthew</span> and the
-other ship which you see yonder, and this very day John
-Cabot and his sons are to set sail. Would that I could sail
-with them too!” Many an English lad, in many a seaport,
-echoes his wish.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Westward! westward! westward!</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The sea sang in his head,</p>
-<p class='line0'>At morn in the busy harbour,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;At nightfall on his bed.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Westward! westward! westward!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Over the line of breakers,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Out of the distance dim,</p>
-<p class='line0'>For ever the foam-white fingers,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Beckoning, beckoning him.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the procession halts on the quay, and the
-mariners kneel while the bishop with uplifted hand blesses
-them and their enterprise. John Cabot, he with the brown
-face and the close-cropped white hair, proudly unfolds the
-scroll which he carries, and begins to read his royal commission:——</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>“Henry, by the grace of God, King of England
-and France, and Lord of Ireland, to all to
-whom these presents shall come, Greeting:</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>“Be it knowen that we haue giuen and granted,
-and by these presents do giue and grant, for VS and
-our heires, to our well beloued Iohn Cabot, citizen
-of Venice, to Lewis, Sebastian, and Santius, sonnes of
-the sayd Iohn, and to the heires of them and euery
-of them, and their deputies, full and free authority,
-leaue and power, to saile to all parts, countreys, and
-seas of the East, of the West, and of the North, under
-our banners and ensignes, with fiue ships of what
-quantity or burden soever they may be, and as many
-manners or men as they will haue with them in the
-sayd ships, upon their owne proper costs and charges
-to seeke out, discouer and finde, whatsoeuer isles,
-countreys, regions or prouinces, of the heathens and
-infidels, whatsoeuer they be, and in what part of the
-world soeuer they be, which before this time haue
-been unknowen to all Christians.”</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So the letters-patent of his gracious Majesty King Henry
-the Seventh run. The reading is finished. The last farewells
-are taken. The wives and children of the adventurous
-mariners weep aloud. The Lord Mayor clasps John Cabot
-warmly by the hand, and the captain goes on board.
-Deafening cheers are raised as the hawsers are cast off and
-the good ships are warped out. Now you see them threading
-the deep gorge of the Avon. Anon they will be
-out on the heaving waters of the Bristol Channel; then
-sail will be made, and in the golden sunset glow they will
-fade away into the unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For months there will be sad hearts in many a humble
-Bristol home, and white-faced women will haunt the quay,
-eagerly questioning incoming sailors for news of their
-husbands and sons who have sailed with the Cabots.
-Then one glad day the blazoned sails, torn and worn with
-tempestuous winds and the rough usage of the sea, appear
-again in the Avon, and all England rings with the story of
-the marvellous voyage. The Bristol bells ring out merry
-peals; the city fathers feast the returning adventurers in
-the Council chamber; and every lad in the good old city
-holds his head high because of the new fame that Bristowe
-men have won. What visits are paid to the <span class='it'>Matthew</span> and
-her consort! The Church of St. Mary Redcliffe is thronged
-with eager citizens gaping at the whale’s rib which Sebastian
-Cabot has deposited there in memory of his voyage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here is one of the heroes of the expedition. Let us
-buttonhole him and bid him spin his yarn. Like the true
-sailor that he is, he readily consents. “Marry, sirs, ’twas
-a long and dull voyage outward; but the winds were fair,
-and in two moons we reached a sea with monstrous great
-lumps of ice floating about like fairy castles. And mark ye,
-the sun set not, and there was daylight all the clock round.
-On the twenty-fourth day of June we sighted land. <span class='it'>Prima
-Vista</span> the captain called it, that being the Latin lingo, so I’m
-told, for ‘first seen.’ ’Twas an island, thick covered with
-woods, lying out from the mainland. We went ashore right
-speedily, and now there’s a bit of England seven hundred
-leagues to the west’ard across the great ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The men of that land are savages dressed in skins of
-beasts. They carry bows and arrows, wooden clubs and
-slings; and fine hunters they be, every man of them. Their
-land is barren, and no fruits grow, but there are big white
-bears in plenty and stags that would make two of ours.
-Off the island the sea swarms with fish, some as much as
-an ell long, and sea-wolves, such as ye may see now and
-then in Bristol Channel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The birds are black-hawks and partridges and eagles.
-When we left the isle we coasted a dreary shore for three
-hundred leagues, and ’tis my belief, comrades, that we have
-discovered a rich, new continent, with mines of copper and
-wonders untold. We sail again next year, and when we
-come back—if God wills—I’ll tell ye more about it. And
-now come along with me and see the three savages that
-the captain has brought home with him to show the king.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There will be no lack of adventurers now to dare the
-Western Ocean. Ship after ship will push across the
-“black waters,” and every year will bring the New World
-into closer touch with the Old. Pass on, ye great pilots
-of Bristowe! Your flag is struck, your sails are furled,
-your ship is beached, but your work is done. In centuries
-to come the vast continent which ye have revealed shall be
-peopled by a great race, largely sprung from British loins,
-and speaking the brave English tongue. “Westward the
-star of Empire takes its way,” and ye are the first of our
-seamen to follow the star!</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo198.jpg' alt='' id='i198' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Departure of John and Sebastian Cabot on the First Voyage of Discovery, 1497.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Ernest Board. By permission of the Bristol Corporation and the Artist.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='200' id='Page_200'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo200.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0047' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>KING AND CARDINAL.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>I charge thee, fling away ambition;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>By that sin fell the angels.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>A stately procession now files by, headed by shaven and
-tonsured priests carrying silver crosses. Behind them a
-bareheaded noble carries the Great Seal of England, and
-another a cardinal’s hat on a cushion. Now you hear
-gentlemen ushers shout, “Make way for my lord’s grace!”
-and a splendid figure stalks past you with the air of a king.
-He wears the scarlet robe of a cardinal, with a tippet of fine
-sable and a gold chain about his neck, while on his feet are
-shoes of gold studded with jewels. In his hand he carries
-an orange-skin with a scented sponge in the midst. This he
-sniffs from time to time, lest he should catch some infection
-from the crowd that throngs his path. Behind him two
-great pillars of silver and a gilt mace are borne, and so he
-proceeds through Westminster Hall to the seat of justice.
-At his coming, suitors kneel to present their petitions and
-beg his favour. Anon he will devote himself diligently to
-the business of his high office, and will spare neither high
-nor low, but will judge all who come before him according
-to their merits and deserts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No man in the kingdom, not even the king, lives in
-such splendour and magnificence. His palace is always
-filled with noblemen, gentlemen, and ambassadors from
-foreign countries, and his banquets and entertainments are
-the wonder of the age. Bluff King Hal and he are boon
-companions, and ofttimes you may see the monarch lean
-lovingly on the shoulder of his splendid chancellor. Sometimes
-he will visit his palace, and the cardinal will spare
-neither money nor ingenuity to divert the king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A writer of the time tells us that “the banquets were set
-forth, with masks and mummeries, in so gorgeous a sort and
-costly manner that it was a heaven to behold. I have seen
-the king suddenly come in thither in a mask, with a dozen
-of other maskers, all in garments like shepherds, having sixteen
-torch-bearers, besides their drums. Ye shall understand
-what joy and delight the cardinal had to see his prince and
-sovereign lord in his house so nobly entertained and pleased.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who is this favoured mortal? He is Thomas Wolsey,
-the son of a wealthy wool-merchant of Ipswich. By his
-great ability and his zeal in the king’s service, he has
-raised himself from a comparatively humble position to
-be the envy of the greatest nobles in the land. “He is
-the person,” writes the Venetian ambassador, “who rules
-both the king and the kingdom. He is very handsome,
-learned, extremely eloquent, of vast ability, and indefatigable.
-He alone transacts all the business that occupies
-all the magistrates, offices, and councils of Venice. He
-has the reputation of being extremely just. He favours
-the people exceedingly, and especially the poor, hearing
-their suits and making the lawyers plead gratis for them.”
-But if he has friends among the poor, his pomp and pride
-have made him hosts of enemies among the proud and rich.
-The old nobles hate him, and would fain bring his haughty
-head to the dust. Nevertheless, even his enemies are forced
-to admit that he is the ablest statesman of his time, and the
-chief prop of the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Truly, he treads all the ways of glory, and sounds all the
-depths and shoals of honour; but the knell of his greatness
-is soon to toll. The sun will no longer usher forth his
-honours, or gild again the noble troops that wait upon his
-smiles. Even now a woman’s bright eyes are weaning
-Henry from him, and soon he will be fain to say—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“The king has gone beyond me; all my glories</p>
-<p class='line0'>In that one woman I have lost for ever.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>Listen to the story of his fall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never king came to his throne more blessed by nature,
-fortune, and circumstance than the eighth Henry. Nature
-had fashioned him as the handsomest and ablest monarch in
-Christendom. “He was tall and well proportioned .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-his complexion very fair and bright, with auburn hair
-combed straight and short in the French fashion, and a
-round face that would become a pretty woman.” But
-there was no effeminacy about him. He was devoted to
-tennis and extremely fond of jousting and hunting—“never
-taking his diversion without tiring eight or ten horses.”
-Nor was there a more accomplished king living. He
-spoke good French, Latin, and Spanish; he was a musician
-and an author, and even as a boy his ability and address
-most favourably impressed the great scholar Erasmus.
-With all these gifts and graces, Henry began his reign with
-the highest promise; but as the years went by he steadily
-changed for the worse. His unbridled self-will grew upon
-him until he became a cold-hearted despot, who made his
-whim the law of the land, and ruthlessly sent to the scaffold
-all on whom his displeasure fell. From the first he was
-absolute master of the realm, and could say, <span class='it'>L’état, c’est moi!</span>
-Nevertheless, he was always careful to make his acts legal
-by getting Parliament to endorse them. He greatly valued
-his popularity with the people, and his ministers had to bear
-the blame of all his unpopular acts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the later years of Henry the Seventh’s reign,
-Arthur, the heir to the throne, had been married to
-Catherine, the daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain.
-Arthur died young, and the miserly old king, unwilling to
-part with Catherine’s rich dowry, proposed to marry her to
-her brother-in-law, Henry, who was six years her junior.
-Such an alliance was against the law of the Church, but
-a dispensation was readily obtained, and shortly after his
-accession Henry married her. For many years they lived
-happily together. “The king adores her, and her Highness
-him,” wrote her confessor, and never had any man a
-more faithful helpmeet. She was a fair-haired, gentle,
-pious woman, of a lively and gracious disposition, but not
-beautiful. As she grew older her health failed, and she
-became prematurely old and lost much of her attraction.
-All her children died except one—the Princess Mary.
-After eighteen years of married life Henry fell violently
-in love with Anne Boleyn, one of the queen’s maids of
-honour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Madame Anne,” wrote an eye-witness, “is not one
-of the handsomest women in the world. She is of middling
-stature and swarthy complexion, and has nothing but the
-king’s great love, and her eyes, which are black and beautiful.”
-She was, however, bright and lively, and had
-“wonderful long hair.” Soon Henry pretended to have
-scruples about the lawfulness of his marriage with his
-brother’s widow, and he persuaded himself that the death of
-his children was a visitation of God for his sin. Further,
-he argued that a son was necessary in the interests of
-his kingdom, for hitherto the rule of women had always
-provoked civil war. The real fact of the matter was that
-the selfish, self-willed king wanted to cast off Catherine
-in favour of a new, young wife. Before long Henry asked
-Pope Clement to declare that his marriage was null and
-void from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wolsey, as the Pope’s legate in England, was the natural
-channel of communication between the king and the
-Pope. Wolsey could not believe that Henry desired a dissolution
-of his marriage tie in order to contract an alliance
-with a giddy, insignificant lady of the court. Rather, he
-assumed, Henry was contemplating a union with some lady
-of the royal house of France, and this fell in with his pet
-scheme for securing the friendship of that powerful state.
-Believing this, he used his influence with the Pope. But
-the wearer of the triple crown was then in a parlous state.
-He was in the power of Charles the Fifth, nephew of
-Queen Catherine, and that monarch was determined that
-his aunt should not be divorced. At the same time,
-Clement was an ally of Henry’s, and was naturally anxious
-to assist him. In his dilemma the Pope sought to gain
-time, and therefore appointed Wolsey and the Italian
-Cardinal Campeggio to inquire into the case. In June
-1529 the two cardinals opened their court in the great
-hall of the Black Friars’ Monastery in London. Catherine
-refused to plead, but knelt at the feet of her husband and
-made a touching appeal to him to spare her the indignity
-and injustice of divorce.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“Heaven witness,</p>
-<p class='line0'>I have been to you a true and humble wife,</p>
-<p class='line0'>At all times to your will conformable;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Ever in fear to kindle your dislike,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Yea, subject to your countenance, glad or sorry</p>
-<p class='line0'>As I saw it inclined.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>She appealed to the Pope himself; then rising, bowed to
-the king, and refused to face the court again. The trial
-dragged on, and Henry became impatient and demanded
-speedy judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile Clement had made a treaty with the
-Emperor, and was no longer solicitous to retain the goodwill
-of the English king. He therefore revoked the commission,
-and ordered the cause to be transferred to Rome
-for a new trial. Henry, baffled and beaten, was furious,
-and Anne Boleyn skilfully fanned the flame of his wrath.
-She suggested that Wolsey had bungled the matter, and
-forthwith his doom was sealed. He was dismissed from
-his office as chancellor, and brought to trial for breaking
-an old law which forbade appeals to Rome. Wolsey said
-truthfully that he had only appealed to the Pope at the
-king’s request. Henry, however, denied that he had sanctioned
-the proceeding, and Wolsey, to the joy of his
-enemies, was found guilty. All his property was seized,
-and after he had made an abject submission, he was ordered
-to withdraw to his diocese of York.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here he flung himself with all his old energy into his
-work as archbishop, and soon won the affection of the
-north-country folk. But he hungered and thirsted for his
-former greatness, and made the serious error of communicating
-with the ambassadors of the French king and the
-Emperor. When Henry heard of it his anger blazed
-forth once more. This was treason and nothing less, and
-Wolsey’s arrest was immediately ordered. Early in November
-he began his journey southward under an armed
-guard. Sick and heart-broken, with his health undermined,
-he travelled as far as Leicester, where at his coming the
-abbot of the place met him with the light of many torches
-and received him with great reverence. “Father abbot,”
-said he, “I am come to lay my bones among you.”
-Truer words were never spoken. A few days later he
-died, lamenting with his failing breath—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Had I but served my God with half the zeal</p>
-<p class='line0'>I served my king, He would not in my age</p>
-<p class='line0'>Have left me naked to mine enemies.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>So died the victim of a headstrong, selfish sovereign,
-who remorselessly flung away even the most devoted of his
-servants as soon as they had ceased to be useful to him.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo202.jpg' alt='' id='i202' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Cardinal Wolsey on his Way to Westminster Hall.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A. in the Guildhall Art Gallery, London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo204.jpg' alt='' id='i204' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>TRIAL OF QUEEN CATHERINE.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Henry O’Neill, A.R.A. By permission of the Art Gallery Committee of the Corporation of Birmingham.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo206.jpg' alt='' id='i206' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>PORTRAIT OF HENRY VIII.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>By Hans Holbein the Younger. From the Royal Gallery at Windsor.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo207.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0048' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE NEW WORSHIP.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>The old order changeth, yielding place to new,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And God fulfils Himself in many ways.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is a pause in our pageantry. While the next
-scene is preparing, let the story of the intervening period
-be briefly told. Twenty-eight years, long and fateful,
-have come and gone since Wolsey died of a broken
-heart, and in the interval a new England with a new
-destiny and a new faith has arisen. The years that have
-sped have been marked by religious upheaval, and by an
-extraordinary outburst of persecuting zeal. The fires of
-Smithfield have blazed, and the thumb-screw and the rack
-have done their fiendish work “for the glory of the Lord.”
-Henry in his rage against the Pope has swept away the
-monasteries, sent the monks adrift, and plundered them of
-their lands and riches. Year by year the doctrines of
-Church reformers have gained ground, and ere Henry’s
-long reign of terror and crime draws to a close, Protestantism
-is a powerful force in England. His son, Edward
-the Sixth, a precocious, consumptive lad of ten, succeeds,
-and then the reformers gain the upper hand. A new
-Prayer Book “in the vulgar tongue, understanded of the
-people at large,” is issued, and the Reformation is hurried
-on with undue speed. There is a ruthless and irreverent
-destruction of images, pictures, and stained glass in the
-churches, and many pious persons, otherwise favourable to
-the “new worship,” are shocked into opposition. To
-secure the triumph of Protestantism, Edward is persuaded
-on his deathbed to make a will excluding his Catholic
-sister Mary from the throne, and naming Lady Jane Grey
-as his successor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The young king dies in his sixteenth year, and three
-days later Queen Jane is proclaimed. Not a hat is tossed
-in the air, not a cheer is raised. London declares for Mary;
-the nobles and gentry flock to her. The poor “eleven days’
-queen”—young, innocent, and beautiful—is utterly deserted.
-She vanishes into the Tower, and her head pays the penalty
-of her father-in-law’s ambition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mary is now queen, and she sets herself immediately
-to undo the work of the Reformation and to restore England
-to the power of the Pope. She makes the fatal mistake of
-marrying Philip of Spain, whose horrible outrages on the
-Dutch have made him an object of terror and loathing in
-England. Soon he deserts her, and the miserable queen,
-racked by painful disease, throws her whole heart into a
-frenzied attempt to stamp out Protestantism in her realm.
-Martyrs perish at the stake, and the nation is horrified at
-the queen’s cruelty. And yet one cannot but be sorry
-for the wretched woman. In feeble health, miserable, and
-soured by the desertion of her husband, filled with anxious
-fears for the future of her kingdom, and conscious of the
-hatred of her people, she honestly believes that she is doing
-the will of Heaven in burning and torturing those of her
-subjects who do not see eye to eye with her in matters of
-religion. Every week her people grow more and more
-discontented; every week her health and spirits grow worse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At length the climax is reached. Her husband drags
-her into war with France, and in the struggle “the chief
-jewel of the realm”—Calais—is lost. For two hundred
-years it has been in English hands, and its possession has
-meant the command of the “narrow seas.” Now England
-is without a foot of soil on French ground, and Englishmen
-grow bitterly angry at the thought. Mary has enough
-national spirit to understand the magnitude of the disaster.
-“When I am dead,” she cries, “you will find ‘Calais’ written
-on my heart!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ten months later, on the eve of a great national
-revolt, the miserable Mary dies, conscious that she has
-been a hopeless, helpless failure. She has striven to re-establish
-Romanism in the land, but has only succeeded
-in ringing its death-knell. Protestantism is again in the
-ascendant. While Mary’s obsequies are preparing, a great
-burst of joy sweeps over the country, for Elizabeth, her
-Protestant sister, is now queen.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='210' id='Page_210'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo210.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0049' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XI.<br/> A TRAGIC STORY.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>And from the top of all my trust</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Mishap hath thrown me in the dust.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/a.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='A'/> DARK and murderous scene now awaits your eyes.
-It is about seven o’clock on a Saturday evening in
-March 1566. A beautiful queen is supping with
-her friends in the inner boudoir of the ancient Palace of
-Holyrood. Some eightscore armed men stealthily enter the
-courtyard and close the gates behind them. Within the
-supper-chamber only one person is cognizant of the foul
-deed which is even now preparing—and he is the queen’s
-husband! The queen herself is blithe and gay, according to
-her wont. She strives to rally her husband, who sits by her
-side; but he is full of drink and jealousy. But a swarthy
-Italian present responds to every sally with nimble wit and
-easy grace. Mary smiles upon him, for he alone in that
-gloomy palace reminds her of the light-hearted merriment
-and the brilliant frivolity of her dearly-loved France. And
-as she smiles the queen’s husband scowls darkly, and ever
-and anon glances furtively towards a door behind the arras.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly the arras is pushed aside, and a man in armour,
-his face corpse-like in its pallor, steps into the room, and
-behind him you see three others. The queen, cool and
-fearless, rises and demands the meaning of this intrusion.
-The Italian knows its meaning full well; he has long been
-bitterly hated by the nobles, and now he fears that his hour
-has come. He cowers for protection behind the queen,
-who confronts the armed men without a tremor. “What
-do ye here, my Lord Ruthven?” she cries, and the intruder
-roughly replies that he comes to drag the Italian from the
-queen’s chamber, where he has been overlong.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a flash the queen perceives a plot, and turning to her
-wretched husband demands if he knows anything of this
-enterprise. The ready lie comes to his lips, and he says
-that he knows nothing of it. “Go,” cries the queen to
-Ruthven, and points to the door. But he moves not, and
-bids the accomplice who has disowned him, “Take the
-queen, your wife and sovereign, to you.” But the royal
-dastard stands dazed, and wists not what to do; while the
-Italian, with his drawn dagger in his trembling hand, clings
-to the queen’s gown, crying, “Save me! save me!” Now
-one of the guests strives to seize Ruthven, who draws his
-sword and cries fiercely, “Lay no hands on me, for I will
-not be handled!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the chamber is filled with armed men, the table
-and chairs are overthrown, the lights are extinguished save
-one, and a wild rush is made for the victim. Ruthven
-flings the queen into the arms of her husband, and the
-shrieking Italian is dragged from the room with curses
-and threats and blows. You hear his screams grow fainter
-and fainter, as his foes plunge their daggers into him.
-Now all is silent, and the queen’s favourite lies dead with
-fifty-six wounds in his body. Her husband’s dagger is
-sticking in the breast of the corpse in testimony of his
-consent to the deed!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ghastly scene which you have just witnessed serves
-to introduce the moving tragedy of Mary Queen of Scots.
-She was born in the hour of calamity, and conflict, contention,
-sorrow, and disaster dogged her footsteps from the cradle to
-the grave. Her heart-broken father, James the Fifth, had
-turned his face to the wall when her birth was announced.
-Ere she was christened he was dead, and Scotland was torn
-with the strife of contending factions. Scotland’s weakness
-was England’s opportunity, and Henry the Eighth lost no
-time in proposing his delicate little son, afterwards Edward
-the Fifth, for the hand of the five-year-old queen. The
-Scots refused the match, and an English army marched
-north and sacked Leith and Edinburgh. The invasion was
-“too much for a wooing and too little for a conquest.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four years later an English army again made an attempt
-to compel the Scots to marry their queen to young Edward.
-At Pinkie there was a great slaughter, but it was all in vain.
-The little queen was hurried to France, where she grew up
-with her four Maries at the gay court of King Henry the
-Second, and became far more French than Scottish. As she
-advanced in years, her grace and beauty, her <span class='it'>esprit</span> and her
-accomplishments, were the talk of France, and at sixteen
-she wedded the Dauphin, a sickly weakling, who only survived
-his marriage a little more than a year. At the age
-of nineteen Mary was a widow, about to set sail for her
-northern kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was now the most charming princess of her time,
-fond of music, dancing, laughter, and gaiety, yet eager for
-risk and adventure, and always rejoicing in the clash of
-arms. Often she wished she were a man “to know what
-life it was to lie all night in the fields, or to walk on the
-causeway with a jack and knapsack, a Glasgow buckler, and
-a broadsword.” In statecraft she was the equal of Queen
-Elizabeth, and in person and charm she far exceeded her
-royal kinswoman. Her beauty, grace, and easy cordiality
-won the hearts of all with whom she came in contact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She left France most reluctantly, and as long as the
-shores of that gay, joyous land remained in sight she
-riveted her gaze on them. As they gradually faded from
-her sight she sighed, and said again and again, “Adieu,
-France! I shall never see thee more!” She arrived at
-Leith unexpectedly on a dismal day of thick fog and incessant
-rain. Never was a more unpropitious home-coming.
-She had returned to a stern, poor, unruly
-kingdom, which had adopted Reformation doctrines with
-remarkable zeal and austerity. The guiding spirit of the
-time was John Knox, the most implacable and fearless
-Reformer who ever lived. Well indeed did he deserve
-the eulogy spoken at his graveside, “Here lyeth a man
-who in his life never feared the face of man.” The
-Covenant had been signed, the authority of the Pope
-had been thrown off, and Protestantism had taken deep
-root in the land. Mary was a strong Romanist, and she
-meant to restore her kingdom to the old faith. In this
-she failed utterly, for almost the whole of her people were
-bitterly opposed to Romanism in any shape or form.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While in France, Mary and her husband had assumed the
-style and title of King and Queen of England, and Elizabeth
-was naturally aggrieved. Now Mary offered to give
-up her claim if Elizabeth would recognize her as heir to the
-English throne. The Scottish queen said that she asked for
-nothing more than her due. Should Elizabeth—the Virgin
-Queen—die without children, Mary would be heir to her
-throne by right of birth, though her claim had been barred
-by Henry the Eighth. Elizabeth, however, flatly refused
-to make any such agreement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a time Mary was popular with her subjects, but
-soon the heather was on fire. All sorts of suitors aspired to
-her hand, and the rival factions were eager to marry her
-to a Catholic or a Protestant, according to the character of
-their respective beliefs. At length, however, she decided
-to marry Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, “a long lad .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-beardless and lady-faced,” and only nineteen years of age.
-He was a Roman Catholic like herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The inevitable rising took place, but it was ineffective,
-and for a while the Protestant cause was undone and Mary
-triumphed. Meanwhile the queen had discovered that her
-youthful husband was vain, spiteful, foolish, untrustworthy,
-and drunken. He was eager for the “crown matrimonial,”
-and yearned to rule in her name; but Mary consistently
-refused his request, and Darnley believed that her Italian
-secretary, David Riccio, was at the back of her refusal.
-Some of the nobles were bitterly jealous of the foreigner,
-who was supposed to sway the queen’s counsels, and with
-these malcontents Darnley came to an understanding. The
-result you have witnessed in the savage scene with which
-this chapter opened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Riccio was dead, and Mary, maddened with rage at the
-night’s work, determined to have her revenge. Within a
-year Darnley was murdered in the lonely house of “Kirk
-of Field,” which stood on the site of the present University
-of Edinburgh. No one knew exactly how Darnley had
-perished, though thousands heard the roar of the explosion
-which blew up the house in which he was lying. His
-murderer was unknown, though anonymous placards on the
-walls of the Tolbooth accused the Earl of Bothwell of the
-foul deed. This earl was a masterful, bold, and vicious
-man, with whom Mary had fallen over head and ears in
-love. He was the very antithesis of Darnley with his
-“heart of wax,” and Mary needed a strong arm to lean
-upon. So flinging every prudential consideration to the
-winds, she gave her whole heart to the dangerous and
-showy man who was accused of murdering her husband.
-Bothwell was tried for the crime, but the trial was a mere
-mockery, and the accused rode to the court of justice on
-Darnley’s favourite steed. No witnesses were called, and
-the jury, composed of Bothwell’s partisans, triumphantly
-acquitted him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bothwell had already been divorced, and now he was
-free to marry the queen. The ceremony took place in the
-presence-chamber at Holyrood, and when the news leaked
-out men’s hearts were hot with shame and indignation.
-For a brief time Mary and her new husband seemed happy,
-but Bothwell’s fierce and brutal nature soon revealed itself.
-There were angry quarrels between the pair, and on one
-occasion Mary called for a knife with which to kill herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ere long a rebellion broke out, and the insurgents
-marched to battle beneath a banner painted with the figure
-of a murdered king with an infant prince kneeling beside
-the body, crying, “Judge and avenge my cause, O God.”
-At Carberry Hill, on the longest day of the year 1567,
-Bothwell offered to decide the contest by single combat,
-but this the queen would not allow. Her forces melted
-away. Bothwell fled, and she was a captive in the hands
-of an exasperated people. A month later she was rowed
-across Loch Leven to the castle which still stands upon
-its little island. Here she was imprisoned, and here she
-was forced to abdicate the throne in favour of her infant son
-James. The Earl of Moray, her half-brother, was named
-regent, and the Protestant party was once more supreme.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within a year Mary was free again. She found a
-knight-errant in the person of “pretty George Douglas,”
-younger brother of the Laird of Loch Leven. He fell deeply
-in love with the deposed queen, and ere long he had planned
-her escape. The story goes that when all was ready
-Douglas sent Mary a signal in the shape of a pearl fashioned
-like a pear. The key of the castle was obtained by the
-ruse of Willie Douglas, a page boy. It was the custom of
-the governor of the castle to have the key of the great gate
-placed on the table beside him when at supper. The page,
-who served at table, placed a plate before the governor,
-and at the same time dropped a napkin on the key, and
-then lifted key and handkerchief together. He slipped out
-to the queen, who was waiting for him. They gained the
-gate unperceived, locked it behind them, and threw the key
-into the water. The lad put Mary and her companion, a
-little maid of ten, into a boat, cast off, and plied his oars
-manfully. The queen waved a white veil to and fro, and
-at the signal George Douglas rose up from the reeds by the
-side of the lake and hurried to the village, from which he
-soon afterwards returned with a troop of armed men and
-some led horses. By the time the boat touched the shore
-the horsemen were waiting for the queen, and in a few
-minutes she was galloping southwards towards the ferry
-across the Forth. On the way she was joined by another
-troop of horse. That night she slept in Niddrie Castle, and
-next day reached Hamilton in safety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The news of her escape spread like wildfire through the
-land, and speedily many of the barons and nobility flocked
-to her with offers of support and service. Before long she
-had five or six thousand men about her, while the regent,
-who was at Glasgow, mustered some four thousand. With
-this force, inferior as it was, he decided on an immediate
-battle. As the queen advanced from Hamilton towards
-Dumbarton, where she proposed to take ship for France, she
-had to pass through a narrow lane leading up to the hill on
-which the village of Langside stands. Moray posted his
-main battle on Langside Hill, and stationed his hagbutters
-or matchlock men along the hedges on both sides of the
-lane and amongst the cottages of the village. The queen
-took her station on an eminence half a mile distant and
-watched the battle which now began. She saw her troops
-charge up the hill and endeavour to force the passage of
-the lane. She saw them roll back under the heavy fire of
-the hagbutters, and then make a second attempt to storm
-the village. This, too, was unsuccessful, and soon she saw
-Moray’s pikemen and his Highlanders sweeping down on
-her friends with the utmost fury. With a cry of anguish
-she saw them break before the flashing claymores of the
-yelling Macfarlanes, and betake themselves to headlong
-flight. All was over, and the miserable queen put spurs
-to her horse and galloped away. She tried to reach
-Dumbarton, but she was too late. So hot was the pursuit
-that she was obliged to gallop for the wilds of the south-west.
-On and on she rode, and never halted until she
-reached Sanquhar, where she drank a bowl of milk at a
-cottage door. Then her wearied horse was urged on again
-until she reached the remote and lonely Abbey of Dundrennan,
-on the Solway, sixty miles from the field of battle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Sunday afternoon, May 16, 1568, she made the
-fatal mistake of her life. She determined to throw herself
-upon the generosity of Elizabeth, and no argument of her
-attendants could make her change her purpose. That
-reckless decision practically signed her death-warrant. She
-crossed the Solway and arrived at Workington. The next
-day she was brought by Richard Lowther to Cockermouth,
-and thence to Carlisle Castle, where she arrived in great
-distress and mean attire, and by the instructions of Elizabeth’s
-council was detained as a prisoner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Elizabeth was by no means pleased at the turn which
-events had taken. Mary was a most embarrassing guest.
-Many of Elizabeth’s Catholic subjects regarded the Queen
-of Scots as the rightful sovereign of England, and now
-this dangerous rival was within her kingdom. Obviously,
-Mary could not be permitted to go to and fro unrestrained,
-gathering her adherents about her, the centre of a movement
-which might hurl Elizabeth from the throne.
-Equally obviously, Elizabeth could not send the refugee
-back to Scotland, where the scaffold or a life-long imprisonment
-awaited her. It would similarly be the height
-of folly to permit her to return to France and there raise
-an army to subdue the Protestants of the kingdom which
-had rejected her. Elizabeth was in a dilemma, and for
-the moment she saw no way out of it. Meanwhile, she
-wrote to Mary that she would be careful of “her life and
-honour,” and regretted that she could not receive her as
-a royal guest until she had been acquitted of the hideous
-crime charged against her. She would be the gladdest
-in the world to see her Grace well purged of this crime,
-that thereby she might aid her fully and amply to regain
-her throne.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At length, after much discussion and negotiation, a trial
-was agreed upon, and three sets of commissioners—one set
-for Elizabeth, one for Mary, and one for the confederate
-Scottish lords—were appointed to inquire into the complaints
-which the Scottish queen brought against those who
-had risen in arms against her, seized her, and imprisoned
-her, forced her to abdicate, and crowned her infant son.
-The conference began at York and ended at London. The
-Regent Moray appeared before the commissioners, and, as a
-last resort, produced a silver casket containing letters which
-were alleged to be written by Mary to Bothwell. These
-letters, if their genuineness could be proved, clearly showed
-her to be the accomplice of Bothwell in the murder of
-her husband. Mary constantly declared that the casket
-letters were forgeries, and to this day no man can positively
-say that she did not speak the truth. Mary demanded that
-the letters should be shown to her, but most unfairly her
-demand was refused. Then she indignantly broke off the
-conference, and the commissioners reported that nothing
-dishonourable had been proved against Moray and his
-friends, and nothing against Mary that could lead Elizabeth
-to take any evil opinion of her good sister. Nevertheless,
-Mary remained a prisoner in England, while Moray returned
-to Scotland and resumed his regency.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now began Mary’s long captivity of nineteen years.
-She was moved about from castle to castle, and at first was
-permitted as much liberty as was consistent with the safe
-custody of her person. We read that she had a stud of
-sixteen horses, and frequently went hunting. She amused
-herself with needlework, in which she was very skilful, and
-kept dogs, turtle doves, and Barbary fowls. She practised
-her religion with great devotion, and she did not fail to
-charm all who came in contact with her by her gracious
-condescension.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But all the while she was ceaselessly plotting and intriguing,
-not only with Elizabeth’s disaffected subjects, but
-with her French friends, the King of Spain, and the Pope.
-Elizabeth’s life was in hourly danger, and her councillors
-constantly warned her that Mary was a terrible menace to
-her safety. In 1569 news arrived that the Pope was about
-to depose Elizabeth, and declare Mary Queen of England.
-Almost immediately there was a great rising of the Catholics
-of the north. The Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland
-marched into Durham, and mass was once more
-said in the cathedral. The insurgents, however, received
-but little support, and some of the leaders perished on
-the scaffold. Next year the long expected Bull of Deposition
-arrived. While most of the Catholics remained loyal,
-some of the more violent schemed to depose and even
-murder Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the plots, known as the “Ridolfi Plot” from the
-name of an Italian banker who played an important part in
-it, was headed by the Duke of Norfolk, an ambitious noble
-of thirty-two, who undertook to seize Elizabeth and marry
-Mary, who had now obtained a divorce from Bothwell.
-Norfolk was the leader of the English Catholics, and had
-the support of many noblemen in the northern counties.
-Some of his papers, however, fell into the hands of Burleigh,
-and the whole plot was exposed. Norfolk, who said truly
-that nothing done for Mary ever prospered, paid the
-penalty with his head on Tower Hill. Both Houses of
-Parliament now petitioned that the Queen of Scots should
-share his fate, but Elizabeth replied that “she could not
-put to death the bird that had fled to her for succour from
-the hawk.” Henceforth Mary was more strictly confined.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At length in 1583 another great plot was unmasked.
-France and Spain were to unite in an invasion of England,
-the English Catholics were to rise, Elizabeth was to be
-murdered, and Mary was to ascend the throne. Six desperate
-fanatics undertook to dispatch the English queen by
-steel or poison as a service pleasing to Heaven. Mary was
-in the plot up to the eyes. She had corresponded with
-Anthony Babington, a vain fool who was the chief agent in
-the plot, and had accepted his offer to assassinate Elizabeth.
-In extenuation it must be said that she was now desperate.
-She felt no compunction in lending her support to the
-murderous project, for she had the wrongs of a lifetime to
-revenge, and she knew that she would ultimately come to
-the scaffold if Elizabeth were permitted to live. Walsingham
-knew every move of the plot, and encouraged it
-to develop until he had sufficient evidence to bring Mary
-to trial on the capital charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was arrested at a neighbouring seat, whither she
-had been allowed to go on the pretext of a stag-hunt, and
-was there detained until her papers had been secured.
-Then she was removed to Fotheringhay Castle and brought
-to trial. Mary faced the court with great tact and dignity,
-and defended herself with the utmost skill. She totally
-denied all knowledge of the Babington plot; but her case
-was hopeless, both because the court had what it considered
-sufficient evidence of her complicity, and because it was
-considered necessary for political purposes that she should be
-found guilty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On October 25, 1586, the commissioners reported that
-she had contrived “divers matters tending to the hurt,
-death, and destruction of the Queen of England.” Therefore
-both Houses of Parliament again petitioned for Mary’s
-speedy execution. Elizabeth replied that she was unwilling
-to shed the blood of that wicked woman, the Queen of
-Scots, though she had so often sought her life. She wished
-that she and Mary were two milkmaids with pails upon
-their arms, and then she would forgive her all her wrongs.
-As for her own life, she had no desire on her own account
-to preserve it. She had nothing left worth living for; but
-for her people she could endure much. She was most
-reluctant to sign the death-warrant, and endeavoured to
-evade the painful task by all sorts of shifts and devices,
-even going so far as to make the cowardly suggestion that
-Mary’s guardians should act upon their own responsibility.
-At length she put her name to the document, and her
-councillors hurried on the execution lest their mistress
-should change her mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Earl of Shrewsbury, who had been Mary’s guardian
-for nineteen years, broke the news to her. She heard her
-fate with the utmost calmness, saying that she was content
-and even happy that she was so soon to be freed from
-so many miseries and afflictions, and rejoicing that God had
-given her grace to die for the honour of His name and for
-His Church. Finally she asked when she was to suffer.
-“To-morrow morning at eight o’clock,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us not linger over the painful scene of her
-execution. She laid her head upon the block with calm
-fortitude, the axe descended, and the long tragedy of her
-life was over. She sinned grievously, but she suffered
-greatly, and she will never lack champions who will
-stoutly maintain even to the crack of doom that she was
-more sinned against than sinning.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo211.jpg' alt='' id='i211' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Murder of Rizzio.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by John Opie, R.A., in the Art Gallery of the Corporation of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo214.jpg' alt='' id='i214' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>AT SEA. “FAREWELL, FRANCE!”</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Robert Herdman, R.S.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo218.jpg' alt='' id='i218' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>ESCAPE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS FROM LOCH LEVEN CASTLE.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Thomas Danby, R.A., in Bethnal Green Museum.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='224' id='Page_224'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo224.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0050' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XII.<br/> IN THE SPACIOUS DAYS.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE SPANISH ARMADA.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Attend, all ye who list to hear our noble England’s praise;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>I tell of the thrice famous deeds she wrought in ancient days,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>When the great fleet invincible against her bore in vain</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The richest spoils of Mexico, the stoutest hearts of Spain.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/i.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='I'/>T is the afternoon of July 19, in the year of grace
-1588. You are gazing at the terraced bowling-green
-of the Pelican Inn that looks down upon the blue
-waters of Plymouth Sound. A group of admirals and captains
-is gathered on the closely-shaven lawn, men of mark
-every one of them, and sea-dogs all. They are waiting, “as
-lions in their lair wait for the passing of a herd of deer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“See those five talking earnestly in the centre of a
-ring which longs to overhear and yet is too respectful to
-approach close. Those soft, long eyes and pointed chin you
-recognize already; they are Walter Raleigh’s. The fair
-young man in the flame-coloured doublet, whose arm is
-round Raleigh’s neck, is Lord Sheffield. Opposite them
-stands, by the side of Sir Richard Grenville, a man as stately
-as he, Lord Sheffield’s uncle, the Lord Charles Howard of
-Effingham, Lord High Admiral of England; next to them
-is his son-in-law, Sir Robert Southwell, captain of the
-<span class='it'>Elizabeth Jonas</span>. But who is that short, sturdy, plainly-dressed
-man who stands with legs a little apart and hands
-behind his back, looking up with keen gray eyes into the
-face of each speaker? His cap is in his hands, so you can
-see the bullet head of crisp brown hair and the wrinkled
-forehead, as well as the high cheek-bones, the short square
-face, the broad temples, the thick lips, which are yet
-as firm as granite—a coarse, plebeian stamp of man. Yet
-the whole figure and attitude are that of boundless
-determination, self-possession, energy; and when at last he
-speaks a few blunt words, all eyes are turned respectfully
-upon him—for his name is Francis Drake.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A burly, grizzled elder, in greasy, sea-stained garments
-contrasting oddly with the huge gold chain about his neck,
-waddles up, as if he had been born, and had lived ever
-since, in a gale of wind at sea. The upper half of his
-sharp, dogged visage seems of brick-red leather, the lower
-of badger’s fur; and as he claps Drake on the back,
-and, with a broad Devon twang, shouts, ‘Be you a-coming
-to drink your wine, Francis Drake, or be you not?—saving
-your presence, my lord!’ the Lord High Admiral
-only laughs, and bids Drake go and drink his wine with
-John Hawkins, admiral of the port.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As they lift their long-necked Dutch glasses a rough-bearded
-old sea-dog bursts in upon them and cries to
-the Lord Admiral,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My lord! My lord! They are coming! I saw
-them off the Lizard last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who, my good sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Armada, your worship—the Spaniard! You’ll
-find them here before nightfall, my lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then we must haste,” observes the Lord High
-Admiral; and turning to Drake, he says, “I must command
-the help of your counsel, vice-admiral.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And it’s this, my good lord,” replies Drake, who
-has taken up a bowl and is now aiming it at the jack:
-“they’ll come soon enough for us to show them sport, and
-yet slow enough for us to be ready; so let no man hurry
-himself. And as example is better than precept, here
-goes.” So saying he aims his bowl. Hawkins follows
-suit, and the game is played to a finish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There, vice-admiral,” cries the veteran, “you’re
-beaten, and that’s the rubber. Pay up three dollars, old
-high-flyer, and go and earn more, like an honest adventurer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” says Drake, pulling out his purse, “we’ll walk
-down now and see about these young hotheads. As I live,
-they are setting to tow the ships out already!—breaking
-the men’s backs overnight to make them fight the lustier
-in the morning! Well, well, they haven’t sailed round the
-world, John Hawkins.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And John Hawkins, with a hearty “bye-bye” to the
-bystanders, waddles off with the remark, “We’re going
-to blow the Dons up now in earnest.”</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Night sank upon the dusky beach and o’er the purple sea;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Such night in England ne’er has been, nor e’er again shall be!</p>
-<p class='line0'>From Eddystone to Berwick bounds, from Lynn to Milford Bay,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That time of slumber was as bright and busy as the day.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile the lordly fleet of Spain, swelling in white
-clouds of sail to the heavens, speeds on towards the shores of
-our threatened land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Why, you ask, is the Spaniard bent on invading
-England?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who does not know something of the exploits of the
-sea-dogs—how they harried King Philip’s territories in
-America, and how no treasure ship put out from the ports
-save in fear and trembling? Philip, the most powerful
-monarch of Europe, and the champion of the Pope, had
-been hard hit by Drake and his fellows. He saw clearly
-that unless England were crushed he could not retain his
-empire in the New World. Further, his Flemish subjects
-were in desperate revolt against him, and English troops
-had now joined them. How he hated England! She
-should bite the dust, and he would stake the whole strength
-of his kingdom, the wealth of the two Indies, the flower
-of Spanish chivalry on the enterprise. It was a Crusade—nothing
-less. The Pope had excommunicated the
-heretic Elizabeth, and the martyred Queen of Scots had
-bequeathed England to him on the scaffold. Holy Church
-would fight for him, and victory was already assured. So
-every dockyard in Spain rang with the hammers of shipwrights,
-and all Latin Christendom sent him volunteers.
-The sea was covered with vessels freighted with arms and
-provisions streaming to the mouth of the Tagus. Cadiz
-harbour was thronged with transports, provision ships,
-powder vessels—a hundred sail of them—many of a
-thousand tons and over, loading with stores for the
-Armada.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Drake begged Elizabeth to let him fit out a fleet and
-sail along the coast of Spain to see what was going on.
-Very reluctantly she consented, but ere his vessels were hull
-down a courier galloped into Plymouth with orders that
-under no condition was he to enter a Spanish port or haven.
-The courier arrived too late—Drake, knowing the mind
-of his mistress, had sailed, and recall was impossible. In
-five days he was at Cape St. Vincent, and a day later he
-saw before him the forest of masts in the harbour of Cadiz.
-In dashed Drake, with a fair wind and flood tide, past the
-batteries, which hurled a storm of shot and shell at him.
-He did not pause to reply, but pushed on, seized and sank
-the guardship, took possession of the Spanish shipping, and
-looted everything of the slightest service to him. Then he
-set the hulls on fire, cut the cables, and left them blazing
-beneath the walls of the town. He had, in his own pleasant
-phrase, “singed the King of Spain’s beard.” He had
-delayed the Armada for a whole year, and had spoiled his
-Catholic Majesty to the tune of a million ducats, without
-losing a boat or a man!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Home came Drake, begging the queen to let him play
-the same game on the Tagus, where fifty great galleons, the
-main strength of the fighting naval force of Spain, were
-assembled. But the queen would not consent; she would
-provoke the King of Spain no further. Negotiations for
-peace had begun, and must not be interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the spring of the next year the Armada was ready,
-and the whole Spanish nation, smarting under the indignity
-of Drake’s exploit, was burning to revenge itself on England.
-It consisted of one hundred and thirty vessels, half of them
-being galleons of the largest size. The ships were manned
-by eight thousand sailors, and overcrowded with twenty
-thousand soldiers, besides slaves, servants, and priests. Every
-noble family in Spain sent a son to fight for the holy cause.
-The ships, however, were ill-found and ill-provisioned, and
-were commanded by a modest gentleman who confessed that
-he was no seaman, that he hardly knew a mast from an
-anchor, and that when he ventured out in a boat he was
-always seasick. To meet this vast fleet England had but
-thirty-four ships in the royal navy, but almost every seaport
-and many rich merchants and noblemen fitted out craft
-to fight the Spaniard. Their crews numbered eighteen
-thousand men, all good seamen, and their commanders
-were sea-dogs all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Spanish Lord High Admiral—the Duke of Medina
-Sidonia—received his orders directly from Philip. He was
-to fight no battle, but was to haste with all speed to the
-North Foreland and there communicate with the Duke
-of Parma, who was in the Netherlands with thirty thousand
-men waiting to cross. The army would be landed, and
-England would be at his feet! So much for instructions.
-On May 14, 1588, the Armada dropped down the Tagus,
-and as the galleons came out the blustering north wind met
-them, and day by day they drifted to leeward until they
-were off Cape St. Vincent. The wind changed at last, and
-the ships steered northward again, their crews in a terrible
-state owing to the stinking water and the putrid pork,
-fish, and bread which fraudulent contractors had foisted on
-them. The ships were obliged to put into Corunna, with
-crews too weak to man the yards, and ready to desert in shoals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last the Armada got under way again, and the old
-seaman who burst in upon the admirals and captains on
-the Pelican bowling-green told a true tale: the Armada
-was coming without a doubt. Badly, indeed, was the
-English fleet prepared to meet them. Elizabeth’s niggardly
-soul would not permit her to provide sufficient stores and
-provisions for the fleet. The English sailors were ill-clothed
-and ill-provided in every way, but they did not complain.
-They tightened their belts and prayed for the speedy coming
-of the enemy. Their prayer was soon to be answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Armada was now in the Channel, sailing crescent-wise.
-As it passed by, out went the Plymouth fleet, hanging
-on to its rear like grim death. The English guns were far
-more powerful than those of the Spaniards, and they poured
-in broadsides at a safe distance with deadly effect. Further,
-they could fire five shots to the Dons’ one. Every broadside
-told, and the effect of the shot and splinters on the overcrowded
-Spanish ships was terrible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So the Armada pursued its way, and Howard “plucked
-out its feathers one by one.” For a week the running
-fight was kept up. During the first few days the English
-were badly hampered by want of powder and provisions, but
-now that danger was imminent there was no lack of ammunition
-and stores. Off Calais the fleets faced each other, and
-a long day’s battle was fought. On the night of Sunday,
-July 28, a memorable council of war was held in the
-<span class='it'>Ark’s</span> main cabin, attended by Howard, Drake, Seymour,
-Hawkins, Martin Frobisher, and others. The conference
-was short, for there was no time to lose. Eight useless vessels
-were immediately coated with pitch—hulls, spars, and
-rigging. Pitch was poured on the decks and over the sides,
-and men were told off to steer them. The night was dark
-as the grave; a faint westerly wind was curling the waters;
-and towards midnight the look-outs on the Spanish galleons
-saw several phantom-like vessels bearing down on them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly the ships broke into a blaze from water-line to
-truck, and lighted up the scene like noonday. The Spaniards
-lost their heads, and in their panic they slipped their cables
-and put to sea, uncertain which way to steer. Drake and
-Hawkins now bore down upon them, pouring in cataracts
-of round shot. The decks of the Spanish ships were like
-slaughter-houses. The Spanish shot flew high over the low
-hulls of the enemy, while every English broadside found its
-billet. Not until his magazines were empty and his last
-cartridge was fired did Drake draw off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then a gale sprang up and the Dons were forced to
-steer up the North Sea. The English closely followed
-them, and “the Lord sent His wind and scattered them.”
-Of the proud fleet which left Spain for the conquest of
-the heretic isle only fifty-three shattered vessels returned
-to Spain. Thousands of Spanish corpses strewed the shores
-of the Orkneys, the Western Isles, and the Atlantic coast
-of Ireland. Scarcely a noble family in Spain but mourned
-a relative slain or drowned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus England and English liberty were saved. All
-honour to you, noble sea-dogs! May Britain never lack
-sons of your breed! To you we owe freedom, literature,
-commerce, and empire, and above all the mastery of that</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='sc'>Kingdom</span> none can take,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The realm of the circling sea.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo225.jpg' alt='' id='i225' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Armada in Sight.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the Picture by Seymour Lucas, R.A. By permission of Mr. Arthur Lucas.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo230.jpg' alt='' id='i230' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>QUEEN ELIZABETH AT TILBURY FORT.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Daniel Maclise, R.A. By permission of the Council of the Art Union of London.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='232' id='Page_232'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo232.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0051' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>SIR WALTER RALEIGH.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>For ’tis the sunrise now of zeal,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And faith and hope are in their prime</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>In great Eliza’s golden time.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more Queen Elizabeth figures in our pageant. She
-is passing to her barge amidst a crowd of courtiers, who
-buzz round her like bees seeking the honey of her smile.
-Amongst the spectators of her progress you observe a young
-man, comely of person, handsome of face, and gallant of
-bearing. Suddenly her Majesty pauses; the ground is
-miry, and she hesitates to soil her dainty shoes. In a
-moment the young man has pulled off his rich plush cloak
-and has thrown it upon the ground for the queen to
-walk upon. She is flattered by the attention; she smiles
-graciously on the young man and says, “You have this
-day spoiled a gay mantle in our behalf. We thank you
-for your service, though the manner of offering it was
-unusual and something bold.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In a sovereign’s need,” he replies, “it is each liegeman’s
-duty to be bold.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That is well said,” the queen remarks, and at a bound
-the young man springs into her royal favour. It was afterwards
-said that the spoiling of his cloak gained him a good
-many <span class='it'>suits</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The young man whose introduction to the queen you
-have just witnessed is Walter Raleigh, a Devonshire gentleman
-who has already seen much warlike service, and has
-shown himself to be possessed of many qualities besides
-personal bravery and prowess in battle. In sooth he is one
-of the most heroic and brilliant men of that brilliant and
-heroic age—explorer, soldier, sailor, poet, prose writer, and
-true-hearted gentleman—“a spirit without spot,” as Shelley
-finely calls him. Let us learn something of his career.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh was not yet thirty when he first attracted the
-attention of Elizabeth. He was then a tall, well-built man
-with thick, dark hair, a bright complexion, and an expression
-full of life. His dress was always magnificent, and he had
-the faculty of displaying himself and his capacities to the
-best possible advantage. His speech was bold and plausible;
-he was fearless and dashing, a man of a stout heart, a sound
-head, and a strong right hand. Now that Elizabeth had
-admitted him to her favour, she speedily raised him from
-the position of a poor gentleman adventurer to one of the
-most wealthy of her courtiers. He was knighted in 1584,
-and subsequently sat in Parliament for Devonshire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Soon, however, he wearied of a life of luxury and busy
-idleness at the court, and arranged with his half-brother,
-Sir Humphrey Gilbert, to join him in his projected voyage
-to Newfoundland. But Elizabeth positively forbade him
-to go, and reluctantly he bowed to the royal command.
-Gilbert never returned from Newfoundland. On the homeward
-voyage he stuck to his little, unseaworthy vessel, the
-<span class='it'>Squirrel</span>, and declined to take his passage on board the <span class='it'>Golden
-Hind</span>, the larger vessel which convoyed him. To all arguments
-he had but one reply, “I will not forsake my little
-company, with whom I have passed through so many storms
-and perils.” When the ships were to the north of the
-Azores terrible seas arose, and the <span class='it'>Squirrel</span> was well-nigh
-swamped. Through all the foul weather Sir Humphrey,
-gallant gentleman that he was, sat on deck, calm and unmoved,
-reading a book. When they besought him to board
-the <span class='it'>Golden Hind</span> he said, “We are as near to heaven by sea
-as by land.” During the night of Monday, September 9,
-1583, the watchers on the <span class='it'>Golden Hind</span> suddenly missed
-the lights of the <span class='it'>Squirrel</span>. She had gone down with all
-her crew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh applied for the patent which Sir Humphrey,
-his half-brother, had held, and was accorded the royal permission
-to discover unknown lands, take possession of
-them in the queen’s name, and hold them to his own profit
-for six years. At once he fitted out an expedition, which
-coasted northward from Florida and took possession of
-Roanoke Island, within the lagoons of what is now North
-Carolina. His captains returned with a glowing account
-of the “good land” which they had discovered, and
-Raleigh took immediate steps to colonize it. He called
-it Virginia, in honour of the Virgin Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Accordingly, in the year 1585, he sent out Sir Richard
-Grenville with one hundred and eight men, and on Roanoke
-Island a little colony was established. Ralph Lane was left
-in charge of the party, and Grenville sailed for home, hoping
-for the best but fearing the worst. Unhappily the wrong
-sort of men had been sent out—soft-handed gentlemen who
-could not dig, and were ashamed to beg. Before long there
-were bitter quarrels in the little hive between the drones
-and the workers, food ran short, and the colonists were on
-the verge of starvation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the next year Drake touched at Roanoke after his
-attack on Cartagena, and seeing what a helpless, shiftless
-crew the colonists were, he carried them all back to England
-save fifteen. The colony had thus proved a costly failure,
-but the experiment was notable, because it was the first
-attempt to found a greater Britain beyond the seas. He
-who writes the history of British expansion must never
-forget to give Raleigh a foremost place in the roll of
-Empire-makers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the immediate results of the voyage was the
-introduction into this country of the potato and the tobacco
-plant. Raleigh grew potatoes in his garden at Youghal,
-and thus gave Ireland the staple food of her peasantry.
-According to an old story, he was the first man to smoke
-tobacco in England. It is said that his servant, seeing
-volumes of smoke issuing from his mouth, concluded that
-he was on fire, and promptly poured a bucket of water over
-him, thus effectually putting out his pipe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A second attempt to found a colony on Roanoke Island
-failed, and Raleigh was terribly disappointed. He could
-do no more; so in 1589, the year after he helped to repel
-the Armada, he disposed of his rights to a company of merchants,
-who made no attempt to found a new colony on the
-ruins of the old. Thus the sixteenth century came to an
-end, and England had no colony of any kind in America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the year 1592 Raleigh fell into disgrace with his
-royal mistress. She discovered that the man she had delighted
-to honour and enrich had actually dared to love one
-of her maids of honour. An excuse was speedily found
-by the jealous queen for sending Raleigh and his lady-love,
-Elizabeth Throgmorton, to the Tower. At length, however,
-the queen relented and restored Raleigh to liberty, but
-forbade him the court. The lovers were married and settled
-at Sherborne, where Raleigh busied himself in erecting a
-magnificent mansion and laying out its grounds with great
-taste.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>About this time he made acquaintance with the Spanish
-legend of the fabulous wealth of El Dorado, the city
-of Manoa, in South America. The story fascinated his
-romantic nature, and he could not rest until he had attempted
-its discovery. Yielding to his wife’s entreaties, he refrained
-from going in search of it himself, and sent his tried
-and trusty servant, Jacob Whiddon, in his stead. Whiddon
-returned without having discovered anything, and Raleigh
-now essayed the adventure himself. With a fleet of five
-ships he sailed in February 1595, and in the next month
-arrived at the island of Trinidad. He seized the capital
-and captured the governor, who confirmed the stories of
-the richness and wonder of Manoa, and told him of its
-remarkable inhabitants, the dog-headed men “whose heads
-do grow beneath their shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early in April Raleigh started on the quest with a
-little flotilla of five boats, a hundred men, and provisions
-for a month. He entered the Orinoco, but found the
-labour of rowing against the vast and powerful stream
-most exhausting. Sometimes his boats did not progress a
-stone’s-throw in an hour. After struggling onwards for
-nearly four hundred miles he was obliged to own himself
-beaten. He brought back with him some pieces of quartz
-showing grains of gold and the earliest specimens of mahogany
-ever seen in this country. Subsequently he attacked
-several Spanish settlements and then returned to England,
-where his enemies declared that the story of his river voyage
-was an invention. As a matter of fact, Guiana is rich in
-gold, and more than one famous mine has been worked in
-the country which Raleigh endeavoured to explore.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh lived peacefully at home for nearly two years,
-and then played a brilliant part in Drake’s daring attack on
-Cadiz. He commanded the <span class='it'>Warspite</span>, the leading ship, and
-though severely wounded, landed with his men for the
-storming of the town. His gallantry won him the queen’s
-forgiveness, and once more he was a familiar figure about
-the court. Under Essex he commanded a ship in the fleet
-which sailed for Flores, in the Azores, to lie in wait for
-Spanish treasure galleons. His disobedience of orders in his
-capture of Fayal earned for him the enmity of Essex, who
-now became one of his bitterest enemies. Essex, however,
-came to the block, but not before he had done Raleigh
-considerable mischief.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Queen Elizabeth died in 1603, and James the Sixth of
-Scotland became James the First of England. There were
-plots to prevent his accession and to put Lady Arabella
-Stewart, an Englishwoman of the royal house, on the
-throne. The cowardly Lord Cobham was at the head of
-the Main Plot, and when arrested he made a lying confession
-implicating Raleigh, who was tried and found guilty
-of compassing the death of the king, of endeavouring to
-set Arabella Stewart on the throne, of receiving bribes from
-the court of Spain, and of seeking to deliver the country
-into the hands of its enemy. Raleigh’s execution was
-ordered, and he wrote a touching farewell to his wife; but
-on the eve of the fatal day he was reprieved and committed
-to the Tower with the death sentence hanging over his
-head. For about twelve years he remained a prisoner.
-He was treated leniently, and given apartments in the
-Bloody Tower, where he lived with his wife and son
-and his attendants. Frequently the young Prince Henry
-visited him, and the lad grew fond of his gallant and
-brilliant friend. “No man but my father,” he once said,
-“would keep such a bird in a cage.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh now busied himself in a variety of occupations:
-he designed a model of a ship, he condensed fresh
-water from salt, he compounded drugs, he began his
-“History of the World,” and wrote verses and political
-pamphlets. About the year 1610 he revived his old
-project for discovering Manoa. Twenty years had now
-passed since he had returned from Guiana, but during his
-long solitude in the Tower his mind returned again and
-again to the fabulous riches of El Dorado, and he devised
-plan after plan for securing its wealth. He now made a
-proposition to certain lords of the Council, and they listened
-to it. “If I bring them not to a mountain covered with
-gold and silver ore,” he wrote, “let the commander have
-commission to cut off my head there.” All he stipulated
-for was that if half a ton of precious ore should be brought
-home he should have a free pardon. At length the king
-was persuaded to agree to the proposal, and in March 1617
-the order for his release was signed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh and his wife adventured all they had in fitting
-out the expedition. Ere it sailed the Spanish ambassador
-intervened. He protested loudly that Guiana belonged to
-Spain, and that Raleigh’s expedition proposed an invasion
-of Spanish territory, and was simply a cloak for piracy on a
-gigantic scale. The ambassador believed that Raleigh had
-his eye on the Mexican Plate fleet, and as after events
-proved, he was right. James warned Raleigh that he was
-not to fight the Spaniards, and on this understanding he was
-permitted to sail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Misfortune dogged him from the outset. Foul winds
-and storms drove him back, and afterwards scattered his
-fleet and sank one of his vessels. He had difficulty in
-getting water at the Canaries, and a hurricane drove him
-from the Cape Verde Islands. For forty days he lay in the
-doldrums, while his men fell a prey to scurvy and fever
-and grew mutinous. At length, when the remnant of his
-ten ships arrived off the mouth of the Orinoco, Raleigh was
-prostrate with fever, and his men had lost all hope of success.
-But his courageous spirit was equal to the occasion. “We
-can make the adventure,” he cried; “and if we perish, it
-shall be no honour to England or gain to his Majesty to lose
-one hundred as valiant men as England hath in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While he remained off the mouth of the river, his
-lieutenant, Thomas Keymis, with five ships and four hundred
-men, undertook the great quest. For three weeks they
-battled against the mighty current, but when they approached
-the proposed landing-place they found a Spanish
-settlement blocking their path. This they stormed and
-burnt, Raleigh’s son being killed in the attack. Though
-the settlement was captured, the Spaniards were still in the
-woods, and Keymis, having done all that man could do,
-was forced to retreat. Raleigh met him with a bitter
-reproach——“You have undone me by your obstinacy.”
-Keymis said not a word, but betook himself to his cabin,
-where he ran a dagger through his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh was now desperate. He proposed to go himself
-in search of the mine, but his men would not follow him.
-Then he suggested the capture of the Mexican Plate fleet;
-but they refused, saying that, even if they succeeded, the
-king would hang them when they got home. There was
-no help for it, so Raleigh was obliged to return to England.
-With angry reproaches to his “rabble of idle rascals,” he
-set sail, knowing well the fate which awaited him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In June 1618 he was back at Plymouth, and was at
-once arrested. James was courting the favour of his “dear
-brother of Spain,” and the Spanish ambassador had obtained
-a promise from him that, “if Raleigh returned loaded with
-gold acquired by an attack on the subjects of the King
-of Spain, he would surrender it all, and would give up the
-authors of the crime to be hanged in the public square of
-Madrid.” Now the Spaniard claimed his victim, and James
-actually proposed to keep his word; but he dared not do
-so, for England now regarded Raleigh as a champion of
-English interests against Spanish tyranny. He was thereupon
-brought to trial. In the course of it the Attorney-General
-said, “Sir Walter Raleigh hath been as a star at
-which the world hath gazed; but stars may fall—nay, they
-must fall when they trouble the sphere where they abide.”
-There was a legal difficulty in the way: Raleigh was under
-sentence of death, and therefore could not be legally tried.
-The easiest way out of the difficulty was to order his execution
-on the old charge of treason. This was done. As
-Raleigh returned to his prison he remarked, “The world
-itself is but a larger prison, out of which some are daily
-selected for execution.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On October 19, 1618, he was brought to the scaffold,
-which had been erected in Old Palace Yard. He met his
-fate cheerfully, and jested pleasantly even on the way to the
-block. He addressed the crowd in a well-known speech,
-thanking God heartily that He had brought him to die in
-the light, and not left him to perish obscurely in the dark
-prison of the Tower. He denied all accusations of treason,
-and defended himself against other charges. When he had
-finished he said, “And now I have a long journey to go,
-and must take my leave.” As he laid his head on the
-block the executioner bade him turn his head to the east.
-“What matter,” he answered, “how the head lies, so that
-the heart be right?” These noble words had hardly fallen
-from his lips when the axe descended.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo236.jpg' alt='' id='i236' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>THE BOYHOOD OF SIR WALTER RALEIGH.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir J. E. Millais, Bart., P.R.A., in the National Gallery of British Art.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo242.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0052' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='242' id='Page_242'></span></p>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XIII.<br/> THE GREAT REBELLION.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>CHARLES THE FIRST.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>He nothing common did or mean</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Upon that memorable scene,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>But with his keener eye</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The axe’s edge did try;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Nor called the gods with vulgar spite</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>To vindicate his helpless right,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>But bowed his comely head</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Down, as upon a bed.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/t.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='T'/>HE incident you are now to witness is without a
-parallel in the history of our land. The scene
-opens in Westminster Hall, the vast building erected
-for the judicial courts of the realm by William the Second.
-There is a troop of horse in the courtyard, and armed men
-guard the doors. Now a procession enters, and as the doors
-open to admit it you hear loud shouts of “Justice! justice!”
-from the mob in the courtyard. At the head of the procession
-are officers bearing the mace and the sword of state;
-behind them, in black robes, you see John Bradshaw, and
-with him a number of members of Parliament. He takes
-his seat on a chair of crimson velvet, and his companions
-range themselves to the right and left of him. The sword
-and the mace are placed on the table at which the clerk sits,
-and the doors are flung open. At once a tumultuous crowd
-rushes in, eager to witness the dread ceremony. They
-struggle for places, and the hall rings with their shouts.
-At length order is restored, and the clerk reads the Act of
-Parliament constituting the court. Then the roll of judges
-is called over. Out of one hundred and thirty-five on the
-list only sixty-nine answer to their names.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Sergeant,” says the president, “bring in the
-prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is a deep hush, and you hear the tramp of armed
-men and the clank of scabbards on the pavement. A guard
-of thirty-two officers leads the prisoner to a chair of crimson
-velvet at the bar. Now you see him clearly; he is none
-other than <span class='sc'>Charles Stuart, King of England</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at him well. He is tall, dark, and handsome,
-with a long, fine face, large black eyes, thick eyebrows, a
-pointed beard, and black, curly hair streaked with silver.
-His whole aspect is noble, dignified, and refined. He is a
-chaste, temperate man, devout at prayers, a good father, and
-a fond husband, a lover of music and painting. Nevertheless
-he is faithless by nature, and addicted to dark and
-crooked ways. Seldom or never is he straightforward in
-his dealings. He is firmly convinced that between him and
-his subjects there can be no agreement which will bind him,
-and he holds that whether he keeps a promise or breaks it
-is a matter for him to decide, and for him alone. He has
-inherited his father’s beliefs in the doctrines of the Divine
-right and the absolute power of kings, and he has pushed
-these doctrines to such utmost extremes that he has plunged
-the nation into civil war, and in the contest has irretrievably
-ruined himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He is not a clever man, and he is incurably obstinate.
-He cannot understand the great movements which have been
-going on around him. He has never been able to perceive
-that the time has gone by when men will allow the king to
-be a tyrant, and permit him to override both the law and
-the will of the people. For eleven years he has ruled the
-land without a Parliament, aided by subservient ministers,
-who have been very geniuses of tyranny, and have goaded
-and maddened the people by all sorts of illegal expedients.
-These ministers have gone to the block, and he has been
-powerless to save them. One of them has died with the
-ominous words on his lips, “Put not your trust in princes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Charles has endeavoured to make himself absolute alike
-in Church and State. The Puritans, who are now very
-strong, have been the especial object of his hatred. They
-have been tormented, fined, whipped, pilloried, and imprisoned.
-His wife is a Roman Catholic princess, whose
-intrigues have still further brought him into bad odour, and
-he has showed such favour to those of her faith that the
-Puritans bitterly denounce him. Many earnest men of less
-fanatical mind have long ago come to the conclusion that
-unless he is removed all freedom will be banished from
-the land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fifteen years ago John Hampden refused to pay an
-illegal tax, and though he was heavily fined, his resistance
-thrilled all England and made him “the argument of all
-tongues.” The patience of the Scots also broke down, and
-they indignantly refused to permit the king to alter their
-mode of worship. In the churchyard of Greyfriars, Edinburgh,
-they signed their bond of resistance with blood and
-tears. Charles would gladly have chastised them, but his
-soldiers were unwilling to fight and his treasury was empty.
-In this plight he was forced to call a Parliament, which was
-full of opponents, who were determined to grant no supplies
-until the causes of all grievances were pulled up by the
-roots. But when this Parliament had done much good
-work for liberty, the members split on religious questions,
-and Charles, profiting by their dissensions, was safe for a
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly terrible news arrived from Ireland. The
-native Irish, who were Roman Catholics to a man, had
-attacked the Protestant English colonists, and had slaughtered
-five thousand of them with horrible cruelty. The leader
-of the Irish had showed his followers a letter purporting to
-come from the king and encouraging him to the massacre.
-The letter had the royal seal attached to it, and looked
-genuine, but it was a forgery. The English Puritans, however,
-were now ready to think the worst of Charles, and
-they firmly believed that he had instigated the Irish to
-slaughter their fellow-countrymen and his own subjects.
-When Parliament reassembled, the Puritan leaders drew up
-a long list of all the illegal acts which the king had done,
-and issued it as a manifesto to the nation. Tact and conciliation
-might have worked wonders at this time, but
-Charles was in no mood for pacific measures. His wife
-urged him to go to Parliament and seize the five Puritan
-leaders. “Pull the rascals out by the ears,” she cried, and
-in fatal hour Charles took her advice. He went down to
-Westminster at the head of five hundred men, and entered
-the House only to discover that “the birds had flown.”
-The five members had escaped to the city, and the king was
-foiled and humiliated. He left the House amidst low
-mutterings of fierce discontent and loud cries of “Privilege!
-privilege!” The London militia rose in arms to protect
-the five members, and war could no longer be avoided.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In April 1642 the king rode to Hull, where there was
-a large magazine of arms and gunpowder, and demanded
-admittance. The gates were shut in his face, and the
-governor declared that he would only take orders from
-Parliament. This was the first act of war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the stormy evening of August 22 the king raised
-his standard at Nottingham, and when it was blown down
-there were many who saw in the occurrence an evil omen.
-Then began a series of miserable years, during which father
-fought against son and brother against brother. The
-fortune of war at first favoured the king; but the tide
-turned, and the forces of the Parliament gradually gained
-the upper hand. It was inevitable that they should win:
-London and the most populous and wealthy part of the
-country were with them; the great military genius, Cromwell,
-rose amongst them; and a deep, religious fervour
-inspired them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For three years the land rang with the tumult of battle,
-but on one June day in the year 1645 the crisis arrived.
-The Parliamentary horsemen scattered the Cavaliers of the
-king like chaff before the wind, and they were never dangerous
-again. The king fled from the field, and in his captured
-baggage the victors found damning proof of his intrigues
-with the French and the Irish, and proposals that foreign
-armies should come over and subdue his revolting subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The king’s cause was now desperate, and he rode to the
-camp of the Scots, who had come to the assistance of the
-English Parliament, and yielded himself to them. The
-Scots were glad to have him, and were ready to restore him
-to his throne if he would promise to support Presbyterianism
-in Scotland and make the Church of England a
-Presbyterian Church. Charles indignantly refused to make
-the Church which he loved so well the price of his freedom,
-and the Scots handed him over to the Parliament. At this
-time the Parliament was divided in opinion. The Presbyterians,
-who were the stronger party and had the custody of
-the king, were eager for peace, so they offered to set Charles
-on his throne again if he would agree to their demands,
-which included the abolition of bishops in the English
-Church. Charles had sworn that he would never sacrifice
-his crown or his Church even to save his life, and he kept
-his word. But for months he would not give a straightforward
-answer. He tried every sort of shift and trick to
-gain time, and in doing so disgusted many of those who
-would gladly have been his friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the army, which was largely composed of Independents,
-took matters into its own hands. It seized the
-king, marched to London, expelled the members of Parliament
-opposed to it, and so obtained a majority. But even
-the stern men who had overthrown the king on the field of
-battle were ready to offer him terms which he might easily
-have accepted. He refused them, because he was still
-hopeful of regaining his throne without making terms. It
-was an evil hour when he rejected the final olive branch.
-When a Royalist rising took place in Scotland, and a second
-and quite unnecessary civil war broke out in England, the
-army felt that the end of his tether had come. They
-hopelessly crushed the royal forces in less than three
-months, and the king’s doom was sealed. The Independent
-remnant of Parliament passed a Bill for bringing him
-to trial, and appointed a High Court of Justice for the
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now you know why Charles faces a court of his subjects
-in Westminster Hall. Now you know why the
-members keep their hats on their heads, and refuse to
-show him honour. To them he is a malefactor, a “man
-of blood.” He is now sitting in his chair waiting for
-the proceedings to begin. Bradshaw rises and says:—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Charles Stuart, King of England, the Commons of
-England assembled in Parliament, taking notice of the
-effusion of blood in the land, which is fixed on you as the
-author of it, and whereof you are guilty, have resolved to
-bring you to a trial and judgment, and for this cause the
-tribunal is erected. The charges will now be read by the
-Solicitor-General.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the Solicitor-General rises to speak, the king touches
-him with his cane on the shoulder and cries “Silence!”
-The head of the king’s cane falls off! It is a ghastly
-portent, and the king himself shows a momentary sign of
-emotion. Then the Solicitor-General reads out a long
-indictment, and concludes by demanding that justice be
-done upon the king as a tyrant, traitor, and murderer. At
-these words Charles laughs in the face of the court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Usually he hesitates in his speech, but to-day he is very
-fluent. He refuses to plead before such a court. He tells
-his judges that they are an illegal meeting appointed by a
-mere remnant of the House of Commons. Again and again
-he declares that they have no authority to sit in judgment
-on him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Bradshaw cries, “Take away the prisoner. The
-court adjourns to Monday next.” The escort marches
-up, and the king rises to depart with them. As he does
-so his eye falls on the sword placed on the table. “I do
-not fear that,” he says, pointing to it with his cane. Then
-he is led forth, and the populace greet him with mingled
-cries of “Justice! justice!” and “God save the king!”
-“God save your Majesty!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Monday the court sits again, and the king makes
-the same protest. On Tuesday the same scene is enacted,
-and meanwhile popular sympathy for the royal prisoner is
-growing rapidly. The shouts of “Justice!” and “Execution!”
-are now only raised by the soldiers. The crowd
-cries “God save the king!” whenever it can do so with
-impunity. As the hours pass by the same cry is heard
-amongst the troops. A soldier of the guard who has dared
-to say to the king, “Sire, God bless you!” is struck by his
-officer. “Methinks,” says Charles, “the punishment exceeds
-the offence.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Wednesday and Thursday the court meets to hear
-evidence, and then retires to consider its verdict. On the
-27th, at noon, it assembles again, and all men notice that
-Bradshaw wears a red robe in place of the customary black.
-As the roll of judges is called over there is no response to
-the name of Fairfax. Suddenly the silence is broken by
-the voice of his wife in the gallery, “He has too much
-wit to be here.” The king enters, and loud shouts of
-“Justice!” “Execution!” are raised by the soldiers, but
-the crowd is silent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The president harangues the prisoner; but when he
-speaks of the crimes charged against him in the name
-of the people of England, he is cut short by the voice
-which has answered to the name of Fairfax, “Where are
-they or their consents? Oliver Cromwell is a traitor!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Excitement and confusion break out for a space, but
-the cry of “Justice! execution!” is again raised. The
-king, almost beside himself, passionately cries, “Hear me!
-hear me!” but he is not permitted to speak. Then
-Bradshaw delivers a long and solemn address, the clerk
-reads the sentence, and the judges stand in their places to
-signify their assent. The king again tries to speak, but
-being considered dead in law is not permitted to do so.
-He is led away, and as he leaves the hall the soldiers on the
-stairs puff smoke in his face and hurl the grossest insults
-at him. But outside the mob shouts, “God save your
-Majesty!” “God deliver your Majesty from the hands
-of your enemies!” The soldiers retort with cries of
-“Justice!” “Execution!” and the king, who has now
-regained his serenity, observes, “Poor souls! for a piece of
-money they would do so to their commanders.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The condemned king is lodged in St. James’s Palace,
-where he is allowed to take a last fond farewell of his
-weeping children. He takes the little boy on his knee,
-and says, “My dear heart, they will soon cut off thy
-father’s head. Mark, child, what I say: they will cut off
-my head, and perhaps make thee king; but thou must not
-be king so long as thy brothers Charles and James live. I
-charge thee, do not be made a king by them.” To which
-the child replies amidst its tears, “I will be torn in pieces
-first.” The children are removed, and the king spends the
-few remaining hours in prayer with his good friend Bishop
-Juxon. On January 30, between two and three in the
-afternoon, he is led by armed men through the leafless
-avenues of St. James’s Park to his palace of Whitehall,
-before which a scaffold draped with black has been erected.
-All marvel at the calm dignity which he displays.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The scaffold is hedged round with soldiers, and the
-headsman stands beside the block. The king, with head
-erect, steps through an opening in the wall of the banqueting
-hall on to the scaffold. He addresses himself to the
-bystanders, and in the last words he utters he shows clearly
-that he has not abandoned his fatal theory of kingship.
-Then he turns to the good Juxon, who says, “There is but
-one stage more, sire; it is full of trouble and anguish, but
-it is a very short one, and it will carry you a great way—from
-earth to heaven!” “I go,” returns the king, “from
-a corruptible to an incorruptible crown, where I shall have
-no trouble to fear.” Then with a mysterious admonition—“<span class='it'>Remember!</span>”—he
-lays his head on the block. The
-axe falls, and a deep groan of pity and horror goes up from
-the people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A blood-red line has been ruled across the page of our
-national history—the Old Rule has gone; the New Rule
-has yet to appear.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo243.jpg' alt='' id='i243' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Charles I. leaving Westminster Hall after his Trial.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., in the Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield. By permission of the Corporation of Sheffield.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo246.jpg' alt='' id='i246' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>CROMWELL AT MARSTON MOOR.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Ernest Crofts, A.R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='252' id='Page_252'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo252.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0053' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>OLIVER CROMWELL.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Cromwell, our chief of men, who through a cloud</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Not of war only, but detractions rude,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Guided by faith and matchless fortitude.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Six years have come and gone since the execution of
-Charles the First, and England has had no king in the
-interval. The great, strong man, Oliver Cromwell, who
-by his military genius has overthrown the king and made
-the army supreme, has crushed all opposition by the weight
-of his iron hand. At the head of his buff-coated Ironsides—men
-with psalms on their lips and ruth in their hearts—he
-has stamped the very life out of Ireland, and by a
-happy accident, which he believes to be an interposition of
-Providence, he has reduced Scotland to impotence. Now
-he is master of three kingdoms, and only the remnant of
-an old Parliament stands in his way. The “Rump,” as it
-is contemptuously called, refuses to dissolve, so Cromwell
-strides into the House and, after roundly rating the members,
-stamps on the floor. At the signal armed men enter
-and proceed to drive out the occupants of the chamber.
-The Speaker refuses to leave the chair, and tries to speak,
-but his voice is drowned in the uproar. Then one of
-Cromwell’s friends offers to lend him a hand to come down,
-and the Speaker, yielding to force, does so. Pointing to
-the mace, the symbol of the authority of the House of
-Commons, Cromwell cries, “What shall we do with this
-bauble? Here, take it away!” and a soldier removes it.
-Then he locks the door and strides away with the key in
-his pocket, while a wag chalks up on the building, “This
-house to let.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Six weeks later he summons another Parliament, and
-finds it composed of fanatics and doctrinaires who are
-passionate admirers of his, but propose to overturn every
-established custom. Under the leadership of “Praise-God
-Barebone” it actually suggests that the law of England
-shall be superseded in favour of the law of Moses! The
-members quarrel fiercely, and at last give up to the Lord-General
-the powers which they have received from him.
-The Council of State begs him to become Lord Protector,
-with rights and duties which differ very little from those
-of a king, and he accepts the proffered honour. Nine
-months elapse, and another Parliament is called; but it
-is a hindrance to the Lord Protector’s schemes, and is
-dissolved. Another takes its place, and offers to make
-Cromwell king. He refuses, for the name of king is loathsome
-to him, and he is already king in all but name. Then
-this Parliament goes the way of the others, and Cromwell
-never calls another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You see him now an even more absolute ruler than
-“martyred Charles:” he is a despot, but with a difference.
-Whatever his detractors may say of him, this cannot be
-disputed, that never was the sceptre of England wielded
-by a more vigorous or sagacious hand. His protectorship,
-compared with any preceding age, or with several ages
-succeeding it, was an era of toleration, justice, and law.
-Weakened though she was by the Civil Wars, England rose
-to respect and greatness abroad, and foreign tyrants and
-persecutors trembled at her name. “We always reckon,”
-said a Royalist bishop, “those eight years of the usurpation
-as a time of great peace and prosperity.” Trade and commerce
-increased, and the land grew wealthy and great; yet
-all the while Cromwell was bitterly hated, and his life was
-always in peril. He wore mail beneath his clothes, and
-slept in a different room almost every night. Despite his
-ever-present danger, he went his way fearlessly, though
-expecting a pistol-shot from every dark corner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us witness a scene which shows Cromwell at
-his best. You see before you the interior of a room in the
-palace of Whitehall. Seated carelessly on a table is the
-Lord Protector. He is a man of massive build, with a
-“figure of sufficient impressiveness: not lovely to the man-milliner
-species, nor pretending to be so.” A massive
-“head so shaped as you might see in it a storehouse and
-shop of a vast treasury of natural parts.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. On the whole,
-a right noble lion-face and hero-face; and to me royal
-enough.” He is careless in his dress, utterly indifferent to
-externals, and wholly without affectation. He is the man
-who warned Lely, when painting his picture, to put in all
-the roughnesses, pimples, and warts of his countenance, or
-he would not pay a farthing for the work. Hard, stern,
-implacable in warfare, he is nevertheless simple, loving,
-and pure in his private life, sincerely and ardently religious,
-and convinced to the bottom of his soul that he is a chosen
-instrument “to do God’s people some good.” True, he
-owes his power to the sword; but he wields that power
-so well, and stoops to so little that is mean or base, that
-future generations will have good cause to rejoice that the
-guidance of the state was for a brief space of years entrusted
-to him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the other end of the table sits John Milton, that
-inspired poet of whom Wordsworth wrote:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“His soul was like a star, and dwelt apart;</p>
-<p class='line0'>So didst thou travel on life’s common way</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;In cheerful godliness.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>Look at his noble face, which reflects in its every expression
-the splendid mind with which he is gifted and the
-noble thoughts which flit through it. No man ever served
-the Muses with such exquisite devotion. He comes to his
-desk as a knight to his vigil, believing that no man can
-worthily write of great things unless his life is worthily
-lived. He loves virtue with all the passion of his nature——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“She can teach ye how to climb</p>
-<p class='line0'>Higher than the sphery chime.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>And now he is engaged on a task which enlists all his
-sympathy, and sends a throb of righteous indignation through
-his veins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He is Latin Secretary to the Council, and it is his task to
-Latinize all communications to foreign states. Cromwell
-has heard that in the valleys of Piedmont the Waldenses, a
-body of dogged Puritans, are being persecuted by the Duke
-of Savoy, who is harrying them with savage cruelty, and
-has already slain thousands of them. Cromwell is greatly
-moved by the news, and his anger breaks forth in a torrent
-of inconsequent words. The upshot, however, is clear to
-Milton: France shall receive those attentions which have
-made the English fleet the terror of the Mediterranean,
-unless an immediate end is put to the persecution. Milton
-has already written the most sublime of all his sonnets on
-this subject:——</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Avenge, O Lord! Thy slaughtered saints, whose bones</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains cold;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Even them who kept Thy truth so pure of old,</p>
-<p class='line0'>When all our fathers worshipped stocks and stones,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Forget not; in Thy book record their groans</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Who were Thy sheep, and in their ancient fold</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Slain by the bloody Piedmontese that rolled</p>
-<p class='line0'>Mother with infant down the rocks. Their moans</p>
-<p class='line0'>The vales redoubled to the hills, and they</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;To heaven. Their martyred blood and ashes sow</p>
-<p class='line0'>O’er all the Italian fields, where still doth sway</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The triple Tyrant; that from these may grow</p>
-<p class='line0'>A hundredfold, who, having learned Thy way,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Early may fly the Babylonian woe.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cromwell has already sent £2,000 out of his own purse
-to the sufferers. Now he dictates his stern message, and
-Milton translates it into resounding Latin of such force and
-fervour that Cardinal Mazarin dare not ignore its purport.
-The Duke of Savoy and the cardinal may gnash their teeth
-with rage, but, with the whole power of France at their
-command, they dare not again lift a finger against the
-Waldenses while Cromwell lives. No incident in the
-whole history of the Commonwealth reveals more clearly
-the salutary fear which the name of Cromwell excites on
-the Continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But his days are numbered. In three short years he
-will go hence, and in two years more a Stuart will sit on
-the throne, and at his coming England will be “reduced to
-a nullity”—aye, and worse, to reproach and shame. Worn
-out with constant anxiety, the death of a favourite daughter
-brings him speedily to the valley of the shadow. “I
-would be willing to live,” murmurs the dying man, “to
-be further serviceable to God and His people; but my
-work is done.” He lies on his deathbed while a great
-storm rages over England. In the morning calm succeeds
-tempest, and on the anniversary of his great victories at
-Dunbar and Worcester he breathes his last. They bury
-him in Westminster Abbey, amidst the kings; but his
-bones are not long to rest in that hallowed fane. The
-Stuart king, to his everlasting shame, will tear the
-unoffending body from its coffin and gibbet it in unavailing
-contempt. But ages to come will do him tardy justice,
-and men will come to honour his memory even while they
-lift their hats and pray, “God save the king!”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo257.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0054' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo256.jpg' alt='' id='i256' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Cromwell dictating Dispatches to Milton.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Ford Madox Brown, in the Manchester Art Gallery. By permission of the Manchester Corporation.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='258' id='Page_258'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo258.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0055' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>ROBERT BLAKE.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Where Blake and mighty Nelson fell</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Your manly hearts shall glow,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>As ye sweep through the deep,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>While the stormy winds do blow,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>While the battle rages loud and long,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>And the stormy winds do blow.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>An admiral sits writing at a table in the cabin of his
-dismasted flagship, the <span class='it'>Triumph</span>. He is a short, squat,
-ungainly man, but within that unprepossessing exterior
-there is one of the most heroic and purely patriotic souls
-that ever existed. His heavy face is clouded by deep
-depression. He is a beaten man, and he is even now
-inditing the frank and ungarnished story of his defeat
-to the Lords of the Council. “Your honours,” he writes,
-“I hope it will not be unreasonable for me to desire your
-honours that you would think of giving me, your unworthy
-servant, a discharge from this employment so far too great
-for me, that so I may be freed from that burden of spirit
-which lies upon me, arising from the sense of my own
-insufficiency.” He finishes his task, signs it “Robert
-Blake, Admiral,” strews the sand upon the wet ink, folds
-the missive, and dispatches it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What is the meaning of this scene? You see a man
-of the sublimest courage and the most ardent patriotism
-humiliated and vexed with himself because he has failed to
-achieve the impossible. A little more than a month ago
-he met the Dutch fleet, and fought a furious battle which
-raged until nightfall, when the foe, too severely handled
-to continue the struggle, drew off and sailed for home.
-“Nothing in this to be ashamed of,” you will say; but you
-do not yet know the whole story.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After the victory—for such it was—the Commonwealth,
-feeling secure, dispersed the fleet either on various detached
-services or to refit, and left Blake with only thirty-seven
-ships to guard the Channel. The Dutchmen, on the other
-hand, flung themselves heart and soul into the work of preparing
-a fleet which should speedily cancel their reverse and
-restore that great prestige which they then enjoyed as the
-first of maritime nations. Yesterday this fleet of eighty ships
-of war, convoying three hundred merchantmen, appeared off
-the Goodwins, standing to the southward, and evidently
-about to force the strait in defiance of its guardian. As
-the vast and well-equipped fleet of the Dutchmen hove in
-sight Blake called a hasty council of war, and announced his
-determination of attacking it with the wholly inadequate
-forces at his command. It was a venture rash almost to
-the verge of madness, but Blake could not sit still and see
-the proudly defiant foe go by without attempting to chastise
-it. Twice before he had met the Dutchman and belaboured
-him; he would do so again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the battle which followed, the wind blew Blake’s
-leading ships into the midst of the enemy. A stout fight
-was stubbornly maintained against tremendous odds; but
-the Dutchmen were overwhelmingly strong, and by evening
-two English ships had been captured, one had been burnt,
-another had blown up, and the remainder, under cover of
-the darkness, had staggered into Dover for safety. And now
-the Channel is full of Dutch ships, and their admiral, in
-the arrogance of victory, has hoisted a broom at his masthead
-to signify that he has swept the narrow seas clean!
-No wonder Blake is sick at heart; no wonder he writes
-himself down failure, and begs to be relieved of his command.
-But to-morrow he will be himself again. The
-Council will refuse to supersede him; they will cheer him
-with tokens of their confidence; they will immediately set
-about repairing their errors, and will speedily give him
-a fleet adequate to the work which they expect him to
-do. They know full well the splendid courage and the
-unswerving fidelity of their admiral, and they repudiate
-the “insufficiency” which, with the modesty of the
-truly brave, he ascribes to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, before we relate the story of his subsequent
-exploits, let us learn something of his earlier career. As a
-young Oxford scholar he coveted a fellowship, but his
-appearance offended the artistic eye of the warden of his
-college and he was passed over. When the Civil War broke
-out he was forty-three years of age, and his sentiments were
-strongly republican. Joining the Parliamentary army, he
-was entrusted with the defence of a post at Bristol, which
-was then besieged by the Royalists. The town was yielded
-by the governor after a feeble resistance, but Blake resolutely
-held on to his post for twenty-four hours after the capitulation
-was signed. He was compelled to yield, and narrowly
-escaped hanging; but the eye of the Parliament was now
-upon him, and before long he found himself entrusted with
-the defence of Taunton town.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The place was wholly without defences. It had no
-forts, no walls, and only a meagre garrison of eighty men.
-Nevertheless, it was a most important strategic post, situated
-at a point on which all the main roads converged, and Blake
-saw that it must be defended at all costs. He worked like
-a Trojan, and inspired his men to similar efforts. Roads
-were barricaded, breastworks were thrown up, guns were
-mounted, houses loopholed, and the Royalists, unable to
-carry it by storm, were forced to invest it and wait for
-famine to do its deadly work. The little garrison grew
-terribly hungry, but Blake was as blithe as a lad on a
-holiday escapade. When only one pig remained, he had it
-driven about the town and whipped from time to time, so
-that its squeals might delude the besiegers into the belief
-that he still possessed a whole herd of porkers. When the
-Royalist captain sent in a ragged messenger to treat for
-terms, Blake dismissed him with a new suit of clothes!
-Taunton never yielded. After the battle of Naseby the
-siege was raised, and Blake emerged from his heap of ruins
-a man of mark. He had delayed a whole army in the west,
-and had enabled the Parliamentary army in the Midlands to
-win the decisive battle of the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the second Civil War broke out, part of the fleet
-declared for the king, and, under Prince Rupert, the “mad
-Cavalier,” was giving much trouble. A fleet was fitted out
-to meet this new danger, and, somewhat inexplicably, Blake
-was chosen as one of the generals-at-sea. Probably Cromwell
-thought that the man who could defend Taunton town
-could defend anything. Blake knew little more about naval
-matters than the Duke of Medina Sidonia; but he was a
-born sailor, and before long he was a master of seamanship
-in all its intricacies. Rupert was a most difficult man to
-catch; but Blake cornered him at last, and at Cartagena
-drove his ships ashore and set fire to them. For this
-exploit Blake received the grateful thanks of Parliament
-and a sum of one thousand pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Blake had now to meet a much more powerful foe than
-Rupert. The Dutch and the English, old allies against
-Spain, were now at daggers drawn. Ill-feeling between
-the two nations had been long rife; now it came to a head.
-Holland swarmed with Royalist exiles, and the Government
-showed them much friendship. A Commonwealth
-envoy was murdered, and the Dutch Government would
-give no satisfaction for the outrage. Further, and beyond
-all, the two nations were rivals in trade, and the Dutch
-were going ahead every day. The bulk of the carrying
-trade of the world was in their hands; they waxed fat and
-kicked. The heads of the Commonwealth knew that war
-with Holland would be popular, and in spite of Cromwell’s
-opposition they proceeded to provoke it. A Navigation
-Act was passed, aimed directly at Dutch trade. Henceforth
-no goods were to be imported into England unless
-they came in English ships or in those of the country which
-produced them. This hit the Dutch hard, and war began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Under Van Tromp, a genuine son of the Vikings, who
-had risen from cabin-boy to admiral, the Dutch sent to sea
-a magnificent fleet of one hundred sail, which the raw
-English navy could scarcely hope to beat. The first shot
-was fired off Dover in May 1652, and you already know
-something of the course of events up to that bitter day in
-November of the same year, when Blake was beaten by
-a largely superior force of the enemy, and wrote despairingly
-to the Council of State to suggest that he should be
-retired on account of his “insufficiency.” You know, too,
-what their answer was. They were true to their promise,
-and by the middle of February 1653 Blake was provided
-with more than seventy sail, ready to renew the contest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had not long to wait for a chance of retrieving his
-credit. Tromp, with ninety ships, was returning with the
-home-coming fleet from the Indies, and Blake was scouring
-the Channel looking for him. On Friday, February 18,
-Blake sighted him; but Tromp took him at a disadvantage,
-and he had to bear the brunt of the fighting with his single
-division of twelve ships, the remaining divisions under Penn
-and Monk being then at a considerable distance from the
-scene of the battle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle raged fiercely round the <span class='it'>Triumph</span>, and Blake
-was in the utmost peril. He himself was severely wounded,
-and large numbers of his men fell around him. Four ships
-were captured, and the end seemed near, when Penn and
-Monk arrived. At once the fight assumed a different complexion,
-and the captured ships were retaken before nightfall
-suspended the battle. Neither side could yet claim
-the victory, and the loss of both, though very great, was
-fairly equal. In the night Tromp slipped off; but he was
-followed, and the battle was resumed. The “four days’
-battle” ended on Sunday the 20th. Five Dutch ships had
-been sunk and four captured, as well as some thirty or forty
-merchant vessels. Tromp, however, got the remainder
-away safely by dint of clever seamanship. The Dutch had
-been beaten, but they were by no means dismayed, and
-immediately began to make preparations for a renewal of
-the struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While Blake was making a slow recovery from his
-wound news arrived that the Dutch were again at sea.
-Before, however, he could reach the fleet a great battle
-had been fought. He and his squadron did not arrive till
-late in the afternoon, but their coming turned the victory
-into a rout. Tromp’s vessel was boarded; but to save her
-from falling into the hands of his foes, he blew her up, and
-by a miracle saved both himself and his ship. Another
-English victory followed, in which the gallant Tromp was
-killed, and then the war was brought to a close. Holland
-paid a war indemnity, and agreed that the English were
-masters of the sea. Henceforth the Dutch might only pass
-through the Strait of Dover by the kind permission of
-England. Blake and Monk received the thanks of Parliament,
-gold medals, and gold chains valued at £300. A few
-weeks’ rest restored Blake to health so far as to enable him
-to return to the fleet, and all was ready for his next exploit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cromwell, now dictator, turned his attention to Spain,
-which was the most dangerous trade rival of the English
-Puritans in America. Accordingly, in 1654, he sent
-out two fleets, one to the Mediterranean under Blake,
-the other to the West Indies under Penn and Venables.
-Blake had a general commission to protect British commerce,
-and this he interpreted as permission to attack
-the Barbary pirates, who levied blackmail on all the commerce
-of Europe passing their shores. Scores of luckless
-merchantmen bound for the Levant were boarded and
-rifled, and their crews carried off as slaves. Possibly the
-compilers of the English Church Litany had the sufferings
-of thousands of their fellow-countrymen in mind when
-they wrote, “That it may please Thee to show Thy pity
-upon all prisoners and captives.” Blake ran into the
-harbour of Tunis in spite of fleet, castles, moles, batteries,
-and musketeers, and in a few hours nine vessels of the
-pirate fleet were in flames, and he was outward bound,
-congratulating himself on a good work well done. This
-gallant exploit made the British name a terror in the
-Mediterranean. He now visited the chief ports of the
-western Mediterranean “to show his flag” and everywhere
-he was received with fear and trembling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He returned to England in October 1655, but spent little
-time ashore, for the Protector had now a daring task to set
-him. Penn and Venables had failed miserably in the West
-Indies, and British arms had suffered a discreditable reverse.
-Cromwell was not the man to overlook failures of this sort.
-He promptly sent the quarrelsome officers to the Tower,
-and dispatched Blake to the Spanish Main to do the work
-properly. In a preliminary cruise off the Spanish coast he
-captured several Plate ships, and in 1657 he set sail for
-Santa Cruz, in Teneriffe, where he accomplished his last
-and most brilliant feat. Within the horseshoe-shaped
-harbour, belted with forts mounting the heaviest artillery
-then known, lay sixteen great galleons, all well armed. The
-Spaniards boasted that within that death-trap their treasure-ships
-were absolutely safe. The historian of the time
-wrote truly: “All men who knew the place concluded
-that no sober men, with whatever courage soever endued,
-would ever undertake it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Blake discovered that the six largest galleons were drawn
-up in line, commanding the entrance to the harbour, and
-that behind them were the other ships. When he learnt
-this he might have repeated Cromwell’s exulting cry at
-Dunbar, “The Lord hath delivered them into my hands.”
-If he ran in with a fair wind and a flowing tide beneath the
-walls of the great fort at the entrance, little harm could
-come to him, for its great guns could not readily be
-depressed so as to stay his progress. Further, the massing
-of the largest galleons at the harbour mouth covered the fire
-of the ships behind, and prevented several of the forts from
-firing lest they should injure friend and foe alike.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To make a long story short, Blake dashed into the
-harbour, attacked at the very closest quarters, and before
-evening had burnt, blown up, or sunk every Spanish ship
-in it. Then, under cover of the dense masses of smoke
-blowing seaward, the British ships crept out into safety,
-with not above fifty men slain outright and one hundred
-and twenty wounded. Nothing so daring or so brilliant
-had ever been accomplished before, not even by Drake
-when he “singed the King of Spain’s beard.” The sea-power
-of Spain was absolutely annihilated, and England
-rang with the praises of the man who had done it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A public thanksgiving was held, and the Protector wrote
-to the victorious admiral: “We cannot but take notice
-how eminently it hath pleased God to make use of you in
-this service, assisting you with wisdom in the conduct and
-courage in the execution; and have sent you a small jewel”—his
-own portrait set in gold and diamonds—“as a testimony
-of our own and the Parliament’s good acceptance of
-your courage in this action.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Blake now sailed for home, and his countrymen eagerly
-waited his coming. Alas, he was never to tread the shores of
-his native land again, never to see the fields and hedgerows,
-the hills and moorlands of his dear-loved West Country.
-Worn out by the fatigues and anxieties of warfare, he grew
-feebler day by day, and constantly asked if the shores of
-England were in sight. When at last the look-out at the
-masthead cried “Land O!” Blake was a dying man. He
-called his captains to him and bade them farewell. Then
-just as his ship entered Plymouth Sound he breathed his last.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In what lay the great glory and inspiration of Blake’s
-life? Not so much in his brilliant achievements, not so
-much in the care and forethought which he exhibited, as
-in his chivalrous character and splendid patriotism. His
-men loved him and honoured him because his honour and
-honesty of purpose were unimpeachable, and because he had
-no trace of self-seeking in his character. His first and only
-thought was for the honour and glory of his land. He
-was a British sailor—nothing more and nothing less. To
-him was entrusted the sacred jewel of the national honour,
-and never was it placed in cleaner or more zealous hands.
-“It is not for us,” he once declared, “to mend state affairs,
-but to keep foreigners from fooling us.” This was the
-watchword of his life, and this was his fame.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo268.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0056' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='268' id='Page_268'></span></p>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XIV.<br/> FROM THE RESTORATION TO THE REVOLUTION.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE RESTORATION OF CHARLES THE SECOND.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Who comes with rapture greeted, and caressed</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>With frantic love,—his kingdom to regain?</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/i.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='I'/>T is the 29th of May, 1660, and London is a gala city.
-The streets are hung with tapestry; flags and banners
-wave from the housetops; the citizens in their best
-attire throng the streets; the mayor, aldermen, and the gilds
-in all their bravery of ceremonial robes and gold chains
-hie them to the city gates; every balcony is full of lords and
-ladies clad in the sumptuous trappings of state; drums roll,
-trumpets sound, and bells clash from the steeples. The
-guns of the Tower roar out a welcome, and loud cries
-of “The king! the king!” are heard. His procession
-approaches “with a triumph of twenty thousand horse and
-foot, brandishing their swords and shouting with inexpressible
-joy.” Now you see him sitting his horse with easy
-grace, and bowing calmly as he responds to the acclamations
-of the crowd. He is tall and graceful, his countenance somewhat
-swarthy and forbidding. He smiles as maidens strew
-flowers in his way and men cheer until they can cheer no
-more. “It must be my own fault,” he says, “that I have
-not come back sooner, for I find nobody who does not tell
-me that he has always longed for my return.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He passes on to Whitehall and takes possession of the
-palace from which his father stepped on to the scaffold.
-Courtiers and sycophants, and honest men with tears in
-their eyes, crowd the presence-chamber to kiss his hands and
-wish him a long and happy reign, while the citizens outside
-give themselves up to unrestrained joy. A special Lord
-Mayor’s show is paraded as part of the festivities, and several
-of the pageants represent scenes from the life of the king
-who has just come into his own again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at this device now passing on a great wheeled
-platform. It is a scene in Boscobel Wood. In the midst
-is a spreading oak, and high in the branches you see a
-figure representing Charles hiding from the Commonwealth
-soldiers, who are searching for him below. This incident
-actually happened just nine years ago, after the “crowning
-mercy” of Worcester, when Cromwell thoroughly routed
-the Royalists and the young prince was a hunted fugitive.
-Another scene in the show represents him riding towards
-safety as the servant of faithful Jane Lane, who sits behind
-him trembling with anxiety. The fugitive is now receiving
-the obeisance of a gay, glittering throng in the palace of his
-sires. As he does so he recalls the shifts and subterfuges,
-the hairbreadth escapes, the privations and perils of those
-dark days, and bitterly contrasts the glorious present with
-the long years of his shabby and penurious exile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now he is crowned and anointed king—hailed
-with enthusiasm by the very men who overthrew his
-father and consented unto his death. How has this
-wondrous change come about? Cromwell built his power
-on the sand, and with his last breath it fell to pieces
-like a house of cards. His son Richard, an easy-going
-country squire devoted to hawking, hunting, and horse-racing,
-hated the greatness which was thrust upon him,
-and within a year laid down his office. Then “Honest
-George” Monk, in command of the army in Scotland,
-saw that the hour had arrived when his countrymen
-were eager for steady and lawful government in place
-of the harsh and uncertain rule of the sword. He
-marched south, and the Londoners hailed him with wild
-shouts of delight. Like the Israelites of old time they
-cried, “Give us a king to reign over us,” and Charles
-was invited to return and claim his birthright.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The monarchy has been restored, and what manner of
-man is he who sets up the throne anew? Nature has given
-him excellent parts and a good temper; he has polite and
-engaging manners and a unique experience of the world; but
-otherwise he is utterly selfish and utterly ungrateful, “without
-desire of renown and without sensibility to reproach.”
-He is a cynic; he has absolutely no faith in human nature;
-he believes that every man has his price; and he values
-his kingship precisely for the amount of selfish indulgence
-which it can afford him. The father who was sent to
-the block was an angel of light compared with the son who
-has now been recalled to fill the empty throne. Forthwith
-he tramples all that is good as well as all that is harsh and
-unlovely in Puritanism under foot. He sets the nation a
-shameless example of licence and frivolity, and his subjects
-are not slow to imitate it. His court is filled with every
-kind of open wickedness; religion is scoffed at; morality,
-honour, steadfastness, and justice are fit subjects for the ribald
-jests of reckless roysterers. The pendulum has swung to the
-other extreme with a vengeance. Never before has national
-virtue been at so low an ebb.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reign of Charles was one long reaction in Church,
-State, and national life. The efficiency of old Noll’s day became
-a thing of the past. The king wasted huge sums of
-money on his follies and vices, and the services were shamefully
-starved. Only fourteen years ago the Dutch were forced
-to acknowledge England as mistress of the seas; and now
-they entered the Thames, destroyed Sheerness, sailed up the
-Medway to Chatham, and burnt eight men of war, while
-the navy, paralyzed by corruption and mismanagement, was
-powerless to chastise them. At this humiliation the anger of
-the nation knew no bounds. “Then at length tardy justice
-was done to the memory of Oliver. Everywhere men
-magnified his valour, genius, and patriotism. Everywhere
-it was remembered how, when he ruled, all foreign powers
-had trembled at the name of England; how the States
-General, now so haughty, had crouched at his feet; and
-how, when it was known that he was no more, Amsterdam
-was lighted up as for a great deliverance, and children
-ran along the canals shouting for joy that the devil was
-dead! Even Royalists exclaimed that the State could be
-saved only by calling the old soldiers of the Commonwealth
-to arms.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Tilbury Fort, the place where Elizabeth had,
-with manly spirit, hurled foul scorn at Parma and Spain, was
-insulted by the invaders. The roar of foreign guns was
-heard, for the first and last time, by the citizens of London.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While this ignominious war was raging, London suffered
-two disasters of such a terrible character that men openly
-spoke of them as the well-deserved scourges of Almighty
-God. Turn to the diary of Samuel Pepys, the Admiralty
-clerk who so faithfully mirrored the loose, careless life of
-the time, and read the entry of July 7, 1665: “This day,
-much against my will, I did in Drury Lane see two or
-three houses marked with a red cross upon the doors and
-‘Lord, have mercy upon us’ writ there, which was a sad
-sight to me, being the first of the kind that to my remembrance
-I ever saw.” The Great Plague had arrived.
-Those who were stricken with the disease began to shiver;
-then they had headaches and were light-headed. On the
-third or fourth day they fainted suddenly, and spots broke
-out on the breast. As soon as these appeared, all hope was
-gone; the poor victim was dead within an hour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we follow Pepys’s pages we see alarm spreading, the
-clergy taking flight to the country, the stoppage of all work
-and trading, grass growing in the deserted streets, the bells
-tolling all day long, searchers going about to discover infected
-houses, dreaded death-carts rumbling over the stones
-to the mournful cry of “Bring out your dead;” then the last
-scene of all—the carts shooting their contents into huge
-pits dug at St. Martin’s in the Fields and at Mile-End.
-It is a terrible picture, and we shudder as we realize it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All infected houses become prisons, with watchers at the
-doors so that none might come out or go in. Pepys tells
-us that a complaint was brought against a man for taking
-a child from an infected house, and the case was inquired
-into by the magistrates. They discovered that the child
-was the little daughter of a saddler. All his other children
-had died of the plague, and the saddler and his wife were
-shut up in their house, never expecting to leave it alive.
-They had one only wish in their despair, and that was
-to save the life of their little girl. At last they managed
-to communicate with a friend, who promised to take her
-away from London. The child was handed down from the
-window stark naked, and the friend, having dressed it in
-fresh clothes, took it to Greenwich, where, when the
-story was known, it was permitted to remain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In all, the death-roll of that terrible year reached nearly
-100,000, or about one-fifth of the total population. The
-worst time of all was in the first fortnight of September,
-when the deaths were over a thousand a day. As the
-summer passed, and the cold, high winds of winter blew,
-the plague gradually passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scarcely, however, had the dead-cart ceased to go its
-rounds when fire laid well-nigh the whole city in ruins. It
-broke out at one o’clock on Sunday morning, September 2,
-1666, at the house of a baker in Pudding Lane, not far from
-the Monument which now commemorates the visitation.
-Most of the city was then built of wood, and as a high
-wind was blowing at the time the flames spread rapidly.
-The citizens could do nothing to stop the fire, and before
-long the city from the Tower to the Temple, and from the
-river to Smithfield, was one sheet of flame. A great terror
-seized the people, but as soon as they recovered from their
-fright they endeavoured to save what they could from the
-flames. Five, ten, and even fifty pounds were given for
-a cart, and the barges and boats on the river were laden
-to the gunwale with fugitives and their belongings. The
-fields round London were full of furniture and of people
-camping out amidst the pitiful remnants of property which
-they had saved. On Monday night the streets were as light
-as noonday, and the flames had reached St. Paul’s.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>John Evelyn tells us in his diary that the stones flew
-like bombs, melting lead ran down the streets in streams,
-and the very pavements were red hot. “God grant,” says
-he, “my eyes may never behold the like. I now saw about
-ten thousand houses all in one flame. The noise and cracking
-and thunder of the flames, the shrieking of women and
-children, the hurry of the people, the fall of towers, houses,
-and churches, was like an awful storm. The air was so hot
-that at last men were not able to approach the fire, and
-were forced to stand still and let the flames burn on, which
-they did for nearly two miles in length and one in breadth.
-The clouds of smoke were dismal, and reached nearly fifty-six
-miles in length. London was, but is no more!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last the fire was checked by blowing up a number
-of houses with gunpowder. The wind fell, and on Wednesday
-morning the fire ceased, “as it were by a command
-from Heaven.” It began at Pudding Lane, and it ended
-at Pie Corner in Giltspur Street. Actually 13,000 houses
-and 89 churches were burnt down, but only fourteen persons
-were killed. Every dwelling and building over an area of
-436 acres was destroyed. The fire, however, was a blessing
-in disguise, for it swept away the foul courts and alleys
-and destroyed the plague germs lingering in the soil.
-Wider and more open streets were built, and new and
-stately churches arose. The genius of Sir Christopher
-Wren was afforded a unique opportunity. He re-created
-St. Paul’s, his chief monument, and erected fifty-four
-churches, each with its own special features, yet all in
-harmony with the great mother-church of the city.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The restoration of Charles was a triumph for the Church
-of England, and marked the downfall of that religious
-toleration which Cromwell had established. At the instigation
-of Clarendon, the only man of real zeal and probity
-about the king, the Cavalier Parliament passed a series of
-spiteful Acts against the Puritans, or Nonconformists, as they
-may now be called. Henceforth all mayors, aldermen,
-councillors, and other borough officers must renounce the
-Solemn League and Covenant, deny the lawfulness of taking
-up arms against the king, and receive the sacrament according
-to the rites of the Church of England. This harsh and
-unfair Act was a great blow to the Nonconformists, and it
-practically drove them out of local government. They were
-next excluded from the Church by the Act of Uniformity;
-and then the expelled ministers began to form congregations
-outside the pale. But a new Act of Parliament forbidding
-the holding of all religious services except those of the
-Church of England, under pain of fine and imprisonment,
-was speedily passed to keep them forcibly within the fold.
-This shocking law actually made family worship a crime
-if more than five persons not belonging to the family were
-present. Then came another Act which forbade ministers
-expelled under the Act of Uniformity from teaching in a
-school or living within five miles of a city or corporate
-town. Thus the Church system which Laud had lost his
-head in trying to establish in the reign of Charles the First
-became the law of the land by the will of the people in the
-reign of his indifferent and cynical son.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The author of these cruel Acts was not long to sit high
-in the king’s favour. He was a grave, ponderous man,
-with the utmost scorn for the idle triflers and wicked
-spendthrifts amongst whom the king wasted his days.
-Frequently he took Charles to task for his misdemeanours,
-and by his importunity goaded him into keeping his
-promises. “He often said it was the making those promises
-which had brought the king home, and the keeping of
-them must keep him at home.” The king’s friends hated
-the solemn, long-winded Polonius, and one of them used to
-whisper in Charles’s ear, “There goes your schoolmaster.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After the second Dutch War, in which England was
-covered with disgrace, Clarendon was a convenient scapegoat,
-and Charles dismissed him without a shade of regret
-and no single mark of gratitude for the long and faithful
-service which the deposed chancellor had rendered him
-both in exile and after the Restoration. Clarendon’s fall
-was the signal for great rejoicing amongst the shameless
-crew which surrounded the king. As he left Whitehall,
-disgraced and abandoned, a courtier assured Charles “that
-this was the first time he could ever call him King of
-England, being freed from this great man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now, “freed from this great man,” Charles began
-to descend deeper and deeper into the mire. He formed
-a ministry of his friends, and laid deep plans for ruling
-as an absolute king, but without running any undue risks.
-Hitherto he had laughed at religion; now, when sick and
-serious, he turned to the Church of Rome, and desired to
-re-establish it in his land, but again without running undue
-risks. On one principle and one principle alone Charles
-was absolutely fixed—he would never go on his travels
-again. Then he perpetrated his last and foullest piece of
-infamy—he sold himself to Lewis of France for a miserable
-£200,000 a year. Henceforth he was the pensioner of the
-French king and a secret traitor to his own subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No king so absolute as Charles when suddenly he was
-stricken with apoplexy. On his deathbed he was openly
-received into the Roman Catholic Church, to which he had
-long secretly belonged. He lingered until Friday, February
-6, 1685. As the morning light began to peep through
-the windows he apologized to those who had watched him
-through the night for all the trouble which he had caused
-them. “He had been,” he said, “a most unconscionable
-time dying, but he hoped they would excuse it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So passes Charles. One of his friends had previously
-suggested this epitaph:—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Here lies our sovereign lord the king,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Whose word no man relies on;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Who never said a foolish thing,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And never did a wise one.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was, however, another and a better side to
-Charles’s character. He frequented the society of the most
-learned men of his time, founded the Royal Society, and
-attended its meetings. He had undeniable talents and a
-taste for arts and sciences, but his talents only served to bring
-into high relief his grovelling vices and sordid treasons.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo269.jpg' alt='' id='i269' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>JANE LANE HELPING PRINCE CHARLES TO ESCAPE.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the fresco by C. W. Cope, R.A., in the Houses of Parliament.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo272.jpg' alt='' id='i272' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>RESCUED FROM THE PLAGUE, LONDON, 1665.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Frank W. W. Topham, R.I. By permission of the Artist.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo276.jpg' alt='' id='i276' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Fall of Clarendon.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by E. M. Ward, R.A., in the National Gallery of British Art.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='278' id='Page_278'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo278.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0057' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>JAMES, DUKE OF MONMOUTH.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Step by step, and word by word: who is ruled may read,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Suffer not the old kings—for we know the breed.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more the scene is laid in Whitehall. James, the
-brother of Charles, is king, and he is now about to grant an
-audience to a nephew who has unsuccessfully rebelled against
-him and lies under sentence of death. Look at the king’s
-face. You see at once that he is a slow, narrow man,
-singularly obstinate, harsh, and implacable. His heart is
-as hard as the marble chimney-pieces of his own palace.
-He never forgets and he never forgives an injury. As you
-glance at his hard, cruel face you feel that he will be deaf
-to every cry of mercy and relentless to every touch of pity.
-Now the door of an antechamber is thrown open and the
-Duke of Monmouth, a handsome man, pale as death, is
-ushered in. His arms are bound behind him with a silken
-cord. At once he throws himself on the ground, and in an
-agony of weeping crawls to the king’s feet. He begs—oh,
-how passionately he begs—for life, only life—life at any
-price. In frenzied tones he beseeches his uncle to show
-him mercy for the sake of the late king, his father. If
-he is spared, he will never, never offend again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am sorry for you,” says the king in icy tones, “but
-you have brought all this upon yourself. You have called
-yourself king, you have raised rebellion, and foully aspersed
-me in your Declaration. Your treasons are black and many.
-There is no hope of pardon for you this side the grave.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At once the wretched prisoner cries out that he signed
-the Declaration without reading it; that it was the work of
-a villain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you expect me to believe,” says James with contempt,
-“that you set your hand to a paper of such moment
-without knowing what it contained?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now Monmouth makes his final and most abject appeal.
-He who has been the champion of Protestantism, and has
-called men to arms against a Catholic king, now offers to
-be reconciled with the Church of Rome! The king, always
-eager to make converts, immediately offers his spiritual
-assistance, but not a word does he say of pardon or respite.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is there no hope?” asks Monmouth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The king turns away in silence, and the prisoner rises
-from his knees. The bitterness of death is past; his craven
-weakness has gone; he leaves the room with a firm step.
-In the Tower he takes farewell of his children and of the
-brave wife who has reclaimed him from a life of vice.
-Then he goes to the block, and his head is hacked off
-by an executioner whose nerve has failed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let the story of the ill-starred rising be told. Monmouth
-was the son of King Charles and Lucy Walters, the daughter
-of a Welsh Royalist. In his thirty-first year he was probably
-the most popular man in England, extremely handsome, and
-gifted with the most charming manners. His father had
-conferred all possible honours on him, and as there was a
-movement to exclude his Roman Catholic uncle James from
-the succession he had come to regard himself as heir to the
-throne. He had proved himself no mean soldier on battlefields
-in the Netherlands and in Scotland, where he had
-shown mercy to the vanquished. He neglected no opportunity
-of making himself popular with the people. “He
-stood godfather to the children of the peasantry, mingled in
-every rustic sport, wrestled, played at quarter-staff, and won
-foot races in his boots against fleet runners in shoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His great claim, however, to the sympathy of the people
-was his staunch Protestantism. As a matter of fact, he had
-no settled religious opinions. His private life was bad, and
-his Protestantism was but a means to an end. He had
-taken part in a reckless plot towards the close of his father’s
-reign, and had been obliged to take refuge in the Netherlands,
-with a sentence of death hanging over his head. On
-his deathbed, when Charles blessed his children, his eldest
-and best-loved son was an exile and a wanderer. The dying
-king never mentioned his name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>James began his reign by promising to “preserve the
-government both in Church and State as by law established.”
-There was no opposition to him; men were
-ready to rely upon “the word of a king who was never
-worse than his word.” They remembered his good work
-at the Admiralty and praised his personal courage, while
-they hated and feared his religion. Really, James was a
-stronger and better man than Charles; but while the late
-king was witty, gracious, good-natured, and easy-going,
-James was dull, suspicious, sullen, and silent. A contemporary
-said, “Charles could have been a great king if he
-would, and James would have been a great king if he
-could.” While Charles cared nothing for religion, and
-would risk nothing for the Church which he favoured,
-James was a zealous Roman Catholic, and was prepared
-to risk his crown for the sake of his Church.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Protestantism of the nation was soon alarmed.
-The king openly heard mass, and a week or two later the
-rites of the Church of Rome, after an interval of a hundred
-and twenty-seven years, were once more performed at Westminster.
-Then came a proclamation suspending the penal
-laws against Nonconformists, and thousands of prisoners,
-including the author of “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” were
-released. Parliament showed no anger; it was packed
-with the king’s friends. They granted James a most liberal
-income, which almost made him independent of further
-Parliamentary grants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile, Monmouth in Holland was busy hatching
-a plot to oust James and secure the throne for himself.
-His fellow-conspirator was Archibald Campbell, Earl of
-Argyll, the leader of the Covenanters who had suffered
-persecutions many and sore during the last reign. Two
-years after the Restoration Episcopacy had been re-established
-in Scotland, and more than three hundred ministers
-had given up their livings rather than conform. Severe
-fines were inflicted on all who dared to abstain from
-public worship in the parish churches, and troopers rode
-about the country cursing and swearing, harrying and
-plundering, wounding and killing to their hearts’ content.
-Many of the ejected ministers continued to preach in the
-open air, and their flocks, greatly daring, attended their secret
-ministrations. “Conventicles” increased daily in number.
-With a Bible in one hand and a sword in the other, the
-blue-bonneted Covenanters gathered on lonely hillsides for
-worship, while scouts kept watch for the coming of the
-dreaded troopers. Persecution at last drove them to arms.
-After a victory at Drumclog, they were utterly defeated
-at Bothwell Bridge, and a terribly cruel time of shooting
-and hanging, torture and transportation set in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Argyll’s father had been leader of the Covenanters in
-the days of Charles the First, and after the Restoration he
-lost his head. The son, Monmouth’s fellow-conspirator,
-refused to take the oath of the Scottish Test Act without
-adding a statement that thereby he was not precluded from
-trying to amend both Church and State. For this he was
-brought to trial, and on evidence that would not hang a
-dog condemned to death. Fortunately, however, he escaped
-in disguise, and found a refuge in Amsterdam, where the
-leading English and Scottish exiles were assembled. Though
-there was not much sympathy between Monmouth and
-Argyll, they joined hands, and arranged that the great
-MacCallum More should rouse his clansmen and head a
-rising in Scotland. This was to be promptly followed by
-Monmouth’s descent on England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Scottish expedition was doomed to failure from the
-first, because it was commanded, not by a single general,
-but by a committee, which disputed and quarrelled on
-every possible occasion. The expedition reached Campbeltown,
-on the coast of Kintyre, and here Argyll issued
-a proclamation declaring that King James had murdered
-King Charles, and that Monmouth was the rightful king.
-His clansmen flocked to him; but the Lowland leaders
-despised them, and endeavoured to raise the Cameronians
-of Ayrshire, who showed not the slightest disposition to
-take up arms. Soon the committee was at loggerheads,
-and all was confusion and despondency. Food ran short,
-and the Highlanders deserted in hundreds. Argyll now
-yielded to the committeemen, who urged him to march
-into the Lowlands. Ere a battle could be fought his army
-had melted away, and his only safety lay in flight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Argyll disguised himself as a peasant, and pretended to
-be the guide of Major Fullarton. The friends journeyed
-through Renfrewshire until they reached the junction of
-the Black Cart and the White Cart. Here they found that
-the only practicable ford was held by a party of militia.
-The travellers were challenged, their answers were evasive,
-and an attempt was made to seize the supposed guide. He
-broke loose and sprang into the water, where for a short
-time he held his own against five assailants. His pistols,
-however, had been wetted and were useless. Struck down
-with a broadsword, he was easily overcome, and his captors
-learnt to their dismay that the champion of the Protestant
-religion, the heir of a great and honoured name in Scotland,
-was in their hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On June 20, 1685, Argyll was dragged through the
-streets of Edinburgh bareheaded, his hands tied behind his
-back, guards surrounding him, and the hangman walking in
-front. Up the Canongate and the High Street he passed,
-and when the castle was reached he was put in irons and
-informed that he had but a few days to live. No new trial
-was necessary; he was to be executed on his old sentence.
-He heard his fate with majestic resignation, for he did not
-fear death. Torture was threatened, but the threat did not
-move him, and not a word would he say to betray a friend.
-He composed his own epitaph, and spent the short remaining
-hours in devotion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the very day on which he was to die he dined
-well, and according to his wont, lay down for a short
-slumber after the meal. A Lord of the Council who came
-with a message insisted on seeing him. He was told that
-the earl was asleep, but could not believe that such was
-the case. The door of the cell was softly opened, “and
-there lay Argyll on his bed, sleeping in his irons the placid
-sleep of infancy.” In his last hour he wrote a most loving
-and cheering letter to his wife, and at the call of his jailers
-mounted the scaffold with undaunted courage. He made a
-short speech to the people, declaring that he died “not only
-a Protestant, but with a heart-hatred of Popery, of Prelacy,
-and of all superstition.” He then embraced his friends,
-gave them tokens of remembrance, prayed a few moments,
-and the axe fell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, having seen a noble man pay the price of failure,
-let us turn to the progress of Monmouth. On the
-morning of June 11, 1685, a week before the capture of
-Argyll, three ships appeared off the little port of Lyme
-Regis, in Dorsetshire. The inhabitants from the cliffs saw
-eighty well-armed men land on the shore, kneel down, and
-pray for a blessing on their venture. Then they saw a
-gallant figure draw his sword and lead his men over the
-cliffs into the little town. His name and the character of
-his mission were soon known, and there was great excitement
-in the place. The fishermen flocked to him shouting,
-“A Monmouth! a Monmouth! the Protestant religion!”
-Meanwhile a blue flag had been set up in the market-place,
-and now Monmouth’s Declaration was read. It was full of
-wild charges against James, and accused him of burning
-London and poisoning the late king, his brother. James
-was denounced as a tyrant, murderer, and usurper. Monmouth
-said that he had come as captain-general of the
-English Protestants in arms against tyranny and Popery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The news of his coming spread like wildfire through the
-West Country. Many of the people were Dissenters, who
-had suffered all kinds of petty persecution, and they hailed
-the advent of Monmouth with the utmost eagerness. They
-remembered how he had endeared himself to them when he
-made his progress through the country five years before, and
-they rushed to his banner with alacrity. By the time he
-reached Exeter nearly all Devonshire had flocked to him,
-and nine hundred young men in white uniform marched
-before him into the city. Recruits came in by hundreds
-daily; there were not enough clerks to take down their
-names. Arming and drilling went on all day, and everything
-promised well.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On June 18, Monmouth reached the pleasant and prosperous
-town of Taunton, which gave him a right royal
-welcome. The children of the men who had helped Blake
-to hold out against the Cavaliers now welcomed Monmouth
-with unrestrained joy. Every door and window was adorned
-with wreaths of flowers, and no man appeared in the streets
-without the badge of the popular cause in his hat. Damsels
-of the best families in the town wove colours for the rebels.
-One flag in particular was embroidered with the royal arms,
-and was offered to Monmouth by a party of school-girls.
-Their school-mistress presented the duke with a small Bible
-of great price. He took it with a show of reverence. “I
-come,” he said, “to defend the truths contained in this
-book, and to seal them, if it must be so, with my blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us hasten on to the final scene. It is Sunday
-morning, July 5, 1685, and “King” Monmouth is standing
-on the lofty tower of Bridgwater parish church, looking
-out over an expanse of fertile and well-wooded country,
-with the Mendip Hills to the north-east and the Quantocks
-to the south-west. He turns his eyes anxiously towards the
-south-east, where there is a wide extent of dreary morass
-known as Sedgemoor. In the villages round the moor the
-royal troops are encamped, and are rapidly drinking themselves
-drunk with Somerset cider. Monmouth is in a
-despondent mood; his heart has failed him, and he has
-already meditated flight. The trainbands of the surrounding
-counties and the life-guards of the king are closing
-in upon him in overwhelming force, and if victory is
-to be secured a battle must be fought without delay.
-He forthwith determines to march that very night, under
-cover of the darkness, and fall on the surprised enemy
-before dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the clock strikes eleven, Monmouth and his men
-march out of Taunton, the moon shining brightly and the
-northern streamers flashing in the sky. By one o’clock his
-half-armed rabble is on the moor, where the marsh-fog
-lies so thick that nothing can be seen fifty paces away.
-Between him and the enemy are three broad ditches or
-rhines full of mud and water. Monmouth knows of two of
-these ditches, and has planned the advance so as to cross
-them by the causeways. He is, however, ignorant of the
-third, and when his army reaches its brink it is powerless to
-cross and attack the king’s troops, only a few paces away.
-A random pistol-shot has already aroused the Royalists;
-their drums beat to arms, and the cavalry and foot, scrambling
-into order, advance towards the rhine which separates them
-from the enemy. “For whom are you?” shouts an officer
-of foot-guards. “For the king,” is the reply from the rebel
-ranks. “For which king?” is then demanded. The answer
-is a loud shout of “King Monmouth! God be with us!”
-The royal troops fire; the rebel horsemen flee, and the
-drivers of the ammunition wagons hasten after them with
-the powder and ball.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now the sun rises and the battle begins in earnest. It
-resolves itself into two rows of men firing at each other
-across a broad ditch of inky water. The Somersetshire
-rustics fight like veterans, but all in vain. The unequal
-contest is soon decided, and Monmouth, seeing that all hope
-has gone, turns and runs away. His deserted followers,
-however, make a gallant stand, but their scythes and pitchforks
-are useless against the swords of the king’s troopers.
-The arrival of the artillery brings the engagement to a speedy
-close. The rebel battalions waver, break, and flee, the
-Mendip miners alone remaining to stain the marshy ground
-with their blood. More than one thousand of the rebels
-lie dead on the field. The last battle has been fought on
-English ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But what of Monmouth? He did not draw rein until
-he reached Chedzoy, where he stopped a moment to mount
-a fresh horse and hide his blue ribbon and his George.
-He rode on all day towards the south-east, hoping to gain
-the New Forest, where he might lurk in the cabins of
-deer-stealers until an opportunity arrived to escape to the
-Continent. The night was passed in the open air; in the
-morning he and his companions found themselves ringed in
-by their foes. Monmouth changed clothes with a peasant
-and betook himself into a field, partly of rye, pease, and
-oats, partly overgrown with furze and brambles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A woman reported that she had seen two strangers enter
-the field, and soldiers, stimulated by the offer of £5,000 for
-the capture of the duke, were told off to watch the fences
-while dogs were turned out among the bushes. At nightfall
-no capture had been made. The fugitives lay close
-behind a thick hedge; thirty times they ventured to look
-out, and thirty times they saw an armed sentinel watching
-for them. At sunrise the search began again, and not a
-yard of the field went unexamined. At length a gaunt
-figure in a shepherd’s dress was discovered in a dry ditch.
-In his pockets were some raw pease, a watch, a purse of
-gold, and the George which he had received from the hands
-of his father in the days when he was the spoiled darling of
-the court.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wretched man was conveyed to London in a state
-of abject terror. He begged for an interview with his
-uncle, and what happened at that interview you already
-know. The scene with which this chapter opened was the
-sequel to his capture, the painful episode which preceded
-his execution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Woe to the vanquished!” James now wreaked such
-a vengeance on Monmouth’s poor, deluded followers that his
-name has become a byword of inhuman cruelty. A brutal
-soldier named Kirke was sent down to the west with his
-“lambs,” and the savage sport began. You may still see at
-Taunton the house in which he lodged. It was formerly an
-inn, and on its signpost he hanged scores of peasants, while
-his drums struck up and his trumpets sounded “so that they
-should have music to their dancing!” “My lord,” said the
-Bishop of Bath and Wells to Lord Feversham, who was
-equally ferocious, “this is murder, not law; the battle being
-over, these poor wretches should be tried.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then came Judge Jeffreys, a drunken, foul-mouthed,
-degraded wretch, with a forehead of brass and lungs of
-leather. Nothing more revolting than his so-called trials
-have ever disgraced our annals. He roared, he bullied, he
-blasphemed, he laughed, joked, and swore until men believed
-him to be drunk from morning till night. So he was—drunk
-with blood. When the “Bloody Assize” was concluded,
-Jeffreys openly boasted that he had hanged more
-traitors than all the Chief-justices since the Conquest. “At
-every spot where two roads met, and every market-place,
-on the green of every large village which had furnished
-Monmouth with soldiers, ironed corpses clattering in the
-wind, or heads and quarters stuck on poles, poisoned the
-air and made the traveller sick with horror. In many
-parishes the peasantry could not assemble in the house of
-God without seeing the ghastly face of a neighbour grinning
-at them over the porch.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps the most infamous sentence of this ermined
-fiend was that on Alice Lisle, the widow of a man who had
-been one of the regicides, and had filled high posts under
-the Commonwealth. Her crime was that she had sheltered
-two fugitives from Sedgemoor. She was old and deaf; she
-had no counsel to defend her; and she pleaded that what
-she had done was simply an act of common charity. So
-innocent and devoid of offence did she seem that the jury
-were inclined to acquit her. Jeffreys turned on them with
-the utmost fury, and at length they brought in a craven
-verdict of “guilty.” “Gentlemen,” said he, “in your place
-I would find her guilty were she my own mother.” It was
-the only word of truth which fell from his lips during the
-trial. Then he condemned her to be burnt alive that very
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Appeals for mercy came to him on all hands and from
-all classes. He consented to postpone the execution for
-five days, during which ladies of high rank interceded with
-James for the poor old lady, but all in vain. The only
-mercy wrung from the pitiless king was to forgo the
-burning in favour of hanging. She went to her death
-with serene courage, and good men and women held up
-their hands in horror throughout the length and breadth of
-the land. Elizabeth Gaunt, a pious and charitable Baptist,
-was actually burnt alive at Tyburn on a like charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The judicial murders reached in all three hundred and
-twenty; the number of persons transported as slaves to the
-West Indies was eight hundred and forty-one. The poor
-wretches destined to the plantations were distributed into
-gangs and bestowed on courtiers, who made huge sums by
-this traffic in the flesh and blood of their fellow subjects.
-The Chief-justice traded largely in pardons, and managed
-to accumulate a fortune in this way. No wonder the
-popular name for the estate which he bought with the
-money was <span class='it'>Aceldama</span>, “the field of blood.” The ladies
-of the queen’s household were specially prominent in this
-odious work of selling pardons. The little girls who had
-presented the banner to Monmouth became the portion of
-the queen’s maids of honour. Two of them died in prison,
-and the rest were only released upon payment of a heavy
-ransom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now James stands triumphant; his throne seems
-unassailable. He is at the height of his power and prosperity,
-and Jeffreys is his Lord Chancellor; yet already the
-writing appears on the wall, and the day of his doom is
-fast approaching. His terrible vengeance in the west has
-sent a thrill of horror through the whole country, and has
-made men loathe his very name.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo291.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0058' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo282.jpg' alt='' id='i282' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Last Sleep of Argyll.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the fresco by E. M. Ward., in Westminster Palace.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo290.jpg' alt='' id='i290' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Arrest of Alice Lisle.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by E. M. Ward, R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='292' id='Page_292'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo292.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0059' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XV.<br/> AFTER THE REVOLUTION.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>WILLIAM THE THIRD.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>I am constant as the northern star,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Of whose true-fixed and resting quality</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>There is no fellow in the firmament.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/a.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='A'/> PRINCE now passes by on horseback. He is small,
-almost diminutive, but by no means insignificant.
-His figure is slender and apparently feeble, but few
-men have borne such hardships and sustained such reverses
-of fortune as he. His forehead is ample, his nose aquiline,
-his eye bright and keen, his lips thin and compressed,
-his cheek pale and deeply furrowed by the marks of sickness
-and care. His whole aspect is pensive, severe, almost
-morose. At a glance you judge him to be neither a happy
-nor a good-humoured man. His bearing is simple; he
-cares nothing for pomp and parade, and he has no particular
-desire for popularity; yet there is an unmistakable
-dignity in his presence, and you feel as you gaze upon him
-that here is a man of high spirit and of great intellectual
-power, of constant and lofty soul, of unshaken courage and
-calm fortitude.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is William of Orange, the man whom the exasperated
-English people called upon to invade their country
-in order to preserve their liberties and the Protestant faith.
-He accepted the invitation, and without striking a blow
-marched from Torbay to London, where he and his wife
-became King and Queen of Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You are once more standing outside Whitehall. It is
-the thirteenth day of February, in the year of grace 1689.
-All London is agog with excitement. Trumpets sound
-and kettledrums roll as the Garter King of Arms in tabard
-and plumed hat rides up to the gates, followed by officials
-carrying the maces of the two Houses of Parliament, the
-Lord Chancellor and the Speaker, the chief officers of state,
-and a long train of coaches filled with noblemen and
-gentlemen. Then in loud, clear tones he proclaims the
-Prince and Princess of Orange King and Queen of England,
-and charges all Englishmen to bear, from that moment,
-true allegiance to the new sovereigns. He concludes by
-praying that God, who has already wrought a signal deliverance
-for Church and nation, will bless William and Mary
-with a long and happy reign.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Loud cheers break forth, and the procession re-forms
-and winds its way along the Strand to Temple Bar. The
-streets, the balconies, the very housetops are crowded with
-gazers, and all the steeples from the Abbey to the Tower
-ring out a joyous peal. The proclamation is repeated at
-Temple Bar and in front of the Royal Exchange, amidst
-the shouts of citizens and the din of trumpets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the evening every window from Whitechapel to
-Piccadilly is illuminated. The state rooms of the palace
-are thrown open, and are filled with a brilliant company of
-courtiers eager to see and to do homage to their new sovereigns.
-The features of the Prince of Orange are familiar
-to them from his portraits, but now for the first time most
-of them see him in the flesh. They cannot fail to note,
-even in this scene of gaiety, his cold, reserved manner and
-his lack of kingly grace. The new queen, however,
-charms all beholders. She is beautiful, winning, and
-gracious, with a good heart, an excellent disposition, and
-an affection for her sullen husband which nothing can daunt.
-It is clear from the first that Mary’s popularity will be
-great, and that William, though he may be respected, will
-never be loved by his new subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at yonder graybeard gazing up at the gay lights
-glittering in the windows. He has seen many changes in
-his sixty-five years of life, and he cannot but reflect on
-the strange vicissitudes through which the Stuart kings,
-now barred for ever from the British throne, have passed.
-Listen to him as he talks to the youth at his side. “My
-lad,” he says, “I remember well the Scotchman James the
-First feasting in this very hall, and expounding to his son
-Charles and the courtiers in right learned language the
-pestilent principles of what he called ‘statecraft’ and the
-divine right of kings to rule and to suspend the laws of
-the land at their will and pleasure. Right well did young
-Charles learn the lesson, and perchance we should blame
-his father and not him for all that happened. He held by
-the hateful doctrines which he had sucked in as a youth, like
-the obstinate man that he was, and ruthlessly destroyed
-our liberties till we were forced to take up arms and fight
-him for seven long, miserable years. I got this wound,
-that makes me go lame, at Naseby, the last great battle
-of the war. That was forty-three years ago save three
-months. I mind well seeing King Charles step through
-a hole in yonder wall on to the black-draped scaffold and
-lay his head on the block. It was a pitiful sight. I did
-not hold with killing him, mark you, but perchance it was
-better so.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then came the Commonwealth and the days of ‘Old
-Noll.’ It was not a ‘Merrie England’ in his time, I warrant
-you. There were no Maypoles and no Bartholomew
-fairs in his day; it was almost a sin to eat a mince pie.
-You young fellows would think yourselves hardly done by
-if those times were to return. But we were a strong nation
-then, my lad. Foreigners feared us, the Dutchmen had to
-eat humble pie, and money flowed right merrily into our
-coffers. It was a harsh and cheerless time, no doubt, and
-there was no liberty to speak of, but trade was brisk, and
-this land has never seen such good prosperous days since.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When Cromwell died—the night after the great
-storm—and his son Dick couldn’t be bothered with business
-of state, we sent across the sea for Charles’s son, and I
-remember well the joy with which these fickle folk greeted
-him as he rode into London on Oak-apple Day. But, my
-lad, I blush with shame to think of the foreign wickedness
-he brought with him, of the way he squandered the public
-money and ‘made Israel to sin.’ Not to my dying day
-shall I forget standing in the Strand—the very year in
-which you were born—and hearing the Dutch guns roaring
-in the Thames. It was a bitter disgrace; we all felt it,
-and we all longed for Blake and Old Noll again to send
-the Dutchman to the right about in double-quick time.
-Aye, and the second Charles did worse than that; he sold
-himself and us to the French king for a dirty pension, and
-plotted to overturn the Church and rob us of our liberties.
-But, thank God! he went to his own place before he had
-time to do his worst. And then came his brother, James
-the Second. Well, you know all about him. Two short
-months ago he lay within these very walls. Now they
-say he’s with the French king, and here’s his son-in-law
-standing in his shoes. The Dutchman is welcome, lad;
-he is the saviour of the country, and he has secured our
-liberties. Please God, under him the old days of good
-government and prosperity shall come back again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The liberties of the land were indeed secured, for no
-future British king would dare to tread the path which
-the Stuarts had trod to their destruction. William and
-Mary now ruled in England by virtue of a solemn contract
-made between themselves and their subjects. Before the
-crown was offered to them they were required to assent
-to the Declaration of Rights, which branded as illegal all
-the arrogant pretensions of the Stuarts. This Declaration
-asserted anew the national liberties, and is the third great
-charter of British liberty.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo296.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0060' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo294.jpg' alt='' id='i294' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Prince of Orange landing at Torbay.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by J. M. W. Turner, R.A. in the National Gallery.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='297' id='Page_297'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo297.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0061' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>THE GREAT DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>If I lose mine honour,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>I lose myself.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who comes hither? A soldier of commanding stature
-and strikingly handsome face; dignified, yet winning in
-manner; blessed, it would seem, with all possible gifts and
-graces. He is John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough,
-Prince of the Holy Roman Empire—one of the greatest
-military geniuses who ever lived, the victor of one of the
-decisive battles of the world, the man who overthrew the
-vast fabric of power which Lewis the Fourteenth had
-erected, the general who never fought a battle that he did
-not win and never besieged a place that he did not take!
-But do not be dazzled by his noble appearance and his
-military glory. His genius is transcendent, his courage is
-of the highest order, his personal graces are remarkable,
-yet he goes down to posterity as one of the greatest and
-meanest of mankind. Treacherous, ungrateful, sordid, and
-miserly, he is despicable as a man though unrivalled as a
-diplomatist and glorious as a soldier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>William the Third died before his work was done.
-The long duel between him and Lewis was only at its opening
-stages when he passed away, after a life of stubborn
-resistance to his invincible foe. His mantle fell on the
-shoulders of John Churchill, and he it was who finished the
-task which William did not live long enough to accomplish.
-Churchill was the son of a Devonshire cavalier, and
-early became a man of fashion and pleasure at the court
-of Charles the Second. At seventeen years of age he was
-an ensign in the army, and at twenty-two the colonel of
-an English regiment in the service of France. By this
-time the “handsome Englishman,” as Marshal Turenne
-dubbed him, had already shown the qualities of a great
-soldier. When an advance post was given up to the
-enemy, Turenne actually wagered a supper that Marlborough
-would recover it with half the number of men
-who had abandoned it, and the wager was won. He was
-absolutely fearless, bold and adventurous, cool and unruffled
-in temper, calm and far-seeing in judgment, and capable of
-enduring all sorts of fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thanks to the friendship of the Duke of York, afterwards
-James the Second, to whose fortunes he attached
-himself, he was raised to the peerage. At the time of
-Monmouth’s rising he was major-general of the forces, and
-the victory at Sedgemoor was largely due to his coolness
-and resource in rallying the royal troops when thrown into
-confusion by the night attack of the rebels.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marlborough owed much of his rapid promotion to his
-wife. In 1678 he married a penniless beauty of the court
-named Sarah Jennings. She was a lady of violent temper
-and a most domineering disposition, but she also possessed
-a strange power of winning and retaining affection. Marlborough’s
-love for his wife “ran like a thread of gold
-through the dark web of his career.” He hated letter-writing,
-chiefly because his spelling was so bad, yet in the
-midst of his marches and sieges, and even from the battlefield
-itself, he constantly wrote his wife letters breathing
-the most passionate devotion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Marlborough wooed and won Sarah Jennings,
-she was the bosom friend and constant companion of the
-Princess Anne, whom she had known from girlhood. Soon
-she obtained complete mastery over the weak and feeble
-nature of the princess, who became a mere puppet in her
-hands. The friends laid aside all the formalities of rank in
-their intercourse; Anne was Mrs. Morley, and the duchess
-Mrs. Freeman. Anne saw with her favourite’s eyes, heard
-with her ears, and spoke with her tongue. If she attempted
-to show one spark of independence, she was immediately
-crushed and deafened by the violent reproaches of the
-woman who was nominally her servant but really her tyrant.
-Anne’s husband, Prince George of Denmark, did not count.
-He was considered the most harmless and stupid man in
-the three kingdoms. “I have tried him drunk,” said Charles
-the Second, “and I have tried him sober, and there is
-nothing in him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Counting upon his wife’s complete control of the princess,
-Marlborough soon began to plot against William.
-His plan was to take advantage of the king’s unpopularity
-and drive him from the throne in favour of Anne. The
-plot was discovered, and William, usually calm and cool,
-was roused to the utmost indignation. “Were I and my
-Lord Marlborough private persons,” he cried, “the sword
-would have to settle between us.” At once the earl was
-stripped of his offices, and his wife was driven from St.
-James’s. Anne, however, refused to be parted from her
-friend, and left the court with her. Then Marlborough
-opened a treacherous correspondence with the deposed king
-at St. Germains. He basely revealed the plan of William’s
-intended expedition to Brest, expressed his deep sorrow at
-having deserted his rightful sovereign, and obtained a written
-promise of pardon. The attack on Brest was a complete
-failure; the enemy, thanks to Marlborough, was forewarned
-and forearmed, and more than a thousand Englishmen were
-slain. This piece of foul treachery is the blackest stain on
-Marlborough’s character.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Queen Mary died childless in 1694, and Anne became the
-acknowledged heiress to the throne. William was obliged
-to recall her to court, and with her returned the Marlboroughs,
-who were reluctantly received into favour once
-more. William hated the earl’s baseness and treachery, but
-he was obliged to recognize his splendid gifts, and to declare
-that he, of all men, was the fittest to carry on the great
-work of checking the ambition of Lewis. Marlborough
-was therefore sent to Flanders at the head of the army, and
-had only just taken command when William met with the
-accident which was the immediate cause of his death.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The succession of Anne practically made the Marlboroughs
-King and Queen of England. Three days later
-Marlborough was appointed captain-general of the British
-forces at home and abroad, and was entrusted with the
-entire direction of the war. Offices and gifts were showered
-upon his wife, and the ministers were chosen from his
-friends and adherents. Most of these men had been in
-treasonable correspondence with James; but now, in accordance
-with the loose notions of honour prevalent at the
-time, they abandoned him, and for their own selfish ends
-determined to keep Anne on the throne, secure the Protestant
-succession, and proceed with the war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Great Britain, Holland, Austria, and most of the smaller
-states of Germany were soon leagued in arms against France,
-and in 1703 Lewis found armies arrayed against him in the
-Spanish Netherlands, in South Germany, in North Italy, and
-Spain. Marlborough was in command of the allied British,
-Dutch, and Germans in the Netherlands. Though he had
-not yet displayed his superb military genius, he had already
-exhibited his unrivalled powers of conciliating the jarring
-elements which formed his army. In North Italy the
-Austrian forces were under Prince Eugene of Savoy, a man
-of extraordinary courage and talent, who was worshipped
-by his soldiers, and still lives as a hero in song. No two
-such generals had ever commanded armies against Lewis
-before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The beginning of the war was uneventful. Marlborough,
-however, managed to capture a number of
-fortresses along the line of the Meuse, and by doing so
-cut off the French from the Lower Rhine and made the
-invasion of Holland impossible. For the rest, the campaign
-was indecisive. On his return to England he was created
-Duke of Marlborough, the title by which he is best
-known.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marlborough was now on the threshold of his great
-career. He was fifty-four years old, and was about to
-win victories at an age when the work of most men is
-done. Like his predecessor William, he owed little to
-early training and much to his natural abilities. The
-keynote of his greatness as a general was the vigour and
-audacity of his plans. His greatest obstacle was the slowness
-and timidity of the Dutch, who refused again and
-again to co-operate in the brilliant movements which he
-suggested. Calm and unruffled, patient and tactful, he
-composed all the differences of his allies, and proved himself
-even greater in the council chamber than on the
-battlefield.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lewis now began a campaign on a scale of grandeur
-which was only equalled by Napoleon himself. He sent
-the flower of his army into Bavaria, where the local troops
-joined them. Then the army of the Danube, in massed
-and irresistible might, began its march on Vienna. Marlborough
-saw that Austria was bound to be conquered
-unless prompt action was taken, so, early in 1704, he made
-a dash for the Danube. To do this he had to march right
-across Germany from the Lower Rhine, while Prince
-Eugene had to cross the Alps from Italy. Both undertakings
-were full of difficulty, but the difficulties were
-overcome. By his boldness and secrecy he completely
-deceived his enemy, and not until he had crossed the
-Neckar and united his forces with those of Eugene was his
-real object revealed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marlborough was bound to fight a battle speedily, though
-his chances of success were doubtful, and the consequences
-of defeat fatal. If Lewis won, beyond all doubt “a universal
-despotic dominion would be established over the
-bodies, a cruel spiritual thraldom over the minds of men.”
-France and Spain, united in a close family alliance, would
-prove irresistible. Protestantism would be destroyed, a
-despotism worse than that of the Roman Empire would
-be set up, and the British race would be arrested in its
-mission to overspread the earth. Marlborough was not
-unaware of the consequences of defeat. “I know the
-danger,” he said, “yet a battle is absolutely necessary; and
-I rely on the bravery and discipline of the troops, which
-will make amends for our disadvantages.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On August 13, 1704, the armies faced each other.
-The enemy, numbering fifty-six thousand men, was posted
-in a strong position, with the Nebel, a marshy stream, in
-front, hill country on the left, and the Danube on the
-right. A short distance from the great river stood the
-village of Blenheim, which had been strongly defended by
-a palisade and trench, and was occupied by Marshal Tallard’s
-infantry. At sunrise the allies were in motion, but
-their movements were covered by a thick haze, and not
-until the allied right and centre were nearly within cannon-shot
-of the enemy was Tallard aware of their approach.
-Eugene, with twenty thousand men, marched through
-broken and wooded country towards the Nebel, which had
-to be crossed before he could attack the Bavarians opposed
-to him. Not until midday did his troops cross the stream,
-and when they faced the enemy they were so weary that
-they could do little more than hold their own.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While Eugene was struggling on the right, the remainder
-of the allies were inactive. During this interval,
-Marlborough ordered divine service to be performed by
-the chaplains at the head of each regiment, for with all
-his faults he was sincerely religious. Then he rode along
-the lines and found officers and men in the highest spirits,
-waiting impatiently for the signal to attack. At length
-an aide-de-camp galloped up from the right with the
-welcome news that Eugene was across the stream. At
-once a strong brigade of infantry under Lord Cutts was
-sent to assault the village of Blenheim, and Marlborough
-himself led the main body down the eastward slope of
-the valley of the Nebel, and crossed the stream.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brigadier Rose led the British infantry to the assault
-of Blenheim under a shower of grape and musketry. He
-ordered his men to reserve their fire until he struck his
-sword against the palisades. The troops advanced with
-great steadiness, but they were repulsed with severe loss;
-and Marlborough, finding how strongly Blenheim was
-held, gave up the attempt to capture it, and bent all his
-energies to breaking through the centre. The ground
-which he had to traverse was very swampy; but he constructed
-something like an artificial roadway, and late in
-the afternoon, despite artillery fire and cavalry charges, he
-crossed the blood-stained stream with eight thousand horsemen.
-The infantry were then brought across to “hold
-up” the French troops in Blenheim.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marlborough chiefly relied on his cavalry, and by
-means of this arm Blenheim was won. Leading two
-furious charges in person, he completely broke the squadrons
-of the enemy. They discharged their carbines, wheeled
-round, and spurred from the field, leaving the infantry to
-be ridden down by the victorious allies. Marlborough
-then drove the French southward to the Danube, where
-they were obliged to drown or yield. The troops in
-Blenheim, after several gallant but unsuccessful attempts
-to cut their way out, laid down their arms. The French
-army was almost entirely destroyed. About twelve thousand
-men were killed and fourteen thousand taken prisoners; all
-the cannon, a vast number of colours and standards, tents
-and equipages, were captured; and the French general and
-twelve hundred officers of rank were in the hands of the
-conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was a famous victory.” Austria was saved, the
-French were driven out of Germany, and the Elector of
-Bavaria was forced to make peace. The moral effect of
-the battle, however, was still greater. For half a century
-the French had been considered invincible; now the spell
-was broken, and the prestige of France had vanished. For
-the rest of the war Lewis had to act on the defensive, and
-“Malbrook” became a name of fear to every child in
-France. The British nation in gratitude presented Marlborough
-with £500,000, with which to purchase the manor
-of Woodstock, and erect a house which should be named
-after the battle. Blenheim Palace still remains one of the
-most magnificent of England’s “stately homes,” and a not
-unworthy monument to Marlborough’s great military
-genius.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next year Marlborough began to attack the great line
-of fortifications which then extended almost from Antwerp
-to Namur. He proposed to fight a decisive action near
-to the field of Waterloo, but was prevented from doing so
-by the persistent opposition of the Dutch. At the end of
-1705 the position of affairs was “as you were.” Next
-year, however, Marlborough again covered himself with
-glory by destroying a French army at Ramillies. The
-effect of the victory was enormous. The French garrisons
-were panic-stricken, and place after place fell. “It really
-looks more like a dream than the truth,” wrote Marlborough.
-Before long he was master of the whole of
-Belgium. Prince Eugene also fared well in Italy, where
-lie drove the French troops across the Alps. Austrian and
-British troops also entered Spain, where they met with a
-stubborn resistance and made but little progress.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1708 Marlborough and Eugene won another great
-victory at Oudenarde. The French generals would not
-act together, and consequently their troops were thrown
-into disorder. A long, running fight on the heights of
-Oudenarde followed, and the French right wing was cut
-to pieces. The remainder of the army, flying back to
-France, was pursued, and the fortress of Lille was captured.
-Lewis begged for peace; but the allies offered him terms
-which he could not accept, and so, much against his will,
-the war went on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next year (1709) Marlborough fought his last battle,
-and again defeated the French at Malplaquet, in what he
-called a “very murdering battle.” The French position
-was very strong, with a narrow front protected on both
-sides by thick woods and heavy batteries. Nevertheless,
-after a series of desperate assaults, he met with his usual
-success, though his victory was dearly bought with a great
-sacrifice of life. Marlborough was deeply affected by the
-horrors of the scene, and spoke with real feeling of his
-misery at seeing so many of his old comrades killed. The
-British nation was now weary of the war, and ready to
-bring it to a close. Peace was signed at Utrecht in 1713.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Long before the treaty was signed, Marlborough, once
-the darling of the nation, was in dire disgrace. He had
-gone into the war as a Tory, but during its continuance
-had allied himself with the Whigs, and by 1708 the
-ministry almost entirely consisted of men of his new party.
-Anne was at heart a Tory, and she greatly disliked the
-change. Indeed, she only agreed to the appointment of
-the Whig leader, Lord Sunderland, because Marlborough
-threatened to resign and the duchess fiercely upbraided her
-for daring to have inclinations of her own. Anne was
-now tired of the Marlboroughs, and was only waiting for
-an opportunity to throw off their yoke. A Mrs. Masham,
-cousin of the duchess, had contrived to usurp the position
-of “Mrs. Freeman,” and she now encouraged the queen to
-rebel. A bitter quarrel broke out between the queen and
-the duchess on the occasion of the “Te Deum” for the
-victory of Oudenarde. The duchess had selected certain
-jewels for the queen to wear, but Anne rejected them,
-whereupon there was a furious scene. Violent quarrels
-and angry letters followed, but peace was patched up for
-a time, though the end was fast drawing near.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1710 a clergyman, named Dr. Sacheverell, in the
-course of a dull, foolish sermon at St. Paul’s, preached the
-old Tory doctrine of the divine right of kings. Very injudiciously,
-and against Marlborough’s advice, the Whig
-ministers determined to prosecute him for the sermon.
-The trial resolved itself into a great struggle between the
-two parties, and Sacheverell became a martyr. The nation
-generally supported him, and a storm of hatred arose
-against the Whigs. Thereupon the queen dismissed them
-from office, restored the Tories, sent “Mrs. Freeman”
-about her business, and removed Marlborough from his
-command. It is said that he actually went on his knees
-to the queen and begged her to let him retain the gold
-key which was the symbol of his office. There was a
-final interview between the queen and the duchess, at
-which the latter shed floods of tears, but could not shake
-Anne’s new-found determination. All was over, and
-“Mrs. Freeman” set about removing the brass locks from
-her apartments in the palace, and giving orders for the
-removal of the marble mantel-pieces and other fixtures.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tories, headed by Henry St. John, Viscount
-Bolingbroke, a subtle traitor in secret correspondence with
-the “old Pretender,” now wreaked their vengeance on
-Marlborough. He was charged with embezzling public
-money, and the charge was only too true, though it is but
-fair to say that sums of money thus obtained were generally
-regarded as the customary perquisites of his office. With
-all his greatness, Marlborough had a mean and miserable
-soul. It has been said that he was perhaps the only really
-great man who ever loved money for its own sake. He
-was actually accused of sending officers unnecessarily into
-the thick of the fight, so that he might fill his pocket by
-selling the commissions of those who fell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Instead of answering his accusers he fled to the Continent,
-where he remained in voluntary exile until news
-reached him of Anne’s last illness. He landed at Dover
-on the day of her death. The new king, George the First,
-restored him to his command and his honours; but two
-years later he had a paralytic stroke, followed by another.
-His great physical strength, hardly tried by the fatigues
-of his many campaigns, and his brilliant intellect, broken
-down by the stress and anxieties of his labours and responsibilities,
-began to give way. He spent his declining days
-in riding, playing with his grandchildren, and keeping
-minute accounts of his most trifling expenditure. Even
-when old and infirm, it was said that he walked in order
-to save sixpence for a chair. He died on June 16, 1722,
-and was buried with great splendour in Westminster Abbey.
-So passes Marlborough. He leaves a stained memory, it is
-true, but let us not dwell upon his vices and failings. Let
-us rather remember how—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Calm and serene, he drives the furious blast;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And pleased th’ Almighty’s orders to perform,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo309.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0062' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo302.jpg' alt='' id='i302' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The British Assault on the Village of Blenheim.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Allan Stewart, specially painted for this book.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Brigadier Rose led the British infantry to the assault under a shower of grape and musketry, and ordered them not to fire a shot
-until he struck his sword against the palisades. While the flower of the French troops were thus “held up” in the village, Marlborough
-broke the center with the allied cavalry.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo310.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0063' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='310' id='Page_310'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XVI.<br/> BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Come weal, come woe, we’ll gather and go,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And live and die for Charlie.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/t.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='T'/>HE scene shifts to the shores of a remote loch in the
-Western Highlands of Scotland. Great, gloomy hills
-rise from the water’s edge; the whole aspect of the
-place is wild and solitary. At the head of the loch is a little
-plain, from which a narrow, rocky glen runs far inland.
-Not a soul is in sight; not a sound breaks the stillness.
-Now you see a small company of men appear on the plain.
-In the centre of them is a gallant young soldier, tall and
-slim, with a high, broad forehead, a shapely nose, rich, dark-brown
-eyes, and chestnut hair. He carries himself right
-nobly, and you feel as you gaze upon him that here at
-last is a real hero of romance. Full of hope and eager anticipation
-he comes upon the scene; but as he waits, and
-the minutes lengthen into hours, his light-hearted gaiety
-gives place to dejection. The glen remains silent and deserted.
-Those who have sworn to meet here have not
-kept tryst. The young prince—for such he is—retires
-with a sinking heart to the shelter of a barn. Suddenly
-he hears the faint sound of distant bagpipes. His eyes
-light up, he springs to his feet, and hastily quits his shelter.
-His heart beats fast as he listens. Louder and louder
-grows the sound of the pibroch, and now on the skyline
-of yonder hill you see Lochiel with seven or eight
-hundred Camerons. As soon as they sight the prince
-they raise loud huzzas, which echo and re-echo from the
-hills.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The clansmen form up, and the feeble old Marquis of
-Tullibardine, supported by a man on each side, proudly
-unfurls a royal standard. As its white, blue, and red folds
-lift upon the wind, cheer after cheer is raised, and the
-greatest enthusiasm prevails. A commission of regency is
-read, and the prince, baring his head, makes a brief but
-gallant speech. “I knew,” he says, “that I should find in
-Scotland brave gentlemen, fired with the noble example
-of their predecessors, and jealous of their own and their
-country’s honour, to join me in so glorious an enterprise.
-For my own part I do not doubt of bringing the affair to a
-happy issue.” The cheers which greet the prince’s speech
-have scarcely died away before the Macdonalds, to the
-number of three hundred, arrive. Others follow, and before
-the camp fires are lighted fifteen hundred men have sworn
-to follow the prince to the death.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who is this prince, and why has he invaded this remote
-and desolate part of Scotland? He is Prince Charles
-Edward Stuart, the grandson of James the Second, the son of
-the “old Pretender,” a gay, light-hearted, active, robust,
-adventurous young man of twenty-five, who since boyhood
-has cherished the hope of winning back the throne of his
-fathers. There has already been one attempt, but it was a
-dismal failure. Fifty-seven years ago his grandfather fled
-from the kingdom, and William and Mary began to reign
-in his stead. Then followed his aunt, Queen Anne; and
-at her death the Tories very nearly made his father king.
-The activity of the Whigs foiled them just in the nick of
-time, and the King of Hanover, “a wee German lairdie,”
-who claimed descent through his mother from James the
-First, was brought over and crowned. Now his son, the
-second George, was King of Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A fierce continental war was now raging, and Britain
-was foolish enough to take a hand in it. To the exiled
-court, then established in Rome, England’s embarrassment
-was the Jacobites’ opportunity, and our young hero, “bonnie
-Prince Charlie,” saw that he must shoot his bolt now or
-never. To his father he said, “I go in search of three
-crowns, which I doubt not but to have the honour and
-happiness of laying at your Majesty’s feet. If I fail in the
-attempt, your next sight of me shall be in my coffin.”
-“Heaven forbid,” replied James, “that all the crowns in
-the world should rob me of my son.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some months of delay elapsed, and then an expedition
-was fitted out; but the winds and waves, never kindly
-disposed to the Stuarts, drove it back. Weary of waiting
-for further French assistance, Prince Charlie determined to
-stake all on a desperate venture. “I will go to Scotland,”
-he said to Lord George Murray, one of the wisest and most
-trusted of his advisers, “if I take with me only a single
-footman.” His equipment makes us smile. He was about
-to challenge the might of Britain with a few hundred
-muskets, some broadswords, twenty small field-guns, a war-chest
-of £4,000, and a barrel or two of brandy. The whole
-story would be a farce had not the splendid spirit of young
-Charles lifted it into a romance. Sailing from Nantes with
-a little privateer and a fast brig called the <span class='it'>Doutelle</span>, he soon
-lost the privateer, which was driven back to harbour by a
-British ship. The <span class='it'>Doutelle</span>, however, skirted the eastern
-shores of Scotland, rounded the tempestuous north, sailed
-amidst the islands of the west, and landed him with seven
-followers at Eriskay, a little island of the Hebrides, on July
-25, 1745.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us picture the scene. The French frigate lies off
-the little rocky isle, and the prince is eager to go ashore.
-During the brief voyage he has exercised that extraordinary
-personal magnetism with which he is endowed, and every
-man on board is his willing slave. No one, not even
-Napoleon, ever possessed so much of that strange attraction
-which can capture the imagination of men and women, and
-make them leave home, kindred, and friends in order to
-throw themselves into a perilous and ruinous cause. As the
-needle points to the pole, so do all men’s hearts turn to him,
-whether in sunshine or in storm, in defeat or in victory.
-As the French frigate comes to her anchorage an eagle
-hovers over the ship. “Sire,” says old Tullibardine, “the
-king of birds has come to welcome your royal highness.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few hours later Charles trod the soil of Scotland for
-the first time. The day was wet and stormy, and the
-opening of the campaign was most inauspicious. Next day
-a neighbouring chief, Macdonald of Boisdale, was sent for.
-He came “over the water to Charlie,” but bluntly advised
-the prince to return home. With that readiness of speech
-which marked him, the prince replied, “I am come home,
-sir, and I will entertain no notion of returning to that place
-from whence I came. I am persuaded that my faithful
-Highlanders will stand by me.” He refused to be rebuffed,
-and forthwith crossed in the French ship to the coast of
-Inverness, where he summoned the gallant Lochiel and other
-leading chiefs to meet him. And now his fate seemed to
-rest on the goodwill of a single man. Lochiel had already
-denounced Charles’s invasion as a rash and desperate undertaking,
-and he was in no mood to join the prince. Other
-leading men shook their heads, though Charles pleaded his
-cause with all the earnestness of despair, pacing up and down
-the deck, and pouring forth a torrent of eloquent words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he did so he espied a young Highlander listening
-attentively with flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes. Here
-was a kindred spirit. The prince suddenly turned to him
-and said, “You, at least, will not forsake me.” “I will
-follow you to the death,” said the lad. “I would follow
-you to the death, even were there no other to draw a sword
-in your cause.” The lad’s speech had an excellent effect on
-his hearers. Their Highland pride was touched, their Highland
-chivalry was aroused. Most of them flung their caution
-to the winds and eagerly embraced his cause. Lochiel,
-however, had yet to be persuaded, and Charles, tired of
-pleading, tried reproach. “In a few days,” he said, “with
-the few friends that I have, I will erect the royal standard
-and proclaim to the people of Britain that Charles Stuart
-is come to claim the crown of his ancestors, and to win it
-or perish in the attempt. Lochiel can stay at home and
-learn from the newspapers the fate of his prince.” This
-was more than Lochiel could bear. “No,” he cried; “I’ll
-share the fate of my prince, come what may.” Forthwith
-arrangements were made for the meeting at Glenfinnan.
-You have already witnessed the gathering of the clansmen
-and the unfurling of the royal standard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the very day that the prince’s banner first waved in
-the northern breeze, Sir John Cope, the commander of the
-royal forces in Scotland, moved towards the Highlands with
-three thousand men, mainly raw recruits, for well-nigh the
-whole British army was overseas in Flanders. Cope was a
-dull man of the stock-and-pipeclay school, and a thoroughly
-incompetent general. His object was to relieve the small
-garrisons of royal troops stationed at Fort William and
-Fort Augustus. When, however, he reached the rocky
-steeps of Corry Arrack he found the clansmen in possession
-of the pass. Rumours were rife that every zigzag path
-was commanded by big guns, and that every rock concealed
-an armed Highlander. Turning aside, he marched towards
-Inverness, and thus left the southern road open.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With banners flying, bagpipes skirling, and drums
-beating, the Highland host, shaggy and unkempt as their
-own cattle, with a meagre equipment and a strange assortment
-of weapons, pushed on towards Perth. The prince
-rode at their head, and every day he grew in favour with
-his followers. His frank, manly air and his gallant bearing
-knit him to them with “hooks of steel,” and their spirits
-rose with every mile they marched. Opposition melted
-away before him. Leaving Perth, he marched on Stirling.
-The castle sent a few ineffective shots towards him as he
-crossed the Forth and proceeded towards Edinburgh. On
-the 17th September he was in possession of the Scottish
-capital without striking a blow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forthwith “King James the Eighth” was proclaimed at
-the Mercat Cross by the heralds in all their finery, and the
-prince took up his abode in Holyrood Palace, where balls
-and banquets and other brilliant festivities were held. The
-time, however, was not suitable for such scenes of gaiety.
-Cope had embarked his troops at Inverness, and had sailed
-south for Dunbar, where he had landed his forces. He was
-now ready to march on Edinburgh, and Charles determined
-to give him battle at once. On the night of the 20th he
-led his army along the ridge of high ground towards
-Inveresk, where he expected to meet the enemy. It was
-wise to keep to the high ground, for, as one of his captains
-said, “Even a haggis could charge down hill.” As the
-troops moved off Charles drew his sword and said, “Gentlemen,
-I have flung away the scabbard.” At Prestonpans
-Cope’s army was discovered on the narrow plain between
-the hills and the sea. A deep morass lay between the two
-hosts, and Cope prided himself that his position was secure.
-Both armies slept on the field, and through the night
-watched each other. The prince lay amongst his men with
-a bundle of pease-sticks for a pillow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the night a local gentleman, who knew every
-inch of the ground, remembered that a path led from the
-height through the morass and round the left wing of the
-enemy. The prince was roused and told the good news,
-and immediately the order was given to advance. In deep
-silence the march was commenced, Lochiel leading the way.
-The stars shone brightly overhead, but as the men advanced
-the mist gathered and concealed their movements. So,
-unseen, they threaded the narrow path, their soft brogues
-making no sound. The path had been left unguarded, and
-the Highlanders gained the plain, and were beginning to
-form when the mist lifted and disclosed them to their foes.
-Cope’s men were taken by surprise. The Highlanders
-charged furiously, and in six minutes the battle was lost and
-won. Cope’s army was in flight, and Charles had captured
-his cannon and baggage and seventeen hundred prisoners.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For six weeks after his victory Charles lay in Edinburgh,
-holding councils and drilling his troops by day, and dancing
-gaily by night in the oaken gallery of Holyrood, where his
-kinswoman, the unhappy Mary Queen of Scots, had held
-her court. Not until the last days of October did he begin
-his march on England, in the full expectation that his easy
-conquest of Scotland would be repeated over the Border.
-No sign of the expected rising, however, met the invaders
-as they marched southward. The Highlanders began to
-desert, and his troops dwindled in number daily. A few
-recruits joined his standard at Preston, but it was already
-evident that his dream of an English rising was vain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Throughout the long, disappointing march the prince
-was the life and soul of his army. His tact, his endurance,
-and unfailing good-humour endeared him more and more to
-his faithful followers. The farther his army marched south
-the colder was his reception, until by the time he reached
-Derby it was plain that he had come to the end of his
-tether. The Duke of Cumberland had an army at Lichfield;
-there was a second army in his rear; and a third on Finchley
-Common. The wiser of the Jacobite leaders now advised
-a retreat to Scotland. Charles, however, had not yet lost
-hope; all his talk at Derby was about the manner in which
-he should enter London, whether on foot or on horseback,
-in the Highland or in the Lowland dress. Lord George
-Murray pressed upon the prince the absolute necessity of
-returning to Scotland, and at length Charles was very
-reluctantly forced to give the order to retreat. Homeward
-in straggling, sullen groups the Highlanders retraced their
-steps, with the foe hard at their heels. Charles showed
-obvious signs of dejection, and constantly lingered behind
-his men. On the 20th December the Highland army stood
-once more on Scottish ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Eight days later Charles marched to Stirling at the head
-of the largest army which he had ever commanded. Leaving
-a small party to watch the castle, he hurried to Falkirk,
-where he met General Hawley, who was advancing to the
-relief of Stirling. Here again the young prince was victorious;
-but hardly had the smoke cleared away from the
-battlefield before quarrels broke out amongst the Highland
-leaders, and Charles was forced to retreat. The
-Highlanders, laden with booty, returned to their homes,
-and Charles pushed on to Inverness, followed by the Duke
-of Cumberland with a strong force of Royalist troops.
-Cumberland encamped at Nairn, nine miles from the moor
-of Culloden, on which the remains of Charles’s army lay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were ill-prepared for battle. The war-chest was
-empty, food was scarce, and the men were worn out with
-fatigue and privation. Lord George Murray proposed a
-night attack on the royal army, and suggested the 15th
-April as the most suitable date, because it was Cumberland’s
-birthday, and sure to be an occasion for revelry in the
-English camp. Charles agreed to the proposal, and the
-march began; but so fatigued and hungry were his men
-that no less than fifty halts had to be called in eight miles.
-At two in the morning, the time fixed for the attack, the
-Highlanders were still four miles from the English camp.
-Cumberland’s men had already aroused themselves, and the
-Jacobite host had to plod back wearily to Culloden once
-more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The final hour had come. Cumberland advanced with
-his 10,000 troops, fresh, ardent, well-fed, and well-equipped,
-and the battle was decided before it was begun. At a
-distance of a third of a mile his guns opened fire, making
-blood-red lanes through the Jacobite regiments. They
-stood their ground with wonderful courage; but they were
-obliged to give way, and as dusk settled over the moor the
-cause of the Stuarts was lost for ever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then came the grim sequel. “Butcher” Cumberland
-took such a cruel vengeance on the defeated foe that he
-well deserves his nickname. Several Scottish lords were beheaded,
-and measures were taken to prevent a similar rising
-in future. The tartan and kilt were proscribed articles of
-dress, the clan system was broken up, and military roads
-opened the Highlands to the rapid march of troops.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile “bonnie Prince Charlie” was a fugitive,
-with a price of £30,000 on his head. For months he encountered
-hairbreadth escapes and perils by land and sea.
-His life was made up of days of hiding in the heather,
-and nights of hunger, cold, fatigue, and anxiety in dim
-mountain caves. Yet, though his whereabouts were known
-to scores of people who might easily have earned the money
-and a pardon into the bargain, no one betrayed him, no one
-revealed his hiding-place. Men and women at the risk of
-their lives befriended him, and ultimately, by the aid of those
-whom he had brought to ruin and to the verge of the
-scaffold, he managed to escape.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>History reveals no more splendid example of unswerving
-loyalty. The whole story of Prince Charlie’s wanderings is
-one of the proudest traditions of the land of mountain and
-of glen. As a memorial of his gallant but hopeless attempt to
-overthrow King George the Second we have those spirited
-and tender Jacobite songs which have become an imperishable
-part of our literature. They are a monument not so
-much to the young man whom they commemorate as to
-the race which saw in him its best and most inspiring ideals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before we say farewell to Prince Charlie, the story
-of a woman’s superb heroism and devotion must be told.
-When Charles was hiding in the heather in South Uist, and
-the redcoats were within a couple of miles of him, a young
-lady, named Flora Macdonald, was introduced to him. She
-had lately come from Skye to visit her brother in South
-Uist, and Charles’s faithful henchman, O’Neil, had heard of
-her and of her friendship for the Stuart cause. He met
-her secretly, and begged her to convey the prince to her
-mother’s house in Skye, where he might be safe until he
-could be got away to France. The plan was most difficult
-and daring, for Flora’s chief was then with Cumberland,
-and her stepfather was an officer in the Skye militia, and
-was at that instant scouring South Uist for the fugitive.
-Nevertheless Flora undertook the task, and O’Neil made her
-known to the prince. O’Neil proposed that Flora should
-obtain a pass from her stepfather for herself and her maid,
-Betty Burke, to go and visit her mother in Skye. Flora’s
-stepfather was a Jacobite at heart, and he furnished her
-with the passports. Betty Burke was none other than the
-prince, who was now to don petticoats and follow Flora as
-her servant. The prince made but a poor maid; he walked
-with such manly strides that his disguise only served to
-attract attention. Further, he could not manage his skirts;
-at one time they trailed in the mud, at another time he held
-them above his knees. However, the boat was reached in
-safety, and “over the sea to Skye” went Charlie. The
-night was stormy, but Flora slept, and the prince watched
-over her and sang songs to hearten the crew. In the
-morning they only just managed to escape the boats of the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While the prince hid in the heather, Flora went to the
-house of a friend, Lady Margaret Macdonald, and arrived
-at a sadly ill-timed moment, for the militia were in the
-neighbourhood and their officer was in the house. Nevertheless,
-arrangements were made, and Macdonald of Kingsburgh
-undertook to get the prince to Portree. The night
-was spent at Macdonald’s house, and next day Charles
-managed to get to Portree, where he doffed his petticoats.
-Here he hid for some time in a cave, and here, too, he said
-good-bye to his brave preserver. He kissed her and said,
-“For all that has happened, I hope, madam, we shall
-meet at St. James’s yet.” He called her “our lady,” and
-his last thought was for her. Thus he parted from the
-courageous woman who had ventured all for his sake.
-From this moment she fades out of history, but her place
-amongst the heroines is assured for ever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Months of flitting to and fro, of lurking in the heather
-and hiding in caves and ruined huts, followed, and at last
-news came to him that two French vessels were off the
-coast. Losing no time, he started off for the very spot
-where fourteen months before he had landed so full of
-hope. The ships were riding at anchor, a boat moored
-to a rock awaited him. The prince jumped in, and in a
-few moments was climbing the sides of the vessel, safe at
-last. And here we leave him while his ship is rocking on
-the wave, and the stern men upon whom he has brought
-such sorrow and suffering wave him a last farewell amidst
-their streaming tears. We will not dwell upon the later
-years of his life—years of misery and degradation, when the
-once gay, kind, brave, and loyal prince sank into a fierce,
-shabby, homeless, and almost friendless adventurer. For
-many years he moved about like a shadow, finding his way
-more than once to England. Giving way to drink, he sank
-deeper and deeper into the mire. Let us not dwell upon
-the sad scenes of his later life. Let us think of him in his
-best moments, as the man who ennobled the Highland race
-for all time by calling forth a devotion, loyalty, and love the
-fame of which can never die.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo322.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0064' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo311.jpg' alt='' id='i311' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the painting by John Pettie, R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo318.jpg' alt='' id='i318' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>AFTER CULLODEN: ROYALIST SOLDIERS SEARCHING FOR JACOBITE FUGITIVES.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by John Seymour Lucas, R.A., in the Tate Gallery. By permission of Messrs. Frost and Reed.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo320.jpg' alt='' id='i320' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>A Royal Fugitive.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Allan Stewart. Exhibited in the Royal Academy, 1907.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='323' id='Page_323'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo323.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0065' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XVII.<br/> MAKERS OF EMPIRE.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>ROBERT CLIVE, THE DARING IN WAR.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>War, disguised as commerce, came;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Britain, carrying sword and flame,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Won an empire.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/y.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='Y'/>OU are now permitted to peep into the citadel of
-Arcot, the old capital of the Carnatic. Its walls are
-ruinous, its ramparts unfitted for guns, its battlements
-too low to protect soldiers. The town is in the
-hands of four thousand native troops, assisted by one hundred
-and fifty Frenchmen. Within the fort there are but
-a hundred and twenty Europeans and two hundred Sepoys.
-Their stock of provisions is very low. At the request of
-the Sepoys the Europeans take the rice, while the faithful
-natives contrive to keep body and soul together on the
-water in which it has been boiled. The defenders are daily
-diminishing in number from starvation, disease, and the
-musketry fire of the enemy, but there is no talk of surrender.
-You judge that their leader must be a man of no common
-courage and resolution, and you are right. Within yonder
-room their young English captain is placidly sleeping, though
-he knows that the enemy is about to assault his feeble post.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Already he has been offered honourable terms and a
-bribe of money if he will but yield. He has rejected both
-with the utmost scorn and defiance, though he knows full
-well that the capture of the fort means the death of every
-man in it. In haughty tones the young Englishman has
-told the prince who commands the besieging army that his
-father is a usurper, that his forces are a mere rabble, and
-that he will do well to think twice before he sends such
-poltroons against English soldiers. It is now the 14th day
-of November, and on the 30th of August last he and his
-little army marched through a violent storm of thunder and
-rain, and captured the fort without striking a blow. He
-has already held out for seventy-five days, hoping hourly for
-relief. But he has not been inactive. Time after time he
-and his little band have sallied forth and inflicted considerable
-damage on the besiegers. The artillery of the enemy
-has already made much havoc; two great breaches gape
-in the walls. Every attempt to storm them has failed.
-Now the enemy is in overwhelming force, and to-day an
-assault is to be made; yet the commander of the post lies
-calmly sleeping, though a touch on the shoulder will awaken
-him and bring him on to the walls to direct the defence.
-He has made all arrangements; he has done all that man
-can do. Now he is recruiting his exhausted strength for
-the critical struggle that awaits him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To-day is the most solemn festival in the Mohammedan
-calendar, a day on which the followers of Mohammed
-believe that he who falls in fight against the infidel will
-enter at once into Paradise. The religious enthusiasm of
-the besiegers is almost a frenzy, and they have further
-increased their madness by a free use of the intoxicating
-drug which they call bhang. They are ready to go to
-death with eager joy; no man of them will flinch from
-the most dangerous duty; all are zealous for the privilege
-of sacrificing their lives.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly you hear the discharge of three bombs. It is
-the signal for the attack. Our young Englishman is awake
-now, and you get your first glimpse of him. One glance at
-his face convinces you that he is a warrior of warriors, that
-there is not a particle of fear in his whole composition, that
-he is a born leader of men. His Sepoys positively worship
-him. They believe him to be more than mortal. Whatever
-he commands they obey. Their devotion to him exceeds
-that of the Tenth Legion to Cæsar and of the Old Guard
-to Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such is Robert Clive, a young man of twenty-five, who
-left his Shropshire home as the scapegrace of the family.
-In his home at Styche and in the grammar school of
-Market Drayton he acquired a most unenviable reputation—always
-in mischief, ready to use his fists on the slightest
-provocation, an idle, worthless dunce. In desperation his
-father packed him off to India as a book-keeper; but he
-has exchanged the pen for the sword, and has now found
-his vocation. It is he who suggested this desperate enterprise,
-and to-day he is about to lay the foundations of his
-great fame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The attack has begun. A vast multitude of besiegers is
-beneath the walls carrying ladders, while against the four
-points where the fort is weakest—the two gates and the
-two breaches—organized and simultaneous attacks are preparing.
-Huge elephants, with their foreheads armed with
-iron plates, are driven forward, and you expect that the
-gates will be smashed to matchwood by the impact of these
-living battering-rams. But watch! Now you see Clive
-directing his men to pour their fire into the elephants.
-They do so, and the huge beasts, stung by the bullets, turn
-round and trample under foot the dense masses of men
-behind them. The enemy has been hoist with his own
-petard.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is a wild rush into the north-west breach, which
-is blocked with yelling natives. Suddenly you hear a volley,
-and down go scores of the assailants. Clive has dug trenches
-behind the breaches, and his men are in them pouring a
-murderous fire on the living, struggling mass that swarms
-through the gap in the wall. As soon as the guns are
-discharged they are handed to the rear-rank men to be
-loaded, and others charged and primed are received in
-exchange. Three field-pieces now open fire, and every shot
-tells. After three desperate onsets the enemy is driven back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile the south-west breach is attacked. Water
-fills one part of the ditch which protects it, and on this the
-foe has launched a raft crowded with soldiers, who are urging
-it towards the shattered walls. The gunners at this post
-fire wildly and their aim is bad. Clive springs to the gun
-and works it himself. In three discharges he has cleared
-the raft and torn it asunder. Many of its occupants are
-drowning in the ditch, the remainder are swimming back
-to the bank.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fight has now lasted an hour, and four hundred of
-the assailants are dead. The grand attack has failed. There
-is firing during the night, but when day breaks the besiegers
-are nowhere to be seen. They have hurriedly abandoned
-the town, leaving their artillery and ammunition behind
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At once India rings with the praises of Clive. Reinforced,
-he proceeds upon his victorious career, and the
-natives tremble at his name. Within the next three years,
-by his marvellous energy and skill, he will establish British
-supremacy in India.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we must hark back in order to understand the
-meaning of the struggle which we have just witnessed. The
-East India Company, in whose service Clive had enlisted,
-was established as far back as the days of Queen Elizabeth.
-It was founded for trade, and it attended closely to business.
-When Clive arrived in India its territory consisted
-of a few square miles of land, for which rent was paid to
-native rajas. Its troops were scarcely sufficient to man
-the ill-constructed forts which had been erected at Madras,
-Bombay, Calcutta, and a few other places to protect the
-warehouses. Most of the soldiers in the service of the
-Company were natives, and were neither furnished with
-European weapons nor disciplined according to European
-methods. The white servants of the Company were
-simply traders, whose business it was to make advances to
-manufacturers, ship cargoes, and in other ways push the
-business interests of their employers. Most of the younger
-clerks, of whom Clive was one, were miserably paid, while
-the older ones enriched themselves by trading on their
-own account.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A French East India Company had also been founded,
-but at the outset it met with much less success than the
-English Company. At the close of the seventeenth century
-it possessed little more than the small town of Pondicherry,
-which still remains in French hands. At this time the
-Moguls, the descendants of the Mohammedan conquerors of
-Northern India, dominated the land; but a few years later
-their power fell to pieces, and India was splintered into
-little independent kingdoms. The land was given over to
-civil war; every nawab, or governor, quarrelled and fought
-with his neighbours. The feebleness of the native rulers
-and the disturbed state of the country positively invited the
-European traders, both English and French, to conquest.
-Hitherto they had been merely competitors for commerce;
-soon they were to become rivals for dominion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such was the condition of affairs when Clive sailed for
-India. He was very homesick and depressed during the
-long voyage round the Cape, and when he arrived he had
-spent all his money and contracted some debts. He was
-stationed at Fort George, Madras, where he was wretchedly
-lodged and badly paid, and engaged in duties ill-suited to
-his daring, ardent nature. On more than one occasion
-he got into scrapes and received reprimands. Twice he
-attempted suicide, and twice the pistol which he snapped
-at his own head failed to go off. “It appears I am
-destined for something,” he said, and, as you already know,
-his prophecy proved true. In the year of his arrival in
-India (1744) war was declared by Britain against France,
-and the struggle in Europe led to the long fight for
-supremacy in India.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dupleix, the French Governor of Pondicherry, was a
-man of great ambition, and he now conceived the idea of
-founding a great French empire in India. Himself an
-able soldier, he made two most important discoveries.
-First, he observed that the native armies could not stand
-against men disciplined in the European fashion; and,
-secondly, he perceived that the natives could be brought
-under European discipline by European officers. Forthwith
-he began to enlist Sepoys, or native soldiers, and to arm
-and discipline them after the French manner. With these
-Sepoys he intended to intervene in the disputes of the
-native rulers, and by taking first this side, and then that,
-gradually win India for France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A French expedition appeared before Madras, captured
-Fort George, and seized the contents of the warehouses
-as prize of war. Some of the servants of the Company,
-including Clive, were paraded through the streets of Pondicherry
-in triumphal procession, and treated with great
-indignity. Clive, in the disguise of a Mohammedan, managed
-to escape from the town by night and make his way
-to Fort St. David, a small British settlement one hundred
-miles south of Madras. Here he begged an ensign’s commission
-in the service of the Company, and at twenty-one
-entered upon his military career.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He took part in Admiral Boscawen’s unsuccessful siege
-of Pondicherry, where he distinguished himself, and in his
-twenty-fifth year was promoted to be a captain. Shortly
-after the failure at Pondicherry peace was proclaimed.
-Nevertheless, there was but a short cessation of hostilities
-in India; for though British and French were supposed
-to have sheathed the sword, a great struggle for power was
-about to begin both in India and in America. Before long
-there was open war, which at first went greatly in favour
-of France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dupleix, continuing his rapid and brilliant career, had
-intervened in the affairs of the two great native states of
-Hyderabad and the Carnatic, and had managed to get his
-own candidates placed on the thrones of both these states.
-Thus he was practically master of South India. Civil war,
-however, continued in the Carnatic, where the French
-nominee was besieging Trichinopoly, the last stronghold
-of his rival. Trichinopoly was about to fall, and its fall
-would mean the complete supremacy of the French in
-India. At the critical moment Clive persuaded the
-Governor of Madras to entrust him with a small force to
-attack Arcot, the capital of the nawab whom Dupleix was
-supporting. By doing so, he hoped to draw off the nawab’s
-forces from the siege of Trichinopoly. You already know
-how splendidly he defended Arcot, and how he forced the
-enemy to raise the siege. By 1753 he had completely
-undone the work of Dupleix.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Worn out by anxiety and fatigue, he now returned to
-England. He had gone out ten years before, a friendless,
-wayward boy; he now returned, at the age of twenty-eight,
-to find himself greeted as one of Britain’s most famous
-soldiers. Naturally, his father and mother and the other
-members of his family were overjoyed to learn that naughty,
-idle Bobby had developed into a famous man, the theme
-of all tongues, honoured and praised by the greatest in the
-land. The East India Company thanked him for his
-services in the warmest terms, and offered him a sword set
-with diamonds. This he refused to accept unless a similar
-one was given to his friend and commander Lawrence.
-With his prize-money Clive helped to pay off some of his
-father’s debts, and to redeem the family estate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1755 Clive returned to India. He had only just
-arrived when terrible news reached him. Suraj-ud-Dowlah,
-the Nawab of Bengal, a fiend in human shape, whose
-amusement as a child was to torture beasts and birds, and
-his pastime as a man to watch the sufferings of his fellow-creatures,
-had attacked the British settlement at Calcutta,
-and had seized one hundred and forty-six Europeans. These
-he thrust into a chamber known as the “Black Hole.” It
-was eighteen feet by fourteen, and its cubical content was
-twenty feet square. When ordered to enter the cell the
-prisoners imagined that the soldiers were joking, and as
-the nawab had promised them their lives they laughed
-aloud at the absurdity of the idea that they could possibly
-exist during the stifling heat of a Bengal June night in such
-a confined space. They discovered their error when they
-were driven in at the point of the sword. The windows
-were small and barred, and soon the air was poisonous.
-The horrors that followed are almost too terrible to recount.
-The poor creatures cried for mercy, they strove to
-break in the door, they offered large bribes to their jailers;
-but all to no purpose. Nothing could be done without the
-nawab’s orders, and he was asleep and could not be awaked.
-Many went mad; they trampled each other down, and
-fought like wild beasts for places at the windows. The
-murderers outside mocked at their agonies, holding lights
-to the bars, and shouting with laughter as they beheld the
-struggles of their victims. When day broke and the doors
-were opened only twenty-three ghastly figures staggered
-out into the sunlight. A hundred and twenty-three corpses
-were flung promiscuously into a pit dug for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rage and anger of the British in India can well be
-imagined. Clive hastened to Bengal to avenge the awful
-outrage. He had nine hundred Europeans and fifteen
-hundred Sepoys with which to oppose Suraj-ud-Dowlah’s
-huge army. After a short, sharp fight the enemy fled in
-confusion, leaving baggage, guns, and cattle in the hands
-of the victors. This battle of Plassey, fought on June 23,
-1757, secured for the British the province of Bengal, the
-richest and most populous province of India.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle, however, was not won without grave
-treachery. Prior to the battle Clive learned that Mir
-Jaffier, Suraj-ud-Dowlah’s chief commander, had formed
-a plot against his master. He managed to get into communication
-with the disaffected general through the agency
-of one Omichand, a wily, unscrupulous Bengali merchant.
-This man held the thread of the whole plot in his hands;
-one word whispered by him in the ear of Suraj-ud-Dowlah
-would have meant the lives of all the conspirators.
-Omichand claimed £300,000 sterling as the price of his
-secrecy and assistance, and insisted that an article regarding
-his claims should be inserted in the treaty between Clive
-and Mir Jaffier. Clive now descended to conduct for
-which he cannot be defended, though excuses may be
-made. He knew he had to do with a villain, and he
-determined to defeat him by his own knavish acts. Two
-treaties were drawn up—the one, on white paper, was
-real; the other, on red paper, was a sham. The red paper
-contained the promise to pay Omichand’s demand; there
-was no mention of it in the white paper. Clive now
-added his signature, and forged that of Admiral Watson to
-the red paper, which was handed to Omichand. The treaty
-to which Mir Jaffier agreed was on the white paper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Suraj-ud-Dowlah was overcome, Mir Jaffier received
-the throne of Bengal as his reward. According to
-the terms of the treaty, he granted territorial and other
-rights to the East India Company, and gave Clive a gift of
-£200,000. “It is now time,” said Clive, “to undeceive
-Omichand.” Turning to the man, Clive’s interpreter said,
-“Omichand, the red treaty is a trick. You are to have
-nothing.” Omichand fell back insensible, and afterwards
-relapsed into a state of idiocy. Soon after, Mir Jaffier was
-besieged by the eldest son of the Great Mogul; but Clive
-marched to his relief, and the besiegers melted away. Then
-Mir Jaffier in gratitude made over to Clive the yearly rent,
-amounting to £30,000, which the British paid for the
-lands which they occupied about Calcutta. Probably Clive
-was justified in accepting this present, but it gave his
-enemies a powerful handle against him. In 1760 Clive
-returned to England, and was everywhere greeted as a
-“heaven-born general.” He became member of Parliament
-for Shrewsbury, and received an Irish peerage. His fortune,
-acquired by spoils, presents, and grants, actually
-yielded him £40,000 a year.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1765 he returned to India as governor-general, and
-set himself the task of purifying the administration of the
-Company. The officials and military commanders received
-very small salaries; but these they turned into fortunes by
-“shaking the pagoda tree”—that is, by blackmail, extortion,
-and corruption of all kinds. Clive attempted to stop these
-practices, and though his reforms were bitterly opposed, he
-left the Company’s service much purer than he found it.
-In the process he raised up a host of enemies, who in 1767,
-when he finally returned to England in shattered health,
-brought about his impeachment for corrupt practices,
-especially with reference to the Omichand affair and the
-present from Mir Jaffier. During the Parliamentary inquiry,
-Clive, when confronted by hostile evidence, remarked,
-“Mr. Chairman, at this moment I stand astonished at
-my own moderation!” The House of Commons evaded
-a decision on his conduct by passing a resolution that
-Lord Clive “had rendered great and meritorious services
-to his country.” He was acquitted, but the acquittal was
-really a vote of censure. Clive, broken in health, keenly
-sensitive to the disgrace of the verdict, and enfeebled in
-mind by the use of opium, felt the disgrace keenly. During
-one of the fits of deep depression to which he was subject,
-he ended his life by his own hand (November 1774).</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus perished, in his forty-ninth year, the great Clive.
-His faults were many, but his merits outweighed them, and
-he must always stand high in the roll of British empire-makers.
-“Our island has scarcely ever produced a man
-more truly great either in arms or in council.” Let this be
-his epitaph.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo328.jpg' alt='' id='i328' style='width:50%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Clive at Bay.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>The natives of India believed that Clive bore a charmed life. On one occasion, when he was
-resting along with several of his men, a party of Frenchmen fired into the room which he occupied,
-killing the man next to him. Clive rushed out, and finding himself confronted by six Frenchmen,
-loudly ordered them to lay down their arms as they were surrounded. The native allies of the
-French fled, and the assailants themselves took refuge in a temple. Next day they surrendered.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='335' id='Page_335'></span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo335.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0066' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>JAMES WOLFE, CONQUEROR OF CANADA.</h2>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Wolfe, where’er he fought,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Put so much of his heart into his act</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>That his example had a magnet’s force,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And all were swift to follow whom all loved.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once more you see a young soldier advancing. He is
-a hero of heroes, yet never was the soul of a hero enshrined
-in a more unhero-like frame. His features are homely, his
-hair is fiery-red, his shoulders are narrow, and his limbs
-are veritable spindle-shanks. But look at his eyes, and you
-will instantly forget his plain features and his rickety body.
-They are bright, searching, brimful of intelligence and
-vivacity, and speak eloquently of the indomitable spirit
-within. This is James Wolfe, the man who gave us Canada—“eldest
-daughter of the Empire”—that vast land of fertile
-prairie, dense forest, widespreading pasture, rich mines,
-unrivalled waterways, fine cities, and, above all, of a sturdy
-nation, heart-warm towards the mother-country, and eager
-to give her tangible proofs of kinship and affection. Wolfe
-gave Canada to the Empire at the price of his heart’s blood.
-In one “crowded hour of glorious life” he gave us the
-heritage of this majestic land, already the greatest and most
-prosperous of all British lands beyond the seas, and yearly
-advancing towards a mighty destiny.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>James Wolfe was a soldier from his youth. His father
-was an officer of distinction; his mother a woman of great
-sweetness and charm, deeply beloved by her two sons,
-of whom James was the elder. He was born on June 2,
-1727, at Westerham in Kent. Of his brief boyhood’s days
-we know little—indeed, there are but meagre details of his
-whole life. We know, however, that he was a delicate,
-sensitive, highly-strung boy, who inherited his mother’s
-frailty though not her beauty. We know, too, that he
-saw little of his father, who was almost constantly absent
-from home on active service. Nevertheless, he was tenderly
-and judiciously reared by his devoted mother.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When a mere schoolboy—a little over fifteen years of
-age—he became an ensign, and carried the colours in one
-of his Majesty’s regiments. From the beginning of his
-career he set himself to study the art of war, and at sixteen
-he was adjutant of his regiment, then serving in Flanders.
-He discharged his duties with great intelligence, and very
-early demonstrated his capacity for leading men. Even
-though an adjutant, he had not lost his schoolboy tastes,
-for we find him writing to his mother warmly thanking
-her for a plum-cake which she had sent him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At twenty-one he had seen seven campaigns, and was a
-major. He had been present at the victories of Dettingen
-and Culloden, and it is said that on the latter battlefield he
-proved the nobility of his nature by refusing to shoot a
-wounded Highlander when ordered to do so by “Butcher”
-Cumberland. It is also said that he recommended the
-enlistment of Highlanders as soldiers in the British army.
-This may or may not be true, but it is certain that the
-Highland regiments first began to win their great renown
-under his command.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At thirty years of age he had acquired the reputation of
-a capable, active, zealous officer, but so far he had given
-little indication of the great fame which was soon to be his.
-In 1758 he first crossed the Atlantic; and here we may interrupt
-the narrative in order to explain the condition of affairs
-at that time in America. By the middle of the eighteenth
-century the British had established themselves in thirteen
-colonies along the Atlantic coast from Florida to Nova
-Scotia. The French had chosen Quebec as their capital,
-and had occupied Acadia (now the provinces of Nova
-Scotia and New Brunswick) and the valley of the St. Lawrence
-from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes. A new England
-and a new France had thus grown up in the New World.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>New England grew rapidly in population and wealth.
-New France also prospered, though in a lesser degree. Its
-progress was hindered by constant warfare with the Indians,
-by the trading enterprise of the British, and by the interference
-of the home government. The two white races
-constantly advanced their frontiers, and their outposts drew
-nearer and nearer to each other every year. Border strife
-between the rival nations soon became frequent. In 1690,
-for example, the British settlers invaded New France to
-revenge themselves for the plunder of certain frontier
-stations. The invaders were driven back, but for years
-afterwards the French and the British kept up an irregular
-warfare. During the War of the Spanish Succession a
-powerful British fleet which was protecting the colonies
-seized that part of Acadia now known as Nova Scotia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though Britain had colonized the whole Atlantic seaboard
-from Florida to Nova Scotia, her territories had not
-advanced inland beyond the great barrier of the Alleghany
-Mountains. France, in addition to Canada, possessed the
-colony of Louisiana at the mouth of the Mississippi. She
-claimed that Louisiana stretched to the head-waters of the
-Mississippi and its tributary the Ohio. Had this claim
-been allowed, the British seaboard colonies would have been
-shut in on the west, and prevented from extending to the
-rich plains of the interior. Already the British needed
-elbow-room, for they numbered some 2,000,000, while the
-French in all the vast territory which they claimed could
-only muster 180,000.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The French now proposed to link Louisiana with Canada
-by a chain of forts along the Mississippi and the Ohio. The
-three northern links in the chain were Fort Ticonderoga, at
-the end of Lake Champlain; Fort Niagara, near the great
-falls; and Fort Duquesne, on the Ohio River, where the
-great manufacturing town of Pittsburg now stands. The
-first and last of these forts were close to the English back
-settlements, which were constantly ravaged by Indians in
-the pay of France. In 1754, while Britain was ringing
-with the fame of Clive fresh from his great defence of
-Arcot, a party of Virginian militia made a dash at Fort
-Duquesne under the leadership of George Washington, soon
-to be the greatest name in American history. The attack,
-however, was unsuccessful. This was the beginning of the
-great struggle between the French and the British for the
-possession of North America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next year General Braddock, who had been sent out to
-be commander-in-chief in America, marched against the
-French at the head of 2,200 British regulars and American
-settlers. He cut his way through almost impenetrable forest,
-but when eight miles from the fort fell into an ambuscade.
-The Indians and French were hidden in bushes and behind
-trees, and they poured volley after volley into the British
-ranks. The settlers wished to fight in the Indian fashion,
-and take cover behind the trees; but Braddock thought
-this mode of warfare cowardly, and so they fought in the
-open until so many of the British were killed that a retreat
-had to be sounded. Soon the retreat became a flight, and
-but for Washington and his Virginians, Braddock’s little
-army would probably have been cut off to a man. The
-consequences of this defeat were terrible. The French let
-loose the Indians on the outlying British settlements, and
-the woods rang with the screams of tortured victims. For
-a time France was supreme on the American continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1758 the British outlook was black indeed, and at
-home men trembled in hourly expectation of a French
-invasion. England was in a very bad way indeed; but the
-hour found the man, and that man was William Pitt. He
-sketched out a bold plan of campaign in America. Simultaneous
-attacks were to be made on Fort Ticonderoga and
-Fort Niagara, and on Quebec, the key to New France. Pitt
-looked around for a general after his own heart. He found
-him in James Wolfe, a young soldier with the daring, skill,
-and determination to accomplish what the great statesman
-planned. Merit and merit alone decided Pitt’s choice, and
-a better choice was never made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wolfe had just returned from the capture of the chief
-fort in Acadia, where as brigadier under General Amherst
-he had covered himself with glory, and had earned the
-proud title of “hero of Louisbourg.” When Pitt offered
-the command of the new expedition to Wolfe he jumped
-at the chance. “Mr. Pitt,” he said, “may dispose of my
-slight carcass as he pleases.” The Duke of Newcastle, then
-Prime Minister, was shocked at Pitt’s choice. He told the
-king that Wolfe was mad. “Mad is he?” said George;
-“then I hope he will bite some others of my generals.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On February 17, 1759, Wolfe sailed for Canada with a
-strong fleet and 9,000 troops. During the voyage he suffered
-tortures from sea-sickness. In May he was in the harbour of
-Louisbourg, and on the sixteenth of June he weighed anchor
-for Quebec, the troops cheering and the officers drinking
-this toast, “British colours on every French fort, port, and
-garrison in America.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Quebec, the most historic spot in all the New World,
-has not inaptly been called the Gibraltar of America. It
-stands on the nose of a rocky peninsula shaped like a bull’s
-head and facing eastward. On the south and east sides it
-rises by steep cliffs to a rocky summit. On south, east, and
-north it is defended by rivers: to the south flows the great
-St. Lawrence River, which expands on the east into a broad
-basin upon which the navies of the world might ride; while
-on the north the peninsula is protected by the estuary of
-the river St. Charles. The town itself consists of two parts—a
-lower town, which huddles by the water side, and an
-upper town, which climbs the cliffs. High on the summit
-is the grim and frowning citadel. Let us ascend to this
-historic fortress and gaze in admiration on the scene which
-unfolds itself. The lower town, with its steep streets, its
-old gabled houses, its public buildings, and numerous
-churches with their tin-covered cupolas and minarets, rises
-sharply from the water’s edge. Opposite to us, on the
-other side of the river, is Point Levis, and to the east
-is the beautiful Isle of Orleans. On our left, across the
-basin, is the Montmorency River, which hurls itself over a
-precipice to mingle its waters with those of the great river.
-To our right extend the famous Plains of Abraham, now
-purchased and preserved as a national park consecrated to
-great historical memories. Such is the Quebec of to-day.
-In the year 1759 it presented a much ruder aspect, though
-it was then lively and important, and had been made almost
-impregnable by walls, bastions, and fortified gates.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within this city Vaudreuil, its bombastic, corrupt
-governor, and his gang of unscrupulous officials kept up a
-feeble imitation of the luxurious court of France. They
-robbed the king, their master, and they robbed the Canadians
-committed to their protection. “Are the walls of Quebec
-made of gold?” asked Lewis when official after official
-returned to France bloated with wealth. New France was
-honeycombed with peculation and fraud, and there was but
-one honest, incorruptible man amongst the greedy horde.
-He was Lewis Joseph, Marquis of Montcalm, a soldier of
-unblemished repute and no mean scholar. His life was one
-long struggle with the governor, who thwarted him in every
-possible way, and arrogated to himself all the credit and
-honour which his noble colleague managed to win.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Montcalm had early news of Wolfe’s errand, and he
-hastily collected every able-bodied man and every boy
-who could hold a gun within the walls of the town.
-“Never,” said he, “was Canada in a state so critical
-and full of peril.” Quebec was already strong by nature,
-and Montcalm proceeded to make it stronger still by
-art. Redoubts, batteries, and lines of entrenchment were
-thrown up along the lofty, curving shores from the St.
-Charles River to the Montmorency, and a boom of logs
-and hulks mounted with cannon barricaded the former
-river. Fourteen thousand men lined the earthworks, and
-one or two thousand more manned the guns of the fortress.
-When Wolfe arrived on the 21st of June, Quebec was
-well-nigh impregnable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wolfe landed his men on the Isle of Orleans, and soon
-realized the desperate character of the task which he had
-undertaken. To take Quebec seemed impossible. The
-cliffs to his left were edged with palisades and capped
-with redoubts, while on his right was a far-extended line
-of entrenchments, ending at the foaming cataract of Montmorency.
-There seemed to be no chink in the wall of
-defence. For weeks Wolfe lay inactive, wearing himself
-to a shadow in the attempt to find a weak spot against
-which he might hurl his army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He seized Point Levis, and from it bombarded the city,
-only a mile away. Fierce as his fire was, it did nothing
-to help him to capture the place. At length, tired of
-inactivity, he attempted on the 31st of July to gain a
-footing on the north shore of the St. Lawrence by landing
-his men at the Montmorency Falls and climbing to the
-plateau above. In this he was successful; but though his
-guns now played on the flank of Montcalm’s entrenchments,
-the city of his desire was as far off as ever. “You
-may demolish the town,” said the bearer of a flag of truce,
-“but you shall never get inside it.” “I will take Quebec,”
-replied Wolfe, “if I stay here until November.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A frontal attack on the Beauport Heights was a complete
-failure, and Wolfe lost more than two hundred men. He
-was now almost worn out. His pale face and tall, lean form
-were no more seen going to and fro amongst his soldiers.
-He lay dangerously ill, and his life was almost despaired
-of. He felt his failure intensely, especially as news now
-arrived that the attacks on Ticonderoga and Niagara had
-been successful. Meanwhile the British fleet had accomplished
-a great feat. Despite a furious cannonade from the
-guns of Quebec, ship after ship had managed to sail up the
-river past the forts, and now were able to threaten the city
-from a position which the French believed to be unattainable
-by the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 20th of August the young general was about again,
-and was diligently searching the steep, rocky shore above
-Quebec for a possible landing-place. At last, about three
-miles from the city, at a place now called Wolfe’s Cove,
-he discovered a goat track that wound up the wooded
-precipice for two hundred and fifty feet above the St. Lawrence.
-A French guard was stationed at the top, but Wolfe
-thought it could easily be surprised. Had he known that
-the captain in charge had gained a reputation for cowardice,
-and had allowed his men to go home to dig up their
-potatoes, his hopes would have been higher. At any rate
-he was now resolved to climb the Heights of Abraham and
-meet Montcalm’s army at the very gates of Quebec.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us pass on to the fateful night of September
-13, 1759. Under cover of the darkness the British flotilla
-of boats moved silently with muffled oars towards the
-landing-place. Wolfe, who was in the leading boat, began
-in a low whisper to recite the beautiful lines of Gray’s
-“Elegy.” He came to the noble verse—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And all that beauty, all that wealth e’er gave,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Await alike the inevitable hour;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The paths of glory lead but to the grave.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>“Now, gentlemen,” he said, “I would rather have written
-those lines than take Quebec.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The boats drifted on in death-like silence. Suddenly,
-as the tide bore them inshore and the mighty wall of rock
-loomed above them, they were sharply challenged by a
-sentry. “Qui vive?” he cried. A Highland officer replied
-in good French, “La France.” “Of what regiment?”
-demanded the sentry. “The Queen’s,” answered the Highlander,
-and the sentry was satisfied. A sigh of relief escaped
-from the commander, and the boats glided on. Presently
-another sentry challenged, but he too was deceived. In a
-few moments more the boats lightly ran aground in a little
-cove. The men disembarked silently and scrambled up
-the wooded precipice on their hands and knees. The
-French guard at the top was captured, and loud British
-huzzas proclaimed that at last a footing had been gained
-on the coveted spot. Before the day broke Wolfe had
-marshalled his men on the Heights of Abraham, and in the
-gray dawn they saw the city almost within their grasp.
-When they became visible, Montcalm was greatly alarmed.
-“This is a serious business,” he said. Bugles and mounted
-messengers called in his troops. To save the citadel he was
-obliged to abandon his entrenchments and give fight in
-the open.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle that followed was singularly brief in duration,
-yet it settled the fate of Canada. The French advanced,
-firing rapidly; but the British reserved their fire until the
-enemy was within close range. Then a fearful hail of
-bullets sped from their muskets. The French wavered,
-and as the British reloaded and advanced, they turned and
-fled. Wolfe was wounded in the wrist as he led the charge,
-but he wrapped a handkerchief about the wound and pushed
-on. Soon after another bullet struck him in the breast.
-“Don’t let my men see me drop,” he said as they carried
-him to the rear. Here he lay, his eyes glazed, and his life
-fast ebbing away. Suddenly one of the little group about
-him cried, “They run; see, they run!” The dying man
-roused himself as though from sleep. “Who run?” he
-asked. “The enemy, sir,” was the reply; “they give way
-everywhere.” The dying flame of life flickered up for a
-moment, and he gave a clear, emphatic order for cutting
-off the retreat. This done, he turned on his side, murmuring,
-“Now God be praised, I die happy.” Wolfe was
-dead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His gallant foe, Montcalm, was also stricken down in
-the fight. “How long have I to live?” he asked of his
-surgeon. “Twelve hours, more or less,” was the reply.
-“So much the better,” said the dying man; “I shall not
-live to see the surrender of Quebec.” Before passing away,
-he wrote to the British commander beseeching him to
-show mercy to the townsfolk. “Do not let them perceive,”
-he said, “that they have changed masters. Be their protector,
-as I have been their father.” It is to Britain’s
-honour that she has observed this dying request of a great
-and good man with scrupulous care. The French Canadian
-of to-day would be the first to say that under the Union
-Jack he retains his faith and language, his old laws and
-cherished institutions, and that under British rule his liberty
-has been enlarged and his prosperity established.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On September 18, 1759, the British flag was hoisted
-on the citadel of Quebec. At home the news was received
-with rapturous joy. “The whole nation rose up and felt
-itself the stronger for Wolfe’s victory.” The scattered
-remnants of the French fell back on Montreal, and in the
-next autumn they were surrounded and forced to surrender.
-The victory of the British was complete; the destiny of
-Canada was fixed for ever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A tribute to the joint memory of the two leaders who
-in death were not divided now stands in the public gardens
-of Quebec, and on the battlefield is a simple obelisk with
-the plain inscription, “Here died Wolfe, victorious.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And here we leave James Wolfe “alone with his glory.”
-He died, as he wished to die, a soldier’s death, and he leaves
-to future ages a noble example of high honour, strict integrity,
-and noble devotion to duty.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo344.jpg' alt='' id='i344' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>DEATH OF WOLFE.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Benjamin West, P.R.A.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo346.jpg' alt='' id='i346' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Battle of Trafalgar, and the Victory of Lord Nelson over the French and Spanish Fleets,</span> <span class='bold'>October 21, 1805.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Clarkson Stanfield, R.A., in the National Gallery of British Art.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo347.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0067' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='347' id='Page_347'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XVIII.<br/> NELSON OF THE NILE.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Admirals all, for England’s sake,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Honour be yours, and fame!</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And honour, as long as waves shall break,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>To Nelson’s peerless fame.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/i.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='I'/>T is a gray, melancholy spring day in the year 1771.
-You are at Chatham, looking on to the deck of his
-Majesty’s ship <span class='it'>Raisonnable</span>, commanded by Captain
-Maurice Suckling. The sixty-four is not yet ready for
-sea; her chief officers are not yet aboard. On the quay
-you see a thin, delicate-looking lad of twelve years of age
-dressed in a “middy’s” uniform. The wind bites shrewdly;
-the lad shivers in his thin jacket, and there is something
-like a tear in his eye. This morning his father left him
-in London to make the best of his way to Chatham and
-there join his ship. He has wandered about, friendless and
-alone, for hours; he is hungry, footsore, and weary, and he
-cannot discover the vessel to which he is posted. You feel
-sorry for the lonely little fellow, but his troubles are now
-over. A kindly officer accosts him, and brings him on
-board. The lad’s eyes gleam as he gazes on the ship which
-is to be his home. He glances down at the almond-white
-decks; he looks around at grinning lines of black cannon;
-he turns his eyes aloft to the symmetrical fabric of spars
-and sails and rigging. It is a wonder-world of delight.
-There is fascination everywhere—in the red muzzles of the
-guns, in their white tompions, in the petticoat trousers and
-long pigtails of the sailors. His young eyes, brilliant with
-intellect, dart hither and thither; he is astonished and
-delighted by all the novel sights which he sees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This frail weakling is Horatio Nelson, the proudest
-name in the naval annals of his land. He is to develop
-into the “unique sailor,” the great hero of his race, the
-man whose statue is decked with laurel and whose fame
-is eagerly commemorated year by year, though well-nigh
-a century has elapsed since he passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Horatio Nelson was born in the year before Wolfe
-captured Quebec. He was the son of a plain country
-parson with a quiver full of children and a modest income.
-The future hero first saw the light in the pleasant rectory
-of Burnham Thorpe, Norfolk. At nine years of age his
-mother died, and the weak, sickly lad grew up under the
-care of his grandmother. There was nothing remarkable
-about the boy’s school days, though many stories are told
-of his mischievous exploits, his fearlessness, and his high
-sense of honour. The best-known story relates that as a
-little boy he strayed from the house on a birds’-nesting
-excursion, and was absent so long that his grandmother
-grew alarmed and sent out servants to look for him. At
-length young Horatio was discovered sitting placidly by
-the side of a stream which he could not cross. When
-brought back his grandmother said, “I wonder that you
-were not driven home by hunger and fear.” “Fear!
-grandma,” said the boy. “Fear! what is that? I never
-saw it!” Truly the boy was father to the man. To the
-end of his life he never saw fear or knew what it meant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You already know that at twelve years of age Nelson
-began his naval career as a midshipman on board his
-uncle’s ship, the <span class='it'>Raisonnable</span>. At twenty-one he was a
-captain in the Royal Navy—“the merest boy of a captain,”
-as Prince William, afterwards William the Fourth, described
-him. Nevertheless, there was no better seaman or
-more gallant officer in the service.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us pass on to the year 1789, when Nelson
-was thirty-one years of age, and was regarded by those who
-knew him best as one of the finest commanders in the service.
-In this year that huge upheaval known as the French
-Revolution took place. For centuries the kings and nobles
-of France had grossly mismanaged the country and had
-bitterly oppressed the people. The State was well-nigh
-bankrupt, and the land was full of starving and despairing
-men. In July of this fateful year Paris rose, the Bastille, or
-State prison, was stormed, the prisoners were released, and
-the garrison slain. All over the country the peasants revolted,
-murdered the nobles, and burned their castles. The
-king was powerless to interfere, and the National Assembly,
-which had now seized the reins of power, passed laws
-sweeping away the privileges of the nobles and the rights
-of the Church. Before long the king and his family tried
-to escape from the country, but they were brought back
-and treated as prisoners. Meanwhile large numbers of
-the nobles had sought refuge abroad, and were urging
-foreign governments to declare war on France. When the
-German sovereigns threatened invasion, the French declared
-war against Austria and Prussia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we must introduce the most dominant figure of
-the modern world—Napoleon Bonaparte. He was born
-in Corsica in the year which saw the American colonists
-beginning to rise against the British Government. In the
-first year of American independence he was a “gentleman
-cadet” in the military school at Paris. Here he was chiefly
-noteworthy as a silent, haughty lad, full of self-love and of
-great ambition. He was studious and very fond of mathematics
-and geography, but his abilities were not striking.
-None of his teachers prophesied for him the astonishing
-genius which he afterwards displayed. When Nelson was
-twenty-seven years of age, Napoleon became a lieutenant of
-artillery. He was a zealous republican, and was placed in
-command of the artillery which was to besiege the naval
-port of Toulon, then in possession of the British, who had
-been called in by the royalist inhabitants of the town.
-Napoleon conducted the siege with such skill that the
-British were forced to evacuate the place, not, however,
-without burning the French fleet which lay in the harbour
-and destroying the arsenal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this juncture Nelson was detailed to besiege certain
-coast towns of the island of Corsica. He captured Bastia
-and Calvi, but at the latter place he lost the sight of an eye.
-A period of dangerous and exhausting service followed.
-Napoleon was now in command of the army of Italy, and
-was at the beginning of his extraordinary career. He
-was marching along the narrow coast-road of the Riviera,
-and Nelson’s task was to harass his shoreward march.
-Scarcely a day passed without a skirmish of some kind with
-a battery, a gunboat, or an armed cruiser. Nelson’s force,
-however, was inadequate, and Napoleon accomplished his
-purpose. His victories in Italy were extraordinary, and
-speedily he was acclaimed on all hands as the greatest
-general of the republic. As he rose in fame and influence
-new vistas opened before him, and he soon perceived that
-the highest office in the State was his to grasp. Next he
-advanced into Austria itself, and carried all before him.
-When he was within eighty miles of Vienna the emperor
-begged for peace, and obtained it at the price of Belgium
-and Lombardy. Prussia now deserted the allies, and
-Holland and Spain had already purchased peace by promising
-the republic the use of their navies. Great Britain was
-in a state of “splendid isolation,” and all eyes turned to the
-fleet as the only hope of succour. The banks stopped cash
-payments, alarm was at its height, and Consols fell to
-fifty-one. Great Britain had her back to the wall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before long, however, the British fleet had its first
-great success. On February 14, 1797—that glorious St.
-Valentine’s Day—Admiral Jervis won a splendid victory
-over the Spanish fleet off Cape St. Vincent. In that confused
-scene of roaring cannon, rolling clouds of smoke,
-crash of falling spars, shrieks of the wounded, and stormy
-huzzas of the half-naked sailors wrestling at the guns,
-Nelson stands out as <span class='it'>the</span> conspicuous figure of the day.
-At one time he was engaging nine Spanish ships. A little
-later he was abreast of the <span class='it'>San Josef</span>, pouring in such a
-murderous fire that speedily she was unmanageable. The
-<span class='it'>San Nicolas</span> drifted on to the <span class='it'>San Josef</span>, and Nelson manœuvred
-to foul the <span class='it'>San Nicolas</span>. He hooked his sprit-sail
-yard into her rigging, and then boarded. The ship
-yielded, but at this moment a fierce fire of musketry was
-opened from the <span class='it'>San Josef</span>—only a jump away. Instantly
-Nelson and his men sprang aboard the <span class='it'>San Josef</span>, and as they
-did so a Spanish officer called out that the ship had surrendered.
-Thus on the deck of a Spanish man-of-war,
-which he had boarded across the deck of another then in
-his possession, Nelson received the swords of the vanquished
-Spaniards. Already he was the darling of his sailors and a
-source of pride to the nation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a daring but unsuccessful attack on Cadiz he lost an
-arm, and sank into a state of deep depression, thinking that
-he had become a burden on his friends and useless to his
-country. For a time our little one-armed, one-eyed hero
-retired to a quiet country home; but on April 1, 1798, he
-was afloat in command of a fleet scouring the Mediterranean
-with orders to seek the French fleet, and use his best
-endeavours to take, sink, burn, and destroy it. After a long
-and anxious quest he at last discovered it anchored in
-Aboukir Bay. “We are moored in such a manner,” wrote
-the French admiral, “as to bid defiance to a force more than
-double our own.” How vain the boast was will shortly
-appear. The French ships were anchored in single file
-along the shore, with three miles of shoal water between
-them and the land, and the admiral believed that no man-of-war
-could possibly get to the shoreward of him. He had
-actually piled up his mess gear on the shoreward side of his
-ships, thus rendering the guns on that side unworkable. As
-the British fleet drew near, under a press of sail, during the
-afternoon of August 1, Nelson observed that the enemy’s
-ships were moored five hundred yards apart, so as to permit
-them to swing at anchor. Instantly he perceived that where
-the enemy’s ship could swing there was room enough for
-one of his squadron to anchor. The French were trapped,
-and Nelson cried, “Before this time to-morrow I shall
-have gained a peerage or Westminster Abbey!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five ships with men in the chains, heaving the leads,
-now bore down, rounded the bows of the leading vessel,
-and got inshore of the French fleet. The rest of Nelson’s
-ships took up their stations on the seaward side, and at half-past
-six, just as the sun was setting, the action began. In
-twelve minutes the leading ship of the enemy was dismasted,
-and almost at the same instant the third ship of the line
-suffered the same fate. Black night came on at seven, and
-only the flash of guns, crimsoning the heavens, lit up the
-darkness. At half-past eight the fourth and fifth ships of
-the enemy’s line surrendered. At ten minutes past nine
-the flagship, the <span class='it'>Orient</span>, caught fire. She lay between two
-British ships, and was almost cut in halves by shot. Her
-gallant admiral lay dying on the deck, and every moment
-the flames raged higher.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The burning of the <span class='it'>Orient</span> was the most terribly grand
-spectacle ever seen in naval warfare. Her magazine was
-full of powder, and an explosion was inevitable. Such,
-however, was the heroism of her crew that while the lower
-decks were in flames, her men continued to work the guns
-on the upper deck. Huge forked flames and living sheets
-of fire leapt up as though from the heart of a volcano. She
-had ceased to fire now, and the remnants of her crew
-crawled out on the spars like flies. The flames lit up the
-scene so vividly that even the Arabs could be seen on
-the shore. At a quarter past eleven she blew up with a
-thunderous roar, and the battle of the Nile was over. All
-that remained was to render the victory complete. By
-three in the morning two ships alone of that proud French
-fleet had escaped. Next morning Nelson, with a deep
-wound on his forehead, called the fleet to return public
-thanksgiving to Almighty God for the most decisive victory
-that has ever blessed British arms at sea. The number of
-the enemy taken, drowned, burnt, and missing was 5,225.
-On the English side 218 were killed and 677 wounded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon was at this time in Egypt, which he proceeded
-to conquer as the first step towards striking at India. The
-disaster at Aboukir Bay cooped him up in the East. He
-crossed the desert into Syria, and drove the Turks out of
-the southern part of the land. Before the walls of Acre,
-however, his victorious march was checked. The Turks
-within, and a British fleet under Sir Sidney Smith outside,
-completely baffled him. In later years Napoleon said,
-“That man made me miss my destiny.” But for Sir Sidney
-Smith, Napoleon would have been Emperor of the East.
-As it was, he was forced to raise the siege of Acre and retire
-into Egypt, where news reached him that the French
-armies had suffered some reverses. He left his army in
-Egypt to get home as best it might, and returned to France,
-where his friends arranged a revolution. On December
-24, 1797, a new French constitution was proclaimed, and
-shortly afterwards Napoleon became First Consul. He
-took up his abode in the Tuileries, and was now on the
-direct highroad to the lofty position which he meant to
-attain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon had pledged his word to save France from
-her host of enemies, and in May 1800 he took the field
-once more. Crossing the Great St. Bernard Pass, never
-before traversed by a large army, he succeeded in planting
-himself in the rear of the Austrians, and at the battle of
-Marengo achieved a brilliant victory. Later in the year
-the French general, Moreau, crushed another Austrian
-army at Hohenlinden, and then Austria sued for peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tsar Paul had already abandoned the allies, and
-now confessed to great admiration for Napoleon, who proceeded
-to form a league for the purpose of subduing Britain
-by striking at her trade. He persuaded the northern powers—Russia,
-Denmark, and Sweden—to mass their fleets and
-close all their ports against British ships. This was a deep-laid
-scheme, but it was doomed to failure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On March 12, 1801, Nelson left Yarmouth Roads as
-second in command to Sir Hyde Parker, a man of unflinching
-bravery but of no original ideas. The fleet which
-these admirals commanded was detailed to destroy the ships
-of the allies which lay at Copenhagen, backed by formidable
-batteries. Parker was irresolute as to the route to be taken
-through the dangerous channels that led to the town.
-“Let it be by the Sound, by the Belt, or anyhow,” cried
-Nelson, “only lose not an hour.” We cannot stay to
-recount the progress of the terrible battle that followed.
-When twenty of the enemy’s ships were almost destroyed,
-Nelson offered a truce, which was gladly accepted, and</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“All amidst her wrecks and her gore,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Proud Denmark blest our chief</p>
-<p class='line0'>That he gave her wounds relief;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And the sounds of joy and grief</p>
-<p class='line0'>Filled the shore.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the very height of the engagement, Parker, greatly
-alarmed for the safety of his fleet, battered furiously by
-incessant broadsides, made the signal to retreat. Nelson’s
-attention was drawn to it. “What does it mean?” asked
-a colonel of marines standing by. “Why, to leave off
-action,” said Nelson; “but hang me if I do! You know,”
-he went on, “I have only one eye. I have a right to be
-blind sometimes.” Putting his telescope to his blind eye,
-he exclaimed, “I really do not see the signal.” So he
-nailed his colours to the mast, and in the midst of the most
-terrible cannonade to which a British fleet has ever been
-subjected, Nelson’s signal for “Close action” streamed high
-aloft, as clear to every man’s sight as a star in the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon had thus failed in his attack on the obstinate
-islanders, and he was now ready for a breathing-space in
-which to recruit his armies and build a navy powerful
-enough to beat Britain. Accordingly peace was signed,
-and Great Britain restored all the colonial conquests which
-she had made during the war, except Ceylon and Trinidad.
-This was all she gained from a struggle which had cost her
-thousands of lives, and had added two hundred and seventy
-millions to the National Debt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before the ink was dry on the treaty, Napoleon was
-busy planning the establishment of a vast colonial empire,
-and aiming at the downfall of the one power which
-thwarted him at every turn. The English press bitterly
-attacked him, coarse and insulting caricatures of him were
-constantly appearing, and French exiles in England frequently
-plotted against him. He now demanded the
-suppression of the hostile newspapers and the expulsion of
-the plotters, but the British Government refused. Every
-day the relations between the two countries grew more and
-more strained, and the breaking-point was not far off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On May 12, 1803, war was again declared. Napoleon
-speedily forced Spain to join him, and then began preparations
-for an invasion of Great Britain. One hundred
-thousand men were marched to Boulogne, and every road
-by which the soldiers passed bore the signpost, “To
-England.” A huge flotilla of flat-bottomed boats was
-collected, and exercises in embarking and disembarking
-went on within sight of the white cliffs of Dover. “The
-Channel,” said Napoleon, “is but a ditch, and any one can
-cross it who has but the courage to try.” He meant to
-put his courage to the test as soon as the Channel was clear
-of the British fleet. From June 1803 to September 1805
-his men were waiting the word of command to cross. It
-was never given.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The prospect of invasion roused every patriotic man in
-Great Britain. Volunteers flocked to the standards, and
-soon, out of a nation of fifteen million souls, including the
-people of Ireland who were not allowed to volunteer,
-300,000 men were in arms, besides 120,000 regular troops
-and 78,000 militia. The dockyards worked night and
-day, and before the end of the year one hundred and sixty-six
-new vessels had been added to the fleet. The fortresses
-were strengthened, martello towers were erected along the
-coast, and every possible preparation was made. Nevertheless
-the year 1803 was one of alarm and terror. Next year
-Napoleon attained the summit of his ambition—he crowned
-himself Emperor of the French.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still the projected invasion hung fire, and now Napoleon
-devised a plan for securing the six hours’ command of the
-Channel on which the success of his enterprise depended.
-His fleet was then in the harbour of Toulon, which was
-being watched by a British fleet, with Nelson in chief
-command for the first time. Napoleon ordered his ships
-to slip out of harbour and sail for the West Indies, in order
-to decoy Nelson away from Europe. Arrived at the West
-Indies, the French fleet was to put about and return with
-all speed for Brest, where an attack was to be made on the
-British squadron blockading that port while Nelson was
-far away. The defeat of the British squadron at Brest
-would clear the Channel, and then the grand invasion was
-to take place.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The plan nearly succeeded. Villeneuve, the French
-admiral, did slip out of Toulon. Nelson was deceived, and
-went off on a false scent. When, however, news arrived
-that the French fleet had sailed for the West Indies, Nelson
-dashed after it in hot pursuit, and went half-way round
-the world and back again before he caught it up. Villeneuve
-had thirty-five days’ start, but Nelson arrived at
-Gibraltar on the return voyage only three days after the
-French fleet sighted Cape Finisterre. Here it found a
-British squadron under Admiral Calder. An indecisive
-battle took place; and though the result was considered in
-England as a failure, and almost a disgrace, it ended the
-grand invasion scheme. Villeneuve was obliged to put
-into Ferrol to refit, and, meanwhile, Nelson had arrived.
-Napoleon’s plan had failed, and Britain could breathe freely
-once more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In disgust, Napoleon broke up his camp at Boulogne,
-and rapidly marched his army across France into Germany,
-where he met the Austrians and Russians, who had formed
-a new league against him. Now began a series of triumphs
-which laid the Austrian empire open to the invaders.
-While Napoleon was rejoicing in his victories, terrible news
-reached him. The greatest sea-fight in the history of the
-world had been fought, and the combined fleets of France
-and Spain were no more. The beginning of the end had
-arrived for the “terror of Europe.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Villeneuve, with thirty-three Franco-Spanish vessels, lay
-in Cadiz harbour, and outside was Nelson with twenty-seven
-British ships. The French admiral had been stung to the
-quick by a bitter, taunting letter from the emperor, accusing
-him of cowardice. To vindicate his courage, Villeneuve
-gave the order to put to sea. On the morning of
-October 20, 1805, the fleets came in sight of each other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The sun never rose on a grander and more impressive
-ocean-picture. As the courses and hulls of the hindmost
-of the British vessels floated up the sea-line, the blue girdle
-of the deep became a field of ships; giant structures bristling
-with guns, canvas swelling in clouds to the heavens
-from their tall sides black with grim and formidable
-defences, crowds of sailors motionless in expectation,
-quarter-decks glittering with uniforms, and stillness everywhere,
-broken only by the creaming wash of the bow-surge
-as it was shouldered off into yeast by the towering battleships.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At daybreak, after a night clouded with the presentiment
-that he would die on the morrow, Nelson arrayed
-himself in his full admiral’s uniform, and came on deck
-blazing with orders. Watching the fleet of the enemy
-forming line of battle, he exclaimed several times, “I’ll
-give them such a dressing as they never had before.” He
-advanced in two columns, intending to crash into the
-enemy’s line, thus breaking it and destroying the ships in
-the centre before those on the wings could come to their
-relief. Undoubtedly there <span class='it'>was</span> a plan of attack, though
-modern critics have questioned the fact. The battle
-perhaps looked like a “heroic scramble,” but behind the
-apparent confusion there was a subtle, daring, and unexpected
-plan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just before the battle began Nelson went to his cabin,
-and there on his knees wrote a beautiful and touching
-prayer. Coming on deck again, he ordered that signal to
-be made which is his greatest bequest to his country—a
-signal which stirs the pulses of every true Briton even after
-the lapse of a century. High above the <span class='it'>Victory’s</span> deck flew
-the colours, and as the words, <span class='sc'>England expects every
-man to do his duty</span>, were interpreted, a great huzza rose
-from the fleet. “Now,” said Nelson, “I can do no more.
-We must trust to the great Disposer of all events and to
-the justice of our cause.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The British ships now bore down, Collingwood in the
-<span class='it'>Royal Sovereign</span> being the first to engage. He was twenty
-minutes in the midst of a furious cannonade before he
-received support. The whole British fleet now came into
-action, but not near enough for Nelson, and he signalled,
-“Engage the enemy more closely,” and set the example
-by dashing into the enemy’s line. Seven or eight of the
-weathermost ships immediately opened a terrific fire on him.
-So fierce was it that for a few minutes the <span class='it'>Victory</span> made
-no reply. Her mizzen top-mast went over the side, her
-wheel was knocked away, and a double-headed shot killed
-eight marines at one stroke. Amidst this hail of death the
-hero moved with the utmost indifference. As a splinter
-tore the buckle from his shoe he remarked smilingly to
-his captain, “This is too warm work, Hardy, to last long.”
-But now the gallant old ship got to work, and with a
-broadside that disabled her immediate enemy, drove into
-the <span class='it'>Redoutable</span> so closely that the muzzles of the <span class='it'>Victory’s</span>
-guns touched the enemy’s side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At half-past one, when Nelson was walking the deck,
-a musket-shot from the <span class='it'>Redoutable</span> mizzen-top struck him,
-and he fell with his face to the deck. “They have done
-for me at last, Hardy,” he exclaimed. “I hope not,”
-answered the captain. “Yes,” said Nelson; “my backbone
-is shot through.” They bore him to the cockpit,
-and on the way he drew a handkerchief over his face
-that his sailors might not see him and be discouraged.
-The gloomy cockpit was a shambles, resounding with the
-groans of anguished men. Dr. Beatty flew to his side.
-“Ah, Mr. Beatty,” said Nelson, “you can do nothing for
-me. I have but a short time to live; my back is shot
-through.” And so it was. The decorations with which
-he had adorned himself were too good a mark for the
-French sharpshooters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hero lay a-dying while the storm of crashing artillery
-continued to rage. High above the thunder came
-the huzzas of his seamen as ship after ship of the enemy
-struck. The dying man turned and smiled. “Will no
-one bring Hardy to me?” he asked, but the captain could
-not be spared. All the beauty, the magnanimity, and
-tenderness of Nelson’s disposition shone out in those dying
-hours. At last Hardy came. “Well, Hardy, how goes
-the day with us?” “Very well, my lord,” was the reply;
-“we have got twelve or fourteen of the enemy’s ships.”
-“I hope,” said Nelson anxiously, “that none of our ships
-have struck.” “No fear of that, my lord,” replied Hardy.
-And now the surgeon tearfully told him that his life was
-done. “God be praised,” he whispered. “Now I am
-satisfied. Thank God I have done my duty!” Nelson
-was dead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As his breath floated away, the cannonading ceased, and
-Trafalgar was won. Of the French and Spanish fleet that
-rose and fell upon the waves on that October morning all
-that remained was a huddle of hulks rolling helplessly in
-the trough of the sea, with the British colours flying on
-the stumps of the wreckage, and a trail of beaten ships
-staggering portwards for safety. Nelson had not spent his
-life’s blood in vain. He had ensured his land a century’s
-command of the sea, during which time she spread her
-empire far and wide, and developed her commerce to an
-extraordinary degree.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo356.jpg' alt='' id='i356' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Death of Nelson.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>By Benjamin West, P.R.A. By permission of the Corporation of Liverpool.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo362.jpg' alt='' id='i362' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Napoleon on Board the “Bellerophon.”</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by W. Q. Orchardson, R.A., in the National Gallery of British Art. By permission of the Berlin Photographic Co.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo363.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0068' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='363' id='Page_363'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XIX.<br/> WELLINGTON.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Lead out the pageant: sad and slow,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>As fits an universal woe,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Let the long long procession go,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And let the sorrowing crowd about it grow,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And let the mournful martial music blow:</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>The last great Englishman is low.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/i.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='I'/>T is a bleak November day in the year 1852. Vast
-multitudes, most of them in the garb of mourning,
-throng the streets of London, and stand for hours waiting
-for a great funeral procession to pass by. The muffled
-bells of the churches are tolling a knell, cannon are booming
-their last farewells, buildings are draped with black, the
-flags fly at half-mast, and all business is suspended. Now
-you see the long procession approaching, soldiers with
-reversed arms leading the way, and marching with slow,
-reluctant step to the roll of drums and the solemn wail of
-the “Dead March.” Behind them come men representing
-all the rank, talent, and dignity of Great Britain, as well as
-the distinguished mourners which foreign sovereigns have
-sent to represent them on the solemn occasion. Many
-of the older spectators barely stifle their sobs as a riderless
-steed is led by, with reversed jack-boots in the stirrups.
-He who has bestridden this war-charger was well known
-to them. They remember all his greatness in the past;
-they recall him as a familiar figure in the streets and in
-Parliament. But, hush! here is the towering car upon
-which lies all that remains of him. Every head is bared,
-and in deep, solemn silence the sad pageant passes.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“All is over and done:</p>
-<p class='line0'>Render thanks to the Giver,</p>
-<p class='line0'>England, for thy son.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Let the bell be toll’d.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Render thanks to the Giver,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And render him to the mould.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Under the cross of gold</p>
-<p class='line0'>That shines over city and river,</p>
-<p class='line0'>There he shall rest for ever,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Among the wise and the bold.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>Side by side with that Mighty Seaman, “saviour of the
-silver-coasted isle,” they bury the Great Duke “to the noise
-of the mourning of a mighty nation.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who was this Great Duke, and why does “sorrow
-darken hamlet and hall” at his passing? Let the story of
-his life and fame be told.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Arthur Wellesley, afterwards Duke of Wellington, was
-born in 1769, less than four months before Napoleon. His
-father was the Earl of Mornington, an Irish peer, and
-Dublin still shows the house, 24 Upper Merrion Street,
-where he was born. In 1787, when eighteen years of age,
-Wellesley became an ensign in the army, but was at first
-quite undistinguished, and was, indeed, considered dull,
-idle, and rather frivolous. Not until 1793, when he was
-appointed to the command of his regiment, did he show
-that he had found the vocation in which he was to win
-such renown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1798 his eldest brother sailed for India as governor-general,
-and Arthur Wellesley accompanied him. Soon
-afterwards he was given a military command, and speedily
-proved himself a most active and successful general. In
-1805 Wellesley was back in England, and for the next
-few years he was employed in various capacities. During
-the year after his return he became a member of Parliament,
-and was frequently consulted on military matters
-by the ministry of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The little kingdom of Portugal was almost the last
-European nation which refused to join Napoleon. He
-therefore overran the country and entered Lisbon. The king
-was deposed, and Joseph, Napoleon’s brother, was placed on
-the throne. Thus the whole Iberian Peninsula passed into
-Napoleon’s power. These high-handed proceedings roused
-the nations to another struggle against him. An insurrection
-broke out in Spain and Portugal, which even Napoleon
-could not stamp out. The British Government eagerly
-seized the opportunity of waging a land-war with Napoleon.
-Arms and money were sent to the Spaniards, and on August
-1, 1808, an army was landed in Portugal. Wellesley was
-given the command of a force of some 9,000 men, and was
-instructed to assist either the Spaniards or the Portuguese at
-his discretion. He sailed on the 12th of July, and, landing
-his men, moved towards Lisbon. This was a bold step, for
-the French general, Junot, had been in occupation of the
-Portuguese capital since November.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the 21st of August he defeated Junot on the hillside
-at Vimiera, and Lisbon would have been captured and the
-whole French army destroyed had Wellesley been permitted
-to pursue. A superior officer, however, had now arrived,
-and Wellesley was no longer first in command. Nevertheless,
-so decisive was the fight that Junot offered to leave Portugal
-altogether, provided he and his troops were permitted to
-return unmolested to France. This offer was accepted,
-greatly to the annoyance of the British people, who were
-sorely disappointed that the whole French army had not
-been captured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wellesley and his superior officer were recalled and tried
-for not capturing Lisbon. The latter was deprived of his
-command; the former was sent back to Portugal. And now
-Wellington began that long, dogged struggle known as the
-Peninsular War, a six years’ contest in which he displayed
-wonderful generalship, foresight, and tenacity, and finally
-drove the French out of Spain and captured Toulouse.
-Before it was over he had been raised to the peerage, and as
-Viscount Wellington was universally regarded as Britain’s
-greatest soldier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the fourth year of Wellington’s struggle in Spain the
-Tsar Alexander, tired of submitting to Napoleon’s mastery,
-defiantly opened his ports to trade with Britain. Napoleon
-thereupon declared war on him, and marched a vast army
-of 600,000 men into Russia. A miserable, crushed remnant
-of 20,000 men was all that struggled back to
-Germany. This terrible blow led to a general rising
-of European powers against Napoleon. Russia, Prussia,
-Austria, and Sweden allied their forces, and Napoleon
-found himself beset on all sides, and with no army to meet
-his foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After the first outburst of dismay, France rallied to him
-as of old, and gave him the new army for which he asked.
-The terrible waste of life during the stormy years since the
-Revolution had pressed heavily on his people, and now half-grown
-lads of seventeen were called to the standards. They
-came willingly, and once more the old enthusiasm prevailed.
-Within six months Napoleon had 200,000 men ready to
-meet the Russians and Prussians on the Elbe. Twice he
-smote the allies, and forced them to seek an armistice.
-Then the fortune of war abandoned him, and at Leipzig,
-in what the Germans call “the battle of the nations,” he
-was defeated and forced to retreat to France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By this time success had crowned Wellington’s efforts
-in Spain. He had made satisfactory soldiers of the Portuguese,
-and the Spaniards had greatly improved. While
-Napoleon was marching into Russia, Wellington had stormed
-Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz, and had won a great battle at
-Salamanca, where he “beat 40,000 men in forty minutes.”
-This battle was his masterpiece. “There was no mistake,”
-he said; “everything went as it ought, and there never was
-an army so beaten in so short a time.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Wellington took Madrid, which had been four
-years in the hands of the enemy; but as the French
-massed their forces against him, he had to retire towards
-the Portuguese border. In 1813 he attacked the French at
-Vittoria, routed them, cut off their retreat, and drove them
-back across the Pyrenees with the loss of every cannon
-and wagon which they possessed. While the allies were
-swarming into France, Wellington, with 100,000 veteran
-troops, stood ready to fall upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The end now rapidly approached. Napoleon struggled
-heroically with the remnant of the army which had been
-defeated at Leipzig, but in vain. Time after time he
-checked the invaders; but numbers triumphed at last, and
-the allies entered Paris on March 31, 1814, where the
-fickle populace received them with shouts of joy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon was now sent to the little Italian island of
-Elba, where he played at being king for eight or nine
-months. All the time he was watching affairs in France
-very closely and was biding his time. In 1814 ambassadors
-from nearly all the Powers assembled at Vienna to settle the
-affairs of Europe. There were constant wrangles, and at
-one time the tension was so acute that war seemed likely to
-break out again. Suddenly, on March 7, 1815, a messenger
-arrived with news that immediately ended their quarrels
-and, in the face of a new and alarming danger, brought
-them shoulder to shoulder. The Tsar said to Wellington,
-who was one of the commissioners, “It is for you to save
-Europe.” What had happened?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon had landed in France, and was making a
-triumphant progress towards Paris. The Bourbon Government,
-which had been installed by the Powers, melted
-away like snow before the summer sun. Everywhere
-Napoleon’s old soldiers donned the cockade and flocked to
-his standards. Whole regiments deserted; the wonderful
-fascination which the emperor exercised upon his followers
-once more asserted itself. Marshal Ney, who had promised
-King Lewis to bring back the invader in an iron cage, fell a
-victim to the charm of his old chief as soon as he met him.
-Lewis and his friends fled the country, and Napoleon once
-more occupied the Tuileries. During the next hundred
-days he displayed all his old energy and daring. By the
-13th of June he had nearly 200,000 men available for war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile the Powers had not been idle. They bound
-themselves to raise a million armed men, and never to rest
-from their labours until Napoleon was finally crushed. In
-a few months an overwhelming force of allies would be
-marshalled. In the meantime, the only troops available
-were those of the British and Prussian armies, now in
-Belgium, and commanded by Wellington and Blücher respectively.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now let us pay a visit to the most renowned battlefield
-in all the world, the field on which the destinies of Europe
-were changed and the great Emperor of the French was
-hurled from a throne to a prison and a grave. We are
-in the village of Waterloo, eleven miles south of Brussels,
-the capital of Belgium. Leaving Waterloo, we traverse a
-road bordered on both sides by houses, and after having
-walked a couple of miles we arrive at the village of Mont
-St. Jean. Here two roads meet, both of which cross the
-battlefield.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now we push on beyond the cross-roads to an obelisk
-in memory of the Germans who fell in the battle. A
-quarter of a mile to the right rises the mound of the
-Belgian Lion. It is two hundred feet in height, and was
-thrown up on the spot where the Prince of Orange was
-wounded in the battle. Surmounting it is a lion made out
-of the metal of captured French cannon. We ascend the
-mound, and facing south find ourselves in the best position
-to survey the battlefield. Unfortunately, the levels of the
-ground have been much altered by the earth removed to
-form the mound. Still from our coign of vantage we may
-get a good general idea of the position occupied by both
-armies on June 18, 1815.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are now on the ridge of a long chain of low hills
-with gentle slopes. On this ridge Wellington extended his
-first line of troops. The ridge, as you will observe, is
-narrow, so that the second line was enabled to occupy a
-sheltered position on the sloping ground behind us. One
-mile distant, across a shallow valley, is another line of hills.
-These were occupied by the French. Now notice a farmhouse
-on the main road to our left. This is La Haye
-Sainte, which was occupied by German troops, and protected
-the allied centre. Follow the road across the
-battlefield, and you will come to the farm of La Belle
-Alliance. During the greater part of the battle Napoleon
-took up his station a little to the right of this house, where
-a French monument now stands. Were you to push on
-along this road for seven or eight miles you would come
-to Quatre Bras (“four arms”), from which place two roads
-lead to the river Sambre.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now look along the road to our right front and observe
-the chateau of Hougoumont, which was an old ruined place
-even in 1815. This building, which still bears traces of
-the fearful scenes that took place about it, was on the right
-of the allied line, and formed the key to the position.
-Hougoumont was strengthened by Wellington, and though
-continually assaulted was never captured. Had Napoleon
-once gained possession of it, the battle would probably
-have had quite a different ending. Now that we have
-surveyed the chief points of interest on the field, let us
-turn to the battle itself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the beginning of June Napoleon had concentrated
-one hundred and twenty thousand men on the Sambre at
-Charleroi, ready to advance when he should arrive to take
-command. Wellington’s army was scattered in various
-places from Nivelles westward, while Blücher’s was extended
-from the same place eastward. Wellington’s plan was to
-unite his forces with those of Blücher at Quatre Bras, and
-block Napoleon’s advance. Napoleon, however, was determined
-to prevent the allied generals from uniting their
-forces. His plan was to fall upon them before they could
-concentrate, and defeat them piecemeal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Blücher reached Ligny, with eighty thousand
-men, Napoleon met him, and a desperate battle ensued
-in which the Prussian general suffered terrible loss, but,
-still undefeated, retreated in good order on Wavre, so that
-he might join Wellington at Waterloo, according to a previous
-arrangement which he had made with Wellington.
-Napoleon thought that the Prussians were retreating on
-the Rhine, and detached thirty-three thousand men under
-Grouchy to hang on their rear. Grouchy missed the
-Prussians, and his troops took no part in the great battle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the same day Ney, with twenty thousand men, appeared
-before Quatre Bras, where only ten thousand British
-and an equal force of Belgians had been able to assemble.
-The Belgians fled before the French cavalry, but the British
-infantry kept up a dogged resistance while corps after
-corps was hurried up. At the close of the day Ney saw
-that he was outnumbered, and withdrew, while Wellington
-retreated to the line of heights upon which we are now
-gazing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Napoleon now pushed on to measure swords with
-Wellington in person for the first time. On Sunday morning,
-the 18th of June, the two armies faced each other.
-As Napoleon looked across the valley and saw the British
-redcoats on the rising ground opposite, he cried, “I have
-them.” He had good reason to believe that he would win.
-His forces numbered between seventy and eighty thousand
-men, and he was superior both in guns and in cavalry to
-his foes. Wellington had about sixty-seven thousand men;
-but his British troops were mainly raw recruits, and the
-rest of his forces were very mixed, and included the Belgians
-who had already fled before the French cavalry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The preceding night had been wet and stormy, and
-when morning broke Napoleon considered the ground too
-heavy for cavalry. He therefore delayed the opening of
-the battle until between eleven and twelve in the forenoon.
-This delay was fatal. Time was most important to both
-commanders. Napoleon knew well that he must beat
-Wellington before Blücher could join him; Wellington, on
-the other hand, was determined to hold his ground to the
-last man, so as to give the Prussians time to come up in
-force and settle the issue of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle began with a fierce attack on Hougoumont;
-but it was held right manfully by the British Guards, and
-though the French won the gardens and orchards, they
-could not drive the defenders from the buildings. Then
-Napoleon sent his heavy columns against the British left,
-but they were utterly routed. His third effort was
-against the British centre, which he tried to break by heavy
-artillery fire and furious cavalry charges.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The British formed square, and, though assailed for five
-hours, held fast. They seemed, said an onlooker, “rooted”
-to the earth. Every attempt to pierce them failed, until
-even the British privates saw the uselessness of the attempt,
-and cried, as Napoleon’s squadrons charged them, “Here
-come those fools again.” Every attempt to take the ridge
-was repulsed with terrible slaughter. At last, in the thick
-of the fighting, the cannon of the advancing Prussians were
-heard, and Napoleon made one last desperate effort to break
-the British line.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>La Haye Sainte was captured about six in the evening,
-and Napoleon’s cannon were now so near that Wellington’s
-centre was in dire danger. Blücher was rapidly drawing
-near, and already he was threatening the French right and
-rear. Like a desperate gambler, Napoleon now staked all
-on a charge of the Old Guard. A little after seven he
-gave the word, and six thousand of his veterans, led by
-Marshal Ney, were hurled at the long-tried British. As
-the French rushed up the slope, the British Guards, who
-had been lying down behind the top of the ridge, sprang
-to their feet and poured a volley into the enemy. Their
-columns wavered, and our soldiers charged with the bayonet,
-hurling the enemy down the hill in utter confusion. Soon
-after eight o’clock the Prussians made their appearance on
-the scene, and speedily Napoleon found himself assailed on
-his flank by forty thousand men.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this juncture, “on the ridge, near the Guards, his
-figure standing out amidst the smoke against the bright
-north-eastern sky, Wellington was seen to raise his hat with
-a noble gesture—the signal for the wasted line of heroes to
-sweep like a dark wave from their covered positions, and
-roll out their lines and columns over the plains. With a
-pealing cheer the whole line advanced just as the sun was
-sinking.” In vain the French Guards rallied, only to be
-swept away by the fierce British charges. When darkness
-fell, the whole French army was in flight. The Prussians
-went in hot pursuit, and before long the proud French
-army of the morning was almost annihilated. Wellington
-and Blücher had lost twenty-two thousand men. The
-French loss will never be known.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle was decisive; the long struggle was at
-an end; and Napoleon’s star had set. He put spurs to
-his horse, and rode hard through the midsummer night
-to escape capture. Fearing death at the hands of the
-Prussians, he surrendered himself to the captain of the
-British man-of-war <span class='it'>Bellerophon</span>. The British Government
-banished him to the lonely isle of St. Helena, where he
-languished in captivity until his death in 1821.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But what of the victor of Waterloo—</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Foremost captain of his time,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Rich in saving common sense,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And, as the greatest only are,</p>
-<p class='line0'>In his simplicity sublime.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>He was no callous victor, regarding his men merely as pawns
-in the great game. When he learnt the death-roll of the
-battle he burst into tears. Scarcely one of those who had
-fought side by side with him in the Peninsula remained to
-share the joy of victory. To the end of his days he was an
-ardent advocate of peace. “Only those who have seen it,”
-he said, “can possibly know how terrible war is.” The
-nation’s gratitude flowed out to him as a river; the meanest
-intelligence could appreciate the overwhelming importance
-of the victory which he had won. Never did such vast
-issues rest on a single battle; never did Britain stand so high
-among the nations as after Waterloo. All possible honours
-were heaped upon him. He received the thanks of both
-Houses of Parliament and a vote of £200,000 wherewith to
-purchase the estate of Strathfieldsaye; while foreign nations
-vied with each other in awarding him gifts and titles.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was but forty-six years of age when the crowning
-victory of his life was accomplished, and for the next quarter
-of a century he was rightly regarded as one of the pillars of
-the State. In 1828 he became Prime Minister; but though
-wise, moderate, and inspired by a high sense of duty, he did
-not prove himself a great statesman. At one time he was
-actually the subject of the nation’s wrath; but as the years
-went by he recovered all his old popularity, and that without
-striving in the least to regain it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He died in his eighty-third year, and you already know
-how this “last great Englishman” was borne to his grave
-amidst sorrowing crowds. And here, side by side with
-Nelson, we leave him—the two great captains of the British
-race, who teach to all future times that the “path of duty”
-is “the way to glory.”</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo368.jpg' alt='' id='i368' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher after the Battle of Waterloo.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the fresco by Daniel Maclise, R.A., in the Houses of Parliament.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo374.jpg' alt='' id='i374' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>QUEEN VICTORIA IN HER CORONATION ROBES.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Sir George Hayter in the Royal Collection.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo376.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0069' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='376' id='Page_376'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XX.<br/> VICTORIA THE GOOD.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Their thoughts shall be my thoughts, their aims my aim,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Their free-lent loyalty my right divine;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Mine will I make their triumphs, mine their fame,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Their sorrows mine.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/i.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='I'/>T is five o’clock on a June morning in the year 1837.
-London is not yet awake, nevertheless four high officers
-of state are knocking lustily and ringing loudly at the
-outer gate of Kensington Palace. They have come straight
-from the deathbed of William the Fourth, and they have
-news of the highest importance for the young princess who
-resides within. But at this early hour of the day the whole
-palace is wrapped in slumber, and the knocking and ringing
-have to be repeated many times before the drowsy porter
-is awakened. You see him rubbing his eyes and reluctantly
-throwing open the gate. Now the little party, which
-includes the Primate and the Lord High Chamberlain,
-enters the courtyard, and another long wait follows. At
-length the distinguished visitors are admitted to a lower
-room of the palace, and there they seem to be quite forgotten.
-They ring the bell, and when it is answered the
-Lord High Chamberlain requests that the attendant of the
-Princess Victoria be sent to inform her Royal Highness that
-high officials of state desire an audience on business of the
-utmost importance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is another long delay, and again the bell is rung,
-this time with pardonable impatience. The attendant of
-the princess is summoned, and she declares that her royal
-charge is in such a sweet sleep that she cannot venture to
-disturb her. “We are come on business of state to the
-Queen,” says the Lord High Chamberlain, “and even her
-sleep must give way to that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few minutes later the door opens again, and a young
-girl of eighteen, fresh as a newly-opened rosebud, enters
-the room. She has not waited to dress. Her hair falls
-loose upon her shoulders; she has hurriedly thrown a shawl
-round herself, and thrust her feet into slippers. There
-are tears in her eyes as she learns that her uncle the king is
-dead and that she is queen!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At once she turns to the archbishop, and with simple,
-unaffected piety says, “Pray for me!” All kneel together,
-and the venerable prelate supplicates the Most High, who
-ruleth over the kingdoms of men, to give the young sovereign
-an understanding heart to judge so great a people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus Victoria, before she is out of her teens, takes up
-the arduous and exacting duties of her high office. Read
-the letters which she wrote in those early days to her
-relatives and statesmen, and you will marvel at the clear
-judgment, the strong will, and the sound common sense
-of the girl-queen. Her reign opens in times of national
-distress and political unrest, and below a certain social level
-there is no sentiment of loyalty to the Crown. But all this
-will suffer a wondrous change in the years that are to come.
-Prosperity hitherto undreamed of will bless the land, and
-year by year freedom will slowly broaden down from
-precedent to precedent; and through all the changes and
-chances of national life Victoria will play her part with
-a courage, steadfastness, and rectitude that will evoke
-universal approbation and passionate loyalty. The time
-will come when she will be the idol of her people, and the
-richest jewel in her crown will be a nation’s love.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk101'/>
-
-<h3>SIXTY YEARS AFTER.</h3>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>And ever when mid-June’s musk roses blow</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Our race will celebrate Victoria’s name,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And even England’s greatness gain a glow</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>From her pure fame!</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>You are in London on the twenty-second day of June
-in the year 1897, and again it is in festal array. The
-whole nation is making holiday to rejoice in the completion
-of sixty years of peace and prosperity under the
-beneficent sway of a dearly-loved queen. Ten years ago
-great public thanksgivings signalized her jubilee; now that
-she has occupied the throne longer than any of her predecessors,
-and has reigned for more years than any other
-monarch known to history, the nation’s delight and gratitude
-know no bounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>You are standing in a favoured position gazing on the
-front of St. Paul’s Cathedral. Afar off you hear the dull
-roar of cheering. The queen is making her progress
-through the capital of her vast Empire. She rides in state
-to-day amidst evidences of almost filial loyalty, and her eyes
-are wet with tears of love and gratitude as she perceives how
-dear she is to the hearts of her people. On the steps of
-the cathedral are the City Fathers, the Colonial Premiers,
-and a white-robed throng of bishops, priests, and choristers,
-the aged Archbishop of Canterbury at their head. The
-noise of cheering grows louder and louder, a troop of
-Household Cavalry clatters by, and you hear the loud cry,
-“<span class='sc'>The Queen! The Queen!</span>” Every head is bared as the
-state carriage with its eight horses appears; the huzzas that
-go up from thousands of throats almost deafen you.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the carriage halts, and the old archbishop
-offers simple and fervent thanks to Almighty God for the
-signal mercies vouchsafed through such long years to
-Victoria and her people. Then, as a climax, the whole
-concourse bursts into the strains of “God save the Queen.”
-Never has the National Anthem been so heartily sung, never
-before has it been so little of a demonstration and so much
-of a prayer. There is no lip-service here: Victoria’s
-throne is in the hearts of her people; she is theirs, and
-they are hers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Look at this little, old lady, whom all men, from duke
-to crossing-sweeper, are to-day hailing as their pride and
-joy. Look at her, and strive to realize the splendour of the
-great office which she has filled so long and so worthily.
-She is the sovereign lady of a dominion so wide in extent
-and so rich in resources that nothing like it has ever been
-seen before in the history of the world. Glance at the
-colonial procession which is even now wending its way
-through the streets, and you will marvel at the world-wide
-character of her sway. Here you see men of British race,
-dwellers in the most distant parts of the earth, all come
-from afar to grace their queen’s pageant, and all bearing
-themselves proudly in the eyes of their kinsfolk “at home.”
-Here, too, you see numerous foreign subjects of the queen,
-men of almost every variety of colour, creed, and language,
-equally proud to do her honour, equally ready to praise her
-beneficent sway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is almost impossible for the aged monarch on this
-red-letter day of her life not to reflect on the wonderful
-changes which have transformed the world since that June
-morning sixty years ago when they waked her out of sleep
-and told her that she was queen. The vast Empire, for
-example, which has been so vividly brought before the
-minds of the British people to-day is very largely the
-creation of her reign. In extent it has nearly doubled
-itself since she came to the throne, and now covers almost
-one-fifth of the globe. In 1837 the colonial population
-was under 4,000,000. Now, excluding India, more than
-18,000,000 of colonists are subject to her. India under her
-sway has doubled its native population, and to-day one-fifth
-of all the people on earth acknowledge her as their sovereign.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The railways which have brought tens of thousands of
-visitors rapidly and cheaply to town were only in their
-infancy when she rode through London to her coronation,
-the steamships which have carried her brave colonials
-across countless leagues of sea were unknown. The electric
-telegraph, which is even now flashing the news of her
-pageant through thousands of miles of wire and cable to
-every part of the civilized world, was then but a toy. The
-penny post, which to-night will convey tens of thousands
-of letters to every town in the land and to most parts of
-her wide Empire, did not exist. There were no omnibuses,
-no tramcars, no district railways, no “twopenny tubes,” no
-motor cars. To-night London will blaze with electric
-lights. What a contrast to the flickering oil lamps of her
-childhood!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And what a vast improvement has taken place in the
-condition of her people! She reflects that there is still
-plenty of poverty and misery in her land, but not a tithe
-of that which existed when she came to the throne. Wages
-are far better, food is far cheaper, housing has greatly improved,
-and men are kings to what they were. The barbarous
-old criminal laws have been abolished; work-people
-are no longer the helots of their masters; education is
-universal, and as free as air and sunlight; and every householder
-has a voice in the government of his country. She
-casts her mind back over sixty years, and rejoices that all
-things have worked together for this great good, and that
-the result is a proud, self-respecting, orderly, and deeply-patriotic
-people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Truly in retrospect her reign appears one long, triumphal
-march; yet there have been reverses, checks, and
-disasters in plenty, though shame never. War has been
-waged in almost every quarter of the globe, and plentiful
-laurels have been won. Her thoughts revert for a moment
-to the great struggle in the Crimea, which took place
-forty-three years ago, and to the splendid British courage
-and endurance there displayed. “Alma,” “Balaclava,”
-“Inkerman,” “Sevastopol”—what heroic memories these
-names recall to her! And then she remembers the terrible
-period of anxiety which followed, when the Sepoys rose,
-and India almost fell from our grasp. “Delhi,” “Lucknow,”
-“Cawnpore”—what anguish and heroism these
-names import! As for the rest of her wars, she rejoices
-to know that they have been, for the most part, punitive
-expeditions against savage neighbours and revolting tribesmen.
-How fervently she prays that peace at home and
-abroad may ever be the lot of her people!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The great day draws to a brilliant close, and from
-end to end of the Empire runs her gracious message of
-gratitude:—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>From my heart I thank my beloved people. May God
-bless them!</span>”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo382.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0070' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo377.jpg' alt='' id='i377' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Saving the Colours: An Incident of the Battle of Inkermann.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by Robert Gibb, R.S.A. By permission of Mr. Bruce-Low.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>In the neighbourhood of the Sandbag Battery the British Guards were surrounded by a strong Russian force,
-through which they cut their way, with the colours carried high as a rallying point. The moment selected for
-representation is that when the Guards are first entering their own lines.</span></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo378.jpg' alt='' id='i378' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Queen Victoria at St. Paul’s.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>An Incident of the Diamond Jubilee. From a photograph.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo380.jpg' alt='' id='i380' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'>Jessie’s Dream.</span><br/> (<span class='it'>From the picture by F. Goodall, R.A., in the Mappin Art Gallery. By permission of the Corporation of Sheffield.</span>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo383.jpg' alt='' id='i383' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'><span class='it'>Edward VII., King of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, Emperor of India.</span></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='383' id='Page_383'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>Chapter XXI.<br/> EDWARD THE PEACEMAKER.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><img src='images/a.jpg' style='float:left;' alt='A'/>ND now let our pageant draw to a close with the
-figure of our present gracious and genial king. Long
-may he reign! He has laid his subjects under
-a deep debt of gratitude. Every inch a constitutional
-king, he has been by no means a mere figurehead of state,
-but a real and potent factor in the affairs of his land. His
-watchword has been Peace, and in its service he has won
-notable victories. It has been his great glory to bring the
-nations of Europe into closer friendship with this country
-than they have ever been before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let us present Edward the Peacemaker in a characteristic
-scene. For two years seven months and nineteen days the
-British nation has been engaged in a desperate struggle
-with the Boers of the Transvaal Republic and Orange
-Free State, and the resources of the British Empire have
-been strained to the utmost. Then, one blessed May day,
-peace is signed at Pretoria, and with a great sigh of relief
-the British nation learns that the war is at an end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Three of the Boer generals, Botha, De la Key, and
-De Wet, come to England to meet the King. They have
-no knowledge of sovereigns and courts, and they have no
-experience to guide them in the presence of royalty. But
-their misgivings are speedily dispelled, for as they step on
-the deck of the royal yacht, King Edward comes forward to
-greet them with an ease and urbanity that is all his own.
-In simple, homely phrases he says that he is glad to meet
-them; he tells them that they have been brave enemies,
-and now he hopes they are to be good friends. And
-the Boer generals respond no less heartily. They reply
-that they hope so too; that they are happy to see him
-recovered from his illness; that their people had heard of it
-with great regret, and are glad to know that the Lord has
-given him back his health.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then they chat frankly and freely with him and the
-Queen—God bless her!—and thus he wins the hearts of
-these simple, brave men, who in the years to come shall be
-his loyal subjects, and shall add a new pillar of strength to
-the British Empire. As they leave the ship a friend asks,
-“And what are you going to tell our people about the
-King, Oom Koos?” “I shall tell them this: that I think
-that if we had sooner known the King, and the King us,
-many things might have been different.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here is a kingly triumph indeed! We raise our hats
-as this royal lover of Peace passes by, and from our grateful
-hearts send up the prayer:</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='sc'>God save the King!</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected.
-Where multiple spellings occur, majority use has been
-employed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious
-printer errors occur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some illustrations were moved to facilitate page layout.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corrections to text:
-—“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Easter Sunday in the year 1491.” was corrected to 1471
-to reflect the actual date of the Earl of Warwick’s death in
-battle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>—“In the year 1788” was corrected to 1759 to reflect the
-year in which Wolfe sailed for Canada, arriving in Quebec in May
-that same year.</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>The Pageant of British History</span> by Sir (James) Edward Parrott]</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pageant of British History, by
-J. Edward Parrott
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PAGEANT OF BRITISH HISTORY ***
-
-***** This file should be named 60524-h.htm or 60524-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/2/60524/
-
-Produced by Al Haines, Cindy Beyer &amp; the online Distributed
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