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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Cameos from English History, by Charlotte Mary Yonge
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
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+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cameos from English History, from Rollo to
+Edward II, by Charlotte Mary Yonge
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Cameos from English History, from Rollo to Edward II
+
+Author: Charlotte Mary Yonge
+
+
+Release Date: December, 2005 [EBook #9474]
+This file was first posted on October 4, 2003
+Last Updated: October 13, 2016
+
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAMEOS FROM ENGLISH HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Text files produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Jayam Subramanian and PG
+Distributed Proofreaders
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ CAMEOS FROM ENGLISH HISTORY
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ FROM ROLLO TO EDWARD II. <br /> <br /> <br /> By Charlotte Mary Yonge
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ 1873
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The &ldquo;Cameos&rdquo; here put together are intended as a book for young people
+ just beyond the elementary histories of England, and able to enter in some
+ degree into the real spirit of events, and to be struck with characters
+ and scenes presented in some relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The endeavor has not been to chronicle facts, but to put together a series
+ of pictures of persons and events, so as to arrest the attention and give
+ some individuality and distinctness to the recollection, by gathering
+ together details at the most memorable moments. Begun many years since, as
+ the historical portion of a magazine, the earlier ones of these Cameos
+ have been collected and revised to serve for school-room reading, and it
+ is hoped that, if these are found useful, they may ere long be followed up
+ by a second volume, comprising the wars in France, and those of the Roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>February 28th, 1868.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>CAMEOS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> CAMEO I. ROLF GANGER. (900-932.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> CAMEO II. WILLIAM LONGSWORD AND RICHARD THE
+ FEARLESS. (932-996.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> CAMEO III. YOUTH OF THE CONQUEROR. (1036-1066.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> CAMEO IV. EARL GODWIN. (1012-1052.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> CAMEO V. THE TWO HAROLDS. (1060-1066.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> CAMEO VI. THE NORMAN INVASION. (1066.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> CAMEO VII. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS. (1066.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> CAMEO VIII. THE CAMP OF REFUGE. (1067-1072.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> CAMEO IX. THE LAST SAXON BISHOP. (1008-1095.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> CAMEO X. THE CONQUEROR. (1066-1087.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> CAMEO XI. THE CONQUEROR&rsquo;S CHILDREN. (1050-1087.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> CAMEO XII. THE CROWN AND THE MITRE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> CAMEO XIII. THE FIRST CRUSADE. (1095-1100.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> CAMEO XIV. THE ETHELING FAMILY. (1010-1159.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> CAMEO XV. THE COUNTS OF ANJOU. (888-1142.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> CAMEO XVI. VISITORS OF HENRY I. (1120-1134.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> CAMEO XVII. THE BATTLE OF THE STANDARD.
+ (1135-1138.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> CAMEO XVIII. THE SNOWS OF OXFORD. (1138-1154.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> CAMEO XIX. YOUTH OF BECKET. (1154-1162) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> CAMEO XX. THE CONSTITUTIONS OF CLARENDON.
+ (1163-1172.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> CAMEO XXI. DEATH OF BECKET. (1166-1172.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> CAMEO XXII. THE CONQUEST OF IRELAND. (1172) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> CAMEO XXIII. THE REBELLIOUS EAGLETS.
+ (1149-1189.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> CAMEO XXIV. THE THIRD CRUSADE. (1189-1193) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> CAMEO XXV. ARTHUR OF BRITTANY. (1187-1206.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> CAMEO XXVI. THE INTERDICT. (1207-1214.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> CAMEO XXVII. MAGNA CHARTA. (1214-1217.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> CAMEO XXVIII. THE FIEF OF ROME. (1217-1254.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> CAMEO XXIX. THE LONGESPÉES IN THE EGYPTIAN
+ CRUSADES. (1219-1254.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> CAMEO XXX. SIMON DE MONTFORT. (1232-1266.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> CAMEO XXXI. THE LAST OF THE CRUSADERS.
+ (1267-1291.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> CAMEO XXXII. The CYMRY. (B.C. 66 A.D. 1269.)
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> CAMEO XXXIII. THE ENGLISH JUSTINIAN.
+ (1272-1292.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> CAMEO XXXIV. THE HAMMER OF THE SCOTS.
+ (1292-1305.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> CAMEO XXXV. THE EVIL TOLL. (1294-1305.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> CAMEO XXXVI. ROBERT THE BRUCE (1305-1308.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> CAMEO XXXVII. THE VICTIM OF BLACKLOW HILL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> CAMEO XXXVIII. BANNOCKBURN. (1307-1313.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> CAMEO XXXIX. THE KNIGHTS OF THE TEMPLE.
+ (1292-1316.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> CAMEO XL. THE BARONS&rsquo; WARS. (1310-1327.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> CAMEO XLI. GOOD KING ROBERT&rsquo;S TESTAMENT.
+ (1314-1329.) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> INDEX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ CAMEOS <br /> <br /> OF <br /> <br /> THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Young people learn the history of England by reading small books which
+ connect some memorable event that they can understand, and remember, with
+ the name of each king&mdash;such as Tyrrell&rsquo;s arrow-shot with William
+ Rufus, or the wreck of the White Ship with Henry I. But when they begin to
+ grow a little beyond these stories, it becomes difficult to find a history
+ that will give details and enlarge their knowledge, without being too
+ lengthy. They can hardly be expected to remember or take an interest in
+ personages or events left, as it were, in the block. It was the sense of
+ this want that prompted the writing of the series that here follows, in
+ which the endeavor has been to take either individual characters, or
+ events bearing on our history, and work them out as fully as materials
+ permitted, so that each, taken by itself, might form an individual Cameo,
+ or gem in full relief, and thus become impressed upon the mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The undertaking was first begun sixteen years ago, for a periodical for
+ young people. At that time, the view was to make the Cameos hang, as it
+ were, on the thread furnished by ordinary childish histories, so as to
+ leave out what might be considered as too well-known. However, as the work
+ made progress, this was found to be a mistake; the omissions prevented the
+ finished parts from fitting together, and the characters were incomplete,
+ without being shown in action. Thus, in preparing the Cameos for separate
+ publication, it has been found better to supply what had previously been
+ omitted, as well as to try to correct and alter the other Cameos by the
+ light of increasing information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of them lay claim to being put together from original documents; they
+ are only the attempt at collecting, from large and often not easily
+ accessible histories, the more interesting or important scenes and facts,
+ and at arranging them so that they may best impress the imagination and
+ memory of the young, so as to prepare them for fuller and deeper reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our commencement is with the Dukes of Normandy. The elder England has been
+ so fully written of, and in such an engaging manner for youthful readers,
+ in the late Sir Francis Palgrave&rsquo;s &ldquo;History of the Anglo-Saxons,&rdquo; that it
+ would have been superfluous to expand the very scanty Cameos of that
+ portion of our history. The present volume, then, includes the history of
+ the Norman race of sovereigns, from Rollo to Edward of Carnarvon, with
+ whose fate we shall pause, hoping in a second volume to go through the
+ French wars and the wars of the Roses. Nor have we excluded the mythical
+ or semi-romantic tales of our early history. It is as needful to a person
+ of education to be acquainted with them, as if they were certain facts,
+ and we shall content ourselves with marking what come to us on doubtful
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO I. ROLF GANGER. (900-932.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 901. Edward the Elder.
+ 924. Athelstan.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 898. Charles
+ the Simple.
+ 923. Rudolf.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 899. Ludwig IV.
+ 912. Konrad.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If we try to look back at history nine hundred years, we shall see a world
+ very unlike that in which we are now moving. Midway from the birth of our
+ Lord to the present era, the great struggle between the new and old had
+ not subsided, and the great European world of civilized nations had not
+ yet settled into their homes and characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christianity had been accepted by the Roman Emperor six hundred years
+ previously, but the Empire was by that time too weak and corrupt to be
+ renewed, even by the fresh spirit infused into it; and, from the 4th
+ century onward, it had been breaking up under the force of the fierce
+ currents of nations that rushed from the north-east of Europe. The Greek
+ half of the Empire prolonged its existence in the Levant, but the Latin,
+ or Western portion, became a wreck before the 5th century was far
+ advanced. However, each conquering tribe that poured into the southern
+ dominions had been already so far impressed with the wisdom and dignity of
+ Rome, and the holiness of her religion, that they paused in their
+ violence, and gradually allowed themselves to be taught by her doctrine,
+ tamed by her manners, and governed by her laws. The Patriarch of Rome&mdash;<i>Papa</i>,
+ or Father&mdash;was acknowledged by them, as by the subjects of Rome of
+ old; they accepted the clergy, who had already formed dioceses and
+ parishes, and though much of horrible savagery remained to be subdued in
+ the general mass, yet there was a gradual work of amelioration in
+ progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was especially the case with the Franks, who had overspread the
+ northern half of Gaul. Their first race of kings had become Christians
+ simultaneously with their conquest; and though these soon dwindled away
+ between crime and luxury, there had grown up under them a brave and
+ ambitious family, whose earlier members were among the most distinguished
+ persons in history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Martel turned back the Saracens at Tours, and saved Europe from
+ Mahometanism, and his grandson, Charles the Great, rescued the Pope from
+ the Lombards, and received from him in return the crown of a new Empire of
+ the West&mdash;the Holy Roman Empire, which was supposed to be the great
+ temporal power. As the Pope, or Patriarch, was deemed the head of all
+ bishops, so the Emperor was to be deemed the head of all kings of the
+ West, from the Danube and Baltic to the Atlantic Ocean&mdash;the whole
+ country that had once been held by Rome, and then had been wrested from
+ her by the various German or Teutonic races. The island of Great Britain
+ was a sort of exception to the general rule. Like Gaul, it had once been
+ wholly Keltic, but it had not been as entirely subdued by the Romans, and
+ the overflow of Teutons came very early thither, and while they were yet
+ so thoroughly Pagan that the old Keltic Church failed to convert them, and
+ the mission of St. Augustine was necessary from Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later, when Charles the Great formed his empire of Franks,
+ Germans, Saxons, and Gauls, Egbert gathered, in like manner, the various
+ petty kingdoms of the Angles and Saxons under the one dominant realm of
+ Wessex, and thus became a sort of island Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems, however, to be a rule, that nations and families recently
+ emerged from barbarism soon fade and decay under the influence of high
+ civilization; and just as the first race of Frankish kings had withered
+ away on the throne, so the line of Charles the Great, though not inactive,
+ became less powerful and judicious, grew feeble in the very next
+ generation, and were little able to hold together the multitude of nations
+ that had formed the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon the kingdom of France split away from the Empire; and while a fresh
+ and more able Emperor became the head of the West, the descendants of the
+ great Charles still struggled on, at their royal cities of Laon and
+ Soissons, with the terrible difficulties brought upon them by restless
+ subjects, and by the last and most vigorous swarm of all the Teutonic
+ invaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wild rugged hills and coasts of Scandinavia, with their keen climate,
+ long nights, and many gulfs and bays, had contributed to nurse the Teuton
+ race in a vigor and perfection scarcely found elsewhere&mdash;or not at
+ least since the more southern races had yielded to the enervating
+ influences of their settled life. Some of these had indeed been tamed, but
+ more had been degraded. The English were degenerating into clownishness,
+ the Franks into effeminacy; and though Christianity continually raised up
+ most brilliant lights&mdash;now on the throne, now in the cathedral, now
+ in the cloister&mdash;yet the mass of the people lay sluggish, dull,
+ inert, selfish, and half savage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were in this state when the Norseman and the Dane fitted out their
+ long ships, and burst upon their coasts. By a peculiar law, common once to
+ all the Teuton nations, though by that time altered in the southern ones,
+ the land of a family was not divided among its members, but all possessed
+ an equal right in it; and thus, as it was seldom adequate to maintain them
+ all, the more enterprising used their right in it only to fell trees
+ enough to build a ship, and to demand corn enough to victual their crew,
+ which was formed of other young men whose family inheritance could not
+ furnish more than a sword or spear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kings and princes&mdash;of whom there were many&mdash;were exactly in the
+ same position as their subjects, and they too were wont to seek their
+ fortunes upon the high seas. Fleets coalesced under the command of some
+ chieftain of birth or note, and the Vikings, or pirates, sailed fearlessly
+ forth, to plunder the tempting regions to the south of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fierce worshippers were they of the old gods, Odin, Frey, Thor; of the
+ third above all others, and their lengthy nights had led to their working
+ up those myths that had always been common to the whole race into a
+ beauty, poetry, and force, probably not found elsewhere; and that nerved
+ them both to fight vehemently for an entrance to Valhalla, the hall of
+ heroes, and to revenge the defection of the Christians who had fallen from
+ Odin. They plundered, they burnt, they slew; they specially devastated
+ churches and monasteries, and no coast was safe from them from the
+ Adriatic to the furthest north&mdash;even Rome saw their long ships, and,
+ &ldquo;From the fury of the Northmen, good Lord deliver us,&rdquo; was the prayer in
+ every Litany of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ England had been well-nigh undone by them, when the spirit of her greatest
+ king awoke, and by Alfred they were overcome: some were permitted to
+ settle down and were taught Christianity and civilization, and the fresh
+ invaders were driven from the coast. Alfred&rsquo;s gallant son and grandson
+ held the same course, guarded their coasts, and made their faith and
+ themselves respected throughout the North. But in France, the
+ much-harassed house of Charles the Great, and the ill-compacted bond of
+ different nations, were little able to oppose their fierce assaults, and
+ ravage and devastation reigned from one end of the country to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, the Vikings, on returning to their native homes, sometimes found
+ their place filled up, and the family inheritance incapable of supporting
+ so many. Thus they began to think of winning not merely gold and cattle,
+ but lands and houses, on the coasts that they had pillaged. In Scotland,
+ the Hebrides, and Ireland, they settled by leave of nothing but their
+ swords; in England, by treaty with Alfred; and in France, half by
+ conquest, half by treaty, always, however, accepting Christianity as a
+ needful obligation when they accepted southern lands. Probably they
+ thought that Thor was only the god of the North, and that the &ldquo;White
+ Christ,&rdquo; as they called Him who was made known to them in these new
+ countries, was to be adored in what they deemed alone His territories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the sea-robbers who sailed from their rocky dwelling-places by the
+ fiords of Norway, none enjoyed higher renown than Rolf, called the ganger,
+ or walker, as tradition relates, because his stature was so gigantic that,
+ when clad in full armor, no horse could support his weight, and he
+ therefore always fought on foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rolf&rsquo;s lot had, however, fallen in what he doubtless considered as evil
+ days. No such burnings and plunderings as had hitherto wasted England, and
+ enriched Norway, fell to his share; for Alfred had made the bravest
+ Northman feel that his fleet and army were more than a match for theirs.
+ Ireland was exhausted by the former depredations of the pirates, and, from
+ a fertile and flourishing country, had become a scene of desolation;
+ Scotland and its isles were too barren to afford prey to the spoiler; and
+ worse than all, the King of Norway, Harald Harfagre, desirous of being
+ included among the civilized sovereigns of Europe, strictly forbade his
+ subjects to exercise their old trade of piracy on his own coasts, or on
+ those of his allies. Rolf, perhaps, considered himself above this new law.
+ His father, Earl Rognwald, as the chief friend of the King, had been
+ chosen to cut and comb the hair which Harald had kept for ten years
+ untrimmed, in fulfilment of a vow, that his locks should never be clipped
+ until the whole of Norway was under his dominion. He had also been
+ invested with the government of the great Earldom of Möre, where the sons
+ of Harald, jealous of the favor with which he was regarded by their
+ father, burnt him and sixty of his men, in his own house. The vengeance
+ taken by his sons had been signal, and the King had replaced Thorer the
+ Silent, one of their number, in his father&rsquo;s earldom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rolf, presuming on the favor shown to his family, while returning from an
+ expedition on the Baltic, made a descent on the coast of Viken, a part of
+ Norway, and carried off the cattle wanted by his crew. The King, who
+ happened at that time to be in that district, was highly displeased, and,
+ assembling a council, declared Rolf Ganger an outlaw. His mother, Hilda, a
+ dame of high lineage, in vain interceded for him, and closed her entreaty
+ with a warning in the wild extemporary poetry of the North:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Bethink thee, monarch, it is ill
+ With such a wolf, at wolf to play,
+ Who, driven to the wild woods away,
+ May make the king&rsquo;s best deer his prey.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Harald listened not, and it was well; for through the marvellous dealings
+ of Providence, the outlawry of this &ldquo;wolf&rdquo; of Norway led to the
+ establishment of our royal line, and to that infusion of new spirit into
+ England to which her greatness appears to be chiefly owing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The banished Rolf found a great number of companions, who, like himself,
+ were unwilling to submit to the strict rule of Harald Harfagre, and
+ setting sail with them, he first plundered and devastated the coast of
+ Flanders, and afterward turned toward France. In the spring of 896, the
+ citizens of Rouen, scarcely yet recovered from the miseries inflicted upon
+ them by the fierce Danish rover, Hasting, were dismayed by the sight of a
+ fleet of long low vessels with spreading sails, heads carved like that of
+ a serpent, and sterns finished like the tail of the reptile, such as they
+ well knew to be the keels of the dreaded Northmen, the harbingers of
+ destruction and desolation. Little hope of succor or protection was there
+ from King Charles the Simple; and, indeed, had the sovereign been ever so
+ warlike and energetic, it would little have availed Rouen, which might
+ have been destroyed twice over before a messenger could reach Laon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this emergency, Franco, the Archbishop, proposed to go forth to meet
+ the Northmen, and attempt to make terms for his flock. The offer was
+ gladly accepted by the trembling citizens, and the good Archbishop went,
+ bearing the keys of the town, to visit the camp which the Northmen had
+ begun to erect upon the bank of the river. They offered him no violence,
+ and he performed his errand safely. Rolf, the rude generosity of whose
+ character was touched by his fearless conduct, readily agreed to spare the
+ lives and property of the citizens, on condition that Rouen was
+ surrendered to him without resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Entering the town, he there established his head-quarters, and spent a
+ whole year there and in the adjacent parts of the country, during which
+ time the Northmen so faithfully observed their promise, that they were
+ regarded by the Rouennais rather as friends than as conquerors; and Rolf,
+ or Rollo, as the French called him, was far more popular among them than
+ their real sovereign. Wherever he met with resistance, he showed, indeed,
+ the relentless cruelty of the heathen pirate; but where he found
+ submission, he was a kind master, and these qualities contributed to gain
+ for him an easy and rapid conquest of Neustria, as the district of which
+ Rouen was the capital was then called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the following year, he advanced along the banks of the
+ Seine as far as its junction with the Eure. On the opposite side of the
+ river, there were visible a number of tents, where slept a numerous army
+ which Charles had at length collected to oppose this formidable enemy. The
+ Northmen also set up their camp, in expectation of a battle, and darkness
+ had just closed in on them when a shout was heard on the opposite side of
+ the river, and to their surprise a voice was heard speaking in their own
+ language, &ldquo;Brave warriors, why come ye hither, and what do ye seek?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are Northmen, come hither to conquer France,&rdquo; replied Rollo. &ldquo;But who
+ art thou who speakest our tongue so well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heard ye never of Hasting?&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hasting was one of the most celebrated of the Sea-Kings. He had fought
+ with Alfred in England, had cruelly wasted France, and had even sailed
+ into the Mediterranean and made himself dreaded in Italy; but with him it
+ had been as with the old pirate in the poem:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Time will rust the sharpest sword,
+ Time will consume the strongest cord;
+ That which moulders hemp and steel,
+ Mortal arm and nerve must feel.
+ Of the Danish band, whom &lsquo;Earl Hasting&rsquo; led,
+ Many wax&rsquo;d aged, and many were dead;
+ Himself found his armor full weighty to bear,
+ Wrinkled his brows grew, and hoary his hair;
+ He leaned on a staff when his step went abroad,
+ And patient his palfrey, when steed he bestrode.
+ As he grew feebler, his wildness ceased,
+ He made himself peace with prelate and priest;
+ He made himself peace, and stooping his head,
+ Patiently listen&rsquo;d the counsel they said.
+
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Thou hast murder&rsquo;d, robb&rsquo;d, and spoil&rsquo;d,
+ Time it is thy poor soul were assoil&rsquo;d;
+ Priests didst thou slay and churches burn,
+ Time it is now to repentance to turn;
+ Fiends hast thou worshipp&rsquo;d with fiendish rite,
+ Leave now the darkness and wend into light;
+ Oh, while life and space are given,
+ Turn thee yet, and think of heaven.&rsquo;
+
+ &ldquo;That stern old heathen, his head he raised,
+ And on the good prelate he steadfastly gazed,
+ &lsquo;Give me broad lands on the &ldquo;Eure and the Seine,&rdquo;
+ My faith I will leave, and I&rsquo;ll cleave unto thine.&rsquo;
+ Broad lands he gave him on &lsquo;Seine and on Eure,&rsquo;
+ To be held of the king by bridle and spear,
+
+ &ldquo;For the &lsquo;Frankish&rsquo; King was a sire in age,
+ Weak in battle, in council sage;
+ Peace of that heathen leader he sought,
+ Gifts he gave and quiet he bought;
+ And the Earl took upon him the peaceful renown,
+ Of a vassal and liegeman for &lsquo;Chartres&rsquo; good town:
+ He abjured the gods of heathen race,
+ And he bent his head at the font of grace;
+ But such was the grizzly old proselyte&rsquo;s look,
+ That the priest who baptized him grew pale and shook.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Such had been the history of Hasting, now Count of Chartres, who without
+ doubt expected that his name and example would have a great effect upon
+ his countrymen; but the answer to his question, &ldquo;Heard ye never of
+ Hasting?&rdquo; met with no such answer as he anticipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; returned Rollo; &ldquo;he began well, but ended badly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will ye not, then,&rdquo; continued the old pirate, &ldquo;submit to my lord the
+ King? Will ye not hold of him lands and honors?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; replied the Northmen, disdainfully, &ldquo;we will own no lord; we will
+ take no gift; but we will have what we ourselves can conquer by force.&rdquo;
+ Here Hasting took his departure, and returning to the French camp,
+ strongly advised the commander not to hazard a battle; but his counsel was
+ overruled by a young standard-bearer, who, significantly observing,
+ &ldquo;Wolves make not war on wolves,&rdquo; so offended the old sea-king, that he
+ quitted the army that night, and never again appeared in France. The
+ wisdom of his advice was the next morning made evident, by the total
+ defeat of the French, and the advance of the Northmen, who in a short
+ space after appeared beneath the walls of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Failing in their attempt to take the city, they returned to Rouen, where
+ they fortified themselves, making it the capital of the territory they had
+ conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fifteen years passed away, the summers of which were spent in ravaging the
+ dominions of Charles the Simple, and the winters in the city of Rouen, and
+ in the meantime a change had come over their leader. He had been
+ insensibly softened and civilized by his intercourse with the good
+ Archbishop Franco; and finding, perhaps, that it was not quite so easy as
+ he had expected to conquer the whole kingdom of France, he declared
+ himself willing to follow the example which he had once despised, and to
+ become a vassal of the French crown for the duchy of Neustria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles, greatly rejoiced to find himself thus able to put a stop to the
+ dreadful devastations of the Northmen, readily agreed to the terms
+ proposed by Rollo, appointing the village of St. Clair-sur-Epte, on the
+ borders of Neustria, as the place of meeting for the purpose of receiving
+ his homage and oath of fealty. It was a strange meeting which there took
+ place between the degenerate and almost imbecile descendant of the great
+ Charles, with his array of courtly followers and his splendor and luxury,
+ and the gigantic warrior of the North, the founder of a line of kings, in
+ all the vigor of the uncivilized native of a cold climate, and the
+ unbending pride of a conqueror, surrounded by his tall warriors, over whom
+ his chieftainship had hitherto depended only on their own consent, gained
+ by his acknowledged superiority in wisdom in council and prowess in
+ battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greatest difficulty to be overcome in this conference, was the
+ repugnance felt by the proud Northman to perform the customary act of
+ homage before any living man, especially one whom he held so cheap as
+ Charles the Simple. He consented, indeed, to swear allegiance, and declare
+ himself the &ldquo;King&rsquo;s man,&rdquo; with his hands clasped between those of Charles;
+ but the remaining part of the ceremony, the kneeling to kiss the foot of
+ his liege lord, he absolutely refused, and was with difficulty persuaded
+ to permit one of his followers to perform it in his name. The proxy, as
+ proud as his master, instead of kneeling, took the King&rsquo;s foot in his
+ hand, and lifted it to his mouth, while he stood upright, thus overturning
+ both monarch and throne, amid the rude laughter of his companions, while
+ the miserable Charles and his courtiers felt such a dread of these new
+ vassals that they did not dare to resent the insult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his return to Rouen, Rollo was baptized, and, on leaving the cathedral,
+ celebrated his conversion by large grants to the different churches and
+ convents in his new duchy, making a fresh gift on each of the days during
+ which he wore the white robes of the newly baptized. All of his warriors
+ who chose to follow his example, and embrace the Christian faith, received
+ from him grants of land, to be held of him on the same terms as those by
+ which he held the dukedom from the King; and the country, thus peopled by
+ the Northmen, gradually assumed the appellation of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Applying themselves with all the ardor of their temper to their new way of
+ life, the Northmen quickly adopted the manners, language, and habits which
+ were recommended to them as connected with the holy faith which they had
+ just embraced, but without losing their own bold and vigorous spirit. Soon
+ the gallant and accomplished Norman knight could scarcely have been
+ recognized as the savage sea-robber, once too ferocious and turbulent even
+ for his own wild country in the far North, while, at the same time, he
+ bore as little resemblance to the cruel and voluptuous French noble, at
+ once violent and indolent. The new war-cry of <i>Dieu aide</i> was as
+ triumphant as that of <i>Thor Hulfe</i> had been of old, and the Red Cross
+ led to as many victories as the Raven standard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that the word &ldquo;Exchequer&rdquo; is derived from the court of justice
+ established by Rollo, so called from the word &ldquo;<i>Schicken</i>&rdquo;
+ signifying, in his native tongue, to send, because from it judges were
+ sent to try causes throughout the dukedom. It is also said that the appeal
+ from them to the Duke himself, made in these terms, &ldquo;J&rsquo;appelle a Rou,&rdquo; is
+ the origin of the cry &ldquo;<i>Haro</i>&rdquo; by which, for centuries after his
+ descendants had passed away from Normandy, the injured always called for
+ justice. This was for many centuries believed in Normandy, but in fact the
+ word <i>Haro</i> is only the same as our own &ldquo;hurrah,&rdquo; the beginning of a
+ shout. There is no doubt, however, that the keen, unsophisticated vigor of
+ Rollo, directed by his new religion, did great good in Normandy, and that
+ his justice was sharp, his discipline impartial, so that of him is told
+ the famous old story bestowed upon other just princes, that a gold
+ bracelet was left for three years untouched upon a tree in a forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been married, as part of the treaty, to Gisèle, daughter of King
+ Charles the Simple, but he was an old grizzly warrior, and neither cared
+ for the other. A wife whom he had long before taken from Vermandois had
+ borne him a son, named William, to whom he left his dukedom in 932.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this history of Rolf, or Rollo, is, however, very doubtful; and
+ nothing can be considered as absolutely established but that Neustria, or
+ Normandy, was by him and his Northmen settled under a grant from the Frank
+ king, Charles the Simple, and the French duke, Robert, Count of Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO II. WILLIAM LONGSWORD AND RICHARD THE FEARLESS. (932-996.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 927. Athelstan.
+ 940. Edmund I.
+ 947. Edwy.
+ 959. Edward.
+ 959. Ethelred II.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 936. Louis IV.
+ 954. Lothaire III.
+ 986. Louis V.
+ 987 Hugh Capet.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 936. Otho I.
+ 973. Otho II.
+ 983. Otho III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Norman character was strongly marked. Their whole nature was strong
+ and keen, full of energy, and with none of the sluggish dulness that was
+ always growing over the faculties of the Frank and Saxon; and even to this
+ day the same energy prevails among their descendants, a certain portion of
+ the English nobility, and the population of Normandy and of Yorkshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a deep sense of religion, always showing itself in action,
+ though not always consistently, and therewith a grand sense of honor and
+ generosity, coupled, however, with a curious shrewd astuteness. The
+ high-minded Norman was the flower of chivalry and honor, the low-minded
+ Norman the most successful of villains&mdash;and there has often been a
+ curious compound of both elements in the character of some of the most
+ distinguished Normans whom history has to show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Rollo caused his only son to be highly educated, and William of the
+ Long Sword grew up a prince to be proud of. His height was majestic, his
+ features beautiful, his complexion as pure and delicate as a maiden&rsquo;s, his
+ strength gigantic, his prowess with all the weapons on foot and on
+ horseback unrivalled, and his wit and capacity of the brightest and most
+ powerful. Born since his father&rsquo;s arrival in France, the tales of Thor and
+ Odin, the old giants, and the future Valhalla, wore things of the dark old
+ past to him, and he threw himself with his whole heart into the new faith.
+ So intensely devout was he, so fond of prayer and of the rites of the
+ Church, that Rollo called him fitter for a cloister than a dukedom; but
+ the choice was not open to him, an only son, with the welfare of the
+ Normans dependent on him; and while living in the world, his saintly
+ aspirations did not preserve him from a self-indulgent life at home, or
+ from unjust dealing abroad. But he had many fits of devotion. Once when
+ hunting on the banks of the Seine, he came on the ruins of the Abbey of
+ Jumièges; which had, many years before, been destroyed by Hasting. Two old
+ monks, who still survived, came forth to meet him, told him their history,
+ and invited him to partake of some of their best fare. It was coarse
+ barley bread, and the young duke, turning from it in disgust, carelessly
+ bestowed a rich alms upon them, and eagerly pursued his sport. He had not
+ ridden far before he roused a huge wild boar, and, in the encounter with
+ it, he broke his sword, was thrown from his horse, and so severely
+ injured, that his servants, on coming up, found him stretched insensible
+ upon the ground. Believing this accident to be the just punishment of
+ Heaven for his contempt for the old brethren, William, as soon as he
+ recovered his senses, desired to be carried to Jumièges, and there humbly
+ confessed his sinful feelings, and entreated their pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His first care, when his health was re-established, was for the
+ restoration of Jumièges, which he built with great splendor, and often
+ visited. His chief desire was to enter the abbey as a brother of the
+ order, but his wish was opposed by the excellent Abbot Martin, who pointed
+ out to him that he ought not to desert the station to which he had been
+ called by Heaven, nor quit the government till his son was old enough to
+ take the charge upon himself, and at the same time encouraged him by the
+ example of many a saint, whose heavenward road had lain through the toils
+ and cares of a secular life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William yielded to the arguments of the good father, but his heart was
+ still in the peaceful abbey, and he practised in secret the devotions and
+ austerities of the cloister to the utmost of his power, longing earnestly
+ for the time when he might lay aside the weary load of cares of war and of
+ government, and retire to that holy brotherhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Normandy, his strict, keen justice made him greatly honored and loved,
+ but the French greatly hated and abhorred him, and his transactions with
+ them were sometimes cunning, sometimes violent. He had much of the old
+ Northman about him, and had not entered into the Church&rsquo;s teachings of the
+ sanctity of marriage. Like his father, he had had a half-acknowledged
+ wife, Espriota, who was the mother of his only child, Richard, but he put
+ her away in order to ally himself with one of the great French families,
+ and he had his child brought up at Bayeux, among Norse-speaking nobles, as
+ if he would rather see him a Norseman than a, French prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bold and devout but inconsistent William was the dread of all his
+ neighbors, and especially of Arnulf, Count of Flanders. William was in
+ alliance with Herluin, Count of Montreuil, against Arnulf; when, in 942,
+ he was invited to a conference on a small island in the Somme, and there,
+ having contrived to separate him from his followers, at a given signal one
+ of the Flemings struck him down with an oar, and a number of daggers were
+ instantly plunged into his breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Flemings made their escape in safety, leaving the bleeding corpse upon
+ the island, where the Normans, who had seen the murder, without being able
+ to prevent or revenge it, reverently took it up, and brought it back to
+ Rouen. Beneath the robes of state they found it dressed in a hair-cloth
+ shirt, and round the neck was a chain sustaining a golden key, which was
+ rightly judged to belong to the chest where he kept his choicest treasure;
+ but few would have guessed what was the treasure so valued by the knightly
+ duke of the martial name, and doubtless there were many looks of wonder
+ among the Norman barons, when the chest was opened, and disclosed, instead
+ of gold and jewels, the gown and hood, the sandals and rosary, of a
+ brother of the Benedictine order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was buried beside his father, in the cathedral of Rouen, amid the
+ universal lamentations of his vassals; and his greatest friend and
+ counsellor, Bernard the Dane, Count of Harcourt, fetched from Bayeux his
+ only child, Richard, only eight years old, to be solemnly invested with
+ the ducal sword and mantle, and to receive the homage of the Normans.
+ [Footnote: This is the Norman legend. The French Chronicles point to
+ Norman treachery.] The bitter hatred of the French to the Normans could
+ not but break out in the minority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the surprise of the Normans, Louis IV., king of France, suddenly
+ arrived at Rouen, to claim, as he said, the homage of his young vassal. On
+ the following day, Richard did not, as usual, appear beyond the walls of
+ the castle, and there were rumors that he was detained there by order of
+ the king. Assembling in great numbers, the Rouennais came before the
+ castle, shouting loudly for &ldquo;Richard! Richard! our little Duke!&rdquo; nor could
+ they be pacified till Louis appeared at the window, lifting young Richard
+ in his arms, and made them a speech upon the gratitude and admiration
+ which he pretended to feel for Duke William, to whom he said he owed his
+ restoration to the throne of his fathers, and whose son he promised to
+ regard as his own child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On leaving Rouen, Louis claimed the right of taking Richard with him, as
+ the guardian of all crown vassals in their minority; and Bernard de
+ Harcourt, finding it impossible to resist, only stipulated that the young
+ Duke should never be separated from his Norman esquire, Osmond de
+ Centeville, who on his side promised to keep a careful watch over him.
+ Richard was accordingly conducted to Montleon, and made the companion of
+ the two young princes, Lothaire and Carloman, and for some time no more
+ was heard respecting him in Normandy. At last arrived a message from
+ Osmond de Centeville, sent in secret with considerable difficulty, telling
+ the Normans to pray that their young duke might be delivered out of the
+ hands of his enemies, for that he was convinced that evil was intended,
+ since he was closely watched; and one day when he had gone down to the
+ river to bathe, the queen had threatened him with cruel punishments if he
+ again left the place. Bernard immediately ordered a three days&rsquo; fast,
+ during which prayers for the safety of the little duke were offered in
+ every church in Normandy, and further tidings were anxiously awaited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the faithful squire was devising a plan of escape. He
+ caused the young Richard to feign illness, and thus obtained a slight
+ relaxation of the vigilance with which his movements, were watched, which
+ enabled him to carry to the duke&rsquo;s apartments a great bundle of hay. At
+ nightfall he rolled Richard up in the midst of it, and laying it across
+ his shoulders, he crossed the castle court to the stable, as if he was
+ going to feed his horse, and as soon as it was dark he mounted, placing
+ the boy before him, and galloped off to a castle on the borders of
+ Normandy, where the rescued prince was greeted with the greatest joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The escape of his ward was followed by an open declaration of war on the
+ part of Louis IV., upon which the Count de Harcourt sent to Denmark to ask
+ succor from King Harald Blue-tooth, who, mindful of Duke William&rsquo;s
+ kindness, himself led a numerous force to Normandy. Bernard, pretending to
+ consider this as a piratical invasion, sent to ask Louis to assist him in
+ expelling the heathens. Louis entered Normandy, and came in sight of the
+ Danish host on the banks of the river Dives, where Harald summoned him to
+ leave the dukedom to its rightful owner. Louis desired a conference, and a
+ tent was pitched between the armies, where the two kings met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bernard advised the King of France not to bring Herluin de Montreuil to
+ this meeting, since the Normans considered him as the occasion of their
+ duke&rsquo;s death; but the French replied that no Dane should hinder their king
+ from taking with him whomsoever he pleased. While the two kings were in
+ the tent, Herluin, seeing a knight from the Cotentin, with whom he was
+ acquainted, went up to him and inquired after his health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Danes asked who he was, and the knight replied, &ldquo;Count Herluin, who
+ caused Duke William&rsquo;s death;&rdquo; whereupon the wild Danes rushed upon him,
+ and killed him with their battle-axes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A general conflict ensued; the French were put to flight, and by the time
+ the kings came out of the tent, the battle was decided. Louis mounted his
+ horse in order to rejoin his troops, but the animal ran with him into the
+ midst of the enemy, where Harald caught his bridle, made him prisoner, and
+ delivered him to four knights to keep. While, however, they were engaged
+ in plundering, he made his escape, and had ridden four leagues when he met
+ a soldier of Rouen, whom he bribed to hide him in an island in the Seine,
+ until he could find a fit opportunity of quitting Normandy. Harald and
+ Bernard, however, by making strict inquiries, discovered that the soldier
+ knew where he was, and seizing the man&rsquo;s wife and children, threatened to
+ put them to death if he did not put the king into their hands. Louis was
+ accordingly delivered to them, but they shortly after released him on
+ receiving his two sons as hostages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The younger of the two princes died shortly after his arrival in Normandy;
+ and anxiety for Lothaire, the remaining son, induced his father to come to
+ terms with the Normans; and, at St. Clair-sur-Epte, Louis swore to leave
+ Richard in undisturbed possession of his lands, and to extend the limits
+ of the duchy as far as the banks of the Epte, after which the young duke
+ paid him homage, and restored his son to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard then returned to Rouen, which he had not visited since he had been
+ carried to the French court, and was greeted with great joy by the
+ citizens, who were much delighted by his appearance, the height of his
+ figure, and the beauty of his countenance. The King of Denmark was also
+ received by them with great enthusiasm, who, after spending some time at
+ Rouen, returned home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the age of fourteen, Richard was betrothed to Emma, daughter of Hugh
+ the White, Count of Paris, a nobleman whose increasing power had long been
+ a subject of jealousy both to the court of Flanders and to the King of
+ France. On hearing of the intended connection between these two mighty
+ vassals, they united their forces to prevent it, and called in the aid of
+ Otho, Emperor of Germany, and Conrad, King of Burgundy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Louis and Conrad attacked the Count, Otho and Arnulf entered
+ Normandy, and laid siege to Rouen, but on the way thither were attacked by
+ an ambuscade under the command of the young Richard himself, who now for
+ the first time bore arms, and greatly signalized himself, putting the
+ Germans to flight, and killing the Emperor&rsquo;s nephew with his own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Otho still advanced and invested Rouen. Wishing to know what resources the
+ city contained, he sent to ask Richard&rsquo;s permission to enter it, in order
+ to pay his devotions at the shrine of St. Ouen. His request was granted,
+ and in passing through the streets he perceived that the city was so well
+ defended that he could not hope to take it. On his return to the camp, he
+ told his council that he intended to make his peace with the Duke of
+ Normandy, by delivering up to him the Count of Flanders, the author of the
+ expedition. His council, however, persuaded him that this would be a
+ disgraceful action; and Arnulf, receiving some hint of his proposal, in
+ the middle of the night quitted the camp with all his men, and returned to
+ Flanders. The noise of his departure awoke the Germans, who, imagining
+ themselves to be attacked by the besieged, armed themselves in haste, and
+ there was great confusion till morning, when, perceiving The departure of
+ the Flemings, they set fire to their camp, and took the road to Germany.
+ The Normans, sallying out of the town, harassed the rear, killed a number
+ of them, and took many prisoners, and a great quantity of baggage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 954, Louis was killed by a fall from his horse, and was succeeded by
+ his son Lothaire, who inherited all his dislike to the Normans, and
+ especially hated the young duke, the companion of his boyhood, whose fame
+ had so far exceeded his own, both in feats of arms and skill in
+ government, and who, though only twenty-three, had been chosen by the wise
+ and great Count of Paris as the guardian of his children, and the model on
+ which his sons were to form themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice did Lothaire, in conjunction with Count Thibaut de Chartres, a young
+ nobleman who envied the fame of Richard, attempt to assassinate him at a
+ conference; and the former, despairing of ridding himself of him by
+ treachery, assembled an army of fifty thousand men, entered Normandy, and
+ besieged Rouen. Here Richard, in a sudden night-attack on his camp,
+ dispersed his forces, and took a great number of prisoners, all of whom he
+ released without a ransom. Then, pursuing his advantage, he entered the
+ county of Chartres, but he was obliged to return to his duchy, to defend
+ it against a powerful league of all the neighboring princes, formed by the
+ king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fearing to be crushed by so mighty a force, he sent to ask succor from his
+ old friend, the king of Denmark, who, though too aged and infirm to come
+ himself to Normandy, equipped a numerous fleet, and sent his best warriors
+ to Richard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ravages which they committed compelled the king to send the Bishop of
+ Chartres to sue for peace, but he would not venture into the camp without
+ an escort from the duke, lest, as he said, &ldquo;the Danish wolves should
+ devour him on the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his arrival, he implored Richard to have compassion on the French, who
+ suffered dreadful miseries from the Danes; and the duke, always desirous
+ of peace, willingly engaged to treat with the king, and withdrew his
+ forces into Normandy, to the great disappointment of the Danes, who had
+ expected to dethrone Lothaire, and to place the gallant Richard on his
+ throne. They were much surprised at the moderation of the demands which
+ he, a conqueror, made to the humiliated Lothaire, only desiring to be left
+ in quiet possession of his inheritance, and that a pardon should be
+ granted for all injuries committed on either side during the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lothaire gladly agreed to these terms, and the remainder of Richard&rsquo;s life
+ was spent in peace. Such of the latter&rsquo;s subjects as had been trained to
+ arms in the constant wars during his minority, found employment in combats
+ with the Greeks and Saracens in Italy, where the twelve sons of a Norman
+ knight, named Tancred de Hauteville, laid the foundation of the kingdoms
+ of the Two Sicilies. Their place was supplied by the Danish allies, who,
+ full of admiration for the Fearless Duke, were desirous of embracing his
+ religion, and living under his government. Thibaut de Chartres came to
+ Normandy to implore his pardon, and was received with such kindness that
+ he was overcome with shame at his former conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard was a stern but honorable man, and the courage and ability which
+ he displayed throughout these wars made a great impression on his Danish
+ allies, who were induced, in great numbers, to adopt the religion of the
+ Fearless Duke, and to live under his government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the truly great man takes his revenge, was indeed shown by Richard the
+ Fearless, the last time he took any part in the affairs of the nation. It
+ was when Hugh Capet, Count of Paris, once his ward, had been raised to the
+ throne of France by the authority of the Pope, and having received the
+ homage of every crown vassal excepting Arnulf of Flanders, proceeded to
+ ravage his county and seize his towns. Arnulf, completely reduced, saw no
+ hope for himself except in throwing himself on the mercy of Duke Richard,
+ the very man whose father he had murdered, and whom he had pursued with
+ the most unrelenting hatred from his earliest childhood. Richard had but
+ to allow royal justice to take its course, and he would have been fully
+ avenged; but he who daily knelt before the altar of the Church of Fescamp,
+ had learnt far other lessons. He went to Hugh Capet, and so pleaded with
+ him, that he not only obtained the pardon of Arnulf, but the restoration
+ of the whole of his county, and of both his cities. Thus, without doubt,
+ would the saintly William Longsword have desired to be revenged by his
+ only son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard Sans Peur lived nine years after this, spending his time, for the
+ most part, in the Abbey of Fescamp, in devotion and works of charity, and
+ leaving the government to his eldest son, Richard the Good. He is thus
+ described by a Norman chronicler who knew him well in his old age: &ldquo;He was
+ tall and well-proportioned, his countenance was noble, his beard was long,
+ and his head covered with white hair. He was a pious benefactor to the
+ monks, supplied the wants of the clergy, despised the proud, loved the
+ humble, aided the poor, the widow and the orphan, and delighted in
+ ransoming prisoners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He caused a stone coffin to be made for himself in his lifetime, and
+ placed in the Church of Fescamp, where, every Friday, he filled it with
+ wheat, which was afterwards distributed among the poor. In this Abbey he
+ died in 996, desiring to be buried outside the church, close beneath the
+ eaves, &ldquo;where,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the droppings of water from the roof may fall on
+ me, and wear away the stains of earthly corruption.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His daughter Emma is often mentioned in English history as the wife of
+ Ethelred the Unready, and afterward of Knut. She has often been much
+ blamed for this second marriage with the enemy of her country, but it
+ should be remembered how nearly the Northmen and Danes were connected, and
+ that Knut was the grandson of her father&rsquo;s ally, Harald Blue-tooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great event of Richard&rsquo;s time was the above-mentioned recognition of
+ Hugh Capet as King of France. The Caroline race were Franks, chiefly
+ German in blood, and had never fully amalgamated with the race called
+ French, a mixture of Roman and Gallic, with only an upper stratum of the
+ true Frank. When the Counts of Paris obtained the throne, and the line of
+ Charlemagne retired into the little German county of Lotharingia, or
+ Lorraine, then France became really France, and a nation with a national
+ sovereign. Still it was a very small domain. Provence was part of the
+ German Empire, so was Burgundy; Anjou, Normandy, and Brittany were almost
+ independent, though owning a sort of allegiance to the king who reigned at
+ Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO III. YOUTH OF THE CONQUEROR. (1036-1066.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1016. Knut.
+ 1036. Harold I.
+ 1039. Harthaknut.
+ 1041. Edward the
+ Confessor.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1031. Henry IV.
+ 1039. Philip I.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1021. Conrad II.
+ 1039. Henry III.
+ 1055. Henry IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Richard, called the Good, son of Richard Sans Peur, does not seem to have
+ been in all respects equal to his father, nor did much that is worthy of
+ note occur in his time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He died in 1026, leaving two sons, Richard and Robert, both violent and
+ turbulent young men, the younger of whom was called, from his fiery
+ temper, Robert the Devil. After a fierce dispute respecting Robert&rsquo;s
+ appanage, the two brothers were suddenly reconciled, and, immediately
+ afterward, Richard died, not without suspicion, on the part of the French,
+ that he had been poisoned by his brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Normans gave little heed to the calumny, and, in fact, the open,
+ generous temper of Robert was by no means likely to belong to a secret
+ murderer. The splendor of his court, and munificence of his gifts,
+ acquired for him the name of Robert the Magnificent, and the following,
+ among other instances, is recorded of his liberality:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When attending mass at the Abbey of Cerizy, his own foundation, he one day
+ remarked a stranger knight, when asked for his alms at the offertory,
+ reply sadly, that he had nothing to give. He beckoned to a squire, and
+ sent him to present the poor stranger with a purse containing a hundred
+ pounds, which the knight immediately offered on the altar. After the mass
+ was over, the sacristan came to ask him if he knew bow large the sum was,
+ or if he had given it by mistake, to which he replied, that he had offered
+ it wittingly, since it was for no other end that the Duke had sent it to
+ him. His answer was reported by the sacristan to the Duke, who instantly
+ sent the high-minded stranger a second purse, containing the same sum for
+ his own use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert founded nine monasteries, and made large gifts to all the churches
+ in his duchy, entreating the prayers of the clergy and of the poor, for
+ the pardon of the sins of his youth; but his conscience was ill at ease,
+ and in the sixth year of his dukedom he resolved to go on pilgrimage to
+ the Holy Land, a journey which was then even more perilous than in
+ subsequent years, when the Crusades had, in some degree, secured the
+ safety of the pilgrims, and he seems to have been fully persuaded that he
+ should never return alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His chief care was for the welfare of his son, William, a boy of seven
+ years old, whose situation was the more precarious, because there was a
+ stain on his birth, his mother being the daughter of a tanner of Falaise,
+ so that it was more than probable that his right to the succession would
+ be disputed by the numerous descendants of Richard Sans Peur. Robert did
+ his best to secure his safety by calling together the vassals to do homage
+ to him, and placing him under the especial protection of Henry I. of
+ France, at whose court at Paris he left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert then set out on his pilgrimage, with a few companions, all wearing
+ the coarse garb of pilgrims, with staves in their hands, and their feet
+ bare. As they were passing the gates of a small town in Franche Comté,
+ Robert walking last, an insolent warder, tired of holding the gate open,
+ struck him such a blow on the shoulders with a halbert that he reeled
+ under it, but so changed was his once violent temper, that, seeing his
+ friends about to revenge the insult, he called out, &ldquo;Let him alone;
+ pilgrims ought to suffer for the love of God. I love his blow better than
+ my city of Rouen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next time Robert was heard of, was in humble guise, with staff and
+ wallet, when he received the blessing of the Pope at Rome; but afterward,
+ when he entered Constantinople, he appeared in all his wonted
+ magnificence. He rode to the palace of the Greek Emperor on a mule, shod
+ with golden shoes, so slightly fastened on as to be shaken off amongst the
+ crowds who surrounded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He travelled onward through Asia Minor, though attacked by a fever, which
+ obliged him to be carried in a litter by Moorish slaves&mdash;as he
+ himself expressed it to a Norman pilgrim whom he met returning, &ldquo;to be
+ carried by devils to Paradise.&rdquo; Safely arriving at Jerusalem, he there
+ paid the entrance-money for a multitude of poor pilgrims, whom he found
+ shut out because they were unable to pay the large toll demanded by the
+ Saracens; and after performing the accustomed devotions at the different
+ consecrated spots in the Holy City, he set out on his return to Normandy.
+ His health was already impaired by the fatigues of the journey, and he
+ died at the city of Nicaea, in the year 1035. There, in the now profaned
+ sanctuary, where was held the first general Council of the Church, rests,
+ in his nameless and forgotten grave, the last of the high-spirited and
+ devout Dukes of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the time of the departure of Duke Robert, dangers crowded round the
+ ducal throne of his child; nor were they, as in the stormy minority of
+ Richard Sans Peur, perils chiefly from enemies without, met by a band of
+ vassals, strong in attachment to their lord. The foes who threatened the
+ young William were of his own family, and his own subjects, and there was
+ none of that generous temper, even amongst his chief supporters, which, in
+ the case of his great-grandfather, had made the scenes of war and
+ bloodshed in which he was brought up, a school not of valor alone, but of
+ the higher virtues of chivalry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Norman barons, greatly altered from what they had been in the days
+ when the justice of Rollo prevailed, lived shut up in their strong
+ castles, making war on each other, like independent princes plundering the
+ poor, and committing horrible cruelties, entirely unrestrained by the
+ guardians of the Duke. These, indeed, seemed to be the especial mark for
+ the attacks of the traitors, for his tutor and seneschal were both
+ murdered; the latter, Osborn, Count de Breteuil, while sleeping in the
+ same room with him. Osborn left a son, William, called from his name Fils,
+ or Fitz Osborn, who grew up with the young Duke, and became his chief
+ companion and friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is wonderful that William himself should have escaped death, when so
+ completely unprotected; but he was preserved through all these dangers for
+ the task which was prepared for him; and at a very early age, his numerous
+ troubles had formed his character in the mould fittest for him, who was to
+ be the scourge of England, and yet the founder of its greatness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not sixteen when he first showed of what temper he was. His
+ great-uncle, the Count d&rsquo;Arques, had set up a claim to the duchy, and was
+ besieged in his castle at Arques by Walter Gifford, Count de Longueville,
+ when the King of France succeeded in sending him such considerable
+ reinforcements and supplies, that Longueville sent information that he
+ should be obliged to raise the siege. The tidings reached the Duke, at his
+ hunting-lodge of Valognes. He stood for a few moments in deep thought, and
+ then called for his horse, only saying to his knights these few words, &ldquo;<i>Qui
+ m&rsquo;aime, me suive!</i>&rdquo; &ldquo;Let him who loves me, follow me!&rdquo; and rode off at
+ full speed. He distanced all his followers, rode all night, only stopping
+ to take a fresh horse, and in the evening of the next day arrived quite
+ alone at the camp before Arques, swearing never to leave it till the
+ castle was in his hands. The siege was continued with vigor, and, in a
+ short time, it was surrendered, the Count taking refuge in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time William took the direction of affairs into his own hands,
+ and, by his firmness and ability, succeeded in restraining the excesses of
+ his lawless vassals, though their turbulence, and the severity of his own
+ silent and haughty disposition, made their submission very unwilling. When
+ he was about twenty, a dangerous conspiracy was formed against him by his
+ cousin, Guy of Burgundy, and a number of his chief vassals, who intended
+ to seize him at his hunting-lodge at Valognes, put him to death, and raise
+ Guy to the dukedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conspirators met at Bayeux, the day before their intended treachery,
+ and, whilst dining there, called in to amuse them a half-witted man named
+ Gillos, and the plot was, inadvertently, mentioned in his presence. The
+ duke, when passing through the town, had shown the poor man some kindness,
+ and no sooner did he understand the intended treachery, than he left the
+ hall, and set off for Valognes, where he arrived just before midnight,
+ and, finding all gone to rest, began to batter the door with a stick,
+ shouting for the Duke. At first, William could not believe the story, but
+ Gillos seemed so much in earnest, that he deemed it advisable to go and
+ see what had given rise to the report, and, muffling himself in a cloak,
+ ran down stairs, himself saddled his horse, and rode toward Bayeux. Before
+ he had gone far, he heard the trampling of horses and clanking of weapons,
+ and, concealing himself among the trees, saw that the poor fool&rsquo;s
+ information was perfectly correct, for the whole band of traitors passed
+ by exactly as they had been described. Upon this, he changed his course,
+ and turned toward the coast in the direction of Falaise, his birthplace,
+ and the town most devoted to his interests. The dawn of morning found him
+ with his horse so weary that it could hardly stand, at the entrance of a
+ small village, still at a considerable distance from Falaise, and ignorant
+ of the road. At that moment a gentleman came out of the principal house,
+ and the instant he beheld the young horseman, travel-stained and covered
+ with dust as he was, he exclaimed, &ldquo;St. Mary, my Lord, what can have
+ brought you here in such a condition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you, who know me so well?&rdquo; asked William, in reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith,&rdquo; was the answer, &ldquo;I am called Hubert de Ryes. I hold this
+ village of you under the Count de Bessin. Tell me, boldly, what you need;
+ I will help you as I would help myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, Hubert de Byes took him into his house, gave him some
+ refreshment, and provided him with a fresh horse, sending his three sons
+ with him as guides, whilst he himself remained to misdirect the pursuers,
+ William safely arrived at Falaise, and, in memory of his escape, is said
+ to have caused his path to be traced out by a raised bank of earth, part
+ of which is still in existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rallying his faithful subjects around him at Falaise, and obtaining aid
+ from the king, William met the rebels at Val des Demes. One of them came
+ over to his side before the battle, and, having previously sworn that the
+ Duke should be the first man whom he would strike, he began by giving his
+ armor a slight blow with the point of his lance, considering it necessary
+ thus to fulfil his rash oath to the letter. The rebels were totally
+ defeated, and either submitted to William&rsquo;s mercy, or went to join their
+ countrymen, who were engaged in the conquest of Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the last attempt made by the Normans to resist their Duke, whose
+ authority was now fully established; but it was not long before a war
+ broke out with his powerful neighbor Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, which,
+ however, would scarcely deserve mention, but for the curious terms in
+ which a challenge was sent by the Duke to the Count, who had come to raise
+ the siege of Domfront.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell the Count of Anjou,&rdquo; said he to William Fitz Osborn and Roger
+ Montgomery, his messengers, &ldquo;that if he attempts to carry victuals into
+ Domfront, he will find me before the gates, mounted on a bay horse, and
+ with a red shield. And that he may know me the better, I shall have at the
+ point of my lance a streamer of taffety, to wipe his face withal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the battle which followed, a few days after, William fulfilled his
+ threat, by overthrowing the Count, who escaped with difficulty, with the
+ loss of part of an ear, and was soon after obliged to conclude a peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William married Matilda, daughter of the Count of Flanders, and of a
+ sister of Duke Robert the Magnificent; and having omitted to ask the
+ dispensation from the Pope, which was required on the marriage of such
+ near relations, his uncle, the Archbishop of Rouen, laid them both under
+ sentence of excommunication. William sought for an advocate to send to
+ Rome to plead for their absolution, and his choice fell upon Lanfranc, a
+ native of Lombardy, who had been bred as a lawyer, and was possessed of
+ great learning and talent, but had chosen to embrace the monastic life,
+ and had selected the Norman abbey of Bee as the place of his profession,
+ because the monks there were very poor, and very strict in the observance
+ of their rule. Lanfranc, at the Duke&rsquo;s desire, travelled to Rome, and
+ there succeeded in obtaining the confirmation of the marriage, and the
+ absolution of the bride and bridegroom, on condition of their each
+ founding an abbey, and jointly building a hospital for the blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In accordance with this command, Matilda built the beautiful Abbaye aux
+ Dames at Caen, where her eldest daughter, Cecile, afterward took the veil,
+ and William founded, at the same place, the Abbey of St. Stephen, of which
+ Lanfranc was the first abbot. But fair as were the proportions of that
+ exquisite building, noble as were its clustered columns, and rich as were
+ the zigzag mouldings of its deep arches, its foundation was insecure, for
+ it was on iniquity. It stood on ground violently taken from a number of
+ poor people; and where could the blessing of Heaven have been?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-three years afterward a grave was dug in the noble choir of St.
+ Stephen&rsquo;s Church, and William&rsquo;s corpse was carried through the porch,
+ followed by a long train of nobles, knights, and clergy, but by not one of
+ his numerous children. The requiem was chanted, and orations were made in
+ praise of the Duke of Normandy, the King and Conqueror of England, the
+ founder of abbeys, the builder of churches, when suddenly the cry of &ldquo;Ha
+ Ro!&rdquo;&mdash;the Norman appeal for justice&mdash;was heard, and a man in
+ mean garments stood forth, and spoke thus: &ldquo;Clerks and Bishops, this
+ ground is mine. Here was my father&rsquo;s hearth. The man whom you praise
+ wrested it from me to build this church. I sold it not. I made no grant of
+ it. It is my right, and I claim it. In the name of Rollo, the founder of
+ his family, and of our laws, I forbid you to lay the body of the spoiler
+ therein, or to cover it with my earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishops were obliged to promise satisfaction to the man, and to pay
+ him on the spot sixty pence as the price of the Conqueror&rsquo;s grave. But,
+ even then, his bones were not permitted to rest in peace. In the course of
+ the civil wars of France, his tomb was twice broken open by the Huguenots,
+ the first time rifled of the royal ornaments in which he had been arrayed,
+ and the second, the spoilers, disappointed of their expected prize, cast
+ out the mouldering bones, and dispersed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO IV. EARL GODWIN. (1012-1052.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1013. Swein.
+ 1014. Knut.
+ 1015. Ethelred the Unready (restored).
+ 1016. Edmund Ironside.
+ 1018. Knut.
+ 1036. Harold I.
+ 1039. Harthaknut.
+ 1041. Edward the Confessor.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Danish conquest of England, although the power of the kings of that
+ nation continued but a short time, made great changes in the condition of
+ the country. The customs and laws that had hitherto been observed only in
+ the lands granted by Alfred to the Danes, spread into almost all the
+ kingdom, and the civilization which the great king had striven so hard to
+ introduce was well-nigh swept away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ England might be considered to be in three divisions&mdash;the West Saxon,
+ subject to the laws of Alfred; the Mercian, which had a law of its own;
+ and the East Anglian and Northern portion, where the population was
+ chiefly Danish, and which was therefore more under the immediate power of
+ the Danish kings. Under them, London became the royal residence, instead
+ of Winchester, and several words in our language still attest their
+ influence upon our customs. Of these is the word Hustings, for a place of
+ public assembly; and the title of Earl, for which the English language
+ afforded no feminine, till it borrowed the word Countess from the French,
+ reminds us that the Northern Jarls were only governors during the king&rsquo;s
+ pleasure, and that their dignity conferred no rank on their families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the Danish kings, the other divisions of England fell under the rule
+ of three great Earls. The Danish Northumbria was ruled by the great
+ Northman Siward Bjorn; Mercia was governed by the house of Leofric, an old
+ noble family connected with the ancient line of Mercian kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were many of this family named Leofric, and it is probably of the
+ one living at this time that the curious old tradition of Coventry
+ belongs, which related how his wife, the Lady Godiva, rode through the
+ town with no covering but her abundant hair, to obtain from him the
+ remission of the townspeople from his oppressive exactions&mdash;a story
+ of which the memory is kept up at Coventry by a holiday, and the
+ procession of the Lady Godiva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wessex had become the portion of Godwin, son of Ulfnoth, and great-nephew
+ to the traitor, Edric Streona, the murderer of Edmund Ironside. There is a
+ story, probably a mere fiction, that this family was of mean origin, that
+ Ulfnoth was a herdsman of the south of Warwickshire, and that Godwin first
+ rose to distinction in the following manner: Ulf, a Danish Jarl, who had
+ married a sister of Knut, was separated from the army after one of the
+ battles with Edmund Ironside, and after wandering all night, met in the
+ morning with a youth driving a herd of cattle. He asked his name, and the
+ reply was, &ldquo;I am Godwin, the son of Ulfnoth; and you, I think, are a
+ Dane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ulf confessed that he was, and begged the young man to show him the way to
+ the Severn, where he expected to find the fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Dane would be a fool who trusted to a Saxon,&rdquo; answered Godwin; and
+ when Ulf continued his entreaties, he explained that the way was not long,
+ but that the serfs were all in arms against the Danes, and would kill both
+ him and any one whom they found guiding him. Ulf offered the young
+ herdsman a golden ring for his reward. He looked at it a moment, then
+ said, &ldquo;I will take nothing from you, but I will be your guide,&rdquo; and led
+ him home to his father&rsquo;s cottage, where he was hidden through the whole
+ day. At night, when he prepared to set forth, Ulfnoth told him that Godwin
+ would not be able to return, since the peasants would kill him for having
+ protected a Dane, and therefore begged that the Jarl would keep him among
+ his own people, and present him to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ulf promised, and this, it is said, was the foundation of Godwin&rsquo;s
+ greatness; but there is great reason to doubt the tale, and it is far more
+ probable that the family was anciently noble. Godwin married Gyda, the
+ sister of Ulf, and thus was brought into near connection with Knut; but
+ Ulf, his patron and brother-in-law, soon after was killed in one of those
+ outbursts of violence and cruelty to which Knut seemed to return whenever
+ he went back to his own savage North.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knut had been defeated by the Swedes at Helge, and was at Roskild, when he
+ was playing at chess in the evening with Ulf, and, making an oversight,
+ lost a knight. He took the piece back again, changed his move, and desired
+ his opponent to go on playing; but the Jarl, choosing to play chess on
+ equal terms or not at all, threw down the board, and went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Run away, Ulf the Fearful!&rdquo; said Knut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ulf turned back, and answered, &ldquo;Thou wouldst have run further at Helge
+ river! Thou didst not call me Ulf the Fearful when I came to thy help
+ while the Swedes were beating thee like a dog.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knut brooded on the offence all night, and in the morning sent his page to
+ kill the Jarl. The page found him at his prayers in church, and therefore
+ refrained; but Knut sent another of his followers, who slew him as he
+ knelt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Godwin had, before this, gained too much favor to be likely to fall with
+ his brother-in-law. He was with the king on an expedition against the
+ Wends, and on the night before an intended battle, made a sudden attack
+ without Knut&rsquo;s knowledge, and completely routed them. His talents were so
+ much appreciated, that he received the great Earldom of Wessex, the
+ portion of England least under the power of the Danes, and where the old
+ line of Alfred was most loved and regretted, since it was their hereditary
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this reason Godwin was desirous to maintain the Danes in England after
+ Knut&rsquo;s death, and to keep the scattered royal line at a distance.
+ Harthaknut, whom the will of his father had called to the succession, was
+ absent in Denmark, and Godwin caused his brother, Harold Harefoot, to be
+ crowned in haste, though the Archbishop would not sanction the usurpation,
+ placed the crown and sceptre on the altar, and forbade the bishops to give
+ him their blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alfred and Edward, the two sons of Ethelred the Unready, had in the
+ meantime been brought up under the protection of their uncle, Richard the
+ Good, of Normandy, dwelling for the most part in those beautiful Abbeys of
+ Fescamp and Jumièges, which had been endowed by the piety of the Dukes,
+ and where they grew up in godliness and virtue, with gentle manners and
+ civilized tastes, far unlike to those which prevailed in their native
+ land. Robert the Magnificent was a great friend to them, and his death on
+ his pilgrimage made their abode in Normandy far less peaceful and secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the coronation of Harold Harefoot, they received a letter
+ purporting to come from their mother, Emma, widow of Knut, inviting them
+ to assert their claim to their father&rsquo;s throne. Edward, with a band of
+ Normans, met his mother at Winchester, but he could not keep his followers
+ from plundering the country; and finding little hope of success, gave up
+ the attempt, and returned to Normandy. Alfred landed at Sandwich, in Kent,
+ and was so well received by the Archbishop and people, that Godwin,
+ becoming alarmed, had recourse to treachery, pretended to own him as king,
+ and conducted him to Guilford. Thither King Harold sent his Danes, who
+ seized the prince&rsquo;s followers, after Godwin&rsquo;s men had dispersed them
+ through the town and stupefied them with drink. Every tenth man was
+ killed, the rest were sold for slaves, and Alfred himself was carried to
+ Ely, where his eyes were torn out, and he died of the injury. His mother,
+ Emma, fled to Bruges, and this makes it probable that either she never
+ sent the letter at all, or was only the innocent instrument of Godwin&rsquo;s
+ desire to rid himself of the royal family; but her son Edward believed her
+ to have been knowingly concerned in this horrible transaction, and never
+ regarded her as guiltless of his brother&rsquo;s death. It is possible that
+ Godwin may also have been free from treachery, and have meant well by the
+ prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her other son, Harthaknut, left Denmark to join her at Bruges, intending
+ in the spring to drive Harold from the throne; but death was beforehand
+ with him. Harold died in 1040, and Harthaknut had only to come to England
+ to take possession of the crown. Both these young men were, at heart,
+ savage Danes; and the first deed of Harthaknut, on his arrival, was to
+ satisfy his vengeance for the usurpation of his throne and the murder of
+ Alfred, by causing Harold&rsquo;s corpse to be taken from its grave, the head
+ cut off, and the body thrown into a marsh. He threatened to punish Godwin,
+ but the Earl averted his wrath by the present of one of the long
+ serpent-like keels prized by the Danes, the prow gilded, and the crew of
+ eighty men, each fully equipped, and with a gold bracelet on the left arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harthaknut was pacified by this gift, and contented himself with sending
+ for his surviving half-brother Edward from Normandy, and treating him as
+ became the Atheling. The wild, half-heathen court of Harthaknut was a
+ strange and bewildering change for the gentle Edward, whose habits and
+ tastes were only suited to the convent where he had spent his early days,
+ and who found in the rough affection of his Danish brother his only
+ protection from the fierce spirits around. His grief and dismay were great
+ when, after he had spent a few months in England, he heard that
+ Harthaknut, at the wedding-feast of the daughter of the Dane, Osgood
+ Clapa, from whom Clapham is named, had died suddenly, immediately after an
+ excessive draught of wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward found himself left without protection in the hands of the fierce
+ men who had murdered his brother. He was forty years old, and of an
+ inactive, timid disposition, which unfitted him for taking any bold
+ measures in this emergency; his affections were in the convents of
+ Normandy, and with the young son of his friend, Duke Robert, and he
+ earnestly entreated Godwin to allow him to return in safety thither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl, however, saw that neither Saxons nor Danes would submit to the
+ authority of one who was not of royal blood, and that the best hope of
+ preserving the power he had acquired in the latter reigns, was by setting
+ up a weak king, and governing in his name. He therefore replied by
+ tendering his submission to Edward, and promising to support him on the
+ throne, on condition that he would marry Edith, his daughter, so fair, so
+ gentle, and pious a lady, that it was a saying, &ldquo;Even as the rose springs
+ from the thorn, so springs Edith from Godwin.&rdquo; She was very learned, and
+ Ingulf, who afterward was the secretary of the Conqueror, and Abbot of
+ Croyland, loved to remember how, when he was a boy come from his
+ convent-school to visit his father at the court, the Lady Edith would send
+ for him, examine him in his studies, and end by causing her maiden to
+ count out three or four coins into his hand, and sending him to the royal
+ larder for refreshment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward was thus placed upon the throne, and every act performed of his own
+ free will showed his gentleness and desire for his people&rsquo;s good. At the
+ request of Edith, he abolished the Danegeld, or money raised first to
+ bribe the Danes, and then as their tribute; indeed, it was said that he
+ had seen a vision of an evil spirit dancing on the gold thus collected. He
+ made new laws in hopes of preventing crime, and set so strict an example
+ of attention to every rule of the Church, and giving alms so largely, that
+ he gained the love of his people, and fixed his memory in their hearts so
+ strongly, that he was revered as a Saint, and the title of Confessor was
+ given to him, though it properly only applies to one who has suffered
+ everything short of martyrdom, for the sake of the Christian faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The times were too rude and violent for a king of so soft a mould: crimes
+ were committed which he had no power to restrain, and, weak-handed and
+ bewildered, he seems to have acted in great matters much as he did in the
+ following adventure: He was lying on his bed, when a person came into the
+ apartment, and, thinking him asleep, stole some money out of a chest. The
+ King let this pass; but when the thief returned for a second handful, he
+ quietly said, &ldquo;Sirrah, you had better take care, for if Hugolin, my
+ chamberlain, catches you, he will give you a sound beating.&rdquo; Hugolin soon
+ came in, and was much concerned at the loss. &ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said the King;
+ &ldquo;the poor man wants it more than we do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sons of Godwin were growing up rude, high-spirited young men, who
+ presumed on their connection with the King to hold him cheap, and laugh at
+ him to his face. Sweyn, the eldest, was the worst, and at last caused
+ himself to be banished from the realm by the crime of carrying off the
+ Abbess from the Convent of Leominster. He then spent the life of a pirate,
+ in the course of which he visited the coast, and, while pretending to
+ attempt to be reconciled to his family, treacherously murdered his cousin
+ Biorn. After six years he repented, went barefoot on pilgrimage to
+ Jerusalem, and died while returning. The other brothers were stained with
+ no such enormities, but they were dreaded and disliked by the King, who
+ naturally turned to the friends of his youth, the Normans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norman dresses and customs were introduced, the King&rsquo;s own handwriting was
+ in the foreign character, and he expressed his assent to the laws by
+ appending to them an impression of his seal, after the fashion of the
+ kings of France. He likewise invited many of his old friends from
+ Normandy, gave some of them lands in England, where they built fortified
+ castles, and bestowed the bishopries and abbeys upon Norman ecclesiastics.
+ Great discontent arose upon this, and Godwin and his sons took advantage
+ of them to gain popularity, by strenuously opposing everything Norman, and
+ maintaining, as they said, the old English customs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eustace als Gernons (the Whiskered), Count de Mantes, who had married the
+ King&rsquo;s sister, came to visit Edward. At Dover a squabble took place
+ between his followers and the townspeople, in which several persons on
+ both sides were killed. Edward ordered Godwin to chastise the townspeople,
+ but, instead of this, the Earl collected an army, and marched upon the
+ King himself. They would have made him prisoner but for Leofric of Mercia,
+ and Siward, Earl of Northumbria, who both came to his rescue, and drove
+ Godwin and his family into exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward now felt himself truly King of England, and was able to enjoy a
+ short visit from the Duke of Normandy, who came to see him, and probably
+ then first conceived the hope of obtaining the crown of the ill-governed
+ and divided country that seemed ready to fall a prey to the first vigorous
+ enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earl Godwin was not long in assembling his friends, and making a descent
+ on the coast. All Kent and London rose in his favor, and Edward was
+ obliged to permit his return, and be reconciled to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very shortly after his return, he was struck with a fit of apoplexy, while
+ feasting with the King at Easter. He was borne from the table by his two
+ eldest surviving sons, Harold and Tostig, and died five days after, in the
+ year 1052. The Norman chroniclers give the following account of his death:
+ One of the cup-bearers, while serving the King, happened to make a false
+ step, but saved himself from falling by the foot, at which Godwin
+ observed, &ldquo;See how one brother helps another!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the king, &ldquo;so would my brother have helped me, had he lived.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know you suspect me of his death,&rdquo; replied Godwin, &ldquo;but may God, who is
+ true and just, cause this morsel of bread to choke me, if I am guilty of
+ his murder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had he spoken the words before he fell back, struck by the hand
+ of Heaven, and never uttered another word. Much doubt has been cast upon
+ this story, since it comes to us through Normans, who were great enemies
+ of his house. There is, however, nothing incredible in it; and other
+ instances have been known of persons who thus defied and brought upon
+ themselves the judgment of Heaven, in the full course of their crimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a propensity in these days to exalt the character of Godwin, as
+ if he had been an honest supporter of the old English habits against
+ foreign innovations. It is an entirely mistaken view, since Godwin climbed
+ into power by the favor of the enemies and destroyers of his country,
+ murdered the prince of the ancient line, and throughout the reign of the
+ lawful successor disturbed his peace, and attempts at civilization, by
+ factious opposition. Norman customs would have done far less harm to
+ England than the Danish invaders among whom Godwin had contentedly spent
+ the best years of his life. He seems throughout to have listened only to
+ his own ambition, and to have scrupled at nothing that could promote his
+ interest. Eloquence, and attention to the humors of the nation, won for
+ him wealth and power that rendered him formidable to the King, and he
+ built up a great name and fortune for himself, but brief and fleeting was
+ the inheritance that he bequeathed to his sons. In fourteen years from his
+ death only one of his brave band of sons survived, and he was a miserable
+ captive, who spent his whole existence in the dungeons of his chief enemy.
+ It seemed as if nothing that Godwin had acquired could be enduring, for
+ the very lands he left behind him no longer exist, his chief estate on the
+ coast of Kent was swallowed by the sea, and now forms the dangerous shoal
+ called the Goodwin Sands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wise men also die and perish together, as well as the ignorant and
+ foolish, and leave their riches for other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet they think their houses shall continue forever; and that their
+ dwelling-places shall endure from one generation to another, and call the
+ lands <i>after their own names</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far more enduring have been the memorials left by the meek Edward the
+ Confessor, though he had no son to carry on his name. He had vowed, during
+ his exile, to go on pilgrimage to Rome, but the Witenagemot refused to
+ consent to his leaving England, and he sent the Archbishop of York to ask
+ the advice of the Pope, Leo IX., who recommended him to perform some work
+ of piety at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the foundation of the Church of St. Peter&rsquo;s, in the open country,
+ at the west end of London, and therefore called Westminster. It was built
+ with all the skill of Norman architects, and occupied several years.
+ Edward&rsquo;s last illness prevented him from being present at its
+ consecration, and he was represented there by his wife, but he soon found
+ his rest there. It was dedicated on the Holy Innocents&rsquo; day, 1065, and he
+ was buried there on the 5th of January following. His memory seemed to
+ give an additional sacredness to the spot in the eyes of the loving
+ English, and the pavement round his tomb was worn away by their knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO V. THE TWO HAROLDS. (1060-1066.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1041. Edward the
+ Confessor.
+ 1066. Harold.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1059. Philippe I.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1055. Heinrich IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The death of Godwin did not at first seem likely to diminish the power of
+ his family. Harold, his eldest surviving son, was highly endowed with
+ mental powers and personal beauty and prowess, and was much preferred by
+ Edward the Confessor to the old Earl himself. He obtained all his father&rsquo;s
+ lands, and, shortly after, distinguished himself in a war with the Welsh,
+ showing, however, that vainglory was his characteristic; for he set up
+ mounds of stones along the course of his march, bearing the inscription,
+ &ldquo;Here Harold conquered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The earls who had hitherto balanced the power of the Godwin family, were,
+ about this time, removed by death. Leofric, of Mercia, and his son Algar,
+ died within a few years of each other; and Algar&rsquo;s sons, Edwin and Morkar,
+ were as yet young and timid. Old Earl Siward Biorn fought his last battle
+ when he assisted Malcolm Canmore in overthrowing the murderous usurper,
+ Macbeth, in Scotland. In the battle, Siward&rsquo;s eldest-son, of the same name
+ as himself, was killed. The father only asked if his death-wound was in
+ front, and when he heard it was, &ldquo;I heartily rejoice,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;no other
+ death is worthy of my son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself was obliged, much against his will, to die in peace. &ldquo;I am
+ ashamed,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;after so many battles, to die like a cow; case me in
+ my armor, gird on my sword, put on my helmet, give me my shield and
+ battle-axe, lift me to my feet, that I may die like a man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fierce old Earl&rsquo;s younger son, Waltheof, was a mere child, and the
+ earldom of Northumbria was therefore given to Tostig, the son of Godwin,
+ but he so misgoverned it that he was, by command of the King, sent into
+ exile by his brother Harold, whom he thenceforth regarded with the utmost
+ hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold stood so high in favor, both with King and people, that his views
+ began to take a still loftier flight, especially after the death of Edward
+ the Stranger, the only grown-up person excepting the King who inherited
+ the blood of Alfred. The stranger had indeed left an infant son, but his
+ rights were entirely overlooked. The King wished to leave his crown to his
+ cousin William, Duke of Normandy; and Harold, trusting to the general
+ hatred of the Norman race, hoped to secure it for himself, much in the
+ same way as Hugh Capet had lately dethroned the line of Charles le Magne
+ in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward the Confessor, desirous of a affording William some means of
+ curbing Harold&rsquo;s ambition, sent to him as hostages Ulfnoth and Hako, a son
+ and grandson of Godwin. Harold, however, contrived to extort permission to
+ go to Rouen, and request their liberation, and set out from Bosham, in
+ Sussex. A storm wrecked him in Ponthieu; he was taken captive by the count
+ of that district, who gave him up to William in exchange for a
+ considerable manor, and thus, though he entered Rouen in state, he found
+ himself, instead of the ambassador of the King of England, in effect the
+ prisoner of the Duke of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was treated with great courtesy, accompanied William on an expedition
+ against the Duke of Brittany, and gave great help to the Normans by his
+ personal strength, when some of them were in danger, in crossing a river,
+ and, apparently, was in high honor; but William was determined not to miss
+ the advantage chance had thrown in his way; and when Harold, alter
+ spending some months at Rouen, proposed to return, he, in the first place,
+ insisted on drawing up a treaty of alliance and friendship with his good
+ friend the Earl of Wessex, to be sworn to on both sides. Very distasteful
+ must this promise of friendship have been to Harold, since the first
+ article required him to assist the Duke with all his power in obtaining
+ the crown of England upon Edward&rsquo;s death; but he found it impossible to
+ resist, and declared himself perfectly willing to engage himself as
+ required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An oath taken on the relics of the Saints was, at that time, considered as
+ more binding than one taken on the Holy Scriptures; and William commanded
+ that the most honored of these remains should be collected from various
+ churches and placed in a chest, covered with cloth of gold on which a copy
+ of the Gospels was laid. Harold, laying his hand on the book, swore to
+ observe the treaty faithfully; and when he had so done, William removed
+ the cloth and showed him the relics, at the sight of which he turned pale
+ and trembled&mdash;a sure sign, as was thought by the Normans who stood
+ round, that his conscience would not allow him to break an oath which was
+ believed to have thus acquired double force and sanctity. Yet Harold soon
+ proved that no oaths can bind a man who will not be bound by his simple
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few months after his return from Normandy, he was standing by the
+ bedside of the dying Edward the Confessor, importuning his last moments
+ with entreaties to him to declare his successor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye know, full well,&rdquo; said the poor old King, &ldquo;that I have bequeathed my
+ kingdom to the Duke of Normandy; nay, some be here who have sworn oaths to
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold pressed him for some other answer, and he replied, &ldquo;Take it,
+ Harold, if such be thy will, but the gift will be thy ruin. Against the
+ Duke and his barons no might of thine will avail thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not for me,&rdquo; replied Harold, joyfully; &ldquo;I fear neither Norman, nor
+ aught else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it fall to the most worthy!&rdquo; was the faint answer of Edward. His
+ thoughts began to wander, and he uttered many passages of Scripture
+ speaking of desolation and destruction, which were afterward regarded by
+ his subjects as the last prophecies of their saintly king. He died two
+ days afterward, and, on the feast of Epiphany, 1066, Harold assumed the
+ crown. The coronation was solemnized by Alfred, Archbishop of York; but
+ whether the absence of the Primate Stigand was occasioned by his dislike
+ to the usurpation, or by the sentence of excommunication under which he
+ had been laid by the Pope, is not known. Be that as it may, there was
+ little joy to welcome the accession of Harold; the people were full of
+ melancholy forebodings, excited by the predictions of King Edward, as well
+ as by the appearance of a comet, then supposed to denote the approach of
+ misfortune; the great earls, Edwin and Morkar, were his enemies, the
+ nobles envied him, and stood aloof, significantly relating a story of his
+ boyhood, when he is said to have met with a severe fall in a foolish
+ attempt to fly from the top of a tower with wings of his own contrivance.
+ There is a Spanish proverb which, in truth, suited Harold well: &ldquo;The ant
+ found wings for her destruction.&rdquo; The bitterest of all his enemies was his
+ own brother, Tostig, who, having been banished partly by his means, on
+ account of his misgovernment of Northumbria, was living in Flanders,
+ whence, the instant he heard of Harold&rsquo;s coronation, he hastened with the
+ tidings to Normandy; and not thinking William&rsquo;s preparations speedy enough
+ to satisfy the impatience of his hatred, he went to Norway, where he found
+ a willing ally in Harald Hardrada, the last sea-king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A curious story is told of the childhood of this Harald Hardrada, who was
+ the half-brother of the kingly St. Olaf, being the son of the haughty
+ Aasta and the peaceful Sigurd Syr. When Harald was about three years old,
+ St. Olaf was on a visit to his mother, and calling to his little brothers,
+ took the two eldest, Guttorm and Halfdan, one on each knee, and looked at
+ them, with a fierce countenance, at which both the little boys were
+ frightened, and ran away to hide themselves. He then took Harald on his
+ knee, and put on the same fierce look at him, but the child looked boldly
+ up in his face in return. As a further trial of his courage, the king
+ pulled his hair, upon which the little fellow undauntedly pulled the
+ king&rsquo;s whiskers, and Olaf said, &ldquo;Thou wilt be revengeful, some day, my
+ friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, Olaf found his little brothers at play; the two eldest
+ building little barns and enclosing cornfields, and Harald lying by the
+ side of a pool of water, in which he was floating small chips of wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are these?&rdquo; asked the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My ships of war,&rdquo; said little Harald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! my friend,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;the time may come when thou wilt command
+ ships.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then called the other two, and asked Guttorm what he would like best to
+ have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Corn land,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how great wouldst thou like thy corn land to be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would have the whole ness (peninsula) that goes out into the lake sown
+ with corn every summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what wouldst thou like best?&rdquo; he asked of Halfdan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cows,&rdquo; said the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How many wouldst thou like to have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So many, that when they went to the lake to drink, they should stand as
+ tight round the lake as they could stand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That would be a great house-keeping!&rdquo; said the king; &ldquo;and now, Harald,
+ what wouldst thou have?&rdquo; &ldquo;Followers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how many of them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so many as would eat up all Halfdan&rsquo;s cows at a single meal!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olaf laughed, and said, &ldquo;Here, mother, thou art bringing up a king.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Guttorm and Halfdan followed the quiet life of their father, but
+ Harald was of far different temper. When Olaf returned from his exile in
+ Russia, young Harald, who was scarcely fifteen, joined him with all the
+ followers he could muster, and insisted on taking part in the battle of
+ Stiklestad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olaf told him he was too young; but Harald boldly answered, &ldquo;I am not so
+ weak but I can handle the sword; and as to that, I have a notion of tying
+ the sword to my hand;&rdquo; and then the brave boy sung out some verses,
+ composed on the spur of the moment, according to a talent often found
+ among the Northmen, and highly valued:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Our army&rsquo;s wing, where I shall stand,
+ I will hold good with heart and hand;
+ My mother&rsquo;s eye shall joy to see,
+ A batter&rsquo;d, blood-stain&rsquo;d shield from me.
+ The brave young skald should gaily go
+ Into the fray, change blow for blow;
+ Cheer on his men, gain inch by inch,
+ And from the spear-point never flinch.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Olaf saw plainly that his high-spirited mother had infused her own temper
+ into her youngest son as entirely as into himself, and yielded his consent
+ that Harald should take part in the battle. It was a mournful beginning
+ for a young warrior. Harald beheld the fall of his noble brother, and was
+ himself severely wounded. He was led from the field by a faithful bonder,
+ who hid him in his house; but the spirit of the young minstrel warrior was
+ undaunted, and, during his recovery, he sung thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;My wounds were bleeding as I rode,
+ And down the hill the bonders strode,
+ Killing the wounded with the sword,
+ The followers of their rightful lord.
+ From wood to wood I crept along,
+ Unnoticed by the bonder throng;
+ &lsquo;Who knows,&rsquo; I thought, &lsquo;a day may come,
+ My name may yet be great at home.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ As soon as his wounds were healed, Harald took refuge in Russia, and
+ thence travelled to Constantinople, where he became one of the renowned
+ guards of the Greek Emperor, composed of hired Northmen and Saxons, and
+ called Vaeringer, or Varangians, from the word <i>Wehr</i>, a defence. He
+ went from Constantinople to the Holy Land, bathed in the Jordan, paid his
+ devotions at Jerusalem, and killed the robbers on the way. Strange stories
+ were told of his adventures at Constantinople, of the Empress Zoe having
+ fallen in love with him, and of his refusal to return her affection; upon
+ which she raised an accusation against him, that he had misapplied the pay
+ of the Vaeringers, and threw him into prison, whence, as the story
+ related, he was freed by a lady, who was commissioned to rescue him by St.
+ Olaf, his brother, who appeared to her in a dream. She brought him a rope
+ ladder, and he escaped to his ship, broke through the chains that guarded
+ the harbor, and sailed northward through the Black Sea, composing on his
+ voyage sixteen songs in honor of Elisif, the Russian king&rsquo;s daughter, whom
+ he married on his arrival at Novogorod. He obtained with her great riches,
+ which he added to the treasures he had brought from Constantinople.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Olaf&rsquo;s son, Magnus, was reigning in Norway, and Harald Hardrada
+ designed to obtain from him a portion of the kingdom, to winch, by the old
+ Norwegian law, every descendant of Harald Harfagre had an equal claim.
+ Harald united with his cousin Swend, who had been dispossessed of an
+ earldom by Magnus, and they advanced together; but Harald was inclined, if
+ possible, rather to decide the matter by a treaty, than by force of arms;
+ while Swend, on the other hand, wished for war and revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening, as the two allies were sitting together, Swend asked Harald
+ what he valued most of all his property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My banner, Land-Waster,&rdquo; answered Harald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has always been said that this banner carries victory with it, and so
+ I have ever found it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will believe in that when thou hast borne it in three battles with thy
+ nephew Magnus, and won them all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know my kindred with king Magnus,&rdquo; answered Harald, &ldquo;without thy
+ recalling it; and though we are now in arms against him, our meeting may
+ be of another sort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They came to high words, Swend reproaching his ally with breaking his
+ agreement. Harald distrusted his intentions, and, at night, did not, as
+ usual, sleep in a tent on the deck of his ship, but left a billet of wood
+ in his place. At midnight a man rowed silently up to the side of the ship,
+ crept up to the tent, and struck so violent a blow with his axe, that it
+ remained sticking in the wood, while the murderer retired to his boat, and
+ rowed away in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harald, convinced of this treachery, deserted Swend, and went to join
+ Magnus, who met him in a friendly manner, and invited him, with sixty of
+ his men, to a banquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the feast, Magnus went round the table, distributing gifts of robes
+ and weapons to the sixty men; but when he came to Harald, he held up two
+ sticks, and asked which of them he would choose. Harald took the nearest,
+ and Magnus declared that therewith he gave up to him half his power and
+ land in Norway, making him of equal right with himself, and only reserving
+ the first seat when they should be together at any time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harald sent for all the treasure he had brought home, declaring that they
+ would likewise divide their riches; and the gold was weighed out, and
+ placed in two equal heaps, each on an ox-hide. But Magnus had no riches to
+ contribute, for he said that the turmoils in the country had so
+ impoverished him, that all the gold he possessed was the ring on his
+ finger, which his father, St. Olaf, had given him at their last parting.
+ Even this, Harald said, smiling, perhaps belonged rightfully to him, since
+ it was, at first, the property of his father, Sigurd Syr. However, the two
+ kings parted amicably, and reigned together without disagreements of any
+ consequence, for the remembrance of St. Olaf seemed always to be a link
+ between his son and brother. Magnus, the more gentle of the two, died just
+ as his uncle had led him to enter on a war of ambition with Swend, King of
+ Denmark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norwegian traditions relate that he dreamt that his father, St. Olaf,
+ appeared to him, saying, &ldquo;Wilt thou choose, my son, to follow me, or to
+ become a long-lived and powerful king, at the cost of a crime that can
+ never be expiated?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do thou choose for me, father,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then follow me,&rdquo; replied the spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Magnus awoke, told the dream, sickened, and died, leaving the whole of
+ Norway to Harald Hardrada, and declaring that it would be just not to
+ molest Swend in his possession of Denmark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harald reigned prosperously, until, in an evil hour, he received Tostig,
+ the son of Godwin, and listened to his invitation to come and invade
+ England, and revenge him on his brother Harold. He fitted out a great
+ armament, sailed up the Humber, plundered and burnt Scarborough, defeated
+ the young earls of Mercia and Northumberland, and summoned York to
+ surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The citizens, dreading an assault, promised to yield the next day; and,
+ accordingly, early in the morning, Hardrada, Tostig and a small band of
+ followers, set out from their camp at Stamford Bridge, on the banks of the
+ Ouse, to receive the keys. The day was bright and warm, though late in
+ September, and the Northmen had left behind them their shirts of mail, and
+ only bore sword, shield, and helmet; even Harald himself had left behind
+ his hawberk Emma, and only wore a blue robe embroidered with gold, and a
+ rich helmet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were approaching the city, they suddenly beheld a cloud of dust,
+ and beneath it the glitter of armor, glancing, as the Norwegians said,
+ like sparkling ice. As they came nearer, they could distinguish the red
+ dragon standard of Wessex, proving that there was the king whom they had
+ supposed to be far away on the south coast, watching to prevent the
+ landing of William of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though taken by surprise, outnumbered, and half-armed, Hardrada did not
+ lose courage. He sent messengers to summon the rest of his men, and
+ planting in the midst his banner, Land-Waster, ranged his troops round it
+ in a circle, with the ends of their spears resting on the ground, and the
+ points turned outward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty horsemen, in full armor, advanced from the Saxon army, and one of
+ them, riding close up to the circle, called out, &ldquo;Where is Earl Tostig,
+ the son of Godwin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is here!&rdquo; replied Tostig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy brother salutes thee, offers thee peace, his friendship, and the
+ Earldom of Northumbria; nay, rather than not be friends with thee, he
+ would give thee the third of his kingdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he had held this language a year ago,&rdquo; replied Tostig, who knew the
+ speaker but too well, &ldquo;he would have saved the lives of many men. But what
+ will he offer my noble ally, King Harold Sigurdson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seven feet of English earth,&rdquo; answered the horseman, proudly scanning the
+ gigantic figure of the Sea-King, &ldquo;or maybe a little more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Tostig, &ldquo;King Harold, my brother, may prepare for battle.
+ Never shall it be said that the son of Godwin forsook the son of Sigurd.&rdquo;
+ It must have been a strange look that passed between those two brothers,
+ thus on the verge of a deadly strife, each surrounded with dangers that
+ could scarcely be averted, and but of late actuated with bitter hate, but,
+ at the decisive moment, that hatred giving way, and their hearts yearning
+ to each other, with the memories of long-past days, yet both too proud to
+ show how they were mutually touched, too far pledged to their separate
+ parties to follow the impulse that would have drawn them once together in
+ love. It was too late; the battle must be fought&mdash;the brothers&rsquo; deeds
+ had decided their lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Saxon horseman rode off, and the Norwegian King asked, who was the man
+ who had been speaking so well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was King Harold Godwinson,&rdquo; said Tostig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did I not learn this sooner?&rdquo; said Hardrada. &ldquo;He should never have
+ had to boast of the slaughter of our men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may have been imprudent,&rdquo; said Tostig, &ldquo;but he was willing to grant me
+ peace and a great dominion. If one of us must die, I had rather he should
+ slay me, than I slay him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So spoke Tostig, who had, of late, been rushing from country to country to
+ stir up foes against his brother. Surely he would have given worlds to
+ check the ruin he had wrought, though his sense of honor would not allow
+ him to forsake his ally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is but a little man, but he sits firmly in his stirrups,&rdquo; returned
+ Harald Hardrada; and then, to cheer his men in their desperate case, he
+ chanted aloud one of his impromptu war-songs:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Advance, advance,
+ The helmets glance;
+ But blue swords play
+ In our array.
+
+ &ldquo;Advance, advance,
+ No hawberks glance&mdash;
+ But hearts are here
+ That know no fear.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These verses sound but ill,&rdquo; said the Sea-King, interrupting himself; &ldquo;we
+ will make some better;&rdquo; and, careful of his verses as a Skald in his last
+ battle, as well as in his first, he sung:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In battle morn we seek no lee,
+ With skulking head and bending knee,
+ Behind the hollow shield;
+ With eye and hand we guard the head,
+ Courage and promptness stand instead,
+ Of hawberk, on this field.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ It was his death-song. Early in the battle his throat was pierced by an
+ arrow; and learning his death, Harold Godwinson sent once more to offer
+ Tostig pardon, and leave to the Northmen to return home; but they refused
+ quarter, and Tostig would not forsake them. The other Northmen from the
+ ships joined them, and the fight raged with more fury than ever in the
+ &ldquo;death-ring,&rdquo; as the Skalds termed it, round the banner Land-Waster.
+ Tostig fell there, and only a few fled to their ships, protected by a
+ brave Norseman, who stood alone to guard Stamford bridge, then only
+ consisting of a few planks, till an Englishman crept under, thrust up his
+ spear, and slew him from below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Harold&rsquo;s condition was too critical to allow of his wasting his
+ strength on a defeated foe; he allowed Hardrada&rsquo;s son to return unmolested
+ to Norway with his fleet and the remains of his army, and he gave great
+ offence to his men by not sharing the plunder of the camp with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So died the last of the Sea-Kings, by the last Anglo-Saxon victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO VI. THE NORMAN INVASION. (1066.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Normandy seems to have considered himself secure of the fair
+ realm of England, by the well-known choice of Edward the Confessor, and
+ was reckoning on the prospects of ruling there, where the language and
+ habits of his race were already making great progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a winter day, however, early in 1066, as William, cross-bow in hand,
+ was hunting in the forests near Rouen, a horseman galloped up to him and
+ gave him, in a low voice, the information that his cousin, King Edward of
+ England, was dead, and that Earl Harold of Kent had been crowned in his
+ stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With fierce rage were these tidings given, for the bearer of them was no
+ other than Tostig, who attempted to bring the Normans against his brother,
+ before seeking the aid of Harald Hardrada in the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No less was the ire of the Norman Duke excited, but he was of too stern
+ and reserved a nature to allow his wrath to break out at once into words.
+ Sport, however, was at an end for him; he threw down his cross-bow, and
+ walked out of the forest, his fine but hard features bearing so dark and
+ gloomy an expression, that no one dared to ask what had disturbed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without a word, he entered the castle, and there strode up and down the
+ hall, his hands playing with the fastenings of his cloak, until suddenly
+ throwing himself on a bench, he drew his mantle over his face, turned it
+ to the wall, and became lost in deep musings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His knights stood round, silent and perplexed, till a voice was heard
+ humming a tune at a little distance, and the person entered who, more than
+ any other, shared the counsels of Duke William, namely, William
+ Fitzosborn, Count de Breteuil, son of that Osborn the seneschal who had
+ been murdered in the Duke&rsquo;s chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two Williams were of the same age, had been brought up together, and
+ Fitzosborn now enjoyed the office of seneschal, and was on a more intimate
+ footing with his lord than any other was admitted to by the dark and
+ reserved prince. All the knights gathered round him to ask what ailed the
+ Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you will soon hear news that will not please you;&rdquo; and as
+ William, roused by his voice, sat up on the bench, he continued: &ldquo;Sir, why
+ hide what troubles you? It is rumored in the town that the King of England
+ is dead, and that Harold has broken his faith, and seized the realm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; replied the Duke. &ldquo;I am grieved at the death of King
+ Edward, and at the wrong Harold has done me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fitzosborn answered with such counsels as his master would best be pleased
+ to hear. &ldquo;Sir, no one should grieve over what cannot be undone, far less
+ over what may be mended. There is no cure for King Edward&rsquo;s death, but
+ there is a remedy for Harold&rsquo;s evil deeds. You have warlike vassals; he
+ has an unjust cause. What needs there, save a good heart? for what is well
+ begun, is half done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William&rsquo;s wishes lay in the direction his friend pointed out, but he was
+ wary, and weighed his means before undertaking the expedition against so
+ powerful and wealthy a state as England. His resources seemed as nothing
+ in comparison with those of England; his dukedom was but a petty state,
+ himself a mere vassal; and though he had reason to hope that the English
+ were disaffected toward Harold, yet, on the other hand, he was not
+ confident of the support of his own vassals&mdash;wild, turbulent men,
+ only kept in cheek by his iron rule, without much personal attachment to
+ one so unbending and harsh, and likely to be unwilling to assist in his
+ personal aggrandizement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused and calculated, waiting so long that Tostig, in his impatience,
+ went to Norway, and tried to find a prompter for Harold. Messages in the
+ meantime passed between Normandy and England without effect. William
+ claimed the performance of the oaths at Rouen, and Harold denied any
+ obligation to him, offering to be his ally if he would renounce the
+ throne, but otherwise defying him as an enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having at length decided, William summoned his vassals to meet at
+ Lillebonne, and requested their aid in asserting his right to the English
+ Crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he left them to deliberate, all with one consent agreed that they
+ would have nothing to do with foreign expeditions. What should they gain?
+ The Duke had no right to ask their feudal service for aught but guarding
+ their own frontier. Fitzosborn should he the spokesman, and explain the
+ result of their parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In came the Duke, and Fitzosborn, standing forth, spoke thus: &ldquo;Never, my
+ lord, were men so zealous as those you see here. They will serve you as
+ truly beyond sea as in Normandy. Push forward, and spare them not. He who
+ has hitherto furnished one man-at-arms, will equip two; he who has led
+ twenty knights, will bring forty. I myself offer you sixty ships well
+ filled with fighting men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fitzosborn was stopped by a general outcry of indignation and dissent, and
+ the assembly tumultuously dispersed; but not one of the vassals was
+ allowed to quit Lillebonne till after a private conference with William,
+ and determined as they might be when altogether, yet not a count or baron
+ of them all could withstand the Duke when alone with him; and it ended in
+ their separately engaging to do just as Fitzosborn had promised for them;
+ and going home to build ships from their woods, choose out the most
+ stalwart villains on their estates to be equipped as men-at-arms and
+ archers, to cause their armorers to head the cloth-yard shafts, repair the
+ hawberks of linked chains of steel, and the high-pointed helmets, as yet
+ without visors, and the face only guarded by a projection over the nose.
+ Every one had some hope of advantage to be gained in England; barons
+ expected additional fiefs, peasants intended to become nobles, and
+ throughout the spring preparations went on merrily; the Duchess Matilda
+ taking part in them, by causing a vessel to be built for the Duke himself,
+ on the figure-head of which was carved a likeness of their youngest son
+ William, blowing an ivory horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William, in the meantime, sought for allies in every quarter, beginning
+ with writing to beg the sanction of the Pope, Alexander II., as Harold&rsquo;s
+ perjury might be considered an ecclesiastical offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Saxons were then in no favor at Rome; they had refused to accept a
+ Norman Primate appointed by Edward; and Stigand, their chosen Archbishop,
+ was at present suspended by the Court of Rome, for having obtained his
+ office by simony: the whole Anglo-Saxon Church was reported to be in a
+ very bad and corrupt state, and besides, Rome had never enjoyed the power
+ and influence there that the Normans had permitted her. Lanfranc, Abbot,
+ of St. Stephens, at Caen, and one of the persons most highly esteemed by
+ William, was an Italian of great repute at Rome, and thus everything
+ conspired to make the Pope willing to favor the attempt upon England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He therefore returned him a Bull (a letter so called from the golden bull,
+ or bulla, appended to it), appointing him, as the champion of the Church,
+ to chastise the impious perjurer Harold, and sent him a consecrated
+ banner, and a gold ring containing a relic of St. Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus sanctioned, William applied to his liege lord Philippe I. of France,
+ offering to pay homage for England as well as Normandy; but Philippe, a
+ dull, heavy, indolent man, with no love for his great vassal, refused him
+ any aid; and William, though he made the application for form&rsquo;s sake, was
+ well pleased to have it so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I succeed,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I shall be under the fewer obligations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he requested aid from Matilda&rsquo;s brother Baldwin, Count of Flanders,
+ the answer he received was a query, how much land in England he would
+ allot as a recompense. He sent, in return, a piece of blank parchment; but
+ others say, that instead of being an absolute blank, it contained his
+ signature, and was filled up by Baldwin, with the promise of a pension of
+ three hundred marks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything was at length in readiness; nine hundred ships, or rather large
+ open boats, were assembled at the mouth of the Dive; lesser barks came in
+ continually, and counts, barons, and knights, led in their trains of
+ horsemen and archers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All William&rsquo;s friends were round him, and his two half-brothers, the sons
+ of Arlette, Robert, Count of Eu, and Odo, the warlike Bishop of Bayeux.
+ Matilda was to govern in his absence, and his eldest son, Robert, a boy of
+ thirteen, was brought forward, and received the homage of the vassals, in
+ order that he might be owned as heir of Normandy, in case any mishap
+ should befall his father on the expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing delayed the enterprise but adverse winds, and these prevailed so
+ long that the feudal army had nearly exhausted their forty days&rsquo; stock of
+ provisions; knight and man-at-arms murmured, and the Duke was continually
+ going to pray in the Church of St. Valery, looking up at the weathercock
+ every time he came out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the eve of St. Michael, the Duke&rsquo;s anxious face became cheerful, for a
+ favorable wind had set in, and the word was given to embark. Horses were
+ led into the ships, the shields hung round the gunwale, and the warriors
+ crowded in, the Duke, in his own Mora, leading the way, the Pope&rsquo;s banner
+ at his mast&rsquo;s head, and a lantern at the stern to guide the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By morning, however, he outstripped all the fleet, and the sailor at the
+ mast-head could see not one; but gradually first one sail, then another,
+ came in sight, and by the evening of Michaelmas-day, 1066, the whole nine
+ hundred were bearing, down upon Pevensey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those adverse winds had done Willium more favor than he guessed, for they
+ had delayed him till Harold had been obliged to quit his post of
+ observation in Sussex, and go to oppose the Northmen at York, and thus
+ there was no one to interfere with the landing of the Normans, who
+ disembarked as peacefully at Pevensey as if it had been Rouen itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William was almost the first to leap on shore; but as he did so, his foot
+ slipped, and he fell. Rising, with his hands full of mud, he called out,
+ &ldquo;Here have I taken possession of the land which by God&rsquo;s help I hope to
+ win!&rdquo; Catching his humor, one of his knights tore a handful of thatch from
+ a neighboring cottage, and put it into his hand, saying, &ldquo;Sir, I give you
+ seizin of this place, and promise that I shall see you lord of it before a
+ month is past.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops were landed first, then the horses, and lastly the carpenters,
+ who set up at once three wooden forts, which had been brought in the ships
+ prepared to be put together. After dinner, William ordered all the ships
+ to be burnt, to cut off all hope of return. He continued for several days
+ at Pevensey, exercising the troops: and viewing the country. In one of
+ these expeditions, he gave, what was thought, a remarkable proof of
+ strength; for on a hot day, as they were mounting a steep hill, Fitzosborn
+ grew faint and exhausted by the weight of his ponderous iron hawberk. The
+ Duke bade him take it off, and putting it on over his own, climbed the
+ hill and returned to his camp wearing both at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His landing, though he saw no one, had in reality been watched by a
+ South-Saxon Thane, who, having counted Ins ships and seen his array,
+ mounted, and, without resting day or night, rode to York, where, as Harold
+ was dining, two days after the battle of Stamford Bridge, he rushed into
+ the hall, crying out, &ldquo;The Normans are come! they have built a fort at
+ Pevensey!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No time was to be lost, and at the dawn Harold and all his army were
+ marching southward, sending a summons to the thanes and franklins of each
+ county as he passed, to gather to the defence of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His speed was too great, however, for the great mass of the people to be
+ able to join him, even if they had been so minded, and they were for the
+ most part disposed to take no part in the struggle, following the example
+ of the young Earls of Mercia, Edwin and Morkar, who held aloof, unwilling
+ alike to join Harold or the Normans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Harold reached London, his army was so much lessened by fatigue and
+ desertion, that his mother, Gytha, and his two youngest brothers, Gyrtha
+ and Leofwyn, advised him not to risk a battle, but to lay the country
+ waste before the Normans, and starve them out of England. Harold answered,
+ with the generous spirit that had been defaced and clouded by his
+ ambition, &ldquo;Would you have me ruin my kingdom? By my faith, it were
+ treason. I will rather try the chances of a battle with such men as I
+ have, and trust to my own valor and the goodness of my cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; said Gyrtha, &ldquo;if it be so, forbear thyself to fight. Either
+ willingly or under force, thou art sworn to Duke William. Thine oath will
+ weigh down thine arm in battle, but we, who are all unpledged, are free to
+ fight in defence of our realm. Thou wilt aid us if we are defeated, avenge
+ us if we are slain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold disregarded this advice, and was resolved to lead the host himself;
+ he gathered his followers from Kent and Wessex, and marched southward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO VII. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS. (1066.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first night after leaving London, Harold slept at Waltham Abbey, and
+ had much conference with the Abbot, who was his friend, and appointed two
+ Monks, named Osgood and Ailric, to attend him closely in the coming
+ battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th of October, Harold found himself seven miles from the enemy,
+ and halted his men on Heathfield-hill, near Hastings, the most
+ advantageous ground he could find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the highest point he planted his standard bearing the figure of a man
+ in armor, and marshalling his Saxons round it, commanded them to entrench
+ themselves within a rampart and ditch, and to plant within them a sort of
+ poles, on the upper part of which, nearly the height of a man from the
+ ground, they interwove a fence of wattled branches, so that while the
+ front rank might pass under to man the rampart, the rear might be
+ sheltered from the arrows of the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These orders given, Harold and Gyrtha rode together to a hill, whence they
+ beheld the Norman camp, when for a moment Harold was so alarmed at the
+ number of their tents that he spoke of returning to London and acting as
+ his mother had advised; but Gyrtha showed him that it was too late; he
+ could not turn back from the very face of the enemy, without being
+ supposed to fly, and thus yielding his kingdom at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three Saxons presently came to the brothers who had been seized as spies
+ by the Normans, and, by order of William, led throughout his camp, and
+ then sent away to report what they had seen. Their story was that the
+ Norman soldiers were all Priests, at which Harold laughed, since they had
+ been deceived by the short-cut locks and smooth chins of the Normans, such
+ as in England were only worn by ecclesiastics, warriors always wearing
+ flowing locks and thick moustaches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several messages passed between the two camps, William sending offers of
+ honors and wealth to Harold and Gyrtha if they would cease their
+ resistance; but when all were rejected, he sent another herald to defy
+ Harold as a perjured traitor under the ban of the Church;&mdash;a
+ declaration which so startled the Saxons, that it took strong efforts on
+ the part of the gallant Gyrtha to inspirit them to stand by his brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This over, William addressed his soldiers from a little hillock, and put
+ on his armor, hanging-round his neck, as a witness of Harold&rsquo;s falsehood,
+ one of the relics on which the oath had been taken. He chanced to put on
+ his hawberk with the wrong side before, and seeing some of his men
+ disconcerted, fancying this a token of ill, he told them that it boded
+ that his dukedom should be turned to a kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His horse was a beautiful Spanish barb sent him by the King of Castile;
+ and so gallantly did he ride, that there was a shout of delight from his
+ men, and a cry, &ldquo;Never was such a Knight under Heaven! A fair Count he is,
+ and a fair king he will be! Shame on him who fails him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William held in his hand the Pope&rsquo;s banner, and called for the
+ standard-bearer of Normandy; but no one liked to take the charge, fearful
+ of being hindered from gaining distinction by feats of personal prowess.
+ Each elder knight of fame begged to be excused, and at last it was
+ committed to Tunstan the White, a young man probably so called because he
+ had yet to win an achievement for his spotless shield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army was in three troops, each drawn up in the form of a wedge, the
+ archers forming the point; and the reserve of horse was committed to
+ Bishop Odo, who rode up and down among the men, a hawberk over his rochet
+ and a club in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On went the Normans in the light of the rising sun of the 13th of October,
+ Taillefer, a minstrel-knight, riding first, playing on his harp and
+ singing the war-song of Roland the Paladin. At seven o&rsquo;clock they were
+ before the Saxon camp, and Fitzosborn and the body under his command
+ dashed up the hill, under a cloud of arrows, shouting, &ldquo;Notre Dame! Dieu
+ aide!&rdquo; while the Saxons within, crying out, &ldquo;Holy Rood!&rdquo; cut down with
+ their battle-axes all who gained the rampart, and at length drove them
+ back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second onset was equally unsuccessful, and William, observing that the
+ wattled fence protected the Saxons from the arrows, ordered the archers to
+ shoot their arrows no longer point blank, but into the sky, so that they
+ might fall on the heads of the Saxons. Thus directed, these shafts
+ harassed the defenders grievously; and Harold himself was pierced in the
+ left eye, and almost disabled from further exertion in the command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet at noon, the Normans had been baffled at every quarter, and William,
+ growing desperate, led a party to attack the entrance of the camp. Again
+ he was repulsed, and driven back on some rough ground, where many horses
+ fell, and among them his own Spanish charger. A cry arose that the Duke
+ was slain; the Normans fled, the Saxons broke out of their camp in
+ pursuit, when William, throwing off his helmet and striking with his
+ lance, recalled his troops, shouting, &ldquo;Look at me! I live, and by Gods
+ grace I will conquer.&rdquo; All the Saxons who had left the camp were slain,
+ their short battle-axes being unfit to cope with the heavy swords and long
+ lances of their enemies; and taught by this success, William caused some
+ of his troops to feign a flight, draw them beyond the rampart, turn on
+ them, and cut them down. The manoeuvre was repeated at different parts of
+ the camp till the rampart was stripped of defenders, and the Normans
+ forced their way into it, cut down the wattled fence, and gave admittance
+ to the host of horse and foot who rushed over the outworks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet still the standard floated in the midst of a brave band who&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Though thick the shafts as snow.
+ Though charging knights like whirlwinds go,
+ Though bill-men ply the ghastly blow,
+ Still fought around their King.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ All who came near that close-serried ring of steadfast Saxon strength were
+ cut down, and the piles of dead Normans round them were becoming ramparts,
+ when twenty knights bound themselves by an oath that the standard should
+ be taken, spurred their horses against the ranks, and by main force, with
+ the loss of ten of their number, forced an opening. Ere the ranks could
+ close, William and his whole force were charging into the gap made for a
+ moment, trampling down the brave men, slaughtering on all sides, yet still
+ unable to break through to the standard.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Till utter darkness closed her wing
+ O&rsquo;er their thin host and wounded King.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Man by man the noble Saxons were hewn down as the Normans cut their way
+ through them, no more able to drive them back than if they had been the
+ trees of the forest. Gyrtha, the true-hearted and noble, fell under the
+ sword of a Norman knight, Leofwyn lay near him in his blood, yet still
+ Harold&rsquo;s voice was heard cheering on his men, and still his standard
+ streamed above their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At sunset, that well-known voice was no longer heard, and the setting sun
+ beheld Tunstan the White perform the crowning achievement of the day,
+ uproot the standard banner of Normandy that the morning beams had seen
+ committed to his charge. Not an earl or thane of Wessex was living; and
+ heaps of slain lay thick on Heathfield hill, and the valley round a very
+ lake of blood. Senlac, or Sanglac, was its old name, and sounded but too
+ appropriate to the French ears of the Conqueror, as, in a moment of sorrow
+ for the fearful loss of life he beheld, he vowed that here should stand an
+ Abbey where prayer should be made for pardon for his sins and for the
+ repose of the souls of the slaughtered. Darkness came on; but the Saxons,
+ retreating under its cover, were still so undaunted that the Normans could
+ hardly venture to move about the field except in considerable parties, and
+ Eustace of Boulogne, while speaking to the Duke, was felled to the earth
+ by a sudden blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the morning, Gytha, the widow of Godwin, who had lost four children by
+ the perjury and ambition of one of them, came to entreat permission to
+ bury. Gyrtha and Leofwyn lay near together at the foot of the banner.
+ Harold was sought in vain, till Edith of the Swan neck, a lady he had
+ loved, was brought to help in the melancholy quest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She declared a defaced and mangled corpse to be that of Harold, and it was
+ carried, with those of the two brothers, to the Abbey of Waltham, where it
+ was placed beneath a stone bearing the two sorrowful words, &ldquo;Infelix
+ Harold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years passed on, and the people had long become accustomed to the Norman
+ yoke, when there was much talk among them of a hermit, who dwelt in a cell
+ not far from the town, in the utmost penitence and humility. He was seldom
+ seen, his face was deeply scarred, and he had lost his left eye, and
+ nothing was known of his name or history; but he was deeply revered for
+ his sanctity, and when Henry Beauclerc once visited Chester, he sought a
+ private interview with the mysterious penitent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said, that when the hermit lay on his death-bed, he owned himself to
+ be Harold, son of Godwin, once King of England for seven months. He had
+ been borne from the bloody hill, between life and death, in the darkness
+ of the evening, by the two faithful monks, Osgood and Ailric, and tended
+ in secret till he recovered from his wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since that time he had been living in penitence and contrition, unknown to
+ and apart from the world, and died at length, trusting that his forty
+ years&rsquo; repentance might be accepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this tale be true, what a warning might not he have bestowed on the
+ young prince Henry, destined to run a like course of perjury and ambition,
+ and to feel it turn back upon him in the dreariness of desolate old age,
+ when &ldquo;he never smiled again.&rdquo; Had not the penitent Harold more peace at
+ the last than the king Henry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same story is told of almost every king missed in a lost battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur, borne away to die at Avalon, and believed to be among the fairies;
+ Rodrigo, the last of the Goths, whose steed Orelio and horned helmet lay
+ on the banks of the river, and whose name was found centuries after on a
+ rude gravestone, near a hermitage; James IV., whom the Scots by turns
+ hoped to see return from pilgrimage, and pitied as they looked at Lord
+ Home&rsquo;s border tower; the gallant Don Sebastian, the last of the glorious
+ race of Portuguese Kings, never seen after his shout of &ldquo;Let us die!&rdquo; in
+ the tumult of Alcaçer, yet long looked for by his loving people&mdash;of
+ each in turn the belief has arisen among the subjects who clung to the
+ hope of seeing the beloved prince, and dwelt on the doubt whether his
+ corpse was identified. In the cases of Harold and Rodrigo&mdash;generous
+ men tempted into fearful and ruinous crimes&mdash;one would hope the tale
+ was true, and that the time for repentance was vouchsafed to them; nor are
+ their stories entirely without authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold had three young children, who wandered about under the care of
+ their grandmother, Gytha, at one time finding a shelter in the Holms,
+ those two islets in the British Channel, at another taking refuge in
+ Ireland, whence they at length escaped to Norway, and the daughter married
+ one of the Kings of Novgorod, the beginning of the Empire of Russia.
+ Ulfnoth, the only remaining son of the bold Godwinsons, was the hostage
+ that Edward the Confessor had placed in the hands of the Duke of Normandy;
+ he was seized upon once more by William Rufus, and remained in captivity
+ till his death. The Conqueror kept his vow, and erected the splendid
+ Battle Abbey on the field that gave him a kingdom. The high altar stood
+ where Harold&rsquo;s banner had been planted, and the enclosures surrounded
+ every spot where the conflict had raged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were measured out by the corpses of Normans and Saxons. The
+ Battle-roll, a list of every Norman who had borne arms there, was lodged
+ in the keeping of the Abbot, and contains the names of many a good old
+ English family which has held the same land generation after generation,
+ English now, though then called the Norman spoiler, but it is to be
+ feared, that the roll was much tampered with to gratify family vanity.
+ Battle Abbey was one of the greatest and richest foundations. The Abbot
+ was a friar, and, according to the unfortunate habit of exempting
+ monasteries from the Bishop&rsquo;s jurisdiction, was subject to no government
+ but the Pope&rsquo;s; and this led to frequent disputes between the Abbot and
+ the see of Winchester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was overthrown in the Reformation, and is now a mere ruin; but its
+ beautiful arches still remain to show that, better than any other
+ conqueror, William knew how to honor a battle-field. There is but one
+ other Battle Abbey in the world&mdash;Batalha in Portugal&mdash;which
+ covers the plain of Aljubarota, where Joao I. won his kingdom from
+ Castile; and as his wife was a daughter of John of Gaunt, a most noble and
+ high-minded princess, it is most probable that she suggested the work
+ after the example of her great ancestor; nay, when the visitor enters the
+ nave, and is reminded by the architecture of Winchester, it seems as if
+ Philippa of Lancaster might have both proposed the foundation, and sent to
+ England for the plan, to the Architect and Bishop, William of Wykeham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is Battle Abbey the only remaining monument of Hastings. Matilda&rsquo;s own
+ handiwork prepared her thank offering of tapestry, recording her husband&rsquo;s
+ victory; and this work, done as it was for a gift to Heaven, not a
+ vainglorious record, still endures in the very cathedral to which she gave
+ it, one of the choicest historical witnesses that have come down to our
+ times. We might be apt to regret that she did not present her work to
+ Battle Abbey, where it would have been most appropriate; but as the
+ Puritans would most likely have called it a Popish vestment savoring of
+ idolatry, we are consoled by thinking it probably owes its preservation to
+ her having chosen to give it as a hanging on festival days to the
+ Cathedral at Bayeux, the see of her husband&rsquo;s half-brother, Odo, who
+ shared in all the toils and dangers of the expedition, and whom she has
+ taken especial care to represent for the benefit of the townspeople of
+ Bayeux; for wherever we find his broad face, large person, shaven crown,
+ and the chequered red and green suit by which she expressed his wadded
+ garment, his name is always found in large letters; and he is evidently in
+ his full glory when we find him, club in hand, at the beginning of the
+ battle, and these words worked round him: <i>Odo Eps.</i> (episcopus) <i>baculum
+ tenens, confortat pueros</i>. He was one of the bad, warlike Bishops of
+ those irregular times, and brought many disasters on himself by his
+ turbulence and haughtiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matilda&rsquo;s tapestry is a long narrow strip, little more than half a yard in
+ breadth. It begins with Harold&rsquo;s journey to Normandy, and ends unfinished
+ in the midst of the battle; and most curious it is. The drawing is of
+ course rude, and the coloring very droll, the horses being red and green,
+ or blue, and, invariably, the off-leg of a different color from the other
+ three, while the ways in which both horses and men fall at Hastings make
+ the scene very diverting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her castles, houses, and more especially Westminster Abbey, are of all the
+ colors in the rainbow, and much smaller than the persons entering them,
+ and yet in every figure there is spirit, in every face expression, and
+ throughout, William, Harold, and Odo, bear countenances which are not to
+ be mistaken. Harold has moustaches, which none of the Normans wore. There
+ we find Harold taking his extorted oath; the death of King Edward, the
+ Saxons gazing with horror at the three-tailed comet; the ship-building of
+ yellow, green, and red boards, cut out of trees with most ludicrous
+ foliage; the moon just as it is described; the disembarkation, where a
+ bare-legged mariner wades out, anchor in hand; the very comical foraging
+ party; the repast upon landing, where Odo is saying grace with two fingers
+ raised in benediction, while the meat is served on shields, and fowls
+ carried round spitted upon arrows. Then follows the battle, where William
+ is seen raising his helmet by its nose-guard, and looking exceedingly
+ fierce as he rallies his men; where horses and men tumble head over heels,
+ and where, finally, Matilda broke off with a pattern of hawberks traced
+ out, and no heads or legs put to them. What stayed her hand? Was it her
+ grief at the conduct of her first-born that took from her all heart to
+ proceed with her memorial, or was it only the hand of death that closed
+ her toil, her womanly record of her husband&rsquo;s achievements?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The border must not be forgotten. It is a narrow edge above and below. At
+ first it is worked with subjects from Phaedrus&rsquo;s fables (on having
+ translated which was rested the fame of Henry&rsquo;s scholarship), and very
+ cleverly are they chosen; for, as if in comment on Harold&rsquo;s visit to
+ Rouen, we find in near neighborhood the stork with her head in the wolf&rsquo;s
+ mouth, and the crow letting fall her cheese into the fox&rsquo;s jaws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matilda did not upbraid the Normans by working the Parliament of
+ Lillebonne, but she or her designer surely had it in mind when a herd of
+ frightened beasts was drawn, an ape in front of them making an oration to
+ what may be a lion, as it is much bigger than the rest; but as Matilda
+ never saw a lion, the likeness is not remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further on are representations of agriculture, sowing, reaping, &amp;c.
+ Wherever there is a voyage, fishes swim above and below, and in the battle
+ there is a border plentiful in dead men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bayeux tapestry&mdash;the &ldquo;Toile de St. Jean,&rdquo; as it is there called,
+ from the feast-day when the cathedral was hung with it&mdash;remained
+ unknown and forgotten, till it was brought to light by one of the last
+ people that could have been expected&mdash;Napoleon. He was then full of
+ his plan for invading England, and called general attention to the toile
+ de St. Jean, to bring to mind the Norman Invasion, and show that England
+ had once been conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she had, but he had to deal with the sons of both victors, and of those
+ who were slain. Now vanquished, Norman and Saxon were one, and by the
+ great mercy of Heaven upon their offspring, the English, not one battle
+ has been fought, since Hastings, with a Continental foe upon English
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May that mercy be still vouchsafed us!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO VIII. THE CAMP OF REFUGE. (1067-1072.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1066. William I.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the fen country of Lincolnshire, there lived, in the reign of Edward
+ the Confessor, a wealthy Saxon franklin named Leofric, Lord of Bourn. He
+ was related to the great Earls of Mercia, and his brother Brand was Abbot
+ of Peterborough, so that he, and his wife Ediva, were persons of
+ consideration in their own neighborhood. They had a son named Hereward,
+ and called, for some unknown, reason, Le Wake, a youth of great height and
+ personal strength, and of so fierce and violent a disposition, that he
+ disturbed the peace of the neighborhood to such a degree that he was
+ banished from the realm. His high spirit found fit occupation in the
+ armies of foreign princes: and pilgrims and minstrels brought home such
+ reports of his prowess, that the people of Bourn no longer regarded him as
+ a turbulent young scapegrace, but considered him as their pride and glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a brilliant career abroad, Hereward married a Flemish lady, and was
+ settled on her estates when the tidings reached him that his father was
+ dead, and that his aged mother had been despoiled of her property, and
+ cruelly treated, by a Norman to whom William the Conqueror had presented
+ the estate of Bourn. No sooner did he receive this intelligence, than he
+ set off with his wife, and, arriving in Lincolnshire, communicated in
+ secret with his old friends at Bourn, collected a small band, attacked the
+ Norman, drove him away, and re-instated Ediva in his paternal home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this exploit only exposed him to further perils. Normans were in
+ possession of every castle around; his cousins, the young Earls Edwin find
+ Morkar, had submitted to the Conqueror; Edwin was betrothed to Agatha,
+ William&rsquo;s daughter; and their sister Lucy was married to an Angevin named
+ Ivo Taillebois bringing him a portion of their lands, in right of which he
+ called himself Viscount of Spalding. Their submission had availed them
+ little; they, as well as Waltheof, Earl of Huntingdon (son of Siward, and
+ husband of the Conqueror&rsquo;s niece, Judith), were feeling that a hand of
+ iron was over them, and regretting every day that he had not made common
+ cause against the enemy before he had fully established his power.
+ Selfishness, jealousy, and wavering, had overthrown and ruined the Saxons.
+ Each had sought to secure his own lands and life, careless of his
+ neighbors. No one had the spirit of Frithric, Abbot of St. Alban&rsquo;s, who
+ blocked up the Conqueror&rsquo;s march with trunks of trees, and when asked by
+ William why he had injured his woods for the sake of making an unavailing
+ resistance, replied, &ldquo;I did my duty. If every one had done as much, you
+ would not be here.&rdquo; According to their own tradition, the men of Kent,
+ coming forward, each carrying a branch of a tree, so that they advanced
+ unperceived, &ldquo;a moving wood,&rdquo; so encumbered William&rsquo;s passage that he
+ could not proceed till he had taken an oath to respect their privileges.
+ London, too, preserved its rights, owing to the management of a burgess,
+ called Ansgard, who conducted the treaty with the Normans and would not
+ admit them into the city till its liberties were secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William himself was anxious to be regarded not as a conqueror, but as
+ reigning by inheritence from the Confessor. For this cause, when Matilda
+ was crowned, he caused a Norman baron, Marmion of Fontenaye, to ride into
+ the midst of Westminster Hall, and, throwing down his gauntlet, defy any
+ man to single combat who denied the rights of William and Matilda. He
+ himself took the old coronation oath drawn up by St. Dunstan, and pledged
+ himself to execute justice according to the old laws of Alfred and Edward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But William, whatever might be his own good intentions, was pressed by
+ circumstances. He had lured his Normans across the channel with hopes of
+ rich plunder in England, and knight and squire, man-at-arms and archer,
+ were eager for their reward. Norman, Breton, Angevin, clamored for
+ possession: families of peasants crossed the sea, expecting, in right of
+ their French tongue, to be gentry at once, and lords of the churl Saxons;
+ while the Saxons, fully conscious of their own nobility, and possessors of
+ the soil for five hundred years, derided them in such rhymes as these:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;William de Coningsby
+ Came out of Brittany
+ With his wife Tiffany,
+ And his maid Manfas,
+ And his dog Hardigras.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But the laugh proved to be on the side of the new comers, and the Saxon,
+ whether Earl, Thane, Franklin, or Ceorl, though he could trace his line up
+ to Odin, and had held his land since Hengist first won Thanet, must give
+ place to Hardigras and his master. And though our sympathies are all with
+ the dispossessed Saxons, and the Normans appear as needy and rapacious
+ spoilers, there is no cause for us to lament their coming. Without the
+ Norman aristocracy, and the high spirit of chivalry and adventure thus
+ infused, England could scarcely have attained her greatness; for, though
+ many great men had existed among the unmixed Anglo-Saxon race, they had
+ never been able to rouse the nation from the heavy, dull, stolid
+ sensuality into which, to this day, an uncultivated Englishman is liable
+ to fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One Norman, the gallant Gilbert Fitz-Richard, deserves to be remembered as
+ an exception to the grasping temper of his countrymen. He would accept
+ neither gold nor lands for the services he had rendered at Hastings. He
+ said he had come in obedience to the summons of his feudal chief, and not
+ for spoil, and, now his term of service was at an end, he would go back to
+ his own inheritance, with which he was content, without the plunder of the
+ widow and orphan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it was thus that William first strove to satisfy his followers. Every
+ rich Saxon widow or heiress who could be found was compelled to marry a
+ Norman baron or knight; but when there proved to be not a sufficiency of
+ these unfortunate ladies, he was obliged to find other pretexts less
+ apparently honorable. Every noble who had fought in the cause of Harold
+ was declared a traitor, and his lands adjudged to be forfeited, and this
+ filled the Earldoms of Wessex and Sussex with great numbers of Normans,
+ who counted their wealth at so many Englishmen apiece, and made no scruple
+ of putting their own immediate followers into the manors whence they
+ thrust the ancient owners. As to the great nobles, they were treated so
+ harshly that they were all longing, if possible, to throw off the yoke,
+ and make the stand which they should have made a year ago, when William
+ had won nothing but the single, hard-fought battle of Hastings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the Norman adventurers took great state on them, all the more,
+ probably, because they had been nobodies in their own country. One of the
+ most haughty of all was the Spalding Viscount, Ivo, whose surname of
+ Taillebois seems to betray somewhat of his origin in Anjou. He was noted
+ for his pompous language and insolent bearing; he insisted on his vassals
+ kneeling on one knee when they addressed him, and he and his men-at-arms
+ took every opportunity of tormenting the Saxons. He set his dogs at their
+ flocks, lamed or drowned their cattle, killed their poultry, and, above
+ all, harassed a few brethren of the Abbey of Croyland, who inhabited a
+ grange not far from Spalding, to such a degree, that he obliged them at
+ last to retreat to the Abbey, and then filled the house with monks from
+ Anjou; and though the Abbot Ingulf was William&rsquo;s secretary, he could
+ obtain no redress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a neighbor as this was not likely to allow the re-instated Ediva to
+ remain at Bourn in peace, and Hereward found that he must continue in
+ arms, for her protection and his own. He placed his wife, Torfrida, in a
+ convent, and, collecting his friends around him, kept up a constant
+ warfare with the Normans, until at length he succeeded in fortifying the
+ Isle of Ely, and establishing there what he called the Camp of Refuge, as
+ it gave shelter to any Saxon who had suffered from the violence of the
+ Normans, or would not adopt the new habits they tried to enforce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weak, helpless, and aged, were sheltered by the monastery and its
+ buildings; the strong, enrolled in Hereward&rsquo;s gallant band. Some of them
+ were of higher rank than himself, and in order that he might be on a par
+ with them, as well as with his Norman enemies, he sought the order of
+ knighthood from his uncle, Abbot Brand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Normans in general were knighted by lay nobles, and though their
+ prince, William Rufus, received the order from Lanfranc, they would not
+ acknowledge Hereward as a knight, though they could not help respecting
+ his truth, honor, and courage; and it was a common saying among them, that
+ if there had been only four men like him in England, they should never
+ have gained a footing there. No wonder, when he never hesitated to fight
+ singly with seven Normans at once, and each of his five principal
+ followers was a match for three. They were Ibe Winter, his
+ brother-in-arms; Eghelric, his cousin; Ital; Alfric; and Sexwald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many fugitives of high rank did Hereward receive in his Camp of Refuge. He
+ had nearly been honored by the presence of his hereditary sovereign, Edgar
+ the Etheling, but the plan failed. He did, however, shelter his two
+ cousins, Morkar and Edwin. They had suffered much from the insolence of
+ the Normans, and experienced the futility of the promises in which they
+ had trusted, until at length they had been driven to join a rising in the
+ North. It had been quickly suppressed, and the worst of all the cruelties
+ of the Normans had avenged it, while the two earls, now become outlaws,
+ fled to the Camp of Refuge. Thence Edwin was sent on a mission to
+ Scotland, but on the way he was attacked by a party of his enemies and
+ slain, after a gallant resistance. He was the handsomest man of his time,
+ and his betrothed, Agatha, was devotedly attached to him; it is even said
+ that the stern William himself wept when the bloody head of his daughter&rsquo;s
+ lover was presented to him. A curious gold ornament has been of late years
+ found in the field where Edwin was killed, and antiquaries allow us to
+ imagine that it might have been a love-token from the Norman princess to
+ the Saxon earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fugitive in Hereward&rsquo;s camp was the high-spirited Abbot Frithric,
+ whose steady opposition to the illegal encroachments of the Normans had
+ given great offence to William. Once Frithric had combined with other
+ influential ecclesiastics to require of the Conqueror another oath to
+ abide by the old English laws, and thus brought on himself an accusation
+ of rebellion and sentence of banishment. He assembled his monks, and told
+ them the time was come when, according to the words of Holy Scripture,
+ they must flee from city to city, bade them, farewell, and, taking nothing
+ with him but a few books, safely reached the Camp of Refuge, where he soon
+ after died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thorold, the new Norman Abbot of Malmesbury, kept a body of archers in his
+ pay, and whenever his monks resisted any of his improper measures, he used
+ to call out, &ldquo;Here, my men-at-arms!&rdquo; At length the Conqueror heard of his
+ proceedings. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll find him his match!&rdquo; cried William. &ldquo;I will send him to
+ Peterborough, &lsquo;where Hereward will give him as much fighting as he likes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Peterborough, then, Thorold was appointed on the death of Hereward&rsquo;s
+ uncle, Abbot Brand, while the poor monks of Malmesbury received for their
+ new superior a certain Guerin de Lire, who disinterred and threw away the
+ bones of his Saxon predecessors, and took all the treasure in the coffers
+ of the convent, in order that he might display his riches in the eyes of
+ those who had seen him poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet all the Norman clergy were not such as these, and never should be
+ forgotten the beautiful answer of Guimond, a monk of St. Leufroi, such a
+ priest as Fitz-Richard was a knight. William had summoned him to England,
+ and he came without delay; but when he was told it was for the purpose of
+ raising him to high dignity, he spoke thus: &ldquo;Many causes forbid me to seek
+ dignity and power; I will not mention all. I will only say that I see not
+ how I could ever properly be the head of men whose manners and language I
+ do not understand, and whose fathers, brothers, and friends, have been
+ slain by your sword, disinherited, exiled, imprisoned, or harshly enslaved
+ by you. Search the Holy Scriptures whether any law permits that the
+ shepherd should be forced on the flock by their enemy. Can you divide what
+ you have won by war and bloodshed, with one who has laid aside his own
+ goods for the sake of Christ? All priests are forbidden to meddle with
+ rapine, or to take any share of the prey, even as an offering at the
+ altar; for, as the Scriptures say, &lsquo;He that bringeth an offering of the
+ goods of the poor, is as one that slayeth the son before the father&rsquo;s
+ eyes.&rsquo; When I remember these commands of God, I am filled with terror; I
+ look on England as one great prey, and dread to touch it or its treasures,
+ as I should a red-hot iron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Guimond then returned to Normandy, uninjured by the Conqueror, who, with
+ all his faults, never took offence at such rebukes; but the worldly-minded
+ clergy were excessively affronted at his censure of their rapacity, and
+ raised such a persecution against him that he was obliged to take refuge
+ in Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the news arrived at the Camp of Refuge that the warlike Thorold
+ had been appointed to Peterborough, Hereward and his hand hastened to the
+ Abbey, and, probably with the consent of the Saxon monks, carried off all
+ the treasures into the midst of the fens. Thorold, with one hundred and
+ sixty men-at-arms, soon made his appearance, was installed as Abbot, and
+ quickly made friends with his Norman neighbor, Ivo Taillebois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They agreed to make an expedition against the robber Saxons, and united
+ their forces, but Thorold appears to have been not quite as willing to
+ face Hereward as to threaten his monks, and let Ivo advance into the midst
+ of an extensive wood of alders, while he remained in the rear with some
+ other Normans of distinction. Ivo sought through the whole wood without
+ meeting a Saxon, and returning to the spot where he had left the Abbot,
+ found no one there, for Hereward had quitted the wood on the opposite
+ side, made a circuit, and falling suddenly on Thorold and his party,
+ carried them off to the fens, and kept them there till they had paid a
+ heavy ransom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1072, the fifth year of the Camp of Refuge, it had assumed so
+ formidable an aspect, that William thought it necessary to take vigorous
+ measures against it, more especially as there had been lately a
+ commencement of correspondence with the Danes. The difficulty was to reach
+ it, for the treacherous ground of the fens afforded no firm footing for an
+ army; there was not water enough for boats, no station for archers, no
+ space for a charge of the ponderous knights, amongst the reedy pools.
+ William decided on constructing a causeway, and employed workmen to cut
+ trenches to drain off the water, and raise the bank of stones and turf,
+ under the superintendence of Ivo Taillebois. However, Hereward was on the
+ alert, harassing them perpetually, breaking on them sometimes on one side,
+ sometimes on the other, in such strange, unexpected ways, that at last the
+ viscount came to the conclusion that he must have magic arts to aid him,
+ and persuaded the king to let him send for a witch to work against him by
+ counter spells. Accordingly, she was installed in a wooden tower raised at
+ the end of the part of the causeway which was completed, and the workmen
+ were beginning to advance boldly under her protection, when suddenly smoke
+ and flame came driving upon them. Hereward had set fire to the dry reeds,
+ and, spreading quickly, the flame cut off their retreat, and the unhappy
+ woman perished, with many of the Normans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again and again were the Norman attacks disconcerted, and all that they
+ could attempt was a blockade, which lasted many months, and might probably
+ have been sustained many more by the hardy warriors, if some of the monks
+ of Ely, growing weary of the privations they endured, had not gone in
+ secret to the king, and offered to show him a way across the Marches, on
+ condition that the wealth of the Abbey was secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, a band of Normans crossed the fens, took the Saxons by
+ surprise, killed a thousand men, and forced the camp. Hereward and his
+ five comrades still fought on, crossed bogs where the enemy did not dare
+ to follow them, and at length escaped into the low lands of Lincoln, where
+ they met with some Saxon fishermen, who were in the habit of supplying a
+ Norman station of soldiers. These Saxons willingly received the warriors
+ into their boats, and hid them under heaps of straw, while they carried
+ their fish as usual to the Normans. While the Normans were in full
+ security, Hereward and his men suddenly attacked them, killed some, put
+ the rest to flight, and seized their horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Collecting others of his scattered followers, Hereward kept up his warfare
+ from his own house at Bourn, continually harassing the Normans, until at
+ length he took prisoner his old enemy, Ivo Taillebois, and, as the price
+ of his liberty, required him to make his peace with the Conqueror. This
+ was good news to William, who highly esteemed his valor and constancy, and
+ could accuse him of no breach of faith, since he had made no engagements
+ to him. Hereward was therefore received as a subject of King William,
+ retained his own estate, and died there at a good old age, respected by
+ both Saxons and Normans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is, indeed, an old Norman-French poem, that declares it was for the
+ love of a noble Saxon lady, named Alftrude, that Hereward ceased to
+ struggle with the victors. According to this story, Alftrude, an heiress
+ of great wealth, was so charmed by the report of Hereward&rsquo;s fame, that she
+ offered him her hand, and persuaded him to make peace with William. It is
+ further said, that one afternoon, as he lay asleep under a tree, a band of
+ armed men, among whom were several Bretons, surrounded and murdered him,
+ though not till he had slain fifteen of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this story is not likely to be true, since we know that Hereward was
+ already married, and the testimony of more than one ancient English
+ chronicler declares that he spent his latter years in peace and honor. He
+ was the only one of the Saxon chieftains who thus closed his days in his
+ native home&mdash;the only one who had not sought to preserve his own
+ possessions at the expense of his country, and who had broken no oaths nor
+ engagements. His exploits are told in old ballads and half-romantic
+ histories, and it is not safe to believe them implicitly, but his
+ existence and his gallant resistance are certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many years after, the remains of a wooden fort, the citadel, so to speak
+ of the Camp of Refuge, still existed in the Isle of Ely, and was called by
+ the peasantry Hereward&rsquo;s Castle. The treacherous monks of Ely were well
+ punished by having forty men-at-arms quartered on their Abbey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the captives taken in the camp, many were most cruelly treated, their
+ eyes put out, and their hands cut off; others were imprisoned, and many
+ slain. Morkar, who was here taken, spent the rest of his life in the same
+ captivity as Ulfnoth, Stigand, and many other Saxons of distinction, with
+ the one gleam of hope when liberated at William&rsquo;s death, and then the
+ bitter disappointment of renewed seizure and captivity. If it could be any
+ consolation to them, these Saxons were not William&rsquo;s only captives. Bishop
+ Odo, of Bayeux, whom William had made Earl of Kent, after giving a great
+ deal of trouble to his brother the king, and to Archbishop Lanfranc, by
+ his avarice and violence, heard a prediction that the next Pope should be
+ named Odo, and set off to try to bring about its fulfilment in his own
+ person, carrying with him an immense quantity of ill-gotten treasure, and
+ a large number of troops, commanded by Hugh the Wolf, Earl of Chester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Odo had reckoned without King William, and he had but just set
+ sail, when William, setting off from Normandy, met him in the Channel,
+ took his ships, and making him land in the Isle of Wight, and convoking an
+ assembly of knights, declared his offences, and asked them what such a
+ brother deserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between fear of the king and fear of the Bishop, no one ventured to
+ answer, upon which William sentenced him to imprisonment; and when he
+ declared that no one but the Pope had a right to judge him, answered, &ldquo;I
+ do not try you, the Bishop of Bayeux, but the Earl of Kent,&rdquo; and sent him
+ closely guarded to Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another Norman state-prisoner was Roger Fitzosborn, the son of William&rsquo;s
+ early friend, who had died soon after the Conquest. Roger&rsquo;s offence was
+ the bestowing his sister Emma in marriage without the consent of the king,
+ and in addition, much seditious language was used at the wedding banquet,
+ where, unhappily, was present Waltheof, Earl of Huntingdon, the last Saxon
+ noble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Roger, finding himself in danger, broke out into open rebellion, but was
+ soon made prisoner. Still the king would have pardoned him for the sake of
+ his father, whom William seems to have regarded with much more affection
+ that he be stowed on any one else, and, as a mark of kindness, sent him a
+ costly robe. The proud and passionate Roger, disdaining the gift, kindled
+ a fire, and burnt the garment on the dungeon floor; and William, deeply
+ affronted, swore in return that he should never pass the threshold of his
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Waltheof, who was innocent of all save being present at the unfortunate
+ feast, might have been spared but for the wickedness of his wife, Judith,
+ William&rsquo;s niece, who had been married to him when it was her uncle&rsquo;s
+ policy to conciliate the Saxons. She hated and despised the Saxon churl
+ given her for a lord, kind, generous, and pious though he was; and having
+ set her affections on a young Norman, herself became the accuser of her
+ husband. Waltheof succeeded in disproving the calumnies, and the best and
+ wisest Normans spoke in his favor; but the spite of Ivo Taillebois, and
+ the hatred of his wife, prevailed, and he was sentenced to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was executed at Winchester, where, lest the inhabitants should attempt
+ a rescue, he was led out, early in the morning, to St. Giles&rsquo;s hill,
+ outside the walls. He wore the robes of an earl, and gave them to the
+ priests who attended him, and to the poor people who followed him. When he
+ came to the spot he knelt down to pray, begging the soldiers to wait till
+ he had said the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer; but he had only come to &ldquo;Lead us not into
+ temptation,&rdquo; when one of them severed his head from his body with one blow
+ of a sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His body was hastily thrown into a hole; but the Saxons, who loved him
+ greatly, disinterred it in secret, and contrived to carry it all the way
+ to Croyland, where it was buried with due honors, and we may think of
+ Hereward le Wake attending the funeral of the son of the stalwart old
+ Siward Biorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the perfidious Judith, she reaped the reward of her crimes; she was
+ not permitted to marry her Norman lover, and he was stripped of all the
+ wealth she expected as the widow of Waltbeof. This was secured to her
+ infant daughter, and was so considerable, that at one time William thought
+ the little Matilda of Huntingdon a fit match for his son Robert; but
+ Robert despised the Saxon blood, and made this project an excuse for one
+ of his rebellions. Matilda was, however, a royal bride, since her hand was
+ given to David I. of Scotland, the representative of the old race of
+ Cerdic, and a most excellent prince, with whom she was much happier than
+ she could well have: been with the unstable Robert Courtheuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO IX. THE LAST SAXON BISHOP. (1008-1095.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1066. William I.
+ 1087. William II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The last saint of the Anglo-Saxon Church, the Bishop who lived from the
+ days of Edward the Confessor, to the evil times of the Red King, was
+ Wulstan of Worcester, a homely old man, of plain English character, and of
+ great piety. The quiet, even tenor of his life is truly like a &ldquo;soft green
+ isle&rdquo; in the midst of the turbulent storms and tempests of the Norman
+ Conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan was born at Long Itchington, a village in Warwickshire, in the
+ time of Ethelred the Unready. He was the son of the Thane Athelstan, and
+ was educated in the monasteries of Evesham and Peterborough. When he had
+ been trained in such learning as these could afford, he came home for a
+ few years, and entered into the sports and occupations of the noble youths
+ of the time, without parting with the piety and purity of his conventual
+ life, and steadily resisting temptation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His parents were grown old, and having become impoverished, perhaps by the
+ exactions perpetrated either by the Danes, or to bribe them away, retired
+ from the world, and entered convents at Worcester. Wulstan, wishing to
+ devote himself to the Church, sought the service of the Bishop, who
+ ordained him to the priesthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lived, though a secular priest, with monastic strictness, and in time
+ obtained permission from the Bishop to become a monk in the convent, where
+ he continued for twenty-five years, and at length became Prior of the
+ Convent. The Prior was the person next in office to the Abbot, and
+ governed the monastery in his absence; and in some religious orders, where
+ there was no Abbot, the Prior was the superior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan&rsquo;s habits in the convent show us what the devotional life of that
+ time was. Each day he bent the knee at each verse of the seven Penitential
+ Psalms, and the same at the 119th Psalm at night. He would lock himself
+ into the church, and pray aloud with tears and cries, and at night he
+ would often retire into some solitary spot, the graveyard, or lonely
+ village church, to pray and meditate. His bed was the church floor, or a
+ narrow board, and stern were his habits of fasting and mortification; but
+ all the time he was full of activity in the cause of the poor, and,
+ finishing his devotions early in the morning, gave up the whole day to
+ attend to the common people, sitting at the church door to listen to, and
+ redress, as far as in him lay, the grievances that they brought him&mdash;at
+ any rate, to console and advise. The rude, secular country clergy, at that
+ time, it may be feared, a corrupt, untaught race, had in great measure
+ ceased to instruct or exhort their flocks, and even refund baptism without
+ payment. He did his best to remedy these abuses, and from all parts of the
+ country children were brought to the good Prior for baptism. Every Sunday,
+ too, he preached, and the Worcestershire people flocked from all sides to
+ hear his plain, forcible language, though he never failed to rebuke them
+ sharply for their most prevalent sins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fame of the holy Prior of Worcester began to spread, and on one
+ occasion Earl Harold himself came thirty miles out of his way to confess
+ his sins to him and desire his prayers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the year 1062, two Roman Cardinals came to Worcester with Aldred,
+ who had just been translated from that see to the Archbishopric of York.
+ They spent the whole of Lent in Wulstan&rsquo;s monastery; and when, at Easter,
+ they returned to the court of Edward the Confessor, they recommended him
+ for the Bishop to succeed Aldred; and Aldred himself, Archbishop Stigand,
+ and Harold, all concurred in the same advice. The people and clergy of
+ Worcester with one voice chose the good Prior Wulstan; his election was
+ confirmed by the king, and he received the appointment. He long struggled
+ against it, protesting that he would rather lose his head than be made a
+ Bishop; but he was persuaded at last by an old hermit, who rebuked him for
+ his resistance as for a sin. He received the pastoral staff from King
+ Edward, and was consecrated by his former Bishop, Aldred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a Bishop he was more active than ever, constantly riding from place to
+ place to visit the different towns and villages; and, as he went,
+ repeating the Psalms and Litany, his attendant priests making the
+ responses; while his chamberlain carried a purse, from which every one who
+ asked alms was sure to be supplied. He never passed a church without
+ praying in it, and never reached his resting-place for the night without
+ paying his first visit to the church. Wherever he went, crowds of every
+ rank poured out to meet him, and he never sent them away without the full
+ Church service, and a sermon; nay, more&mdash;each poor serf might come to
+ him, pour out his troubles, whether temporal, or whether his heart had
+ been touched by the good words he had heard. Above all, Wulstan delighted
+ in giving his blessing in Confirmation, and would go on from morning till
+ night without food, till all his clergy were worn out, though he seemed to
+ know no weariness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His clergy seem to have had much of the sluggishness of the Saxon, and
+ were often impatient of a temper, both of devotion and energy, so much
+ beyond them. If one was absent from the night service, the Bishop would
+ take no notice till it was over; but when all the others were gone back to
+ bed, he would wake the defaulter, and make him go through the service with
+ no companion but himself, making the responses. They did not like him to
+ put them out, as he often did on their journeys, while going through the
+ Psalms, by dwelling on the &ldquo;prayer-verses;&rdquo; and most especially did they
+ dislike his leading them to church, whatever season or weather it might
+ be, to chant matins before it was light. Once, at Marlow, when it was a
+ long way to church, very muddy, and with a cold rain falling, one of his
+ clergy, in hopes of making him turn back, led him into the worst part of
+ the swamp, where he sunk up to his knees in mud, and lost his shoe; but he
+ took no notice until, after the service was over, he had returned to his
+ lodgings, half dead with cold, and then, instead of expressing any anger,
+ he only ordered search to be made for the shoe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan took no part in what we should call politics; he thought it his
+ duty to render his submission to the King whom the people had chosen, and
+ to strive only to amend the life of the men of the country. He was in high
+ favor with Harold during his short reign, and was for some time at court,
+ where the fine Saxon gentlemen learnt to dread the neighborhood of the old
+ Bishop; for Wulstan considered their luxury as worthy of blame, and
+ especially attacked their long flowing hair. If any of them placed their
+ heads within, his reach, he would crop off &ldquo;the first-fruits of their
+ curls&rdquo; with his own little knife, enjoining them to have the rest cut off;
+ and yet, if Wulstan saw the children of the choir with their dress
+ disordered, he would smooth it with his own hands, and when told the
+ condescension did not become a Bishop, made answer, &ldquo;He that is greatest
+ among you shall be your servant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aldred, Wulstan&rsquo;s former Bishop, now Archbishop of York, was the anointer
+ of both Harold and William the Conqueror. He kept fair with the Normans as
+ long as he could, but at last, driven to extremity by the miseries they
+ inflicted on his unhappy diocese, he went to William arrayed in his full
+ episcopal robes, solemnly revoked his coronation blessing, denounced a
+ curse on him and his race, and then, returning to York, there died of
+ grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eghelwin, Bishop of Durham, gave good advice to Comyn, the Norman Earl,
+ but it was unheeded, and the townsmen rose in the night and burnt Comyn to
+ death, with all his followers, as they lay overcome with wine and sleep in
+ the plundered houses. The rising of the northern counties followed, and
+ Eghelwin was so far involved in it, that he was obliged to fly. He took
+ shelter in the Camp of Refuge, was made prisoner when it was betrayed, and
+ spent the rest of his life in one of William&rsquo;s prisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our good Wulstan had a happier lot, and spent his time in his own round of
+ quiet duties in his diocese, binding up the wounds inflicted by the cruel
+ oppressors, but exhorting the Saxons to bear them patiently, and see in
+ them the chastisement of their own crimes. &ldquo;It is the scourge of God that
+ ye are suffering,&rdquo; he said; and when they replied that they had never been
+ half so bad as the Normans, he said, &ldquo;God is using their wickedness to
+ punish your evil deserts, as the devil, of his own evil will, yet by God&rsquo;s
+ righteous will, punishes those with whom he suffers. Do ye, when ye are
+ angry, care what becomes of the staff wherewith ye strike?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had his own share of troubles and anxieties, but he met them in his
+ trustful spirit, and straight-forward way. At Easter, 1070, a council was
+ held at Winchester, at which he was summoned to attend. He was one of the
+ five last Saxon Bishops; Stigand, who held both at once the primacy and
+ the see of Winchester; his brother, Eghelmar, Bishop of Elmham; Eghelsie,
+ of Selsey; and the Bishop of Durham, Eghelwin, who was in the Camp of
+ Refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two cardinals were present to represent the Pope, and on account of his
+ simony, Stigand was deposed and imprisoned, while Eghelric and Eghelmar
+ were also degraded. Yet Wulstan, clear of conscience, and certain of the
+ validity of his own election, was not affrighted; so far from it, he
+ boldly called on the King to restore some lands that Aldred of York had
+ kept back from the see of Worcester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas, Aldred&rsquo;s successor, claimed them by a pretended jurisdiction over
+ Worcester, and the decision was put off for a court of the great men of
+ the realm, which did not take place till several fresh appointments had
+ been made. Lanfranc, the Italian, Abbot of Bec, had become Archbishop of
+ Canterbury, and was, of course, interested in guarding the jurisdiction of
+ the Archiepiscopal see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan, in this critical time, was exactly like himself. He fell asleep
+ while Thomas was arguing, and when time was given him to think of his
+ answer, he spent it in singing the service of the hour, though his priests
+ were in terror lest they should be ridiculed for it. &ldquo;Know you not,&rdquo; he
+ answered, &ldquo;that the Lord hath said, &lsquo;When ye stand before king and rulers,
+ take no thought what ye shall speak, for it shall be given you in that
+ hour what ye shall speak.&rsquo; Our Lord can give me speech to-day to defend my
+ right, and overthrow their might.&rdquo; Accordingly, his honest statement
+ prevailed, and he gained his cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a beautiful legend that Lanfranc, thinking the simple old Saxon
+ too rude and ignorant for his office, summoned him to a synod at
+ Westminster, and there called on him to deliver up his pastoral staff and
+ ring. Wulstan rose, and said he had known from the first that he was not
+ worthy of his dignity, and had taken it only at the bidding of his master,
+ King Edward. To him, therefore, who gave the staff, he would resign it.
+ Advancing to the Confessor&rsquo;s tomb, he said, &ldquo;Master, thou knowest how
+ unwillingly I took this office, forced to it by thee. Behold a new king&mdash;a
+ new law&mdash;a new primate; they decree new rights, and promulgate new
+ statutes. Thee they accuse of error in having so commanded&mdash;me of
+ presumption, in having obeyed. Then, indeed, thou wast liable to err,
+ being mortal&mdash;now, being with God, thou canst not err. Not to these
+ who require what they did not give, but to thee, who hast given, I render
+ up my staff. Take this, my master, and deliver it to whom thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laid it on the tomb, took off his episcopal robes, and sat down among
+ the monks. The legend goes on to say, that the staff remained embedded in
+ the stone, and no hand could wrench it away, till Wulstan himself again
+ took it up, when it yielded without effort. The King and Archbishop fell
+ down at his feet, and entreated his pardon and blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the story told a century after; and surely we may believe that,
+ without the miracle, the old man&rsquo;s touching appeal to his dead King, and
+ his humility, convinced Lanfranc that it had been foul shame to think of
+ deposing such a man because his learning was not extensive, nor his
+ manners like those of the courtly Norman. Be that as it may, thenceforth
+ Lanfranc and Wulstan worked hand in hand, and we find the Archbishop
+ begging him to undertake the visitation of the diocese of Chester, which
+ was unsafe for the Norman prelates. One great work accomplished by the
+ help of Wulstan was, the putting an end to a horrible slave-trade with
+ Ireland, whither Saxon serfs were sold, not by Normans, but by their own
+ country people, who had long carried it on before the Conquest. Lanfranc
+ persuaded William to abolish it, but the rude Saxon slave-merchants cared
+ nothing for his edicts, until the Bishop of Worcester came to Bristol, and
+ preached against the traffic, staying a month or two at a time, every
+ year, till the minds of the people of Bristol were so altered, that they
+ not only gave up the trade, but acquired such a horror of it that they
+ tore out the eyes of the last person who persisted in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favor and esteem with which Wulstan was regarded did not cease, but he
+ was obliged to spend a life of constraint. The Archbishop made him keep a
+ band of armed retainers to preserve the peace of the country, and they
+ were new and strange companions for the old monk; but as he thought his
+ presence kept them from evil, he did not remain aloof, dining with them
+ each day in the public hall, and even while they sat long over the wine,
+ remaining with them, pledging them good-humoredly in a little cup, which
+ he pretended to taste, and ruminating on the Psalms in the midst of their
+ noisy mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were the days of church-building&mdash;the days of the circular
+ arch, round column, and zigzag moulding; of doorways whose round arch,
+ adorned with border after border of rich or quaint device, almost bewilder
+ us with the multiplicity of detail; of low square towers, and solid walls;
+ of that kind of architecture called Norman, but more properly a branch of
+ the Romanesque of Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each new Roman Bishop or Abbot thought it his business to renew his clumsy
+ old Saxon minster, and we have few cathedrals whose present structure does
+ not date from the days of the Conqueror or his sons. Walkelyn, Bishop of
+ Winchester, obtained a grant from William of as much timber from Hempage
+ Wood as could be cut in four days and nights; whereupon Walkelyn assembled
+ a huge company of workmen, and made such good use of the time, that when
+ the king passed that way, he cried out, &ldquo;Am I bewitched, or have I taken
+ leave of my senses? Had I not a most delectable wood in this spot?&rdquo; where
+ now only stumps were to be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan had always been a church-builder, and he renewed his cathedral
+ after the Norman fashion; but when it was finished, and the workmen began
+ to pull down the old one, which had been built by St. Oswald, he stood
+ watching them in silence, till at last he shed tears. &ldquo;Poor creatures that
+ we are,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we destroy the work of the saints, and think in our
+ pride that we improve upon it. Those blessed men knew not how to build
+ fine churches, but they knew how to sacrifice themselves to God, whatever
+ roof might be over them, and to draw their flocks after them. Now, all we
+ think of is to rear up piles of stones, while we care not for souls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wulstan lived to a great age, survived William and Lanfrane, and assisted
+ to consecrate Anselm. In the last year of his life he kept each festival
+ with still greater solemnity than ever, and his feast for the poor
+ overflowed more than ever before; his stores were exhausted, though he had
+ collected an unusual quantity, and his clergy begged him to shut the gates
+ against the crowds still gathering; but he refused, saying none should go
+ empty away, and some gifts from his rich friends arrived opportunely to
+ supply the need. The Bishop sat in the midst as feasting with them, now
+ grown too feeble to wait on them, as he had always done hitherto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Whitsuntide, 1094, he was taken ill, and lingered under a slow fever
+ till the new year, when he died in peace and joy on the 19th of January.
+ His greatest friend, Robert, the Bishop of Hereford, a learned man,
+ understanding all the science of the time, a judge, and a courtly
+ Lorrainer, yet who loved to spend whole days with the unlettered Saxon,
+ came to lay him in his grave. He received, as a gift from the convent, the
+ lambskin cloak that Wulstan used to wear, in spite of the laughter of the
+ gay prelates arrayed in costly furs, keeping his ground by saying, that
+ &ldquo;the furs of cunning animals did not befit a plain man.&rdquo; He went home to
+ Hereford, and soon after died, having, it is said, been warned in a vision
+ by St. Wulstan that he must soon prepare to follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO X. THE CONQUEROR. (1066-1087.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In speaking of William, the Norman Conqueror, we are speaking of a really
+ great man; and great men are always hard to understand or deal with in
+ history, for, as their minds are above common understandings, their
+ contemporary historians generally enter into their views less than any one
+ else, and it is only the result that proves their wisdom and far-sight.
+ Moreover, their temptations and their sins are on a larger scale than
+ those of other men, and some of the actions that they perform make a
+ disproportionate impression by the cry that they occasion&mdash;the evil
+ is remembered, not the good that their main policy effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William was a high-minded man, of mighty and wide purposes, one of the
+ very few who understood what it was to be a king. He had the Norman
+ qualities in their fullest perfection. He was devoutly religious, and in
+ his private character was irreproachable, being the first Norman Duke
+ unstained by licence, the first whose sons were all born of his princess
+ wife. He was devout in his habits, full of alms-deeds; and strong and
+ resolute as was his will, he kept it so upright and so truly desirous of
+ the Divine glory and the Church&rsquo;s welfare, that he had no serious
+ misunderstanding with the clergy, and lived on the most friendly terms
+ with his great Archbishop, Lanfranc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was one of those mighty men who, in personal intercourse, have a force
+ of nature that not merely renders opposition impossible, but absolutely
+ masters the will and intention, so that there is not even the secret
+ contradiction of mind. We have seen this in his dealings with both his own
+ Normans and the Saxons who came in contact with him. His presence was so
+ irresistible that men yielded to it unconsciously, but when absent from
+ him they became themselves again, and in the reaction they committed
+ treason against the pledges they seemed to have voluntarily given to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was stern, fiercely stern. His standard and ideal were very high, such
+ as, perhaps, only the saintly could attain to. The men who never
+ quarrelled with him were Lanfranc, Edgar Atheling, and William Fitzosborn.
+ The first was saintly and strong; the second, honest, upright, and simple;
+ the third was endeared by boyish memories, and to these, perhaps, may be
+ added Edward the Confessor and good Bishop Wulstan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many others William tried to love and trust&mdash;his uncle Odo, his own
+ son, Earls Edwin and Morkar, Waltheof, the sons of Fitzosborn; but they
+ all failed, grieved, and disappointed him. None was strong, noble, or
+ disinterested enough not at one time or other to be a traitor; and,
+ perhaps, his really honest, open enemy, Hereward le Wake, was the person
+ whom he most valued and honored after the above mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And though his affection was hearty, his wrath when he was disappointed
+ was tremendous. And his disappointments were many, partly because his
+ standard was in every respect far above that of the men around him, and
+ partly because his presence so far lifted them to his level, that, when
+ they fell to their own, he was totally unprepared for the treachery and
+ deceit such a fall involved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then down he came on them with implacable vengeance, he was so very
+ &ldquo;stark,&rdquo; as the old chronicle has it. Battle, devastation, plunder,
+ lifelong imprisonment, confiscation, requited him who had drawn on himself
+ the terrible wrath of William of Normandy. There were few soft places in
+ that mighty heart; it could love, but it could not pity, and it could not
+ forgive. He was of the true nature to be a Scourge of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hardened and embittered by the selfish treasons that had beset his early
+ boyhood, and which had forced him into manhood before his time, he came to
+ England as one called thither by the late king&rsquo;s designation, and,
+ therefore, the lawful heir. The Norman law, a confusion of the old Frank
+ and Roman codes, and of the Norwegian pirate customs, he seems to have
+ been glad to leave behind. His native Normans must be ruled by it, but he
+ was an English king by inheritance, and English laws he would observe;
+ Englishmen should have their national share in the royal favor, and in
+ their native land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the design proved impracticable. The English had been split into
+ fierce parties long before he came, and the West Saxon, the Mercian Angle,
+ and Northumbrian Dane hated one another still, and all hated the Norman
+ alike; and his Norman, French, and Breton importations lost no love among
+ themselves, and viewed the English natives as conquered beings, whose
+ spoil was unjustly withheld from them by the Duke King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rebellion began: by ones, twos, and threes, the nobles revolted, and were
+ stamped out by William&rsquo;s iron heel, suffering his fierce, unrelenting
+ justice&mdash;that highest justice that according to the Latin proverb
+ becomes, in man&rsquo;s mind at least, the highest injustice. So England lay,
+ trampled, bleeding, indignant, and raising a loud cry of misery; but, in
+ real truth, the sufferers were in the first place the actual rebels, Saxon
+ and Norman alike; next, those districts which had risen against his
+ authority, and were barbarously devastated with fire and sword; and
+ lastly, the places which, by the death or forfeiture of native lords, or
+ by the enforced marriage of heiresses, fell into the hands of rapacious
+ Norman adventurers, who treated their serfs with the brutal violence
+ common in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Otherwise, things were left much as they were. The towns had little or no
+ cause of complaint, and the lesser Saxon gentry, with the Franklins and
+ the Earls, were unmolested, unless they happened to have vicious
+ neighbors. The Curfew bell, about which so great a clamor was raised, was
+ a universal regulation in Europe; it was a call to prayers, an intimation
+ that it was bedtime, and a means of guarding against fire, when streets
+ were often nothing but wooden booths thatched. The intense hatred that its
+ introduction caused was only the true English dislike to anything like
+ domiciliary interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King has left us an undoubted testimony to the condition of the
+ country, and the number of Saxons still holding tenures. Nineteen years
+ after his Conquest, he held a council at Gloucester, the result of which
+ was a great &ldquo;numbering of the people&rdquo;&mdash;a general census. To every
+ city or town, commissioners were sent forth, who collected together the
+ Shire reeve or Sheriff&mdash;the Viscount, as the Normans called him&mdash;the
+ thegus, the parish priests, the reeves, and franklins, who were examined
+ upon oath of the numbers, names, and holdings of the men of their place,
+ both as they were in King Edward&rsquo;s days, and at that time. The lands had
+ to be de scribed, whether plough lands or pasture, wood or waste; the
+ mills and fisheries wore recorded, and each farmer&rsquo;s stock of oxen, cows,
+ sheep, or swine. The English grumbled at the inquiry, called it tyranny,
+ and expected worse to come of it, but there was no real cause for
+ complaint. The primary object of the survey was the land-tax, the
+ Danegeld, as it was called, because it was first raised to provide
+ defences against the Danes, and every portion of arable land was assessed
+ at a fair rate, according to ancient custom, but not that which lay waste.
+ The entire record, including all England save London and the four northern
+ counties, was preserved at Winchester, and called the Winchester Roll, or
+ Domesday Book. It is one of the most interesting records in existence,
+ showing, as it does, the exceeding antiquity of our existing divisions of
+ townships, parishes and estates, and even of the families inhabiting them,
+ of whom a fair proportion, chiefly of the lesser gentry, can point to
+ evidence that they live on soil that was tilled by their fathers before
+ the days of the Norman. It is far more satisfactory than the Battle Roll,
+ which was much tampered with by the monks to gratify the ancestral vanity
+ of gentlemen who were so persuaded that their ancestors ought to be found
+ there, that they caused them to be inserted if they were missing. Of
+ Domesday Book, however, there is no doubt, as the original copy is still
+ extant in its fair old handwriting, showing the wonderful work that the
+ French-speaking scribes made with English names of people and places.
+ Queen Edith, the Confessor&rsquo;s widow, who was a large landholder, appears as
+ Eddeve, Adeve, Adiva&mdash;by anything but her true old English name of
+ Eadgyth. But it was much that the subdued English folk appeared there at
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most real grievance that the English had to complain of was the Forest
+ Laws. The Dukes of Normandy had had many a quarrel in their Neustrian home
+ with their subjects, on the vexed question of the chase, their greatest
+ passion; and when William came into England as a victor, he was determined
+ to rule all his own way in the waste and woodland. All the forests he took
+ into his own hands, and the saying was that &ldquo;the king loved the high deer
+ as if he was their father;&rdquo; any trespass was severely punched, and if he
+ slaughter of any kind of game was a more serious thing than murder itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chief of all, however, in people&rsquo;s minds, was his appropriation of the
+ tract of Jettenwald, or the Giant&rsquo;s Wood, Ytene, in South Hants. A
+ tempting hunting-ground extended nearly all the way from his royal city of
+ Winchester, broad, bare chalk down, passing into heathy common, and forest
+ waste, covered with holly and yew, and with noble oak and beech in its
+ dells, fit covert for the mighty boar, the high deer, and an infinity of
+ game beside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With William&rsquo;s paternal feelings toward the deer, he thought the cotters
+ and squatters, the churls and the serfs, on the borders of the wood, or in
+ little clearings in the midst, mischievous interlopers, and at one swoop
+ he expelled them all, and kept the Giant&rsquo;s Wood solely for himself and his
+ deer, by the still remaining name of the New Forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chroniclers talk of twenty-two mother churches and fifty-two parishes laid
+ waste, but there is no doubt that this was a monstrous exaggeration, and
+ that the population could not have been so dense. At any rate, whatever
+ their numbers, the inhabitants were expelled, the animals were left
+ unmolested for seven years, and then the Norman king enjoyed his sports
+ there among his fierce nobility, little recking that all the English, and
+ many of the Normans, longed that a curse should there light upon his head,
+ or on that of his proud sons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XI. THE CONQUEROR&rsquo;S CHILDREN. (1050-1087.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The wife of William of Normandy was, as has been said, Matilda, daughter
+ of Baldwin, Count of Flanders. The wife of such a man as William has not
+ much opportunity of showing her natural character, and we do not know much
+ of hers. It appears, however, that she was strong-willed and vindictive,
+ and, very little disposed to accept him. She had set her affections upon
+ one Brihtric Meau, called Snow, from his fair complexion, a young English
+ lord who had visited her father&rsquo;s court on a mission from Edward the
+ Confessor, but who does not appear to have equally admired the lady. For
+ seven years Matilda is said to have held out against William, until one
+ twilight evening, when she was going home from church, in the streets of
+ Bruges he rode up to her, beat her severely, and threw her into the
+ gutter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wonderful to relate, the high-spirited demoiselle was subdued by this
+ rough courtship, and gave her hand to her determined cousin without
+ further resistance; nor do we hear that he ever beat her again. Indeed, if
+ he did, he was not likely to let their good vassals be aware of it; and,
+ in very truth, they seem to have been considered as models of peace and
+ happiness. But it is much to be suspected that her nature remained proud
+ and vindictive; for no sooner had her husband become master of England,
+ than she caused the unfortunate Brihtric, who had disdained her love, to
+ be stripped of all his manors in Gloucestershire, including Fairford,
+ Tewkesbury, and the rich meadows around, and threw him into Winchester
+ Castle, where he died; while Domesday Book witnesses to her revenge, by
+ showing that the lands once his belonged to Queen Matilda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indication of character in a woman who had so little opportunity of
+ independent action, is worth noting, as it serves to mark the spirit in
+ which her children would be reared, and to explain why the sons so
+ entirely fell short of all that was greatest and noblest in their father.
+ The devotion, honor, and generosity, that made the iron of his composition
+ bright as well as hard, was utterly wanting in them, or merely appeared in
+ passing inconsistencies, and it is but too likely that they derived no
+ gentler training from their mother. There were ten children, four sons and
+ six daughters, but the names of these latter, are very difficult to
+ distinguish, as Adela, Atheliza, Adelheid, or Alix, was a sort of feminine
+ of Atheling, a Princess-Royal title, and was applied to most of the eldest
+ daughters of the French and German-princes, or, when the senior was dead,
+ or married, to the surviving eldest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecily, Matilda&rsquo;s eldest daughter, was, even before her birth, decreed to
+ be no Adela for whom contending potentates might struggle. She was to be
+ the atonement for the parents&rsquo; hasty, unlicensed marriage, in addition to
+ their two beautiful abbeys at Caen. When the Abbaye aux Dames was
+ consecrated, the little girl was led by her father to the foot of the
+ altar, and there presented as his offering. She was educated with great
+ care by a very learned though somewhat dissipated priest, took the veil,
+ and, becoming abbess, ruled her nuns for many years, well contented and
+ much respected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next sister was the Atheliza of the family, but her name was either
+ Elfgiva or Agatha. She enjoys the distinction of being the only female
+ portrait in her mother&rsquo;s tapestry&mdash;except a poor woman escaping from
+ a sacked town. She stands under a gateway, while Harold is riding forth
+ with her father, in witness, perhaps, of her having been betrothed to
+ Harold; or perhaps Matilda felt a mother&rsquo;s yearning to commemorate the
+ first of her flock who had been laid in the grave, for Elfgiva died a
+ short time after the contract, which Harold would hardly have fulfilled,
+ since he had at least one wife already at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her sister, Matilda, promoted to be Adeliza, was betrothed to another
+ Saxon, the graceful and beautiful Edwin, whom she loved with great ardor,
+ through all his weak conduct toward her father. After his untimely end,
+ she was promised to Alfonso I. of Castile, but she could not endure to
+ give her heart to another; she wept and prayed continually, but in vain as
+ far as her father was concerned. She was sent off on her journey, but died
+ on the way; and then it was that the poor girl&rsquo;s knees were found to be
+ hardened by her constant kneeling to implore the pity that assuredly was
+ granted to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constance married Alain Fergeant, a brother of the Duke of Brittany, and
+ an adventurer in the Norman invasion. He was presented with the Earldom of
+ Richmond, in Yorkshire; and as his son became afterward Duke of Brittany,
+ this appanage frequently gave title to younger brothers in the old
+ Armorican Duchy. That son was not born of Constance; she fell into a
+ languishing state of health, and died, four years after her marriage.
+ Report said that her husband&rsquo;s vassals found her so harsh and rigorous,
+ that they poisoned her; and considering what her brothers were, it is not
+ unlikely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the Adela who married that accomplished prince, Stephen, Count de
+ Blois, there will be more to say; and as to Gundred, the wife of Earl
+ Warenne, it is a doubtful question whether she was a daughter of William
+ and Matilda. Her tomb was lately found in Isfield Church, Sussex; but
+ though it has an inscription praising her virtues, it says nothing of her
+ royal birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sons of William left far more distinct and undesirable traces of
+ themselves than their sisters. Robert was probably the eldest of the whole
+ family, and he was his mother&rsquo;s favorite, like most eldest sons. He did
+ not inherit the stately height of the Norman princes, and, from his short,
+ sturdy form, early acquired the nickname of Courtheuse, by which he was
+ distinguished among the swarms of other Roberts. Much pains was bestowed
+ on his instruction, and that of his brothers, Richard and William, by the
+ excellent Lanfranc, and they all had great abilities; but there were
+ influences at work among the fierce Norman lads that rendered the holy
+ training of the good abbot wholly ineffectual. Their father, conscious of
+ his own defective right to the ducal rank, lost no opportunity of binding
+ his vassals to swear fealty not only to himself, but his eldest son; and
+ from Robert&rsquo;s infancy he had learnt to hold out his hand, and hear the
+ barons declare themselves his men. When the Duke set out on his conquest
+ of England, he caused the oath to be renewed to Robert, and he at the same
+ time showed his love for William, then the youngest, by having him, with
+ his long red hair floating, carved, blowing a horn, at the figure-head of
+ the Mora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the Conquest, when Matilda had lately been crowned Queen of
+ England, the fourth son, Henry, was born. He had much more personal beauty
+ and height than the other brothers, and there was always an idea floating
+ that the son born when his father was king had a right over his elder
+ brethren, and thus Henry was always an object of jealousy to his brothers.
+ Passionately fond of the few books he could obtain, he was called
+ Beauclerc, or the fine scholar; and whilst as little restrained by real
+ principle as his brothers, he was able to preserve a decorum and
+ self-command that kept him in better reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second brother, Richard, however, had no opportunity of showing his
+ character. He died in the New Forest, either from a blow on the head from
+ a branch of a tree, or from a fever caught in the marshes, and is buried
+ in Winchester Cathedral. Perhaps the doom came on him in innocent youth,
+ &ldquo;because there was some good thing in him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1075, when Robert must have been a man some years over twenty, Henry a
+ boy of nine, and William probably twelve or fourteen, they all three
+ accompanied their father into Normandy, and were there in the fortress of
+ Aquila, or Aigle, so called because there had been an eagle&rsquo;s nest in the
+ oak-tree close to the site of the castle. Robert was in a discontented
+ mood. The numerous occasions on which he had received the homage of the
+ Normans made him fancy he ought to have the rule in the duchy; his
+ mother&rsquo;s favoritism had fostered his ill-feeling, and he was becoming very
+ jealous of red-haired William, who from his quickness, daring, and
+ readiness had become his father&rsquo;s favorite; and though under restraint in
+ the Conqueror&rsquo;s presence, was no doubt outrageously boisterous, insolent,
+ and presuming in his absence; and Henry, the fine scholar, his companion
+ and following his lead, secretly despised both his elders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert&rsquo;s lodging was suddenly invaded by the two wild lads and their
+ attendants. Finding themselves no better welcomed or amused than rude boys
+ are wont to be by young men, they betook themselves to an upper room, the
+ floor of which was formed by ill-laid, gaping planks, which were the
+ ceiling of that below. Here they began to play at dice; they soon grew
+ even more intolerably uproarious, and in the coarse of their quarrelsome,
+ boisterous tricks, overthrew a vessel of dirty water, which began to drip
+ through the interstices of the planks on their brother and his friends
+ below&mdash;an accident sure to be welcomed by a hoarse laugh by the rough
+ boys, but appearing to the victims beneath a deliberate insult. &ldquo;Are you a
+ man not to avenge this shameful insolence?&rdquo; cried Robert&rsquo;s friends,
+ Alberic and Ivo de Grantmesnil. In a fury of passion, Robert rushed after
+ the lads with his sword drawn, and King William was roused from his sleep
+ to hear that Lord Robert was murdering his brothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passion and violence of the elder son had the natural effect of making
+ the father take the part of the younger ones, and Robert was so much
+ incensed, that he rode off with his friends, and, collecting partisans as
+ he went, attacked Rouen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was of course repulsed, and many of his followers were made prisoners.
+ He held out in the border counties for a little while, but all his
+ supporters were gained from him by his father, and he at length came back
+ to court, and appeared reconciled. There, however, he had nothing to do,
+ and all the licentious and disaffected congregated round him; he idled
+ away half his time, and revelled the rest, and his pretensions magnified
+ themselves all the time in his fancy, till at last he was stimulated to
+ demand of his father the cession of Normandy, as a right confirmed to him
+ by the French king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William replied by a lecture on disobedience, citing as examples of
+ warning all the Absaloms of history; but Robert fiercely answered, that he
+ had not come to listen to a sermon; he was sick of hearing all this from
+ his teachers, and he would have his answer touching his claim to Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer he got was, &ldquo;It is not my custom to lay aside my clothes till I
+ go to bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It sent him off in a rage, with all his crew of dissolute followers. He
+ went first to his uncle in Flanders, then to Germany and Italy, always
+ penniless from his lavish habits, though his mother often sent him
+ supplies of money by a trusty messenger, called Samson le Breton. However,
+ the King found him out, and reproached Matilda angrily; but she made
+ answer, &ldquo;If Robert, my son, were buried seven feet under ground, and I
+ could bring him to life again by my heart&rsquo;s blood, how gladly would I give
+ it!&rdquo; The implacable William commanded Samson to be blinded, but he escaped
+ to the monastery of St. Everard, and there became a monk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning, Robert presented himself to King Philippe of France, who was
+ glad to annoy his overgrown vassal by patronizing the rebellious son, and
+ accordingly placed Robert in the Castle of Gerberoi, where he might best
+ be a thorn in his father&rsquo;s side. There William besieged him, bringing the
+ two younger sons with him, though Henry was but twelve years old. For
+ three weeks there was sharp fighting; and, finally, a battle, in which the
+ younger William was wounded, and the elder, cased in his full armor of
+ chain mail, encountered unknowingly with Robert, in the like disguising
+ hawberk. The Conqueror&rsquo;s horse was killed; his esquire, an Englishman, in
+ bringing him another, was slain; and he himself received a blow which
+ caused such agony that he could not repress a shriek of pain. Robert knew
+ his voice, and, struck with remorse, immediately lifted him up, offered
+ him his own horse, and assured him of his ignorance of his person; but
+ William, smarting and indignant, vouchsafed no answer, and while the son
+ returned to his castle, the father went back to his camp, which he broke
+ up the next day, and returned to Rouen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert seems to have been a favorite with the lawless Normans, who writhed
+ under the mighty hand of his father, and on their interference, backed by
+ that of the French king and the Pope, brought about a reconciliation in
+ name. The succession of Normandy was again secured to Robert, but
+ therewith he was laid under a curse by his angry father, whose face he
+ never saw again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other troubles thickened on William. Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, the bold,
+ rough, jovial half-brother, whom he had trusted and loved, was reported to
+ be full of mischievous plots. He seems to have been told by diviners that
+ the next Pope was to be named Odo, and, to secure the fulfilment of the
+ augury, he was sending bribes to Rome, and at the same time collecting a
+ great body of troops with whom to fight his way thither. He was in the
+ Isle of Wight, preparing to carry his forces to Normandy, when William
+ pounced, on him, and ordered him back again. It is not clear whether he
+ wished to prevent the scandal to the Church, or whether he suspected this
+ army of Odo&rsquo;s of being intended to support Robert against himself; but, at
+ any rate, he made bitter complaint before the council of the way he had
+ been treated by son, brother, and peer, and sentenced Odo to imprisonment.
+ No one would touch the Bishop, and William was obliged to seize him
+ himself, answering, to Odo&rsquo;s appeal to his inviolable orders, &ldquo;I judge not
+ the Bishop, but my Earl and Treasurer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another grief befell him in 1083, in the death of Matilda, who, it was
+ currently believed, pined away with grief at his fury against her beloved
+ first-born&mdash;anger that his affection for her could not mitigate,
+ though he loved her so tenderly that his great heart almost broke at her
+ death, and he never was the same man during the four years that he
+ survived her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His health began to break; he had grown large and unwieldy, but his spirit
+ was as fiery as ever, and wherever there was war, there was he. At last,
+ in 1087, there was an insurrection at Mantes, supported by King Philippe.
+ William complained, but received no redress. Rude, scornful jests were
+ reported to him, and the savage part of his nature was aroused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always, hitherto, he had shown great forbearance in abstaining from direct
+ warfare on his suzerain, much as Philippe had often provoked him, but his
+ patience was exhausted, and he armed himself for a deadly vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His own revolted town of Mantes was the first object of his fury. It was
+ harvest-time, and the crops and vineyards were mercilessly trodden down.
+ The inhabitants sallied out, hoping to save their corn; but the ruthless
+ king made his way into the city, and there caused house, convent, and
+ church alike to suffer plunder and fire, riding about himself directing
+ the work of destruction. The air was flame above, the ground was burning
+ hot beneath. His horse stumbled with pain and fright; and the large, heavy
+ body of the king fell forward on the high steel front of the saddle, so as
+ to be painfully and internally injured. He was carried back to Rouen, but
+ the noise, bustle, and heat of the city were intolerable to him, and, with
+ the restlessness of a dying man, he caused himself to be carried to the
+ convent of St. Gervais, on a hill above the town; but he there found no
+ relief. He felt his time was come, and sent for his sons, William and
+ Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mighty man&rsquo;s agony was a terrible one. &ldquo;No tongue can tell,&rdquo; said he,
+ &ldquo;the deeds of wickedness I have wrought during my weary pilgrimage of toil
+ and care.&rdquo; He tried to weigh against these his good actions, his churches
+ and convents, his well-chosen bishops, his endeavors to act uprightly and
+ justly; but finding little comfort in these, he bewailed his own destiny,
+ and how his very birth had forced him into bloodshed, and driven him to
+ violence, even in his youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The presence of his sons brought back his mind from the thought of his
+ condition, to that of the disposal of the lands which had become to him
+ merely a load of thick clay smeared with blood. Normandy, he said, must be
+ Robert&rsquo;s; but he groaned at the thought of the misery preparing for his
+ native land. &ldquo;Wretched,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;must be the country under Robert&rsquo;s
+ rule; but he has received the homage of the barons, and the grant once
+ made can never be revoked. To England I dare appoint no heir. Let Him in
+ whose hands are all things, provide according to His will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was his first feeling, but when he saw William&rsquo;s disappointment, he
+ added, that he hoped the choice of the English might fall on his obedient
+ son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what do you give me, father?&rdquo; broke in Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A treasure of 5,000 pounds of silver,&rdquo; was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What good will the treasure do me,&rdquo; cried Henry, &ldquo;if I have neither land,
+ nor house, nor home?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take comfort, my son,&rdquo; said his father; &ldquo;it may be that one day thou
+ shalt be greater than all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words he spoke in the spirit of foreboding, no doubt perceiving in
+ Henry a sagacity and self-command which in the struggle of life was
+ certain to give him the advantage of his elder brothers; but then, alarmed
+ lest what he had said might be construed as acknowledging Henry&rsquo;s superior
+ claim as having been born a king&rsquo;s son, he felt it needful to back up
+ Rufus&rsquo;s claim, and bade a writ be prepared commanding Lanfranc to crown
+ William King of England. Affixing his signet, he kissed and blessed his
+ favorite, and sent him off at once to secure the English throne. Henry,
+ too, hurried away to secure his 5,000 pounds, and the dying man was left
+ alone, struggling between terror and hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He left sums of money for alms, masses, and prayers; and as an act of
+ forgiveness, released his captives&mdash;Earl Morcar, Ulfnoth, the
+ unfortunate hostage, Siward, and Roger de Breteuil, and all the rest; but
+ he long excepted his brother Odo, and only granted his liberation on the
+ earnest persuasion of the other brother, the Count of Mortagne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He slept uneasily at night, awoke when the bells were ringing for lauds,
+ lifted up his hands in prayer, and breathed his last on the 8th of
+ September, 1087.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His sons were gone, his attendants took care of themselves, his servants
+ plundered the chamber and bed, and cast on the floor uncovered the mortal
+ remnant of their once dreaded master. And though the clergy soon
+ recollected themselves, and attended to the obsequies of their benefactor,
+ carrying the corpse to his own Abbey at Caen, yet even there, as has
+ already been said, the cry of the despoiled refused to the Conqueror even
+ the poor boon of a grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XII. THE CROWN AND THE MITRE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1087. William II.
+ 1100. Henry I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1059. Philippe I.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1080. Heinrich IV.
+ 1105. Heinrich V.
+
+ <i>Popes of Rome</i>.
+ 1066. Victor III.
+ 1073. Gregory VII.
+ 1088. Urban II.
+ 1099. Paschal II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Great struggles took place in the eleventh century, between the spiritual
+ and temporal powers. England was the field of one branch of the combat,
+ between Bishop and King; but this cannot be properly understood without
+ reference to the main conflict in Italy, between Pope and Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope, which word signifies Father, or Patriarch, of Rome, had from the
+ Apostolic times been always elected, like all other bishops, by the
+ general consent of the flock, both clergy and people; and, after the
+ conversion of Constantine, the Emperor, as first lay member of the Church,
+ of course had a powerful voice in the election, could reject any person of
+ whom he disapproved, or nominate one whom he desired to see chosen, though
+ still subject to the approval of clergy and people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This power was, however, seldom exercised by the emperors at Rome, after
+ the seat of empire had been transferred to Constantinople, and their power
+ over Italy was diminishing through their own weakness and the German
+ conquests. The election continued in the hands of the Romans, and in
+ general, at this time, their choice was well-bestowed; the popes were,
+ many of them, saintly men, and, by their wisdom and authority, often
+ guarded Rome from the devastations with which it was threatened by the
+ many barbarous nations who invaded Italy. So it continued until Pope
+ Zaccaria quarrelled with Astolfo, King of Lombardy, and summoned the
+ Carlovingian princes from France to protect him. These Italian wars
+ resulted in Charles-le-Magne taking for himself the crown of Lombardy, and
+ in his being chosen Roman Emperor of the West, by the citizens of Rome,
+ under the influence of the Pope; while he, on his side, conferred on the
+ pope temporal powers such as none of his predecessors had enjoyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From thenceforth the theory was, that the Pope was head of the Western
+ Church, with archbishops, bishops, clergy, and laity, in regular
+ gradations under him; while the Emperor was in like manner head of the
+ State, kings, counts, barons, and peasants, in different orders below him;
+ the Church ruling the souls, the State the bodies of men, and the two
+ chieftains working hand in hand, each bearing a mission from above; the
+ Emperor, as a layman, owning himself inferior to the Pope, yet the Pope
+ acknowledging the temporal power of the crowned monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a grand theory, but it fell grievously short in the practice. The
+ city of Rome, with its worn-out civilization, was a most corrupt place;
+ and now that the Papacy conferred the highest dignity and influence, it
+ began to be sought by very different men, and by very different means,
+ from those that had heretofore prevailed. Bribery and every atrocious
+ influence swayed the elections, and the wickedness of some of the popes is
+ almost incredible. At last the emperors interfered to check the dreadful
+ crimes and profanity at Rome, and thus the nomination of the Pope fell
+ absolutely into their hands, and was taken from the Romans, to whom it
+ belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the earlier part of the eleventh century, a deacon of Rome, named
+ Hildebrand, formed the design of freeing the See of St. Peter from the
+ subjection of the emperors, and at the same time of saving it from the
+ disgraceful power of the populace. The time was favorable, for the
+ Emperor, Henry IV., was a child, and the Pope, Stephen II., was ready to
+ forward all Hildebrand&rsquo;s views.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1059 was held the famous Lateran Council [Footnote: So called
+ from being convoked in the Church at the Lateran gate, on the spot where
+ St. John was miraculously preserved from the boiling oil.] of the Roman
+ clergy, in which it was enacted, that no benefice should be received from
+ the hands of any layman, but that all bishops should be chosen by the
+ clergy of the diocese; and though they in many cases held part of the
+ royal lands, they were by no means to receive investiture from the
+ sovereign, nor to pay homage. The tokens of investiture were the pastoral
+ staff, fashioned like a shepherd&rsquo;s crook, and the ring by which the Bishop
+ was wedded to his See, and these were to be no longer taken from the
+ monarch&rsquo;s hands. The choice of the popes was given to the seventy cardinal
+ or principal clergy of the diocese, who were chiefly the ministers of the
+ different parish churches, and in their hands it has remained ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hildebrand himself was elected Pope in 1073, and took the name of Gregory
+ VII. He bore the brunt of the battle by which it was necessary to secure
+ the privileges he had asserted for the clergy. Henry IV. of Germany was a
+ violent man, and a furious struggle took place. The Emperor took it on
+ himself to depose the Pope, the Pope at the same time sentenced the
+ Emperor to abstain from the exercise of his power, and his subject;
+ elected another prince in his stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one time Gregory compelled Henry to come barefooted to implore
+ absolution; at another, Henry besieged Rome, and Gregory was only rescued
+ from him by the Normans of Apulia, and was obliged to leave Rome, and
+ retire under their protection to Apulia, where he died in 1085, after
+ having devoted his whole life to the fulfilment of his great project of
+ making the powers of this world visibly submit themselves to the dominion
+ of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strife did not end with Gregory&rsquo;s death. Henry IV. was indeed
+ dethroned by his wicked son, but no sooner did this very son, Henry V.,
+ come to the crown, than he struggled with the Pope as fiercely as his
+ father had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till after this great war in Germany that the question began in
+ any great degree to affect England. Archbishop Lanfranc, as an Italian,
+ thought and felt with Gregory VII.; and the Normans, both here and in
+ Italy, were in general the Pope&rsquo;s best friends; so that, though William
+ the Conqueror refused to make oath to become the warrior of the Pope,
+ Church affairs in general made no great stir in his lifetime, and the
+ question was not brought to issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The face of affairs was, however, greatly changed by the death of the
+ Conqueror in 1087. William Rufus was a fierce, hot-tempered man, without
+ respect for religion, delighting in revelry, and in being surrounded with
+ boisterous, hardy soldiers, whom he paid lavishly, though at the same time
+ he was excessively avaricious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had made large promises of privileges to the Saxons, in order to obtain
+ their support in case his elder brother Robert had striven to assert his
+ claims; but all these were violated, and when Lanfranc remonstrated, he
+ scoffingly asked whether the Archbishop fancied a king could keep all his
+ promises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lanfranc had been his tutor, had conferred on him the order of knighthood
+ and had hitherto exercised some degree of salutary influence over him; but
+ seeing all his efforts in vain, he retired to Canterbury, and there died
+ on the 24th of May, 1089.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, indeed, began evil days for the Church of England. William seized
+ all the revenues of the See of Canterbury, and kept them in his own hands,
+ instead of appointing a successor to Lanfranc, and he did the same with
+ almost every other benefice that fell vacant, so that at one period he
+ thus was despoiling all at once&mdash;the archbishopric, four bishops&rsquo;
+ sees, and thirteen abbeys. At the same time, the miseries he inflicted on
+ the country were dreadful; his father&rsquo;s cruel forest laws were enforced
+ with double rigor, and the oppression of the Saxons was terrible, for they
+ were absolutely without the least protection from any barbarities his
+ lawless soldiery chose to inflict upon them. Every oppressive baron
+ wreaked his spite against his neighbors with impunity, and Ivo Taillebois
+ [Footnote: See &ldquo;The Camp of Refuge.&rdquo;] was not long in showing his malice,
+ as usual, against Croyland Abbey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fire had accidentally broken out which consumed all the charters, except
+ some which were fortunately in another place, where they had been set
+ aside by Abbot Ingulf, that the younger monks might learn to read the old
+ Saxon character, and among these was happily the original grant of the
+ lands of Turketyl, signed by King Edred, and further confirmed by the
+ great seal of William I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ivo Taillebois, hearing of the fire, and trusting that all the parchments
+ had been lost together, sent a summons to the brethren to produce the
+ deeds by which they held their lands. They despatched a lay brother called
+ Trig to Spalding, with Turketyl&rsquo;s grant under his charge. The Normans
+ glanced over it, and derided it. &ldquo;Such barbarous writings,&rdquo; they said,
+ &ldquo;could do nothing;&rdquo; but when Trig produced the huge seal, with William the
+ Conqueror&rsquo;s effigy, still more &ldquo;stark&rdquo; and rigid than Sir Ivo had known
+ him in his lifetime, there was no disputing its validity, and the court of
+ Spalding was baffled. However, Taillebois sent some of his men to waylay
+ the poor monk, and rob him of his precious parchment, intending then again
+ to require the brotherhood to prove their rights by its production; but
+ brother Trig seems to have been a wary man, and, returning by a by-path,
+ avoided pursuit, and brought the charter safely home. A short time after,
+ Ivo offended the king, and was banished, much to the joy of the Fen
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rapine and oppression were in every corner of England and Normandy, the
+ two brothers Robert and William setting the example by stripping their
+ youngest brother, Henry, of the castle he had purchased with his father&rsquo;s
+ legacy. One knight, two squires, and a faithful chaplain, alone would
+ abide by the fortunes of the landless prince. The chaplain, Roger le Poer,
+ had been chosen by Henry, for a reason from which no one could have
+ expected the fidelity he showed his prince in his misfortunes, nor his
+ excellent conduct afterward when sharing the prosperity of his master. He
+ was at first a poor parish priest of Normandy, and Henry, chancing to
+ enter his church, found him saying mass so quickly, that, quite delighted,
+ the prince exclaimed, &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a priest for me!&rdquo; and immediately took him
+ into his service. Nevertheless, Roger le Poer was an excellent adviser, an
+ upright judge, and a good bishop. It was he who commenced the Cathedral of
+ Salisbury, where it now stands, removing it from the now deserted site of
+ Old Sarum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert had not added much to the tranquillity of the country by releasing
+ his uncle, the turbulent old Bishop Odo, who was continually raising
+ quarrels between him and William. Odo&rsquo;s old friend, Earl Hugh the Wolf, of
+ Chester, [Footnote: See the &ldquo;Camp of Refuge.&rdquo;] was at this time better
+ employed than most of the Norman nobles. He was guarding the frontier
+ against the Welsh, and at the same time building the heavy red stone pile
+ which is now the Cathedral of Chester, and which he intended as the Church
+ of a monastery of Benedictines. Fierce old Hugh was a religious man, and
+ had great reverence and affection for one of the persons in all the world
+ most unlike himself&mdash;Anselm, the Abbot of Bec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anselm was born at Aosta, in Piedmont, of noble parents, and was well
+ brought up by his pious mother, Ermengarde, under whose influence he
+ applied himself to holy learning, and was anxious to embrace a religious
+ life. She died when he was fifteen years of age, and his father was
+ careless and harsh. Anselm lost his love for study, and fell into youthful
+ excesses, but in a short time her good lessons returned upon him, and he
+ repented earnestly. His father, however, continued so unkind, and even
+ cruel, that he was obliged to leave the country, and took refuge, first in
+ Burgundy and then in Normandy, where he sought the instruction of his
+ countryman, Lanfranc, then Abbot of Bec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He learnt, at Bec, that his father was dead, and decided on taking the
+ vows in that convent. There he remained for many years, highly revered for
+ his piety and wisdom, and, in fact, regarded as almost a saint. In 1092,
+ Hugh the Wolf was taken ill, and, believing he should never recover, sent
+ to entreat the holy Abbot to come and give him comfort on his death-bed.
+ Anselm came, but on his arrival found the old Earl restored, and only
+ intent on the affairs of his new monastery, the regulation of which he
+ gladly submitted to Anselm. The first Abbot was one of the monks of Bec,
+ and Earl Hugh himself afterward gave up his country to his son Richard,
+ and assumed the monastic habit there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Anselm was on his visit to the Earl of Chester, there was some
+ conversation about him at Court, and some one said that the good Abbot was
+ so humble that he had no desire for any promotion or dignity. &ldquo;Not for the
+ Archbishopric?&rdquo; shouted the King, with a laugh of derision; &ldquo;but&rdquo;&mdash;and
+ he swore an oath&mdash;&ldquo;other Archbishop than me there shall be none.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the clergy about this time requested William to permit prayers to
+ be offered in the churches, that he might be directed to make a fit choice
+ of a Primate. He laughed, and said the Church might ask what she pleased;
+ she would not hinder him from doing what he pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew not what Power he was defying. That power, in the following
+ spring, stretched him on a bed of sickness, despairing of life, and in an
+ agony of remorse at his many fearful sins, especially filled with terror
+ at his sacrilege, and longing to free himself from that patrimony of the
+ Church which seemed to be weighing down his soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anselm was still with Hugh the Wolf, probably at Gloucester, where the
+ King&rsquo;s illness took place. A message came to summon him without delay to
+ the royal chamber, there to receive the pastoral staff of Canterbury. He
+ would not hear of it; he declared he was unfit, he was an old man, and
+ knew nothing of business, he was weak, unable to govern the Church in such
+ times. &ldquo;The plough should be drawn by animals of equal strength,&rdquo; said he
+ to the bishops and other friends who stood round, combatting his scruples,
+ and exulting that the king&rsquo;s heart was at length touched. &ldquo;Would you yoke
+ a feeble old sheep with a wild young bull?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without heeding his objections, the Norman clergy by main force dragged
+ him into the room where lay the Red King, in truth like to a wild bull in
+ a net, suffering from violent fever, and half mad with impatience and
+ anguish of mind. He would not hear Anselm&rsquo;s repeated refusals, and
+ besought him to save him. &ldquo;You will ruin me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;My salvation is in
+ your hands. I know God will never have mercy on me if Canterbury is not
+ filled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still Anselm wept, imploring him to make another choice; but the bishops
+ carried him up to the bedside, and actually forced open his clenched hand
+ to receive the pastoral staff which William held out to him. Then, half
+ fainting, he was carried away to the Cathedral, where they chanted the <i>Te
+ Deum</i>, and might well have also sung, &ldquo;The king&rsquo;s heart is in the hand
+ of the Lord, as the rivers of water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though William had thus been shown how little his will availed when he
+ openly defied the force of prayer, his stubborn disposition was unchanged,
+ and he recovered only to become more profane than ever. Gundulf, Bishop of
+ Rochester, when congratulating him on his restoration, expressed a hope
+ that he would henceforth show more regard to the Most High. &ldquo;Bishop,&rdquo; he
+ returned, as usual with an oath, &ldquo;I will pay no honor to Him who has
+ brought so much evil on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A war at this time broke out between William and his brother Robert, and
+ the King ordered all his bishops to pay him large sums to maintain his
+ forces. Canterbury had been so wasted with his extortions that Anselm
+ could hardly raise 500 marks, which he brought the King, warning him that
+ this was the last exaction with which he meant to comply. &ldquo;Keep your money
+ and your foul tongue to yourself,&rdquo; answered William; and Anselm gave the
+ money to the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after, Anselm expostulated with William on the wretched state of
+ the country, where the Christian religion had almost perished; but the
+ King only said he would do what he would with his own, and that his father
+ had never met with such language from Lanfranc. Anselm was advised to
+ offer him treasure to make his peace, but this he would not do; and
+ William, on hearing of his refusal, broke out thus: &ldquo;Tell him that as I
+ hated him yesterday, I hate him more to day, and will hate him daily more
+ and more. Let him keep his blessings to himself; I will have none of
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next collision was respecting the Pallium, the scarf of black wool
+ with white crosses; woven from the wool of the lambs blessed by the Pope
+ on St. Agnes&rsquo; day, which, since the time of St. Augustine, had always been
+ given by the Pope to the English Primate. Anselm, who had now been
+ Archbishop for two years, asked permission to go and receive it; but as it
+ was in the midst of the dispute between Emperor and Pope, there was an
+ Antipope, as pretenders to that dignity were called&mdash;one Guibert,
+ appointed by Henry IV. of Germany, besides Urban II., who had been chosen
+ by the Cardinals, and whose original Christian name was really Odo.
+ William went into a great fury on hearing that Anselm regarded Urban as
+ the true Pope, without having referred to himself, convoked the clergy and
+ laity at Rockingham, and called on them to depose the Archbishop. The
+ bishops, all but Gundulf of Rochester, were in favor of the King, and
+ renounced their obedience to the Primate; but the nobles showed themselves
+ resolved to protect him, whereupon William adjourned the council, and sent
+ privately to ask what might be gained by acknowledging Urban as Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Urban sent a legate to England with the Pallium. The King first tried to
+ make him depose Anselm, and then to give him the Pallium instead of
+ investing the Archbishop with it; but the legate, by way of compromise,
+ laid it on the altar at Canterbury, whence Anselm took it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years more passed, and Anselm came to beg permission to go to Rome to
+ consult with the Pope on the miserable state of the Church. William said
+ he might go, but if he did, he himself should take all the manors of
+ Canterbury again, and the bishops warned him they should be on the king&rsquo;s
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have answered well,&rdquo; said Anselm; &ldquo;go to your lord; I will hold to my
+ God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William banished him for life; but just before he departed, he came to the
+ King, saying, &ldquo;I know not when I shall see you again, and if you will take
+ it, I would fain give you my blessing&mdash;the blessing of a father to
+ his son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For one moment the Red King was touched; he bowed his head, and the old
+ man made the sign of the cross on his brow; but no sooner was Anselm gone
+ forth from his presence, than his heart was again hardened, and he so
+ interfered with his departure, that he was forced to leave England in the
+ dress of a pilgrim, with only his staff and wallet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Italy, Anselm was able to live in quiet study, write and pray in peace.
+ He longed to resign his archbishopric, but the Pope would not consent; and
+ when Urban was about to excommunicate the King, he prevailed to prevent
+ the sentence from being pronounced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William was left to his own courses, and to his chosen friend Ralph, a
+ low-born Norman priest, beloved by the King partly for his qualities as a
+ boon companion, partly for his ingenuity as an extortioner. He was
+ universally known by the nickname of Flambard, or the Torch, and was
+ bitterly hated by men of every class. He was once very nearly murdered by
+ some sailors, who kidnapped him, and carried him on board a large ship.
+ Some of them quarrelled about the division of his robes, a storm arose,
+ and he so worked on their fears that they at length set him on shore,
+ where William was so delighted to see him that he gave him the bishopric
+ of Durham, the richest of all, because the bishop was also an earl, and
+ was charged to defend the frontier against the Scots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had promised to relax the forest laws, but this was only one of his
+ promises made to be broken; and he became so much more strict in his
+ enforcement of them than even the Conqueror, that he acquired the nickname
+ of Ranger of the Woods and Keeper of the Deer. Dogs in the neighborhood of
+ his forests were deprived of their claws, and there was a scale of
+ punishments for poachers of any rank, extending from the loss of a hand,
+ or eye, to that of life itself. In 1099, another Richard, an illegitimate
+ son of Duke Robert of Normandy, was killed in the New Forest by striking
+ his head against the branch of a tree; and a belief in a family fate began
+ to prevail, so much so that Bishop Gundulf warned the King against hunting
+ there; but William, as usual, laughed him to scorn, and in the summer of
+ 1100 took up his residence in his lodge of Malwood, attended by his
+ brother Henry, and many other nobles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the last night of July a strange sound was heard&mdash;the King calling
+ aloud on St. Mary; and when his attendants came into his chamber, they
+ found him crossing himself, in terror from a frightful dream. He bade them
+ bring lights, and make merry, that he might not fall asleep again; but
+ there were other dreamers. With morning a monk arrived to tell that he had
+ had a vision presaging the King&rsquo;s death; but William brayed his own
+ misgivings, and laughed, saying the man dreamt like a monk. &ldquo;Give him a
+ hundred pence, and bid him dream better luck next time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet his spirits were subdued all the morning, and it was not till wine had
+ excited him that he returned to his vein of coarse, reckless mirth. He
+ called his hunters round him, ordered the horses, and asked for his new
+ arrows&mdash;long, firm, ashen shafts. Three he stuck in his belt, the
+ other three he held out to a favorite comrade, Walter Tyrrel, Lord de
+ Poix, saying, &ldquo;Take them, Wat, for a good marskman should have good
+ arrows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some one ventured to remind him of his dream, but his laugh was ready. &ldquo;Do
+ they take me for a Saxon, to be frighted because an old woman dreams or
+ sneezes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hunters rode off, Walter Tyrrel alone with the King. By-and-by a cry
+ rang through the forest that the King was slain. There was an eager
+ gathering into the beech-shaded dell round the knoll of Stoney Cross,
+ where, beneath an oak tree, lay the bleeding corpse of the Red William, an
+ arrow in his heart. Terror fell on some, the hope of self-aggrandizement
+ actuated others. Walter Tyrrel never drew rein till he came to the coast,
+ and there took ship for France, whence he went to the holy wars. Prince
+ Henry rode as fast in the opposite direction. William de Breteuil (eldest
+ son of Fitz-Osborn) galloped off to secure his charge, the treasury at
+ Winchester, and; when he arrived, found the prince before him, trying to
+ force the keepers to give him the keys, which they refused to do except at
+ their master&rsquo;s bidding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Breteuil, who, as well as Henry, had sworn that Robert should reign if
+ William died childless, tried to defend his rights, but was overpowered by
+ some friends of Henry, who now came up to the forest; and the next morning
+ the prince set off to London, taking with him the crown, and caused the
+ Bishop of London to anoint and crown him four days after his brother&rsquo;s
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one cared for the corpse beneath the oak, and there it lay till
+ evening, when one Purkiss, a charcoal-burner of the forest hamlet of
+ Minestead, came by, lifted it up, and carried it on his rude cart, which
+ dripped with the blood flowing from the wound, to Winchester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There the cathedral clergy buried it in a black stone coffin, ridged like
+ the roof of a house, beneath the tower of the cathedral, many people
+ looking on, but few grieving, and some deeming it shame that so wicked a
+ man should be allowed to lie within a church. These thought it a judgment,
+ when, next year, the tower fell down over the grave, and it was rebuilt a
+ little further westward with some of the treasure Bishop Walkelyn had
+ left. Never did any man&rsquo;s history more awfully show a hardened, impenitent
+ heart, going back again to sin after a great warning, then cut off by an
+ instantaneous death, in the full tide of prosperity, in the very height of
+ health and strength&mdash;for he was but in his fortieth year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A spur of William Rufus is still preserved at the forest town of
+ Lyndhurst; Purkiss&rsquo;s descendant still dwells at Minestead; part of the way
+ by which he travelled is called the King&rsquo;s Lane, and the oak long remained
+ at Stoney Cross to mark the spot where the King fell; and when, in 1745,
+ the remains of the wood mouldered away, a stone was set up in its place;
+ but the last of the posterity of William the Conqueror&rsquo;s &ldquo;high deer&rdquo; were
+ condemned in the course of the year 1831.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A Minestead churl, whose wonted trade
+ Was burning charcoal in the glade,
+ Outstretched amid the gorse
+ The monarch found: and in his wain
+ He raised, and to St. Swithin&rsquo;s fane
+ Conveyed the bleeding corse.
+
+ And still&mdash;so runs our forest creed&mdash;
+ Flourish the pious woodman&rsquo;s seed,
+ Even in the self-same spot:
+ One horse and cart, their little store,
+ Like their forefather&rsquo;s, neither more
+ Nor less, their children&rsquo;s lot.
+
+ And still in merry Tyndhurst hall
+ Red William&rsquo;s stirrup decks the wall;
+ Who lists, the sight may see.
+ And a fair stone in green Mai wood,
+ Informs the traveller where stood
+ The memorable tree.
+
+ Thus in those fields the Red King died,
+ His father wasted in his pride,
+ For it is God&rsquo;s command
+ Who doth another&rsquo;s birthright rive,
+ The curse unto his blood shall cleave,
+ And God&rsquo;s own word shall stand.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Who killed William Rufus? is a question to which the answer becomes more
+ doubtful in proportion to our knowledge of history. Suspicion attached of
+ course to Tyrrel, but he never owned that the shaft, either by design or
+ accident, came from his bow, and no one was there to bear witness. Some
+ think Henry Beauclerc might be guilty of the murder, and he was both
+ unscrupulous enough and prompt enough in taking advantage of the
+ circumstance, to give rise to the belief. Anselm was in Auvergne when he
+ heard of the King&rsquo;s death, and he is said to have wept at the tidings. He
+ soon received a message from Henry inviting him to return to England,
+ where he was received with due respect, and found that, outwardly at
+ least, order and regularity were restored in Church matters, and the
+ clergy possessed their proper influence. Great promises were made to them
+ and to the Saxons; and the hated favorite of William, Ralph Flambard, was
+ in prison in the Tower. However, he contrived to make his escape by the
+ help of two barrels, one containing wine, with which he intoxicated his
+ keepers, the other a rope, by which he let himself down from the window.
+ He went to Robert of Normandy, remained with him some time, but at last
+ made his peace with Henry, and in his old age was a tolerably respectable
+ Bishop of Durham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anselm was in favor at court, owing to the influence of the &ldquo;good Queen
+ Maude,&rdquo; and he tried to bring about a reformation of the luxuries then
+ prevalent especially long curls, which had come into fashion with the
+ Normans of late. Like St. Wulstan, he carried a knife to clip them, but
+ without making much impression on the gay youths, till one of them
+ happened to dream that the devil was strangling him with his own long
+ hair, waked in a fright, cut it all off, and made all his friends do so
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as Henry was afraid of having his crown disputed by Robert, he
+ took care to remain on excellent terms with the Church, and Anselm
+ supported him with all his influence when Robert actually asserted his
+ rights; but when the danger was over, the strife between Church and State
+ began again. In 1103, Henry appointed four bishops, and required Anselm to
+ consecrate them, but as they all had received the staff and ring from the
+ King, and paid homage for their lands, he considered that he could not do
+ so, conformably with the decree of the Lateran Council against lay
+ investiture. Henry was much displeased, and ordered the Archbishop of York
+ to consecrate them; but two of them, convinced by Anselm, returned the
+ staff and ring, and would not be consecrated by any one but their true
+ primate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry said that one archbishop must consecrate all or none, and the whole
+ Church was in confusion. Anselm, though now very old, offered to go and
+ consult the Pope, Paschal II., and the King consented; but when Paschal
+ decided that lay investiture was unlawful, Henry was so much displeased
+ that he forbade the archbishop to return to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man returned to his former Abbey of Bec, and thus remained in
+ exile till 1107, when a general adjustment of the whole question took
+ place. The bishops were to take from the altar the ring and staff, emblems
+ of spiritual power, and to pay homage to the king for their temporal
+ possessions. The election was to belong to the cathedral clergy, subject
+ to the King&rsquo;s approval. The usual course became that the King should send
+ to the chapter a <i>congé d&rsquo;élire</i>, that is, permission to elect, but
+ accompanied by a recommendation of some particular person; and this
+ nominee of the crown was so constantly chosen, that the custom of sending
+ a <i>congé d&rsquo;élire</i> has become only a form, which, however, is an
+ assertion of the rights of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar arrangement with regard to the presentation of bishops was
+ accepted in 1122 by Henry V. of Germany, who married Matilda, the daughter
+ of Henry I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the arrangement in 1107, Anselm returned to England, and good Queen
+ Maude came to meet him and show him every honor. His last year was spent
+ at Canterbury, in a state of weakness and infirmity, terminated by his
+ death on the 21st of April, 1109.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A gentle, studious man was the pious Anselm, our second Italian
+ archbishop, thrust into the rude combat of the world against his will, and
+ maintaining his cause and the cause of the Church with untiring meekness
+ and quiet resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XIII. THE FIRST CRUSADE. (1095-1100.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ William II.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ Philippe II.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ Heinrich IV.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ Urban II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the November of 1095 was seen such a sight as the world never afforded
+ before nor since. The great plain of La Limagne, in Auvergne, shut in by
+ lofty volcanic mountains of every fantastic and rugged form, with the
+ mighty Puy de Dome rising royally above them, was scattered from one
+ boundary to the other with white tents, and each little village was
+ crowded with visitants. The town of Clermont, standing on an elevation
+ commanding the whole extent of the plain, was filled to overflowing, and
+ contained a guest before whom all bowed in reverence&mdash;the Pope
+ himself&mdash;Urban II., whom the nations of the West were taught to call
+ the Father of Christendom. Four hundred Bishops and Abbots had met him
+ there, other clergy to the amount of 4,000, and princes, nobles, knights,
+ and peasants, in numbers estimated at 30,000. Every one&rsquo;s eye was,
+ however, chiefly turned on a spare and sunburnt man, of small stature, and
+ rude, mean appearance, wearing a plain, dark serge garment, girt by a cord
+ round his waist, his head and feet bare, and a crucifix in his hand. All
+ looked on his austere face with the veneration they would have shown to a
+ saint, and with the curiosity with which those are regarded who have dared
+ many strange perils. He was Peter the Hermit, of Picardy, who had
+ travelled on pilgrimage to Jerusalem; had there witnessed the dreadful
+ profanities of the infidels, and the sufferings they inflicted on the
+ faithful; had conversed with the venerable Patriarch Simeon; nay, it was
+ said, while worshipping at the Holy Sepulchre, had heard a voice calling
+ on him to summon the nations to the rescue of these holy spots. It was the
+ tenth day of the council at Clermont, and in spite of the severe cold, the
+ clergy assembled in the open air on the wide space in front of the dark
+ stone cathedral, then, as now, unfinished. There was need that all should
+ hear, and no building could contain the multitudes gathered at their
+ summons. A lofty seat had been raised for the Pope, and Peter the Hermit
+ stood by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was silence as the Hermit stood forth, and, crucifix in hand, poured
+ forth his description of the blasphemy of the infidels, the desolation of
+ the sacred places, and the misery of the Christians. He had seen the very
+ ministers of God insulted, beaten, even put to, death: he had seen
+ sacrilege, profanation, cruelty; and as he described them, his voice
+ became stifle, and his eyes streamed with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he ceased, Urban arose, and strengthened each word he had spoken,
+ till the whole assembly were weeping bitterly. &ldquo;Yes, brethren,&rdquo; said the
+ Pope, &ldquo;let us weep for our sins, which have provoked the anger of heaven;
+ let us weep for the captivity of Zion. But woe to us if our barren pity
+ leaves the inheritance of the Lord any longer in the hands of his foes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he called on them to take up arms for the deliverance of the Holy
+ Land. &ldquo;If you live,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you will possess the kingdoms of the East;
+ if you die, you will be owned in heaven as the soldiers of the Lord; Let
+ no love of home detain you; behold only the shame and sufferings of the
+ Christians, hear only the groans of Jerusalem, and remember that the Lord
+ has said, &lsquo;He that loveth his father or mother more than Me is not worthy
+ of Me. Whoso shall leave house, or father, or mother, or wife, or
+ children, and all that he has, for My sake, shall receive an hundredfold,
+ and in the world to come eternal life.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Deus vult; Deus vult;</i>&rdquo;&mdash;It is God&rsquo;s will&mdash;broke as with
+ one voice from the assembly, echoing from the hills around, and pealing
+ with a voice like thunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is God&rsquo;s will,&rdquo; again spoke Urban, &ldquo;Let these words be your
+ war-cry, and keep you ever in mind that the Lord of Hosts is with you.&rdquo;
+ Then holding on high the Cross&mdash;&ldquo;Our Lord himself presents you His
+ own Cross, the sign raised aloft to gather the dispersed of Israel. Bear
+ it on your shoulders and your breast; let it shine on your weapons and
+ your standards. It will be the pledge of victory or the palm of martyrdom,
+ and remind you, that, as your Saviour died for you, so you ought to die
+ for Him.&rdquo; Outcries of different kinds broke out, but all were for the holy
+ war. Adhemar de Monteil, Bishop of Puy, a neighboring See, first asked for
+ the Cross, and thousands pressed after him, till the numbers of Crosses
+ failed that had been provided, and the cardinals and other principal
+ persons tore up their robes to furnish more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crusading spirit spread like circles from a stone thrown into the
+ water, as the clergy of the council carried their own excitement to their
+ homes, and the hosts who took the Cross were beyond all reckoning. On the
+ right or wrong of the Crusades, it is useless as well as impossible to
+ attempt to decide. It was doubtless a spirit of religion, and not of
+ self-interest, that prompted them; they were positively the best way of
+ checking the progress of Mahometanism and the incursions of its
+ professors, and they were undertaken with far purer intentions than those
+ with which they were carried on. That they afterward turned to great
+ wickedness, is not to be denied; some of the degenerate Crusaders of the
+ latter days were among the wickedest of mankind, and the misuse of the
+ influence they gave the Popes became a source of some of the worst
+ practices of the Papacy. Already Pope Urban was taking on him to declare
+ that a man who perished in the Crusade was sure of salvation, and his
+ doctrine was still further perverted and falsified till it occasioned
+ endless evils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, in these early days, joined with many a germ of evil, was a grandeur
+ of thought, a self-devotion, and truly religious spirit, which will hardly
+ allow us to call the first Crusade other than a glorious and a Holy War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was time, politically speaking, to carry the war into the enemy&rsquo;s
+ quarters, and repress the second wave of Mahometan conquest. Islam
+ [Footnote: Islam, meaning &ldquo;the faith;&rdquo; it is a barbarism to speak of the
+ faith of Islam.] has often been called the religion of the sword, and
+ Mahomet and his Arabic successors, under the first impulse, conquered
+ Syria, Persia, Northern Africa, and Spain, and met their first check at
+ Tours from Charles Martel. These, the Saracen Arabs, were a generous race,
+ no persecutors, and almost friendly to the Christians, contenting
+ themselves with placing them under restrictions, and exacting from them a
+ small tribute. After the first great overflow, the tide had somewhat
+ ebbed, and though a brave and cultivated people, they were everywhere
+ somewhat giving way on their orders before the steady resistance of the
+ Christians. Probably, if they had continued in Palestine, there would have
+ been no Crusades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But some little time before the eleventh century, a second flood began to
+ rush from the East. A tribe of Tartars, called Turcomans, or Turks,
+ embraced Mahometanism, and its precepts of aggression, joining with the
+ warrior-spirit of the Tartar, impelled them forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They subdued and slaughtered the Saracens of Syria, made wide conquests in
+ Asia Minor, winning towns of the Greek Empire beyond where the Saracens
+ had ever penetrated, and began to threaten the borders of Christendom.
+ They were very different masters from the Arabs. Active in body, but
+ sluggish in mind, ignorant and cruel, they destroyed and overthrew what
+ the Saracens had spared, disregarded law, and capriciously ill-treated and
+ slaughtered their Christian subjects and the pilgrims who fell into their
+ hands. It was against these savage Turks that the first Crusade was
+ directed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter the Hermit soon gathered together a confused multitude of peasants,
+ women, and children, with whom he set out, together with a German knight
+ named Walter, and called by his countrymen by the expressive name <i>Habe
+ Nichts</i>, translated into French, <i>Sans avoir</i>, and less happily
+ rendered in English, <i>The Penniless</i>. They were a poor, ignorant,
+ half-armed set, who so little knew what they were undertaking, that at
+ every town they came to they would ask if that was Jerusalem. Peter must
+ either have been beyond measure thoughtless, or have expected a miracle to
+ help him, for he set out to lead these poor creatures the whole length of
+ Europe without provisions. They marauded on the inhabitants of the
+ countries through which they passed; the inhabitants revenged themselves
+ and killed them, and the whole wretched host were cut off, chiefly in
+ Hungary and Bulgaria, and Peter himself seems to have been the only man
+ who escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A better-appointed army, consisting of the very flower of chivalry of
+ Europe, had in the meantime assembled to follow the same path, though in a
+ different manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First in name and honor was Godfrey de Bouillon, Duke of Lorraine, one of
+ the most noble characters whom history records. He was pure in life,
+ devotedly pious, merciful, gentle, and a perfect observer of his word, at
+ the same time that his talents and wisdom were very considerable; he was a
+ finished warrior, expert in every exercise of chivalry, of gigantic
+ strength, and highly renowned as a leader. He had been loyal to the
+ Emperor Henry IV. through the war which had taken place in consequence of
+ his excommunication by Gregory VII. He had killed in battle the rebellious
+ competitor for the imperial crown, who, when dying from a wound by which
+ he had lost his right hand, exclaimed, &ldquo;With this hand I swore fealty to
+ Henry; cursed be they who led me to break my oath.&rdquo; Godfrey had likewise
+ been the first to scale the walls of Rome, when Henry IV. besieged Gregory
+ there; but he, in common with many others of the besieging force, soon
+ after suffered severely from malaria fever&mdash;the surest way in which
+ modern Rome chastises her invaders; and thinking his illness a judgment
+ for having taken part against the Pope, he vowed to make a pilgrimage to
+ Jerusalem. Soon after, the Crusade was preached, and Godfrey was glad to
+ fulfil his vow with his good sword in his hand, while Pope and princes
+ wisely agreed that such a chieftain was the best they could choose for
+ their expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many another great name was there: Raymond, the wise Count of Toulouse;
+ the crafty Boemond, one of the Normans of Sicily; his gallant cousin,
+ Tancred, a mirror of chivalry, the Achilles of the Crusade; but our limits
+ will only allow us to dwell on those through whom the Crusade is connected
+ with English history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Anglo-Normans had not been so forward in the Crusade as their
+ enterprising nature would have rendered probable, but the fact was, that,
+ with such a master as William Rufus, no one felt that he could leave his
+ home in anything like security. Helie de la Flèche, Count de Maine,
+ [Footnote: Robert of Normandy had been betrothed in his childhood to the
+ heiress of Maine, but she died before she was old enough for the marriage
+ to take place. In right of this intended marriage, the Norman Kings
+ claimed Maine, though Helie was the next heir.] took the Cross, and asked
+ William for some guarantee that his lands should not be molested. &ldquo;You may
+ go where you like,&rdquo; said William; &ldquo;I mean to have your city. What my
+ father had, I will have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is mine by right,&rdquo; said Helie; &ldquo;I will plead it with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will plead, too.&rdquo; said William; &ldquo;but my lawyers will be spears and
+ arrows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have taken the Cross; my land is under Christ&rsquo;s own protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only warn you,&rdquo; said William, &ldquo;that if you go, I shall pay the good
+ town of Mans a visit, with a thousand lances at my heel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Helie stayed at home, and in two years&rsquo; time was made a prisoner when
+ in a wood with only seven knights. Mans was seized, and he was brought
+ before the King. &ldquo;I have you now, my master,&rdquo; said William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By chance,&rdquo; said Helie; &ldquo;but if I were free, I know what I would do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What would you do, you knave?&rdquo; said William. &ldquo;Hence, go, fly, I give you
+ leave to do all you can; and if you catch me, I ask nothing in return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helie was set at liberty, and the next year, while William was absent in
+ England, managed to retake Mans. The Red King was hunting in the New
+ Forest when he heard the tidings; he turned his horse&rsquo;s head and galloped
+ away, as his father had once done, with the words, &ldquo;He who loves me, will
+ follow.&rdquo; He threw himself into a ship, and ordered the sails to be set,
+ though the wind was so boisterous that the sailors begged him to wait.
+ &ldquo;Fools,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;did you ever hear of a drowned king?&rdquo; He cruelly
+ ravaged Maine, but could not take the city, and, having been slightly
+ wounded, returned to meet his fate in the New Forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this story, no one could wonder that it required a great deal of
+ enthusiasm to persuade a man to leave his inheritance exposed to the grasp
+ of the Red King, who, unlike other princes, set at nought the anathemas by
+ which the Pope guarded the lands of absent Crusaders. Stephen, Count de
+ Blois, the husband of William&rsquo;s sister Adela, took the Cross. He was wise
+ in counsel, and learned, and a letter which he wrote to his wife is one of
+ the chief authorities for the early part of the expedition; but his health
+ was delicate, and it was also said that his personal courage was not
+ unimpeachable; at any rate, he soon returned home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the foremost of the Crusaders was, however, our own Norman Prince,
+ Robert Courtheuse. Every one knows the deep stain of disobedience on
+ Robert&rsquo;s early life; and yet so superior was he to his brothers in every
+ point of character, that it is impossible not to regard him with a sort of
+ affection, though the motto of his whole career might be, &ldquo;Unstable as
+ water, thou shalt not excel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was man more completely the tool of every villain who gained his
+ ready ear. It was the whisper of evil counsellors that fired his jealousy
+ of his young brothers, and drove him into rebellion against his father;
+ the evil counsel of William led him to persecute Henry, loving him all the
+ time: and when in possession of his dukedom, his careless, profuse habits
+ kept him in constant poverty, while his idle good-nature left unpunished
+ the enormities of the barons who made his country miserable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in generosity he never failed; he heartily loved his brothers, while
+ duped and injured by them again and again; he always meant to be true and
+ faithful, and never failed, except from hastiness and weakness; and while
+ William was infidel, and Henry hypocritical, he was devout and sincere in
+ faith, though miserably defective in practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crusade was the happiest and most respectable period of his life, and
+ no doubt he never was more light-hearted than when he delivered over to
+ William the mortgage of his dukedom, with all its load of care, and
+ received in return the sum of money squeezed by his brother from all the
+ unfortunate convents in England, but which Robert used to equip his brave
+ knights and men-at-arms, assisted by some of the treasures of his uncle,
+ Bishop Odo, who had taken the Cross, but was too feeble and infirm to
+ commence the expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crusaders were not sufficiently advanced in the knowledge of
+ navigation to attempt to enter Palestine by sea, and they therefore
+ traversed Germany, Hungary, and the Greek Empire, trusting to the Emperor
+ Alexis Comnenus to give them the means of crossing the Hellespont. Alexis
+ was in great dread of his warlike guests; the schism between the Greek and
+ Roman Churches caused continual heart-burnings; and at the same time he
+ considered, very naturally, that all the lands in the East at present
+ occupied by the Mahometans were his right. He would not, therefore, ferry
+ over the Crusaders to Asia till they had sworn allegiance to him for all
+ that they might conquer, and it was a long time before Godfrey would
+ comply. At last, however, on condition that the Greeks would furnish them
+ with guides and reinforcements, they took the oaths; but as Alexis did not
+ fulfil his part of the engagement, they did not consider themselves bound
+ to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Nicea, the Crusading army, of nineteen different nations, of whom
+ 100,000 were horse and 500,000 infantry, came in sight of the Turks, and,
+ after a long siege and several hotly-contested battles, won the town. They
+ continued their march, but with much suffering and difficulty; Raymond of
+ Toulouse had an illness which almost brought him to the grave, and Godfrey
+ himself was seriously injured by a bear, which he had attacked to save the
+ life of a poor soldier who was in danger from its hug. He killed the bear,
+ but his thigh was much torn, and he was a long time recovering from the
+ effects of his encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the siege of Antioch were their chief disasters; they suffered from
+ hunger, disease, inundations of the Orontes, attacks of the enemy, until
+ the living were hardly enough to bury the dead. The courage of many gave
+ way; Robert of Normandy retired to Laodicea, and did not return till he
+ had been three times summoned in the name of the Christian Faith; and
+ Peter the Hermit himself, a man of more enthusiasm than steadiness, began
+ to despair, and secretly fled from the camp in the night. As his defection
+ would have done infinite harm to the cause, Tancred pursued him and
+ brought him back to the camp, and Godfrey obliged him to swear that he
+ would not again leave them. In the spring of 1098 a great battle took
+ place, in which Godfrey, Robert, and Tancred each performed feats of the
+ highest prowess. In the midst of the battle, Tancred made his esquire
+ swear never to reveal his exploits, probably as a mortification of his own
+ vanity in hearing them extolled. After a siege of more than seven months,
+ Boemond effected an entrance by means of an understanding with some of the
+ Eastern Christians within the town. It was taken, with great slaughter,
+ and became a principality ruled by the Sicilian Norman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another great victory opened the way to Palestine, and the Crusaders
+ advanced, though still very slowly. During the march, one of the knights,
+ named Geoffroi de la Tour, is said to have had a curious adventure. He was
+ hunting in a forest, when he came upon a lion struggling in the folds of a
+ huge serpent; he killed the serpent, and released the lion, which
+ immediately fawned upon him and caressed him. It followed him
+ affectionately throughout the Crusade, but when he embarked to return to
+ Europe, the sailors refused to admit the lion into their vessel. The
+ faithful creature plunged into the sea to follow its master, swam till its
+ strength was exhausted, and then sank and was drowned. [Footnote:
+ Michaud&rsquo;s <i>Histoire des Croisades</i> gives this story from two
+ authorities.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on a glowing morning of June, 1098, that the Crusading host,
+ Tancred first of all, came in sight of the object of all their toils&mdash;the
+ City set upon a Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There it stood, four-square, on the steep, solid, fortification-like
+ rocks, rising from the rugged ravines, Kedron, Siloam, Jehoshaphat,
+ Gehenna, that form, as it were, a deep moat round the walls, and natural
+ defences, bulwarks planted by the Lord&rsquo;s own hand around His own City,
+ while He was still her Tower of Salvation, and had not left her to the
+ spoiler. There stood the double walls, the low-built, flat-roofed,
+ windowless houses, like so many great square blocks, here and there
+ interspersed with a few cypresses and aloes, the mighty Tower of David,
+ the Cross of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and far above it, alas! the
+ dome of the Mosque of Omar, with its marble gates and porphyry pillars, on
+ the flat space on Mount Moriah, where the Temple had once flashed back the
+ sunlight from its golden roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerusalem, enslaved and profaned, but Jerusalem still; the Holy City, the
+ mountain whither all nations should turn to worship, the sacred name that
+ had been spoken with reverence in every holiest lesson, the term of all
+ the toils they had undergone. &ldquo;Jerusalem! Jerusalem!&rdquo; cried the foremost
+ ranks. Down fell on their knees&mdash;nay, even prostrate on their faces&mdash;each
+ cross-bearing warrior, prince and knight, page and soldier. Some shouted
+ for joy, some kissed the very ground as a sacred thing, some wept aloud at
+ the thought of the sins they had brought with them, and the sight of the
+ tokens of Zion&rsquo;s captivity&mdash;the Dome and the Crescent. Then once more
+ their war-cry rose as with one voice, and Mount Zion and Mount Olivet
+ echoed it back to them, &ldquo;<i>Deus vult! Deus vult!</i>&rdquo; as to answer that
+ the time was come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Jerusalem was only in sight&mdash;not yet won; and the Crusaders had
+ much to suffer, encamped on the soil of iron, beneath the sky of brass,
+ which is part of the doom of Judea. The vineyards, cornfields, and
+ olive-trees of ancient times had given place to aridity and desolation;
+ and the Christian host endured much from heat, thirst, and hunger, while
+ their assaults on the walls were again and again repelled. They pressed
+ forward their attacks as much as possible, since they could not long exist
+ where they were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three great wooden towers were erected, consisting of different stages or
+ stories, where the warriors stood, while they were wheeled up to the
+ walls. Godfrey, Raymond, and Tancred each had the direction of one of
+ these towers, and on the fourteenth of July the general assault began. The
+ Turks, on their side, showered on them arrows, heavy stones, and Greek
+ fire&mdash;an invention consisting of naphtha and other inflammable
+ materials, which, when once ignited, could not be quenched by water, but
+ only by vinegar. It was cast from hollow tubes, and penetrating the armor
+ of the Christians, caused frightful agonies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raymond&rsquo;s tower was broken down or burnt; Godfrey and Tancred fought on,
+ almost overpowered, their warriors falling round them, the enemy shouting
+ with joy and deriding them. At the moment when the Crusaders were all but
+ giving way, a horseman was seen on the Mount of Olives, his radiant armor
+ glittering in the sun, and raising on high a white shield marked with the
+ red Cross. &ldquo;St. George! St. George!&rdquo; cried Godfrey&rsquo;s soldiers; &ldquo;the Saints
+ fight for us! <i>Deus vult! Deus vult!</i>&rdquo; and on they rushed again in an
+ ecstasy of enthusiasm that nothing could resist. Some broke through a
+ half-opened breach, some dashed from the wooden towers, some scaled the
+ fortifications by their ladders, the crowd came over the walls like a
+ flood, and swept all before them with the fury of that impulse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a frightful slaughter; the Crusaders, brought up in a pitiless
+ age, looked on the Saracens as devoted to the sword, like the Canaanite
+ nations, and spared not woman or child. The streets streamed with blood,
+ and the more merciful chieftains had not power to restrain the carnage.
+ Raymond did indeed save those who had taken refuge in the Tower of David,
+ and Tancred sent three hundred in the Mosque of Omar his own good pennon
+ to protect them, but in vain; some of the other Crusaders massacred them,
+ to his extreme indignation, as he declared his knightly word was
+ compromised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Godfrey had fought on as long as resistance lasted, then he threw himself
+ from his horse, laid aside his helmet and gauntlets, bared his feet, and
+ ascended the hill of Calvary. It was Friday, and the ninth hour of the
+ day, when the Christian chief entered the circular-vaulted church, and
+ descended, weeping at once for joy and for sorrow, into the subterranean
+ crypt, lighted with silver lamps&mdash;the Holy Sepulchre itself, where
+ his Lord had lain, and which he had delivered. Far from the sound of
+ tumult and carnage, there he knelt in humility and thankfulness, and in
+ time the rest of the chieftains gathered thither also&mdash;Tancred guided
+ by the chant of the Greek Christians who had taken refuge in the church.
+ Peter the Hermit sang mass at the altar, and thus night sunk down on
+ Jerusalem and the victorious Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following days confirmed the conquest, and councils began to be held
+ on the means of securing it. A King was to be elected, and it is said that
+ the crown was offered to Robert of Normandy, and declined by him.
+ Afterward, by universal consent, Godfrey de Bouillon was chosen to be King
+ of Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accepted the office, with all its toils and perils, but he would
+ neither bear the title nor crown. He chose to leave the title of King of
+ Jerusalem to Him to whom alone it belonged; he would not wear a crown of
+ gold where that King had Worn a crown of thorns, and he kept only his
+ knightly helmet, with the title of Defender and Baron of the Holy
+ Sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well did he fulfil his trust, ever active, and meeting the infidels with
+ increasing energy wherever they attacked him; but it was only for one
+ year. The climate undermined his health; he fell sick of a fever, and died
+ in July, 1100, just one year from the taking of Jerusalem. He lies buried
+ in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, beneath a stone bearing these words:
+ &ldquo;Here lieth the victorious Duke Godfrey de Bouillon, who won all this land
+ to the Christian faith. May whose soul reign with Christ.&rdquo; His good sword
+ is also still kept in the same church, and was long used to dub the
+ Knights of the Holy Sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XIV. THE ETHELING FAMILY. (1010-1159.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ Knute and his sons.
+ Edward.
+ Harold.
+ William I.
+ William II.
+ Henry I.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ Henry I.
+ Philippe I.
+ Louis VI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When, in 1016, the stout-hearted Edmund Ironside was murdered by Edric
+ Streona, he left two infant sons, Edmund and Edward, who fell into the
+ power of Knute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These children were placed, soon after, under the care of Olaf Scotkonung,
+ King of Sweden, who had been an ally of their grandfather&rsquo;s, and had sent
+ to England to request that teachers of the Gospel might come to him. By
+ these English clergy he had been baptized, and his country converted, so
+ that they probably induced him to intercede with Knute for the orphan
+ princes. Shortly after, a war broke out between Denmark and Sweden, and
+ Olaf, believing, perhaps, that the boys were unsafe in the North, where
+ Knute&rsquo;s power was so great, transferred them to Buda, to the care of
+ Stephen, King of Hungary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a happy home for them. Stephen, the first king of Hungary, was a
+ most noble character, a conqueror and founder of a kingdom, humble,
+ devout, pious, and so charitable that he would go about in disguise,
+ seeking for distressed persons. He was a great lawgiver, and drew up an
+ admirable code, in which he was assisted by his equally excellent son
+ Emeric, and was the first person who in any degree civilized the Magyar
+ race. His son Emeric died before him, leaving no children; and, after
+ three years of illness, Stephen himself expired in 1038. His name has ever
+ since been held in high honor, and his arched crown, half-Roman,
+ half-Byzantine, was to the Hungarians what St. Edward&rsquo;s crown is to us.
+ After Hungary was joined to the German Empire, there was still a separate
+ coronation for it, and it was preserved in the castle of Buda, under a
+ guard of sixty-four soldiers, until the rebellion of 1848, when it was
+ stolen by the insurgents, and has never since been recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Stephen&rsquo;s death, there was a civil war between the heathen Magyars
+ and the Christians, ending in the victory of the latter, and the
+ establishment of Andrew in the kingdom. This was in 1051, and it was
+ probably the sister-in-law of this Andrew whom the Saxon prince Edward
+ married. All we are told about her is, that her name was Agatha, and that
+ she was learned and virtuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1058, Edward, the only survivor of the brothers, was invited by his
+ cousin, the childless Confessor, to return to England, and there be owned
+ as Etheling, or heir to the crown. He came, but after his forty years&rsquo;
+ absence from his native country, his language, habits, and manners were so
+ unlike those of the English, that he was always known by the name of
+ Edward the Stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After two years, both the Stranger and his wife Agatha died, leaving three
+ young children, Christina, Margaret, and Edgar, of whom the boy was the
+ youngest. His only inheritance, poor child, was his title of Etheling,
+ declaring a claim which was likely to be his greatest peril. Edward the
+ Confessor passed him entirely over in disposing of his kingdom; and as he
+ was but six, or, as some say, ten years old, Harold seems to have feared
+ no danger from him, but left him at liberty within the city of London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There he remained while the battles of Stamford Bridge and Hastings were
+ fought, and there, when the tidings came that the Normans had conquered,
+ the little child was led forth, while a proclamation was made before him
+ that Edgar was King of England. But it was only a few faithful citizens
+ that thus upheld the young descendant of Alfred. Some were faint-hearted,
+ others were ambitious; Edwin and Morkar said they would support him if the
+ bishops would; the bishops declared that the Pope favored the Normans. The
+ Conqueror was advancing, and from the walls of London the glare of flame
+ might be seen, as he burnt the villages of Hertfordshire and Surrey, and
+ soon the camp was set up without the walls, and the Conqueror lodging in
+ King Edward&rsquo;s own palace of Westminster. The lame Alderman Ansgard was
+ carried in his litter to hold secret conference with him, and returned
+ with promises of security for lives and liberties, if the citizens would
+ admit and acknowledge King William. They dreaded the dangers of a seige,
+ and gladly accepted his proposal, threw open their gates, and came forth
+ in procession to Westminster to present him with the keys, basely carrying
+ with them the helpless boy whom they had a few weeks before owned as their
+ king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edgar was a fair child, of the old Saxon stamp of beauty, with flaxen hair
+ and blue eyes; and the Duke of Normandy, harsh as he usually was, received
+ him affectionately. Perhaps he thought of his own orphanhood at the same
+ age, and the many perils through which he had been preserved, and pitied
+ the boy deprived of his kingdom, without one faithful hand raised to
+ protect him, and betrayed to his enemies. He took him in his arms, kissed
+ him, promised him favors and kindness, and never broke the promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next two years Edgar remained at the court of William, until the
+ general spirit of hatred of the Normans began to incite the Saxons to rise
+ against them. Cospatric, Earl of Durham, thought it best to secure the
+ safety of the royal children, and, secretly withdrawing Edgar and his two
+ sisters from the court, he embarked with them for the Continent, intending
+ to take them to their mother&rsquo;s home in Hungary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrary winds drove the ship to Scotland, and there the orphans were
+ brought to King Malcolm III. Never had an apparent misfortune been in
+ truth a greater blessing. Malcolm had but seven years before been himself
+ a wandering exile, sheltered in the court of Edward the Confessor, after
+ his father, the gracious Duncan, was murdered, and the usurper Macbeth on
+ the throne. He had venerated the saintly Confessor, and remembered the
+ untimely death of the Stranger, which had left these children friendless
+ in what was to them a foreign land; and he owed his restoration to his
+ throne to the Saxon army under old Siward Bjorn. Glad to repay his
+ obligations, he conducted the poor wanderers to his castle of Dumfermline,
+ treated them according to their rank, and promised to assert Edgar&rsquo;s claim
+ to the crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accordingly advanced into England, where, in many places, partial
+ risings were being made on behalf of &ldquo;England&rsquo;s darling,&rdquo; as the Saxon
+ ballads called young Edgar, after his ancestor Alfred. It was, however,
+ all in vain: Malcolm did not arrive till the English had been defeated on
+ the banks of the Tyne, and the Normans avenging their insurrection by such
+ cruel devastation, that nine years after the commissioners of Domesday
+ Book found no inhabitants nor cultivation to record between York and
+ Durham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is some confusion in both the English and Scottish histories
+ respecting Malcom&rsquo;s exertions in Edgar&rsquo;s cause; indeed, the Border warfare
+ was always going on, and now and then the King took part in it. At length
+ William and Malcolm, each at the head of an army, met in Galloway, and
+ after standing at bay for some days, entered into a treaty. Malcolm paid
+ homage to the English King for the two Lothians and Cumberland, and at the
+ same time secured the safety of Edgar Etheling. The boy solemnly renounced
+ all claim to the English crown, engaging never to molest the Conqueror or
+ his children in their possession of it; while, on the other hand, he was
+ endowed with estates in England, and a pension of a mark of silver a day
+ was settled upon him. He could not at this time have been more than
+ fourteen&mdash;there is more reason to think he was but ten years old&mdash;but
+ the oath that he then took he kept with the most unshaken fidelity, in the
+ midst of temptations, and of examples of successful perjury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned with his friend to Scotland, where, the next year, his
+ beautiful sister Margaret consented to become the wife of their host, the
+ King Malcolm; but Christina, the other sister, preferred a conventual
+ life, though she seems for the present to have continued with Margaret at
+ Dumfermline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gentle Margaret, bred in some quiet English convent; taught by her mother
+ to remember the Greek cultivation and holy learning of good King Stephen&rsquo;s
+ court; perhaps blessed by the tender hand of pious Edward the Confessor,
+ and trained by the sweet rose, Edith, sprung from the thorn, Godwin; she
+ must have felt desolate and astray among the rude, savage Scots, wild
+ chiefs of clans, owning no law, full of brawling crime and violence, too
+ strong to be kept in order by force, and their wives almost as untamed and
+ rude as themselves. Her husband was a rough, untutored warrior, ruling by
+ the main force of a strong hand, and asking counsel of his own honest
+ heart and ready wit, but perfectly ignorant, and probably uncouth in his
+ appearance, as his appellation of Cean Mohr means Great-head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Margaret was a true daughter of Alfred, and the traditions of the
+ Alfred of Hungary were fresh upon her, and, instead of sitting down to
+ cower alarmed amid the turmoils round her, she set herself to conquer the
+ evils in her own feminine way, by her performance of her queenly duties.
+ She was happy in her husband: Malcolm revered her saintly purity even more
+ than he loved her sweet, sunny, cheerful manner, or admired her surpassing
+ loveliness of person. He looked on her as something too precious and
+ tender for his wild, rugged court, and attended to her slightest bidding
+ with reverence, kissing her holy books which he could not read, and
+ interpreting her Saxon-spoken advice to his rude Celts. She even made him
+ help her to wash the feet of the poor, and aid her in disgusting offices
+ to the diseased, and his royal treasury was open to her to take all that
+ she desired for alms. Sometimes she would pretend to take it by stealth,
+ and Malcolm would catch her by the wrists and carry her to her confessor,
+ to ask if she was not a little thief who deserved to be well punished. In
+ his turn he would steal away her books, and bring them back after a time,
+ gilt and adorned with beautiful illuminations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The love and reverence with which so bold a warrior treated her, together
+ with her own grace and dignity, had its effect on the unruly Scottish
+ chieftains, and not one of them ventured to use a profane word, or make an
+ unseemly jest before her. They had a rude, ungodly practice of starting
+ away from table without waiting for grace, and this the gentle queen
+ reformed by sending, as an especial gift from herself, a cup of wine to
+ all who remained. In after times the last cup was called, after her, St.
+ Margaret&rsquo;s cup, or the grace-cup.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To improve the manners of the ladies, she gathered round her a number of
+ young girls, whom she brought up under her own eye, and she used to sit in
+ the midst of them, embroidering rich vestments for the service of the
+ Church, and permitting cheerful talk with the nobles whom she admitted&mdash;all
+ men of whose character she had a good opinion. She endeavored to reform
+ the Scottish Church which had become very sluggish, and did little to
+ contend with Highland savagery. There were only three Bishops and those
+ not with fixed sees. Margaret and her husband convened a synod, when
+ Margaret herself explained her views, and Malcolm interpreted. It was not
+ a usual order of things, but to themselves quite satisfactory, and
+ thenceforth the Scottish Church became assimilated to the rest of the
+ Western communion. It was a Saxon immigration: the Lowlands became more
+ English than England then was, and Scotch is still more like Saxon than
+ the tongue we speak. But the Celts bitterly hated the change; and
+ thenceforth the land was divided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was gay and playful; but her fasts and mortifications in secret were
+ very great. She cut off unnecessary food and sleep, and spent half the
+ night in prayer. She daily washed the feet of six poor people, and washed,
+ clothed, and fed nine orphan babes, besides relieving all who came to ask
+ her bounty, attending to the sick, and sending to ransom captives,
+ especially her own countrymen the English, lodging her rescued prisoners
+ in a hospital which she had founded, till they could be sent to their own
+ homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leading this happy and holy life, Edgar left his sister about two years
+ after her marriage, upon an invitation from Philippe I. of France; but he
+ was shipwrecked on the coast of Normandy, and coming to Rouen, was kindly
+ received by William, and remained with him. A close friendship sprung up
+ between the disinherited Etheling and Robert the heir of Normandy, who was
+ only a year or two older. Both were brave, open-hearted, and generous, and
+ their love for each other endured, on Edgar&rsquo;s side, through many a trial
+ and trouble. Happy would it have been for Robert had all his friends been
+ like Edgar Adeling, as the Normans called him. A few years more made Edgar
+ a fine young man, expert in the exercises of chivalry, and full of the
+ spirit of enterprise: but he did not join his friend in rebellion against
+ his father; and after Robert had quitted Rouen, never to return thither in
+ his father&rsquo;s lifetime, he obtained permission from William to go on
+ pilgrimage, gave his pension for a fine horse, and set off for Italy with
+ two hundred knights, fought there, or in Sicily, against the Saracens, for
+ some time, and then continued his pilgrimage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned through Constantinople, where many of the English fugitives
+ were serving in the Varangian guard. The Emperor Alexius Comnenus was much
+ pleased with him, and offered him high preferment if he would remain with
+ him; but Edgar loved his own country too well, and proceeded homeward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found a changed state of affairs on his arrival in Normandy. William
+ the Conqueror was dead, and Robert, with the aid of Henry Beauclerc, just
+ preparing to assert his right to the English crown against Red William.
+ Edgar Etheling offered his sword to assist his friend; but he was
+ shamefully treated. William came to Normandy, sought a conference with
+ Robert, cajoled or outwitted him into a treaty in which one of the
+ conditions was that he should withdraw his protection from both Edgar and
+ Henry, and deprive the former of all the lands in Normandy which their
+ father had given him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edgar retired to Scotland to his sister Margaret, whom he found the mother
+ of nine children, continuing the same peaceful, active life in which he
+ had left her, and her holy influence telling more and more upon her court.
+ Many Saxons had come to live in the lowlands of Scotland, and the habits
+ and manners of the court of Dumfermline were being fast modelled on those
+ of Westminster in the time of Edward and Edith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Malcolm and William Rufus were at war, and Edgar accompanied his
+ brother-in-law to the banks of the Tyne, where they were met by William
+ and Robert. No battle took place; but Edgar and Robert, meeting on behalf
+ of the two kings, arranged a treaty of peace. In return for this service,
+ William permitted Edgar to return to England, being perhaps persuaded by
+ Robert and Malcolm that the English prince was a man of his word, though
+ to his own hindrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peace, thus effected did not last long, most unhappily for Scotland.
+ Malcolm, with his two eldest sons, Edward and Edmund, invaded England, and
+ laid siege to Alnwick Castle, leaving the Queen at Edinburgh, seriously
+ ill. At Alnwick the Scottish army was routed, and Malcolm and Edward were
+ slain. The tradition is, that one of the garrison pretended to surrender
+ the castle, by giving the keys, through a window, on the point of a lance;
+ [Footnote: Curiously in accordance with this story we find, in the Bayeux
+ tapestry, the surrender of Dinan represented by the delivery of the keys
+ in this manner to William the Conqueror.] but that he treacherously thrust
+ the weapon into the eye of Malcolm, and thus killed him. The story adds
+ that thus the soldier acquired the name of Pierce-eye, or Percy; which is
+ evidently incorrect, since the Percys of Alnwick trace their origin to
+ William de Albini, who married Henry Beauclerc&rsquo;s second queen, Alice of
+ Louvain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An instant disturbance prevailed on the King&rsquo;s death. His army fled in
+ dismay; his corpse was left on the ground, till a peasant carried it to
+ Tynemouth; his men were dispersed, slain, or drowned in their flight; his
+ young son Edmund, a stripling of eighteen or nineteen, just contrived to
+ escape to Edinburgh Castle. The first tidings that met him there were,
+ that his mother was dying; that she lay on her bed in great anxiety for
+ her husband and sons, and finding no solace except in holding a fragment
+ of the true Cross pressed to her lips, and repeating the fifty-first
+ Psalm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor youth, escaped from a lost battle, and bearing such dreadful
+ tidings, was led to her presence at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How fares it with your father and brother?&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He feared to tell her all, and tried to answer, &ldquo;Well;&rdquo; but she perceived
+ how it was too plainly, and holding out the Holy Cross, commanded him to
+ speak the truth. &ldquo;They are slain, mother&mdash;both slain!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Margaret&rsquo;s thoughts must have rushed back to the twenty-three years of
+ uninterrupted affection she had enjoyed with her lord, to her gallant son,
+ slain in his first battle, and onward to the unprotected state of the
+ seven orphans she left in the wild kingdom. Agony indeed it was; but she
+ blessed Him who sent it. &ldquo;All praise be to Thee, everlasting God, who hast
+ made me to suffer such anguish in my death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She lingered on a few hours longer, while storms raged around. The wild
+ Celts hated Malcolm&rsquo;s improvements and Saxon arts of peace, and his
+ brother Donald was placing himself at their head to deprive his lawful
+ brothers of their heritage. A troop of Highlanders were on their way to
+ besiege Edinburgh Castle, even when the holy Queen drew her last breath;
+ and her friends had barely time to admire the sweet peacefulness that had
+ spread over her wasted features, before they were forced to carry her
+ remains away in haste and secrecy, attended by her weeping, trembling
+ children, to Dumfermline Abbey, where she was buried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her children, seven in number (for Ethelred, the eldest, had died in
+ infancy), were left unprotected. Edmund was only eighteen, and timid and
+ gentle. Donald seized the crown; and the orphans remained in great danger,
+ till their brave uncle, Edgar Etheling, learnt the fatal tidings, and,
+ coming from England, fetched them all home with him, giving the two girls,
+ Edith and Mary, into the care of their aunt Christina, who was now Abbess
+ of Wilton. It was at some danger to himself that he took the desolate
+ children under his protection. A man named Orgar accused him to William
+ Rufus of intending to raise his nephews to the English crown. A knight,
+ named Goodwin, no doubt of Saxon blood, no sooner heard the aspersion,
+ than he answered by avowing the honor and faithfulness of his Etheling,
+ threw down his glove, and defied Orgar to single combat&mdash;&ldquo;God show
+ the right.&rdquo; It was shown; Orgar fell, and Saxons and Normans both
+ rejoiced, for the Etheling had made himself much beloved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crusade was preached, and Robert invited Edgar to join in it; but he
+ could not forsake the charge of his sister&rsquo;s children, and was forced to
+ remain at home. Revolutions, however, continued in Scotland. Donald was
+ overthrown by Duncan, a son of Malcolm, born long before his marriage; and
+ the Lowland Scots were impatient of the return to barbarism. Duncan was
+ killed, and Donald restored. Edgar hoped that his nephews might be
+ restored. Edmund had chosen to renounce the throne and embrace a religious
+ life; but the next in age, Edgar and Alexander, were spirited princes, and
+ eager to assert their right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Etheling had never shed blood to regain his own lost kingdom; but he
+ was a true knight-errant and redresser of wrongs. He asked leave from
+ William to raise a Saxon army to restore his nephew to the Scottish
+ throne; and such was the reliance that even the scoffer William had learnt
+ to place on his word, that it was granted. The English flocked with joy
+ round their &ldquo;darling,&rdquo; wishing, without doubt, that it was for the
+ restoration of the Saxon, instead of the Scottish Edgar, that they took up
+ arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Durham the monks of St. Cuthbert intrusted to the Etheling their sacred
+ standard&mdash;a curious two-winged ensign, with a cross, that was carried
+ on a car. It was believed always to bring victory, and at the first sight
+ of it Donald&rsquo;s men abandoned him, and went over to Edgar. Donald was made
+ prisoner, and soon after died. Young Edgar assumed the crown, sent for the
+ rest of his family, and had a happy and prosperous reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Edgar Etheling been selfish and ambitious, he might now, at the head
+ of his victorious Saxons, have had a fair chance of dethroning the tyrant
+ William; but instead of this, his thoughts were fixed on the Holy Land;
+ and embarking with his willing army, he came up with the Crusaders just in
+ time for the siege of Jerusalem, where the English, under &ldquo;Edgar Adeling,&rdquo;
+ fought gallantly in the assault in the portion of the army assigned to
+ Robert of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edgar and Robert returned together, and visited the Normans of Apulia,
+ where Edgar had been some years before. Robert here fell in love with
+ Sybilla, the beautiful daughter of the Count of Conversana, and soon after
+ married her. It was in the midst of the wedding festivities that Ralph
+ Flambard, lately the wicked minister of William Rufus, arrived from
+ England, having escaped from prison, bringing the news that his master,
+ the Red King, was slain, and Henry Beauclerc wore the crown. The hasty
+ wrath of Duke Robert was quickly fanned by Ralph Flambard, and he set off
+ at once to attack his brother, and gain the kingdom which Henry had sworn
+ should be his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, on his arrival, he at first only amused himself with conducting
+ his bride through his dukedom, and being feasted at every castle. When two
+ knights of Maine came to tell him that Helie de la Flèche was besieging
+ their castles, he carelessly thanked them for their fidelity, but told
+ them he had rather gain a kingdom, than a county, and so that they should
+ make the best terms they could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sybilla&rsquo;s dowry enabled Robert to raise a considerable army, and he had
+ likewise the support of most of the barons whose estates lay both in
+ Normandy and England, and who therefore preferred that the two states
+ should be united; whereas those who had only domains in England held with
+ Henry, wishing to be free from the elder and more powerful nobility of
+ Normandy. The Anglo-Saxons were for Henry, who had relieved them from some
+ of their sufferings, and had won their favor by his marriage, which
+ connected him with the Etheling. Edith, the eldest daughter of the good
+ Queen Margaret, had remained with her aunt Christina in the Abbey of
+ Wilton, after her brother had been made King of Scotland. She was like her
+ mother in many respects; and her aunt wished to devote her to the
+ cloister, and secure her from the cruel sorrows her mother had endured,
+ under the black veil that she already wore, like the professed nuns, to
+ shield her from the insults of the Norman knights, or their attempts to
+ secure a princess as a bride. But Edith remembered that her father had
+ once said that he destined her to be a queen, and not a nun. She
+ recollected how her mother had moulded her court, and been loved and
+ honored there, and her temper rebelled against the secluded life in the
+ convent, so much that, in a girlish fit of impatience, she would, when her
+ aunt was out of sight, tear off her veil and trample upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the tidings came that Henry, the new King of England, wooed the
+ Princess of Scotland for his bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A marriage of policy it evidently was; for, unlike the generous love that
+ had caused Malcolm to espouse the friendless exile Margaret, Henry was a
+ perjured usurper, and dark stories were told of his conduct in Normandy.
+ Christina strongly and vehemently opposed the marriage, as the greatest
+ calamity that could befall her niece: she predicted that, if Edith
+ persisted in it, only misery could arise from it; and when she found her
+ determined, tried to prove her to be already bound by the promises of a
+ nun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Christina went too far: a court was held by Archbishop Anselm, and it
+ was fully proved that the Lady Edith was under no vows. She was declared
+ free to marry, and in a short time became the wife of Henry, changing her
+ own Saxon name to the Norman Matilda, or Maude. In the first year of her
+ marriage, when Henry was anxious to win the favor of the English, he
+ conformed so much to their ways that the scornful Normans used to call him
+ and his young wife by the Saxon names of Godric and Godiva. The Saxons
+ thus were willing to stand by King Henry, all excepting the sailors, who
+ were won by Robert&rsquo;s spirit of enterprise, and deserting, with their whole
+ fleet, went to Normandy, and brought Robert and his army safe to
+ Portsmouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This happened just as Edith Maude had given birth to her first child, at
+ Winchester. Robert was urged to assault the city; but he refrained,
+ declaring such would be an unknightly action toward his sister-in-law and
+ her babe. Henry soon came up with his forces, the brothers held a
+ conference, and, as usual, Robert was persuaded to give up his rights, and
+ to make peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next four years Robert continued in Normandy, leading a gay and
+ careless life at first with his beautiful Sybilla; but she soon died,
+ leaving an infant son, and thenceforward his affairs grew worse and worse,
+ as he followed only the impulse of the moment. From riot and drunkenness
+ he fell into fits of devotion, fasting, weeping, and praying; his poverty
+ so great that he was at one time obliged to lie in bed for want of
+ garments to wear; and his dukedom entirely uncared for, fields left
+ uncultivated, and castles which were dens of robbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Normans begged that some measures might be taken for their relief, and
+ King Henry came, and, with Robert&rsquo;s consent, set things on a better
+ footing; but meanwhile he was secretly making arrangements with the barons
+ for the overthrow of his brother. In two years&rsquo; time he had tempted over
+ almost every baron to desert the cause of their master, and in 1106
+ prepared to wrest the dukedom from him. The unfortunate Robert came to him
+ at Northampton, almost alone, forced himself into his presence, and told
+ him he would submit everything to him, if he would only leave him the
+ state and honor due to his birth. Henry turned his back on him, muttering
+ some answer which Robert could not hear, and which he would not repeat. In
+ a passion, Robert reproached him with his ill faith and cruel, grasping
+ temper, left him hastily, and returned to Rouen, to make a last sad
+ struggle for his inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He placed his child in the Castle of Falaise, obtaining a promise from the
+ garrison that they would give up their trust to no summons but his own, or
+ that of a trusty knight called William de Ferrières. Hardly a vassal would
+ rally round him in his dire distress; his only supporters were two
+ outlawed barons, whom Henry had driven out of England for their violence,
+ and besides these there were two faithful friends of his youth, whose
+ swords had always been ready in his cause, except in the unhappy war
+ against his father. One was Helie de St. Saen, the other was Edgar
+ Etheling, who quitted his peaceful home, and all the favor he enjoyed in
+ England as uncle to the Queen, to bear arms for his despoiled and injured
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry invaded Normandy, and all the nobles came over to his side. Robert
+ met him before the Castle of Tenchebray, and the two armies prepared for
+ battle the next day. In the evening a hermit came to the English camp; his
+ head strewn with ashes, and a cord about his waist. He conjured Henry to
+ cease from his unnatural war with a brother who had been a soldier of the
+ Cross, &ldquo;his brow still shining with traces of the crown of Jerusalem,&rdquo; and
+ prevailed so far as to gain permission to go and propose terms of peace to
+ the Duke of Normandy. On coming into his presence, the hermit begged to
+ kiss the feet which had trodden the pavement of the Holy Sepulchre, and
+ then exhorted Robert to be contented with the kingdom reserved for him in
+ heaven. He declared Henry&rsquo;s terms very hard ones; but the Duke would have
+ accepted them, but that he was required to own himself vanquished; and
+ against this his haughty spirit revolted. He cast aside all offers of
+ accommodation, and prepared for battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight of Tenchebray took place on St. Michael&rsquo;s Eve, 1106, the day
+ forty years since the Battle of Hastings; and when the Saxons in Henry&rsquo;s
+ army turned Robert&rsquo;s Normans to flight, they rejoiced as if they were
+ wiping out the memory of the defeat of Harold. Yet in the vanquished army
+ was their own Etheling, the darling of England, who was made prisoner
+ together with the unfortunate Robert, and led before Henry. It was the
+ last battle in which the two friends fought side by side; the disinherited
+ prince had fought for the son of the despoiler for the last time, and soon
+ they were to part, to spend the many remaining years of their lives in a
+ far different manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert was made to summon the surrender of Rouen, and Ferrières was sent
+ to receive Falaise, and the little William, heir of Normandy; but the
+ faithful garrison would not yield till Henry had conducted thither the
+ Duke himself, who called on them to surrender, lest the castle should be
+ taken by the wicked outlaw De Belesme. Little William was brought to the
+ King, and his tears and caresses for a moment touched Henry&rsquo;s heart so far
+ that he gave the child into the charge of Helie de St. Saen, Robert&rsquo;s
+ faithful friend, and husband of his illegitimate daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the last time Robert of Normandy saw the face of his only child.
+ The boy went to Arques with the faithful Helie, while Robert was sent to
+ England, and imprisoned in Cardiff Castle. At first he was honorably
+ treated, and allowed to indulge in hunting and other amusements; but he
+ made an attempt to escape, and was only recaptured in consequence of his
+ horse having plunged into a bog, whence he could not extricate himself.
+ After this he was more closely guarded, and it is said that his eyes were
+ put out; but there is reason to hope that this may not be true. He was
+ under the charge of Robert, an illegitimate son of Henry, who had married
+ Amabel Fitzaymon, heiress of Gloucester, and who was a noble, high-minded,
+ chivalrous person, likely to do all in his power to cheer his uncle&rsquo;s
+ captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Robert from time to time heard of his son: first, how Henry had sent
+ messengers to seize him when St. Saen was absent from Arques; but happily
+ they came on a Sunday morning, when the child was at church, and the
+ servants, warned in time, carried him off to meet their brave master. Then
+ Helie chose to forfeit lands and castle rather than give up his trust, and
+ conducted his little brother-in-law from court to court, wherever he could
+ hope for security, till young William was grown up, and raised an army,
+ with the aid of Louis of France and Foulques of Anjou, to recover his
+ inheritance and rescue his father. But Foulques was detached from the
+ alliance by the betrothal of his daughter to Henry&rsquo;s son William, and the
+ battle of Brenville ruined the hopes of William of Normandy. Next, Robert
+ learnt that the male line of the Counts of Flanders had failed, and his
+ son, as the representative of Matilda, the Conqueror&rsquo;s wife, had been
+ owned as the heir of that rich country. Shortly after, the captive Duke
+ was one morning found weeping. He had had a dream, he said, in which he
+ had seen his son dying of a wound in the hand. The tidings came in due
+ time that William had been accidentally pierced by the point of a lance in
+ the hand, the wound had mortified, and he expired at the end of a week.
+ The prisoner still lived on, till, in the twenty-eighth year of his
+ captivity, death at length released him. There is a story of his having
+ starved himself to death in a fit of anger, because Henry had sent him a
+ robe after wearing it once; but this is very improbable. Robert had
+ reached a great age, and his was a character which was likely to be much
+ improved when absent from temptation and with time for thought. He lies
+ buried in Gloucester Cathedral, under an effigy carved in bog oak, with
+ the legs crossed, in memory of his crusade, but unfortunately painted in
+ such a manner as to entirely to spoil its effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edgar Etheling was soon allowed to ransom himself, and retiring to his own
+ estates, lived there in peace. His niece, the good Queen Maude, lived on
+ in the English Court, trying to imitate her mother in her charities, and
+ being, like her, much beloved by the poor, to whose wants she ministered
+ with her own hands; while her youngest brother David, then a gay-tempered
+ youth, used to laugh at her for such mean toils, as he called them. No
+ help, such as her father had given St. Margaret, did Maude receive from
+ her husband; she had only the pain of watching his harshness, cruelty, and
+ hypocrisy, during the eighteen years of her marriage. She died in 1118,
+ leaving three children&mdash;Maude, already married to the Emperor of
+ Germany, and William and Richard. William Etheling is reported to have
+ been as proud as his sister Maude, and to have talked of using the churl
+ Saxons as beasts of burden. But there are stories more in his favor. He
+ seemed generously disposed toward his cousin, the son of Robert; and he
+ met his death in an attempt to save life, so that it may be hoped that he
+ was not entirely unworthy of the good old name of Etheling, which he bore
+ as heir to the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Etheling Edgar lived on in peace through all the troublous times of
+ Stephen, without again appearing in history, till his death is noted in
+ 1159, ninety-three years after the Norman Conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been the fashion to call him a fool and a coward; and no doubt the
+ ambitious men who broke oath after oath, and scrupled at no violence, so
+ esteemed one whose right was the inheritance over which they quarrelled.
+ Whether he was a fool, may be answered by showing that, after he was
+ fourteen, his name was never once brought forward by factious men for
+ their own purposes; that he conducted a treaty with Scotland, and restored
+ his nephew to the throne: and whether he was a coward, no one can ask who
+ has heard of him hastening to attack the Saracens of Apulia, invading
+ warlike Scotland, leading the English to scale the walls of Jerusalem,
+ and, lastly, fighting in a cause that could only be desperate, in a battle
+ that <i>must</i> be lost, where he had no personal interest, and only came
+ to aid a distressed and injured friend. No one can inquire into the
+ history of the last of the race of Alfred without acknowledging in him one
+ of the most perfect examples of true chivalry, in inviolate adherence to
+ his word, and in redressing of grievances, for which his good sword was
+ ever ready, though for his own rights it was never drawn, nor was one drop
+ of English blood shed that Edgar Etheling might reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XV. THE COUNTS OF ANJOU. (888-1142.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Having traced the ancestry of our Norman kings from the rocks of Norway
+ and the plains of Neustria, let us, before entering on the new race which
+ succeeded them, turn back to the woodland birthplace of the house of
+ Plantagenet, on the banks of the Loire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first ancestor to whom this branch of our royal line can be traced is
+ Torquatus, a native of Rennes in Brittany, and keeper of the forest of Nid
+ de Merle in Anjou, for the Emperor Charles the Bald. Of Roman Gallic
+ blood, and of honest, faithful temper, he was more trusted by his
+ sovereign than the fierce Frank warriors, who scarcely owned their prince
+ to be their superior; and in after times the counts and kings his
+ descendants were proud of deriving their lineage from the stout Woodman of
+ the Blackbird&rsquo;s Nest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His son Tertullus distinguished himself in battle, and died early, leaving
+ an only son, named Ingelger, who was godson to the Countess de Gastinois,
+ and was brought up in her castle, the school of chivalry and &ldquo;courtoisie&rdquo;
+ to the young vassals of the county.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady was heiress of Gastinois in her own right, and as the monarch had
+ the power of disposing of his wards in marriage, she had been obliged to
+ give her hand to the seneschal of Charles the Bald, a person whom she much
+ disliked. One morning her husband was found dead in his bed; and his
+ nearest relation, whose name was Gontran, accusing her of having murdered
+ him, laid claim to her whole inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause was brought before Charles the Bald, at Chateau Landon; and
+ Gontran offered to prove his words by the ordeal of battle, taking off his
+ gauntlet and throwing it down before the Emperor. Unless the countess
+ could find a champion to maintain her innocence, or unless Gontran was
+ overthrown in single combat, she would be completely ruined, adjudged a
+ murderess, and forced to hide her disgrace in a convent. None of the
+ knights present would undertake her cause; and after gazing round at them
+ in despair, she fainted away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her godson Ingelger, who attended her as a page, could not bear the sight
+ of her distress, and, as a last hope, threw himself on his knees before
+ the Emperor, entreating that, though he was only sixteen, and in the last
+ grade of chivalry, he might be allowed to take up the gauntlet, and assert
+ the innocence of his godmother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Permission was granted; and Ingelger, trusting to the goodness of his
+ cause, spent the night in prayer, went in early morning with the countess
+ to hear mass, and afterward joined her in giving alms to the poor; then
+ she hung a reliquary round his neck, and sent him to arm for the decisive
+ combat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole court were spectators; the Emperor Charles on his throne, and
+ the accused widow in a litter curtained with black. Prayers were offered
+ that God would show the right; the trumpets sounded, and the champions
+ rode in full career against each other. At the first onset Gontran&rsquo;s lance
+ pierced his adversary&rsquo;s shield, so that he could not disengage it, and
+ Ingelger was thus enabled to close with him, hurl him to the ground, and
+ dispatch turn with a dagger. Then, while the lists rung with applause, the
+ brave boy rushed up to his godmother, and threw himself into her arms in a
+ transport of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess, thus cleared, only desired to retire from the world, and
+ besought the Emperor&rsquo;s consent to her bestowing all her lands on her young
+ defender. It was readily granted; and shortly after Charles gave him, in
+ addition, the government of the city of Angers, and the adjoining county
+ of Anjou, whence he derives his title. [Footnote: Many similar tales of
+ championship will occur to every one, in romance and ballad. The Ginevra
+ of Ariosto, our own beautiful English ballad of Sir Aldingar, where it is
+ an angel in the form of a &ldquo;tinye boy,&rdquo; who appears to vindicate the good
+ fame of the slandered and desolate queen, the &ldquo;Sir Hugh le Blond of
+ Arbuthnot, in Scotland.&rdquo; Perhaps this story may be the root of all the
+ rest. It is recorded in the &ldquo;Gesta Andegavorum,&rdquo; in the compilation of
+ which a descendant of Ingelger had a considerable share.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little more is known of the first Count of Anjou, except that he bravely
+ resisted the Northern pirates; and for his defence of the clergy of St.
+ Martin of Tours was rewarded by a canonry, and the charge of the treasure
+ of the chapter. He died in 888, and was succeeded by his son Count
+ Foulques le Roux, or the Red. From this time the house of Anjou began to
+ acquire that character of violence, ambition, and turbulence, which
+ distinguished the whole family, till, six hundred years after, the last of
+ the race shed her blood on the scaffold of the Tower of London. It
+ therefore seems appropriate here to give the strange, wild story to which
+ they were wont to attribute their family temper, though it is generally
+ told of one who came later in the line. It was said that the count
+ observed that his wife seldom went to church, and never at the celebration
+ of mass; and believing that she had some unholy dealings to cause this
+ reluctance, he put her to the proof, by causing her to be forcibly held
+ throughout the service by four knights. At the moment of consecration,
+ however, the knights found the mantle alone in their hands; the lady had
+ flown through the window, leaving nothing behind her but the robe, and a
+ fearful smell of brimstone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the witch-countess, as she was called, her sons were thought to
+ derive the wild energy and fierce mutual hatred which raged for so many
+ centuries, and at last caused the extinction of the line. Foulques le Roux
+ was certainly not exempt, for he was believed to be the murderer of his
+ own brother. His eldest son, Geoffrey, called the Beloved of Ladies, died
+ before him; and Foulques, who succeeded him, though termed &ldquo;<i>le bon</i>,&rdquo;
+ had little claim to such a title, unless it was derived from his love of
+ learning and his friendship with the monks of Tours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He composed several Latin hymns for the use of the Cathedral, and always
+ took part in the service on high festivals in his canonical dress, as
+ hereditary treasurer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once, when King Louis IV. was present, he and his courtiers irreverently
+ amused themselves during the service by making jests on the clerical
+ count. A few days after, Louis received the following letter:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The Count of Anjou to the King of France. Hail. Learn, my liege
+ Lord, that an unlettered King is no better than a donkey with
+ a crown on.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ In spite of his devotion, to St. Martin, Foulques sacrilegiously robbed
+ the treasury of two golden vessels, and did not restore them till a severe
+ illness brought him to the point of death. The Bretons accuse him of a
+ horrible crime. He married the widow of Duke Alan <i>barbe torte</i>, who
+ brought with her to Angers her infant son, the little Duke Drogo. The
+ child died, and the Bretons believed that, for the sake of retaining the
+ treasure brought by his subjects, his stepfather had murdered him, by
+ pouring boiling water on his head while his body was in a cold bath, so
+ that, the two streams mingling, it might appear that he had been only
+ placed in tepid water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However this might be, a war broke out between the Angevins and Bretons,
+ and there was bitter hatred between the two races, which is scarcely yet
+ at an end. Indeed, an Angevin Count could hardly in these days be a
+ peaceable man, bordering on such neighbors as Brittany, Normandy, and
+ Poitou. The Angevins were much more French than any of these neighbors;
+ and their domain being smaller, they generally held by the King. They were
+ his hereditary grand seneschals, carving before him on great occasions;
+ and Geoffrey Grise gonnelle, who succeeded Foulques le Bon in 958, was on
+ the side of the crown in all the war with Richard the Fearless of
+ Normandy. His ogre-like surname of Grise gonnelle simply means gray gown,
+ and is ascribed by the chronicle of Anjou to the following chivalrous
+ adventure:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the war with Normandy, when Harald Bluetooth&rsquo;s Norwegians
+ were ravaging France, and were encamped before the walls of Paris, a
+ gigantic Berserk daily advanced to the gate of the city, challenging the
+ French knights to single combat. Several who accepted it fell by his hand;
+ and King Lothaire forbade any further attempts to attack him. Count
+ Geoffrey was at this time collecting his vassals to come to the King&rsquo;s
+ assistance; and no sooner did he hear of the defiance of the Northman,
+ than, carried away by the spirit of knight-errantry, he bade his forces
+ wait for him at Chateau Landon; and, without divulging his purpose, rode
+ off, with only three attendants, to seek the encounter. He came to the
+ bank of the Seine in early morning, caused a miller to ferry him and his
+ horse across the river, leaving his squires on the other side, and reached
+ the open space before the walls in time to hear and answer the Northman&rsquo;s
+ daily challenge. The duel ended in the death of the giant, and was
+ witnessed by the French on the walls; but they did not recognize their
+ champion, and before they could come down to open the gates, and thank
+ him, he was gone. He had cut off the enemy&rsquo;s head, and, bidding the miller
+ carry it to the King, crossed the Seine again, met his squires at the
+ mill, and rejoined his vassals at Landon, without letting any one know
+ what had happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lothaire was very anxious to know who the champion was; but all the miller
+ could tell him was, that it had been a man of short stature, and slight,
+ active figure, a capital horseman, whom he was sure he should know again
+ anywhere. In due time the nobles collected with their troops, and Geoffrey
+ among them. When they were in full assembly, Lothaire introduced the
+ miller, bidding him say whether the knight-errant was present. The man
+ fixed his eyes on the Count of Anjou, who wore a cassock of coarse gray
+ wool over his armor. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;&lsquo;tis he&mdash;<i>à la grise gonnelle</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also said that Geoffrey took his name from his frequent pilgrimages
+ to Rome, in which he wore the gray &ldquo;palmer&rsquo;s amice.&rdquo; He was a favorable
+ specimen of the Angevin character, the knight-errant element predominating
+ over its other points, and rendering him honorable and devout, and not
+ more turbulent than could be helped by a feudal chief of the tenth
+ century. He died near Saumur, while besieging the castle of a refractory
+ vassal, in the year 987.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His son Foulques was surnamed Nerra, an old form of Le Noir, or The Black.
+ The name was derived from his complexion; but he merited it by his
+ disposition, for he was the most wicked of all the counts of Anjou. He was
+ very able, and, though little in stature, and lame, usually made his wars
+ turn out much to his advantage. In personal prowess he by no means
+ equalled his father; indeed, there was a Danish warrior, who guarded the
+ town of Saumur for the Count de Blois, that he dreaded so much as always
+ to gallop at full speed through the neighborhood, whenever he was obliged
+ to pass that way. However, he was not backward to risk his person on
+ occasion, and in a battle with the Count de Blois at Amboise was severely
+ wounded, his standard taken, and his troops forced to retreat, when his
+ vassal, the alert Herbert <i>Eveille chiens</i>, of Mans, came up with
+ fresh troops, fell on the men of Blois as they were bathing and resting
+ after the battle, cried the Angevin war-cry, &ldquo;Rallie! rallie!&rdquo; [Footnote:
+ &ldquo;Go at then again!&rdquo; evidently the origin of &ldquo;to rally.&rdquo;] and taking them
+ by surprise, turned the fortune of the day. This victory extended
+ Foulques&rsquo; domain to the bank of the Loire, and enabled him to lay siege to
+ Saumur. The citizens were too few to defend both gates, and, by the advice
+ of the monks of St. Florent, resolved to commit the defence of one to the
+ relics of St. Doucelin, which had the reputation of working miracles. The
+ reliquary was placed full before the eastern gate, in the hope that either
+ the Augevins would be afraid to break through, or that some evil
+ consequence might ensue on their attempting it, and the Saumurois went to
+ protect their western gate. However, Foulques Nerra seldom let scruples
+ interfere, and marched in without regard to the saint. He was very cruel
+ to his prisoners, and with his own hand thrust out the eye of one who
+ reproached him with his unworthy treatment. He built new walls round
+ Saumur, for which he was obliged to destroy some buildings belonging to
+ the monastery of St. Florent, and as he set fire to them with his own
+ hand, he called out to the saint to beg his pardon, swearing to build him
+ a much finer house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the practice of Foulques Nerra to commit frightful crimes, and then
+ to expect to atone for them by vehemence in penance and devotion. He was
+ recklessly barbarous in his wars, and a cruel tyrant to his people,
+ filling his castle with miserable prisoners. He married a lady named
+ Hildegarde, a pious and gentle dame, whose influence had some effect in
+ calming his fierce passions and lessening his cruelty; but their son
+ Geoffrey Martel was as wild and violent as himself, though with more
+ generosity. A quarrel broke out, Geoffrey rebelled, was conquered, and his
+ father obliged him to come and ask pardon, crawling on all fours, with a
+ saddle on his back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, sir, you&rsquo;re tamed!&rdquo; said the count, putting his foot on his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True! but by no one but my father,&rdquo; the proud youth made answer. And
+ Foulques was so pleased, that he took him into favor again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foulques Nerra was a great founder of churches and convents, and made no
+ less than four pilgrimages to the Holy Land, in the third of which he
+ travelled part of the way with another ancestor of our kings, Robert the
+ Magnificent of Normandy. In the last, his penance exceeded all that had
+ yet been seen at Jerusalem. He stripped himself to his waist, and went
+ barefoot to the Holy Sepulchre, followed by two servants, whom he obliged
+ to beat him with rods, while at each step he exclaimed, &ldquo;O Lord, have pity
+ on the wretched, perjured traitor Foulques!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such violent penances are repugnant to all our ideas, and if these rude
+ warriors believed that by them their crimes could be atoned, they were
+ grievously mistaken: but at the same time it must be remembered that they
+ were intended as tokens of repentance; and that, as we have seen in the
+ humiliation of the rebellious son of the count himself, it was the fashion
+ to punish the body, because the mind was too little cultivated to be alone
+ addressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foulques III. died at Metz, in the course of his return from this
+ pilgrimage, in the year 1039. His son Geoffrey, called Martel, or the
+ Hammer, was a great warrior. William the Conqueror was his chief enemy,
+ and the curious challenge that once passed between them has been related.
+ Indeed, Henry I. of France, who was in dread of both, promoted their
+ quarrels by making a grant to William of all that he might be able to win
+ from Anjou; and the Angevins had given bitter offence to the Duke of
+ Normandy when he was besieging the town of Hambrières, by hanging up hides
+ over the walls, and shouting, &ldquo;<i>A la pel! à la pel!</i>&rdquo; (The hide! the
+ hide!) in allusion to his mother being the daughter of a tanner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their chief dispute was about the county of Maine&mdash;a name of evil
+ omen to their descendants. The only daughter of Count Herbert <i>Eveille
+ chiens</i> (Wake-dog) was betrothed to Robert Courtheuse; and though she
+ died before the marriage took place, William claimed the county for his
+ son on Herbert&rsquo;s death. Geoffrey, who was the feudal lord of Maine, took
+ the part of the next heir, and invaded Normandy. On the river Dive,
+ Geoffrey, with his chief followers, was imprudent enough to cross by a
+ narrow bridge, leaving the main body of the troops on the other side,
+ where they were attacked by William. The bridge gave way, and the Angevin
+ army was destroyed in the sight of its lord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This disaster broke the spirit of Geoffrey Martel. He was still a young
+ man, but he was worn out with disappointment. He had been twice married&mdash;the
+ second time to a very learned lady, named Grecia, who is famous for having
+ bought a book of homilies for two hundred sheep, twelve measures of
+ cheese, as much barley and millet, besides eight marks of silver and some
+ marten skins. Neither wife brought him any children: and at Whitsuntide,
+ 1060, he sent for his two nephews, the sons of his sister Ermengarde, and
+ divided his lands between them; giving Touraine and Landon to the eldest,
+ Geoffrey the Bearded, and Anjou to Foulques, called <i>Le Réchin</i>, or
+ The Quarrelsome, then only seventeen, whom he knighted. He died the next
+ Martinmas, in the robes of a monk; and thenceforth Foulques proved his
+ right to his surname by his perpetual wars and disputes with his brother.
+ Geoffrey <i>le Barbu</i> is famed for nothing but his misfortunes, and for
+ a curious suit which he had with the monks of St. Florent respecting some
+ woods on the banks of the Loire, which they declared to have been granted
+ them by Foulques Nerra. They brought witnesses to support their claim, as
+ they had no title-deeds; and Geoffrey agreed to have recourse to the
+ judgment of Heaven, as a proof whether the testimony was true or false.
+ The ordeal was to be by hot water. A great fire was lighted in the Church
+ of St. Maurice, at St. Angers, and a cauldron of water placed on it, into
+ which was plunged an old forester who had borne witness for the convent.
+ Without appearing to suffer inconvenience from the heat, he repeated what
+ he had formerly said and Geoffrey was obliged to abide by the result of
+ the ordeal. The monks proceeded to cut down the woods, and supplied their
+ place by the vineyards which have ever since been the pride of the Loire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strife respecting lay investiture was the ruin of the bearded
+ Geoffrey; he claimed the investiture of the Abbot of Marmoutiers as a
+ temporal baron, and thus caused himself to be excommunicated. His vassals
+ fell from him and he became an easy prey to his brother Foulques, who
+ threw him into the castle of Chinon, and kept him prisoner for thirty
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foulques IV., le Réchin, was a scholar, and wrote a Latin history of
+ Anjou, of which, however, only a fragment is preserved. He was as wicked
+ as most of the race, fierce, violent, and voluptuous. He was no longer a
+ young man, and had been twice married and once divorced (one tradition
+ says that he was the husband of the demon-countess), when, in 1089, he
+ cast his eyes on the beautiful young Bertrade, daughter of the Count de
+ Montfort, and promised Duke Robert of Normandy to make over to him the
+ county of Maine, if he would use his influence with her parents to obtain
+ her for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Count de Montfort would not give up his daughter to the wicked old
+ Angevin, till Robert, in his usual weak, good-natured fashion, had yielded
+ up a number of his own frontier castles as her purchase. Foulques did
+ indeed put Maine into his hands; but he did not keep it long, for Helie de
+ la Flèche set up his claim, and maintained it as we have seen. Nor did
+ Foulques gain much by his bargain; for Bertrade had no perfection but her
+ beauty, and, in the fourth year of her marriage, abandoned him and her
+ infant son, and went to the court of Philippe I. of France, who had lately
+ grown weary of his queen Bertha, the mother of his four children, and had
+ shut her up in the castle of Montreuil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe found some pretext for declaring that his first marriage and
+ Bertrade&rsquo;s were both null and void; but not one French bishop could be
+ found to solemnize the disgraceful union he desired. He was obliged to
+ look beyond his own dominion, and it is said that it was the brother of
+ the Conqueror, Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, who consented to pronounce a
+ blessing over their marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were not, however, allowed to sin unmolested. Bertrade&rsquo;s husband made
+ war on them on one side, Bertha&rsquo;s brother on the other. Philippe&rsquo;s son
+ Louis fled to the protection of the English; and the Pope laid them under
+ excommunication. For nine years, however, they persisted in their crime;
+ but at last they made a show of penitence; the King pretended to renounce
+ Bertrade, and they were absolved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bertrade had forsaken her child; but she was very anxious that he should
+ succeed his father, instead of his elder brother Geoffrey, a high-spirited
+ youth, whom the peasantry of Anjou regarded as their friend and protector.
+ She contrived to sow dissension between him and his father, and at last
+ caused him to be assassinated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she chose to come to Angers to see her son heir of Anjou, and
+ actually brought the King with her; made Philippe and her husband behave
+ in the most friendly manner, eat at the same table, sleep on the same
+ couch; and Foulques was even base enough to sit on a footstool at the feet
+ of this woman, who could scarcely have been better than the witch-lady
+ herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the death of Philippe she returned to Anjou, and went into the Abbey
+ of Fontevraud, where she practised such rigorous penances that her health
+ sank under them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her son, Foulques V., succeeded to the county in 1109, and was a much
+ better man than could have been expected from the son of such parents. His
+ wife was Sybil, daughter of Helie de la Flèche, an excellent, gentle, and
+ pious lady, whom he loved devotedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eldest daughter, the Alix, or noble maid of Anjou, whose name seems to
+ have been Matilda, was betrothed to William the Etheling, son of Henry I.,
+ in order to detach her father from the cause of the unfortunate William
+ Clito of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their marriage took place in the autumn of 1120, when the bridegroom was
+ seventeen and the bride twelve. It was celebrated with great splendor, and
+ all the Norman barons did homage to young William as their future Duke.
+ Afterward the English court repaired to Barfleur, there to embark for
+ their own island; but there was considerable delay in collecting shipping
+ enough for so numerous a party, and it was not possible to set sail till
+ the 25th of November. Just as the King was about to embark, a mariner,
+ named Thomas Fitzstephen, addressed him, with the offering of a golden
+ mark, saying that his father had had the honor of carrying King William to
+ the conquest of England, and entreating that his beautiful new vessel, the
+ Blanche Nef, or White Ship, with fifty good oarsmen, might transport the
+ present King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry, always courteous, answered that his own arrangements were made, but
+ that no doubt his son, the Etheling, and his companions, would gladly make
+ the passage with him. The King then sailed, taking with him the little
+ bride, but leaving behind no less than eighteen ladies of the highest rank&mdash;among
+ them his niece, Lucy de Blois, Countess of Chester, and his illegitimate
+ daughter, Marie, Countess de Perche&mdash;also another illegitimate son,
+ named Richard, and all the gayest young nobles, who were in attendance on
+ the prince. Including the crew, the Blanche Nef was expected to carry full
+ three hundred persons across the Channel. All were in high spirits, in
+ that reckless state of mirth which the grave Scots deem as the absolute
+ presage of a fearful catastrophe, as well as often its cause; and the
+ young Etheling, with open-hearted, imprudent good-nature, presented the
+ crew with three casks of wine to drink to his health and the success of
+ the voyage. Such feasting took place, that all the rest of the fleet had
+ sailed; but Fitzstephen boasted that he would overtake and outstrip every
+ ship before they reached England. Some prudent persons&mdash;among them
+ young Stephen de Blois&mdash;left the ship; but no one else had any fears;
+ and though the night came on, there was a bright moon, and the water was
+ calm. Every sail was set; the rowers plied their utmost strength, and thus
+ it was with great violence that the ship ran foul of the rocks called the
+ Ras de Catte. A lamentable cry reached the ships of the King&rsquo;s fleet; but
+ no one guessed the cause. A boat was lowered; Fitzstephen handed in the
+ prince and a few rowers, and bade them make for the shore; but just as
+ they had pushed off, William heard the agonized calls of his sister, the
+ Countess de Perche, and commanded the rowers to put back and save her. The
+ masterless, terrified multitude no sooner saw the boat approach, than they
+ all flung themselves headlong into it; down it went under them, and the
+ whole freight perished. The ship itself soon likewise foundered, and there
+ only remained, clinging to the mast, a young baron, named Godfrey de
+ l&rsquo;Aigle, and a butcher of Rouen. Fitzstephen, however, swam up, and called
+ out to ask if the King&rsquo;s son had got off safe. When he heard their answer,
+ he cried aloud, &ldquo;Woe is me!&rdquo; and sank like a stone. It was a cold night,
+ and, after some hours, young Godfrey became benumbed, lost his hold, and
+ likewise sank; but the butcher, in his sheepskin coat, held on till
+ daylight, when he was picked up by some fishermen, and told his piteous
+ tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the news came to England, and every one knew it but the King. For
+ some days no one could summon up resolution to inform him of this
+ surpassing calamity; but at last a little boy was sent to fall at his
+ feet, and, weeping bitterly, to tell him all. The stern heart was wrung:
+ Henry fell senseless on the ground; and he, whose gayety had once almost
+ hidden his hard, selfish nature, never smiled again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Count of Anjou sent for his daughter and her dowry. The daughter came,
+ and afterward became a nun at Fontevraud; but no dowry was sent with her:
+ and Foulques returned to the cause he had deserted, gave her sister Sybil
+ to William Clito, and held with him till his early death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the death of his countess, Foulques vowed to go on a crusade. His
+ eldest son Geoffrey was but seven years old, and before setting out, he
+ solemnly placed the boy on the altar of St. Julian at Angers, saying,
+ &ldquo;Great Saint, I offer thee my son and my lands; be the protector of both!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foulques maintained a hundred men-at-arms in Palestine for a year, at his
+ own expense, and signalized himself greatly. Baldwin I., King of
+ Jerusalem, the brother of Godfrey, had survived his brother eighteen
+ years, when, in 1118, the crown passed to Baldwin du Bourg, Count of
+ Essex, who, according to the usual fate of the Defenders of the Holy
+ Sepulchre, felt his health fast giving way under the influence of toil,
+ anxiety, and climate. He had been twice a prisoner, and had spent seven
+ years in captivity among the Infidels; but his kingdom had been bravely
+ defended by the knights of the Temple and Hospital, aided by Crusaders
+ from the West. Of these armed pilgrims the Count of Anjou was so much the
+ most distinguished, that, after his return, a knight was sent to him by
+ King Baldwin, to propose to give him the hand of Melisende, the eldest
+ princess of Jerusalem, and with it that crown of care and toil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crusading spirit was, however, strong in the house of Anjou, and so
+ continued for full three hundred years: and though Foulques was
+ considerably past forty, he accepted the offer, gave up his country to his
+ son Geoffrey, and set forth in 1127, married Melisende, and, four years
+ after, became King of Jerusalem. It was an unloving marriage; but he was
+ much respected and beloved, and his biographer observes that, though he
+ had red hair, he had not the faults common in men of that complexion. He
+ was continually in the field at the head of his knights, and won several
+ victories, one of which gained the town of Caesarea Philippi. He was
+ killed by a fall from his horse, near Acre, in 1142; and left two sons by
+ Melisende&mdash;Baldwin and Amaury, who afterward both reigned at
+ Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XVI. VISITORS OF HENRY I. (1120-1134.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Henry Beauclerc was really a great King. His abilities were high even for
+ one of the acute Normans, and he studied at every leisure moment. He
+ translated Aesop&rsquo;s fables, not from Latin into French&mdash;which would
+ not have been wonderful&mdash;but from Greek to English. He seems to have
+ had a real attachment to the English, feeling that, in their sturdy
+ independence, he had the best preservative from the &ldquo;outre cuidance&rdquo; of
+ the Normans. Indeed, the English mind viewed Brenville as making up for
+ Hastings. He wrote a book of maxims, even on etiquette; and though his
+ heart was almost as hard as those of his brothers, his demeanor was far
+ more gracious: moreover, he felt remorse, as his brothers never did, nor
+ his father till his death. After he lost his son he had many a night of
+ anguish; when all the men of his kingdom seemed to come and reproach him
+ with their sufferings. But his reign, on the whole, was a breathing-time,
+ when he carried out his father&rsquo;s policy, restrained the barons, and raised
+ the condition of the English. He was also greatly respected in other
+ countries, and had many royal visitors, among the chief of whom may be
+ reckoned his brother-in-law, David of Scotland, and Louis <i>l&rsquo;éveillé</i>,
+ the prince of France. In the Conqueror&rsquo;s lifetime Henry and Louis had met
+ at the court of France, where they had quarrelled at chess, and Henry, in
+ a passion, had struck Louis a violent blow. His elder brother, Robert,
+ then in exile in Paris, came in at the moment, and was so alarmed for the
+ consequences, that he dragged Henry down stairs, called for their horses,
+ and galloped away, never resting till he had seen the youth safely on the
+ bounds of Normandy, where Robert himself might not enter. King Philippe&rsquo;s
+ anger is said to have been one of the causes of the war in which William
+ I. met with his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, however, Louis was a fugitive from the persecution of the wicked
+ Bertrade, and found shelter and protection in England till his father
+ became reconciled to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another royal visitor was Sigurd the Crusader, king of part of Norway.
+ Eystein, Sigurd, and Olaf had been left orphans by the death of their
+ father, King Magnus, when Eystein, the eldest, was only fifteen. According
+ to the law of Norway, they all possessed an equal right to the kingdom;
+ but this led to no disputes, and they lived together on the most friendly
+ terms. Eystein was peaceably disposed and thoughtful, though lively;
+ Sigurd, though enterprising and spirited, had a strain of melancholy which
+ affected him when he was not actively employed: and one morning, Eystein,
+ observing that his looks were gloomy, drew from him that he had had a
+ dream. &ldquo;I thought,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that we brothers were all sitting on a bench
+ in front of Christ Church in Drontheim, and our kinsman, Olaf the Saint,
+ came out in royal robes, glancing and splendid, and his face bright and
+ joyous. He took our brother Olaf by the hand, saying, &lsquo;Come with me,
+ friend,&rsquo; and led him into the Church. Soon after, King Olaf the Saint came
+ forth again, but not so bright as before. He came to thee, brother, and
+ led thee with him into the church. Then I looked for him to come to me and
+ meet me; but it was not so: and I was seized with great sorrow, and was
+ altogether without strength; so that I awoke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eystein interpreted the dream to mean that Olaf would die young and
+ innocent; that the Saint was less radiant in coming for himself, because
+ of his sins; and that Sigurd would be the longest-lived of the three. It
+ fell out much as the dream had presaged, for Olaf died in early youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sigurd had the restless spirit of the Sea-kings, and became a Crusader. He
+ spent the first winter in England, the second in aiding the Christians of
+ Spain against the Moors: he visited the Normans in Sicily, and, as the
+ King of the whole Northern race, conferred on Count Roger de Hauteville
+ the title of King of Sicily, and then proceeded to Jerusalem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baldwin I. received him splendidly, and availed himself of his aid to
+ capture the town of Zidon. He left the Holy Land, taking as his reward a
+ piece of the wood of the True Cross, and returned through Constantinople.
+ There Alexius Comnenus gave him a magnificent reception, which he tried to
+ requite by equal Ostentation, repeating Robert of Normandy&rsquo;s invention of
+ the golden horse-shoes. He was entertained with grand games in the
+ Hippodrome, where the ancient Greek statues were much admired by his
+ followers and their Vaeringer brethren, who took them for their own
+ ancient Asagods. On his departure, he gave Alexius all his ships, the
+ figure-heads of which were made ornaments for one of the churches at
+ Constantinople; and some of the presents which he brought away are still
+ extant in Norway. In one little remote church there has lately been found
+ a curious Byzantine picture, representing the rescue of the True Cross
+ from the Persians by the Emperor Heraclius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Eystein was leading a wise, beneficent, peaceable, and
+ pious life in Norway. But their different dispositions are best shown in a
+ discussion that the old Norwegian chronicle has recorded as taking place
+ soon after Sigurd&rsquo;s return. The two brothers were, in the ancient fashion,
+ sojourning in the house of one of their bonders, and keeping open table,
+ when, one evening the ale was not good, Sigurd fell into one of his moods
+ of gloomy depression, and the guests sat round silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good-natured Eystein said, &ldquo;Let us fall on some jest to amuse people;
+ for surely, brother Sigurd, all people are well pleased when we converse
+ cheerfully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you talk as much as you please, but let me be silent,&rdquo; returned
+ Sigurd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Eystein, &ldquo;let us follow the old custom over the ale-table of
+ making comparisons. I will soon make it appear that, different as we are,
+ we are both equal, and one has no advantage over the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He succeeded in drawing his brother into the game; and Sigurd, who was the
+ taller and stronger, answered, &ldquo;Do you remember that I was always able to
+ break your back, if I had pleased, though you are a year older?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Eystein; &ldquo;but you were not so good at games that need
+ agility.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you remember that I could drag you under water, when we swam together,
+ as often as I pleased?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; returned Eystein; &ldquo;but I could swim as far as you, and dive as
+ well; and I could run on snow skates so well that no one could beat me,
+ and you could no more do it than an ox.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said Sigurd, &ldquo;you could hardly draw my bow, even if you took
+ your foot to help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so strong at the bow, but there is less difference in our
+ shooting near.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beside,&rdquo; continued the tall Sigurd, &ldquo;a chief ought to be taller than
+ other men, easily seen and distinguished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Eystein, who was the handsomest man in Norway, &ldquo;good looks may
+ be an equal distinction. Besides, I am more knowing in the law, and my
+ words flow more easily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you may know more law quirks. I have had something else to do,&rdquo;
+ said the rough warrior. &ldquo;No one can deny you a smooth tongue; and some say
+ you do not keep to what you promise&mdash;which is not kingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I promise satisfaction to one party before I have heard the other,
+ and then am forced to take something back. It would be easy to do like you&mdash;promise
+ evil to all. I never hear any complaint of your not keeping this promise
+ to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, and while I made a princely voyage, you sat at home like my father&rsquo;s
+ daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you take up the cudgel,&rdquo; said Eystein, merrily; &ldquo;but I know how to
+ answer. If I did sit at home, like my father&rsquo;s daughter, you cannot deny
+ that, like a sister, I furnished you forth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sigurd continued: &ldquo;I was in many a battle in the Saracens&rsquo; land, and
+ always came off conqueror; I won many precious goods, the like of which
+ were never seen here before; and I was always the most highly esteemed
+ where brave men met: while yours is but a home-bred renown. I went to
+ Palestine, I came to Apulia; but I did not see you there, brother. I gave
+ Roger the Great the title of King. I won seven battles; but you were in
+ none of them. I was at our Lord&rsquo;s grave; but I did not see you there,
+ brother. I went to Jordan, where our Lord was baptized. I swam across the
+ river; but I did not see you there. A willow grew on the bank, and I
+ twisted the boughs into a knot, which is waiting there for you; for I said
+ that you should untie it, and fulfil the vow that is bound up in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have little to set against this,&rdquo; said Eystein; &ldquo;but if you fought
+ abroad, I strove to be of use at home. In the north of Vaage I built
+ fish-houses, so as to enable the poor people there to earn a livelihood. I
+ built a priest&rsquo;s house, and endowed a Church, where before all the people
+ were heathen; and therefore I think they will recollect that Eystein was
+ once King of Norway. The road from Drontheim goes over the Dofrefield, and
+ often travellers had to sleep in the open air; but I built inns, and
+ supported them with money, and thus wayfarers may remember that Eystein
+ has been King of Norway. Agdaness was a bare waste, and no harbor, and
+ many a ship was lost. Now, there is a good harbor, and a Church. I raised
+ beacons on the high ground; I built a royal hall in Bergen, and the Church
+ of the Apostles; I built Michael&rsquo;s Church, and a Convent beside. I settled
+ the laws, so that all may obtain justice. The Jemteland people are again
+ joined to our realm, and more by kind words than by war. Now, though all
+ these are but small doings, yet I am not sure if the people of our land
+ have not been better served by them than by your killing blue men in the
+ land of the Saracens. Your deeds were great; yet I hope what I have done
+ for the servants of God may serve me no less for my soul&rsquo;s salvation. So,
+ if you did tie a knot for me, I will not go to untie it; and if I had been
+ tying a knot for you, you would not have been King of Norway, when with a
+ single ship you came into my fleet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eystein conferred many more benefits on his country, and on individuals
+ many acts of kindness&mdash;such as his undertaking by his conversation to
+ cheer and console one of his friends who had been disappointed in love.
+ This excellent King died at thirty-five, and it was said that there was
+ never so much mourning in Norway. Sigurd&rsquo;s fate was sad; the shadow
+ predicted in his dream fell on him. His moodiness increased to
+ distraction, and nothing could be more wretched in those early times than
+ the condition of an insane king or of his country. He grew extremely
+ violent, and often did fearful mischief; but he still preserved his
+ generous spirit, and could always, even at the worst, be tamed by any one
+ who would boldly resist his fury. Happily, this only lasted six years, for
+ he died in 1330, at the age of forty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has been a long digression; but as Sigurd was the last of our
+ Northern visitors, we hope it may be pardoned for the sake of its
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry I. gave his only daughter Maude in marriage to Henry V., Emperor of
+ Germany, a rebellious son, who had taken advantage of the sentence of
+ excommunication on his father, to strip him of his domains, and absolutely
+ reduce him to beggary. Maude was married to Henry V. at eleven years old,
+ when she was so small that she could not stand under the weight of her
+ robes, and the Archbishop of Cologne was obliged to hold her in his arms
+ during the celebration of the wedding. The principal favorites of the King
+ of England were at this time the sons of his sister Adela, three in
+ number: Theobald, Count de Blois and Champagne; Stephen, Count de
+ Mortagne, whom the King married to Matilda, heiress, of Boulogne, the
+ niece of good Queen Maude, and Henry, whom he made Bishop of Winchester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry was persuaded to marry again, and his queen was the beautiful and
+ gracious Alice of Louvaine, a fair young girl of eighteen. His daughter
+ Maude returned from Germany in 1125; but there were strange stories that
+ her husband, the Emperor, was not dead, but had fled in secret from his
+ court, to dwell as a hermit in penance for his crimes. His funeral had,
+ however, been performed with full solemnity. King Henry regarded her as in
+ truth a widow, and was very anxious to bestow her a second time in
+ marriage. He caused his vassals to take an oath of fealty to her as his
+ heiress, and foremost in making this promise were David, King of Scotland&mdash;as
+ Earl of Huntingdon, in right of his wife, Waltheof&rsquo;s daughter&mdash;and
+ Stephen de Blois, Count de Mortagne and Boulogne; while Henry engaged at
+ the same time that she should not be married without the consent of the
+ Barons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon, however, he broke his word, with the desire of conciliating
+ those troublesome neighbors of Normandy, the counts of Anjou. Foulques V.
+ showed himself so much inclined to befriend the son of Robert, that Henry
+ resolved to attach him to his own party, and proposed to him to give Maude
+ to his son Geoffrey, whom he desired should be sent at once to Rouen, that
+ he might see him, and confer on him the order of knighthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Geoffrey was only fifteen, but, unlike his ancestors, was very tall,
+ and had also inherited the beauty and grace of his grandmother Bertrade.
+ King Henry was delighted with him, and after examining him closely on all
+ the rules of chivalry, as well as on other points, to which Geoffrey
+ replied with much acuteness, showing himself a good scholar even in Latin,
+ resolved to make him his son-in-law. His knighthood was conferred with the
+ greatest splendor and all the formalities of the time. The first day he
+ entered the bath, the emblem of purity, and then was arrayed in fine
+ linen, a robe woven with gold, and a purple mantle. A Spanish horse was
+ presented to him, and he was armed in polished steel, and with a helmet
+ covered with precious stones; his gilded spurs were buckled on, and his
+ sword and lance given to him. He sprung on horseback without putting his
+ foot in the stirrup, and six days were spent in jousting with twenty-nine
+ young nobles, who were knighted at the same time. At the close of the
+ tourney, Henry conferred on him the accolade, or sword-blow, which was the
+ chief part of the ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry had great difficulty in making his daughter consent to the marriage.
+ Whether she believed her husband to be alive, or whether it was from
+ pride, or dislike to take so mere a boy as her bridegroom, her resistance
+ was long; and it was not till 1127 that she was brought by her father to
+ Mans, where the wedding took place, just before Geoffrey&rsquo;s father departed
+ for Palestine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maude was proud and disdainful, and treated her young husband in the most
+ contemptuous way; and Geoffrey avoided her in return, spending most of his
+ time in hunting in the woods, where he used to wear the spray of broom
+ that became the cognizance of his house, and caused their surname of
+ Plantagenet. Perhaps it was in contrast to his wife&rsquo;s haughtiness that he
+ chose to adopt this plant, considered as the emblem of humility, and
+ reminding her that she had married the descendant of the woodman
+ Torquatus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey seems to have been of a gay, lively temper, associating freely
+ with all who came in his way, and often doing kind actions. Once, as on
+ Christmas-day he was entering the Church of St. Julian at Mans, he met a
+ poor priest, meanly clad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What tidings?&rdquo; said the Count.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Glad tidings,&rdquo; returned the priest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;To us a Child is born, to us a Son is given,&rsquo;&rdquo; the clerk made answer;
+ and Geoffrey was so struck with his appropriate manner, that he gave him a
+ valuable canonry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey was hunting in a forest, when he lost his way, and was benighted;
+ and, meeting a charcoal-burner, asked the road to Loches. The man offered
+ to become his guide, and accordingly the Count took him up on his horse,
+ talking gayly, and asking what people said of the Count. The peasant
+ answered that the Count himself was said to be friendly and free-spoken,
+ but his provost committed terrible exactions, of which he gave a full
+ account. Geoffrey listened, and in the morning rode into the town of
+ Loches with the charcoal-burner still <i>en croupe</i> (if his haughty
+ empress was there, he must have enjoyed provoking her), and there he
+ summoned all his provosts, himself examined their accounts, put an end to
+ their exactions, and ended by making the charcoal-burner a free man
+ instead of a serf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a report that Maude&rsquo;s first husband came to Angers in his
+ penance-garb, and on his death-bed told his confessor who he was; that the
+ confessor fetched the empress; and that she attended him in secret till
+ his death; but the truth of this tale is very uncertain. Maude had been
+ six years married to Geoffrey when her first child was born, Henry, called
+ by the Normans Fitz-Empress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This event in some degree cheered the latter years of his grandfather,
+ King Henry, whose sin had found him out, in bitter remorse and fearful
+ dreams. Nobles, peasants, and clergy seemed in turn to be standing round
+ his bed, calling him to account for his misdeeds toward them. Many other
+ victims of his ambition might have been conjured up by his remorse&mdash;such
+ as the citizen of Rouen, spared by Robert, whom Henry threw from the top
+ of a high tower, whither he had treacherously invited him; the Norman
+ barons, with whom he had broken his faith; his gallant, generous brother,
+ so cruelly betrayed and imprisoned; his persecuted nephew, William Clito;
+ the unhappy troubadour, Lucas de Barré, whom he had blinded, for writing a
+ satire on him, and who dashed out his brains in despair on the prison
+ wall; and&mdash;almost the worst of all&mdash;the poor children of his
+ illegitimate daughter Juliana, left to the ferocious revenge of Raoul de
+ Harenc, by whom their eyes were put out and their noses cut off. With such
+ recollections as these to haunt his later years, no wonder Henry&rsquo;s nights
+ were times of agony and wakefulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He tried to lose the thought of these horrors in activity, and was
+ constantly passing between England and Normandy. It was in the latter
+ country that he made his fatal supper of lampreys, after he had been
+ fatigued with hunting all day. A violent fever came on at night, and he
+ died on the 1st of December, 1135.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The court of Scotland presented a far different scene. David, the youngest
+ of the children of St. Margaret, inherited the crown in 1124, on the death
+ of his brother Alexander, and was treading in the same course as his
+ mother, his sister Maude, and his brethren. He belonged, indeed, to a
+ family of saints, and brought piety, firmness, cultivation, and a merciful
+ temper to improve his rugged country. He was a brave warrior: but he loved
+ the arts of peace, and one of his favorite amusements was gardening,
+ budding and grafting trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He administered strict justice, but shed tears as he ordered an execution;
+ and was so tender-hearted and ready to hear the poor, that he would take
+ his foot out of the stirrup when just ready for the chase, to listen to
+ the humblest complaint. Though lively and social in temper, he spent some
+ hours every evening alone, in prayer and meditation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His wife was Matilda, daughter of that Earl Waltheof who was executed by
+ William I. She had previously been married to a Norman knight, Simon de
+ St. Liz, who died on pilgrimage, leaving her with two sons, Simon and
+ Waltheof. Two sons were likewise born to David; but the eldest was killed
+ in his infancy by an accident: and shortly after David took home as a
+ companion to the little Henry, Aelred, the son of a Saxon priest at
+ Hexham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These four boys were brought up &ldquo;in the nurture of good learning,&rdquo; and in
+ godliness; but their different tempers soon showed themselves. Simon, the
+ little Earl of Northampton, while a child, was always playing at building
+ castles, and bestriding the &ldquo;truncheon of a spear,&rdquo; as a war-horse.
+ Waltheof was a builder, too, but his were churches, and his delight was in
+ making the sign of the Cross and singing chants. It was still the same as
+ they grew older; Waltheof ever drew more apart, and spent more time in
+ reading and prayer. His stepfather, the King, would take him to the chase,
+ and tell him to bear his bow; but he often found his bow in the hands of
+ another, and, after a search, discovered Waltheof reading or praying in a
+ secret glade, or under a tree. &ldquo;Your boy,&rdquo; he said to the Queen, &ldquo;will
+ either die young, or leave us for the cloister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aelred was Waltheof&rsquo;s chief friend; but, though very pious, he was more of
+ a scholar, and read both romances of King Arthur and such works of Cicero
+ as had found their way to Scotland. He was lively in conversation; David
+ was fond of him, and used to tell him stories of his own younger days; and
+ Aelred became the loving chronicler of this happy court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Henry had the same holy temper, coupled with a bold spirit, that
+ was needed by the heir of Scotland, and showed himself full of the noble
+ qualities of his father and uncles. He was the true knight of the party,
+ as bold as a lion, yet as strict and devout as a monk, even in the camp.
+ Simon was no more than a rough, bold, tyrannical earl, and soon took up
+ his abode in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere long Aelred became a monk, and Waltheof was not slow in following his
+ example. Both entered the Cistercian order, and led holy lives, avoiding
+ all preferment&mdash;a difficult matter for Waltheof, stepson to one king
+ and cousin to another. His brother Simon took such offence at his
+ lowliness, that he actually threatened to burn down the convent of Waldon,
+ where Waltheof was living, because he thought it shame to see a descendant
+ of Siward a common monk in a poor monastery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, in time, promotion was thrust on them. Aelred became Abbot of
+ Rivaux, and Waltheof Abbot of Melrose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the King and his son, more will be said in the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XVII. THE BATTLE OF THE STANDARD. (1135-1138.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1135. Stephen.
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1124. David I.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1107. Louis VI.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1125. Lothar II.
+ 1138. Konrad II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Earl Egbert of Gloucester was the son of Henry Beauclerc and of a
+ beautiful Welsh princess named Nesta, who had fallen into his hands in the
+ course of the war which he maintained for his brother William Rufus, on
+ the borders of Wales. Henry was much attached to the boy, and gave him a
+ princely education, by which he profited so as to become not only learned,
+ but of a far purer and more chivalrous character than was often to be
+ found among the great men of his time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry I. provided for him, by giving to him the hand of the Lady Amabel
+ Fitzaymon, heiress of Glamorgan, and a ward at the disposal of the crown,
+ in whose right he became Earl of Gloucester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert and his cousin, Stephen de Blois, both attended the death-bed of
+ Henry I., and heard his dying words: &ldquo;I leave to my children whatever I
+ have gained. Let them do justice to those I have injured.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had the King expired, than Stephen set off for England, where he
+ was already very popular, partly on account of his courteous manners and
+ goodly person, partly for the sake of his wife, Matilda of Boulogne, who
+ was treading in the steps of her aunt, the good Queen Maude. He landed at
+ Dover in the midst of a frightful thunder-storm, and though he found that
+ city and Canterbury closed against him, he met with a joyful reception in
+ London and Winchester. He bribed Hugh Bigod, the late King&rsquo;s seneschal, to
+ swear that Henry had on his deathbed disinherited Maude, and left the
+ kingdom to him; and the Archbishop, William de Corboil, was credulous
+ enough to believe the tale, and crown the usurper; but discovery of the
+ falsehood hastened the old man&rsquo;s death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While this was passing, Robert of Gloucester was conducting the funeral of
+ his father; causing his body to be <i>salted</i>, instead of embalmed, and
+ bringing it to England to be buried at Reading, an abbey that Henry had
+ built and endowed for his burial-place. It is now completely ruined, and
+ few vestiges remain to show what the buildings were, far less any trace of
+ the tomb of the scholarly and cruel son of the Conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Empress Maude was at the same time attending her husband, Geoffrey
+ Plantagenet, in a dangerous illness; and thus Stephen was enabled to
+ obtain possession of both England and Normandy, and received the
+ submission of all the nobles. The Earl of Gloucester, thinking resistance
+ vain, took the oath of fealty; reserving, however, the right of recalling
+ it if any injury was offered to him or to his property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next year Geoffrey de Bel raised an army, and entered Normandy; but
+ was met there by Stephen, wounded, and forced to retreat, leaving only a
+ few castles still holding out for the Empress. Stephen was besieging that
+ of Bertran, with an army composed partly of Normans and partly of natives
+ of his wife&rsquo;s county of Boulogne, when, while he was taking his mid-day
+ sleep, a quarrel arose between the two brothers. Waking in haste, and
+ alarmed for his Boulognais, he took part against the Normans, calling out,
+ &ldquo;Down with the traitors!&rdquo; The Normans were greatly offended, and, having
+ retired to their tents, they held a council together, and ended by making
+ him the following plain-spoken address:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, a folly is better ended than continued. By ill advice, we took you
+ for our lord for a little while. If you blame us for it, you will not be
+ wrong. You have beaten our men, and called us traitors. Certes, we were
+ traitors when we left our rightful lady for a stranger. We have held with
+ you against our lady the Empress, and we repent, for we have sinned
+ against God and man: but we will no longer continue in the sin; and
+ therefore we bid you mount, and leave this host, for we will not suffer
+ you to remain in this country, unless it be the will of our lady the
+ Empress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen begged them to let him remain till the next day but they swore
+ that, if he did, it should be the worse for him, and immediately escorted
+ him beyond the bounds of Normandy. They then brought back Maude, with her
+ husband and children; and the dukedom continued in the hands of Geoffrey
+ as long as he lived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time David, King of Scotland, recollecting the oath to Maude,
+ which he and Stephen had together sworn, took up arms in her cause, and
+ invaded England, forcing the inhabitants to take the oath of allegiance.
+ His troops were a fearfully wild, untamed race, undisciplined and cruel,
+ and it was a dreadful thing to let loose such a host of savage marauders
+ without any possibility of restraining them. The Galwegians, Picts by
+ race, were the worst; but the Highlanders and Borderers were also
+ dreadfully cruel: and the English armed to protect themselves against the
+ inroad of their ancient foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergy of the North even deemed it a sacred war, and, by the authority
+ of Thurstan, Archbishop of York, gathered their flocks, and came, each
+ priest at the head of his parishioners, to the place of assembly at York,
+ where three days were spent in prayer and fasting; and then the old
+ Archbishop administered to them an oath never to desert each other, and
+ dismissed them with his blessing. Raoul, Bishop of Durham, was deputed by
+ him to take the lead, and to have the charge of the consecrated standards
+ of St. Cuthbert of Durham, St. Peter of York, St. John of Beverley, and
+ St. Wilfred of Ripon. These were all suspended from one pole, like the
+ mast of a vessel, surmounted by a cross, in the centre of which was fixed
+ a silver casket, containing the consecrated wafer of the Holy Sacrament.
+ The pole was fixed into a four-wheeled car, on which the Bishop stood.
+ Such cars were much used in Italy, where each city had its own consecrated
+ Gonfalone, on its caroccio, hung with scarlet cloth and drawn by oxen. The
+ English collected under this sacred standard were the stout peasants of
+ the North, the bowmen of Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire; each with a bow of
+ his own height, and a sheaf of arrows two cubits long; and there were also
+ many barons of Norman birth, of whom Walter L&rsquo;Espee was the leader. Some
+ of these barons held their lands under David of Scotland, as Earl of
+ Cumberland, and two of them, Bernard Baliol and Robert Bruce, the last an
+ old friend of the King, went to the Scottish camp, to remonstrate with
+ him. Bruce begged him to retreat, described the horrors committed by his
+ wild Scots, told him of the strength of the English force, and ended by
+ declaring with tears that it would now become his duty to renounce his
+ allegiance, and array himself against his beloved prince. Good King David
+ shed tears, but William Macdonochie, the fierce lord of Galloway, burst
+ out with the exclamation, &ldquo;Bruce, thou art a false traitor!&rdquo; and the
+ insulted baron renounced all he held in Scotland, gave up his allegiance,
+ and rode back to the English army, at Northampton, bringing tidings that
+ the Scots were coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The host arrayed itself around their car, where the sacred standard waved
+ above their head, and the Bishop of Durham addressed them from beneath it,
+ reminding them of former victories. Walter L&rsquo;Espee was the first to
+ respond. Grasping the hand of the Earl of Albemarle, he exclaimed, &ldquo;I
+ pledge thee my troth that to-day I will overcome the Scots, or die!&rdquo; &ldquo;So
+ swear we all,&rdquo; cried the other barons; and the whole host knelt down, the
+ Bishop pronounced over them the words of absolution, they replied with one
+ mighty sound of united voices, &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo; and arose. The knights and squires
+ sat with gathered reins and knees in rest, the yeomen stood each with his
+ good yew bow ready strung, awaiting the onslaught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Less union was there in the hostile army, where it might be said that
+ there was no authority, for David was unable to restrain his wild subjects
+ from the North and West. The men of Galloway insisted on beginning the
+ attack; but as they wore no defensive armor, and had no weapons but long,
+ thin pikes, besides being more fierce than steady, the king hesitated.
+ &ldquo;Why trust to a plate of steel or rings of iron?&rdquo; exclaimed Malise of
+ Strathern. &ldquo;I, who wear no armor, will go as far as any one with
+ breastplate of mail.&rdquo; &ldquo;You brag of what you dare not do!&rdquo; said the Norman
+ Alan de Percy. But the King found himself obliged to yield the precedence
+ to the Galwegians, trusting far more to the lowland knights and
+ men-at-arms, whom he arrayed under his gallant son, Prince Henry, while he
+ himself commanded the reserve of Northern Scots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fierce Kelts of Galloway, guided by a tall spear, wreathed with
+ heather blossom, and shouting, &ldquo;Albin! Albin!&rdquo; with harsh, dissonant cries
+ like the roar of a tempest, fell headlong on the English ranks, and at
+ first their fury carried them on so that they burst through them as if
+ they had been a spider&rsquo;s web. But the Norman chivalry round the standard
+ stood firm, and hewed down the undefended Galwegians, nor could the long
+ claymores of the Highland clans, who next attacked them, break through
+ their steel armor. The charge of Prince Henry&rsquo;s horsemen had more effect,
+ and at one time the youth had almost won his way to the standard, when
+ some traitor in the rear raised a bloody head on the point of a lance,
+ shouting that the King was slain. In consternation the Scots gave back;
+ the English saw their advantage, and pressed upon them: and though David
+ rode forward and displayed the dragon standard which marked his presence
+ (inherited from the Saxon kings), he could not rally them, and but just
+ succeeded in protecting their flight to Carlisle, which then belonged to
+ him as Earl of Cumberland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This first of the long series of Scottish defeats was called the Battle of
+ the Standard, from the banner of St. Cuthbert, which was always thought to
+ bring success. It came forth at the battle of Nevil&rsquo;s Cross, and was again
+ victorious, and it was preserved with great reverence till the
+ Reformation, when, in 1549, Catherine Whittingham, the wife of the Dean of
+ Durham, burnt it, out of zeal against Popery. It is some comfort that she
+ was a Frenchwoman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen had left his Northern subjects to take care of themselves, because
+ he was full of perplexities in the South. He had tried to please all
+ parties, and by no means succeeded. He was a humane, kind-hearted man, and
+ really wished to befriend the unfortunate Saxons; but, on the other hand,
+ he was afraid to affront their Norman oppressors, whom he had allowed to
+ build castles, and strengthen themselves in the very way which it had been
+ Henry Beauclerc&rsquo;s policy to prevent. Almost every spot where green mounds
+ and blocks of massive masonry remain within an ancient moat, is said by
+ tradition to have been &ldquo;a castle in Stephen&rsquo;s time,&rdquo; and we wonder,
+ considering that he reigned but nine years, how such immense works could
+ have been effected. Dens of thieves they seem to have been, and misery and
+ destruction reigned round them; while the least attempt on the King&rsquo;s part
+ to restrain the ferocity of their owners was requited by a threat of
+ bringing in our lady the Empress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her party became continually stronger, and Stephen, living in constant
+ mistrust, added to it by offending several Bishops, even his own brother,
+ Henry de Blois, by trying, to deprive them of their fortified castles.
+ Next he made an attack on the Earl of Gloucester, who, being thus freed
+ from his engagement to keep the peace, after repulsing Stephen, went to
+ Normandy to fetch the Empress, and inform her that this was the time for
+ establishing her right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maude, gladly accepted his invitation, but her husband Geoffrey seems to
+ have been glad to be rid of her ungracious company, and chose to remain in
+ Anjou. She landed in safety, for Stephen was at this time extremely ill,
+ and her brother placed her in Arundel Castle, which belonged to her
+ father&rsquo;s widow, Queen Alice, lately married to William de Albini, the
+ ancestor of the noble line of Howard. Here Maude remained, while her
+ brother went to his own estates to raise troops; but in the meantime
+ Stephen recovered, and advanced on Arundel Castle. Queen Alice sent to
+ tell him that her stepdaughter had come to seek her protection, and beg
+ him not to make her do anything disloyal; and Stephen, who had many of the
+ qualities of a courteous knight, forbore to make any personal attack on
+ the ladies, but allowed the Empress to depart unmolested to meet Earl
+ Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He brought her to his castle at Bristol, where she remained two years,
+ while the warfare was carried on in a desultory manner, chiefly by the
+ siege of castles. At last Stephen laid siege to Lincoln, where Robert&rsquo;s
+ daughter was, with her husband Ralf, Earl of Chester. Her father came to
+ her relief with an army of 10,000 men. Stephen was advised to retreat; but
+ he thought his honor concerned, and gave battle. His forces were soon
+ overwhelmed; but he fought on desperately at the foot of his standard, so
+ fiercely that no one dared to approach him, though his sword and
+ battle-axe were both broken. At last a stone brought him to the ground,
+ and a knight, named William Kames, grappled with him and held him fast;
+ but even then he refused to yield the fragment of his sword to any but the
+ Earl of Gloucester, who came up at the moment and prevented any further
+ violence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen was given into the keeping of Countess Amabel, and Maude was
+ conducted in state to Winchester, where Stephen&rsquo;s own brother, the Bishop,
+ proclaimed her Queen, standing on the steps of the altar. Her uncle, King
+ David, came to visit her, and she held her court with great splendor. It
+ was here that she disgusted every one by her disdainful manners, and
+ treated her cousin, Stephen&rsquo;s queen, with such harshness as to drive her
+ to take up arms again. London had always been favorable to Stephen, and
+ two months of negotiation were necessary before David and Robert could
+ prevail on the citizens to receive her. At midsummer, however, they
+ consented to admit her, and she came to Westminster; but as soon as a
+ deputation of citizens were in her presence, she showed her pride and
+ hostile spirit. They asked for charters; she replied by ordering them to
+ bring money, and telling them they were very bold to talk of their
+ privileges, when they had just been aiding her enemies. Robert made
+ speeches to try to soften matters, and David reasoned with her in vain,
+ till she was convinced of her folly in a way for which he was little
+ prepared. It is said that she actually flew at him and struck him; and if
+ she could thus treat a royal uncle, how must not men inferior in rank have
+ sped?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was noon, and the deputies went home, as Maude thought, to dinner; but
+ presently all the bells began to ring, and burghers, armed with bows and
+ bills, began to swarm in the streets. The followers of the Empress were
+ too few to resist; so, after a brief council, David galloped off to the
+ North, and Robert rode with his sister to Oxford, while the Londoners
+ opened their gates to Matilda, Stephen&rsquo;s wife, and her son Eustace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert went to raise more forces, and Maude, hearing that Bishop Henry de
+ Blois was conferring with his sister-in-law, sharply summoned him to her
+ presence. He quietly made answer, &ldquo;<i>Parabo me</i>&rdquo;&mdash;I prepare
+ myself; and Maude, in a passion, set out, intending to surprise him at
+ Wolvesley, his palace at Winchester. She found it well fortified, and laid
+ siege to it from the castle at Winchester, where she was joined by her
+ uncle and brother; and the town was in a miserable state, burnt by both
+ parties in turn. Twenty churches and two convents were destroyed, and the
+ Bishop took Knut&rsquo;s crown out of the Cathedral&mdash;to save it from the
+ enemy, as was said, but it was never seen again. At last Eustace de Blois
+ and his mother brought such a force that the Empress was besieged in her
+ turn, and completely starved out. Her garrison resolved to break through
+ the enemy at all risks, and on Sunday they set forth, Maude riding first
+ with her uncle David, and Robert following with a band of knights, under a
+ vow to die rather than let her be taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Stourbridge the pursuers came up with them, many of the knights fell,
+ and Robert was captured. So closely were the royal fugitives pursued, that
+ David at one time was in the enemy&rsquo;s hands, and only escaped by the
+ stratagem of his godson, David Olifant. Maude and one faithful knight, by
+ the speed of their horses, reached Devizes, whence she was carried in a
+ coffin to Gloucester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maude could not make up her mind to release her foe, Stephen, even for the
+ sake of recovering her brother; but the Countess of Gloucester,
+ considering the King as her own property, acted for herself, and exchanged
+ him for her husband. Queen Matilda tried to make Robert promise to bring
+ about peace, to secure England to Stephen, and Normandy to Maude; but he
+ would make no engagements which he knew she would not observe, and matters
+ continued in the same state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XVIII. THE SNOWS OF OXFORD. (1138-1154.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1135. Stephen.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1124. David I.
+ 1153. Malcolm V.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+
+ <i>Emperor Of Germany</i>.
+ 1139. Konrad II.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1130. Innocent II.
+ 1143. Celestine II.
+ 1144. Lucius II.
+ 1145. Anastasius II.
+ 1154. Adrian IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the 1st of November, 1138, Stephen was set at liberty, and Robert of
+ Gloucester, being exchanged for him, rejoined his sister the Empress at
+ Gloucester; and during this time of quiet her fierce nature seems to have
+ somewhat softened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen, meanwhile, had one of his terrible attacks of illness, in which
+ he lay for hours, if not days, in a death-like lethargy, and, of course,
+ his followers did nothing but build castles whenever the frost would let
+ them work, prey on their neighbors, and make the state of the country far
+ worse than it had been under any of the Normans of hated memory. Maude&rsquo;s
+ domain was in better order, as Robert&rsquo;s rule was modelled on that of his
+ father&rsquo;s, in its best points. It is wonderful that Robert, whose mother
+ was a princess by birth, and had been treated as a wife till the Etheling
+ marriage had become a matter of policy, should have put forward no
+ pretensions to the crown, but have uniformly given his staunch support to
+ his proud and ungrateful sister. In a council held at Devizes in the
+ course of the winter, it was decided that he should go to Normandy to
+ entreat the Count of Anjou to bring succors to his wife. Geoffrey,
+ however, had no desire to return to her haughty companionship, and
+ represented that there were still many castles in Normandy unsubdued.
+ Robert gave efficient aid in taking these; but Geoffrey still could not
+ persuade himself to meet his wife, though, at Robert&rsquo;s persuasion, he
+ consented to give into his charge Henry, his eldest son, a boy of ten
+ years old, with a large body of troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maude had, in the meanwhile, been placed in the strong fortress at Oxford;
+ but no sooner had Stephen recovered from his illness, than he collected
+ his army, and marched southward. In the end of September he besieged her
+ at Oxford, where at first she thought herself safe; but he crossed the
+ river, set fire to the city in several places, and blockaded her in the
+ castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her nobles collected at Wallingford, and sent defiances to Stephen to
+ fight a pitched battle with them; but he knew his own advantage too well,
+ and took no notice. Earl Robert, landing near Wareham, tried to create a
+ diversion by besieging that seaport; but he could not draw the enemy off
+ from Oxford. Famine prevailed in the castle, and, after much suffering, it
+ became impossible for the garrison to hold out any longer. The depth of
+ winter had come, the ground was covered with snow, and the Isis was frozen
+ over. Maude, whose courage never failed, caused herself and three of her
+ knights to be dressed in white, and let down from the battlements upon the
+ snow, where they were met by one of Stephen&rsquo;s men, whom they had gained
+ over, and by him were led, unseen and unheard, through the camp of the
+ enemy, hearing the call of the sentinels, and trembling with anxiety. For
+ six miles they crept over the snow, and at last arrived at Abingdon,
+ nearly frozen, for their garments had been far too scanty for the piercing
+ weather; but they could not remain a moment for rest or warmth, but took
+ horse, and never paused till they reached Wallingford Castle. Thither, so
+ soon as the news reached Earl Robert, he brought her young son, and her
+ troubles were forgotten in her joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence she repaired with her son to Bristol Castle, where the boy remained
+ under the care of a learned tutor named Matthew, who instructed him under
+ the superintendence of Earl Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This great Earl deserved the name of Beauclerc almost as well as his
+ father; he was well read, and two histories were dedicated to him, William
+ of Malmesbury&rsquo;s, and Geoffrey of Monmouth&rsquo;s wonderful chronicle of the old
+ British kings, whose blood flowed in Robert&rsquo;s veins; that chronicle&mdash;wrought
+ out of queer Welsh stories&mdash;that served as a foundation for Edward&rsquo;s
+ claims on Scotland, and whence came our Lear and Cymbeline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that knightly training could do for young Henry was done by Earl
+ Robert, and the boy so far answered to his care as to have that mixture of
+ scholarliness and high spirit that was inherent in the Norman and Angevin
+ princes. But the shrewd unscrupulousness and hard selfishness of the
+ Norman were there, too&mdash;the qualities from which noble Gloucester
+ himself was free. It may be, however, that the good Earl did not see these
+ less promising characteristics of his ward; for, after five years of the
+ boy&rsquo;s residence at Bristol, and the old desultory warfare between the
+ partisans of King and Empress, Count Geoffrey sent for his son, to take
+ leave of him before going on a crusade; and while Henry was absent, Earl
+ Robert died, in 1147. It speaks much for Henry Beauclerc&rsquo;s court that such
+ men should have grown up in it as Robert of Gloucester and David of
+ Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey, in the meantime, paid a visit to his younger brother, Baldwin
+ III. of Jerusalem, a very gallant prince. On his return, Maude came back
+ to him, and after their eight years&rsquo; absence, they met with affection they
+ never had shown to one another before. She did not attempt to take the
+ government of Normandy, but left it wholly in Geoffrey&rsquo;s hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen, meanwhile, was unmolested in England till 1149, when Henry sailed
+ for Scotland, there to be knighted by his uncle, King David; while,
+ curiously enough, his younger brother Geoffrey was at the very same time
+ knighted by Stephen&rsquo;s elder brother, Theobald, Count de Blois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a year of grief to that excellent King, who suffered a great
+ affliction in the death of the chivalrous Henry, his only son, and the
+ father of a numerous infant family. His barons feared he would sink under
+ his sorrow, and came to comfort him; but they found him cheerful. &ldquo;I ought
+ not to lament my son&rsquo;s being taken away from me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;since he is
+ gone to enjoy the fellowship of my parents and my brethren, of whose souls
+ the world was no longer worthy. Should I mourn, it would be to arraign the
+ goodness and justice of God for removing him to the mansions of bliss
+ before me. I should rather be thankful, and rejoice that the Almighty
+ endowed my son with so much grace to behave himself in a manner to be so
+ beloved and lamented. Soon do I hope to follow, and, being delivered from
+ temporal miseries, to enjoy a blessed eternity with the saints in light.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shortly after this that Aelred, the good Abbot of Rivaux, came to
+ Dunfermline, on the affairs of his order; and in the presence of this holy
+ man, the adopted brother of his beloved Henry, one of the four promising
+ boys who had gladdened the early days of his reign, the King&rsquo;s grief broke
+ freely forth, though still it was not the sorrow of one who had no hope.
+ He told Aelred he saw in this calamity a punishment for the devastation he
+ had caused in his invasion of England, and would fain have laid down his
+ royalty, and spent the rest of his days in penitence in a convent; but he
+ was persuaded to relinquish the design, and guard the crown for his
+ grandsons. He shed tears as he tenderly embraced Aelred, and both felt it
+ was their last meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David did not long survive his son. He appointed his eldest grandchild,
+ Malcolm, to succeed him, and set his affairs in order, redoubling all his
+ pious and charitable acts. One of the last things he was heard to say,
+ was, &ldquo;Lord, I restore Thee the kingdom wherewith Thou didst entrust me.
+ Put me in possession of that whereof the inhabitants are all kings.&rdquo; He
+ was soon after found dead, in the attitude of devotion. His body was
+ buried at Dunfermline, and his name added to the list of Scottish saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grandsons, Malcolm, William, and David, were all good and valiant men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Waltheof, his stepson, lived peaceably at Melrose, strict in rule, gentle
+ in manners, and peculiarly humble in demeanor, and poor in dress. He once
+ had occasion to meet King Stephen, and rode in among the barons in their
+ armor, only clad in his coarse serge frock, and mounted, on an old gray
+ horse. His brother Simon, who stood by the King, was displeased, and said,
+ &ldquo;See, my lord, how my brother and thy kinsman does honor to his lineage.&rdquo;
+ He met with a reply he little expected. &ldquo;If thou and I had only the grace
+ to see it,&rdquo; said Stephen, &ldquo;he is an honor indeed to us. He adorns our
+ race, as the gem does the gold in which it is set!&rdquo; And when he had parted
+ with the meek abbot, Stephen exclaimed, with tears, &ldquo;This man has put all
+ worldly things under his feet; but we are presuming after this fleeting
+ world, and losing both body and soul in the chase.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This must indeed have, been brought home soon after to Stephen, by the
+ fate of his wretched son Eustace. This fiery youth had desired to be
+ crowned in his father&rsquo;s lifetime; but Archbishop Theobald, and all his
+ suffragans, perceiving that this would prevent the only hope of peace on
+ Stephen&rsquo;s death, steadily refused, though the King shut them all up in his
+ hall, and threatened them violently. The next year, when the treaty was
+ made by which Henry of Anjou was to reign after Stephen, Eustace was so
+ enraged at finding himself excluded from the succession, that he rushed
+ off, accompanied by a party of lawless young men, and ravaged all
+ Cambridgeshire, committing dreadful excesses. It is to be hoped that he
+ was already under the influence of the brain-fever which came on in a few
+ days&rsquo; time, immediately after he had pillaged Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s, and of
+ which he died; leaving a belief among the country people, that, like King
+ Sweyn, he had been struck by the avenging hand of the Saint himself. His
+ father, King Stephen, only lived a few months after, worn out by the toils
+ and troubles which he had brought on himself by his own ambition. His son
+ William, who would have opposed Henry&rsquo;s accession, was prevented, by
+ breaking his leg by a fall from his horse, and Henry peaceably gained the
+ throne. His mother, Empress Maude, had in the meantime retired to Anjou,
+ where she led a quiet life, giving up her rights to her son, and
+ apparently profiting by the lesson she had been taught when her prosperity
+ was turned at its full tide by her own pride and presumption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the boys bred up in the good household of Dunfermline, Aelred was the
+ last survivor. Waltheof had the happiness, before his death, of seeing his
+ brother, the proud Earl Simon of Northampton, repent heartily, leave his
+ evil courses, found churches, and endow the convent of Waldon, which he
+ had once persecuted for sheltering his brother. Waltheof was elected to be
+ Bishop of St. Andrews, and Aelred, as head of the Cistercians in Britain,
+ came to Melrose, to order him, on his canonical obedience, to accept the
+ see. But Waltheof was weak in health, and knew that another call had gone
+ forth. He pointed to a stone slab on the floor of the chapter-house.
+ &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is the place of my rest. Here will be my habitation,
+ among my children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in a short time he died, in the year 1159. Aelred lived seven or eight
+ years longer, and was highly honored and trusted by the young Malcolm of
+ Scotland. On his behalf the old Abbot undertook a journey, to treat with
+ the wild men of Galloway, whom Malcolm had three times defeated in battle,
+ and now wished to bring to terms. He succeeded in persuading their chief
+ to submit, and even to become a canon at Holyrood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He afterward attended a chapter of his order at Pavia, and died at Rivaux,
+ after a long illness, about 1166.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XIX. YOUTH OF BECKET. (1154-1162)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1154. Henry II.
+
+ <i>King Of Scotland</i>.
+ 1153. Malcolm V.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1138. Konrad II.
+ 1152. Friedrich II.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1154. Adrian IV.
+ 1159. Alexander III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Henry of Anjou showed, in his journey to England, both courage and
+ moderation. He remained there for some little time, and then returned home
+ to join his father in a war against the Count de Montreuil, who was
+ befriended by both Pope and King of France. The Pope excommunicated
+ Geoffrey, but he fought on, and made his enemy prisoner; then, at the
+ command of the King of France, released him. When the Pope would have
+ absolved Geoffrey, he refused, saying he had only done justice, and had
+ not deserved the sentence. A few months after, in 1151, a cold bath, when
+ he was heated with riding, brought on a fever that caused his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He left his son Henry his county of Anjou, to be resigned to Geoffrey if
+ he should become King of England, and commanded that his body should not
+ be interred till Henry had taken an oath to that effect. From this oath
+ Henry was absolved by Adrian IV, properly Nicholas Brakespeare, the only
+ English Pope, and stripped his brother of all his possessions. It was no
+ good omen for his own relations with his sons. His mother lived many years
+ in retirement, and used her influence chiefly for good. She died in 1167.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry, meantime, had come to the throne in 1154, and was the mightiest
+ King who had yet reigned in England. More than half France was his&mdash;partly
+ by inheritance, and partly by marriage with Eleanor, heiress of Aquitaine;
+ and he was quite able to rule his vast dominions. His alertness and
+ activity were the wonder of every one. He made journeys with great
+ rapidity, was always busy, and hardly ever sat down. He had a face like a
+ lion, well-knit limbs, and a hardy temperament. He was heedless what he
+ ate or wore, and was an embodiment of vehemence and activity. He threw
+ himself eagerly into the work of reducing to order the dreadful state of
+ things allowed by Stephen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Down came the castles&mdash;once more the nobles found they had a strong
+ hand over them&mdash;no more dens of robbers were permitted&mdash;the King
+ was here, there, and everywhere. He had English to tame Anglo-Normans,
+ Angevins to set on French Normans, Poitevins to turn loose on both. He
+ knew what order was, and kept it; and the counsellor who aided him most
+ must now be described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is the romantic ballad-tale of that counsellor&rsquo;s origin, though it is
+ much to be feared that the fact cannot be established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the reign of Henry I. the citizens of London were amazed by the sight
+ of a maiden in an Eastern dress, wandering along the streets, plaintively
+ uttering the word &ldquo;Gilbert!&rdquo; Certain seafaring men declared that she had
+ prevailed on them to take her on board their vessel and bring her to
+ England, by constantly repeating the name &ldquo;London!&rdquo;&mdash;the only other
+ word in the language that she knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor lady! The mob of London were less compassionate than the sailors had
+ been. They hooted and hunted her, till she came to Southwark, in front of
+ a house belonging to Gilbert à Becket, a rich and prosperous merchant,
+ who, with his faithful serving-man, Richard, had lately returned from
+ pilgrimage. Richard, who had come out on hearing the noise, hurried back
+ into the house as soon as he perceived its cause; then, hastening out
+ again, went up to the poor, persecuted maiden, who fainted away at the
+ sight of him. He carried her to the house of an honorable widow lady,
+ desiring her, in his master&rsquo;s name to take care of the desolate stranger,
+ with whom, on her revival, he held converse in her own tongue, and seemed
+ to cheer her greatly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Gilbert à Becket was on his way to St. Paul&rsquo;s, to consult the
+ Bishop of London. He related how, in the East, he and his man Richard had
+ been taken captive by the Saracens, and become slaves to a wealthy Emir.
+ In the course of their services to their master, Gilbert had attracted the
+ notice of his daughter, who had more than once asked him questions about
+ his faith and country, and had at last offered to contrive his escape, if
+ he would take her for his wife, and bring her to his own land. Gilbert,
+ who did not trust her, effected his escape with Richard without her
+ assistance, and returned to England, little thinking they should ever see
+ her again. But she followed him, leaving her home, her riches, and her
+ father, and seeking him through his long and dangerous journey, ignorant
+ of all save his name, and the name of his city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five other prelates were present when he told the story, and one, the
+ Bishop of Chichester, exclaimed, that Heaven itself most have conducted
+ the damsel, and advised that Gilbert should at once marry her. The next
+ day she was brought to St. Paul&rsquo;s, and was there baptized by the name of
+ Matilda, Richard acting as interpreter; and shortly after the wedding took
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This romantic story was the origin of several old English ballads, one of
+ which celebrates the Saracen lady by the extraordinary title of Susy Pye,
+ perhaps a vulgarism of her original Eastern name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first year of his marriage, Gilbert went on pilgrimage again,
+ leaving his wife under the care of his man Richard. Soon after his
+ departure she gave birth to a son, to whom she gave the name of Thomas,
+ and who was three years old by the time his father returned from the Holy
+ Land. They afterward had two daughters, named Mary and Agnes, and lived in
+ great piety and happiness, until the time of Matilda&rsquo;s death, at the end
+ of twenty-two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas received a clerkly education from the Canons of Merton, and showed
+ such rare ability that his whole family deemed him destined for great
+ things. He was very tall and handsome, and his aquiline nose, quick eyes,
+ and long, slender, beautiful hands, accorded with the story of his Eastern
+ ancestry; and he was very vigorous and athletic, delighting in the manly
+ sports of the young men of his time. In his boyhood, while he was out
+ hawking with a knight who used to lodge in his father&rsquo;s house when he came
+ to London, he was exposed to a serious danger. They came to a narrow
+ bridge, fit only for foot-passengers, with a mill-wheel just below. The
+ knight nevertheless rode across the bridge, and Thomas was following, when
+ his horse, making a false step, fell into the river. The boy could swim,
+ but would not make for the bank, without rescuing the hawk, that had
+ shared his fall, and thus was drawn by the current under the wheel, and in
+ another moment would have been torn to pieces, had not the miller stopped
+ the machinery, and pulled him out of the water, more dead than alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems that it was the practice for wealthy merchants to lodge their
+ customers when brought to London by business, and thus young Thomas became
+ known to several persons of high estimation in their several stations. A
+ rich merchant called Osborn gave him big accounts to keep; knights noticed
+ his riding, and clerks his learning and religious life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the clergy of Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury, who were among
+ those guests, were desirous of presenting him to their master. He at first
+ held back, but they at length prevailed with him: he became a member of
+ the Archbishop&rsquo;s household, and, after he had improved himself in
+ learning, was ordained deacon, and presented with the Archdeaconry of
+ Canterbury, an office which was then by no means similar to what we at
+ present call by that name. It really then meant being chief of the
+ deacons, and involved the being counsellor, and, in a manner, treasurer to
+ the Bishop of the diocese; and thus, to be Archdeacon of Canterbury, was
+ the highest ecclesiastical dignity in the kingdom, next to that of the
+ prelates and great mitred abbots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas à Becket was a secular clerk, bound by none of the vows of monastic
+ orders; and therefore, though he led a strictly pure and self-denying
+ life, he did hot consider himself obliged to abstain from worldly business
+ or amusements, and in the year 1150 he was appointed Chancellor by Henry
+ II. He was then in his thirty-eighth year, of great ability and
+ cultivation, graceful in demeanor, ready of speech, clear in mind, and his
+ tall frame (reported to have been no less than six feet two in height)
+ fitting him for martial exercise and bodily exertion. The King, a youth of
+ little past twenty, delighting in ability wherever he found it, became
+ much attached to his gallant Chancellor, and not only sought his advice in
+ the regulation of England after its long troubles, but, when business was
+ done, they used to play together like two schoolboys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must have been a curious scene in the hall of Chancellor Becket, when,
+ at the daily meal, earls and barons sat round his table, and knights and
+ nobles crowded, so thickly at the others, that the benches were not
+ sufficient, and the floor was daily strewn with hay or straw in winter, or
+ in summer with green boughs, that those who sat on it might not soil their
+ robes. Gold and silver dishes, and goblets, and the richest wines, were
+ provided, and the choicest, most costly viands were purchased at any price
+ by his servants for these entertainments: they once gave a hundred
+ shillings for a dish of eels. But the Chancellor seldom touched these
+ delicacies, living on the plainest fare, as he sat in his place as the
+ host, answering the pledges of his guests, amusing them with his converse,
+ and providing minstrelsy and sports of all kinds for their recreation.
+ Often the King would ride into the hall, in the midst of the gay crowd
+ seated on the floor, throw himself off his horse, leap over the table, and
+ join in the mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These rich feasts afforded afterward plentiful alms for the poor, who were
+ never forgotten in the height of Becket&rsquo;s magnificence, and the widow and
+ the oppressed never failed to find a protector in the Chancellor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His house was full of young squires and pages, the sons of the nobility,
+ who placed them there as the best school of knighthood; and among them was
+ the King&rsquo;s own son Henry, who had been made his pupil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King seems to have been apt to laugh at Becket for his strict life and
+ overflowing charity. One very cold day, as they were riding, they met an
+ old man in a thin, ragged coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor old man!&rdquo; said Henry, &ldquo;would it not be a charity to give him a good,
+ warm cloak?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would, indeed.&rdquo; said Becket: &ldquo;you had better keep the matter in mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no; it is you that shall have the credit of this great act of
+ charity,&rdquo; said Henry, laughing. &ldquo;Ha! old man, should you not like this
+ nice, warm cloak?&rdquo; and, with those words, he began to pull at the scarlet
+ and gray mantle which the Chancellor wore. Becket struggled for it, and in
+ this rough sport they were both nearly pulled off their horses, till the
+ clasp gave way, and the King triumphantly tossed his prize to the
+ astonished old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chancellor was in the habit of daily giving more costly gifts than
+ these, both to rich and poor; gold and silver, robes and jewels, fine
+ armor and horses, hawks and hounds&mdash;even fine new ships, were
+ bestowed by him, from the wealth of the old merchant Gilbert, as well as
+ from the revenues of his archdeaconry, and of several other benefices,
+ which the lax opinions of his time caused him to think no shame to keep in
+ his own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot call Thomas à Becket by any means a perfect character; but
+ thoroughly conscientious he must ever have been, and very self-denying,
+ keeping himself pure from every stain in the midst of the court, and
+ guarding himself by strict discipline. He was found to be in the habit of
+ sleeping on the bare boards beside his rich bed, and in secret he wore
+ sackcloth, and submitted to the lash of penance. His uprightness and
+ incorruptibility as a judge, his wisdom in administering the affairs of
+ state, and his skill in restoring peace to England, made the reign of
+ Henry Plantagenet a relief indeed to his subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In almost every respect he lived like a layman. He hunted and hawked, and
+ was found fault with by the Prior of Leicester for wearing a cape with
+ sleeves, which it seems was an unclerical garment. The prior said it was
+ more unsuitable in one who held so many ecclesiastical preferments, and
+ was likely to become Archbishop of Canterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this Thomas answered: &ldquo;I know three poor priests, each of whom I would
+ rather see Archbishop than myself. If I had that rank, I know full well I
+ must either lose the King&rsquo;s favor, or set aside my duty to God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Henry went to war with France respecting the inheritance of Eleanor
+ of Aquitaine, his wife, his Chancellor brought to his aid seven hundred
+ knights of his own household, besides twelve hundred in his pay, and four
+ thousand foot soldiers. He fed the knights themselves at his own table,
+ and paid them each three shillings a day for the support of their squires
+ and horses; and he himself commanded them, wearing armor, and riding at
+ their head. He kept them together by the sound of a long, slender trumpet,
+ such as was then used only by his own band; and in combat he showed
+ himself strong and dexterous in the use of lance and sword, winning great
+ admiration and respect even from the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry resolved to come to a treaty, and to seal it by asking the King of
+ France, Louis le Jeune, to give his daughter Margaret in marriage to
+ Henry, the heir of England. Becket was sent on this embassy, and the
+ splendor of his equipment was such as might become its importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two hundred men on horseback, in armor or gay robes, were his immediate
+ followers, and with them came eight waggons, each drawn by five horses, a
+ groom walking beside each horse, and a driver and guard to every waggon,
+ besides a large, fierce dog chained beneath each. The waggons carried
+ provisions and garments, and furniture for the night: two were filled with
+ ale for the French, who much admired that English liquor; another was
+ fitted up as a kitchen, and another for a chapel. There were twelve
+ sumpter horses carrying small articles, and on the back of each of these
+ sat a long-tailed ape!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dogs and hawks, with their attendants, accompanied the procession, the
+ whole marshalled in regular order, and the men singing as they went; and
+ the impression on the minds of all beholders was, &ldquo;If such was the
+ Chancellor, what must be the King?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Paris all these riches were given away, and so resolved was Becket to
+ keep up his character for munificence, that he did not choose to be
+ maintained at the expense of the French King; and when Louis, wishing to
+ force him into being his guest, sent orders to the markets round to sell
+ nothing to the English Chancellor, his attendants disguised themselves,
+ and bought up all the provisions in the neighborhood. King Louis acquired
+ a great esteem and admiration for the Chancellor, and willingly granted
+ his request, betrothing Margaret, who was only seven years old, to Prince
+ Henry. She, as well as her little husband, became Becket&rsquo;s pupils, by
+ desire of King Henry, and she, at least, never seems to have lost her
+ attachment to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time Becket dreaded came. The good, old, peaceable Archbishop Theobald
+ died in 1162, and Henry, who was then at Falaise, ordered his Chancellor
+ to England, ostensibly to settle a disturbance in the western counties,
+ but in reality, as he declared in a private interview, that he might be
+ elected to the primacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becket smiled, and, pointing to his gay robes, said, &ldquo;You are choosing a
+ pretty dress to figure at the head of your monks of Canterbury. If you do
+ as you say, my lord, you will soon hate me as much as you love me now, for
+ you assume an authority in Church affairs to which I shall not consent,
+ and there will be plenty of persons to stir up strife between us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry did not heed the warning, and King, Bishops, and the Chapter of
+ Canterbury unanimously chose Becket as Archbishop, with only one reluctant
+ voice, that of Gilbert Folliot, Bishop of London, who expected the same
+ promotion himself. On Whit-Sunday Thomas received priest&rsquo;s orders, and
+ shortly after was consecrated Bishop by Henry de Blois, Bishop of
+ Winchester, and brother of King Stephen. John of Salisbury, a priest of
+ Becket&rsquo;s household, and his intimate friend, was sent to Rome to ask for
+ the pallium; and, bringing it home, laid it on the altar of Canterbury
+ Cathedral, whence the Archbishop took it up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magnificent Archdeacon was expected by King Henry to lead the same
+ life when Archbishop, and thus to secularize the Church. But Henry had
+ mistaken his man. Clever and clear-sighted as the King was, seven years of
+ transacting business together, and of familiar intercourse with the
+ frank-hearted, free-spoken Thomas à Becket, had failed to make him
+ conscious of the inner life and deep devotion, the mortification and
+ uncompromising sense of duty, that was the true spring of his actions. It
+ was no secret; Becket avowed it from the first; the King only did not see
+ it, because he <i>could</i> not understand it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becket had too high an idea of the office of a bishop to unite the care of
+ state affairs with it, and he at once resigned the chancellorship.
+ Outwardly there was not much difference&mdash;he still kept a magnificent
+ table, and entertained nobles and knights at his banquets; but his
+ self-discipline was secretly carried to a far greater extent than before.
+ He touched the wine-cup with his lips, to do honor to his guests, but his
+ drink was water in which hay had been boiled; and though costly meats were
+ placed before him, he hardly tasted them, and his chief food was bread. He
+ doubled all the gifts that Archbishop Theobald had been wont to make to
+ the poor convents and hospitals, and gave very large alms. Every day he
+ washed the feet of thirteen beggars, then fed them, and gave them each
+ four shillings. This was, in fact, considered as a religious duty, almost
+ an obligation on certain occasions. It is a ceremony still performed by
+ the Pope at Passion-tide; and Queen Elizabeth herself used to do so on
+ Maundy Thursday. The gifts now distributed by the Queen on that day are a
+ relic of the custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archbishop Becket, when at Canterbury, often visited the cloisters, where
+ he sat reading among the monks; and he often went to see and console the
+ sick or infirm brethren, who were unable to leave their cells. He was much
+ loved and respected by those who knew him best; but the nobles, who had
+ usurped lands belonging to his see, dreaded his maintenance of his rights,
+ and hoped for disagreements between him and the King&mdash;especially one
+ Randolf de Broc, who wrongfully held the Castle of Saltwood, near
+ Canterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, at the first meeting all was smooth. On the return of the court
+ the Archbishop brought his pupil, Prince Henry, to meet his father at
+ Southampton, and was received with great affection. The King embraced him
+ eagerly, and spent much time apart with him, discussing all that had taken
+ place in his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XX. THE CONSTITUTIONS OF CLARENDON. (1163-1172.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1151. Henry II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1165. William.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1152. Friedrich II.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ 1159. Alexander III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The strife between the Crown and the Mitre was not long in breaking out
+ again. The former strife had been on the matter of investiture; the strife
+ of the twelfth century was respecting jurisdiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sometimes hear the expression, &ldquo;Without benefit of clergy,&rdquo; and the
+ readers of the &ldquo;Lay of the Last Minstrel&rdquo; cannot have forgotten William of
+ Deloraine&rsquo;s declaration,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Letter or line know I never a one,
+ Were&rsquo;t my neck-verse at Harribee.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ These are witnesses of the combat between Henry II. and Thomas à Becket.
+ The Church, as bearing the message of peace, claimed to be exempt from the
+ sword of the State. Her sacred buildings protected the criminal, the
+ inhabitants of her lands were spared in war, and offences committed either
+ by an ecclesiastic or against one, were not liable to be punished by the
+ temporal power. This protection was extended not only over actually
+ ordained clergymen, but all who held any office in connection with
+ ecclesiastical affairs&mdash;all students, nay, all who were clerks enough
+ to read and write. Thus the wild borderers, when made prisoners, escaped
+ the halter by pretending to read a verse of the <i>Miserere</i>, which
+ they had learnt by heart in case of such an emergency, and called their
+ neck-verse; and &ldquo;without benefit of clergy&rdquo; was added to new laws, to
+ prevent education from exempting persons from their power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this arose long after the battle had been fought and won; and it is
+ not to be supposed, that the Church left offenders unpunished.
+ Imprisonment, loss of rank, and penance, fell heavily on them, and it was
+ only very hardened and desperate men who would die under excommunication
+ rather than endure all that was required before they could be reconciled
+ to the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry II. had found the course of justice seriously impeded by these
+ privileges of the clergy, and convoking a council at Westminster, in 1163,
+ called on the bishops to consent that, as soon as a clerk should be proved
+ guilty of a crime, he should be deprived of his orders, and handed over to
+ receive punishment as a layman, at the hands of the King&rsquo;s officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to our views in the present day, this demand was just, but to
+ the Church of the twelfth century it seemed an attempt to deprive her of
+ powers committed to her trust; and considering the uncertainty of justice,
+ and the lawless tyranny and cruelty often exercised by the sovereigns and
+ nobles, the resistance made to Henry II. cannot be wondered at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bishops, however, first took the King&rsquo;s view, and argued that a crime
+ was worse in a clerk than in another, so that he deserved no immunity. To
+ this Becket answered, that the loss of his orders was one penalty, and it
+ was not right that he should be punished twice for the same offence. They
+ said that the King would be displeased, and it would be better to give up
+ their liberties than to perish themselves. This cowardly plea Becket
+ treated no better than it deserved, and brought them over to his side, so
+ that they all answered the King, that their duty forbade them to comply
+ with his demand; Henry put the question in another form, asking them
+ whether they would in all things observe the royal Constitutions of his
+ ancestors. Becket replied, &ldquo;We will in all things, saving the privileges
+ of our order;&rdquo; and so, one by one, said they all, except Hilary of
+ Chichester, who was afraid, and left out the important restriction. But by
+ this cowardice all he gained was the King&rsquo;s contempt. Henry chose him as
+ the one on whom to vent his passion, abused him violently, and quitted the
+ council, in one of his furious fits of rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thenceforth Henry was at war with Becket. One of his first acts of spite,
+ was exiling the Archbishop&rsquo;s friend, John of Salisbury, a faithful priest,
+ and an excellent scholar, as his correspondence with his master remains to
+ testify. It is curious to read his account of Paris. &ldquo;The people here seem
+ to enjoy abundance of everything; the Church ceremonies are performed with
+ great splendor, and I thought, with Jacob, &lsquo;Surely the Lord is in this
+ place, and I knew it not;&rsquo; also, in the words of the poet,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Blessed is the banish&rsquo;d man who liveth here.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The French are much afraid of our King Henry, and hate him most
+ intensely; but this between ourselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Archbishop wrote to the Pope for counsel, but the King had strong
+ influence at Rome, and the Pope only advised Becket to preserve peace;
+ owning that what the King demanded was wrong, but recommending Becket to
+ give way, and make friends, so that England might be once more at his beck
+ and call.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this policy Becket was far too straight-forward, and his perplexity
+ was great, especially when the Archbishop of York, who had always been his
+ enemy, the jealous and disappointed Gilbert Folliot of London, and the
+ time-serving Hilary of Chichester, all declared themselves of the King&rsquo;s
+ party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope and his legate prevailed with Becket to consent to the
+ Constitutions of the realm, without making any exception; the King said
+ this must be done in public, and in January, 1164, convoked a council for
+ the purpose at Clarendon, in Wiltshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Constitutions were read, and proved to contain much that was contrary
+ to the canons of the Church; they were discussed and commented on for
+ three days, and then, to Becket&rsquo;s surprise and dismay, he was required not
+ only to agree to them by word of mouth, as he had already done, but to set
+ his archiepiscopal seal to them. He rose, and exclaimed, much agitated, &ldquo;I
+ declare by God Almighty, that no seal of mine shall ever be set to such
+ Constitutions as these.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King left the room in a fury, and great confusion ensued, of which we
+ have no clear account. The nobles broke in on the bishops, and threatened
+ them in the King&rsquo;s name; the Grand Master of the Templars persuaded
+ Becket, and it seems that his firmness in some degree gave way, though
+ whether what he repented of was the sealing the Constitutions, or merely
+ the promise he had given, we cannot tell. The assembly broke up, the King
+ and each of the Archbishops taking a copy of the Constitutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becket, as he rode away, lamented over what had passed, as his faithful
+ friend and biographer, Herbert of Bosham, has recorded. &ldquo;My sins are the
+ cause why the Church of England is reduced to bondage,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I was
+ taken from the court to fill this station, a proud and vain man; not from
+ the cloister, nor from a school of the Saviour, but from the palace of
+ Caesar. I was a feeder of birds, and I was suddenly made a feeder of men;
+ I was a patron of players, and a follower of hounds, and I became a
+ shepherd over many souls. I neglected my own vineyard, and yet was
+ intrusted with the care of others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fasted, and abstained from ministering at the altar, till he had
+ received from the Pope a letter of absolution for his act of weakness; and
+ as the Pope gave no ratification of the Constitutions of Clarendon, he did
+ not consider them binding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry shifted his ground, and, calling another Council at Northampton in
+ 1164, brought various petty charges against the Archbishop. The first was,
+ that a man named John Marshall had failed to obtain justice in his court.
+ The truth was, that the man had been caught making oaths on a jest-book,
+ instead of on the Gospels; and Becket, instead of coming himself to state
+ this, sent four knights with letters explaining it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this neglect, as it was said, of the King&rsquo;s summons, Becket was
+ condemned to forfeit the whole of his personal property; and to this he
+ submitted, but without appeasing the King, who went on to accuse him of
+ taking the public money while Chancellor, when, as every one knew, he had
+ spent far more largely than ever he had received in the King&rsquo;s service.
+ Not a person was there who did not know that his character stood far above
+ such base charges; besides, an appointment to an ecclesiastical dignity
+ was always supposed to clear from all former charges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry de Blois, Bishop of Winchester, brother of King Stephen, went to the
+ King, and offered to pay the whole sum required of Becket; but he was not
+ listened to, and the Bishops of Chichester and London plainly told the
+ Archbishop, that what was aimed at was to force him to resign. The plain,
+ blunt Bishop of Lincoln said, &ldquo;The man&rsquo;s life is in danger; he will lose
+ it, or his bishopric; and what good his bishopric will do him without his
+ life, I do not see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the decisive day on which he was expected to submit to judgment,
+ Archbishop Thomas rose early and celebrated mass; after which, arrayed in
+ his pontifical dress, except his mitre and pall, he set out for the place
+ of meeting, attended by his faithful clerks. He wished to have gone
+ thither barefoot, and, bearing his cross, to have thrown himself at the
+ feet of the King, and intercede with him for the liberties of the Church;
+ but his clergy and the Templars persuaded him to relinquish this design,
+ contrary to his own judgment. He returned to it again so far, that, on
+ dismounting in the Castle court, he took his cross from Alexander
+ Llewellyn, its bearer, and carried it himself into the hall. The Bishop of
+ Hereford ran up to him, saying, &ldquo;Suffer me, my lord, to carry the cross;
+ it is better than that you should carry it yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my son,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;suffer me to retain it, as the banner under
+ which I fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A French archdeacon, who was present, said to the Bishop of London, &ldquo;My
+ lord, do you allow the Archbishop to carry his own cross?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good friend,&rdquo; was Folliot&rsquo;s rude reply, &ldquo;he always was a fool, and
+ will continue so to the end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when all gave way before the majestic figure of the Archbishop, with
+ the cross in his hand, Gilbert went up to him, and tried to snatch it
+ away, telling him he was disturbing the peace; for the King would take the
+ sword, and then the King and Archbishop would be matched against each
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; said Becket; &ldquo;my cross is the sign of peace; the King&rsquo;s sword
+ is an instrument of war.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down to wait, while the other prelates were called to a
+ consultation with the King in another apartment. His clerks sat round, and
+ Herbert de Bosham said, &ldquo;If they lay violent hands on you, you can
+ excommunicate them all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Far be that from our lord,&rdquo; rejoined Fitzstephen, his secretary; &ldquo;let him
+ rather follow the pattern of the ancient confessors and martyrs, and pray
+ for his enemies and persecutors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the King&rsquo;s marshals touched Fitzstephen on the shoulder, telling
+ him it was forbidden to speak to the Archbishop; upon which he glanced at
+ his master, and pointed to the cross, to express what he was forbidden to
+ say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King sat in his own chamber, and the bishops and barons were sent in
+ turn with messages from him to the Archbishop. Becket appealed to the
+ Pope, and the bishops, on their side, appealed against the Archbishop; and
+ then the Earls of Leicester and Cornwall were sent to pronounce sentence
+ on him; but instead of allowing them to proceed, he declared that the King
+ had no right to call him to account for what had happened before he was
+ Archbishop; for it had been expressly declared, when he was appointed,
+ that he was freed from all former claims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a point of view in which the Earls had not seen the case, and
+ they said they must go back to the King. &ldquo;One word more,&rdquo; said Becket: &ldquo;as
+ the soul is more worthy than the body, so you are bound to obey God rather
+ than the King. Can the son judge his father? I can receive no judgment
+ from you or the King; the Pope alone, under God, is my judge. I place
+ myself and my Church under his protection. I call the bishops, who have
+ obeyed their King rather than God, to answer before his tribunal; and so,
+ protected by the Holy Catholic Church and the power of the Apostolic See,
+ I leave this court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose, followed by his clerks. Cries of abuse followed him; Ranulf de
+ Broc shot straws at him, and a relation of the King reproached him with
+ sneaking away like a traitor. &ldquo;If I were a knight,&rdquo; said the Archbishop,
+ &ldquo;my sword should answer that foul speech.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only the King&rsquo;s immediate followers that thus reviled him; the poor
+ crowded after him in multitudes, so that he could hardly hold in his
+ horse, carry the cross, which he still retained, and give his blessing to
+ those who sought it. &ldquo;See,&rdquo; he said to his clerks, &ldquo;what a glorious train
+ escorts me home! These are the poor of whom Christ spake, partakers of my
+ distress: open the door, and let us feast together!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On coming to the monastery, they first went to the chapel, where he
+ prayed, and laid down the cross; then went to the refectory to take food.
+ In talking over the events of the day, he bade his clerks beware of
+ retorting on their enemies the abuse that was poured on them. &ldquo;To rail,&rdquo;
+ he said &ldquo;is the mark of an inferior; to bear it, of a superior. If we
+ would teach them to control their tongues, let us show that we control our
+ ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the reading that evening, at supper, the text occurred, &ldquo;If they
+ persecute you in one city, flee to another.&rdquo; This Becket took as direction
+ for his course, and sent to ask the King for a safe-conduct to return to
+ Canterbury. The King said he should have an answer to-morrow, which Becket
+ and his clerks considered as a sign that his life was not safe. That
+ night, therefore, he, with three of his clergy, mounted at the postern of
+ the monastery, and rode off, in such torrents of rain, that four times he
+ was obliged to cut off a portion of his long cloak to relieve himself of
+ the weight. He made for Kent, travelling by night and hiding by day, for
+ twenty days, till he reached the coast, and at Estrey was hidden for
+ several days in a little secret chamber opening into the parish church,
+ whence, at mass, he gave the blessing to the congregation, though they
+ knew it not. At last a small open boat was procured, and, embarking on the
+ 2d of November, 1164, he safely landed near Gravelines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The county of Boulogne belonged to Mary de Blois, Stephen&rsquo;s daughter. She
+ had taken the veil at Romsey, when a girl; but on the death of her
+ brothers, Eustace and William, became the heiress of her mother&rsquo;s county
+ of Boulogne, and had been stolen away and married, for the sake of her
+ inheritance, by Matthew of Flanders. The Archbishop had opposed this
+ marriage, and the count was therefore his enemy, so that he was obliged to
+ pass through his territory in the disguise of a Cistercian monk, calling
+ himself Brother Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice he was in danger of discovery. The first time was when they met a
+ party of young men hawking. Becket, who had never lost his admiration for
+ the noble birds (for one of whom he had so nearly lost his life), showed
+ so much interest in the falcons, that their owner, surprised at seeing so
+ much sportsmanship in a monk, exclaimed, &ldquo;You must be the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury!&rdquo; &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said another of the hawking party, &ldquo;do you think the
+ Archbishop travels in this sort?&rdquo; And thus Becket was saved from being
+ obliged to make answer. The next time was at supper, when they had reached
+ the inn at Gravelines, where his great height and beautiful hands
+ attracted attention; and the host, further remarking that he bestowed all
+ the choicest morsels on the children, was convinced that this must be the
+ English Archbishop, whose escape was already known on the Continent, and
+ falling down at his feet, blessed the saints for bringing such a guest
+ under his roof. Becket was much afraid the good man might unintentionally
+ betray him, and left Gravelines early the next morning, on his way to the
+ monastery of St. Bertin&rsquo;s, at St. Omer. It is amusing to find Becket&rsquo;s
+ faithful clerks, on the Friday when they were to arrive at that hospitable
+ convent, trying to coax their master to grant them leave, after their
+ journey, to eat a little meat: &ldquo;for, suppose there should be a scarcity of
+ fish.&rdquo; Here they were joined by Herbert de Bosham, who had been sent to
+ Canterbury to collect such money and valuables as he could bring away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry had in the meantime sent an embassy to desire the King of France not
+ to shelter &ldquo;the late Archbishop;&rdquo; but it met with no favorable reception
+ from Louis. &ldquo;He is a noble-minded man,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;if I knew where to find
+ him, I would go with my whole court to meet him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he did much harm to France,&rdquo; said the Earl of Arundel, &ldquo;at the head
+ of the English army.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was his duty,&rdquo; said Louis; &ldquo;I admire him the more. If he had been my
+ servant, he would have done the same for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor did the embassy meet with much better success on going to Sens, where
+ Pope Alexander III. then was. The Bishop of London began to abuse the
+ Archbishop virulently, saying that he had fled, &ldquo;as the Scripture saith.
+ &lsquo;The wicked fleeth when no man pursueth.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; interrupted the Pope, &ldquo;spare. I entreat you, spare&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will spare him, holy father,&rdquo; said Gilbert
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not <i>him</i>, but <i>yourself</i>, brother,&rdquo; said Alexander; and
+ Gilbert was silenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding how favorably both Pope and King were disposed toward him, Becket
+ left his retreat at St. Omer, and was received with much respect by Louis
+ at Soissons, after which he proceeded to Sens. There he was treated with
+ high honor by Alexander, and almost his first measure was to confess, with
+ deep grief, that he considered his election uncanonical, &ldquo;the handiwork of
+ men, and not of God,&rdquo; and that therefore these troubles had fallen on his
+ Church. He therefore gave up his see; but the Pope would not accept his
+ resignation, and assigned to him the Cistercian Abbey of Pontigny as his
+ dwelling-place. Here he remained two years, while the King persecuted his
+ adherents and banished his kindred. Four hundred poor creatures were
+ stripped of their goods, and turned adrift in Flanders, where they must
+ have perished, had not the Count and the Empress Maude taken pity on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXI. DEATH OF BECKET. (1166-1172.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England.</i>
+ 1154. Henry II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1165. William.
+
+ <i>King of France.</i>
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1152. Friedrich II.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ 1159. Alexander III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 1166, Pope Alexander III. returned to Rome, after many vain attempts to
+ reconcile the King and Archbishop, and it was determined that Becket
+ should pronounce sentence of excommunication on the King and his chief
+ followers in his uncanonical proceedings. Henry was at this time seriously
+ ill, and Becket therefore did not include him under the sentence; the
+ others were excommunicated, and this so exasperated Henry, that he
+ intimated to the monks at Pontigny that he should seize all the
+ possessions of the Cistercians in England, if they continued to harbor his
+ enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor monks were much distressed, and laid the letter before their
+ guest, who could, of course, do no other than depart. &ldquo;He who feeds the
+ birds of the air, and clothes the lilies of the field, will provide for me
+ and my fellow-exiles,&rdquo; said he; and he soon after received an invitation
+ from the King of France to choose any castle or convent in his dominions
+ for his abode. He selected the Abbey of St. Columba, a little beyond the
+ walls of Sens, and took leave of the brethren at Pontigny, with such a
+ burst of tears that the abbot remarked them with surprise, and begged to
+ know their cause. &ldquo;I feel that my days are numbered,&rdquo; said Becket; &ldquo;I
+ dreamt, last night, that I was put to death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think you are going to be a martyr?&rdquo; said the abbot. &ldquo;You eat and
+ drink too much for that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know that I am too self-indulgent,&rdquo; said the Arch bishop; &ldquo;but God is
+ merciful, albeit I am unworthy of His favor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Legates were sent by the Pope to negotiate, and many letters were written
+ on either side, but without effect. The difference was said to lie in a
+ nutshell; but where the liberties of the Church were concerned, Becket was
+ inflexible. At the Epiphany, 1169, he was put to a severe trial; Henry
+ himself, who had long been at war with Louis le Jeune, came to Montmirail,
+ to hold a conference and sign a treaty, and he was summoned to attend it.
+ By the advice of the legates and other clergy, Becket had agreed to give
+ up the phrase which had formerly given the King so much offence at
+ Clarendon, &ldquo;Saving the privileges of my order,&rdquo; but not without inserting
+ in its stead an equivalent, &ldquo;Saving the honor of God,&rdquo; which, as being
+ concerned in that of the Church, meant the same thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet on this the clergy of France, who were always extremely submissive to
+ the crown, were by no means of Becket&rsquo;s opinion, and tried so hard to
+ persuade him, for the sake of peace, to suppress this clause altogether,
+ and make no reservation, that the bold and faithful Herbert de Bosham
+ began to fear he might give way, and, pressing through the crowd as the
+ Archbishop was advancing to the presence of the two kings, he whispered in
+ his ear, &ldquo;Take heed, my lord&mdash;walk warily. I tell you truly, if you
+ leave out the words, &lsquo;Saving God&rsquo;s honor,&rsquo; as you suppressed the other
+ phrase, saving your own order, your sorrow will be renewed, and the more
+ bitterly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The throng was so dense, that Becket could only answer him by a look, and
+ he remained in great anxiety as he watched his master advance and throw
+ himself at the feet of King Henry; then, when raised up by the King, begin
+ to speak, accusing himself of being by his unworthiness, the cause of the
+ troubles of the English Church. &ldquo;Therefore,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I throw myself on
+ your mercy and pleasure, my lord, on the whole matter that lies between
+ us, only <i>saving the honor of my God.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry burst out in rage and fury, heaping on Becket a load of abuse;
+ declaring, to the King of France that this was all a pretence and that he
+ himself was willing, to leave the Archbishop to the full as much power as
+ any of his predecessors, but that he knew that, whatever the Archbishop
+ disapproved, he would say was contrary to God&rsquo;s honor. &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Henry,
+ &ldquo;there have been many kings of England before me, some of greater power
+ than I am, some of less; and there have been many archbishops of
+ Canterbury before him. Now let him behave to me as the holiest of his
+ predecessors behaved to the least of mine, and I am satisfied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was apparent reason in this, that brought over Louis to Henry&rsquo;s
+ side, and he said, rather insultingly, &ldquo;My lord Archbishop, do you wish to
+ be more than a saint?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Becket stood firm. He said there had indeed been holier and greater
+ archbishops before him, each one of whom had corrected some abuse of the
+ Church; and had they corrected all, he should not have been exposed to
+ this fiery trial. Besides, the point was, that Henry was not leaving the
+ Church as it had been under them, but seeking to bind a yoke on her that
+ they had never borne. Almost all the French clergy and nobles were now
+ against him; they called him obstinate and proud; the two kings mounted
+ their horses and rode away together, without bidding him farewell; and
+ some of the last words his clerks heard from the French nobles were, &ldquo;He
+ has been cast out by England; let him find no support in France.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dreading what might come next, and grievously disappointed in their hopes
+ of returning to their homes, even his clerks were out of humor, and blamed
+ his determination. As they rode back in the gloom toward St. Columba, the
+ horse of one happened to stumble, and in his vexation he exclaimed, &ldquo;Come
+ up, saving the honor of the Church and my order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Archbishop looked grieved, but was silent, and Herbert took this
+ moment for riding up to him, and saying, &ldquo;Heaven be praised, my lord, that
+ through all to-day&rsquo;s tribulation you have been sustained by the Lord, and
+ have not suffered that slippery member to betray you into anything against
+ the honor of God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great ground of anxiety was the displeasure of Louis, who had hitherto
+ not only allowed the exiles to take shelter in his dominions, but
+ absolutely maintained them; and if he was won over by their persecutors,
+ what was to become of them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their alarm increased as they heard nothing from him of his usual messages
+ of kindness and friendship, and they were consulting together on their
+ plans if they should be turned out of St. Columba.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never fear,&rdquo; said the Archbishop; &ldquo;I am the only person King Henry wishes
+ to injure: if I go away, no one will molest you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for you we are anxious,&rdquo; they said; &ldquo;we do not see where you can
+ find refuge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Care not for me,&rdquo; he said: &ldquo;my God can protect me. Though England and
+ France are closed against me, I shall not be undone. I will not apply to
+ those Roman robbers, who do nothing but plunder the needy. I have heard
+ that the people who dwell on the banks of the Arar, in Burgundy, are
+ open-handed. I will go among them, on foot, with one comrade, and they
+ will surely have compassion on me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then a messenger came to desire the Archbishop to come to the
+ lodgings of the French King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There! it is to drive us out of his kingdom,&rdquo; said one of the clerks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not forebode evil,&rdquo; returned Becket. &ldquo;You are not a prophet, nor the
+ son of a prophet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becket could hardly have been prepared for the manner of his reception.
+ Louis threw himself on his knees, crying out, &ldquo;My father, forgive me; you
+ were the only wise man among us. We were all blinded and besotted, and
+ advised you to make God&rsquo;s honor give way to a man&rsquo;s will! I repent of it,
+ my father, and entreat you to bestow on me absolution!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis had been brought to this change of mind by a breach of promise on
+ Henry&rsquo;s part, but he never again wavered in his confidence and support of
+ Becket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the November of the same year there was another interview between the
+ two kings and Becket, at Montmartre, near Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, the Bishops of London and Salisbury had been excommunicated
+ for disobedience to their primate; and Henry, expecting the same stroke to
+ fall on himself, was resolved to put an end to the quarrel, and, bringing
+ back Becket to his kingdom, to deal with him there as best he might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Becket did not, by any means, trust the King&rsquo;s intentions, and had written
+ to ask the Pope what pledge for his security he had better require.
+ Alexander answered, that it was not accordant with the character of an
+ ecclesiastic to stipulate for such pledges, but that he had better content
+ himself with obtaining from the King a kiss of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this kiss Henry would not give. He said he had sworn an oath never to
+ kiss the Archbishop, and this refusal immediately convinced every one that
+ evil was intended. Louis and all the Archbishop&rsquo;s friends concurred in
+ advising him never to come to any terms without this seal of friend ship,
+ and entirely on this ground the treaty was broken off. One of Becket&rsquo;s
+ clergy remarked, that the meeting had taken place on the spot where St.
+ Denys was put to death, adding, &ldquo;It is my belief that nothing but your
+ martyrdom will insure peace to the Church.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; said Becket; &ldquo;God grant that she may be redeemed, even at the
+ sacrifice of my life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began to make up his mind that, since the King had given up the point
+ at issue, he ought to allow no regard for his personal safety to keep him
+ away from his flock; but just at this point the quarrel became further
+ complicated. Henry, in dread of excommunication, resolved to have his son
+ Henry crowned, to reign jointly with him, and the difficulty arose that no
+ one could lawfully perform the coronation but the primate. Letters
+ prohibiting the bishops from taking part in the coronation were sent by
+ Becket, but, in the meantime, Gilbert Folliot had been appealing to Rome
+ against his own excommunication. The Pope, who had been shuffling
+ throughout, would not absolve him himself, but gave him letters to the
+ Archbishops of Rouen and Nevers, and they granted him absolution; on which
+ he returned triumphant to England, and joined with Roger of York and
+ Hilary of Chichester in setting the crown on the head of young Henry. It
+ was a measure which every person concerned in it had bitterly to rue&mdash;king,
+ prince, bishops, every one, except Margaret, young Henry&rsquo;s wife, who
+ steadily avoided receiving the crown from any one but her old tutor and
+ friend, the primate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pope and Archbishop both agreed that this contempt of prohibition must be
+ visited by excommunication; and as Alexander had about this time
+ effectually humbled the pride of the Emperor Frederick, Henry thought it
+ time to submit, at least in appearance, lest his realm should be laid
+ under an interdict. At Freitval, therefore, he met the Archbishop in the
+ autumn of 1170, and all was arranged. He consented to the excommunication
+ of those concerned in the coronation; he held Becket&rsquo;s stirrup; he did
+ everything but give the kiss of peace, but that he constantly avoided.
+ Even when they went to church together at Tours, when, in the course of
+ the communion service, Henry must have received the kiss from the
+ Archbishop, he contrived to change the service to the mass for the dead,
+ in which the kiss did not occur. The last time the King and Archbishop met
+ was at Chaumont, near Blois, and here they had a return of old feelings,
+ talked cheerfully and in a friendly manner, and Henry was so much touched
+ by his remembrance of his happiest and best days, when his noble
+ Chancellor was his friend and counsellor, that he exclaimed, &ldquo;Why will you
+ not do as I wish you? I would put all my affairs into your hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Becket told his clerks that he recollected, &ldquo;All these things will I
+ give Thee, if Thou wilt fall down and worship me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They parted for the last time, and Becket prepared for his return, after
+ his seven years&rsquo; exile, sending before him letters from the Pope,
+ suspending the Archbishop of York, and excommunicating the other bishops
+ who had assisted at the coronation. At every step warnings met him that
+ the English coast was beset with his foes, lying in wait to murder him;
+ but he was resolved to proceed, and bold Herbert helped to strengthen his
+ resolution by his arguments. On the 3d of December he set sail from the
+ Boulogne coast. &ldquo;There is England, my lord!&rdquo; cried the rejoicing clerks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are glad to go,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but, before forty days, you will wish
+ yourself anywhere else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With extreme joy did the people of Sandwich see, for the first time for
+ seven years, the archepiscopal cross, as it stood high above the prow of
+ the ship. They thronged to receive their pastor and ask his blessing, and
+ in every village through which he passed the parish priest came forth,
+ with cross or banner, his flock in procession behind him, and the bells
+ pealing merrily, while the road was strewed with garlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Canterbury the joy was extreme; anthems were sung in all the churches,
+ and the streets resounded with trumpets and the shouts of the people in
+ their holiday robes. The Archbishop rode through the midst, saluted each
+ of the monks of Christ Church on the cheek, and then went straight to his
+ own cathedral, where his greeting to his flock was a sermon on the text,
+ &ldquo;Here we have no abiding city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After taking possession of his palace, Becket set out to London to visit
+ his pupil, the young King, taking him a present of a fine horse; but he
+ was not allowed to see him, and the courtiers threatened him severely,
+ because of the rejoicings of the citizens of London. At home he was much
+ annoyed by his old enemy, Ranulf de Broc, who from Saltwood Castle made
+ forays on all that were going to the archiepiscopal palace, stole his
+ baggage, and cut off the tail of one of the poor horses that carried it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bishops who had been placed under the censures of the Church were,
+ meanwhile, in violent anger. Roger of York said he had 8,000 crowns in his
+ coffers, and would spend every one of them in beating down Thomas&rsquo;s
+ insolence: and together they all set out to make their complaints to the
+ King, who was at Falaise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would seem that Henry either forgot, or did not choose to tell them, of
+ the permission he had given Becket at Freital, and he went into a passion,
+ saying, if all who were concerned in the coronation were to be
+ excommunicated, he ought to be one. The Archbishop of York talked of
+ patience and good contrivance. &ldquo;What would you have me do?&rdquo; said Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your barons must advise you,&rdquo; said one of the bishops (which, is not
+ known); &ldquo;but as long as Thomas lives, you will never be at peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry&rsquo;s eyes flashed. &ldquo;A curse,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;on all the false varlets I
+ have maintained, who have left me so long subject to the insolence of a
+ priest, without attempting to rid me of him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A council of the barons was called, and Henry found them willing enough to
+ advise him as he wished. &ldquo;The only way to deal with such a fellow,&rdquo; said
+ one, &ldquo;is to plait a few withe in a rope, and have him up to a gallows.&rdquo; In
+ the midst of the council, however, it was observed that four of the King&rsquo;s
+ knights were missing&mdash;Reginald Fitzurse, William Tracy, Hugh
+ Morville, and William Brito. It was remembered that they had heard the
+ King&rsquo;s words about the insolent priest, and, becoming alarmed for the
+ consequences, Henry sent off the Earl of Mandeville, and some others, with
+ orders to overtake them, and arrest the Archbishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four knights had held a hasty council, after which they set out
+ separately, agreeing to meet in Saltwood Castle, where they were sure of
+ assistance in their designs from Randolf de Broc. They reached it on
+ Innocents&rsquo; day, and the next day set out for Canterbury, accompanied by
+ several of the Broc family and their armed retainers. In the meantime,
+ Becket had been keeping Christmas, and preaching his last sermon on the
+ text, &ldquo;Peace on earth, good-will to men.&rdquo; He had sent away his
+ cross-bearer, Alexander Llewellyn, and his high-minded friend, Herbert de
+ Bosham, with letters to the Pope&mdash;perhaps because he was afraid that
+ Herbert&rsquo;s boldness might bring him into peril; and he was sitting in his
+ own chamber writing, when the four knights arrived, and desired to speak
+ with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received them with his clergy about him, and they began to threaten him
+ in the name of the King, and order him to leave the kingdom. He must fully
+ have understood the meaning of all this; but he stood firm, and quietly
+ answered all their railing. They then told him his doings should recoil on
+ his own head; and on his replying that he was ready to suffer martyrdom,
+ they noisily left the room, Fiturse shouting out, &ldquo;Ho! clerks and monks,
+ in the King&rsquo;s name seize that man, and keep him till justice is done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will find me here,&rdquo; answered Becket, standing by the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knights had gone back to arm themselves and join their retainers. In
+ the meantime the terrified clergy fastened all the doors of the monastery,
+ and besought the Archbishop to take shelter in the church; but he seemed
+ the only person present who had no fear, and replied that he would not
+ flee&mdash;he would remain where he was. At last he was persuaded to come
+ into church, as it was the hour for vespers, and set off, with the cross
+ borne before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord! my lord! they are arming!&rdquo; cried one frightened monk; and
+ another brought word that they were upon them&mdash;Robert de Broc having
+ shown them the way through the orchard. Still Becket was calm; and as the
+ monks tried to drag him into the church, he stood at the door, saying, &ldquo;Go
+ on with the holy service. As long as you are afraid of death, I will not
+ enter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They proceeded, and he advanced up the aisle. As he was going up the steps
+ to the altar, there was a rush of monks into the church; for Reginald
+ Fitzurse, with a drawn sword, had just come through the cloister door, the
+ other murderers following. Becket turned, on seeing the monks trying to
+ bolt and bar the church doors. &ldquo;It is not right,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;to make a
+ fortress of the house of prayer. It can protect its own, even if its doors
+ are open. We shall conquer our enemies by suffering, not by fighting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vespers ceased; the clergy threw themselves on the altars for
+ protection; the Archbishop stood alone with one canon, with Fitzstephen
+ and Edward Grim, a priest who had come to visit him. In rushed the band of
+ armed men, crying out, &ldquo;Where is the traitor, Thomas Becket?&rdquo; To this he
+ made no answer; but when the cry was, &ldquo;Where is the Archbishop?&rdquo; he came
+ down the steps, saying, &ldquo;Here I am; no traitor, but a priest of the Lord.
+ What would you of me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Absolve those you have excommunicated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have not repented, and I will not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you shall die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am ready, for the Lord&rsquo;s sake; but, in the name of Almighty God, I
+ forbid you to harm these, whether priests or laymen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Flee, or you are a dead man!&rdquo; cried one, striking him with the back of
+ his sword, and unwilling, apparently, to slay him in the church. They
+ tried to push him away from the pillar against which he was standing, but
+ in vain. Becket was a tall, powerful man, expert in the use of weapons.
+ Had he snatched a sword from one of these, he might have saved his life;
+ but temporal arms he had long since laid aside, and he only stood still,
+ clasped his hands in prayer, and commended his soul to his God. Reginald
+ Fitzurse began to fear the people might break in to his rescue, and struck
+ a blow which wounded his head, as well as the arm of Edward Grim, who fled
+ to the altar; but Becket did not move hand or foot&mdash;only, as the
+ blood flowed from his face, he said, &ldquo;In the name of Christ, and for the
+ defence of the Church, I am ready to die.&rdquo; Tracy struck him again twice on
+ the head: he staggered, and, as he was falling, the fourth stroke, given
+ by Brito, cleft off the top of his skull with such violence, that the
+ sword broke against the pavement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The murderers, after making sure of his death, left the church; the monks
+ took up his corpse, unwounded, save the crown of his head, which was
+ shattered to pieces above his tonsure, and laid it out on the high altar,
+ deeming that he had indeed been a sacrifice, and weeping as they beheld
+ the beauty of his peaceful expression, as if he had calmly fallen asleep.
+ They folded outward the haircloth shirt he had always worn secretly; and
+ as the blood still trickled from the wound, it was caught in a dish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The threats of Randolf de Broc obliged them to bury him in haste the next
+ morning; and they were strictly forbidden to place his coffin among those
+ of the former archbishops&mdash;a command which they obeyed, from the
+ dread that otherwise his remains might be insulted. They had not long to
+ fear. Europe rang with horror at the crime, and admiration, rather than
+ compassion, for the victim. No one was more shocked than the King himself,
+ who was at Bure, in Normandy, when the news reached him. For three days he
+ remained shut; up in his room, taking no food, and seeing no one, in an
+ agony of grief and dismay at the consequence of his hasty words, and
+ dwelling on those days of early friendship which he had passed with the
+ murdered Becket. Not till these first paroxysms of grief were over was he
+ even able to think of the danger he was in; and he then sent off an
+ embassy to explain to the Pope how far he was from intending the bloody
+ deed, and to entreat forgiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was at a loss how to treat the murderers. He could not punish what his
+ own words had been supposed to authorize, and he dared not let them
+ escape, lest he should be supposed to be their defender. He therefore let
+ them reap the benefit of the liberties for which Becket had died: their
+ crime was done on the person of a clerk; therefore it was left to the
+ censures of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had, in the meantime, fled to Morville&rsquo;s Castle, in Cumberland, where
+ they found themselves regarded with universal execration; their servants
+ shrank from their presence, and, in the exaggerations of tradition, it was
+ said that the very dogs would not approach them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overwhelmed with remorse, they set out for Italy, and dreaded and avoided,
+ as if they bore a mark like the first &ldquo;murderer and vagabond,&rdquo; they threw
+ themselves at the feet of the Pope, and entreated to know what they should
+ do to obtain mercy. He ordered them to go on pilgrimage to Jerusalem; and
+ they all went except Tracy, who, lingering behind, was seized with a
+ dreadful illness, and died at Cosenza. The others all died within three
+ years, with deep marks of penitence, and were buried before the door of
+ the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry obtained pardon from the Pope on giving up all attempts at
+ subjecting the Church to the law of the State, and on giving a large sum
+ of money to maintain 200 knights for three years in the Holy Land. He also
+ largely endowed Mary and Agnes Becket, the Archbishop&rsquo;s sisters, with
+ possessions in his newly-conquered domain in Ireland; and one of them
+ became the ancestress of the noble family of Butler, Earls of Ormonde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cathedral at Canterbury had, in the meantime, been sprinkled with holy
+ water, to purify it from the crime of sacrilege and murder there
+ committed, and for which it had been a whole year left neglected, and
+ without the celebration of Divine service. On its reopening, gifts poured
+ in from all quarters, in honor of the Archbishop, and it was repaired and
+ beautified to a great degree. The beautiful circular chapel at the east
+ end was named Becket&rsquo;s Crown, and the spot by the north transept, where he
+ fell, was termed The Martyrdom. Reports of miracles having been performed
+ at his intercession were carried to Rome, and Pope Alexander canonized him
+ as St. Thomas of Canterbury. The next year, 1174, Henry II., who was
+ broken down with grief at the rebellion of his sons, rode from Southampton
+ to Canterbury without resting, taking no food but bread and water, entered
+ the city, and walked through the streets barefoot to the cathedral, and
+ into the crypt, where he threw himself prostrate on the ground, while
+ Gilbert Folliot preached to the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the chapter-house Henry caused each of the clergy present, to the
+ number of eighty, to strike him over the shoulders with a knotted cord,
+ and afterward spent the whole night beside the tomb. He heard mass the
+ next morning, and returned to London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years after, Louis VII. came to pray at the tomb of his friend for
+ the recovery of his son Philippe Auguste, who was ill of a fever. He made
+ splendid gifts to the cathedral, and in especial a very large diamond, and
+ a golden cup. In Italy Thomas was equally honored. William the Good, of
+ Sicily, who married Joan, daughter to Henry II., placed a colossal statue
+ of St. Thomas of Canterbury in his new foundation, the Church of Monreale;
+ and at Agnani there is still preserved a richly-embroidered cope,
+ presented by Pope Innocent III., bearing thirty-six different scenes in
+ delicate needlework, and among them the death of the English Archbishop.
+ There are also many German and French representations of the subject; the
+ murderers, in the more ancient ones, carefully distinguished by their
+ shields: Morville, <i>fretty fleur-de-lis</i>; Tracy, <i>two bars gules</i>;
+ Brito, <i>three bears, heads muzzled</i>; Fitzurse, <i>three bears passant</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Henry III.&lsquo;s reign a new shrine was built at Canterbury, and the
+ Archbishop&rsquo;s relics were thither translated. No saint in England was more
+ popular than St. Thomas of Canterbury, and frequent pilgrimages were made
+ to his shrine. The Canterbury Pilgrims of Chaucer are thither journeying,
+ and Simon of Sudbury, the archbishop killed by Wat Tyler&rsquo;s mob, is said to
+ have made himself unpopular by rebuking the superstition that made the
+ ignorant believe in the efficacy of these pilgrimages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the reaction. Henry VIII., little able to endure such a saint as
+ Becket, sent the spoilers to Canterbury. Lord Cromwell burnt his relics,
+ and carried off the treasures of gold and jewels, which filled two chests,
+ so heavy that six or eight men were wanted to carry each of them. Henry
+ wore Louis VII.&lsquo;s diamond in a ring. The costly shrine was destroyed, and
+ the pavement, worn by the knees of the pilgrims, alone remained to show
+ where Becket&rsquo;s tomb had been. In London, the house of Gilbert à Becket, in
+ Southwark, where the Saracen lady had ended her toilsome journey, and
+ where Thomas had been born, had, in Henry III.&lsquo;s reign, been made a
+ hospital; Edward VI. granted it for the same use; and thus it still
+ remains, by its old name of St. Thomas&rsquo;s Hospital, which perhaps would not
+ so generally be given it, if it were known after what saint it was so
+ called. His likeness was destroyed in every church and public building, so
+ that but one head of St. Thomas à Becket is known to exist in England&mdash;namely,
+ one in stained glass, at the village of Horton, in Ribblesdale&mdash;and
+ even in missals and breviaries it was defaced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one has met with more abuse than Becket, ever since the Reformation.
+ Proud, ostentatious, hypocritical, and rebellious&mdash;these are the
+ terms usually bestowed on him. How far he deserves them, may be judged
+ from a life detailed with unusual minuteness by three intimate companions,
+ none of them treating him as faultless. Of the rights of the struggle we
+ will not speak. No one can doubt that Becket gave his life for the cause
+ which, in all sincerity, he deemed that of the Church against the World.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fate of the murderers has been questioned in later times. It is said
+ that they died at home, in peace and fair prosperity; but the evidence on
+ either side is nearly balanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXII. THE CONQUEST OF IRELAND. (1172)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Few histories are more strange and confused than the Irish. The
+ inhabitants of Ierne, or Erin, as far as anything credible can be
+ discovered about them, were of three different nations, who had in turn
+ subdued the island before the beginning of history. These were the Tuath
+ de Dunans, the Firbolg, and the Scots, or Milesians. Who the two first
+ were, we will not attempt to say, though Irish traditions declare that
+ some of them were there before the Flood, and that one Fintan was saved by
+ being transformed into a salmon, and so swimming about till the water
+ subsided, after which he resumed the human form, and lived so long that
+ the saying was, &ldquo;I could tell you much, if I was as old as Fintan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Milesians are not much behind their predecessors in their claim, for
+ they say they are descended from a son of Japhet, and first discovered
+ writing, and all the arts commonly said to have been derived from Egypt,
+ but which they assert were carried thither by one Neill, who gave his name
+ to the river Nile, as well as to his sons, all the O&rsquo;Neills of Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is more certain that these Milesians were Kelts, and were in early
+ times called Scots. A colony of them conquered the Picts; drove the
+ Caledonians into Galway, and gave North Britain, or Albin the name of
+ Lesser Scotland, while their own country, or Greater Scotia, returned to
+ its former name of Erin, called by the Romans Hibernia, and by the
+ English, Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Erse tongue is nearly the same as the Gaelic, and there was much in
+ the Irish and Highland institutions showing their common origin. The clan
+ system prevailed in Ireland, the clans being called Septs, and all having,
+ as a surname, the name of the common ancestor. His representative, the
+ chief, was known as the Carfinny; but the succession was not determined by
+ the rules of primogeniture. It was always in one family, but the choice was
+ made by election of the next heir. When a Carfinny died, another came into
+ office who had been chosen on his accession as heir, or Tanist, and at the
+ same time another Tanist was chosen to succeed him as Carfinny at his
+ death. The land was the property of the tribe, divided into holdings; and
+ whenever the death of a considerable proprietor took place, there was a
+ fresh allotment of the whole, which, of course, as well as the choice of a
+ Tanist, set the whole population at war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were four kingdoms&mdash;Ulster, Munster, Leinster, and Connaught&mdash;to
+ which the chiefs succeeded by tanistry, besides Meath, another kingdom
+ which always belonged to the principal king, or Toparch, who was in like
+ manner elected as Tanist on each new accession; and the number of battles
+ and murders among these wild Irish princes is beyond all estimate. Out of
+ 178 kings, 71 were slain in battle, and 60 murdered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christianity was brought to Ireland about the year 400, by St. Colman and
+ St. Patrick. It does not seem to have materially softened the manners of
+ the people at large, whose wars went on as fiercely as ever; but the
+ churches were seats of peace and learning, whence teachers went forth in
+ numbers into Gaul, and among the heathen Saxons of England. The Roman
+ calender shows so many names of Irish hermits, priests, and nuns, that we
+ do not wonder Erin once was known as the Isle of Saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Northmen made their cruel inroads on Ireland, and swept away much of
+ the beginnings of civilization. Turges, a Danish chief, was, in 815, King
+ of all Ireland; and having forced Melachlin, or Malachy, King of Meath, to
+ give up his daughter to him, Melachlin sent with her, in the disguise of
+ female attendants, sixteen young men armed with skeynes, or long knives.
+ They killed Turges, and brought the princess back to her father, who was
+ waiting in ambush at no great distance with his armed men, set upon the
+ Danes, defeated them, and, being joined by the other Irish princes,
+ destroyed them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that shortly before, Melachlin, when at the court of Turges,
+ had told him that Ireland was full of a kind of foul, ravenous bird, and
+ asked his advice how to get rid of them; to which Turges answered, that he
+ had better destroy the nests&mdash;eggs, nestlings, and all&mdash;counsel
+ which the Irish hardly needed; and the massacre of the Danish raven&rsquo;s
+ brood was frightful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the lull brought about by Alfred&rsquo;s conquests, the Irish enjoyed the
+ halcyon days remembered as those of Malachy with the collar of gold (which
+ he had torn from the neck of a conquered Dane), and those of Brien
+ Boromhe, or Boru, the great Brien, in whose reign a maiden, though
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rich and rare were the gems she wore,&rdquo;
+ travelled safely round the Green Isle unprotected,
+ save by &ldquo;Erin&rsquo;s honor and Erin&rsquo;s pride.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But when England suffered again, Ireland shared its fate, and, in 1004,
+ Brien Boru, at the age of eighty-eight, perished in the great battle of
+ Clontarf, with his eldest son Morogh, and the Danes gained a permanent
+ settlement, besides making endless forays on the coast. King Olaf
+ Trygvesson, of Norway, conducted one of these descents; and while driving
+ off a large herd of cattle, a peasant so piteously entreated to have his
+ own cows restored, that the king told him he might take them, if he could
+ tell at once which they were, but that he must not delay the march. The
+ peasant said his dog knew them, and sent the animal into the midst of the
+ herd, which consisted of several hundreds, when he drove out just the
+ number his master had asked, and all bearing the same mark. The King
+ desired to purchase the intelligent animal, but the man begged that he
+ would take it as a gift; on which Olaf presented him with a gold ring, and
+ kept and valued the faithful Vige as &ldquo;the best of dogs&rdquo; for many years
+ after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turlogh, the contemporary of the Conqueror, seems to have been prosperous,
+ since his subjects were rich enough to buy the unfortunate English, who
+ were sold for slaves, till St. Wulstan put a stop to the traffic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morogh O&rsquo;Brien, of Leinster, sent to William Rufus bog oak from the green
+ of Oxmanton, on the Liffey, to serve for the timber of the roof of
+ Westminster Hall; and this wood, enjoying the universal Irish exemption
+ from vermin, is said never to harbor a spider. Morogh was once told that
+ William Rufus intended to make a bridge of his ships, and conquer Ireland.
+ After some musing, Morogh asked, &ldquo;Hath the King, in his great threatening,
+ said, &lsquo;If it please God?&rsquo;&rdquo; &ldquo;No!&rdquo; &ldquo;Then, seeing he putteth his trust only
+ in man, and not in God, I fear not his coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morogh was a peaceable man. Magnus, the Norse King of Man, by way of
+ defiance, sent him his shoes, ordering him to hang them on his shoulders
+ on Christmas-day, as he passed through his hall. The Irish were, of
+ course, much enraged at the insult offered to their master, but Morogh
+ only laughed at the folly of the conceit, saying, &ldquo;I will not only bear
+ his shoes, but I had rather eat them, than that he should destroy one
+ province in Ireland.&rdquo; Magnus did not, however, give up his purpose of
+ invasion, but was killed in reconnoitring the coast. Morogh was murdered
+ at Dublin about 1130, and thenceforward all was dire confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irish Church had never been decidedly under the dominion of Rome, and
+ the Popes, in the divided state of the country, obtained neither money nor
+ obedience from it. They thought much advantage might be gained if it were
+ under the rule of England; and in 1154, Adrian IV., assuming that all
+ islands were at the disposal of the Church, gave Henry II. a bull,
+ authorizing him to become Lord of Ireland, provided he would establish the
+ Pope&rsquo;s authority there. However, the Irish, not being likely readily to
+ receive their new Lord, and Henry having full occupation at home, allowed
+ his grant to rest in oblivion till circumstances arose to enable him to
+ avail himself of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dermod MacMorogh, King of Leinster, a cruel savage, who had barbarously
+ revenged the death of his father, the good Morogh, had, in the year 1152,
+ stolen away Devorghal, the wife of Tigheirnach O&rsquo;Rourke, Prince of
+ Breffny. The toparch, Turlogh O&rsquo;Connor, was the friend of O&rsquo;Rourke, and
+ forced Dermod to make restitution, but the husband and lover, of course,
+ remained bitter enemies; and when O&rsquo;Connor died, the new chieftain,
+ O&rsquo;Lachlan, being on the side of Dermod, O&rsquo;Rourke was severely oppressed,
+ till the tables were turned by O&rsquo;Lachlan being killed, and Roderick
+ O&rsquo;Connor, the son of Turlogh, becoming toparch. Thereupon Leinster was
+ invaded in 1167, and Dermod was obliged to flee, setting fire to his
+ capital at Ferns. He hastened to Henry II. in Normandy, and offered his
+ allegiance, provided the King would restore him. But Henry was too much
+ engaged in his disputes with France to attend to the matter, and all
+ Dermod could obtain was a letter permitting the English knights to take up
+ his cause, if they were so inclined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these letters Dermod sought the fierce Normans whose estates bordered
+ on Wales. The first who attended to him was Richard de Clare, son of the
+ Earl of Pembroke, and surnamed Strongbow&mdash;a bold, adventurous man,
+ ruined by his extravagance, and kept at a distance by the King on account
+ of his ambition. To him Dermod offered the hand of his daughter Eva, and
+ the succession of Leinster, provided he would recover for him the kingdom.
+ Richard accepted, but thought it prudent to obtain the King&rsquo;s special
+ permission; and in the meantime, Dermod, by his promises, further engaged
+ in his cause a small band of other knights&mdash;Robert Fitzstephen,
+ Maurice Fitzgerald, Milo Fitzhenry, Hervé de Montmarais, and some others.
+ In May, 1169, thirty knights, sixty men-at-arms, and three hundred
+ archers, landed at the Creek of Bann, near Wexford, to conquer Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They first besieged Wexford, and took it; then attacked the Prince of
+ Ossory, and gained a great victory; after which they had full opportunity
+ of seeing of what a savage they had undertaken the defence, for Dermod
+ mangled with his teeth the face of his chief foe among the slain, to
+ gratify his revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, they fought not for the right, but for the spoil; and when
+ Roderick O&rsquo;Connor sent to declare war against them, and inform them of the
+ true character of their ally, they returned a scornful answer; and, with
+ their heavy armor and good discipline, made such progress against the
+ half-armed Irish kernes, that Richard Strongbow saw the speculation was a
+ good one, and was in haste for his share. He went to the King, to beg him
+ either to give him his inheritance, or to grant him leave to seek his
+ fortune in other lands. &ldquo;Go where thou wilt, for what I care,&rdquo; said Henry.
+ &ldquo;Take Daedalus&rsquo;s wings, and fly away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking this as sufficient consent, Strongbow sent before him 3,000 men
+ under his friend Raymond le Gros, and, landing on St. Bartholomew&rsquo;s day,
+ joined his forces with Dermod, took Waterford, and in a few days was
+ married to Eva. The successes of the English continued, and on the death
+ of Dermod, which took place shortly after, he declared Earl Richard his
+ heir. However, the vassals would not submit to the Englishman, and the
+ invaders were for a time hard beset, and found it difficult to keep the
+ enemy at bay, while the King in great displeasure peremptorily summoned
+ Strongbow to return, and forbade men, horses, or arms to be sent to his
+ aid. On this Richard found himself obliged to make his peace with the
+ King, sending Raymond le Gros and Hervé de Montmarais before him. The King
+ was at Newnham, in Gloucestershire, and at first refused to see him, but
+ soon relented; and Richard, on entering his presence, threw himself on his
+ knees, and gave up to him the city of Dublin, and all other towns and
+ castles on the coast, after which Henry confirmed him in the possession of
+ the rest of Leinster, and made him Seneschal of Ireland, though at the
+ same time confiscating his castles in Pembrokeshire, because his
+ expedition had been unsanctioned. In October of the next year, 1172, Henry
+ himself came to Ireland, with 500 knights and 4,000 men-at-arms. The Irish
+ princes felt that it was needful to submit to such power, nor was it with
+ much reluctance on the part of the toparchs, who had some pride in being
+ under the sway of the mighty Henry Fitzempress, rather than that of the
+ petty chieftain of Meath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry professed not to come as a conqueror, but in consequence of the
+ Pope&rsquo;s grant, and soon received the submission of all the toparchs of
+ Leinster and Munster. Roderick O&rsquo;Connor himself did not hold out, though
+ he would not come to the King, and only met Hugo de Lacy and William Fitz
+ Adhelm on the Shannon, where he swore allegiance, but, as appeared
+ afterward, with a mental reservation&mdash;Connaught he was willing to
+ hold under Henry, but Ireland he neither could nor did yield up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry invited all these new subjects of his to keep Christmas with him at
+ Dublin, where he entertained them in a temporary structure of wicker-work,
+ outside the gates; and after receiving their homage, he gave them a
+ banquet of every kind of Norman delicacy, among which were especially
+ noticed roasted cranes&mdash;a food hitherto held in abhorrence by them,
+ so that partaking of it was a sort of pledge that they were about to
+ forsake their peculiar and barbarous habits. They are said to have been
+ much impressed by the splendor of Henry&rsquo;s gold and jewels, the rich robes
+ of his court, and the chivalrous exercises of the knights and nobles.
+ Afterward he held a synod of the Irish clergy at Cashel, where he caused
+ the bull of Adrian to be read, and regulations were made for the Church,
+ requiring the priests to catechize children and baptize them, enforcing
+ the payment of tithes, and the performance of Divine service, as well as
+ that corpses should receive Christian burial. Henry had intended to
+ subject Ireland to English law, but the danger in which he had been
+ involved by the murder of Becket obliged him to return at Easter, before
+ his arrangements were completed. The lands settled by the Normans around
+ Dublin, which were called the English pale, were alone under English laws;
+ besides five septs&mdash;the O&rsquo;Neills, the O&rsquo;Connors, the O&rsquo;Briens, the
+ O&rsquo;Lachlans, and the MacMoroghs&mdash;all the rest were under the Brehon,
+ or Irish law; and an injury, or even murder done by an Englishman on one
+ of the Irish, was to be atoned for by a fine according to this code.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugo de Lacy, [Footnote: The readers of &ldquo;The Betrothed&rdquo; will here
+ recognise a friend.] constable of Chester, an old, experienced warrior,
+ much trusted by the King, was made governor of Ireland with a grant of the
+ county of Meath. Shortly after, Oraric, a chieftain of that territory,
+ invited De Lacy to a conference on the hill of Tara, whither each party
+ was to come unarmed. The night before the meeting young Griffith, the
+ nephew of Maurice Fitzgerald, dreamt that he saw a herd of wild boars rush
+ upon his uncle and Hugo de Lacy, and tear them to pieces with their tusks.
+ Treating this dream as a warning, he chose seven tall men of his own
+ kindred, armed them well, and, leading them near the place of conference,
+ began to career about with them as if in chivalrous exercises, always
+ watching the assembly on the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time Oraric retired a few steps from the rest, and made a sign, on
+ which an Irishman came forward and gave him his weapons. He instantly fell
+ upon Hugo de Lacy, and would have cloven his skull, if the interpreter had
+ not thrown himself between, and saved his master, with the loss of his own
+ arm. Oraric&rsquo;s men sprung from their ambush, but at the same moment the
+ eight Fitzgeralds rushed to the rescue; the traitor fled, pursued by
+ Griffith, who overtook him, thrust him through with a lance, cut off his
+ head, and sent it to King Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugo de Lacy kept tolerable order until the King recalled him in the
+ troubles occasioned by the rebellion of the young princes, when trusty
+ friends were scarce. Earl Strongbow became governor, and was at once more
+ violent and less firm in the restraint of English and Irish. He quarrelled
+ with Raymond le Gros for presuming to gain the affections of his sister
+ Basilia, and took from him the command, conferring it on Hervé de
+ Montmarais, a person much disliked. Raymond went home to Wales, to receive
+ his inheritance, on his father&rsquo;s death; and the Irish, as old Campion&rsquo;s
+ history says, rose &ldquo;tagge and ragge;&rdquo; headed by Roderick O&rsquo;Connor. They be
+ sieged Waterford and Dublin; and Strongbow, in distress, wrote to Raymond:
+ &ldquo;As soon as you read this, make all the haste you can, bring all the help
+ you can raise, and you shall have what you have so long desired.&rdquo; No
+ further summons was needed; and just as Waterford was on the point of
+ being taken, and the wild Irish were about to massacre the English,
+ Raymond, with twenty ships, sailed into the harbor, dispersed the Irish,
+ relieved Dublin, and in his full armor wedded the Lady Basilia. The very
+ next morning he pursued the Irish; he took Limerick, and reduced Roderick
+ to come to a final peace with the King, to whom that prince sent
+ messengers, disdaining to treat with Strongbow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montmarais, being displaced, went in revenge to the King, and maligned
+ Raymond, so that Henry empowered commissioners to inquire into his
+ conduct, and send him home. Just as he was departing, the O&rsquo;Briens of
+ Thomond broke out in insurrection, and besieged Limerick; the troops
+ refused to march unless under Raymond, and the commissioners were obliged
+ to send him to chastise the rebels. He pushed his conquests into Desmond,
+ and established his good fame. During his absence Earl Strongbow died,
+ leaving, by Eva, one daughter named Isabel, who, being of tender age,
+ became the ward of the Crown. It is said that he also had a son by a
+ former wife, and that this youth, being seized with a panic in a battle
+ with the Irish, was afterward stricken through with a sword by his
+ command, though given with streaming tears. He was buried at Dublin, with
+ an epitaph recording his cowardice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friends of Montmarais were resolved to let no tidings of Strongbow&rsquo;s
+ death reach Raymond, that so they might first gain the ear of the King,
+ and prevent him being made governor. They turned back all the servants,
+ and intercepted all the letters sent to him with the news, till they were
+ outwitted by Lady Basilia. She wrote a letter to her husband, with no word
+ of her brother, but full of household matters; among others, that she had
+ lost the &ldquo;master tooth which had been so long ailing, and she sent it to
+ him for a token.&rdquo; The tooth was &ldquo;tipped with gold and burnished featly,&rdquo;
+ but Raymond knew it was none of his lady&rsquo;s; and gathering her meaning,
+ hurried home, and was made Protector of Ireland till the King&rsquo;s pleasure
+ should be known. Henry sent as governor William Fitz Adhelm, a selfish
+ voluptuary, under whose command all went ill; and, indeed, the English
+ rule never prospered except when in the hands of good old Hugo de Lacy,
+ under whom &ldquo;the priest kept his church, the soldier his garrison, and the
+ ploughman followed his plough.&rdquo; But Henry, who was constantly tormented by
+ jealousies of his Anglo-Irish nobles, was perpetually recalling him on
+ suspicion, and then finding it necessary to send him back again. He built
+ many castles, and, while fortifying that of Dernwath, was entreated by
+ some of the Irish to allow them to work for hire. Glad to encourage any
+ commencement of industry, he took a pickaxe to show them how to work; when
+ one of them, seizing the moment when he bent forward to strike with it,
+ cleft his head with an axe, and killed him on the spot. His less worthy
+ nephew and namesake succeeded to his Irish estates, and at times held the
+ government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King Henry intended Ireland as the inheritance of his son John, and in
+ 1185 wrote to request the Pope to grant him the investiture. Urban
+ returned a favorable answer, and with it a crown of peacock&rsquo;s feathers set
+ in gold&mdash;a more appropriate present than he intended for the
+ feather-pated prince, who was then sixteen years of age, and who, having
+ been knighted by his father, set off for Dublin, accompanied by a train of
+ youths of his own age, whom the steadier heads of the good knight Philip
+ Barry, and his clerkly relative Gerald, were unable to keep in order. This
+ Gerald Barry was the historian commonly known as Giraldus Cambrensis, to
+ whom we are chiefly indebted for the account of the conquest of Ireland.
+ The Irish chiefs of Leinster flocked to pay their respects, but were most
+ improperly received by John and his friends, who could not restrain their
+ mirth at their homely garb, and soon proceeded to gibes and practical
+ jokes; pricking them with pins, and rapping them on the head with a stick
+ as they bent to pay homage, tweaking their ample mantles, and pulling
+ their long beards and moustaches, all as if they had studied to enrage
+ this proud and sensitive people. These were the Irish of the friendly
+ country; and when those of more distant and unsubdued regions heard what
+ treatment they had met, they turned back, and soon broke out in
+ insurrection. John and his gay companions did not stay to meet the storm
+ they had raised, but hastily fled to England, and the King wrote to Sir
+ John de Courcy to take the government, and do his best to restore
+ obedience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is round this De Courcy that the interest of the Irish wars chiefly
+ centres. [Footnote: This history of De Courcy is derived from an old life
+ of him by an Irish priest, which is disputed by many historical
+ authorities] In his youth, while serving the King in Normandy, he had made
+ friends with Sir Almeric Tristrem, and, in true chivalrous style, the two
+ knights plighted their faith in the Church of our Lady at Rouen, to be
+ sworn brethren-in-arms, to live and die for each other, and to divide
+ equally whatever they might gain in war. Their friendship was never broken
+ till death, and their whole career was one of perfect chivalry. Almeric
+ became the husband of his friend&rsquo;s sister, and in honor of this closer
+ alliance changed his surname to De St. Laurence, their wedding-day being
+ the feast of that Saint. The two brethren-in-arms came into Ireland with
+ Henry in 1172, and De Courcy received a grant of Ulster, when he could
+ conquer it. Sir Almeric at once landed at Howth, and fought a bloody
+ battle, in which he gained the victory, but with the loss of seven of his
+ kindred, and for that reason Howth was made his portion, and long remained
+ in his family. At the battle of Daud, fought with Roderick O&rsquo;Connor, the
+ two friends, with seven hundred men, were again victorious, owing to a
+ timely charge of Almeric&rsquo;s with his reserve of forty horse. The next
+ midsummer another battle took place, with the same result, though Sir
+ Almeric was so sorely wounded that he was found lying, faint and bleeding,
+ under a hedge, eating honeysuckles by way of cure, and his son Nicholas
+ received nine wounds, and was left for dead. These successes made the
+ Irish submit, and De Courcy was acknowledged as their feudal chief. He
+ proceeded to build castles, and granted two of them to one MacMahon, who
+ had made every promise of fidelity. Within a month, De Courcy heard that
+ the castles were pulled down, and, on his calling his refractory vassal to
+ account, received a truly Irish answer: MacMahon said he had not promised
+ to hold stones, but land, and it was contrary to his nature to couch
+ within cold stones, when the warm woods were so nigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Courcy proceeded to foray his land, and was driving off a great herd of
+ cattle, when a host of Irish set on him, and by their shouts so frightened
+ the cows, that they ran on the English, and more were killed by being
+ trodden down by them than were slain by the Irish; and De Courcy and De
+ St. Laurence with difficulty collected the remnant in a little fort. At
+ night Almeric went out to survey the enemy, and reported that there were
+ five thousand feasting and drinking at no great distance. If they should
+ fall on the wearied, hungry, and wounded English the next day, they would
+ make them an easy prey, and he therefore advised a night-attack, to take
+ them by surprise. The English sat silent, looking at each other, til Sir
+ John de Courcy spoke: &ldquo;I looked all this while for some of these young
+ gallants to deliver their courage; but, Sir Almeric, where are their
+ horses bestowed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your white horse and my black,&rdquo; said Sir Almeric, &ldquo;I have cunningly
+ conveyed away, and the rest I can point out to you with my finger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Sir John, &ldquo;let two men ride these two horses, gather their
+ horses together, and drive them in on the enemy; then, all who can bear
+ arms shall follow, and we will serve them with their horses as they did us
+ with our kine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stratagem was completely successful; the Irish were entirely routed
+ with great slaughter, while the English lost only two&mdash;though the
+ preceding day had lost them four hundred men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By six battles, altogether, Sir John established his power, and he then
+ received from Henry the rank of Earl of Ulster. He governed Ireland from
+ the time of Prince John&rsquo;s flight till the accession of Richard Coeur de
+ Lion, with great prosperity; and during this time Roderick O&rsquo;Connor was
+ dethroned by his sons, and forced to retire to a convent, where he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King Richard left the management of Irish affairs to his brother, who took
+ the government from De Courcy, and gave it to Hugo de Lacy, the nephew.
+ He, comporting himself as a favorite, of John was likely to do, of course
+ occasioned another war, and Cathal O&rsquo;Connor, the Bloody-handed, of
+ Connaught, began to threaten Ulster. De Courcy summoned Almeric to his
+ aid, and the good knight set out with two hundred foot and thirty horse;
+ but, while passing through the enemy&rsquo;s country, he suddenly found himself
+ beset by Cathal, at the head of an enormous host. The horsemen might
+ easily have saved themselves by their speed; but though death was certain
+ if he remained, this true knight would not forsake the foot in their
+ extremity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Hanmer&rsquo;s affecting words, &ldquo;Sir Almeric turned him to the foot company,
+ and hardly gathering breath with the sorrow of his heart, resolved himself
+ thus: &lsquo;I have no power to fly, and leave my friends, my flesh and blood,
+ in this extreme distress. I will live with them who for my sake came
+ hither, if it so please God; or I will die with them, if it be His
+ pleasure, that, ending here, we shall meet again, bodies and souls, at the
+ last day. God and the world bear witness that we do as Christian knights
+ ought to do. I yield my soul into God&rsquo;s hands; my body to return whence it
+ came; my service to my natural prince; my heart to my wife, and brother
+ Sir John de Courcy; my might, my force, my bloody sweat, to the aid of you
+ all that are in the field.&rsquo; He alighted, kneeled on his knees, kissed the
+ cross of his sword, ran his horse through, saying, &lsquo;Thou shalt never serve
+ against me, that so worthily hast served with me.&rsquo; All the horses were
+ then killed but two, on which he mounted two of the youngest of his
+ followers, bidding them watch the fight from the next hill, then make all
+ speed to bear his greetings to his brother De Courcy, and report that
+ day&rsquo;s service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Irish saw the devoted band so firmly awaiting their attack, they
+ fancied that succor must be near, and did not venture their onset till the
+ whole country had been reconnoitred. Every Englishman was slain, but one
+ thousand Irish also fell, and the death of these brave men was not in
+ vain. Cathal was so impressed by their courage, that he sued for peace,
+ and never ventured another pitched battle. He afterward told Sir Hugo de
+ Lacy that he thought verily there never was the like seen on earth; for,
+ when the Englishmen could not stand, they set themselves back to back, and
+ fought on till the last man was slain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Courcy long survived his faithful brother-in-arms, and stood so high in
+ all men&rsquo;s estimation, that De Lacy in jealousy sent information to King
+ John, soon after the death of Arthur, that the Earl of Ulster was sowing
+ disaffection by accusing him of his nephew&rsquo;s murder. This was the very
+ thing for which John had lately starved to death the Lady de Braose and
+ her children, and he sent orders to De Lacy to attack the person of De
+ Courcy. Every means of open force failed, and De Lacy was reduced to
+ tamper with his servants, two of whom at length informed him that it was
+ vain to think of seizing their master when he had his armor on, as he was
+ of immense strength and skill, nor did he ever lay aside his weapons,
+ except on Good Friday, when he was wont to walk up and down the churchyard
+ of Downe, alone and unarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, De Lacy sent a band of horsemen, who fell upon the betrayed
+ knight. He caught up a wooden cross, and made brave resistance, and so did
+ his two nephews, sons of Sir Almeric, who were with him; but they had no
+ weapon, and were both slain, while De Courcy was overpowered, and carried
+ a prisoner to London. The two traitors begged De Lacy to give them
+ passports to go to England; on which he gave them a sealed paper, on
+ condition of their not opening it themselves, nor returning on pain of
+ death. Now, the paper set forth that they were traitors no better than
+ Judas, and exhorted every true man to spit in their faces, and drive them
+ away. However, these letters were never delivered; for the wretched men
+ were driven, by stress of weather, back on the coast of Ireland, and De
+ Lacy had them hanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Courcy continued in captivity till one of the many disputes between
+ John and Philippe Auguste was to be decided by the ordeal of battle. The
+ most stalwart of all John&rsquo;s subjects was his prisoner, and he immediately
+ sent to release him from the Tower, offering him immense rewards if he
+ would become his champion. The old knight answered that King John himself
+ was not worthy to have one drop of blood shed for him; and as to rewards,
+ he could never requite the wrongs he had done him, nor restore the heart&rsquo;s
+ ease he had robbed him of. For John Lackland he would never fight, nor for
+ such as him, but for the honor of the Crown, and of England, he undertook
+ the cause. The old warrior, wasted with imprisonment, was prepared by good
+ feeding, and received his weapons: the Frenchman fled at once, and De
+ Courcy prepared to return to Ireland. He made fifteen attempts to cross,
+ and each time was forced to put back. At length, as old chronicles relate,
+ he was warned in a dream to make the trial no more: for, said the voice,
+ &ldquo;Thou hast done ill: thou hast pulled down the master, and set up the
+ servant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was thought to refer to his having newly dedicated the cathedral of
+ Downe in the name of St. Patrick, whereas before it had been the Church of
+ the Holy Trinity. He took blame to himself, submitted, and going to
+ France, there died at an advanced age. For his championship, the right of
+ wearing the head covered in the presence of royalty was granted to him and
+ his heirs, and it is still the privilege of his descendants, the Earls of
+ Kinsale;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For when every head is unbonneted
+ They walk in cap and plume.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXIII. THE REBELLIOUS EAGLETS. (1149-1189.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1154. Henry II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1165. William.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1137. Louis VII.
+ 1180. Philippe II.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1152. Friedrich I.
+
+ <i>Popes of Rome</i>.
+ 1154. Adrian IV.
+ 1159. Alexander III.
+ 1181. Lucius III.
+ 1185. Urban III.
+ 1187. Gregory VIII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The gods are just, and of our pleasant sins make whips to scourge us.&rdquo;
+ This saying tells the history of the reign of Henry of the Court Mantle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ambition and ill faith were the crimes of Henry from his youth upward, and
+ he was a man of sufficiently warm affections to suffer severely from the
+ retribution they brought on him, when, through his children, they recoiled
+ upon his head. &ldquo;When once he loveth, scarcely will he ever hate; when once
+ he hateth, scarcely ever receiveth he into grace,&rdquo; was written of him by
+ his tutor, Peter of Blois, and his life proved that it was a true estimate
+ of his character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The root of his misfortunes may be traced to his ambitious marriage with
+ Eleanor of Aquitaine, twelve years older than himself, and divorced by
+ Louis VII. of France on account of her flagrant misconduct in Palestine,
+ in the course of the miserable expedition called the Second Crusade. For
+ her broad lands, he deserted the woman whom he loved, and who had left her
+ home and duty for his sake, and on his promise of marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fair Rosamond Clifford was the daughter of a Herefordshire baron, with
+ whom Henry became acquainted in his seventeenth year, when he came to
+ England, in 1149, to dispute the crown with Stephen. He lodged her at
+ Woodstock, in the tower built, according to ballad lore, &ldquo;most curiously
+ of stone and timber strong,&rdquo; and with such a labyrinth leading to it that
+ &ldquo;none, but with a clue of thread, could enter in or out.&rdquo; There Rosamond
+ remained while he returned to France to receive Normandy and Anjou, on the
+ death of his father, and on going to pay homage to Louis VII., ingratiated
+ himself with Queen Eleanor, whose divorce was then impending. Eleanor and
+ her sister Petronella were joint heiresses of the great duchy of
+ Aquitaine, their father having died on pilgrimage to the shrine of
+ Santiago de Compostella, and the desire of the fairest and wealthiest
+ provinces of the south of France led the young prince to forget his ties
+ to Rosamond and her infant son William, and never take into consideration
+ what the woman must be of whom her present husband was resolved to rid
+ himself at the risk of seeing half his kingdom in the hands of his most
+ formidable enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time Rosamond seems to have been kept in ignorance of Henry&rsquo;s
+ unfaithfulness; but in 1152, the year of his coronation, and of the birth
+ of her second child, Geoffrey, she quitted Woodstock, and retired into the
+ nunnery of Godstow, which the King richly endowed. It has been one of the
+ favorite legends of English history, that the Queen traced her out in her
+ retreat by a ball of silk that had entangled itself in Henry&rsquo;s spurs, and
+ that she offered her the choice of death by the dagger or by poison; but
+ this tale has been refuted by sober proof; there is no reason to believe
+ that Eleanor was a murderess; and it is certain that Rosamond, on learning
+ how she had been deceived, took refuge in the nunnery, where she ended her
+ days twenty years after, in penitence and peace, far happier than her
+ betrayer. Her sons, William and Geoffrey, were honorably brought up, and
+ her remains were placed in the choir, under a silken canopy, with tapers
+ burning round, while the Sisters of the convent prayed for mercy on her
+ soul and King Henry&rsquo;s. Even King John paid the costs of this supposed
+ expiation; but St. Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln, not thinking it well that her
+ history should be before the minds of the nuns, ordered the corpse to be
+ interred in the ordinary burial-place of the convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During most of these twenty years of Rosamond&rsquo;s repentance, all apparently
+ prospered with Henry. The rigorous justice administered by his excellent
+ chancellor, Ranulf de Glanville, had restored order to England; the only
+ man bold enough to gainsay him had been driven from the kingdom. Ireland
+ was in course of conquest, and his astute policy was continually
+ overreaching the simple-minded Louis VI., who, having derived the surname
+ of <i>le jeune</i> from his age at his accession, was so boyish a
+ character all his life as never to lose it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four sons and three daughters were born to Henry and Eleanor, and in their
+ infancy he arranged such alliances as might obtain a still wider power for
+ them&mdash;nay, even the kingdom of France. Louis VI. had married again,
+ but his second wife died, leaving two infant girls, named Margaret and
+ Alice, and to them Henry betrothed his two eldest sons, Henry and Richard.
+ It was to ask the hand of Margaret for the prince that Becket took his
+ celebrated journey to Paris, and the young pair, Henry and Margaret, were
+ committed to his care for education; but the disputes with the King
+ prevented their being sufficiently long in his hands for the correction of
+ the evil spirit of the Angevin princes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By threats of war, Henry obtained for Geoffrey, his third son, Constance,
+ the only child of Conan, Duke of Brittany; though the Bretons, who hated
+ Normans, Angevins, and English with equal bitterness, were extremely angry
+ at finding themselves thus connected with all three. On Conan&rsquo;s death,
+ Geoffrey, then ten years old, was called Duke of Brittany, but his father
+ took the whole government into his hands, and made it a heavy yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John, Count of Mortagne, for whom no heiress had been obtained, was gayly
+ called by his father Lackland&mdash;a name which his after-life fitted to
+ him but too well. Richard was intended to be the inheritor of his mother&rsquo;s
+ beautiful duchy of Aquitaine, where he spent most of his early years. It
+ was a strange country, where the ordinary events of life partook so much
+ of romance that we can hardly believe them real.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had never been so peopled by the Franks as to lose either the language
+ or the cultivation left by the Romans. The <i>langue d&rsquo;oc</i> had much
+ resemblance to the Latin, and was beautifully soft and adapted to poetry;
+ and when the nobles adopted chivalry, they ornamented it with all the
+ graces of their superior education. The talent of improvising verses was
+ common among them; and to be a minstrel, or, as they called it, a
+ troubadour (a finder of verses), was essential to the character of a
+ complete gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Courts of beauty and love took place, where arguments were held on cases
+ of allegiance of a knight to his lady-love, and competitions in poetry, in
+ which the reward was a golden violet. Each troubadour thought it needful
+ to be dedicated to the service of some lady, in whose honor all his
+ exploits in arms or achievements in minstrelsy were performed. To what an
+ extravagant length this devotion was carried, is shown in the story of
+ Jauffred Rudel, Lord of Blieux, who, having heard from some Crusaders a
+ glowing account of the beauty and courtesy of the Countess of Tripoli, on
+ their report made her the object of his affections, and wrote poem after
+ poem upon her, of which one has come down to our times:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;No other love shall e&rsquo;er be mine,
+ None save my love so far away;
+ For one more fair I&rsquo;ll never know,
+ In region near, or far away.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus his last verse may be translated, and his &ldquo;<i>amour luench</i>,&rdquo; or
+ love far away, occurs in every other line. He embarked for Palestine for
+ the sole purpose of seeing his <i>amour luench</i>, but fell sick on the
+ voyage, and was speechless when he arrived. The countess, hearing to what
+ a condition his admiration had brought him, came on board the vessel to
+ see him; the sight of her so charmed him, that he was able to say a few
+ words to her before he expired. She caused him to be buried with great
+ splendor, and erected a porphyry tomb over him, with an Arabic
+ inscription.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The romance of the Languedoçians was unhappily not accompanied by purity
+ of manners, and much of Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s misconduct may be ascribed to the
+ tone prevalent in her native duchy, to which she was much attached. Her
+ brave son, Richard, growing up in this land of minstrelsy, became a
+ thorough troubadour, and loved no portion of his father&rsquo;s domains as well
+ as the sunny south; and his two brothers, Henry and Geoffrey, likewise
+ fell much under the influence of the poetical knights of Aquitaine,
+ especially Bertrand de Born, Viscount de Hautefort, an accomplished noble,
+ who was the intimate friend of all the princes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King&rsquo;s first disappointment was when, at length, a son was born to
+ Louis VI., who had hitherto, to use his own words, &ldquo;been afflicted with a
+ multitude of daughters.&rdquo; This son of his old age was christened &ldquo;Philippe
+ <i>Dieu donné</i>,&rdquo; and the servant who brought the welcome tidings of his
+ birth was rewarded with a grant of three measures of wheat yearly from the
+ royal farm of Gonesse. Soon after, Louis dreamt that he saw his son
+ holding a goblet of blood in his hand, from which his valor was predicted,
+ and he did indeed seem born to visit the offences of the Plantagenets on
+ their own heads. Even while quite a child, when present at a conference
+ between the two kings under the Elm of Gisors, he was shrewd enough to
+ perceive that Henry was unjustly overreaching his father, and surprised
+ all present by exclaiming, &ldquo;Sir, you do my father wrong. I perceive that
+ you always gain the advantage over him. I cannot hinder you now, but I
+ give you notice that, when I am grown up, I will take back all of which
+ you now deprive us.&rdquo; And, by fair means and foul, he kept his word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next Henry began to find that the Church would not allow him to remain in
+ peace while he kept the Archbishop in exile, and the dread of
+ excommunication caused him to obviate the danger of his subjects being
+ released from their oaths of allegiance, by causing his eldest son to be
+ crowned, and receive their homage. The Princess Margaret was in Aquitaine
+ with Queen Eleanor; and when she found that the rights of her former
+ tutor, Becket, were neglected, and the ceremony to be performed by the
+ Archbishop of York, she refused to come to England, and her husband was
+ crowned alone. It was then that his father carved at his banquet, and he
+ made the arrogant speech respecting the son of a count and the son of a
+ king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That year was marked by the murder of the Archbishop, and soon after the
+ storm began to burst. Young Henry, now nineteen years of age, went with
+ his wife to pay a visit to her father at Paris, and returned full of
+ discontent, complaining that he was a king only in name, since he had not
+ even a house to himself, and insisting on his father&rsquo;s giving up to him at
+ once either England, Normandy, or Anjou.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His complaints were echoed by Richard and Geoffrey, who were with their
+ mother in Aquitaine. Richard had received investiture of the county of
+ Poitiers, but the entire authority was in the hands of Castellanes,
+ appointed by his father, and the proud natives were stirring up the young
+ prince to shake off the bondage in which he, like them, was held.
+ Geoffrey, though only fifteen, thought himself aggrieved by not having yet
+ received his wife&rsquo;s duchy of Brittany, and positively refused to pay
+ homage for it to his eldest brother, when newly crowned to repair the
+ irregularity of his first coronation, and for this opposition the
+ high-spirited Bretons forgave his Angevin blood, and looked on him as
+ their champion. The boys&rsquo; discontents were aggravated by their mother, and
+ the state of feeling was so well known in the South, that when Henry and
+ his eldest son came to Limoges to receive the homage of Count Raymond of
+ Toulouse, that noble, on coming to the part of the oath of fealty where he
+ was engaged to counsel his lord against his enemies, added, &ldquo;I should warn
+ you to secure your castles of Poitou and Aquitaine, and to mistrust your
+ wife and sons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry, who was aware of the danger, under pretext of hunting, visited his
+ principal fortresses, and, to guard against the evil designs of his son
+ Henry, caused him to sleep in his own bedroom. At Chinon, however, the
+ youth contrived to elude his vigilance, stole away, and escaped to Paris,
+ where he was received in a manner that reflects great discredit on the
+ French monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the elder Henry sent to Paris to desire the restoration of the
+ fugitive, the messengers found him royally robed, and seated by the side
+ of the French King, who received them, asking from whom they came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From Henry, King of England, Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine, Count of
+ Anjou and Maine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is not true. Here sits Henry, King of England, who has no message to
+ send me by you. But if you mean his father, the late King of England, he
+ has been dead ever since his son has worn the crown; and if he still
+ pretends to be a king, I will soon find a cure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Henry adopted a great seal, and wrote letters to the Pope, his
+ mother, and brothers, exciting them against his father, and putting forth
+ a manifesto declaring that he could not leave unpunished the death of &ldquo;his
+ foster-father, the glorious martyr St. Thomas of Canterbury, whose blood
+ was crying out for vengeance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On receiving these letters, Richard and Geoffrey hurried to meet him at
+ Paris, and Queen Eleanor was following in male attire, when she was seized
+ and made prisoner. Louis caused the two boys to swear that they would
+ never conclude a peace with their father without his consent, and they
+ were joined by great numbers of the Norman and Poitevin nobility, even
+ from among the King&rsquo;s immediate attendants. Each morning some one was
+ missed from his court, and known to be gone over to the enemy, but still
+ Henry outwardly kept up his spirits, conversed gaily, and hunted as usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only once did he give way. Geoffrey, the son of Rosamond, was devotedly
+ attached to him, and had at his own expense raised an army of Brabançons,
+ or mercenary soldiers, and defeated an inroad of the Scots, and he now
+ brought his victorious force to the aid of his father. Rosamond was just
+ dead in her nunnery, and at his first meeting with her son, Henry embraced
+ him with tears, exclaiming, &ldquo;Thou art my true and lawful son!&rdquo; The
+ bishopric of Lincoln was destined to Geoffrey, but he was only twenty, and
+ was unwilling to take orders, thinking himself better able to help his
+ father as a layman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Brabançons were the only troops on whom the King could rely, and with
+ them he marched against the Bretons, who had been encouraged by Louis and
+ their young Duke to rebel. They were defeated, and Louis, not wishing to
+ run further risks, brought the three youths to the Elm of Gisors, and held
+ a conference with them, where Henry showed himself far more ready to
+ forgive than his sons to ask pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterward young Henry and Geoffrey returned to Paris, and Richard to
+ Poitou, whence he soon came to the French court, to receive the order of
+ knighthood from Louis&mdash;another insult to his father. The two queens,
+ Eleanor and Margaret, were in the old King&rsquo;s hands, and kept in close
+ captivity; the younger, who seems to have been a gentle and innocent lady,
+ was soon allowed to join her husband, but Eleanor was retained in
+ confinement at Winchester. As long as his mother, whom he tenderly loved,
+ was imprisoned, Richard thought his resistance justified, and Aquitaine
+ echoed with laments for the Lady of the South in the dungeon of her cruel
+ husband. Bertrand de Born, who had chosen her daughter Eleanor, Queen of
+ Castile, as the object of his songs, was especially ardent in his
+ lamentations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder King&rsquo;s grief at the continued misconduct of his sons led him to
+ humble himself at the tomb of Becket, and the penance he underwent brought
+ on a fever. He thought, however, that he had received a token of pardon,
+ when news was brought that his faithful son Geoffrey of Lincoln, and his
+ chancellor, Ranulf de Glanville, had defeated the King of Scots, William
+ the Lion, and made him prisoner at Prudhoe Castle. But King Henry had far
+ more to suffer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eldest son was invading Normandy, and he was forced to march against
+ him. After a battle at Rouen, the princes were reduced to obedience;
+ Richard was the last of all to be reconciled, believing, as he did, that
+ his cause was his mother&rsquo;s, but he kept his oaths better than either of
+ the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A time of greater quiet succeeded, during which young Henry set out as a
+ knight-errant, going from one country to another in search of
+ opportunities of performing deeds of arms. He came, in 1180, to attend the
+ coronation of young Philippe II., who had just succeeded his father, in
+ his fifteenth year, and had, or pretended to have, a great friendship for
+ Geoffrey of Brittany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard had in the meantime affronted Bertrand de Born, by assisting his
+ brother Constantine, whom he had deprived of his inheritance. Bertrand
+ rebelled with other Poitevins, proceeded to lash up, by verses, young
+ Henry, to join them against Richard, rousing him to be no more a mere king
+ of cowards, who had no lands, and never would have any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry was worked upon to go to his father, and insist on receiving
+ Richard&rsquo;s homage; and as he threatened to take the Cross and go to
+ Palestine, the old King, who doted on him, consented. Richard declared
+ this would be giving up the rights of his mother; and though he consented,
+ at his father&rsquo;s entreaty, for the sake of peace, Henry was now affronted,
+ would not receive it, and, with Geoffrey, placed himself at the head of
+ the rebels of Poitou, and a fresh war broke out, and their father was
+ obliged to come to Richard&rsquo;s aid. It seems to have been about this time
+ that the unhappy King caused a picture to be painted of four eaglets
+ tearing their father&rsquo;s breast. &ldquo;It is an emblem of my children,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;If John has not yet acted like his brethren, it is only because he is not
+ yet old enough!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry and Geoffrey invited their father to a conference in Limoges, which
+ he was besieging; but as he entered the town, a flight of arrows was
+ discharged from the battlements, some of which rattled against his armor,
+ and one pierced his horse&rsquo;s neck. The King held one of them up, saying,
+ &ldquo;Ah, Geoffrey! what has thine unhappy father done that thou shouldest make
+ him a mark for thine arrows?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey treated the matter lightly. His brother was, however, so much
+ shocked, that for a little while he joined his father, swearing he would
+ never again rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few days had passed, before, on some trifling dispute, he again
+ quitted his father, and, vowing he would take the Cross, joined Geoffrey
+ and the rebel Poitevins. But this was indeed his last rebellion. He had
+ scarcely entered the town of Limoges, before a violent fever came on, and
+ in terror of death he sent to entreat his father to come and give his
+ blessing and forgiveness. It was too late. After that last treason, the
+ King could not trust himself in the rebel camp, and only sent the
+ Archbishop of Bordeaux to carry his signet ring, and assure his son of his
+ pardon. He found the unhappy young man in the agonies of death, lying on a
+ bed of ashes, accusing himself of having been a &ldquo;wicked, undutiful son,
+ and bitterly disappointed at not seeing his father, to receive the
+ blessing he had once cast from him, and which in vain he now sought
+ earnestly and with tears.&rdquo; He died, fervently pressing the ring to his
+ lips. Surely his remorse might have served for a warning to his brothers;
+ but when the sorrowful father sent a priest to entreat Geoffrey to make
+ peace over his grave, the fierce youth only answered that it was vain.
+ &ldquo;Our grandmother, the Witch, has left us a doom that none of us shall ever
+ love the rest. It is our heirloom, and the only one of which we can never
+ be deprived!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Limoges was taken, and in it Bertrand de Born, who was led before
+ the King to receive the punishment he deserved, and there he stood silent
+ and dejected. &ldquo;Hast thou nothing to say for thyself?&rdquo; said the King.
+ &ldquo;Where is all thy ready flow of fine words? I think thou hast lost thy
+ wits!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sire!&rdquo; said Bertrand, &ldquo;I lost them the day the brave young King
+ died!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father burst into tears, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Sir Bertrand, thou mightest
+ well lose thy senses with grief for my son. He loved thee more than any
+ man on earth; and I, for love of him, give thee back thy castles and
+ lands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey still held aloof, and spent his time with his friend Philippe of
+ France. At Paris, in 1186, he who called hatred his inheritance, and
+ spurned his father&rsquo;s forgiveness, died without space for asking it,
+ leaving, indeed, his chosen heirloom to his innocent children. He was in
+ his twenty-fifth year, and the handsomest and the most expert in
+ chivalrous exercises of all his brothers; but in the midst of a great
+ tournament he was thrown from his horse, and trampled to death in the
+ throng before his squires could extricate him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard, the second son, inheriting the &ldquo;lyonnous visage&rdquo; that Peter de
+ Blois ascribes to King Henry, and with it the Lion-heart, that gained him
+ his surname, had far more feeling and generosity than his brothers, and,
+ but for King Henry&rsquo;s own crimes, he might have been his blessing and
+ glory. When Henry had provoked him, by desiring him, as being now heir of
+ Normandy and England, to yield up Poitou to his brother John, Richard had
+ refused; but on the King bringing his mother to Aquitaine, and reinstating
+ her in her duchy, he instantly laid down his arms, joyfully came to her,
+ and continued perfectly peaceable and dutiful whilst she still held her
+ rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after all these warnings, Henry was sinning grievously against his
+ wife and son. Richard had been, in his infancy, betrothed to Alice of
+ France, who had been placed in his father&rsquo;s keeping; but he had reached
+ his twenty-seventh year without having been allowed to see her, and there
+ was but too much reason to believe that the old King had wickedly betrayed
+ his trust, and corrupted her innocence. Richard had, in the meantime,
+ become attached to a modest, gentle maiden, Berengaria, sister to King
+ Sancho of Navarre, and was anxious to know on what ground he stood with
+ Alice; but the consequence of his first demonstration was, that Henry sent
+ Eleanor back to her prison at Winchester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This broke the tie that held him to obedience, and he went to Paris to
+ consult with Philippe, Alice&rsquo;s brother, on the best measures for breaking
+ off his unfortunate engagement, as well as on securing the succession to
+ the crown, which he suspected his father of wishing to leave to his
+ brother John. Philippe received him most affectionately; so that it is
+ said they shared the same cup, the same plate, and the same bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at this time, Archbishop William of Tyre came to preach a new
+ Crusade, and the description of the miseries of the Christians in
+ Palestine so affected the two kings and Richard, that they took the Cross,
+ and agreed to lay aside their disputes, to unite in the rescue of
+ Jerusalem. However, the concord did not last long; Richard quarrelled with
+ the Count of Toulouse, and a petty war took place, which the kings agreed
+ to conclude by a conference, as usual, under the Elm of Gisors. This noble
+ tree had so large a trunk, that the arms of four men could not together
+ encircle it; the branches had, partly by Nature, partly by art, been made
+ to bend downward, so as to form a sort of bower, and there were seats on
+ the smooth extent of grass which they shaded. King Henry first arrived at
+ this pleasant spot, and his train stretched themselves on the lawn,
+ rejoicing in being thus sheltered from the burning heat of the summer sun;
+ and when the French came up, laughed at them, left beyond the shade, to be
+ broiled in the sunbeams. This gave offence, a sharp skirmish took place,
+ the English drew off to Vernon, and Philippe, mindful of the indignation
+ he had felt in his boyhood under that tree, swore that no more parleys
+ should be held under it, and his knights hewed it down with their
+ battle-axes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war continued, and Richard fought gallantly on his father&rsquo;s side; but
+ as winter drew on, it was resolved that a meeting should be held at
+ Bonmoulins to re-establish peace. Richard thought this a fit opportunity,
+ in the presence of Alice&rsquo;s brother, for endeavoring to have his rights
+ confirmed, and to clear up the miserable question of his betrothal. In the
+ midst of the meeting he called on his father to promise him, in the
+ presence of the King of France, that he would no longer delay his
+ marriage, and declaration as his heir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry prevaricated, and talked of bestowing Alice on John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; cried Richard, &ldquo;forces me to believe what I would fain have
+ thought impossible! Comrades, you shall see a sight you did not expect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And ungirding his sword, he knelt down before Philippe, and did homage to
+ him, asking his assistance to re-establish his rights. Henry withdrew,
+ followed by a very small number of knights. They mostly held with the
+ young prince, won by his brilliant talents, great courage, and liberal
+ manners; and the King found the grief renewed that his son Henry had
+ caused him, while he himself, aged by cares rather than years, was less
+ able to cope with them: moreover, Richard was far more formidable than his
+ elder brother; Philippe a more subtle enemy than Louis; and above all, the
+ King&rsquo;s own faults were the immediate cause of the rebellion. He took no
+ active measures; he only caused his castellanes in Normandy to swear that
+ they would yield their keys up to no one but to Prince John, on whom he
+ had concentrated his affections. He awaited the coming of the Cardinal of
+ Anagni, who was sent by the Pope to pacify these Crusaders, and remind
+ them of their vows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the parties met, and the legate, with four archbishops, began to
+ speak of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I consent,&rdquo; said Philippe, &ldquo;for the love of Heaven and of the Holy
+ Sepulchre, to restore to King Henry what I have taken from him, provided
+ he will immediately wed my sister Alice to his son Richard, and secure to
+ him the succession of the crown, I also demand that his son John should go
+ to Palestine with his brother, or he will disturb the peace of the
+ kingdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That he will!&rdquo; exclaimed Richard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry; &ldquo;this is more than I can grant. Let your sister marry
+ John; let me dispose of my own kingdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the truce is broken,&rdquo; answered the French King. The Cardinal
+ interfered, threatening to lay France under an interdict, and
+ excommunicate Philippe and Richard if they would not consent to Henry&rsquo;s
+ conditions. Their answers were characteristic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not fear your curses,&rdquo; said Philippe. &ldquo;You have no right, to
+ pronounce them on the realm of France. Your words smell of English
+ sterlings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll kill the madman who dares to excommunicate two royal princes in one
+ breath!&rdquo; cried Coeur de Lion, drawing his sword; but his friends threw
+ themselves between, and the Cardinal escaped, mounted his mule, and rode
+ off in haste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French took Mans, and pillaged it cruelly, while Richard looked on in
+ shame and grief at the desolation of his own inheritance. His father, weak
+ and unwell, resolved to make peace, and for the last time appointed a
+ meeting with Philippe on the plain between Tours and Amboise. There it was
+ arranged that Richard should be acknowledged as heir, and Alice put into
+ the hands of the Archbishop either of Canterbury or Rouen, as he should
+ prefer, until he should return from the Crusade. The conference was
+ interrupted by a vivid flash of lightning and a tremendous burst of
+ thunder. To the evil conscience of the elder King it was the voice of
+ avenging Heaven: he reeled in his saddle, and his attendants were forced
+ to support him in their arms and carry him away. He travelled in a litter
+ to Chinon, where his first son had deserted him, and there, while he lay
+ dangerously ill, the treaty was sent to him to receive his signature, and
+ the conditions read over to him. By one of them, those who had engaged in
+ Richard&rsquo;s party were to transfer their allegiance to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are they&mdash;the ungrateful traitors?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Let me hear their
+ names.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His secretary began the list: &ldquo;John, Count of Mortagne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John!&rdquo;&mdash;and the miserable father started up in his bed. &ldquo;John! It
+ cannot be true!&mdash;my heart, my beloved son! He whom I cherished beyond
+ the rest&mdash;he for whose sake I have suffered all this&mdash;can he
+ also have deserted me?&rdquo; He was told it was too true. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he,
+ falling back on his bed, and turning his face from the light, &ldquo;let the
+ rest go as it will! I care not what becomes of me, or of the world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was roused in a few moments by the entrance of Richard, come, as a
+ matter of form, to ratify the treaty by the kiss of peace. The King,
+ without speaking, gave it with rigid sternness of countenance; but
+ Richard, as he turned away, heard him mutter, &ldquo;May I but live to be
+ revenged on thee!&rdquo; and when he was gone, the King burst out into such
+ horrible imprecations against his two sons, that the faithful Geoffrey of
+ Lincoln and the clergy of Canterbury, who attended him, were shocked, and
+ one of the monks reminded him that such hasty words had occasioned the
+ death of Becket. But he gnashed his teeth at them with fury. &ldquo;I have been
+ and I am your lord, traitors that ye are!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Away with you! I&rsquo;ll
+ have none but trusty ones here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monks left him; but one, turning round, said boldly, &ldquo;If the life and
+ sufferings of the martyr Thomas were acceptable with God. He will do
+ prompt justice on thy body.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King threw himself out of bed, with his dagger in his hand; but was
+ carried back again, and continued to rave, though growing weaker. In an
+ interval of calm he was taken into the church, and absolution was
+ pronounced over him; but no persuasion would induce him to revoke his
+ curses against his sons: the delirium returned, and the last words that
+ were heard from his dying lips were, &ldquo;Shame, shame on a conquered King!
+ Cursed be the day I was born! Cursed be the sons I leave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his fifty-fifth year he thus miserably expired, and his son Geoffrey of
+ Lincoln with difficulty found any one to attend to his funeral; the
+ attendants had all fled away, with everything valuable that they could lay
+ their hands on. A piece of gold fringe was made to serve for a crown, and
+ an old sceptre and ring were brought from the treasury at Chinon; horses
+ were hired, and the corpse was carried, as he had desired, to be interred
+ in the beautiful Abbey of Fontevraud. In the midst of the service a
+ hurried step was heard. It was Richard, who, while laughing with his false
+ friend Philippe over his ungracious reception at Chinon, had been
+ horror-struck by the news that his father was dead, and that there was no
+ more forgiveness to be looked for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had hastily left the French, and now stood beside the coffin, looking
+ at the fine but worn and prematurely aged face, which bore the stamp of
+ rage and agony. A drop of blood oozed from the nostril&mdash;a token,
+ according to the belief of those times, that the murderer was present.
+ Richard hid his face in his hands in the misery of remorse, and groaned
+ aloud, &ldquo;Yes, it was I who killed him.&rdquo; He threw himself on his knees
+ before the altar, so remained &ldquo;about as long as it would take to say a <i>Pater</i>&rdquo;
+ and then, rising up in silence, dashed out of the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten years later, his corpse was, by his own desire, laid in humility at
+ his father&rsquo;s feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXIV. THE THIRD CRUSADE. (1189-1193)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1189. Richard I.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1165. William.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1180. Philippe II.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1152. Friedrich I.
+ 1191. Henry VI.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1183. Clement III
+ 1191. Celestine III
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The vices of the Christians of Palestine brought their punishment. Sybilla
+ of Anjou, Queen of Jerusalem, had married the handsome but feeble-minded
+ Guy de Lusignan, who was no match for the Kurdish chieftain, Joseph
+ Salah-ed-deen, usually called Saladin, who had risen to the supreme power
+ in Egypt and Damascus. The battle of Tiberias ruined the kingdom, and the
+ fall of Jerusalem followed in a few weeks, filling Christendom with grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The archbishop and historian, William of Tyre, preached a Crusade in
+ Europe, and among the first to take the Cross were the Plantagenet princes
+ and Philippe Auguste of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unhappy discord between Henry II. and Coeur de Lion hindered the
+ enterprise until the death of the father, which left the son a prey to the
+ bitterest remorse; and in the hope to expiate his crimes, he hurried on
+ the preparations with all the vehemence of his impetuous nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hastened his coronation, and began to raise money by the most
+ unscrupulous means, declaring he would even have sold London itself could
+ he have found a bidder. He made his half-brother, Geoffrey, pay £3,000 for
+ the possession of the temporalities of the see of York, and sold the
+ earldom of Northumberland to the aged Bishop of Durham, Hugh Pudsey,
+ saying, laughing, that it had been a clever stroke to make a young earl of
+ an old bishop. William the Lion of Scotland was also allowed to purchase
+ exemption from his engagements to Henry II., by the payment of a large sum
+ of money and the supply of a body of troops under the command of his
+ brother David, Earl of Huntingdon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These arrangements made, Richard marched to meet Philippe Auguste at
+ Vezelai, and agree on the regulations for the discipline of their host. If
+ rules could have kept men in order, these were strict enough, forbidding
+ all gaming, all foul language, all disputing, and all approach to licence,
+ and ordering all acquisitions to be equally divided; but with a prince
+ whose violent temper broke through all restraint, there was little hope of
+ their observance. The English wore white crosses, the French red, the
+ Flemings green, to distinguish the different nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They marched together to Lyons, whence Philippe proceeded across the Alps
+ to embark at Genoa in the vessels he had hired, and Richard went to
+ Marseilles, where his own fleet was appointed to meet him and transport
+ him to Messina, the place where the whole crusading army was to winter. He
+ waited for his ships till his patience failed, and, hiring those which he
+ found in the harbor, he sailed to Pisa, whence he rode to Salerno, and
+ there learning that his fleet had touched at Marseilles, and arrived at
+ Messina, he set out for the coast, attended by only one knight. On the way
+ he saw a fine hawk, kept at a cottage in a small village, and forgetting
+ that there were no such forest laws as in his own domains, he was enraged
+ to see the bird in the keeping of mean &ldquo;<i>villeins</i>&rdquo; seized upon it,
+ and bore it off on his wrist. This was no treatment for Italian peasants,
+ who, in general, were members of small, self-ruling republics, and they
+ swarmed out of their houses to recover the bird. One man attacked the King
+ with a long knife, and though Richard beat him off with the flat of his
+ sword, the assault with sticks and stones was severe enough to drive the
+ King off the field, and force him to ride at full speed to a convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thence went to Bagnata, where he found his own ship <i>Trenc-la-Mer</i>
+ awaiting him. In full state he sailed into the harbor of Messina at the
+ head of his fleet, streamers flying from the masts, and music playing upon
+ the decks. He was received by the King of Sicily, Tancred, Count of Lecce,
+ who without much right had assumed the crown on the recent death of
+ William the Good, the last of the direct Norman line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This William, had been married to Joan Plantagenet, Richard&rsquo;s youngest
+ sister, who now came to join him, making complaints that Tancred was
+ withholding from her the treasures bequeathed to her by her husband; and
+ these were indeed of noted value, for she specified among them a golden
+ table twelve feet long, and a tent of silk large enough to contain two
+ hundred knights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tancred, who had lodged his royal guests, the one in a palace within the
+ town, the other in a pleasant house among the vineyards, was confounded at
+ these claims, and on his declaring that he had duly paid the Queen&rsquo;s
+ dowry, Richard seized upon two of his castles, and, on a slight quarrel
+ with the inhabitants, upon the city of Messina itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe Auguste interfered, not on behalf of the unfortunate Sicilian,
+ but to obtain a share of the spoil; requiring that the French standard
+ should be placed beside the English one on the walls, and that half the
+ plunder should be his. It was, however, agreed that the keeping of the
+ city should be committed to the Knights Templars until the three kings
+ should come to an agreement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this time that Richard again showed his violent nature. A
+ peasant happening to pass with an ass loaded with long reeds, or canes,
+ the knights began in sport to tilt at each other with them, and Richard
+ was thus opposed to a certain Guillaume des Barres, who had once placed
+ him in great danger in a battle in Normandy. Both reeds were broken, and
+ Richard&rsquo;s mantle was torn; his jest turned to earnest, and he dashed his
+ horse against Des Barres, meaning to throw him from the saddle; but he
+ swerved aside, and the King&rsquo;s horse stumbled, and fell. He took another,
+ and returned to the charge, but in vain; however, when the Earl of
+ Leicester was coming to his aid, he ordered him off. &ldquo;It is between him
+ and me alone,&rdquo; he said. At length repeated failures so inflamed his anger,
+ that he shouted, &ldquo;Away with thee! Never dare appear in my presence again!
+ I am a mortal foe to thee and thine!&rdquo; and it was only on the threat of
+ excommunication that he could be prevailed on to consent to the knight
+ remaining with the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March, a meeting took place between the Kings of England and Sicily, in
+ which Tancred agreed to pay Richard and his sister 20,000 ounces of gold;
+ and Richard remitted his share as a portion for Tancred&rsquo;s infant daughter,
+ whom he asked in marriage for his nephew, Arthur of Brittany. The two
+ Kings were much pleased with each other, and an exchange of presents was
+ made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tancred disclosed that the French monarch had falsely sent him a warning
+ that it was useless to trust the King of England, who only intended to
+ break his treaties; and when Richard refused to believe that his former
+ friend would so slander him, showed him the very letters in which Philippe
+ offered to assist in expelling him from the island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unwisely, Richard called his rival to account for his treachery; on which
+ Philippe retorted with the old engagement to his sister Alice, declaring
+ that this was only an excuse, for casting her off. Richard answered, that
+ her conduct made no excuse necessary for not marrying her, and proved it
+ so entirely, that Philippe was glad to hush the matter up, and rest
+ satisfied with a promise that she should be restored to her own count with
+ a sufficient pension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was time indeed for Richard to be free from his bonds to Alice, for he
+ had already sent his mother to conduct to him his own chosen and
+ long-loved lady, Berengaria of Navarre, a gentle, delicate, fair-haired,
+ retiring maiden, to whom he had devoted his Lion-heart in his days of
+ poetry and song in his beloved Aquitaine, and who was now willing to share
+ the toils and perils of his crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She arrived on the 29th of March; but the season of Lent prevented the
+ celebration of their wedding, and Queen Eleanor, placing her under the
+ charge of Joan, the widowed Queen of Sicily, returned to England to watch
+ over her son&rsquo;s interests there. The next day the fleet set sail, Richard
+ in his royal vessel, the ladies in another called the Lion; but a tempest
+ arose and scattered the ships, and though a lantern was hung from the mast
+ of <i>Trenc-la-Mer</i> as a guide to the others, she was almost alone when
+ she put into the harbor of Rhodes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had suffered so much from sea-sickness, that he was forced to
+ remain there ten days, in much anxiety, and there his vessels gradually
+ joined him, and he heard tidings of the rest. Philippe Auguste, with six
+ vessels, was safe at Acre, and the Lion had been driven to the coast of
+ Cyprus. Isaac Comnenus, a Greek, who called himself Emperor of the island,
+ had behaved with great discourtesy, forbidding the poor princesses to
+ land, and maltreating the crews of the vessels that had been cast ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All Coeur de Lion&rsquo;s chivalry was on fire at this insult to his bride. He
+ sailed at once to Cyprus, made a rapid conquest of the whole island, and
+ took prisoners both the Emperor and his daughter. The only request
+ Comnenus made was, that he might not be put into iron chains; and he was
+ gratified by wearing silver ones, until his death, four years after. His
+ daughter became an attendant on Berengaria, and as the feast of Easter had
+ now arrived, Richard no longer deferred his marriage, which was celebrated
+ in the church of Limasol by the Bishop of Evreux. It is certainly one of
+ the strangest stories in our history, that one of our Kings should have
+ been married in that distant isle of Cyprus, after conquering it, as a
+ sort of episode in his crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a victory not without great benefit to the Crusaders, for the
+ island was extremely fertile, and Richard appointed a knight, named Robert
+ de Turnham, to send constant supplies of provisions to the army in the
+ Holy Land; after which he set sail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Guy de Lusignan had already laid siege to St. Jean d&rsquo;Acre, or Ptolemais, a
+ city on the bay formed by the projection of the promontory of Mount
+ Carmel, admirably adapted as a stronghold, in which succor from Europe
+ might be received. Leopold of Austria brought the first instalment of
+ Crusaders; next followed Philippe of France; but the increase of the
+ number of besiegers only caused famine, until the conquest of Cyprus
+ insured supplies. Richard had sailed first for Tyre; but Conrade, Marquis
+ of Montferrat, Prince of Tyre, who was related to the Comneni, had given
+ orders that he should be excluded from the city; and he continued his
+ course to Acre, capturing, on his way, a large galley filled with troops
+ and provisions sent from Egypt to the relief of the besieged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his arrival, Richard at once resigned to Philippe half the booty,
+ whereupon the French King claimed half the island of Cyprus: this Coeur de
+ Lion replied he might have, if he was willing likewise to divide the
+ county of Flanders, which had just fallen to his wife by the death of her
+ brother. The siege was pressed on with the greatest ardor on the arrival
+ of the English, and Philippe was extremely jealous of the reputation
+ acquired by the brilliant deeds of daring in which Richard delighted,
+ while he himself was left completely in the shade. Cool, wary, and
+ prudent, he contemned the boisterous manners, animal strength, and
+ passionate nature of his rival, and nothing could be more galling than to
+ find himself disregarded, while all the &ldquo;talk was of Richard the King,&rdquo;
+ and all the independent bands from Europe clustered round the banner of
+ the Plantagenet. Philippe tried to win the hearts of the army by
+ liberality, and offered two pieces of gold a week to any knight who might
+ be distressed; Richard instantly promised four, adding a reward of high
+ value to any soldier who should bring him a stone from the walls of the
+ city; and such allurements led many to leave the French service for the
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heat of the climate soon brought on fevers, and both the kings were
+ attacked. Richard, when unable to mount his horse, was carried on a
+ mattress to the front of the army, to superintend the machines and
+ military engines, often himself aiming a ballista at the walls. He thus
+ slew a Saracen whom he beheld parading on the ramparts in the armor of a
+ Christian knight who had lately fallen. Saladin was hovering around with
+ his army, attempting to relieve the town; but the Christian army enclosed
+ it, said the Arab writers, close as the eyelid does the eye, and he could
+ only obtain intelligence from the inhabitants by means of carrier-pigeons;
+ while at the same time some friend to the Christians within the town used
+ to shoot arrows into the camp, with letters attached, containing
+ information of all the plans of the besieged. The name of this secret ally
+ was never discovered, but his tidings often proved of the greatest
+ service..
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A curious interview took place, between Saladin&rsquo;s brother, Malek-el-Afdal
+ (Just King), and a deputy sent by Richard, to arrange for a conference on
+ his recovery. The meeting was held in Saladin&rsquo;s camp. &ldquo;It is the custom of
+ our kings to make each other presents, even in time of war,&rdquo; said the
+ deputy, &ldquo;My master wishes to offer some worthy of the Sultan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The present shall be well received,&rdquo; said Malek-el-Afdal, &ldquo;so that we
+ offer others in return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have falcons, and other birds of prey, which have suffered much from
+ the voyage, and are dying of hunger. Would it please you to give us some
+ poultry to feed them with? When recovered, they shall be a gift to the
+ Sultan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say rather,&rdquo; returned Malek, &ldquo;that your master is ill, and wishes for
+ poultry. He shall have what he will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard restored a Mussulman prisoner, and thereupon Saladin gave the
+ deputy a robe of honor, and sent an emir to the camp with presents of
+ Damascus pears, Syrian grapes, and mountain snow, which much conduced to
+ the convalescence of the Malek Rik, as the Saracens, who much admired and
+ feared King Richard, were wont to call him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his recovery, the siege was pressed on, fierce battles daily taking
+ place, though the heat was such that the burning rays of the sun had their
+ share of the slain. At last Saladin, much to his grief, was obliged to
+ send permission to the inhabitants to surrender; which they did, on
+ condition of being allowed to ransom themselves for a fixed sum of money
+ and the release of 2,600 Christian captives. Thus ended the three years&rsquo;
+ siege of Acre. The Kings of France and England set up their standards on
+ the chief towers, and it was here that Richard insulted the banner of
+ Austria, which had been planted beside them. He caused it to be torn down
+ and thrown into the moat, demanding how a Duke dared assume the rights of
+ a King. Leopold maintained a sullen silence, brooding over the indignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This overbearing conduct of Richard alienated the chief Crusaders, and
+ Philippe Auguste, whose health was really much impaired, resolved to
+ return home, and sent a deputation to acquaint Richard with his intention.
+ They were so much grieved at their King abandoning the enterprise, that,
+ when admitted into Richard&rsquo;s presence, they could not utter a word for
+ tears. &ldquo;It will be an eternal disgrace to himself and his kingdom,&rdquo; said
+ Coeur de Lion; &ldquo;but let him go, since he is dying for want of his fair
+ court of Paris.&rdquo; He accordingly parted, after taking an oath to offer no
+ injury to the English possessions in Richard&rsquo;s absence, and leaving Hugh,
+ Duke of Burgundy, with the portion of his army which remained in
+ Palestine. There was a dispute, too, on the succession to the crown of
+ Jerusalem. Sybilla&rsquo;s death transferred her rights to her sister, Isabel,
+ the wife of Conrade of Montferrat; but Guy de Lusignan refused to give up
+ the title of King, and the Christians&rsquo; camp was rent with disputes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of August, Richard led his crusading troops from Acre into the
+ midst of the wilderness of Mount Carmel, where their sufferings were
+ terrible; the rocky, sandy, and uneven ground was covered with bushes full
+ of long, sharp prickles, and swarms of noxious insects buzzed in the air,
+ fevering the Europeans with their stings; and in addition to these natural
+ obstacles, multitudes of Arab horsemen harassed them on every side,
+ slaughtering every straggler who dropped behind from fatigue, and
+ attacking them so unceasingly, that it was remarked that throughout their
+ day&rsquo;s track there was not one space of four feet without an arrow sticking
+ in the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard fought indefatigably, always in the van, and always ready to
+ reward the gallant exploits of his knights. It was now that Guillaume des
+ Barres so signalized himself, that the King offered him his friendship,
+ and forgot the quarrel at Messina. Here, too, a young knight, who bore a
+ white shield in hopes of gaining some honorable bearing, so distinguished
+ himself, that Richard thus greeted him at the close of the day: &ldquo;Maiden
+ knight, you have borne yourself as a lion, and done the deeds of six <i>croisés</i>&rdquo;
+ and granted him a lion between six crosses on a red field, with the motto
+ &ldquo;<i>Tinctus cruore Saraceno</i>&rdquo; tinted with Saracen blood, whence he
+ assumed the name of Tynte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Arsoof, on the 7th of September, a great battle was fought. Saladin and
+ his brother had almost defeated the two Religious Orders, and the gallant
+ French knight, Jacques d&rsquo;Avesne, after losing his leg by a stroke from a
+ scimitar, fought bravely on, calling on the English King, until he fell
+ overpowered by numbers. Coeur de Lion and Guillaume des Barres retrieved
+ the day, hewed down the enemy on all sides, and remained masters of the
+ field. It is even said that Richard and Saladin met hand to hand, but this
+ is uncertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This victory opened the way to Joppa, where the Crusaders spent the next
+ month in the repair of the fortifications, while the Saracen forces lay at
+ Ascalon. While here, Richard often amused himself with hawking, and, one
+ day, was asleep under a tree, when he was aroused by the approach of a
+ party of Saracens, and springing on his horse Frannelle, which had been
+ taken at Cyprus, he rashly pursued them, and fell into an ambush. Four
+ knights were slain, and he would have been seized, had not a Gascon
+ knight, named Guillaume des Porcelets, called out that he himself was the
+ Malek Rik, and allowed himself to be taken. Richard offered ten noble
+ Saracens in exchange for this generous knight, whom Saladin restored,
+ together with a valuable horse that had been captured at the same time. A
+ present of another Arab steed accompanied them; but Richard&rsquo;s
+ half-brother, William Longsword, insisted on trying the creature before
+ the King should mount it. No sooner was he on his back, than it dashed at
+ once across the country, and before he could stop it, he found himself in
+ the midst of the enemy&rsquo;s camp. The two Saracen princes were extremely
+ shocked and distressed lest this should be supposed a trick, and instantly
+ escorted Longsword back, with gifts of three chargers which proved to be
+ more manageable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Malek-el-Afdal was always the foremost in intercourse with the Christians;
+ Richard knighted his son, and at one time had hopes that this youth might
+ become a Christian, marry his sister Joan, the widowed Queen of Sicily,
+ and be established as a sort of neutral King of Jerusalem; but this
+ project was disconcerted in consequence of his refusal to forsake the
+ religion of his Prophet. [Footnote: This is the groundwork of the
+ mysterious negotiations in the &ldquo;Talisman&rdquo; and of Madame Cottin&rsquo;s romance
+ of &ldquo;Matilde.&rdquo;]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Joppa the Crusaders marched to Ramla, and thence, on New-Year&rsquo;s Day,
+ 1192, set out for Jerusalem through a country full of greater obstacles
+ than they had yet encountered. They were too full of spirit to be
+ discouraged, until they came to Bethany, where the two Grand Masters
+ represented to Richard the imprudence of laying siege to such
+ fortifications as those of Jerusalem at such a season of the year, while
+ Ascalon was ready in his rear for a post whence the enemy would attack
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He yielded, and retreated to Ascalon, which Saladin had ruined and
+ abandoned, and began eagerly to repair the fortifications, so as to be
+ able to leave a garrison there. The soldiers grumbled, saying they had not
+ come to Palestine to build Ascalon, but to conquer Jerusalem; whereupon
+ Richard set the example of himself carrying stones, and called on Leopold
+ to do the same. The sulky reply, &ldquo;He was not the son of a mason,&rdquo; so
+ irritated Richard, that he struck him a blow. Leopold straightway quitted
+ the army, and returned to Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reports from home made Richard anxious to return, and he tried to
+ bring the Eastern affairs to a settlement. He adjudged the crown of
+ Jerusalem to Conrade of Montferrat, giving the island of Cyprus and its
+ princess as a compensation to Lusignan; but Conrade had hardly assumed the
+ title of King, before his murder, by two assassins from the Old Man of the
+ Mountain, threw everything into fresh confusion; and the barons of
+ Palestine chose in his place Henry of Champagne, a nephew of Richard&rsquo;s, a
+ brave knight, whom Queen Isabel was induced to accept as her third
+ husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not without great grief and many struggles that Coeur de Lion
+ finally gave up his hopes of taking Jerusalem. He again advanced as far as
+ Bethany; but a quarrel with Hugh of Burgundy, and the defection of the
+ Austrians, made it impossible for him to proceed, and he turned back to
+ Ramla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While riding out with a party of knights, one of them called out, &ldquo;This
+ way, my lord, and you will see Jerusalem.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said Richard, hiding his face with his mantle, &ldquo;those who are not
+ worthy to win the Holy City, are not worthy to behold it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to Acre; but there, hearing that Saladin was besieging Joppa,
+ he embarked his troops, and sailed to its aid. The Crescent shone on its
+ walls as he entered the harbor; but while he looked on in dismay, he was
+ hailed by a priest, who had leapt into the sea, and swam out to inform him
+ that there was yet time to rescue the garrison, though the town was in the
+ hands of the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hurried his vessel forward, leapt into the water breast-high, dashed
+ upward on the shore, ordered his immediate followers to raise a bulwark of
+ casks and beams to protect the landing of the rest, and, rushing up a
+ flight of steps, entered the city alone. &ldquo;St. George! St. George!&rdquo; That
+ cry dismayed the Infidels; and those in the town, to the number of three
+ thousand, fled in the utmost confusion, and were pursued for two miles by
+ three knights who had been fortunate enough to find horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard pitched his tent outside the walls, and remained there, with so
+ few troops that all were contained in ten tents. Very early one morning,
+ before the King was out of bed, a man rushed into his tent, crying out, &ldquo;O
+ King! we are all dead men!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Springing up, Richard fiercely silenced him. &ldquo;Peace! or thou diest by my
+ hand!&rdquo; Then, while hastily donning his suit of mail, he heard that the
+ glitter of arms had been seen in the distance, and in another moment the
+ enemy were upon them, 7,000 in number!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard had neither helmet nor shield, and only seventeen of his knights
+ had horses; but undaunted, he drew up his little force in a compact body,
+ the knights kneeling on one knee, covered by their shields, their lances
+ pointing outward, and between each pair an archer, with an assistant to
+ load his cross-bow; and he stood in the midst, encouraging them with his
+ voice, and threatening to cut off the head of the first who turned to fly.
+ In vain did the Saracens charge that mass of brave men, not one-seventh of
+ their number; the shields and lances were impenetrable: and without one
+ forward step, or one bolt from the crossbows, their passive steadiness
+ turned back wave after wave of the enemy. At last the King gave the word
+ for the crossbowmen to advance, while he, with seventeen mounted knights,
+ charged lance in rest. His curtal axe bore down all before it, and he
+ dashed like lightning from one part of the plain to another, with not a
+ moment to smile at the opportune gift from the polite Malek-el-Afdal, who,
+ in the hottest of the fight, sent him two fine horses, desiring him to use
+ them in escaping from this dreadful peril. Little did the Saracen prince
+ imagine that they would find him victorious, and that they would mount two
+ more pursuers! Next came a terrified fugitive, with news that 3,000
+ Saracens had entered Joppa! He summoned a few knights, and, without a word
+ to the rest, galloped back into the city. The panic inspired by his
+ presence instantly cleared the streets, and, riding back, he again led his
+ troops to the charge; but such were the swarms of Saracens, that it was
+ not till evening that the Christians could give themselves a moment&rsquo;s
+ rest, or look round and feel that they had gained one of the most
+ wonderful of victories. Since daybreak Richard had not laid aside his
+ sword or axe, and his hand was all one blister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No wonder the terror of his name endured for centuries in Palestine, and
+ that the Arab chided his starting horse with, &ldquo;Dost think that yonder is
+ the Malek Rik?&rdquo; while the mother stilled her crying child by threats that
+ the Malek Rik should take it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These violent exertions seriously injured Richard&rsquo;s health, and a low
+ fever placed him in great danger, as well as several of his best knights.
+ No command or persuasion could induce the rest to commence any enterprise
+ without him, and the tidings from Europe induced him to conclude a peace,
+ and return home. Malek-el-Afdal came to visit him, and a truce was signed
+ for three years, three months, three weeks, three days, three hours, and
+ three minutes&mdash;thus so quaintly arranged in accordance with some
+ astrological views of the Saracens. Ascalon was to be demolished, on
+ condition free access to Jerusalem was allowed to the pilgrims; but
+ Saladin would not restore the piece of the True Cross, as he was resolved
+ not to conduce to what he considered idolatry. Richard sent notice that he
+ was coming back with double his present force to effect the conquest; and
+ the Sultan answered, that if the Holy City was to pass into Frank hands,
+ none could be nobler than those of the Malek Rik. Fever and debility
+ detained Richard a month longer at Joppa, during which time he sent the
+ Bishop of Salisbury to carry his offerings to Jerusalem. The prelate was
+ invited to the presence of Saladin, who spoke in high terms of Richard&rsquo;s
+ courage, but censured his rash exposure of his own life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On October 9th, 1193, Coeur de Lion took leave of Palestine, watching with
+ tears its receding shores, as he exclaimed, &ldquo;O Holy Land! I commend thee
+ and thy people unto God. May He grant me yet to return to aid thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The return from this Crusade was as disastrous as that from the siege of
+ Troy. David, Earl of Huntingdon, the Scottish King&rsquo;s brother (the Sir
+ Kenneth of the Talisman), who had shared in all Richard&rsquo;s toils and
+ glories, embarked at the same time, but was driven by contrary winds to
+ Alexandria, and there seized and sold as a slave. Some Venetian merchants,
+ discovering his rank, bought him, and brought him to their own city, where
+ he was ransomed by some English merchants, and conducted by them to
+ Flanders; but while sailing for Scotland, another storm wrecked him near
+ the mouth of the Tay, near the town of Dundee, the name of which one
+ tradition declares to be derived from his thankfulness&mdash;<i>Donum Dei</i>,
+ the Gift of God. He founded a monastery in commemoration of his
+ deliverance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two queens, Berengaria and Joan, were driven by the storm to Sicily,
+ and thence travelled through Italy. At Rome, to their horror, they
+ recognized the jewelled baldric of King Richard exposed for sale; but they
+ could obtain no clue to its history, and great was their dread that he had
+ either perished in the Mediterranean waves, or been cut off by the many
+ foes who beset its coasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ship had been driven out of its course into the Adriatic, where the
+ pirates of the Dalmatian coast attacked it. He beat them off, and then
+ prevailed on them to take him into their vessel and land him on the coast
+ of Istria, whence he hoped to find his way to his nephew Otho, Count of
+ Saxony, elder brother of Henry, King of Jerusalem. This was the only
+ course that offered much hope of safety, since Italy, France, Austria, and
+ Germany were all hostile, and the rounding Spain was a course seldom
+ attempted; so that it was but a choice of dangers for him to attempt to
+ penetrate to his own domains. Another shipwreck threw him on the coast
+ between Venice and Aquileia; he assumed a disguise, and, calling himself
+ Hugh the Merchant, set out as if in the train of one of his own knights,
+ named Baldwin de Bethune, through the lands of the mountaineers of the
+ Tyrol. The noblesse here were mostly relatives of Conrade of Montferrat;
+ and Philippe Auguste having spread a report that Richard had instigated
+ his murder, it was no safe neighborhood. He sent one of his men to Count
+ Meinhard von Gorby, the first of these, asking for a safe-conduct, and
+ accompanying the request with a gift of a ruby ring. Meinhard, on seeing
+ the ring, exclaimed, &ldquo;Your master is no merchant. He is Richard of
+ England: but since he is willing to honor me with his gifts, I will leave
+ him to depart in peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Meinhard sent intelligence to Frederic of Montferrat, Conrade&rsquo;s
+ brother, through whose domains Richard had next to pass. He sent a Norman
+ knight, called Roger d&rsquo;Argenton, who was in his service, to seek out the
+ English King; but d&rsquo;Argenton would not betray his native prince, warned
+ Richard, and told Frederic that it was only Baldwin de Bethune. Not
+ crediting him, the Marquis passed on the intelligence to the Duke of
+ Austria; and Richard, who had left Bethune&rsquo;s suite, and was only
+ accompanied by a page, found every inhabited place unsafe, and wandered
+ about for three days, till hunger, fatigue, and illness drove him to a
+ little village inn at Eedburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence he sent his servant to Vienna, a distance of a few miles, to change
+ some gold bezants for the coin of the country. This attracted notice, and
+ the page was carried before a magistrate, and interrogated. He professed
+ to be in the service of a rich merchant who would arrive in a day or two,
+ and, thus escaping, returned to his master, and advised him to hasten
+ away; but Richard was too unwell to proceed, and remained at the inn,
+ doing all in his power to avert suspicion&mdash;even attending to the
+ horses, and turning the spit in the kitchen. His precautions were
+ disconcerted; the page, going again to Vienna, imprudently carried in his
+ belt an embroidered hawking-glove, which betrayed its owner to be of high
+ rank; and being again seized and tortured, confessed his master&rsquo;s name and
+ present hiding-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armed men were immediately sent to surround the inn, and the Mayor of
+ Vienna, entering, found the worn-out pilgrim lying asleep upon his bed,
+ and aroused him with the words, &ldquo;Hail, King of England! In vain thou
+ disguisest thyself; thy face betrays thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Awakening, the Lion-heart grasped his sword, declaring he would yield it
+ to none but the Duke. The Mayor told him it was well for him that he had
+ fallen into their hands, rather than into those of the Montferrat family;
+ and Leopold, arriving, reproached him for the insult to the Austrian
+ banner, which indeed was far more dishonored by its lord&rsquo;s foul treatment
+ of a crusading pilgrim, than by its fall into the moat of Acre. He was
+ conducted to Vienna, and thence to the lonely Castle of Tierenstein, where
+ he was watched day and night by guards with drawn swords. Leopold sent
+ information of his capture to the Emperor, Henry VI., who bore a grudge to
+ Richard for his alliance with Tancred, who had usurped Sicily from the
+ Empress Constance; he therefore offered a price for the illustrious
+ prisoner, and placed him in the strong Castle of Triefels. Months passed
+ away, and no tidings reached him from without. He deemed himself forgotten
+ in his captivity, and composed an indignant <i>sirvente</i> in his
+ favorite Provençal tongue. The second verse we give in the original, for
+ the sake of being brought so near to the royal troubadour:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Or sachen ben, mici hom e mici baron,
+ Angles, Norman, Peytavin, et Gascon,
+ Qu&rsquo;yeu non hai ja si pauore compagnon
+ Que per ave, lou laissesse en prison.
+ Faire reproche, certes yeu voli. Non;
+ Mais souis dos hivers prez.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Or, as it may be rendered in modern French:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Or sachent bien, mes hommes, mes barons,
+ Anglais, Normands, Poitevins, Gascons,
+ Que je n&rsquo;ai point si pauvre compagnon
+ Que pour argent, je le laisse en prison.
+ Faire reproche, certes, je ne le veux. Non;
+ Mais suis deux hivers pris.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This melancholy line, &ldquo;Two winters am I bound,&rdquo; is the burden of the song,
+ closing the recurring rhymes of each stanza. In the next he complains that
+ a captive is without friends or relations, and asks where will be the
+ honor of his people if he dies in captivity. He laments over the French
+ King ravaging his lands and breaking the oaths they had together sworn
+ while he is &ldquo;<i>deux hivers pris</i>,&rdquo; and speaks of two of his beloved
+ troubadour companions by name, as certain to stir up his friends in his
+ cause, and to mourn for his loss while he is &ldquo;<i>deux hivers pris</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was right; the troubadours were his most devoted friends; Bertram de
+ Born was bewailing him, and Blondel de Nesle, guided by his faithful
+ heart, sang his King&rsquo;s own favorite lays before each keep and fortress,
+ until the unfinished song was taken up and answered from the windows of
+ the Castle of Triefels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clue was found: Queen Eleanor wrote instantly to the Pope, calling on
+ him to redress the injury offered to a returning pilgrim, yet signed with
+ the Cross, and sent two abbots and the Bishop of Ely to visit him. From
+ them he learnt that his brother John and Philippe of France were using
+ every means to prevent his return; but this gave him the less concern, as
+ he said, &ldquo;My brother John was never made for conquering kingdoms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ex-chancellor, William Longchamp, who had been expelled from England
+ for tyrannical government, thought to serve his cause by a forgery of a
+ letter in Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, purporting to be from the Old Man of
+ the Mountain, exculpating Richard from the murder of Conrade. It ran thus:
+ &ldquo;To Leopold, Duke of Austria, and to all princes and people of the
+ Christian faith, Greeting. Whereas many kings in countries beyond the seas
+ impute to Richard, King and Lord of England, the death of the Marquis, I
+ swear by Him who reigns eternally, and by the law which we follow, that
+ King Richard had no participation in this murder. Done at our Castle of
+ Shellia, and sealed with our seal, Midseptember, in the year 1503 after
+ Alexander.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one thought of inquiring what brought this confession from the father
+ of assassins, or why he chose Alexander for his errand, the letter was
+ deemed conclusive, gave great encouragement to Richard&rsquo;s partisans, and
+ caused many of the French to refuse to take up arms against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that his captivity was public, Henry VI. sent for him to Hagenau,
+ where he pleaded his cause before the diet, was allowed more liberty, and
+ promised permission to ransom himself, after performing homage to the
+ Emperor, which probably was required of him to show the subordination of
+ the Royal to the Imperial rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe and John tempted the avarice of Henry by the offer of twice the
+ sum if he would give them the captive, or 20,000 marks for every month
+ that he was detained. However, the free princes of Germany, stirred up by
+ Richard&rsquo;s nephew, the Count of Saxony, were so indignant at their master&rsquo;s
+ conduct, that he could not venture to accept the tempting offer, and on
+ the 28th of February, 1194, he indited this note to his ally, the King of
+ France: &ldquo;Take care of yourself! The devil is unchained; but I could not
+ help it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe forwarded the warning to his accomplice, John, who tried to raise
+ the English to prevent his brother from landing; but they were rejoicing
+ at the return of their own King, and even before his arrival had adjudged
+ John guilty of treason, and sentenced him to lose his manors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ March 20th, Richard landed at Sandwich, and two days after entered London,
+ among the acclamations of his subjects, who displayed all their wealth to
+ do him honor, and caused the Germans who accompanied him to say that, if
+ their Emperor had guessed at half the riches of England, his ransom would
+ have been doubled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John was soon brought to sue for the pardon so generously given, and all
+ ranks vied with each other in raising the ransom. William the Lion of
+ Scotland presented the King with 2,000 marks, and the first instalment was
+ sent to Germany; but before it arrived, Henry VI. was dead, and the
+ Germans were so much ashamed of the transaction, that they returned the
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the expedition, in which Richard had gained all the glory that
+ valor and generosity could attain, conquered a kingdom and given it away,
+ fought battles with desperate courage and excellent skill, and shown much
+ fortitude and perseverance, but had marred all by his unbridled temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXV. ARTHUR OF BRITTANY. (1187-1206.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1154. Henry II.
+ 1189. Richard I.
+ 1199. John.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1158. Malcolm IV.
+ 1165. William.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1180. Philippe II.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1152. Friedrich I.
+ 1191. Henry VI.
+
+ <i>Popes.</i>
+ 1183. Clement IV.
+ 1189. Celestine III.
+ 1193. Innocent III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The son of Geoffrey Plantagenet and Constance, Duchess of Brittany, was
+ born at Nantes, on Easter-day, 1187, six months after the death of his
+ father. He was the first grandson of Henry II., for the graceless young
+ King Henry had died childless. Richard was still unmarried, and the elder
+ child of Geoffrey was a daughter named Eleanor; his birth was, therefore,
+ the subject of universal joy. There was a prophecy of Merlin, that King
+ Arthur should reappear from the realm of the fairy Morgana, who had borne
+ him away in his death-like trance after the battle of Camelford, and,
+ returning in the form of a child, should conquer England from the Saxon
+ race, and restore the splendors of the British Pendragons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bretons, resolved to see in their infant duke this champion of their
+ glories, overlooked the hated Angevin and Norman blood that flowed in his
+ veins, and insisted on his receiving their beloved name of Arthur.
+ Thanksgivings were poured forth in all the churches in Brittany, and the
+ altars and shrines at the sacred fountains were adorned with wreaths of
+ flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same a time a Welsh bard directed King Henry to cause search to be
+ made at Glastonbury, the true Avallon, for the ancient hero&rsquo;s corpse,
+ which, as old traditions declared, had been buried between two pyramids
+ within the abbey. There, in fact some distance beneath the surface, was
+ found a leaden cross, inscribed with the words, &ldquo;<i>Hic jacet sepultus
+ inclytus Rex Arthurus in insula Avallonia</i>&rdquo; (Here lies buried the
+ unconquered King Arthur in the isle of Avallon). A little deeper was a
+ coffin, hollowed out of an oak tree, and within lay the bones of the
+ renowned Arthur and his fair Queen Guenever. His form was of gigantic
+ size; there were the marks of ten wounds upon his skull, and by his side
+ was a sword, the mighty Caliburn, or Excalibar, so often celebrated in
+ romances. Guenever&rsquo;s hair was still perfect, to all appearance, and of a
+ beautiful golden color, but it crumbled into dust on exposure to the air.
+ The Bretons greatly resented this discovery, which they chose to term an
+ imposture of Henry&rsquo;s, in order to cast discredit on Merlin&rsquo;s prediction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were, however, in no condition to oppose the grasping monarch; Henry
+ entered Brittany, assembled the States at Nantes, and claimed the
+ guardianship of his grandson&rsquo;s person and domains. They were at first
+ intimidated by his threats, but Constance showed so much spirit, that she
+ obtained the keeping of her son, and the immediate government, though she
+ was not to act without the advice and consent of the King of England, who
+ received the oaths of the barons present. The widowed heiress suffered
+ much persecution from the different suitors for her hand, among whom
+ figured her brother-in-law, John Lackland; and Henry, fearing her marriage
+ with some powerful prince, so tormented her by threats of removing her son
+ from her charge, that he forced her into a marriage with Ranulf de
+ Blondeville, Count of Chester, grandson to an illegitimate son of Henry
+ I., a man of violent, and ambitious temper, and of mean and ungraceful
+ appearance. In a dispute which took place between him and the Count de
+ Perche, in Lincoln Cathedral, the latter contemptuously called him a
+ dwarf. &ldquo;Sayest thou so?&rdquo; cried Ranulf; &ldquo;ere long I shall seem to thee as
+ high as that steeple!&rdquo;&mdash;and his words were fulfilled, when, as Duke
+ of Brittany, he claimed the allegiance of the Count.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made himself extremely hated in Brittany by his cruelty and injustice;
+ and no sooner had the news arrived of the death of Henry II., than the
+ people rose with one consent, drove him away, and restored the power to
+ Constance. Richard I. did not interfere in his behalf, and appeared
+ favorable to his nephew Arthur, acknowledging him as heir-presumptive of
+ England, and, when at Messina, betrothing him to the daughter of Tancred,
+ King of Sicily. It was probably in honor of this intended alliance that
+ Richard presented Tancred with the sword Excalibar, which certainly should
+ never have passed out of the possession of the British.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constance remained at peace for the present, though Richard&rsquo;s absence left
+ the other territories over which he asserted his power exposed to much
+ disturbance. He had left the government of England in the hands of Hugh,
+ Bishop of Durham (the young Earl), and William Longchamp, Bishop of Ely&mdash;a
+ native of Beauvais, who had risen to high favor in the employ first of
+ Geoffrey, the son of Rosamond, Archbishop of York, and was now chancellor,
+ and afterward of Richard. He was an arrogant man, and broke through all
+ restraint, imprisoned his colleague, deprived him of his offices, and
+ forced him to resign his earldom; then, when Richard despatched orders
+ that he should be re-instated, declared that he knew what were the King&rsquo;s
+ private intentions, and should obey no public instructions. He sealed
+ public acts with his own seal instead of the King&rsquo;s, kept a guard of
+ fifteen hundred rapacious and disorderly mercenaries, plundered men of
+ every rank, so that it was said &ldquo;the knight could not keep his silver
+ belt, the noble his ring, the lady her necklace, nor the Jew his
+ merchandise.&rdquo; He travelled in great state, with a train of minstrels and
+ jesters, who drowned the outcries of the injured people by songs in his
+ praise. Again Richard sent orders to restrain him, but in vain; he only
+ declared them a forgery, and pursued his careless course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey, Archbishop of York, had sworn not to enter the kingdom for three
+ years, but he now returned; whereupon the chancellor seized him while at
+ mass, and kept him prisoner. John had no love for his half-brother: but
+ this was a good opportunity of overthrowing the chancellor, after such an
+ outrage on the person of an archbishop; and, at the head of the barons and
+ bishops, he forced Longchamp to resign the chancellorship, and promise to
+ give up the keys of the King&rsquo;s castles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To avoid yielding the castles, he attempted to escape from England in
+ disguise, and arrived at the seashore of Kent in the dress of an old woman&mdash;a
+ gown with large sleeves, a thick veil, and a bundle of linen and ell-wand
+ in his hand. The tide did not serve, and he was forced to seat himself on
+ a stone to wait for his vessel. Here the fisherwomen came up and began to
+ examine his wares, and ask their price; but the English chancellor and
+ bishop understood no English, and only shook his head. Thinking him a
+ crazy woman, they peeped under his veil, and, &ldquo;spying a great beard under
+ his muffler,&rdquo; raised a shout which brought their husbands to the spot,
+ who, while he vainly tried to explain himself, dragged him in derision
+ through the mud, and shut him up in a cellar. He was, however, released,
+ gave up the keys, and left England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey became chancellor in his stead, and took possession of the see of
+ York. The next disturbance was caused by the return of Philippe of France,
+ begging Pope Celestine III. to absolve him of his oath to respect
+ Richard&rsquo;s dominions. Celestine refused, and no one was found to second his
+ plans but Richard&rsquo;s own brother John, whom he brought over by promises of
+ securing to him the succession, and bestowing on him the continental
+ fiefs. The English, and with them William the Lion of Scotland and his
+ brother David, maintained the rights of the young Arthur, and matters
+ continued in suspense till Richard&rsquo;s release from his captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Easily subduing and more easily pardoning his traitor brother, Richard
+ carried his arms into France, gained a victory at Vendome, and took the
+ great seal of France; then entered Guienne, where the turbulent nobility
+ had revolted, and reducing them, enjoyed a short space of tranquillity and
+ minstrelsy, and kept on a poetical correspondence with Count Guy of
+ Auvergne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur, who was now nine years old, was, in 1196, introduced by his mother
+ to the assembly of the States of Brittany, and associated with her in the
+ duchy. His uncle at the same time claimed the charge of him as his heir,
+ and invited Constance to a conference at Pontorson. On her way&mdash;it is
+ much to be feared with his connivance&mdash;she was seized by a body of
+ troops under her husband, the Earl of Chester, and carried a prisoner to
+ the castle of St. James de Beuvron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her nobles met at St. Malo, and deputed the seneschal of Rennes to inquire
+ of her how they should act, and to assure her of their fidelity. She
+ thanked them earnestly, but her whole entreaty was that they would guard
+ her son, watch him like friends, servants, and parents, and save him from
+ the English. &ldquo;As for me,&rdquo; wrote she, &ldquo;that will be as God wills; but
+ whatever may befall me, do your best for Arthur my son. I shall always be
+ well, provided he is well, and in the care of good subjects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vassals wept at this letter, full of maternal love; they swore to
+ devote themselves to their young lord, even to the death, and obtained
+ from him a promise never to treat with the English without their consent.
+ They placed him under the charge of the Sieur de Vitré, who conducted him
+ from castle to castle with so much secrecy, that Richard continually
+ failed in his attempts to seize on him. Treaties were attempted, but
+ failed, with mutual accusations of perfidy, and while Constance continued
+ a prisoner, a most desolating war raged in the unfortunate duchy. The
+ dislike and distrust that existed between Constance and her mother-in-law,
+ Queen Eleanor, seem to have been the root of many of these troubles;
+ Eleanor was all-powerful with her son, and contrived to inspire him with
+ distrust of Constance&mdash;a suspicion naturally augmented by her refusal
+ to allow him the care of her son, his own heir, whom she placed in the
+ hands of the foe of the English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard&rsquo;s troops were chiefly Brabançon mercenaries, or free-companions&mdash;a
+ lawless soldiery, deservedly execrated; and their captain, Mercadet, was a
+ favorite of the King on account of his dauntless courage and enterprise.
+ In a skirmish, Mercadot took prisoner the Bishop of Beauvais, one of the
+ warlike prelates who forgot their proper office. The Pope demanded his
+ liberation, and Richard returned the suit of armor in which the bishop had
+ been taken, with the message, &ldquo;See if this be thy son&rsquo;s coat, or no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed,&rdquo; said Celestine; &ldquo;this is the coat of a son of Mars; I will
+ leave it to Mars to deliver him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vitré succeeded in lodging young Arthur, his charge, in the hands of the
+ King of France, who espoused his cause as an excuse for attacking Richard.
+ Several battles took place, and at length another treaty of peace was
+ made, by which Constance was liberated, after eighteen months&rsquo; captivity.
+ Doubtless this would soon have proved as hollow as every other agreement
+ between the French King and the Plantagenet; but it was Coeur de Lion&rsquo;s
+ last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Vicomte de Limoges, in Poitou, sent him two mule-burdens of silver,
+ part of a treasure found in his hands. Richard rapaciously claimed the
+ whole. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Vicomte, &ldquo;only treasure in gold belongs to the
+ suzerain; treasure in silver is halved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard, in anger, marched to Poitou with his Brabançons, and besieged the
+ Castle of Chaluz, where he believed the rest of the riches to be
+ concealed. In the course of the assault his shoulder was pierced by an
+ arrow shot from the walls by an archer named Bertrand de Gourdon, and
+ though the wound at first appeared slight, the surgeons, in attempting to
+ extract the head of the arrow, so mangled the shoulder, that fever came
+ on, and his life was despaired of. Mercadet, in the meantime, pushed on
+ the attack, took the castle, and brought Gourdon a prisoner to the King&rsquo;s
+ tent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain, wherefore hast thou slain me?&rdquo; said Richard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; replied Gourdon, &ldquo;thou hast with thine own hand killed my
+ father and my two brothers. Torture me as thou wilt; I shall rejoice in
+ having freed the world of a tyrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dying King ordered that the archer should be released, and have a sum
+ of money given to him; but the Brabançons, in their rage and grief, flayed
+ the unhappy man alive. Richard&rsquo;s favorite sister Joan, Queen of Sicily,
+ had married Raymond, Count of Toulouse, who was at this juncture in great
+ distress from having taken the part of the persecuted Albigenses. She
+ travelled to her brother&rsquo;s camp to ask his aid, but arriving to find him
+ expiring, she was taken ill, and, after giving birth to a dead child, died
+ a few hours after her brother. They were buried together, at their
+ father&rsquo;s feet, at Fontevraud. Queen Berengaria survived him thirty years,
+ living peacefully in a convent at Mans, where she was buried in the church
+ of St. Julien, an English Queen who never set foot in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loud were the lamentations of the troubadours of Aquitaine over their
+ minstrel King, Bertrand de Born especially, bewailing him as &ldquo;<i>le roi
+ des courtois, l&rsquo;empereur des preux</i>,&rdquo; and declaring that barons,
+ troubadours, jongleurs, had lost their all. This strange, contradictory
+ character, the ardent friend yet the turbulent enemy of the Plantagenet
+ princes, ended his life of rebellion and gallantry as a penitent in the
+ Abbey of Citeaux. Dante nevertheless introduces him in his Inferno, his
+ head severed from his body, and explaining his doom thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sappi ch&rsquo;i&rsquo;son Bertram dal Bornio, quelli
+ Che diedi al re Giovanni i ma&rsquo; comforti
+ I&rsquo; feci&rsquo;l padre e&rsquo;l figlio in se ribelli
+ Achitofel non fè pir d&rsquo;Absalone
+ E di David co&rsquo; malvagi pungelli
+ Perch&rsquo; i&rsquo; parti cosi giunte persone
+ Partito porto il mio cerebro, lasso
+ Dal suo principio ch&rsquo;é n questo troncone
+ cosi s&rsquo;osserva in me lo contrapasso.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s influence and Richard&rsquo;s own displeasure at the Duchess of
+ Brittany so prevailed, that Arthur was not even named by the dying Coeur
+ de Lion; but he directed his barons to swear fealty to his brother John,
+ and the wish was universally complied with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe Auguste&rsquo;s voice was the only one uplifted in favor of Arthur, but
+ it was merely as a means of obtaining a bribe, which John administered in
+ the shape of the county of Evreux, as a marriage-portion for his niece,
+ Blanche, the eldest daughter of Eleanor Plantagenet, Queen of Castile.
+ John, though half-married to various ladies, had no recognized wife, and
+ to give her to Louis, the eldest son of the King of France, would
+ therefore, as John hoped, separate France from the interests of the Breton
+ prince. He little thought what effect that claim would have on himself!
+ Queen Eleanor, though in her seventieth year, travelled to Castile to
+ fetch her granddaughter, a beautiful and noble lady, innocent of all the
+ intrigues that hinged on her espousal, and in whom France received a
+ blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe Auguste brought young Arthur to this betrothal, and caused him to
+ swear fealty to his uncle for Brittany as a fief of Normandy. Arthur was
+ now thirteen, and had newly received the order of knighthood, adopting as
+ his device the lion, unicorn, and griffin, which tradition declared to
+ have been borne by his namesake, and this homage must have been sorely
+ against his will. He was betrothed to Marie, one of the French King&rsquo;s
+ daughters, and continued to reside at his court, never venturing into the
+ power of his uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mother, Constance, had taken advantage of this tranquillity to obtain
+ a divorce from the hated Earl of Chester, and to give her hand to the
+ Vicomte Guy de Thouars; but the Bretons appear to have disapproved of the
+ step, as they never allowed him to bear the title of Duke. She survived
+ her marriage little more than two years, in the course of which she gave
+ birth to three daughters, Alix, Catherine, and Marguerite, and died in the
+ end of 1201.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur set off to take possession of his dukedom, and was soon delighted
+ to hear of a fresh disturbance between his uncle and the King of France,
+ hoping that he might thus come to his rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John had long ago fallen in love with Avice, granddaughter of Earl Robert
+ of Gloucester, and had been espoused to her at his brother&rsquo;s coronation;
+ but the Church had interposed, and refused to permit their union, as they
+ were second cousins. He was now in the south of France, where he beheld
+ the beautiful Isabelle, daughter of the Count of Angoulême, only waiting
+ till her age was sufficient for her to fulfill the engagement made in her
+ infancy, and become the wife of Hugh de Lusignan, called <i>le brun</i>,
+ Count de la Marche, namely, the borders of English and French Poitou.
+ Regardless of their former ties, John at once obtained the damsel from her
+ faithless parents, and made her his queen; while her lover, who was
+ ardently attached to her, called upon the King of France, as suzerain, to
+ do him justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe was glad to establish the supremacy of his court, and summoned
+ John to appear. John promised compensation, and offered as a pledge two of
+ his castles; then broke his word, and refused; whereupon Philippe took up
+ arms, besieged the castles, and had just destroyed them both, when Arthur
+ arrived, with all the Breton knights he could collect, and burning with
+ the eagerness of his sixteen years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once Philippe offered to receive his homage for the county of Anjou,
+ and to send him to conquer it with any knights who would volunteer to
+ follow him. Hugh de Lusignan was the first to bring him fifteen, and other
+ Poitevin barons joined him; but, in all, he could muster but one hundred
+ knights and four or five hundred other troops, and the wiser heads advised
+ him to wait for reinforcements from Brittany. The fiery young men,
+ however, asked, &ldquo;When was it our fashion to count our foes?&rdquo; and their
+ rashness prevailed. Arthur marched to besiege the town of Mirabeau, where
+ there resided one whom he should never have attacked&mdash;his aged
+ grandmother; but Constance had taught him no sentiment toward her but
+ hatred, and with this ill-omened beginning to his chivalry he commenced
+ his expedition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The town was soon taken: but Eleanor&rsquo;s high spirit had not deserted her;
+ she shut herself up in the castle, and contrived to send intelligence to
+ her son. John was for once roused, and marched to Mirabeau with such
+ speed, that Arthur soon found himself surrounded in his turn. The Queen
+ was in the citadel, the prince in the town, besieging her, and himself
+ besieged by the King on the outside; but the town wall was strong, and
+ John could not easily injure his nephew, nor send succor to his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He recollected a knight named Guillaume dos Roches, who had once been
+ attached to Arthur&rsquo;s service, but was now in his camp; and sending for
+ him, the wily King thus addressed him: &ldquo;It is hard that persons who should
+ be friendly kindred should so disturb each other for want of meeting and
+ coming to an understanding. Here is Eleanor, my honored mother,
+ discourteously shut up in a tower in danger of being broken down by
+ engines of war, and sending forth nothing but cries and tears. Here is
+ Arthur, my fair nephew, who some day will be an honor to chivalry, going
+ straight forward, fancying nothing can hurt him, looking on battles as
+ feasts and sports. And here am I, John, his lord and King, who could
+ easily take from him at a blow all the rest of his life; I am waiting, and
+ endeavoring to spare him, though his men-at-arms may come and catch me
+ like a fox in the toils. Cannot you find some expedient? Can you remember
+ no friend of my fair nephew who could help you to restore peace, and
+ obtain a guerdon from me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The only guerdon I desire,&rdquo; replied Des Roches, &ldquo;is the honor of serving
+ my lord; but one gift I entreat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grant it, by the soul of my father,&rdquo; said John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow, then,&rdquo; said Des Roches, &ldquo;the young Duke and all his young
+ lords shall be at your disposal; but I claim the gift you granted me. It
+ is, that none of the besieged shall be imprisoned or put to death, and
+ that Duke Arthur be treated by you as your good and honorable nephew, and
+ that you leave him such of his lands as rightfully pertain to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John promised, and even swore that, if he violated his word, he released
+ his subjects from their oaths. Arthur&rsquo;s stepfather, Guy de Thouars,
+ witnessed the agreement, and, thus satisfied, Des Roches introduced his
+ troops into the town at midnight, and Arthur and his followers were seized
+ in their sleep. But for John&rsquo;s promise, he regarded it no more than the
+ wind; he sent twenty-two knights at once to Corfe Castle, chained two and
+ two together in carts drawn by oxen, where all but Hugh de Lusignan were
+ starved to death by his orders. He threw the rest into different prisons,
+ and closely confined his nephew at Falaise. Des Roches remonstrated, upon
+ which John attempted to arrest both him and De Thouars, but they escaped
+ from his dominions; and Des Roches was so grieved at the fatal consequence
+ of his treachery, that he became a hermit, and ended his life in penance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Queen, whose disposition had softened with her years, charged
+ John, on pain of her curses, not to hurt his nephew, and exerted herself
+ to save the victims from barbarity. She prevailed so far as to obtain the
+ life of Lusignan; but he was shut up at Bristol Castle, where John
+ likewise imprisoned the elder sister of Arthur, Eleanor, a girl of
+ eighteen, of such peerless beauty that she was called the Pearl of
+ Brittany. John held a parley with his nephew at Falaise, when the
+ following dialogue took place; [Footnote: These particulars are from old
+ chronicles of slight authority.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give up your false pretentions,&rdquo; said John, &ldquo;to crowns you will never
+ wear. Am I not your uncle? I will give you a share of my inheritance as
+ your lord, and grant you my friendship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better the hatred of the King of France!&rdquo; exclaimed the high-spirited
+ boy; &ldquo;he has not broken his faith, and with a noble knight there is always
+ a resource in generosity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Folly to trust him!&rdquo; sneered John. &ldquo;French kings are the born enemies of
+ Plantagenets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Philippe has placed the crown on my brow&mdash;he was my godfather in
+ chivalry&mdash;he has granted me his daughter,&rdquo; said Arthur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you will never marry her, fair nephew! My towers are strong; none
+ here resist my will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy burst out proudly: &ldquo;Neither towers nor swords shall make me
+ cowardly enough to deny the right I hold from my father and from God. He
+ was your elder brother, now before the Saviour of men. England, Touraine,
+ Anjou, Guienne, are mine in his right, and Brittany through my mother.
+ Never will I renounce them, but by death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, fair nephew,&rdquo; were John&rsquo;s words, and with them he left his
+ captive alone, to dwell on the horrors thus implied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after, John secretly sent a party of men into Arthur&rsquo;s dungeon, with
+ orders to put out his eyes. The youth caught up a wooden bench, and
+ defended himself with it, calling so loudly for help as to bring to the
+ spot the excellent governor of the castle, Hubert de Burgh, who had been
+ in ignorance of their horrible design. He sent away the assassins, and, as
+ the only means of saving the poor prince, he caused the chapel bell to be
+ tolled, and let it be supposed that he had perished under their hands. All
+ the world believed it, and Brittany and Normandy began to rise, to call
+ the murderer to account. Hubert thought he was doing a service in
+ divulging the safety of the prisoner, but the effect was, that John
+ transferred the poor boy to Rouen, and to the keeping of William Bruce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was an old man, and dreaded the iniquity that he saw would soon be
+ practised; and, coming to the King, gave up his charge in these words: &ldquo;I
+ know not what Fate intends for your nephew, whom I have hitherto
+ faithfully kept. I give him up to you, in full health, and sound in limb;
+ but I will guard him no longer; I must return to my own affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John&rsquo;s eyes flashed fury; but the baron retired to his own fiefs, which he
+ put in a state of defence. A few days after, John and his wicked squire,
+ Pierre de Maulac, left the court, giving notice that he was going to
+ Cherbourg, and, after wandering for three days in the woods of Moulineau,
+ came late at night in a little boat to the foot of the tower where Arthur
+ was confined. Horses were ready there, and he sent Maulac to bring him his
+ nephew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair nephew,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;come and see the day you have so long desired. I
+ will make you free as air: you shall even have a kingdom to govern.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur began to ask explanations, but John cut him short, telling him
+ there would be time for questions and thanks; and Maulac helped him to his
+ horse, for he was so much weakened by his imprisonment that he could
+ hardly mount. They rode on, Arthur in front, till they came to a spot
+ where the river flowed beneath a precipitous bank. It was John&rsquo;s chosen
+ spot; and he spurred his horse against his nephew&rsquo;s, striking him down
+ with his sword. The poor boy cried aloud for mercy, promising to yield all
+ he required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All is mine henceforth,&rdquo; said John, &ldquo;and here is the kingdom I promised
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then striking him again, by the help of Maulac he dragged him to the edge
+ of the rock, and threw him headlong into the Seine, whose waters closed
+ over the brave young Plantagenet, in his eighteenth year, ending all the
+ hopes of the Bretons. The deed of darkness was guessed at, though it was
+ long before its manner became known; and John himself marked out its
+ consummation by causing himself to be publicly crowned over again, and by
+ rewarding his partner in the crime with the hand of the heiress of
+ Mulgrave. His mother, Queen Eleanor, is said to have died of grief at the
+ horror he had perpetrated. She had retired, after the siege of Mirabeau,
+ to the convent of Fontevraud, where she assumed the veil, and now shared
+ the same fate as her husband, King Henry&mdash;like him, dying
+ broken-hearted for the crimes of their son. She was buried beside him and
+ her beloved Coeur de Lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bretons mourned and raged at the loss of their young duke. His sister
+ Eleanor was wasting her youth and loveliness in a prison, which she only
+ left, after her oppressor&rsquo;s death, to become a nun at Ambresbury; and they
+ therefore proclaimed as their duchess her little half-sister, Alix de
+ Thouars, who was, at four years old, presented to the States in her
+ father&rsquo;s arms, and shortly after married to an efficient protector, Pierre
+ de Dreux, called, from his quarrels with the clergy, Mauclerc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had the enemy of the Plantagenets been so well served as by King
+ John. Such was the indignation and grief of the whole French noblesse,
+ that, when Pope Innocent III sent out a legate to mediate between the two
+ kings, the barons bound themselves by a charter, &ldquo;to second their lord,
+ King Philippe, in his war against King John, notwithstanding the will of
+ the Pope, exhorting him to contrive it without being dismayed by vain
+ words, and agreeing to give him all assistance, and enter into no treaty
+ with the Pope save with his consent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding his nobles in this disposition, Philippe ventured on an
+ unprecedented step, namely, that of summoning the King of England, as his
+ vassal for Normandy and Anjou, to answer for the crime done on the person
+ of his nephew, before his peers, namely, the other great crown vassals and
+ barons holding fiefs directly from the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John did not deny the competence of the court of peers, and sent Hubert de
+ Burgh, and Eustace, Bishop of Ely, to declare that he would willingly
+ appear, provided a safe-conduct was sent to him. Philippe declared that he
+ certainly might come in safety; but when they asked if he guaranteed his
+ security, supposing he was condemned, he replied, &ldquo;By all the saints of
+ France, no! That must be decided by the peers.&rdquo; The bishop declared that a
+ crowned head could not be tried for murder; the English barons would not
+ permit it. &ldquo;What is that to me?&rdquo; said Philippe. &ldquo;The Dukes of Normandy
+ have certainly conquered England; but because a vassal augments his
+ domain, is the suzerain to lose his rights?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two months were allowed for John&rsquo;s appearance in person; and on the
+ appointed day the assembly was held in the Louvre: the nobles in ermine
+ robes, and the heralds paraded the public places, calling on King John to
+ appear and answer for his felony; then, as no reply was made, judgment was
+ pronounced that his fiefs of Normandy, Anjou, and Poitou, were forfeited
+ to the Crown, Guienne alone being excepted, as its heiress, his mother,
+ was not at that time dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The execution followed upon the sentence: Philippe instantly marched into
+ Normandy, and seized upon towns, his flatterers said, as if he caught them
+ in a net. Chateau Gaillard, however, held out for more than a year, and
+ Philippe was forced to blockade it. It had been fortified to perfection by
+ Richard, who termed it his beautiful Castle on the Rock, and
+ pertinaciously defended by Roger de Lacy. All the non-combatants were
+ driven out; but the French would not allow them to pass through their
+ lines, and they lived miserably among the rocks, trying to satisfy their
+ hunger with the refuse of the camp. One wretched man was found gnawing a
+ piece of the leg of a dog, and when some compassionate French tried to
+ take it from him, he resisted, declaring he would not part with it till he
+ was satisfied with bread. They fed him, but he could hardly masticate,
+ though swallowing his food ravenously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One tower was at last overthrown, and another was gained by a bold
+ &ldquo;varlet,&rdquo; named Bogis, who was lifted on the shoulders of his comrades,
+ till he could climb in at an undefended window, where he drew up sixty
+ more with ropes. They burnt down the doors, and entered the castle, where
+ only one hundred and fifty knights remained alive. Keeping them at bay,
+ Bogis lowered the drawbridge, and admitted the rest of the army; the
+ remains of the garrison retreated into the keep, still resolved not to
+ surrender, though battering-rams, catapults, and every engine of war was
+ brought to bear on them. A huge piece of wall fell down, still there was
+ no surrender; but with night, all resistance ceased, and the French,
+ entering in the morning, found every one of the garrison lying dead in the
+ dust and ruins, all their wounds in the face and breast&mdash;not one
+ behind, &ldquo;to the great honor and praise of chivalry,&rdquo; said their
+ assailants, who rejoiced in their valor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only one feeble attempt had been made by John to succor these noble and
+ constant men, though no further distant than Rouen, where he was feasting
+ with his new queen. All his reply to messages of Philippe&rsquo;s advance was,
+ &ldquo;Let him alone; I will regain more in a day than he can take in a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinon was taken after a gallant defence, and in it Hubert de Burgh, for
+ whom John seems to have had an unusual regard. For a moment it grieved
+ him, and he awoke from his festivities to say to his queen:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, dame, do you hear what I have lost for your sake?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; said Isabella, who had learnt by this time at how dear a price she
+ had purchased her crown, &ldquo;on my part, I lost the best knight in the world
+ for your sake!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the faith I owe you, in ten years&rsquo; time we shall have no corner safe
+ from the King of France and his power!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certes! sir,&rdquo; she answered, &ldquo;I believe you are very desirous of being a
+ king checkmated in a corner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She seems to have taken every occasion of showing her contempt for the
+ mean-spirited wretch to whom she had given her hand: but at present her
+ treatment only incited the King&rsquo;s ardor of affection: he formed more
+ schemes of pleasure for her, and turned a deaf ear to all complaints from
+ his deserted subjects, until Falaise had surrendered, Mont St. Michael was
+ burnt, and Rouen itself was threatened. Then he took flight, and returned
+ to England, where he made his Norman war a pretext for taxes; but when the
+ Rouennais citizens, who still had a love for the line of Rollo, came to
+ tell him that they must surrender in thirty days unless they were
+ succored, he would not interrupt his game at chess to listen to them; and,
+ when it was finished, only said, &ldquo;Do as you can: I have no aid to give
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were therefore forced to surrender, Philippe swearing to respect
+ their rights and liberties; and thus, after three hundred years, did the
+ dukedom that first raised the Norman line to the rank of princes pass from
+ the race of Rollo, disgracefully forfeited by a cowardly murder. The four
+ little isles of Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, and Sark, are the only remnant
+ of the duchy won by the Northman. They still belong to the Queen, as
+ Duchess of Normandy, are ruled by peculiar Norman laws, and bear on their
+ coinage only the three lions, without the bearings of her other domains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anjou, Maine, and Touraine, were won by the French, without one blow
+ struck in their defence by Ingelger&rsquo;s degenerate descendant, &ldquo;whose sinful
+ heart made feeble hand.&rdquo; The recovery of his continental dominions served
+ as a pretext for a tax of every tenth shilling; but this being illegal,
+ Geoffrey, the Archbishop of York, refused to consent to, and threatened
+ excommunication to all in his diocese who should pay it. John vowed
+ vengeance, and placed his life in such danger that he was forced to flee
+ from the country, and his death abroad saved the King from the guilt of
+ the murder of a brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the money John had raised, he levied a force of Brabançons and
+ free-companions, entered Anjou, burnt Angers, and besieged Nantes; but on
+ hearing of Philippe&rsquo;s advance, retreated, and thus ended all hopes of his
+ regaining his inheritance. The Norman barons, whose lands had passed to
+ the French, told him that, if their bodies served him, their hearts would
+ be with the French, and, for the most part, transferred their allegiance,
+ and he remained with his disgrace. Thus was Arthur avenged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXVI. THE INTERDICT. (1207-1214.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England.</i> 1199. John.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i> 1163. William.
+
+ <i>King of France</i> 1180. Philippe II.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany.</i>
+ 1208. Otho IV.
+ 1209. Friedrich III.
+
+ <i>Pope.</i> 1198. Innocent III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The election of bishops still remained a subject of dispute in the Church,
+ in spite of the settlement apparently effected in the time of Archbishop
+ Anselm, when it was determined that, on the vacancy of a see, the King
+ should send a <i>Congé d&rsquo;élire</i> (permission to elect) to the chapter of
+ the cathedral, generally accompanied with a recommendation, and that the
+ prelate should receive investiture from the Crown of the temporalities of
+ his see. However, in the case of archbishoprics, the matter was
+ complicated by the right of the bishops to have a voice in the choice of
+ their primate, and by the custom of the Pope&rsquo;s presenting him with a pall,
+ which the grasping pontiffs of the thirteenth century would fain have
+ converted into a power of rejection. At each election to Canterbury the
+ debate broke out, enhanced by the jealousies between the secular clergy,
+ who often formed the majority of the bishops, and who usually held with
+ the sovereign, and the regular monks of St. Augustine, who were the canons
+ of the cathedral, and looked to the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard, who succeeded Thomas à Becket, was a monastic priest, mild, and
+ somewhat time-serving, conniving at irregularities, and never apparently
+ provoked out of his meekness, except by the perpetual struggle for
+ precedence with the see of York&mdash;and no wonder, when, at a synod at
+ Westminster, Roger, Archbishop of York, fairly sat down in his lap on
+ finding him occupying the seat of honor next to the legate. Upon this the
+ Pope interfered, pronouncing the Archbishop of York, Primate of England,
+ and him of Canterbury, Primate of all England; but the jealousy as to the
+ right of having the cross carried before them in each other&rsquo;s provinces
+ continued for centuries to a lamentable and shameful degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baldwin, who succeeded him, seems to have been secular, but little is
+ known of him. He, with the consent of Richard Coeur de Lion, laid the
+ foundation of a convent at Lambeth, which he intended as a residence for
+ the primate, in order to lessen the preponderance of the canons of St.
+ Augustine; he then accompanied the King on the Crusade, and died of fever
+ before the walls of Acre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter Hubert, Bishop of Salisbury, was also a Crusader, and a great
+ friend of Richard, who, from his imprisonment, wrote letters to point him
+ out as archbishop&mdash;a favor which he returned by great exertions in
+ raising the King&rsquo;s ransom. He was a completely worldly and secular priest,
+ continually giving umbrage to his chapter, who used to complain of him to
+ the Pope, and obtain censures, of which he took no heed. When Richard made
+ him Grand Justiciary, they declared that it was contrary to all rule for
+ him to be judge in causes of blood; whereupon the Pope ordered the King to
+ remove him from the office, but without much effect. Sharing Richard&rsquo;s
+ councils, he had the same dislike to Constance and her son, and willingly
+ crowned John, making a dangerous and disloyal speech, in which he
+ pronounced the kingdom elective, and to be conferred on the most worthy of
+ the royal family. He accepted the chancellorship from John, and was so
+ fond of boasting of its riches and dignities, that he drew on himself a
+ rebuke from Hugh Bardolfe, one of the rude barons. &ldquo;My Lord, with your
+ leave, if you would consider the power and dignity of your spiritual
+ calling, you would not undertake the yoke of lay servitude.&rdquo; But,
+ unchecked by this rebuke, he gave offence to John by foolishly trying to
+ vie with the King in the richness of the raiment given at Christmas to his
+ retainers&mdash;an affront to John which a sumptuous feast at Easter could
+ not efface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief grievance to the Augustine chapter at Canterbury was the new
+ foundation at Lambeth; they dreaded that Becket&rsquo;s relics might be
+ translated thither, and they never ceased appealing to Pope Innocent III.
+ till they had obtained an order for its demolition. This dispute made them
+ more than ever bent on an archbishop of their own choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hubert died at Canterbury, July 18th, 1205, and the younger monks were
+ misled by party-spirit into the attempt to steal a march on the rest. They
+ assembled on the night of his death, and elected their sub-prior Reginald,
+ conducted him to the cathedral, placed him on the archiepiscopal throne,
+ and hurried him off in secret to Rome, with strict injunctions not to
+ divulge his election till he had obtained confirmation of it from the
+ Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reginald was as imprudent as might have been expected from his acceptance
+ of a dignity thus conferred; he had no sooner crossed the sea, than he
+ began to boast of his rank as archbishop-elect. These tidings coming back
+ to England, his own supporters were ashamed of him, and, willing to have
+ their transaction forgotten, joined with their elders, the bishops, and
+ the King, in appointing John de Gray, Bishop of Norwich, a man apparently
+ of the same stamp as Hubert, as he was one of the Justiciaries, and little
+ attentive to the affairs of his diocese. Twelve of the canons of St.
+ Augustine were despatched to Rome to explain the affair to the Pope, offer
+ him a present of 12,000 marks, and obtain the pall for Gray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope examined into the subject, and pronounced, of course, Reginald&rsquo;s
+ election null, and Gray&rsquo;s also null, because made before the former claim
+ had been disposed of. The twelve canons were therefore to make a fresh
+ election, and as this had been foreseen before they left home, the King
+ had bound them by oath to choose no one but Gray. Innocent might
+ justifiably object to such a person, but his proceedings were in
+ accordance with the violent and domineering spirit which actuated him. His
+ nominee was an Englishman named Stephen Langton, a learned man, who had
+ taught in the University of Paris, of which he was now chancellor; he had
+ been recommended from thence to Innocent, who had given him high office at
+ Rome, and made him a cardinal. His life was irreproachable, and he was
+ deeply learned in the Scriptures, which it is said he was the first to
+ divide into verses. To so distinguished and excellent a person Innocent
+ hoped no objection could arise; and when the canons of St. Augustine
+ demurred as to their oath, and the King and chapter&rsquo;s right, he silenced
+ their scruples by threats of excommunication, and they all, excepting one
+ named Elias de Braintefeld, concurred in appointing Langton and enthroning
+ him, singing <i>Te Deum</i> while Elias stood at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent wrote to John two letters. The first was merely complimentary,
+ and contained four rings, with explanations of their emblematic meaning.
+ Their circular form signified eternity; their number, constancy; the
+ emerald was for faith; the sapphire for hope; the red granite for charity;
+ the topaz for good works. In his other letter, he recommended Langton to
+ the King, dwelling on his many high qualities, on which John himself had
+ previously complimented him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A good archbishop was the last thing John desired, especially a man of
+ high spirit and ability, who would act as a restraint on him, and he
+ refused to receive the letters. The chapter of Canterbury, however,
+ confirmed the election, and the Pope, after waiting in vain for an answer
+ from the King, consecrated Stephen Langton at Viterbo, June 17th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John certainly so far had the advantage that his opponents had placed
+ themselves in the wrong, but as no one could outdo him in that respect, he
+ instantly fell on the unfortunate monks of Canterbury, and declaring them
+ guilty of high treason, sent two of his most lawless men-at-arms and their
+ followers to drive them out of the country. At the same time he wrote to
+ the Pope that he was astonished at his thus treating a country that
+ contributed so largely to the papal revenues; that he was resolved to
+ support Gray&rsquo;s election, and that he was determined that Langton should
+ never set foot in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent remonstrated in vain, declaring that this should never be made a
+ precedent for interference with future appointments. John held out, and at
+ length the Pope availed himself of the power ascribed to him, to force the
+ King to compliance, by declaring his country under the ban of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said that, in the midst of the horrible confusion that followed the
+ death of Charlemagne, the idea of such an expedient had first arisen. In
+ the Synod of Limoges, the Abbot Odolric had proposed that, till the nobles
+ should cease from their ravages, the churches should be stripped of their
+ ornaments, the mass not be celebrated, no marriages take place, and the
+ abstinence of Lent be observed. This universal mourning had brought the
+ ferocious nobles to a sense of their guilt, and more peaceful times had
+ succeeded, so that an interdict was considered as one of the mightiest
+ weapons in the armory of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few years before, Innocent had, by an interdict on the kingdom of
+ France, forced Philippe Auguste to put away Agnes de Meranie, whom he had
+ married in the lifetime of his lawful wife Ingeberge. Then (if ever) it
+ was properly employed, to enforce morality; but it was a different thing
+ to lay a whole nation under the ban of the Church merely for a dispute
+ respecting an appointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent sent orders to the bishops of London, Ely, and Worcester, to
+ publish the interdict on the Monday of Passion week, 1208 (the second
+ before Easter). They went to the King, and besought him to be reconciled
+ with the Pope, and avert this dreadful edict. He grew pale with rage,
+ foamed at the mouth, and threatened them furiously; swore at the clergy,
+ drove them from his presence, and issued orders that his officers should
+ seize, the property of every man who paid any attention to the interdict.
+ &ldquo;If you, or any of your body, dare to lay my states under interdict, I
+ will send you to Rome, and seize your goods; and if I catch one Roman
+ priest in my realms, I will cut off his nose and put out his eyes, that
+ all may know he is a Roman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, on the appointed day it was pronounced by the three
+ prelates, according to the appointed form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At night the clergy assembled, each bearing a torch, and with one voice
+ chanted the <i>Miserere</i>, and other penitential psalms and prayers,
+ while the church-bells rang out the &lsquo;broken funeral-knell. Veils were hung
+ over the crucifixes, the consecrated Wafer of the Host was consumed by
+ fire, the relics and images of the saints were carried into the crypts,
+ and then the bishops, in the violet robes of mourning used on Good Friday,
+ announced to the frightened multitude, in the name of Heaven, that the
+ domains of John, King of England, were laid under the ban of the Church
+ until he should have rendered submission to the Holy See. Every torch was
+ then at once extinguished, in token that the light of the Gospel was
+ denied them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thenceforth every church was closed; no bell pealed forth, no mass was
+ offered, no matins nor vespers were sung. Only the dying were permitted to
+ communicate, but their corpses were laid in the ground with maimed rites;
+ infants were baptized, but their mothers were churched only in the
+ churchyard, where on Sunday a sermon was preached, and on Good Friday the
+ cross was carried out and exposed for the veneration of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monasteries were allowed to carry on their services, on condition that
+ they did so with closed doors, admitting no one from without; and the
+ Cistercian order considered it as their privilege to be exempt, and to
+ open their churches for worship as usual. Neither did the King&rsquo;s favorite,
+ Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, nor De Gray himself, choose to
+ acknowledge the interdict, so that the services continued as usual in
+ their sees, and in many single parishes. These were the only two bishops
+ in England; for the three who proclaimed the interdict had at once to flee
+ for their lives, and the others, few in number at present, soon followed
+ them. De Gray being soon after sent as deputy to Ireland, Des Roches was
+ the sole bishop left to all England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King made light of it; and when, in the chase, he killed an unusually
+ fat buck, he said, laughing, &ldquo;Here is a fellow who has prospered well
+ enough without ever hearing matins or vespers.&rdquo; But he was much enraged;
+ he imprisoned the relatives of the fugitive bishops, and announced himself
+ ready to drive every priest who should obey the interdict out of the
+ kingdom, to be maintained, as he said, by the Pope. The Archdeacon of
+ Norwich experienced his cruelty for consulting with his brethren on
+ enforcing it. The Angevin soldiers seized him, and soldered on his neck a
+ cope of lead, so that he perished in prison under its weight, and from
+ hunger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterward, however, some terror seized on John, and he ordered his
+ officers to allow the bishops enough to provide them two dishes of meat
+ each day, while the secular clergy were to receive as much as should be
+ adjudged needful for their support by four sworn men of their parish.
+ Moreover, the man who, by word or deed, abused any of the clergy, should
+ forthwith be hanged upon an oak!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope followed up his interdict by excommunicating John, and absolving
+ his subjects from their oaths of allegiance, but a strict watch was kept
+ on the ports, and no one seems ever to have dared to lay the bull before
+ the King. However, its existence was well known, and rendered John very
+ uneasy. He wished to hear what his fate was to be, and his half-brother,
+ William Longsword, brought him a hermit, named Peter of Wakefield, who
+ told him he would wear his crown no longer than next Ascension Day. John
+ flew into a rage, and called him idiot-knave; declared that, as idiot, he
+ pardoned him, but, as knave, he imprisoned him in Corfe Castle, till he
+ should see whether his tale came true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, to preserve the obedience of the nobles, demanded their children
+ to be kept as hostages. One of those to whom the order came was William de
+ Braose, Lord of Bramber, in Sussex, and of a wide district in Ireland.
+ Herds of the wild white cattle with red ears roamed about his estate, and
+ his wife is said to have boasted that she could victual a besieged castle
+ for a month with her cheeses, and yet have some to spare. When John&rsquo;s
+ squire, Pierre de Maulac, the hated governor of Corfe, who was accused of
+ having aided in the murder of Arthur, came to demand her children, the
+ high-spirited lady answered that the King had not taken such care of his
+ own nephew as to make her entrust her son to his keeping. Her husband was
+ alarmed for the consequences of her bold speech, sent four hundred of the
+ oxen as a present to the Queen, and fled with his wife to Ireland; but in
+ his absence, two years after, John made a progress thither, seized upon
+ her and her children, and sent them back to Corfe, where Maulac, by his
+ orders, starved them all to death in the dungeons. The eldest son escaped,
+ being with his father in France, where the unhappy Lord of Bramber died of
+ grief on hearing of their horrible fate, the most barbarous action which
+ has ever stained the pages of English history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent now put forth a bull addressed to the King of France, saying that
+ the prelates of Canterbury, London, and Ely, having declared to him the
+ cruel persecution of the English Church, he had, in presence of his
+ cardinals, solemnly deposed King John; and in order that a greater and
+ more noble prince might be summoned to the throne, he granted it to
+ Philippe Auguste, assuring him that all his efforts to conquer it should
+ be reckoned for the remission of his sins, and that he might transmit his
+ conquests to his descendants. He wrote other letters, desiring the French
+ nobles to second their King in their enterprise; and there were many
+ English who, grieved by the censures of the Church, and suffering personal
+ injuries from their tyrant, were ready to seek aid in a new dynasty.
+ Walter Hubert&rsquo;s doctrine of the most worthy was an unfortunate one for
+ such a king as John, and he began to reap the fruits of it when placed in
+ comparison with Louis the Lion, whom, by the marriage with his niece,
+ Blanche of Castille, he had placed next in succession to his own infant
+ children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis collected a fleet and army, and put forth a proclamation; while John
+ forced money from his subjects, robbed the monasteries, and tortured the
+ Jews. One of them, refusing to pay an exorbitant demand of 10,000 marks,
+ was seized, and condemned daily to lose a tooth until he should consent.
+ He held out seven days, and did not yield up the sum till he had lost all
+ his double teeth. Scotland and Wales were also stirred up against him; and
+ though he made a treaty with William the Lion, and defeated Llewellyn of
+ Wales, his danger was pressing, and John de Gray, the chosen archbishop,
+ is said to have done his best, to put the Pope in the right, by advising
+ his master to seek the alliance of the Emir of Cordova, Mahomet of Nesser,
+ one of the brave, generous, and learned Moors of Spain, who had it in his
+ power seriously to damage France on the southern frontier, and thus make a
+ diversion in his favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two knights and a clerk, it is alleged, were sent on this mission,
+ proposing to Mahomet to take John under his protection on receiving a
+ tribute from him, and he even offered himself and De Gray to become
+ Mahometans, so as to be rid of Pope and cardinals together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bearers of this base proposal were admitted to the palace. At the
+ first door they found soldiers with drawn swords, in the second a band of
+ nobles, in the third a species of couch guarded by ferocious-looking
+ warriors, who opened their ranks and let them approach the Saracen prince.
+ They explained their mission, and gave him the King&rsquo;s letters, which were
+ translated by an interpreter, while they studied the grave and majestic
+ but gentle expression of his countenance. After some minutes&rsquo; reflection,
+ he thus spoke: &ldquo;A few moments ago I was reading a book by a Greek sage;
+ who was a Christian, by name Paul, whose words and acts please me
+ exceedingly. One thing alone in him displeases me, namely, that, born
+ under the Jewish law, he forsook the faith of his fathers to adopt a new
+ one. It is the same with your King of England, who, renouncing the
+ religion to which he was born, is bent and moulded like wax. I know the
+ Almighty is ignorant of nothing; and, had I been born with no religion, I
+ might have chosen the Christian. But tell me, what is the King of England&mdash;what
+ are the strength and riches of his realm?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clerk then spoke: &ldquo;Our King is born of illustrious ancestors, his
+ domains are rich in fertile pastures, forests, and mines; his people are
+ mighty and handsome, possessed of sciences, and ruling over three tongues&mdash;Welsh,
+ Latin, and French. The English understand all arts, especially mechanics
+ and navigation, and they have gained the title of Island Kings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, ha!&rdquo; said the Moor, smiling; &ldquo;but how can the prince of so fair a
+ kingdom condescend, to offer to give up his freedom, pay tribute, and put
+ himself under subjection? He must be sick. What is his age?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Between forty and fifty&mdash;strong and healthy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see how it is! He is losing his youthful spirit!&rdquo; Then, after a
+ silence, &ldquo;Your King is nothing; he is only a kinglet growing enfeebled and
+ old. I care not for him; he is unworthy to be united to me. Away with you!
+ Your master&rsquo;s infamy stinks in my nostrils!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoys retired in confusion; but the Emir had been struck by the
+ appearance of the clerk, a small, deformed man, with a dark, Jewish face,
+ one arm longer than the other, misshapen fingers, wearing the tonsure and
+ clerical habit; and thinking there must be superior intelligence to
+ counterbalance so unprepossessing an aspect, he sent for him in private,
+ and asked him on oath respecting the morals and character of his master.
+ He was obliged to confess the whole truth; and Mahomet asked, in surprise,
+ &ldquo;How can the English allow this cowardly tyrant to misuse them? Are they
+ effeminate and servile?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed,&rdquo; was the answer, &ldquo;but they are very patient, until driven to
+ extremity; then, like the wounded lion or elephant, they rise against
+ their oppressor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I blame their weakness,&rdquo; said the Emir: &ldquo;they should put an end to the
+ wretch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, obtaining nothing for their master by his plan of apostasy, the envoys
+ were dismissed, the clerk alone having received a present from the Saracen
+ prince, who had been pleased with his ability. While buoyed up by these
+ hopes, John had shown some spirit; he had fitted out a fleet, which
+ suddenly crossed the Channel and burnt the French ships at Dieppe, and he
+ was at the head of an army of 60,000 men in Kent. But he did not trust his
+ own forces, and, on hearing there was no aid to be looked for from Spain,
+ his courage failed, and he was ready, after all his threats, to make any
+ concession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hubert, Abbot of Beaulieu, the monastery founded by John in expiation of
+ Arthur&rsquo;s murder, was secretly sent with offers of submission, and two
+ Knights of the Temple arrived at the camp with a message that Cardinal
+ Pandulfo, the Pope&rsquo;s legate, would fain see the King in private. John
+ consented, and Pandulfo, coming to him at Dover, terrified him dreadfully
+ with the description of the French armament, and then skilfully talked of
+ the Pope&rsquo;s clemency and forgiveness. This took the more effect that
+ Ascension Day was approaching, and the prediction of Peter of Wakefield
+ way preying on his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 13th of May, John consented, in the presence of four of his nobles&mdash;the
+ Earls of Salisbury, Boulogne, Warenne, and Ferrars&mdash;to a treaty such
+ as had been previously offered to him, receiving Langton, recalling the
+ exiled clergy, and making restitution for the injuries they had suffered.
+ This deed was sealed by the King and the four earls, and it seemed as if
+ all were arranged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, however, the legate was closeted with the King; and on the
+ following, the eve of the Ascension, 1213, the English were amazed by the
+ proceedings of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He repaired to the church of the Temple early in the morning, and there an
+ instrument was read aloud: &ldquo;Ye know,&rdquo; it said, in the name of John to his
+ subjects, &ldquo;that we have deeply offended our Holy Mother the Church, and
+ that it will be hard to draw on us the mercy of Heaven. Therefore we would
+ humble ourselves, and without constraint, of our own free will, by the
+ consent of our barons and high justiciaries, we give and confer on God, on
+ the holy Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul, on our Mother the Church, and on
+ Pope Innocent III. and his Catholic successors, the whole kingdom of
+ England and of Ireland, with all their rights and dependencies, for the
+ remission of our sins; henceforth we hold them as a fief, and in, token
+ thereof we swear allegiance and pay homage in presence of Pandulfo, Legate
+ of the Holy See.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John seems to have found no chancellor who would seal the charter of his
+ shame, but to have had to set the great seal to it himself; thus giving to
+ the Pope, &ldquo;for the remission of his sins,&rdquo; the crown which the Saracen had
+ disdained! The cardinal legate seated himself on the vacated throne, John
+ knelt at his feet, laid down the crown, and spoke the words of allegiance
+ as a vassal, offering money as the earnest of the tribute. Pandulfo
+ indignantly trampled on the coin, in token that the Church scorned earthly
+ riches; but earthly honors Rome did not scorn, and for five days the crown
+ remained in the cardinal&rsquo;s keeping. So John was discrowned on Ascension
+ Day, and Peter of Wakefield&rsquo;s prediction was verified; but it did not save
+ the poor prophet. The vindictive wretch, who pretended to have yielded his
+ throne for the pardon of his sins, caused him and his son to be drawn at
+ the tails of horses, and hanged on gibbets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excommunication was removed, and the hateful John was declared a
+ favored son of the Church, while Pandulfo went to put a stop to the French
+ expedition. This was not quite so easy; Philippe Auguste had been at great
+ expense, and he could not endure to let his enemy escape him; he was the
+ Pope&rsquo;s friend only when it suited him, and he swore that, Pope or no Pope,
+ he would invade England. Ferrand, Count of Flanders, remonstrated and
+ Philippe drove him away in a fury, &ldquo;By all the saints, France shall belong
+ to Flanders, or Flanders to France!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he burst into Flanders, and besieged Ghent. Ferrand sent to John for
+ aid, and the fleet under the command of the earls of Holland and Salisbury
+ utterly destroyed the French fleet at Bruges, on which Philippe depended
+ for provisions, so that he was forced to retreat to his own country. The
+ following year, as he was still in opposition to the Pope, a league was
+ formed for the invasion of France, between John, his nephew Otho, Emperor
+ of Germany, and many other friends of Innocent, but it only resulted in a
+ shameful defeat at Bouvines, where Philippe signalized his courage and
+ generalship, and John and Otho fled in disgrace. In this battle the Bishop
+ of Beauvais again fought, but thought to obviate the danger of being
+ disavowed by his spiritual father by using no weapon save a club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Stephen Langton arrived in England, took possession of
+ his see, and at Winchester received a reluctant kiss from the King, who
+ bitterly hated the cause of his shame. The Cardinal Archbishop publicly
+ absolved the King, and relieved the country from the interdict under which
+ it had groaned for five years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a melancholy history of the encroachments of Rome, and of the
+ atrocious wickedness of the English King; and perhaps the worst feature in
+ the case was that his crimes went unreproved, and that it was only his
+ resistance to the Pope that was punished. The love of temporal dominion
+ was ruining the Church of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXVII. MAGNA CHARTA. (1214-1217.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1199. John.
+ 1216. Henry III.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1214. Alexander II.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1180. Philippe II.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany.</i>
+ 1209. Friedrich II.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1198. Innocent III.
+ 1216. Honorius III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The first table of English laws were those of Ina, King of Wessex. Alfred
+ the Great published a fuller code, commencing with the Ten Commandments,
+ as the foundation of all law. Ethelstane and St. Dunstan, in the name of
+ Edgar the Peaceable, added many other enactments, by which the lives,
+ liberties, and property of Englishmen were secured as soundly as the
+ wisdom of the times could devise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were the laws of Alfred and Edward the Confessor, which William the
+ Conqueror bound himself to observe at his coronation, but which he
+ entirely set at nought, bringing in with him the feudal system, according
+ to his own harsh interpretation. The Norman barons who owned estates in
+ England found themselves more entirely subject to the King, who brought
+ them in by right of conquest, than they had been by ancient custom to
+ their duke in Normandy; and Saxons and Normans alike were new to the
+ strict Forest Laws introduced by William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every king of doubtful right tried to win the favor of the Saxons, a
+ sturdy and formidable race, though still in subjection, by engaging to
+ give them the laws of their own dynasty. With this promise William Rufus
+ was crowned, and likewise Henry I., who even distributed copies of the
+ charter to be kept in the archives of all the chief abbeys, but afterward
+ caused them, it seems, to be privately destroyed. Stephen made the same
+ futile promise, failing perhaps, more from inability than from design; and
+ after his death the nation was so glad of repose on any terms, that there
+ were no special stipulations made on the accession of Henry II. He and his
+ Grand Justiciary, Ranulf de Glanville, governed according to law, but it
+ was partly the law of Normandy, partly of their own device; the Norman <i>parlement</i>
+ of barons, and the Saxon Wittenagemot, were alike ignored. The King
+ obtained sufficient supplies from his own immense estates, and from the
+ fines which he had the power to demand at certain times as feudal
+ superior, and did in fact obtain at will, and exact even for doing men
+ justice in courts of law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as there was an orderly sovereign, such as Henry II. the unlimited
+ power of the Crown was tolerable; under a reckless, impetuous prince like
+ Coeur de Lion, it was a grievance; and, in a tyrant such as John Lackland,
+ it became past endurance. His fines were outrageous extortion, and here
+ and there the entries in the accounts show the base, wanton bribery in his
+ court. The Bishop of Winchester paid a tun of good wine for not reminding
+ the King to give a girdle to the Countess of Albemarle; Robert de Vaux
+ gave five of his best palfreys that the King might hold his tongue about
+ Henry Pinel&rsquo;s wife; while a third paid four marks for permission to eat.
+ Moreover, no man&rsquo;s family was safe, even of the highest rank: the death of
+ the Lady of Bramber was fresh in the memory of all; and Matilda the Fair,
+ the daughter of Robert Lord Fitzwalter, was seized, carried from her home,
+ and, because she refused to listen to the suit of the tyrant, her father
+ was banished, his castles destroyed, and the maiden, after enduring with
+ constancy two years&rsquo; imprisonment in a turret of the White Tower of
+ London, was poisoned with an egg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person of whom John stood most in awe, was his Grand Justiciary,
+ Geoffrey Fitzpiers, who, though of low birth, had married the Countess of
+ Essex, and was highly respected for his character and situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day the King, with his usual imprudence, pointed him out to the
+ Provost of St. Omer. &ldquo;Seest thou him yonder? Never did one man watch
+ another as he watches me, lest I should get some of his goods; but as much
+ pains as he takes to watch me, so much do I take to gain them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fitzpiers was not out of earshot, and his comment was, &ldquo;Sir Provost, well
+ did I hear what the King said to thee; and since he is so set on my
+ wealth, he will surely get it; but thou knowest; and he knows, that I can
+ raise such a storm as he will feel many a day after my death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John&rsquo;s fears did not prevent him from imposing a fine of 12,000 marks on
+ Geoffrey, which ended his patience. He entered into an understanding with
+ the barons, who had just been summoned by John to attend him on his
+ expedition against France. They joined him, but sailed no further than
+ Jersey, where they declared that the forty days they were bound to serve
+ by feudal tenure were passed; and all, turning back, met Archbishop
+ Langton and the Grand Justiciary at St. Albans, where Fitzpiers commenced
+ his retaliation, by proclaiming, in the King&rsquo;s name, the old Saxon charter
+ of Alfred and Edward, renewed by Henry I., as well as the repeal of the
+ Forest Laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back came John in rage and fury, and let loose his free-companions on the
+ estates of the confederates. At Northampton, Stephen Langton met him, and
+ forbade his violence. &ldquo;These measures are contrary to your oaths,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;Your vassals have a right to be judged only by their peers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John reviled him. &ldquo;Rule you the Church,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;leave me to govern the
+ State.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Langton left him, but met him again at Nottingham, assuring him the barons
+ would come to have their cause tried, and threatening excommunication to
+ every one who should execute the King&rsquo;s barbarous orders. This brought
+ John to terms, and all parties met in London, where the Archbishop had a
+ previous conference with the barons, to which he brought a copy of the
+ Charter, with great difficulty procured from one of the monasteries. He
+ read it to them, commented on its provisions, and they ended by mutually
+ engaging to conquer, or die in defence of their rights as Englishmen. The
+ Norman barons were glad enough so to term themselves, and to take shelter
+ under English laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was the Pope&rsquo;s kingdom now, not that of craven John; and Innocent
+ sent a legate, Nicholas, Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum, to settle the
+ affair. John debased himself by repeating the homage and oath of fealty,
+ and by giving a fresh charter of submission, sealed not with wax, but with
+ gold, as if to make it more binding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The injuries done to the barons by the free-companions were beyond the
+ King&rsquo;s power of restitution, but the Pope adjudged him to pay 15,000 marks
+ for the present, after which John set off on his disastrous journey to
+ Bouvines. In his absence, Fitzpiers died, and this quite consoled him for
+ his defeat. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s well,&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;he is gone to shake hands in hell with
+ our primate Hubert! Now am I first truly a King!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Geoffrey&rsquo;s storm was near its bursting, precipitated perhaps by the
+ loss of this last curb on the lawless King. Langton was seriously
+ displeased with the legate, who had taken all the Church patronage into
+ his hands, and was giving it away to Italians, foreigners, children&mdash;nay,
+ even promising it for the unborn. The Archbishop sent his brother Simon to
+ appeal to the Pope, but could get no redress. Innocent was displeased with
+ him for opposing the <i>protégé</i> of the papal see; and certainly he had
+ no right to complain of the Roman patronage while he held the see of
+ Canterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he was too much of an Englishman to see his Church or his country
+ trampled down; and at Christmas, 1214, there was another assembly of the
+ barons at Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s. The plans were arranged, and an oath taken by
+ each singly, kneeling before the high altar in the church of the royal
+ Saxon saint, that if the laws were rejected, they would withdraw their
+ oaths of allegiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They set out for Worcester to present their charter to the King, but he
+ got intelligence of their design, hastened to London, and put himself
+ under the protection of the Knights of the Temple. They followed him, and
+ on Twelfth Day laid the charter before him. He took a high tone, and only
+ insisted on their declaring by hand and seal that they would never so act
+ again; but finding this was not the way to treat such men, promised, on
+ the security of the Archbishop, the Bishop of Ely, and Earl of Pembroke,
+ to grant what they asked at Easter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He used the space thus gained in taking the Cross, that he might enjoy the
+ immunities of a Crusader, fortifying his castles, and sending for
+ free-companions, while both parties wrote explanations to the Pope. John
+ obtained encouragement, Langton was severely reprehended; Innocent
+ declared all the confederacies of the barons null and void, and forbade
+ them for the future, under pain of excommunication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Easter-week the barons met at Stamford, with 2,000 knights and their
+ squires. Their charter was carried to the King at Oxford by the Archbishop
+ and the Earls of Pembroke and Warenne. They were received with fury. &ldquo;Why
+ do not they ask my crown at once?&rdquo; cried John. &ldquo;Do they think I will grant
+ them liberties that would make me a slave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, with more moderation, he proposed to appeal to the Pope, and to
+ redress all grievances that had arisen in his own time or in that of his
+ brothers; but they still adhered to their demands, and when Pandulfo
+ called on the Primate to excommunicate the insurgent barons, Langton made
+ answer that he was better instructed in the Pope&rsquo;s views, and unless the
+ King dismissed his foreign soldiers, he should be obliged to excommunicate
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John offered to refer the matter to nine umpires&mdash;namely, Innocent,
+ four chosen by himself, and four by the barons; but this also was
+ rejected: the barons would have no terms short of their Great Charter; and
+ electing the most injured of all, Robert Fitzwalter, as their general,
+ they marched against Northampton. It was garrisoned by the King&rsquo;s foreign
+ mercenaries, who refused all attempts to corrupt them; and as the want of
+ machines made it impossible to take it, the barons proceeded to Bedford
+ after fifteen days, their spirits somewhat damped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Bedford opened its gates, and tidings reached them that London
+ was favorably disposed. They therefore proceeded thither, and arrived on
+ the first Sunday in June, early in the morning, when the gates were
+ opened, and the burghers all at mass in the churches. They entered in
+ excellent order, took possession of the Tower, and thence sent forth
+ proclamations, terming themselves the Army of God and of Holy Church, and
+ calling on every one to join them, under pain of being used as traitors
+ and rebels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole country responded; scarcely a man, Saxon or Norman, who was not
+ with them in spirit; and John, then at Odiham, in Hampshire, found himself
+ deserted by all his knights save seven. He was at first in deadly terror;
+ but soon rallying his spirits, he resolved to cajole the barons,
+ pronounced that what his lieges had done was well done, and despatched the
+ Earl of Pembroke to assure them of his readiness and satisfaction in
+ granting their desires: all that was needed was a day and place for the
+ meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The day, the 15th of June; the place, Runnymede,&rdquo; returned his loving
+ subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The broad, smooth, green meadow of Runnymede, on the bank of the Thames,
+ spreading out fair and fertile beneath the heights of Windsor, became a
+ watchword of English rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stalwart barony of England, Norman in name and rank, but with Saxon
+ blood infused in their veins, and strength consisting of stout Saxon
+ yeomen and peasantry, there arrayed themselves, with Robert Fitzwalter for
+ their spokesman and leader; and thither, on the other hand, came, from
+ Windsor Castle, King John, accompanied by Cardinal Pandulfo, Amaury, Grand
+ Master of the Temple, Langton, and seven other bishops, and Pembroke with
+ twelve nobles, but scarcely one of these, except the two first, whose
+ heart was not with the barons on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charter was spread forth&mdash;the Great Charter, which, in the first
+ place, asserted the liberty of the Church of England, and then of its
+ people. It forbade the King to exact arbitrary sums from his subjects
+ without the consent of a council of the great crown vassals; it required
+ that no man should be made an officer of justice without knowledge of the
+ law; and forced from the King the promise not to sell, refuse, or defer
+ right or justice to any man; neither to seize the person or goods of any
+ free man without the lawful judgment of his peers, or by the law of the
+ land. The same privileges were extended to the cities, but the serfs or
+ villeins had no part in them; the nobility of England had not yet learnt
+ to consider them worthy of regard. Much, however, was done by the
+ recognition of the law, and Magna Charta has been the foundation of all
+ subsequent legislation in England. A lesser charter was added on the
+ oppressive Forest Laws, which it in some degree mitigated by lessening the
+ number of royal forests, and appointing nobles in each county to keep in
+ check the violence of the King&rsquo;s keepers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The original Charter itself, creased with age and injured by fire, but
+ with John&rsquo;s great seal still appended to it, remains extant in the British
+ Museum, a copy beside it, bearing in beautiful old writing in Latin the
+ clear, sharp, lawyer-like terms with which the barons, who, rough and
+ turbulent as they were, must have had among them men of great legal
+ ability, sought to bind their tyrant to respect their lives and lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four-and-twenty of their number, and with them the Mayor of London, were
+ appointed to enforce the observance of the Charter, which was sent out to
+ the sheriffs in all the counties to be proclaimed by them with sounds of
+ trumpet at the market-crosses and in the churches; while twelve men,
+ learned in the law, were to be chosen to inquire into and re dress all
+ grievances since the accession. Moreover, every Poitevin, Brabançon, and
+ other free-companion in the King&rsquo;s service was to be immediately
+ dismissed, and the barons were to hold the city of London, and Langton the
+ Tower, for the next two months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Charter was thus sealed, June 15th, 1215; and John, as long as he was
+ in the presence of the barons, put a restraint on himself, and acted as if
+ it was granted, as it professed to be, of his own free will and pleasure,
+ speaking courteously to all who approached, and treating the matter in
+ hand with his usual gay levity, signing the Charter with so little heed to
+ its contents that the wiser heads must have gathered that he had no
+ intention of being bound by them. However, they had achieved a great
+ victory, and, after parting with him, amused themselves by arranging for a
+ tournament to be held at Stamford; while John, when within the walls of
+ Windsor, gave vent to his rage, threw himself on the ground, rolled about
+ gnawing sticks and straws, uttering maledictions upon the barons, and
+ denouncing vengeance against the nation that had made him an underling to
+ twenty-five kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On recovering, he ordered his horse, and secretly withdrew to the Isle of
+ Wight, where he saw no one but the piratical fishermen of the place, whose
+ manners he imitated, and even, it is said, joined in some of their lawless
+ expeditions. At the same time he despatched letters to the Brabançons and
+ Gascons, inviting them to the conquest of England, and promising them the
+ castles and manors of his present subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barons gained some tidings of his proceedings, and were on their
+ guard. Robert Fitzwalter wrote letters appointing the tournament to be
+ held, not at Stamford, but on Hounslow Heath, summoning the knights to it
+ with their arms and horses, and promising, as the prize of the tournay, a
+ she-bear, which the young lady of a castle had sent them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To what brave knight the she-bear was awarded, history says not; for in
+ the midst came the tidings that the Pope had been greatly enraged, had
+ annulled the Charter as prejudicial to the power of the Church, and had
+ commanded the Archbishop of Canterbury to dissolve all leagues among the
+ vassals under pain of excommunication. The barons, having the Archbishop
+ on their side, thought little of the thunders of the Pope; but John was
+ emboldened to come forth, offer a conference at Oxford, which he did not
+ attend, and then go to Dover to receive the free-companions, who flocked
+ from all quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barons sent Stephen Langton to Rome to plead their cause, and found
+ themselves obliged to take up arms. William de Albini, one of the
+ twenty-five sureties, was sent to possess himself of the Castle of
+ Rochester; but before he could bring in sufficient stores, he was invested
+ by John, with Savary de Mauléon, called the Bloody, and a band of
+ free-companions, whose <i>noms de guerre</i> were equally truculent&mdash;namely,
+ the Merciless, the Murderer, the Iron-hearted. One of the archers within
+ the walls bent his bow at the King&rsquo;s breast, and said to the castellane,
+ &ldquo;Shall I deliver you from yonder mortal foe?&rdquo; &ldquo;No; hold thy hand,&rdquo; said
+ Albini; &ldquo;strike not the evil beast; shouldst thou fail, thy doom would be
+ certain.&rdquo; &ldquo;Then, betide what God will, I hold my hand!&rdquo; said the archer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two months these brave men held out, but by St. Andrew&rsquo;s Day they had
+ eaten all their horses, and the walls were battered down, so that Albini
+ was forced to surrender. John was for hanging the whole garrison, but
+ Mauléon said, &ldquo;Sir, the war is not over; the chances are beyond reckoning.
+ If we begin by hanging your barons, your barons may end by hanging us.&rdquo; So
+ Albini and the nobles were spared, but the archers and men-at-arms were
+ hung in halters to every tree in the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Archbishop had failed at Rome, and partly by his own fault,
+ for he had tried to make his brother Simon, a man generally detested,
+ Archbishop of York, and thus had given Innocent good reason for again
+ interfering. He was placed under sentence of suspension; the barons,
+ beginning with Fitzwalter, were excommunicated as rebels against a Church
+ vassal and Crusader, and termed as wicked as Saracens; and the city of
+ London was laid under an interdict.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Londoners boldly declared that the Pope had no power to meddle in
+ their case, kept their churches open, and celebrated their Christmas as
+ usual; but beyond their walls it was less easy to be secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John now had two great armies of foreigners, and had been joined by
+ several of the barons&rsquo; party; and he marched with one of them for the
+ North, where young King Alexander of Scotland had laid siege to Norham,
+ and had received the homage of the neighboring nobility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As John advanced, the barons burnt their houses and corn before him, while
+ he and his marauders ruined all they approached; he every morning, with
+ his own hands, set fire to his night&rsquo;s lodgings, and in eight days five
+ principal towns were consumed, and the course of his army was like the bed
+ of a torrent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vowing he would unkennel the young fox, as he called Alexander, on account
+ of his red hair, John sent his troops into Scotland, where they laid the
+ whole country waste up to Edinburgh, and then, returning, reduced the
+ castles and ravaged the lands of the barons in Yorkshire, and the same
+ dreadful atrocities were perpetrated by his other army in the south of
+ England, till the country people called the free-companions by no other
+ name than Satan&rsquo;s Guards, and the Devil&rsquo;s Servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barons had no stronghold left them but London, and saw their rank,
+ their families, and estates, at the mercy of the remorseless tyrant and
+ his savage banditti, backed by the support of their spiritual superiors.
+ In this condition they deemed all ties between them and their sovereign
+ dissolved, and, as their last resource, resolved to offer the crown to
+ Louis, the son of Philippe Auguste, and the husband of Blanche of Castile,
+ the marriage made to separate France from the cause of Arthur. It was a
+ step which even their extremity could not justify, passing over, as it
+ did, the rights of the captive Pearl of Brittany, of John&rsquo;s own innocent
+ children, and of those of his eldest sister. But men have seldom been
+ harder pressed than were these barons; and they were further tempted by
+ the hope that all the mercenaries who were French subjects might be
+ detached from the enemy by seeing their own prince&rsquo;s standard unfurled
+ against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saher de Quincy, Earl of Winchester, and Robert Fitzwalter, were deputed
+ to carry letters to Prince Louis, who was then at war with the Albigenses
+ of Languedoc. The wary old King Philippe dissembled his joy at the
+ promised triumph over the hated Plantagenet, and at first declared that he
+ could not trust his son&rsquo;s person in England, unless twenty-four nobles
+ were first given up to him as hostages; but he permitted Louis to send a
+ favorable reply to England, and the barons were so delighted at its
+ reception, accompanied by a few French volunteers, that they held another
+ tournament in its honor, but this was closed by the death of Geoffrey
+ Mandeville, who was accidentally killed by the lance of a Frenchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent was much incensed at the enterprise of the French prince,
+ forgetting that he had already shown him the way to England. He sent his
+ legate, Gualo, with letters to forbid Philippe&rsquo;s interference with a fief
+ of the Holy See, and these were laid before the court in full council.
+ Philippe, who always tried to have the law apparently on his side, began
+ by saying he was the devoted subject of the Pope, and it was by no counsel
+ or advice of his that his son disobeyed the court of Rome; but as he
+ declared that he had some rights to the English crown, it was fair to hear
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A knight then arose, and declared that John had been attainted and
+ condemned by Philippe&rsquo;s own court on account of Arthur&rsquo;s murder; that he
+ had since given his crown away without the consent of his barons; and as
+ no sovereign had any such right, the throne was vacant by his own act, and
+ his barons had full power to elect, and Louis to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legate declared John to be a Crusader, and therefore under the
+ Church&rsquo;s peace for four years. He was answered, that John had himself
+ violated that peace; and then Louis, rising, and turning to his father,
+ said, &ldquo;Sir, if I am your liegeman for the lands you have given me here,
+ you have no right to England, which is offered to me: you can decree
+ nothing on that head. I appeal to the judgment of my peers, whether I
+ ought to follow your commands or my rights. I beg you not to hinder my
+ designs, for my cause is just, and I will fight to the death for my wife&rsquo;s
+ inheritance.&rdquo; Then, red with anger, Louis the Lion left the assembly,
+ while the legate asked the King for a safe-conduct to England; and
+ Philippe replied, that on the French territory he was safe enough; but if,
+ on the coast, he fell into the hands of <i>King</i> Louis&rsquo;s men, he could
+ not be responsible for his safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gualo, however, came safely to England, and joined John at Dover, where he
+ promised him the succor of the Church; and Innocent, as an earnest,
+ excommunicated Louis, and preached to his cardinals on Ezekiel xxi. 28:
+ &ldquo;The sword, the sword is drawn.&rdquo; But this was one of the last public acts
+ of his life; he died at Perugia on the 8th of July, 1216, without having
+ been able to send any support to his obedient vassal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Louis collected a great force, and embarked with it in 680
+ vessels, under the command of Eustace the Monk, a recreant who had become
+ a pirate, and was reckoned the best mariner of his time. John fled from
+ Dover, leaving it to the trusty and loyal Hubert de Burgh, while Louis
+ disembarked at Sandwich, and was received by the barons, who were charmed
+ with his chivalrous and affable demeanor. They conducted him to London,
+ where, in St. Paul&rsquo;s, he received their homage, and made oath to govern
+ them by good laws, after which he appointed Simon Langton his chancellor.
+ Nearly the whole country gave in their adhesion, Alexander of Scotland
+ paid him homage, the North rose in his favor, and the chief strongholds
+ that remained to John were Windsor Castle; Corfe, where, under the care of
+ his wicked follower, Pierre de Maulae, were his queen and little children;
+ and Dover, gallantly defended by Hubert de Burgh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly four months were spent by Louis in a vain attempt to take this
+ place; his supplies were cut off by the sailors of the Cinque Ports, who
+ were in John&rsquo;s interest; and though Louis&rsquo;s father sent him a battering
+ machine, called Malvoisine, or &ldquo;Bad Neighbor,&rdquo; he could make no impression
+ on the walls. Meantime, the estates of the barons were devastated by John
+ and his free-companions; and if ever the French prince retook any of the
+ castles, he retained them in his own hands, or gave them to his French
+ followers, instead of restoring them to their owners. They began to
+ suspect that they were in evil case, more especially when the Vicomte de
+ Melun, being suddenly seized by a mortal sickness, sent for all the nobles
+ then in London, and thus spoke: &ldquo;I grieve for your fate. I, with the
+ prince and fifteen others, have sworn an oath, that, when the realm is
+ his, ye shall all be beggared, or exterminated as traitors whom he can
+ never trust. Look to yourselves!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suspicion thus excited, William Longsword and several other barons
+ returned to their allegiance, and forty more offered to do the same on the
+ promise of pardon. Louis was forced to raise the siege of Dover, and
+ John&rsquo;s prospects improved; he took Lincoln, and marched to Lynn, whence he
+ wont to Wisbech, intending to proceed by the Wash from Cross-keys to
+ Foss-dyke, across the sands&mdash;a safe passage at low water, but covered
+ suddenly by the tide, which there forms a considerable eddy on meeting the
+ current of the Welland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His troops were nearly all on the other side, when the tide began to rush
+ in. They gained the higher ground in safety; but the long train of wagons,
+ carrying his crown, his treasure, his stores of provision, were suddenly
+ engulfed, and the whole was lost. Some years since, one of the gold
+ circlets worn over the helmet was found by a laborer in the sand, but, in
+ ignorance of its value, he sold it to a Jew, and it has thus been lost to
+ the antiquary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King John went into one of his paroxysms of despair at the ruin he beheld,
+ and, feverish with passion, arrived at the Cistercian convent of
+ Swineshead, where he seems to have tried to forget his disaster in a
+ carouse upon peaches and new ale, and in the morning found himself
+ extremely ill; but fancying the monks had poisoned him, he insisted on
+ being carried in a litter to Sleaford, whence the next day he proceeded to
+ Newark, where it became evident that death was at hand. A confessor was
+ sent for, and he bequeathed his kingdom to his son Henry. As far as it
+ appears from the records of his deathbed, no compunction visited him;
+ probably, he thought himself secure as a favored vassal of the Holy See.
+ When asked where he would be buried, he replied that he committed himself
+ to God and to the body of St. Wulstan (who had been canonized by Innocent
+ III. in 1203). He dictated a letter to the new Pope, Honorius III., and
+ died October 19, 1216, in the forty-ninth year of his age, the last and
+ worst of the four rebellious sons of Henry II., all cut off in the prime
+ of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His death made a great difference in the aspect of affairs. His innocent
+ sons had forfeited no claim to the affection of the English, and their
+ weakness was their most powerful claim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Pembroke at once marched to Corfe Castle, and brought the two
+ boys, nine and seven years old, to Gloucester, where young Henry&rsquo;s
+ melancholy coronation took place. In lieu of his father&rsquo;s lost and
+ dishonored crown, a golden bracelet of his mother&rsquo;s was placed upon his
+ head by the papal legate, instead of his own primate, and he bent his knee
+ in homage to the see of Rome. The few vassals who attended him held their
+ coronation banquet, and afterward bound a white fillet around their heads,
+ in token of their vow of fidelity to their little, helpless king. Magna
+ Charta was revised a few days after at Bristol; Henry was made to swear to
+ agree to it, and the Earl of Pembroke appointed as his protector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, Louis had received the news of his rival&rsquo;s death while again
+ besieging Dover, the capture of which was most important to him, as
+ securing his communications with his own country. He sent tidings of it to
+ the garrison by two English barons, one of them Hubert&rsquo;s own brother,
+ Thomas de Burgh. On their approach the sentinels sounded their horns, and,
+ without opening the gates, the governor came to speak to them, with five
+ archers, their crossbows bent. They told him of the King&rsquo;s decease, and
+ reminded him of the oath Louis had made to hang him and all his garrison
+ if the town were taken by assault instead of surrender. His brother said
+ he was ruining himself and all his family, and the other knight offered
+ him, in the prince&rsquo;s name, the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. But Hubert
+ would hear no more. &ldquo;Traitors that you are,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;if King John is
+ dead, he leaves children! Say no more; if you open your lips again, I will
+ have you shot with a hundred arrows, not sparing even my brother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis was obliged to draw off his forces, returned to London, and took
+ Hertford; Robert Fitzwalter claimed the keeping of the castle as a family
+ right, but Louis forgot the necessity of conciliating the barons, and
+ replied that he could not trust a man who had betrayed his King. This, of
+ course, led to further desertions on the part of the English, and the
+ truce which prevailed through Lent added greater numbers to the young
+ King&rsquo;s party than Blanche of Castile was able to collect in France for her
+ lord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Easter the Earl of Pembroke besieged Mountsorrel, in Leicestershire.
+ The Count de Perche came to its relief, and, after forcing him to retreat,
+ attacked Lincoln Castle, which was bravely held by the late castellane&rsquo;s
+ widow, Nicolette de Camville. She contrived to send the Earl tidings of
+ her distress, and he set out from Newark with four hundred knights and
+ their squires, two hundred and fifty crossbowmen and other infantry, all
+ wearing white crosses sewn on their breasts, and sent forth by the legate
+ as to a holy war. The crossbowmen, under one of John&rsquo;s free-companions,
+ were a mile in advance, and entered the castle by a postern, while the
+ French, taking the baggage for a second army, retreated into the town; but
+ there the garrison made a sally, and a battle was fought in the streets,
+ which ended in the total discomfiture of the French. The Count de Perche
+ was offered his life, but swearing that he would yield to no English
+ traitor, he was instantly slain, and the Fair of Lincoln, as it was
+ called, completely broke the strength of Louis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote word to his wife and father of his perilous situation, shut up
+ within the walls of London, and the whole country in possession of Henry,
+ and entreated them to send him reinforcements. Fear of the Pope prevented
+ Philippe from putting himself forward, but he connived at Blanche&rsquo;s
+ exertions, and she succeeded in collecting three hundred knights, who were
+ to embark in eighty large ships, under the command of Eustace the Monk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hubert de Burgh, landsman as he was, resolved to oppose them to the
+ utmost, and with much difficulty collected a fleet of forty ships of all
+ sizes. Several of the knights, believing his attempt hopeless, declared
+ that they knew nothing of sea fights, and refused to share his peril; and
+ he himself was so persuaded that he was sacrificing himself, that he
+ received the last rites of the Church as a dying man, and left orders
+ that, in case of his being made prisoner, Dover should on no account be
+ surrendered, even as the price of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midway in the strait he met the French fleet; his archers showered their
+ arrows and quarrels, and, being on the windward, threw clouds of
+ quicklime, which blinded the eyes of the enemy; then, bearing down on
+ them, grappled the ships with iron hooks, and boarded them so gallantly,
+ that the French, little accustomed to this mode of warfare, soon gave over
+ resistance: many of the ships were sunk, and the rest completely
+ dispersed; the pirate monk Eustace was taken, and, being considered as a
+ traitor and apostate, was put to death, and his head carried on a pole to
+ Dover in triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This defeat completely broke the hopes of Louis, and he sent to demand a
+ safe-conduct for messengers to Henry, or rather to the Earl of Pembroke,
+ offered to leave England, and concluded a peace, restoring the allegiance
+ of the barons, and even engaging to give up Normandy and Anjou on his
+ accession to the crown of France. He then returned to his own country,
+ where his father received him affectionately, blaming him, however, for
+ the want of skill and judgment with which he had conducted his affairs.
+ His departure took place in the end of 1217, and thus closed the wars
+ which established the Great Charter as the foundation of English law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXVIII. THE FIEF OF ROME. (1217-1254.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1216. Henry III.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1214. Alexander II.
+ 1249. Alexander III.
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1180. Philip III.
+ 1223. Louis VIII.
+ 1226. Louis IX.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1209. Friedrich II.
+ 1250. Conrad IV.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>
+ 1198. Innocent III.
+ 1216. Honorius III.
+ 1227. Gregory IX.
+ 1241. Celestin. IV.
+ 1242. Innocent IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Fief of Rome! For many years of the reign of Henry III. England could
+ hardly be regarded in any other light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry&rsquo;s life was one long minority; the guardians of his childhood were
+ replaced by the favorites of his manhood, and he had neither power nor
+ will to defend his subjects from the bondage imposed on them by his
+ father&rsquo;s homage to Innocent III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legates, Gualo and Pandulfo, undertook the protection of the desolate
+ child, and nominated to the government the excellent William, Earl of
+ Pembroke, Earl Marshal; but on his death, shortly after, the
+ administration was divided between the justiciaries, Hubert de Burgh, and
+ John&rsquo;s favorite, Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester. The latter was a
+ violent, ambitious, and intriguing prelate, and it was well for England
+ and the King when he engaged in a Crusade, and left the field to the loyal
+ Hubert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the care of this good knight Henry grew up devoid of the vices of
+ his father, with more of the Southern troubadour than of the Northern
+ warrior in his composition, gentle in temper, devout of spirit, tender of
+ heart, well-read in history and romance, skilled in music and poetry, and
+ of exquisite taste in sculpture, painting, and architecture, Hubert must
+ have watched his orphan charge with earnest hope and solicitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually, however, there was a sense of disappointment; years went by,
+ and Henry of Winchester was a full-grown man, tall and well proportioned,
+ his only blemish a droop of the left eyelid; but no warlike, no royal
+ spirit seemed to stir within him; he thought not of affairs; he left all
+ in the hands of his justiciaries, and, so long as means were given him of
+ indulging his love of splendor, he recked not of the extortions by which
+ the Italian clergy ruined his country, and had no idea of taking on him
+ the cares and duties of royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His young Queen encouraged all his natural failings. She was one of the
+ four daughters of Beranger, last Count of Provence, highly accomplished
+ young heiresses. One of them already was wedded to Louis IX., the son of
+ Louis the Lion, who, by the death of his father and grandfather, had been
+ placed on the throne of France nearly at the same age and time as Henry in
+ England. Marguerite, whose device, the daisy, Louis wore entwined with his
+ own lily, was a meek, peaceful lady, submitting quietly to the dominion
+ exercised over her by Queen Blanche, her mother-in-law. Eleanor, the next
+ sister, was the beauty and genius of the family; she was called La Belle,
+ and, at fourteen, composed a romance in rhyme on the adventures of one
+ Blandin, Prince of Cornwall, which was presented to King Henry&rsquo;s brother,
+ Richard, Earl of Cornwall, when, on returning from pilgrimage, he passed
+ through Provence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard was struck with her beauty, and spoke of it to his brother, who,
+ against the wishes of De Burgh, offered her his hand. Richard soon after
+ married Sancha, another of the sisters, and Beatrix, the fourth, was the
+ wife of Charles, Count of Anjou, brother of Louis IX. The two queens seem
+ to have been proud of their dignity, for they used to make their countess
+ sisters sit on low stools, while they sat on high chairs. Sancha and
+ Beatrix pined to see their husbands kings, and in time had their wish.
+ Four uncles followed Queen Eleanor, young brothers of her mother, a
+ princess of Savoy. They were gay and courtly youths, and the King
+ instantly attached himself to them, and lavished gifts and honors upon
+ them, among others, the palace in London still called the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another tribe of his own relations soon followed. His mother&rsquo;s first love,
+ Hugh de Lusignan, Count de la Marche, had been released from durance at
+ Corfe Castle in 1206, and had offered his aid to John, on condition of the
+ infant Joan, the child of his faithless Isabelle, being at once betrothed
+ to him and placed in his own hands. Lodging her in one of his castles in
+ Poitou, he went on a crusade, and, on his return, found her but seven
+ years old, but her mother a widow, beautiful as ever, and still attached
+ to him. They were at once married, and Joan was sent home to England,
+ where she became the wife of Alexander II. of Scotland, and his sister,
+ the Princess Margaret, was at the same time wedded to Hubert de Burgh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lusignans were an old family, who had given a King to Jerusalem and a
+ dynasty to Cyprus; but they were a wild race, and a fairy legend accounted
+ for their family character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raymond de Lusignan, a remote ancestor, met, while wandering in a forest,
+ a maiden of more than mortal beauty, named Melusine, and, falling at once
+ in love, obtained her hand, on condition that he should never ask to
+ behold her on a Saturday. Their marriage was happy, excepting that all
+ their children had some deformity; but at last, in a fit of curiosity,
+ Raymond hid himself, in order to penetrate into his lady&rsquo;s secret, and, to
+ his dismay, perceived that from the waist downward she was transformed
+ into a blue-and-white serpent, an enchantment she underwent every
+ Saturday. For years, however, he never divulged that he had seen her in
+ this condition; but at length, when his eldest son, Geoffrey (who had a
+ tusk like a wild boar), had murdered his brother, he forgot himself in a
+ transport of grief, and called her an odious serpent, who had contaminated
+ his race. Melusine fainted at the words, lamented bitterly, and vanished,
+ never appearing again except as a phantom, which flits round the Castle of
+ Lusignan whenever any of her descendants are about to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this haunted castle the Queen contrived to gain a reputation for
+ sorcery and poisoning, and the connection brought no good on her royal
+ son, for she involved him in a war with France on behalf of her husband.
+ He met with no success, and his French domains were at the mercy of Louis
+ IX.; but that excellent prince would not pursue his advantage. &ldquo;Our
+ children are first cousins,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;we will leave no seeds of discord
+ between them.&rdquo; He even took into consideration the justice of restoring
+ Normandy and Anjou, but concluded that they had been justly forfeited by
+ King John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four young Lusignans, or, as they were generally called, De Valence, were
+ sent by Isabelle to seek their fortune at the court of their half-brother,
+ who bestowed on them all the wealth and honors at his disposal; and gave
+ much offence to the English, who beheld eight needy foreigners preying, as
+ they said, upon the revenues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feasts and frolics, songs, dancing, and pageantry, were the order of the
+ day; romances were dedicated to the King, histories of strange feats of
+ chivalry recited, the curious old lays of Bretagne were translated and
+ presented to him by the antiquarian dame, Marie. Italian, Provençal,
+ Gascon, Latin, French, and English, were spoken at the court, which the
+ English barons termed a Babel, and minstrels of all descriptions stood in
+ high favor. There was Richard, the King&rsquo;s harper, who had forty shillings
+ a year and a tun of wine; there was Henry of Avranches, the &ldquo;archipoeta,&rdquo;
+ who wrote a song on the rusticity of the Cornishmen, to which a valiant
+ Cornishman, Michael Blampayne, replied in a Latin satire, politely
+ describing the arch-poet as having &ldquo;the legs of a sparrow, the mouth of a
+ hare, the nose of a dog, the teeth of a mule, the brow of a calf, the head
+ of a bull, the color of a Moor!&rdquo; There was poor Ribault the troubadour,
+ whose sudden madness had nearly been fatal to Henry. Imagining himself the
+ rightful King, he rushed at midnight into a chamber he supposed to be the
+ King&rsquo;s, and was tearing the bed to pieces with his sword, when Margaret
+ Bisset, one of the Queen&rsquo;s ladies, who was sitting up reading a book of
+ devotions, heard the noise; roused the guard, and he was secured. There,
+ too, was the half-witted jester, who, we are sorry to say, was a chaplain,
+ with whom the King and his brother Aymer were seen playing like boys,
+ pelting each other with apples and sods of turf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was fond of ornamenting his palaces with curious tapestry and
+ jewelry, worthy of the wedding-gift his wife had received from her sister,
+ Queen Marguerite, namely, a silver ewer for perfumes, in the shape of a
+ peacock, the tail set with precious stones. He adorned the walls with
+ paintings; there were Scripture subjects in his palace at Westminster; and
+ at Winchester, his birthplace, were pictures of the Saxon kings, a map of
+ the world, and King Arthur&rsquo;s round table, inscribed with the names of the
+ knights, and Arthur&rsquo;s full-length figure in his own place. It has survived
+ all changes; it was admired by a Spanish attendant at the marriage of
+ Philip II. and Queen Mary; it was riddled by the balls of the Roundheads,
+ and now, duly refreshed with paint, hangs in its old place, over the
+ Judge&rsquo;s head in the County Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do Henry justice, he spent as freely on others as on himself; he
+ clothed and fed destitute children; and when in his pride, at the goodly
+ height of his five-year-old boy, he caused him and his little sisters to
+ be weighed, the counterpoise was coined silver, which was scattered in
+ largesse among his lieges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry&rsquo;s special devotion was to a Saxon saint, the mild Confessor, to whom
+ his own character had much likeness, and whose name he bestowed on his
+ eldest child, while he presented a shrine of pure gold to contain his
+ relics, and devoted £2,000 a year to complete the little West-Minster of
+ St. Peter&rsquo;s, the foundation and last work of St. Edward. He rendered it a
+ perfect specimen of that most elegant of all styles, the early-pointed,
+ and fit indeed for the coronation church and burial-place of English
+ kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was soon an end of Henry&rsquo;s treasure, however; and no wonder, when,
+ besides his own improvidence, the Pope was sucking out the revenues of the
+ country. <i>Talliages</i>, of one tenth or one-twentieth of their
+ property, were demanded of the clergy; the tax of a penny, usually called
+ Peter-pence, was paid to him by every family on St. Peter&rsquo;s Day, and
+ generally collected by the two orders of begging friars, who rode about on
+ this errand in boots and spurs, and owning the rule of no one but the
+ Pope, were great hindrances to the bishops and parish clergy. Still worse
+ was the power the Pope assumed to himself of seizing on Church patronage,
+ and thrusting in Italian clergy, often children or incapable persons, and
+ perfectly ignorant of the language. At one time 7,000 marks a year were in
+ possession of these foreigners, one of whom held seven hundred places of
+ preferment at once!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent IV., who was chiefly guilty of these proceedings, was engaged in
+ a long struggle with Frederick II. of Germany, respecting the kingdom of
+ the two Sicilies, and the Guelf and Ghibelline struggle forever raging in
+ Italy, and it was this apparently remote quarrel which was in reality the
+ cause of the oppression and simony that so cruelly affected England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English bitterly hated the foreign clergy, and quarrels were forever
+ breaking out. When Otho, the legate, was passing through Oxford, and
+ lodging at Osney Abbey, a terrible fray occurred. The students, a strange,
+ wild set, came to pay him their respects; but his porter, being afraid of
+ them, kept them out, and an Irish priest, pressing forward to beg for
+ food, had some scalding water thrown in his face by the clerk of the
+ kitchen, the brother of the legate, who, used to Italian treachery,
+ entrusted to no one the care of his food. A fiery Welsh scholar shot the
+ legate&rsquo;s brother dead with an arrow, and a great riot ensued. Otho locked,
+ himself up in the church-tower till night, then fled, through floods of
+ rain, hunted by the students, all yelling abuse, and getting before him to
+ the fords, so that the poor man had to swim the river five times, and came
+ half dead to the King at Abingdon. Next morning the scene was changed.
+ Earl Warenne and his bowmen came down upon Oxford, forty of the rioters
+ were carried off in carts like felons, interdicts and excommunications
+ fell on the university, and only when doctors, scholars, and all came
+ barefoot to ask the legate&rsquo;s pardon, was the anger of the Pope appeased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, there was a widespread confederation among the gentry against
+ these Italians, and rioters arose and plundered their barns, distributing
+ the corn to the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walter do Cantilupe, the young Norman Bishop of Worcester, was thought to
+ be among those in the secret, and the outrages grew more serious when an
+ Italian canon of St. Paul&rsquo;s was seized and impressed by five men in masks.
+ Des Roches, the Bishop of Winchester, who had returned home, and was very
+ jealous of Hubert de Burgh, thought this a fit time for overthrowing him,
+ and publicly accused him of being in the plot. A young knight, Sir Robert
+ Twenge, came forward and confessed that he had been the leader of the
+ rioters under the name of Will Wither, and that the good old justiciary
+ had nothing to do with them. He was sent to do penance at Rome, and
+ Hubert&rsquo;s enemies continued their machinations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry and his Queen were tired of the sage counsels of the brave knight,
+ and open to all Des Roches&rsquo; insinuations, forgetting the wise though
+ punning warning of the wonderful Franciscan friar, Roger Bacon, who told
+ Henry there was nothing so dangerous in a voyage as &ldquo;<i>les Pierres et les
+ Roches</i>.&rdquo; At Christmas, the Bishop invited them to Winchester, and
+ there his sumptuous banquets and splendid amusements won the King&rsquo;s
+ frivolous heart, and obtained his consent to dismiss Hubert from all his
+ offices, even from the government of Dover, which he had saved. Soon after
+ orders were sent forth for his arrest, that he might be tried for the
+ disturbances against the Italians, and likewise for having seduced the
+ King&rsquo;s affections by sorcery and witchcraft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hubert placed his wealth in the care of the Templars, and took sanctuary
+ in the church of Merton, in Surrey; but the Mayor of London was ordered to
+ dislodge him, and the whole rabble of the city were setting forth, when
+ the Archbishop and Earl of Chester represented the scandal to the King,
+ and obtained letters of protection for him until the time for his trial,
+ January, 1233. Trusting to these letters, he set out to visit his wife at
+ Bury, but at Brentwood was waylaid by a set of ruffians called the Black
+ Band, and sent by the Bishop of Winchester. He retreated into the church,
+ but they dragged him from the very steps of the altar, and called a
+ blacksmith to chain his feet together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed,&rdquo; said the brave peasant, &ldquo;never will I forge fetters for the
+ deliverer of my country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he was led into London with his feet chained under his horse.
+ There the Bishop of London, threatening excommunication for the sacrilege,
+ forced his enemies to return him to Brentwood church, which, however, they
+ closely blockaded till hunger forced him to deliver himself up to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bought his life by giving up his treasures, and was imprisoned at
+ Devizes. Shortly this castle was given to Des Roches; and De Burgh, who
+ knew by experience how the change of castellane often brought death to the
+ captive, sought to escape. He gained over two of his guards, who carried
+ him to the parish church, for he was too heavily ironed to walk, and there
+ laid him down before the altar. They could take him no further, and the
+ warden of the castle cruelly beat him, and brought him back; but, as
+ before, the Bishop maintained the privileges of the sanctuary, and forced
+ the persecutors to restore him, and though he was again hemmed in there by
+ the sheriff, before he was starved out a party of his friends came to his
+ rescue, and he was carried off to the Welsh hills, there remaining till
+ recalled by the influence of the Archbishop. He was restored to his
+ honors, and though he once again had to suffer from Henry&rsquo;s fickleness and
+ the rapacity of his court, his old age was peaceful and honored, as
+ befitted his unsullied fame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Archbishop was Edmund Rich, who had been elected in 1232, after two
+ short-lived primates had succeeded Langton. He was of a wealthy family at
+ Abingdon, and had been brought up entirely by an excellent mother, his
+ father having retired into a monastery. His whole childhood had been a
+ preparation for holy orders, and when he went to study at Oxford, he led a
+ life of the strictest self-denial, inflicting on himself all the rigorous
+ discipline which he hoped would conduce to a saintly life. When he had
+ become a teacher in his turn, such was his contempt for money, that, when
+ his pupils paid him, he would sprinkle it with dust, and say, &ldquo;Ashes to
+ ashes, dust to dust,&rdquo; and would let it lie in the window, without heeding
+ whether any was stolen. When, shortly after, made treasurer of Salisbury,
+ he kept an empty dish by his side at meals, and put into it what he denied
+ himself, sending it afterward by his almoner to the sick poor. He was a
+ constant reader of the Scriptures day and night, always kissing the holy
+ volume before commencing, and thus he derived the judgment and firmness
+ which enabled him to battle with the evils of his day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gifts were especially held in scorn and contempt by him. He was wont to
+ say, that between <i>prendre</i> and <i>pendre</i> there was but one
+ letter&rsquo;s difference; and in a court so full of corrupt and grasping
+ clergy, this gave him untold power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter des Roches was the head of these, representing King John&rsquo;s former
+ policy, and uniting himself with the young Gascon relations of the King,
+ who were wont to say, &ldquo;What are English laws to us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family of Pembroke, Earls Marshal of England, were especially
+ obnoxious to this party, as resolute supporters of Magna Charta, and of
+ much power and influence. William, the eldest son of the late Protector,
+ was married to Eleanor, the King&rsquo;s sister. He died early, and this party
+ tried to deprive his brother Richard of his inheritance; then, when this
+ did not succeed, Des Roches wrote letters in the King&rsquo;s name to some of
+ the Norman-Irish nobles, offering them all his lands in that island,
+ provided they would murder him, ratifying these promises with the great
+ seal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The assassins stirred up the Irish to attack Pembroke&rsquo;s castles, so as to
+ bring him to Ireland; they then pretended to join with him in putting down
+ the rebellion, and, in the midst, waylaid him, and attacked him while
+ riding with a few attendants. Some of these he ordered at once to convey
+ his young brother to a place of safety, and gallantly defended himself,
+ but his horse was killed, and he was stabbed in the back; his servants,
+ returning, carried him home to his castle, but there the letter purporting
+ to be from the King was shown him, and his grief was so great that he
+ would not permit his wounds to be dressed, and died in a few hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archbishop Edmund procured letters exposing this black treachery, and read
+ them before the whole court. Henry and all present burst into tears, and
+ the poor careless King confessed with bitter grief that he had often
+ allowed Des Roches to attach his seal to letters without knowing their
+ contents, and that this must have been one of them. Des Roches was
+ dismissed, and sent to his own diocese, where he soon after died at his
+ castle of Farnham. He was the founder of many convents, several in
+ Palestine, and others in his own diocese, among which was Netley, or
+ Letley (<i>Laeto Loco</i>), near Southampton, a beautiful specimen of the
+ pointed style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edmund could not prevent the King from intruding on the see of Winchester
+ the giddy young Aymar de Valence, already Bishop-designate of Durham. &ldquo;If
+ my brother is too young, I will hold the see myself,&rdquo; said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every attempt Edmund made to repress the grievous evils that prevailed was
+ frustrated by the authority of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The imperial family of Hohenstaufen were held in the utmost hatred by the
+ Popes; and Frederick II., being likewise King of Naples and Sicily, was an
+ object of great dread and defiance. Fierce passions on either side were
+ raging, and Innocent IV. regarded his spiritual powers rather as weapons
+ to be used against his foe the Emperor, than as given him for the
+ salvation of men&rsquo;s souls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a warrior, he needed money: it was raised by exactions on the clergy,
+ going sometimes as far as demanding half their year&rsquo;s income; as head of a
+ party, he needed rewards for his friends, and bestowed benefices without
+ regard to the age, the character, or the fitness of the nominee; moreover,
+ he trusted to the religious orders, especially those called Mendicant, for
+ spreading his influence, and he did not dare to restrain or reform their
+ disorders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archbishop Edmund, with his two friends, Robert Grosteste, Bishop of
+ Lincoln, and Richard Wych, Chancellor of Canterbury, did their best.
+ Robert&rsquo;s history is striking. He was a nameless peasant of Suffolk, of the
+ meanest parentage, and only called Grosteste from the size of his head,
+ needing plenty of stowage (says Fuller) for his store of brains. How he
+ obtained education is not known, but he worked upward until he became a
+ noted teacher at Oxford, and afterward at Paris, where he lectured on all
+ the chief authors then known in Greek and Latin. He wrote two hundred
+ books, many on sacred subjects, and several poems in Latin and French; for
+ he was a great lover of minstrelsy, and his contemporary translator tells
+ us that
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Next his chamber, besyde hys study
+ Hys harper&rsquo;s chamber was thereby.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This poet and scholar was a most active, thorough-going, practical man,
+ and, when chosen as Bishop of Lincoln, showed his gratitude for the
+ benefits of his education by maintaining a number of poor students at the
+ University. He set himself earnestly to reform abuses in his diocese,
+ forcing the monasteries which held the tithes of parishes to provide
+ properly for their spiritual care, and making a strict inquiry into the
+ condition of the religious houses. They, however, appealed to Rome; and
+ Innocent, who had at first sanctioned his proceedings, was afraid of
+ losing their support, and ordered Grosteste to desist. The resolute Bishop
+ set off to Rome, and laid the Pope&rsquo;s own letters before his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Innocent, &ldquo;be content; you have delivered your own soul. If I
+ choose to show grace to these persons, what is that to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert was anything but content, but he went home, and manfully struggled
+ with the evils that were rife, sometimes prevailing, sometimes
+ disappointed, always honest and steadfast. The more gentle Archbishop gave
+ up the contest, worn out by the vain attempt to preserve purity and order
+ between the fickle King, the oppressive Pope, the turbulent nobles, and
+ the avaricious clergy. Orders to him, to Robert, and to the Bishop of
+ Salisbury, to appoint no one to a benefice till three hundred Italians
+ were provided for, seemed finally to overpower him; he, with Richard Wych,
+ secretly left London, and arrived at Pontigny, where, three years after,
+ he died, in 1142, and has been revered as a saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canterbury remained vacant for several years, the revenues being absorbed
+ by the King, and the refractory chapter tailing upon them to quarrel with
+ Grosteste, and going so for as to excommunicate him; whereupon the sturdy
+ Bishop trod the letter under foot, saying, &ldquo;Such curses are the only
+ prayers I ask of such as you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three years the King appointed to Canterbury the Queen&rsquo;s uncle,
+ Boniface of Savoy, a man of no clerical habits; but the Queen wrote a
+ persuasive letter, by which she obtained the consent of Innocent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So many monstrous demands had been made by the Pope, that, in 1245, the
+ nobles sent orders to the wardens of the seaports to seize every despatch
+ coming from Rome, and they soon made prize of a great number of orders to
+ intrude Italians into Church patronage. Martin, the legate, complained to
+ the King, who ordered the letters to be produced, but the barons took the
+ opportunity of laying before the King a statement of the grievances of the
+ Church of England, 60,000 marks a year being in the hands of foreigners,
+ while the whole of the royal revenue was but 20,000. Henry could only make
+ helpless lamentations, and, under pretext of a tournament, the Barons met
+ at Dunstable, and sent a knight to expostulate with the legate. This envoy
+ threatened him, that if he remained three days longer in England, his life
+ would not be safe&mdash;an intimation which drove him speedily from the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barons, hearing that the Pope was holding a council at Lyons, sent
+ deputies thither, with a letter drawn up by the Bishop of Lincoln, so
+ powerfully enforced by William de Powerie, their spokesman, that the
+ exposure of the enormities permitted in England called up a deep blush on
+ the face of Innocent, and he allowed that he had been wrong in thrusting
+ in these incompetent Italians. There was one good effected at this
+ council, namely, the appointment of Richard Wych to the see of Chichester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard was the son of a Worcestershire yeoman, and was early, with his
+ elder brother, left an orphan. He was a studious, holy, clerkly boy,
+ looked on as fit for the cloister: but when his brother came of age, it
+ was found that the guardians had so wasted their goods, that their
+ inheritance lay desolate. The brother was in despair, but young Richard
+ comforted him, bade him trust in God, and himself laying aside the studies
+ he delighted in, look up the spade and axe, and worked unceasingly till
+ the affairs of the homestead were in a flourishing state. Then, when
+ prosperity dawned on the elder brother, the younger obtained his wish, and
+ went to study at Oxford, where he was so poor that he and two other
+ scholars had but one gown between them, lived hard, and allowed themselves
+ few pleasures; but this he was wont to call the happiest time in his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterward he went to Bologna, and, after seven years there, returned, and
+ was made Chancellor, first of Oxford, and afterward of Canterbury. There
+ was a most earnest attachment between him and St. Edmund, whom he followed
+ into his exile. The Bishop whom the King had appointed to Chichester was
+ examined by Grosteste, and found deficient in theology, and the chapter
+ and Pope agreed in choosing Richard Wych, who was consecrated by Innocent
+ himself. Henry, in displeasure, took all the temporalities of the see into
+ his hands, and for a year Richard lived at the expense of a poor parish
+ priest named Simon, whom he strove to requite by working in his garden,
+ budding, grafting, and digging, as he had once done for his brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went about his diocese visiting each parish, and doing his work like
+ the early bishops of poorer days, and all the time making his suit to the
+ King to do him justice; but whenever he went to Westminster, meeting only
+ with jests and gibes from the courtiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope was too busy to attend to him. That council at Lyons had ended in
+ sentence of deposition upon Frederick, and the combat raged in Italy till
+ his death, when Innocent, claiming Sicily as a fief of the Church, offered
+ it, if he could get it, to Richard, Earl of Cornwall, who had too much
+ sense to accept such a crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It then was offered to Henry for his son Edmund, whom he arrayed in the
+ robes of a Sicilian prince, and presented to the barons of England, asking
+ for men and money to win the kingdom. Not a man of them, however, would
+ march, or give a penny in aid of the cause, and therefore Innocent raised
+ money from the Lombard merchants in the name of the King of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No wonder Henry could not pay. His own household had neither wages,
+ clothes, nor food, except what they obtained by purveying&mdash;in their
+ case only a license to rob, since no payment was ever given for the goods
+ they carried off. His pages were gay banditti, and the merchants, farmers,
+ and fishers fled as from an enemy when the court approached; yet, at each
+ little transient gleam of prosperity, the King squandered all that came
+ into his hands in feasting and splendor, then grasped at Church revenues,
+ tormented the Jews, laid unjust fines on the Londoners, or took bribes for
+ administering justice, and all that he did was imitated with exaggeration
+ by his half-brothers, uncles, and favorites.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His chancellor, Mansel, held seven hundred benefices at once, and so
+ corrupted the laws, that one of the judges pronounced the source poisoned
+ from the fountain. Another chancellor was expelled from the court for
+ refusing to set the great seal to a grant to one of the Queen&rsquo;s uncles of
+ four-pence on every sack of wool, and at one time Eleanor herself actually
+ had the keeping of the seal, and when the Londoners resisted one of her
+ unjust demands, she summarily sent the Lord Mayor and Sheriffs to the
+ Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isabel Warenne, the King&rsquo;s cousin, and widow of the Earl of Arundel, an
+ excellent and charitable lady, still young, came to the King&rsquo;s court to
+ seek justice respecting a wardship of which she had been deprived. She
+ spoke boldly to Henry: &ldquo;My Lord, why do you turn your face from justice?
+ Nobody can obtain right. You are placed between God and us, but you govern
+ neither yourself nor us. Are you not ashamed thus to trample on the
+ Church, and disquiet your nobles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you mean, lady?&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Have the great men of England
+ chosen you for their advocate?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said the spirited lady; &ldquo;they have given me no such charter,
+ though you have broken that which you and your father have granted and
+ sworn to observe. Where are the liberties of England, so often granted? We
+ appeal from you to the Judge in heaven!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All Henry could say, was, &ldquo;Did you not ask me a favor because you were my
+ cousin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You deny my right; I expect no favor,&rdquo; and, so saying, Isabel left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After two years, Richard of Chichester was permitted to assume the
+ temporalities of his see, and most admirably he used them, doing every
+ kindness to the poor in his diocese, and always maintaining the right,
+ though more gently than his friend at Lincoln. Those were evil days, and
+ men&rsquo;s sense of obedience and sense of right were often sorely divided.
+ Richard died in the year 1253, after a short illness, in which he was
+ attended by his friend Simon, leaving the memory of his peaceful,
+ charitable life, much beloved in his diocese, and was shortly after
+ canonized. &ldquo;Show us the Father, and it sufficeth us,&rdquo; were among his last
+ words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The champion Robert Grosteste had one more battle to fight ere following
+ his two saintly brethren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was wont always to compare each bull which he received with the Gospels
+ and the canon law, and if he found anything in it that would not stand
+ this test, he tore it in pieces. In 1254, one of these letters commanded
+ him to institute to a benefice a nephew of the Pope, a mere child, besides
+ containing what was called the clause &ldquo;<i>non obstante</i>&rdquo; (namely, in
+ spite of), by which the Pope claimed, as having power to bind and loose,
+ to set aside and dispense with existing statutes and oaths, at his
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grosteste wrote an admirable letter in reply. He said most truly, &ldquo;Once
+ allowed, this clause would let in a flood of promise-breaking, bold
+ injustice, wanton insult, deceit, and mutual distrust, to the defilement
+ of true religion, shaking the very foundations of trust and security;&rdquo; and
+ he also declared that nothing could be more opposed to the precepts of our
+ Lord and His apostles, than to destroy men&rsquo;s souls by depriving them of
+ the benefits of the pastoral office by giving unfit persons the care of
+ souls. He therefore absolutely refused to publish the bull, or to admit
+ the young Italian to the benefice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent flew into a passion on reading the letter. &ldquo;What meaneth this old
+ dotard, surd and absurd, thus to control our actions? Did not our innate
+ generosity restrain us, I would confound him, and make him a prodigy to
+ all the world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the Spanish cardinals, however, spoke thus: &ldquo;We cannot deal harshly
+ with such a man as this. We must confess that he speaketh truth. He is a
+ holy man, of more religious life than any of us; yea, Christendom hath not
+ his equal. He is a great philosopher, skilled in Greek and Latin, a
+ constant reader in the schools, preacher in the pulpit, lover of chastity,
+ and hater of simony.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Authorities are divided as to whether the Pope was persuaded to lay aside
+ his anger, or not. Some say that he sent off sentence of suspension and
+ excommunication; others, that he owned the justice of Grosteste&rsquo;s letter.
+ It made little difference to the good Bishop, who lay on his deathbed long
+ before the answer arrived. He spoke much of the troubles and bondage of
+ the Church, which he feared would never be ended but by the edge of a
+ blood-stained sword, and grieved over the falsehood, perfidy, and
+ extortion, that were soiling his beloved Church; and thus he expired,
+ uplifting his honest testimony both in word and deed, untouched by the
+ crimes of his age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Innocent IV. did not long survive him, and there is a remarkable story of
+ the commencement of his last illness. He dreamt that the spirit of Robert
+ Grosteste had appeared, and given him a severe beating. The delusion hung
+ about him, and he finally died in the belief that he was killed by the
+ blows of the English Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sewel, Archbishop of York, had the same contest with Rome. Three Italians
+ walked into York cathedral, asked which was the Dean&rsquo;s seat, and installed
+ one of their number there; and when the Archbishop refused to permit his
+ appointment, an interdict was laid on his see, and he died under
+ excommunication, bearing it meekly and patiently, and his flock following
+ his funeral in weeping multitudes, though it was apparently unblest by the
+ Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These good men had fallen on days of evil shepherds, and lamentable was
+ the state of Europe, when men&rsquo;s religious feelings were perverted to be
+ engines for exalting the temporal power of the popedom, and their
+ ministers, mistaking their true calling, were struggling for an absolute
+ and open dominion, for which purity, truth, meekness, and every attribute
+ of charity were sacrificed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXIX. THE LONGESPÉES IN THE EGYPTIAN CRUSADES. (1219-1254.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1216. Henry III.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1214. Alexander II.
+ 1249. Alexander III.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1180. Philip III.
+ 1223. Louis VIII.
+ 1226. Louis IX.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany.</i>
+ 1209. Friedrich II.
+ 1259. Conrad IV.
+
+ <i>Popes.</i>
+ 1216. Innocent III.
+ 1227. Honorius III.
+ 1241. Gregory IX.
+ 1241. Celestin IV.
+ 1242. Innocent IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The crusading spirit had not yet died away, but it was often diverted by
+ the Popes, who sent the champions of the Cross to make war on European
+ heretics instead of the Moslems of Palestine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William Longespée, the son of Fair Rosamond, was, however, a zealous
+ crusador in the East itself. He had been with Coeur de Lion in the Holy
+ Land, and in 1219 again took the Cross, and shared an expedition led by
+ the titular King of Jerusalem, a French knight, named Jean de Brienne, who
+ had married Marie, the daughter of that Isabelle whom Richard I. had
+ placed on the throne of Jerusalem. Under him, an attempt was made to carry
+ the war into the enemy&rsquo;s quarters, by attacking the Saracens in Egypt, and
+ with a large force of crusaders he laid siege to Damietta. The reigning
+ Sultan, Malek el Kamel, marched to its relief, and encamping at Mansourah,
+ in the delta of the Nile, fought two severe battles with doubtful success,
+ but could not assist the garrison, who, after holding out for fifteen
+ months, at length surrendered. The unhappy city was in such a state from
+ the effects of hunger and disease, that the Christians themselves,
+ suffering from severe sickness, did not dare to enter it, till the
+ prisoners, as the price of their liberty, had encountered the risk of
+ cleansing it and burying the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even then they remained, encamped outside, and Kamel continued to watch
+ them from Mansourah, where he built permanent houses, and formed his camp
+ into a town, while awaiting the aid of the natural defender of Egypt, the
+ Nile, which, in due time arising, inundated the whole Christian camp, and
+ washed away the stores. The troops, already reduced by sickness, were
+ living in a swamp, the water and mud ankle-deep, and with currents of
+ deeper water rushing in all directions, drowning the incautious; while
+ want and disease preyed upon the rest, till Jean de Brienne was obliged to
+ go and treat with the Sultan. When received courteously in the commodious,
+ royal tent at Mansourah, the contrast to the miseries which his friends
+ were enduring so affected him, that he burst into a fit of weeping, that
+ moved the generous Kamel at once, without conditions, to send as a free
+ gift a supply of provisions to his distressed enemies. A treaty was then
+ concluded, by which the crusaders restored Damiotta, after having held it
+ for eight months, and were allowed every facility for their departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though hardy, patient and enterprising as a crusader, Longespée was
+ lawless and unscrupulous, and paid no respect to the ordinances of
+ religion, neither confessing himself nor being a communicant; while his
+ wife, the lady Ella, Countess of Salisbury in her own right, continued a
+ devout observer of her duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after his return from Egypt, Longespée, in sailing from Gascony to
+ England, was in great danger, from a storm in the Bay of Biscay of many
+ days&rsquo; continuance, and so violent, that all the jewels, treasure, and
+ other freight, were thrown overboard to lighten the vessel. In the height
+ of the peril, the mast was illuminated, no doubt by that strange electric
+ brightness called by sailors &ldquo;St. Elmo&rsquo;s Light,&rdquo; but which, to the
+ conscience-stricken earl, was a heavenly messenger, sent to convert and
+ save him. It was even reported that it was a wax-light, sheltered from the
+ wind by a female form of marvellous radiance and beauty, at whose
+ appearance the tempest lulled, and the ship came safely to land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess Ella availed herself of the impression thus made upon her
+ husband to persuade him to seek the ghostly counsel of St. Edmund Rich,
+ then a canon of Salisbury; and the first sight of the countenance of the
+ holy man at once subdued him, so that he forsook his evil ways, devoutly
+ received the rites so long neglected, and spent his few remaining years in
+ trying to atone for his past sins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1226, he was taken suddenly ill at a banquet given by Hubert de Burgh,
+ and being carried home, sent for the Bishop of Salisbury, Richard Poer,
+ who found him in a high fever; but he at once threw himself from his bed
+ upon the floor, weeping, and crying out that he was a traitor to the Most
+ High: nor would he allow himself to be raised till he had made his
+ confession, and received the Holy Eucharist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He died a few days subsequently, and was buried at Old Sarum, whence his
+ tomb was afterward removed to the cathedral at Salisbury, where his effigy
+ lies in the nave, in chain armor, with his legs crossed as a crusader. The
+ Countess Ella founded a monastery at Laycock, where she took the veil. Her
+ eldest son, William Longespée, succeeded to the Castle of Sarum, but
+ afterward offended the King by quitting the realm without the royal
+ license, for which breach of rule Henry III. seized his possessions, and
+ he remained a knight adventurer. In this capacity he followed his cousin,
+ Richard Plantagenet, Earl of Cornwall, who took the Cross in 1240.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, Yolande, the daughter of Jean de Brienne, had carried her
+ rights to her husband, Frederick II., Emperor of Germany, the object of
+ the bitter hatred of the Popes, who had thwarted him in every way, when he
+ himself led an expedition to Palestine, and now, since the conquests of
+ the crusaders would go to augment his power, would willingly have checked
+ them. Gregory IX. strove to induce the English party to commute their vow
+ for treasure, but they indignantly repelled the proposal, and set forth,
+ under the solemn blessing of their own bishops. In France, they were
+ received with great affection by Louis IX., and with much enthusiasm by
+ the people; so that their progress was a triumph, till they came to
+ Marseilles, where they embarked, disregarding a prohibition from the Pope
+ which here met them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Acre, they were received by the clergy and people in solemn procession,
+ chanting, &ldquo;Blessed is he that cometh in the Name of the Lord;&rdquo; and high
+ were the hopes entertained that their deeds would rival those of the last
+ Richard Plantagenet and William Longespée. But Richard, though brave and
+ kindly-tempered, was no general; Palestine was in too miserable a
+ condition for his succor to avail it, and all he could do was to make a
+ treaty, and use his wealth to purchase free ingress to the holy places for
+ the pilgrims; and, without himself entering Jerusalem, he returned home.
+ He took with him as curiosities two Saracen damsels, trained to perform a
+ dance with each foot, on a globe of crystal rolling on a smooth pavement,
+ while they made various graceful gestures with their bodies, and struck
+ together a couple of cymbals with their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the whole result of the Crusade, for the treaty was set at naught
+ by the Templars and Hospitallers, who called him a boy, and refused to be
+ bound by his compact. In 1245, William Longespée again took the Cross
+ under a very different leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the previous year, Louis IX., King of France, had been attacked by an
+ illness of such severity that his life was despaired of; and at one time a
+ lady, who was watching by his bed, thought him actually dead, and was
+ about to cover his face. He soon opened his eyes, and, stretching out his
+ arms, said, &ldquo;The light of the East hath shined on me, and called me back
+ from the dead,&rdquo; and he demanded the Cross, and at once took the vow for
+ the deliverance of the Holy Sepulchre. To part with so just and excellent
+ a monarch on an expedition of such peril was grief and misery to his
+ subjects, and, above all, to his mother, Queen Blanche, and every means
+ was taken to dissuade him; but he would neither eat nor drink till the
+ sign was given to him; and as soon as he had strength to explain himself,
+ declared that he had, while in his trance, heard a voice from the East,
+ calling on him, as the appointed messenger of Heaven, to avenge the
+ insults offered to the Holy City. His mother mourned as for his death, his
+ counsellors remonstrated, his people entreated; but nothing could outweigh
+ such a summons, and his resolution was fixed. The Bishop of Paris saying
+ that the vow was made while he was not fully master of his senses, he laid
+ the Cross aside, but only to resume it, so as to be beyond all such
+ suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crusade was preached, but it had now become a frequent practice, of
+ which Henry III. was a lamentable example, lightly and hastily to assume
+ the Cross in a moment of excitement, or even as a means of being
+ disembarrassed from troublesome claims by the privileges of a Crusader,
+ and then to purchase from the Pope absolution from the vow. It had become
+ such an actual matter of traffic, that Richard of Cornwall positively
+ obtained from Gregory IX. a grant of the money thus raised from recreant
+ Crusaders. The landless William of Salisbury, going to the Pope, who was
+ then at Lyons, thus addressed him: &ldquo;Your Holiness sees that I am signed
+ with the Cross. My name is great and well known: it is William Longespée.
+ But my fortune does not match it. The King of England has bereft me of my
+ earldom, but as this was done judicially, not out of personal ill-will, I
+ blame him not. Yet, poor as I am, I have undertaken the pilgrimage. Now,
+ since Prince Richard, the King&rsquo;s brother, who has not taken the Cross, has
+ obtained from you a grant to take money from such as lay it aside, surely
+ I may beg for the like&mdash;I, who am signed, and yet without resource.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He obtained the grant, and thus raised 1,000 marks, while Richard of
+ Cornwall actually gained from one archdeacon £600, and in proportion from
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis, for three years, was detained by the necessity of arranging matters
+ for the tranquillity of his own kingdom, and not till the Friday in
+ Whitsun-week, 1248, was he solemnly invested at St. Denis with the
+ pilgrim&rsquo;s staff and wallet, and presented with the oriflamme, the standard
+ of the convent, which he bore as Count of Paris. His two brothers, Robert
+ Comté d&rsquo;Artois, and Charles Comte d&rsquo;Anjou, and his wife Marguerite of
+ Provence, accompanied him, together with a great number of the nobility,
+ among whom the most interesting was the faithful and attached Sieur de
+ Joinville, Seneschal of Champagne, who has left us a minute record of his
+ master&rsquo;s adventures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sailed from Aigues Mortes, August 25th, 1248, and Joinville reflected
+ that he could not imagine how a man in a state of mortal sin could ever
+ put to sea, since he knew not, when he fell asleep at night, whether
+ morning would not find him at the bottom of the sea. On coming near the
+ coast of Barbary, Joinville&rsquo;s ship seems to have been becalmed, for it
+ continued for three whole days in view of the same round mountain, to the
+ great dismay of the crew, until a <i>preux d&rsquo;homme</i> priest suggested,
+ that in his parish, in cases of distress, such as dearth, or flood, or
+ pestilence, processions chanting the Litany were made on three Saturdays
+ following. The day was Saturday, and the crew acted on his advice, making
+ the procession round the masts, even the sick being carried by their
+ friends. The next day they were out of sight of the mountain, and on the
+ third Saturday safely landed at Cyprus. Here the Crusaders remained for
+ eight months, since Egypt was the intended point of attack, and they
+ wished to allow the inundation of the Nile to subside. At length, in the
+ summer of 1249, they arrived before Damietta, which was even better
+ fortified than when it had previously held out for fifteen months; but it
+ now surrendered, after Fakreddin, the Mameluke commander, had suffered one
+ defeat under its walls, and the Christians entered in triumph. Here Louis
+ made an unfortunate delay, while waiting for reinforcements brought by his
+ brother Alfonse, Comte de Poitiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the rude and superstitious noblesse, a Crusade appeared a certain means
+ of securing salvation, as indeed the clergy led them to believe; and this
+ belief seemed to remove all restraint of morality from the ill-disposed,
+ so that the pure and pious King was bitterly grieved by the license which
+ he found himself unable to restrain. Much harm was done by the excess in
+ which the troops indulged while revelling in the plunder of Damietta. The
+ prudent would have reserved the stores there laid up for time of need, but
+ old crusaders insisted on &ldquo;the good old custom of the Holy Land,&rdquo; as they
+ called it, namely, the distribution of two-thirds among the army; and
+ though the King ransomed some portion, the money did as much harm in
+ promoting revelry as the provisions themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Longespée arrived, with 200 English knights; but the small band of English
+ and their landless leader met with nothing but contumely from their
+ allies, especially the King&rsquo;s brother, Robert Comte d&rsquo;Artois, a haughty
+ and impetuous youth. The English took a small castle on the road to
+ Alexandria, where one of the Saracen Emirs had placed his harem. It was
+ reported that Longespée had acquired a huge treasure there, and Robert
+ insulted him to his face, and deprived him of his just share of the spoil.
+ Longespée, complained to the King; but Louis could give him no redress.
+ &ldquo;You are no King, if you cannot do justice,&rdquo; said William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis meekly suffered the reproach. He had, in his submission, made over
+ his judgment and authority to the papal legates&mdash;men far less fit
+ than he to exercise power&mdash;and matters went chiefly as they and his
+ fiery brothers chose to direct. Wiser counsellors recommended securing the
+ other seaport, Alexandria; but Prince Alfonse declared, that the only way
+ to kill a snake, was to strike the head, and persuaded the council that
+ the move should be upon Grand Cairo, or, as the Crusaders chose to call
+ it, Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On November 25th, 1249, the army advanced, and the conjuncture should have
+ been favorable, for the Sultan was just dead, and his son absent at
+ Damascus; but nothing could have been worse concerted than the expedition&mdash;ill-provisioned,
+ without boats to cross the canals, without engines of war, the soldiery
+ disorganized; while the Mameluke force were picked soldiers, recruited
+ from the handsomest Circassian children, bred up for arms alone, and with
+ an <i>esprit de corps</i> that rendered them a terror to friend and foe
+ almost down to our own times. They harassed the Christians at every step,
+ and destroyed their machines, and terrified them excessively by showers of
+ Greek fire, a compound of naphtha and other combustibles launched from
+ hollow engines, which ignited as it traversed the air, and was very hard
+ to extinguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Franks regarded it with a superstitious horror, as a fiendish mystery,
+ and compared it to a fiery dragon with a tail as long as a lance; but it
+ did not actually cause many deaths, and they met with no serious disaster
+ till they came to the canal of Aschmoum, which flowed between them and
+ Mansourah. They tried to build a causeway across it, but their
+ commencement was destroyed by the Greek fire, and a Bedouin offered, for
+ 500 bezants, to show them a ford on the Shrove Tuesday of 1250. Robert
+ d&rsquo;Artois begged to lead the vanguard, and secure the passage of the rest;
+ and when the King hesitated to confide so important a charge to one so
+ rash and impetuous, he swore on the Gospels that, when he should have
+ gained the bank on the other side, nothing should induce him to leave it
+ till the whole army should have crossed. The King consented, but placed
+ the command in the hands of the wise Guillaume de Sonnac, Grand Master of
+ the Templars, who, with his knights, the Hospitallers, Longespée and the
+ English, and Robert&rsquo;s own band, formed a body of 1,400.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Saracens who guarded the ford were taken by surprise, and fled in
+ confusion; and the Christians, mounting the bank, beheld the inhabitants
+ and garrison of Mansourah hurrying away in terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The temptation made the impetuous prince forget his promises, and he was
+ dashing forward in pursuit, when the Grand Master tried to check him, by
+ representing that, though the enemy were at present under the influence of
+ panic terror, they would soon rally, and that the only safety for the
+ I,400 was to wait, with the canal in their rear, until the rest of the
+ army should have crossed; otherwise, as soon as their small number should
+ be perceived, they would infallibly be surrounded and cut off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fiery youth listened with scorn and impatience. &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; cried he,
+ &ldquo;that it is well said, that the Orders have an understanding with the
+ Infidel! They love power, they love money, and so will not see the war
+ ended. This is the way that so many crusading princes have been served by
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noble Count,&rdquo; said Pierre de Villebride, the Grand Master of St. John,
+ trying to calm him, &ldquo;why do you think we gave up our homes and took these
+ vows? Was it to overthrow the Church and lose our own souls? Such things
+ be far, far from us, or from any Christian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But De Sonnac would not parley; he called to his esquire, &ldquo;Spread wide the
+ Beauséant banner. Arms and death must decide our honor and fate. We might
+ be invincible, united; but division is our ruin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Longespée interposed. &ldquo;Lord Count,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you cannot err in following
+ the counsel of a holy man like the Grand Master, well tried in arms. Young
+ men are never dishonored by hearkening to their elders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The tail! that smacks of the tail!&rdquo; exclaimed the headstrong Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Footnote: On Thomas á Becket&rsquo;s last journey to Canterbury, Raoul de
+ Broc&rsquo;s followers had cut off the tails of his pack-horses. It was a vulgar
+ reproach to the men of Kent that the outrage had been punished by the
+ growth of the same appendage on the whole of the inhabitants of the
+ county; and, whereas the English populace applied the accusation to the
+ Kentishmen, foreigners extended it to the whole nation when in a humor for
+ insult and abuse, such as that of this unhappy prince.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Count Robert,&rdquo; rejoined William, &ldquo;I shall be so forward in peril to-day,
+ that you will not even come near the tail of my horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words they all set out at full gallop, Robert&rsquo;s old deaf tutor,
+ Sir Foucault de Nesle, who had not heard one word of the remonstrance,
+ holding his bridle, and shouting, &ldquo;<i>Ores à eux! ores à, eux!</i>&rdquo; They
+ burst into the town, and began to pillage, killing the Saracen Emir
+ Fakreddin, as he left his bath; but in the meantime, Bendocdar, another
+ Mameluke chief, had rallied his forces, threw a troop between them and the
+ ford, and thus, cutting them off, attacked them in the streets, while the
+ inhabitants hurled stones, boiling water, and burning brands from above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Separated and surprised as they were, the little band sold their lives
+ dearly, forgot their fatal quarrels, and fought as one man from ten
+ o&rsquo;clock till three. Robert entrenched himself in a house, defended himself
+ there for a long time, and finally perished in its ruins. Longespée was
+ killed at the head of his knights, who almost all fell with him; and his
+ esquire, Robert de Vere, was found with his banner wrapped around his dead
+ body. Only thirty-five prisoners were made, among them Pierre de
+ Villebride. Sonnac, after having lost a hundred and eighty of his knights,
+ fought his way through with the loss of an eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had, in the meantime, crossed the canal, and grievous was his
+ disappointment on finding that the Saracens were between him and his
+ brother. Every effort was made to break through to the rescue, but in
+ vain; and at one moment Louis himself was in the utmost danger, finding
+ himself singly opposed to six Saracens, whom, however, he succeeded in
+ putting to flight. With difficulty could his forces even maintain their
+ footing on the Mansourah side of the canal, and it was not till after a
+ long and desperate conflict that there was time to inquire for the
+ missing. The Prior de Rosnay came to the royal tent, to ask whether there
+ were any tidings of the Count, &ldquo;Only that he is in Paradise,&rdquo; said the
+ King. &ldquo;God be praised for what He sends to us.&rdquo; And he lifted up his eyes,
+ while the tears flowed down his cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was believed, in England, that the Countess Ella of Salisbury had on
+ that day a vision of her son received into Paradise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bon Sieur de Joinville had his part in the brave deeds of the day: he,
+ with the Comte de Soissons and four other knights, guarded a bridge
+ against a mighty force of Saracens. &ldquo;Seneschal,&rdquo; cried the Count, &ldquo;let
+ this canaille roar and howl; you and I will yet talk of this day in our
+ lady&rsquo;s chamber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Joinville fought on cheerfully, though twice dismounted, and in great
+ danger. But he kept up his heart, crying out, &ldquo;Beau Sire, St. James, help
+ me, and succor me in my need!&rdquo; and he came off safely, though pierced with
+ five arrows, and his horse with fifteen wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following day was a doubly sorrowful Ash-Wednesday in the Christian
+ camp; while the Mussulmans triumphed, calling the battle of Mansourah the
+ key of joy to true believers; and fancying, from the fleur-de-lys on the
+ surcoat, that the corpse of Robert was that of Louis himself, they
+ proclaimed throughout their camp, &ldquo;The Christian army is a trunk without
+ life or head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They learnt their error on the Friday, when they made a furious attack on
+ the Crusaders, and Louis&rsquo;s valor made itself felt, as he dashed through
+ showers of arrows and of Greek fire, and drove back the enemy as they were
+ surrounding his brother Charles. His other brother, Alfonse, was for a
+ moment made prisoner, but being much beloved, the butchers, women, and
+ servants belonging to the army, suddenly rushed forward and rescued him.
+ The Grand Master of the Templars lost his other eye, and was soon after
+ killed; and though the Christians claimed the victory, their loss was so
+ severe, especially in horses, that it was impossible to advance to Cairo,
+ and they therefore remained encamped before Mansourah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing more fatal could have been done: the marshy ground, the number of
+ dead bodies that choked the stream, the feeding on fish that had preyed
+ upon them&mdash;for the Lenten fast prevented recourse to solid food&mdash;occasioned
+ disease to break out&mdash;fever, dysentery, and a horrible disorder which
+ turned the skin as black and dry (says Joinville) as an old boot, and
+ caused great swelling and inflammation of the gums, so that the barbers
+ cut them away piecemeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Saracens let them alone, only now and then launching volleys of Greek
+ fire. The King, on seeing these coming, would kneel down, and cry, &ldquo;Lord,
+ spare my people!&rdquo; But worse enemies were at work. Warrior after warrior
+ succumbed to his sufferings, and the clergy, going about among the dying,
+ caught the infection, till there were hardly sufficient to perform the
+ daily offices of religion. Joinville rose from his bed to lift up his
+ chaplain, who, while singing mass, fainted on the step of the altar.
+ Supported in his arms, he finished the mass, but, says the Seneschal, &ldquo;he
+ never chanted more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Patiently and steadfastly all was borne: the Christians repented of their
+ late license, and suffered without murmurs, desertion, or submission,
+ encouraged by their good King, who spent his time in going from one bed to
+ another to encourage the sick, attend to their wants, and offer his
+ prayers with them. He was vainly entreated not to expose himself to the
+ infection. But love and duty equally led him among his people, and his
+ sad, resigned face never failed to cheer the sufferers, till he too was
+ laid on a bed of sickness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Easter came, but famine was added to their miseries, and those who were
+ recovering from illness died of hunger. The new Sultan, Touran Chah, or
+ Almoadan, had at length arrived, and Louis tried to negotiate with him,
+ offering to surrender the town of Damietta, provided Jerusalem were placed
+ in his hands. The Sultan would have agreed, but required hostages, and,
+ when Louis offered his two brothers, refused any guarantee but the person
+ of the King himself. With one voice the French knights vowed that they
+ would all be killed rather than make a pledge of their King, and the
+ project was ineffectual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis now resolved to attempt to retreat in secret, and on the 5th of
+ April he collected as many boats as possible upon the canal, there by
+ night to embark the sick, that they might ascend the Nile to Damietta.
+ Those who yet had strength to fight were to go by land; and he, though
+ very ill, refused to desert his army, and resolved to accompany them. In
+ the midst of the embarkation the Saracens discovered what was going on,
+ and fell upon them, shooting arrows at the sick as they were carried on
+ board. They hurried the vessels off, notwithstanding loud cries from the
+ land army of &ldquo;Wait for the King! wait for the King!&rdquo;&mdash;for the French
+ soldiery only longed to see their King in safety; but he came not, and
+ they pushed off. Before long the Sultan&rsquo;s galleys met them with such
+ showers of Greek fire, that Joinville, one of those unfortunate sick,
+ declares that it seemed as if all the stars were falling. Soon they were
+ boarded by the enemy; Joinville gave himself up for lost, threw overboard
+ all his relics, lest they should be profaned, and prayed aloud; but a
+ Saracen renegade who knew him, came up to him, and by calling out, &ldquo;The
+ King&rsquo;s cousin!&rdquo; saved his life, and that of a little boy in his company.
+ All who seemed capable of paying a ransom were made prisoners; the rest
+ had the choice of death or apostasy, and too many chose the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the army fared no better by land. Louis had mounted his horse,
+ though so weak that he could not wear his armor, and rode among the
+ knights, who strove to cut their way through the foe. The two good
+ knights, Geoffroi de Sargines and Gautier de Chatillon rode on each side
+ of him, and, as he afterward said, guarded, him from the Saracens as a
+ good servant guards his master&rsquo;s cup from flies. They were obliged to
+ support him in his saddle after a time, so faint and exhausted did he
+ become; and at last, on arriving at a little village named Minieh,
+ Sargines look him from his horse, and laid him down just within a house,
+ his head on the lap of a Frenchwoman whom he found there, and watched over
+ him, expecting each breath to be the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chatillon defended the entrance, rushing each moment on the Saracens, and
+ only resting to draw out the arrows with which he was covered. At last he
+ was overcome by numbers, and slaughtered; and another knight, Philippe de
+ Montfort, making his way to the King, who had somewhat revived, told him
+ that five hundred knights remained in full force, and, with his
+ permission, he could make good terms. Louis consented, and the Saracen
+ Emir was in the act of concluding a truce, when a traitor cried out, &ldquo;Sir
+ French knights, surrender! the King bids you! Do not cause him to be
+ slain!&rdquo; They instantly laid down their arms unconditionally, and the Emir,
+ whose ring had been already off his finger, looking round, said, &ldquo;We make
+ no truce with prisoners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was thus lost. The Saracens entered the village, and finding the King,
+ loaded him with chains, and placed him on board a vessel. His brothers
+ were likewise taken, and even the knights who were far advanced on the way
+ to Damietta, on hearing of their monarch&rsquo;s captivity, dropped their arms,
+ and became an easy prey. The crosses and images of the Saints were trodden
+ under foot and reviled by the Mussulmans, and the prisoners, when all
+ those of importance had been selected, were placed in an enclosure, and
+ each man who would not deny his faith was beheaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of the ruin of the army and the captivity of her husband reached
+ Queen Marguerite at Damietta, where she was daily awaiting the birth of an
+ infant. Her despair and terror were such, that her life was in the utmost
+ danger, and nothing soothed her except holding the hand of an old knight,
+ aged eighty years, who did his utmost to calm her. If she slept for a few
+ moments, she awoke starting, and fancying the room was full of Saracens,
+ and the old knight had to assure her that he was there, and she need fear
+ nothing. Once she sent every one else out of the room, and, kneeling down,
+ insisted that he should make oath to do what she should require of him. It
+ was, that, should the enemy take the city, he would sweep off her head
+ with his sword, rather than let her fall into their hands. &ldquo;Willingly,&rdquo;
+ said the old knight. &ldquo;Had you not asked it of me, I had thought of doing
+ so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The morning after, a son was born to her, and named Jean Tristan, on
+ account of the sadness that reigned around. On that very day word was
+ brought to her that the Genoese and Pisans, who garrisoned the town, were
+ preparing their vessels to depart. The poor Queen sent for their leaders,
+ and as they stood round her bed, she held up her new-born babe, and
+ conjured them not to desert the town and destroy all hopes for the King.
+ They told her that they had no provisions: on which she sent to buy up all
+ in the town, and promised to maintain them at her own expense; thus
+ awakening sufficient compassion and honor to make them promise at least to
+ await her recovery. Her first pledge of hope was a bulbous root, on which,
+ with a knife, had been cut out the word &ldquo;<i>Espérance</i>,&rdquo; the only
+ greeting the captive King could send to her. No wonder that plant has ever
+ since borne the well-omened name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis, meanwhile, was carried by water to Mansourah, where he lay very
+ ill, and only attended by one servant and two priests. A book of Psalms
+ and the cloak that covered him were the sole possessions that remained to
+ him; but with unfailing patience he lay, feebly chanting the Psalms, never
+ uttering one word of complaint, and showing such honor to the office of
+ the priests, that he would not endure that they should perform for him any
+ of the services that his helplessness required. Nor did he make one
+ request from his enemies for his own comfort; though Touran Chah, struck
+ with his endurance, sent to him a present of fifty robes for himself and
+ his nobles; but Louis refused them, considering that to wear the robes of
+ the Saracen would compromise the dignity of his crown. The Sultan next
+ sent his physician, under whose care his health began to return, and
+ negotiations were commenced. The King offered as his ransom, and that of
+ his troops, the town of Damietta and a million of bezants; but the Sultan
+ would not be contented without the cities of the Crusaders in Palestine,
+ Louis replied that these were not his own; and when Touran Chah threatened
+ him with torture or lifelong captivity, his only reply was, &ldquo;I am his
+ prisoner; he can do as he will with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His firmness prevailed, and the Sultan agreed to take what he offered.
+ Louis promised the town and the treasure, provided the Queen consented;
+ and when the Mahometans expressed their amazement at a woman being brought
+ forward, &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the Queen is my lady; I can do nothing without
+ her consent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King ransomed all his companions at his own expense, and there was
+ general rejoicing at the hopes of freedom; but, alas! the Sultan, Touran
+ Chan, was murdered by his own Mamelukes, who hunted him into the river,
+ and killed him close to the ship where Joinville had embarked. They then
+ rushed into the vessels of the Christians, who, expecting a massacre to
+ follow, knelt down and confessed their sins to each other. &ldquo;I absolve you,
+ as far as God has given me power,&rdquo; replied each warrior to his brother.
+ Joinville, seeing a Saracen with a battle-axe lifted over him, made the
+ sign of the Cross, and said, &ldquo;Thus died St. Agnes.&rdquo; However, they were
+ only driven down into the hold, without receiving any hurt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis was in his tent with his brothers, unable to account for the cries
+ he heard, and fearing that Damietta had been seized, and that the
+ prisoners were being slain. At last there rushed in a Mameluke with a
+ bloody sword, crying, &ldquo;What wilt thou give me for delivering thee from an
+ enemy who intended thy ruin and mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dost thou not know,&rdquo; said the furious Mameluke, &ldquo;that I am master of thy
+ life? Make me a knight, or thou art a dead man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make thyself a Christian,&rdquo; said the undaunted King, &ldquo;and I will make thee
+ a knight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His calm dignity overawed the assassin; and though several others came in,
+ brandishing their swords and using violent language, the sight of the
+ majestic captive made them at once change their demeanor; they spoke
+ respectfully, and tried to excuse the murder; then, putting their hands to
+ their brow, and salaaming down to the ground, retired. They sounded their
+ drums and trumpets outside the tent, and it is even said they deliberated
+ whether to offer their crown&mdash;since the race of Saladin was now
+ extinct&mdash;to the noble Frank prince. Louis had decided that he would
+ accept it, in hopes of converting them, but the proposal was never made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mamelukes returned to the former conditions of the treaty with the
+ King, but, when the time came for making oaths on either side for its
+ observance, a new difficulty arose. The Emirs, as their most solemn
+ denunciation, declared that, &ldquo;if they violated their promises, they would
+ be as base as the pilgrim who journeys bareheaded to Mecca, or as the man
+ who takes back his wives after having put them away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In return, they required the King to say that, if he broke his oath, he
+ should be as one who denied his religion; but the words in which this was
+ couched seemed to Louis so profane, that he utterly refused to pronounce
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mahometans threatened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are masters of my body,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but you have no power over my
+ will.&rdquo; His brothers and the clergy entreated in vain, though the
+ Mamelukes, fancying that his resistance was inspired by the latter, seized
+ the Patriarch of Jerusalem, an old man of eighty, and tied him up to a
+ stake, drawing the cords so tight round his hands that the blood started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sire, sire, take the oath!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;I take the sin upon myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Louis was immovable, and the Emirs at last contented themselves with
+ his word, and retired, saying that this was the proudest Christian that
+ had ever been seen in the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They knew not that his pride was for the honor of his God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 6th of May, Geoffroi de Sargines came to Damietta, placed the Queen
+ and her ladies on board the Genoese vessels, and gave up the keys to the
+ Emirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was, on this, set free, but his brother Alfonso was to remain as
+ a hostage till the bezants were paid. The royal coffers at Damielta could
+ not supply the whole, and the rest was borrowed of the Templars, somewhat
+ by force; for Joinville, going to their treasurer in his worn-out garments
+ and his face haggard from illness, was refused the keys, till he said &ldquo;he
+ should use the royal key,&rdquo; on which, with a protest, the chests were
+ opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe de Montfort managed to cheat the Mamelukes of 10,000 bezants, and
+ came boasting of it to the King; but Louis, much displeased, sent him back
+ with the remaining sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King then embarked, still in much anxiety whether the Emirs would
+ fulfil their engagements and liberate his brother; but, late at night,
+ Montfort came alongside of the vessel, and called out, &ldquo;Sire, speak to
+ your brother, who is in the other ship!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In great joy Louis cried, &ldquo;Light up! light up!&rdquo; and the signals of the two
+ princes joyfully answered each other in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King sailed for Acre, and after some stay there, finding that his
+ weakened force could effect nothing, and hearing that the death of his
+ mother, Queen Blanche, had left France without a regent, he returned home,
+ and landed 5th of September, 1254, six years after his departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess Ella and her son Nicholas, Bishop of Salisbury, raised an
+ effigy to William like that of his father, and the figures of the father
+ and son lie opposite to each other in the new cathedral founded by Bishop
+ Poore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXX. SIMON DE MONTFORT. (1232-1266.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England.</i>
+ 1216. Henry III.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland.</i>
+ 1214. Alexander II.
+ 1249. Alexander III.
+
+ <i>Kings of France.</i>
+ 1226. Louis IX.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany.</i>
+ 1209. Friedrich II.
+ 1249. Conrad IV.
+ 1255. William.
+
+ <i>Popes.</i>
+ 1227. Gregory IX.
+ 1241. Celestin IV.
+ 1242. Innocent IV.
+ 1254. Alexander IV.
+ 1261. Urban IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The lawlessness of John Lackland led to the enactment of Magna Charta; the
+ extravagance of Henry of Winchester established the power of Parliament,
+ and the man who did most in effecting this purpose was a foreigner by
+ birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amicia, the heiress of the earldom of Leicester, was the wife of Simon,
+ Count de Montfort, an austere warrior, on whom fell the choice of Innocent
+ III. to be leader of the so-called crusade against the unfortunate
+ Albigenses. Heretics indeed they were; but never before had the sword of
+ persecution been employed by the Church, and their fate is a grievous
+ disgrace to Rome, and to the Dominican order. Strict in life, but of cruel
+ temper, Count Simon was a fit instrument for the massacres committed; and
+ being a leader of great skill, he gained complete victories over the
+ native princes of the heretics, who, though not holding their opinions,
+ were unwilling to let them perish without protection. Raymond de St.
+ Gilles Count de Toulouse, Gaston Count de Béarn, and all the most famous
+ names of the south of France, took up arms in their defence; and even
+ Pedro, King of Aragon, joined, the confederacy; but at the battle of Muret
+ all were totally defeated, and Pedro lost his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nobles were imprisoned, the peasants murdered by wholesale, villages
+ burnt down and the inhabitants slain, with out distinction of Catholic or
+ heretic, and all the time the followers of Montfort deemed themselves
+ religious men. The Lateran Council actually invested Simon with the
+ sovereignty of the counties of Toulouse and Carcassonne; but he was
+ extremely hated there, and Count Raymond, recovering his liberty, attacked
+ him, and regained great part of his own dominions. Montfort was besieging
+ the town of Toulouse, when, while hearing mass, intelligence was brought
+ to him that the garrison were setting fire to his machines. He rose from
+ his knees, repeating the first verse of the Song of Simeon, and rushing
+ out to the battle, was struck on the head by a stone from a mangonel on
+ the walls, and killed on the spot, June 25, 1218. He was a remarkable type
+ of that character fostered by the system of the Middle Ages, where
+ ambition and cruelty existed side by side with austere devotion, and were
+ encouraged as if they did service to Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His second son, Simon, had the same strong sense of religion, together
+ with equal talents, and unusual beauty of person, skill in arms, and
+ winning grace of deportment. The elder son, Amaury, was the heir of the
+ county of Montfort, and for some time Simon remained landless, the earldom
+ of Leicester having been forfeited on account of the adherence of the
+ family to the party of Louis the Lion in the wars that followed the
+ signing of Magna Charta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1232, however, young Simon came to England to attempt the recovery of
+ his mother&rsquo;s inheritance, and his graceful manners and Southern tongue at
+ once delighted Henry III. Another heart was at the same time gained; the
+ King&rsquo;s sister, Eleanor, who had been left a widow at sixteen by the death
+ of the brave Earl of Pembroke, had, in her first despair, made a vow of
+ perpetual widowhood, and received the ring of dedication from the
+ Archbishop; but at the end of six years all this was forgotten; she fell
+ in love with the handsome Provençal, and prevailed on the King to sanction
+ with his presence a hasty private wedding in St. Stephen&rsquo;s Chapel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some time the marriage remained a secret, and when it became known,
+ great was the indignation alike of clergy and laity. The Barons even
+ collected troops, and headed by Richard, the King&rsquo;s brother, whom they
+ called the Staff of Fortitude, assembled at Southwark, and dreadfully
+ alarmed the poor King; but Montfort, who always possessed a great power
+ over men&rsquo;s minds, managed to reconcile himself to Prince Richard, and to
+ disperse the other nobles. Still, the Archbishop termed it no marriage at
+ all, and Simon therefore set out at once for Rome, carrying letters from
+ Henry, and raising money by every means in his power, till he was able to
+ offer a sufficient bribe to obtain from the Pope a dispensation, with
+ which he returned to England a few days before the birth of his eldest
+ child, Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Simon was now in high favor; the Barons, who at first looked on him as one
+ of the hated Southern adventurers, were gained over by his address and
+ adoption of their manners; and when, by the royal favor and the formal
+ cession by his brother Amaury, he obtained the earldom of Leicester, they
+ readily identified him with themselves. At court he was highly beloved;
+ his children were constantly at the palace; and in 1239, when Edward, heir
+ of the crown, was baptized, he was one of the nine godfathers&mdash;an
+ honor, perhaps, chiefly owing to his wealth, for this was at one of the
+ times when Henry&rsquo;s finances were at so low an ebb that he, or his
+ messengers, made the birth of the child an excuse for their rapacity. Each
+ noble to whom the tidings were sent was obliged to make a costly gift; and
+ if he did not offer enough, his present was returned on his hands with
+ intimation that it must be increased. &ldquo;God has given us this child,&rdquo; said
+ a jester; &ldquo;the King sells him to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montfort&rsquo;s English popularity seems suddenly to have rendered the fickle
+ King jealous; for, to his great surprise, on the day of the churching of
+ the Queen, Henry suddenly met him, and forbade him to join in the service,
+ reviling him furiously for the circumstances of his marriage, and ordering
+ him at once to leave his dominions. Returning with his wife to his
+ lodgings, he was at once followed by messengers, ordering them both away;
+ and before sunset he was obliged to embark with Eleanor in a small vessel,
+ leaving behind them their infant son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He placed his wife in safety in France, and proceeded to the Holy Land,
+ where he highly distinguished himself, and, as usual, gained every one&rsquo;s
+ affection, so that the Barons of Palestine would fain have had him for
+ their leader in the absence of their young Queen Yolande and her husband,
+ Friedrich II. of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King Henry had forgotten his displeasure by the time he returned, and the
+ next ten years were spent in peace by the Earl and Countess, at their
+ castles of Kenilworth and Odiham, and the government of Gascony. Their
+ five sons were brought up as the playfellows of their royal cousins, and
+ were under the tutorship of the great Robert Grosteste, while the noble
+ and magnificent earl stood equally well with sovereign and people. His
+ chaplain, Adam de Marisco, seems to have been an admirable man, who never
+ failed to administer suitable reproofs to the Countess for love of dress
+ and other failings, all which she seems to have taken in good part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Henry was plunging deeper in debt and difficulty. Every time his
+ council met they charged him with breaches of the Great Charter, and
+ refusing, in spite of his promises and pleas, to grant him any money, left
+ him to devise means of obtaining it by extortion. The Jews had always been
+ considered a sort of lawful property of the sovereign, who plundered them
+ without remorse; but even this resource was not inexhaustible, and he
+ looked with covetous eyes on the prosperous citizens of London. Once, when
+ he was in great distress, and it was suggested to him to pawn to them his
+ plate and jewels, he broke out passionately: &ldquo;If the treasures of Augustus
+ were put up to sale, these clowns would buy them. Is it for them to assume
+ the style of Barons, and live sumptuously, while we are in want of the
+ necessaries of life?&rdquo; Thenceforth he made still more unscrupulous demands
+ of the citizens, under the name of New-Year&rsquo;s gifts, loans, &amp;c.; and
+ Queen Eleanor had even less consideration, so that their Majesties became
+ the objects of the utmost hatred in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1252 the Earl of Leicester was summoned from Gascony to answer various
+ charges of maladministration. His brother-in-law, Prince Richard, took his
+ part, with the two great Earls of Gloucester and Hereford, and it was
+ reported that he had pledged the Gascons by a solemn oath not to make any
+ complaint of his government. At any rate, they declared their intention of
+ withdrawing their allegiance if he were superseded, and he himself refused
+ to resign his post unless he were repaid the sums he had expended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not bound to keep my word with a traitor,&rdquo; said Henry&mdash;words
+ which put Simon into a passion, and he replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a lie! and whoever said so, I will compel to eat his words. Who can
+ believe you to be a Christian prince? Do you ever go to confession?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A Christian I am; I have often been to confession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vain confession, without repentance and reparation!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I repent of nothing so much,&rdquo; cried the King, &ldquo;as having fattened one who
+ has so little gratitude and so much ill manners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friends of Simon checked further reply. Henry&rsquo;s wrath was like straw
+ on fire; but he forgot that by it he lighted a flame more enduring, though
+ at first less visible; and he was vexed when the offended Montfort removed
+ his eldest son, Henry, from court. However, Gascony was wanted as a
+ government for Prince Edward, who was only thirteen years old, and
+ therefore Leicester was forced to resign, though he would not do so
+ without full compensation, such as Henry was ill able to afford. Yet,
+ affronted as he was, when the office of high steward of France was offered
+ to him, he would not accept it, by the advice of Grosteste, lest he should
+ seem unfaithful to his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To carry Prince Edward to Guienne was at present Henry&rsquo;s favorite scheme,
+ and for this end every means of raising money was resorted to. The King
+ met the parliament, as he had done often before, with entreaties for a
+ grant to enable him to go and redeem the Holy Sepulchre; but this had been
+ far too frequently tried, and was unnoticed; so he next tried the bribe of
+ confirmation of the charters. All the assembly went to Westminster Abbey,
+ the bishops and abbots carrying tapers, and there the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury pronounced sentence of excommunication against whosoever should
+ infringe these charters. As he spoke, the tapers were dashed at once on
+ the ground, with the words, &ldquo;May his soul who incurs this sentence be thus
+ extinguished for ever!&rdquo; while Henry added, &ldquo;So help me God! I will keep
+ these charters, as I am a man, as I am a Christian, as I am a knight, as I
+ am a king crowned and anointed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet a few days after, when the parliament was dismissed and the money in
+ his hands, the temptation to transgress the charter again occurred. His
+ conscience was still overawed, and he hesitated; but his uncles and
+ half-brothers bade him remember that, while he kept his oath, he was but
+ the shadow of a King, and that, should he scruple, three hundred marks
+ sent to the Pope would purchase his dispensation and discharge him of
+ guilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was real need in Guienne; for Alfonso, King of Castile, had set up a
+ claim to that county, and threatened to invade it. Arriving there, Henry
+ gained some advantages, and concluded a peace, which was to be sealed by a
+ marriage between Edward of England and Dona Leonor of Castile, Alfonso&rsquo;s
+ sister. Young as they were&mdash;Edward only fourteen and Leonor still
+ younger&mdash;they were at once brought to Burgos and there united; after
+ which a tournament was held, and the prince received knighthood from the
+ sword of Alfonso. Bringing his bride back to his father at Bordeaux,
+ Edward was received with a full display of luxury; all Henry&rsquo;s money, and
+ more too, having been laid out on the banquetting, so that the King
+ himself stood aghast, and dismally answered one of his English guests,
+ &ldquo;Say no more! What would they think of it in England?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young bride, Eleanor, as the English called her, was brought to
+ England, while Edward remained in Guienne, sometimes visiting the French
+ court, and going wherever tournaments or knightly exercises invited him.
+ He was far better thus employed, and in intercourse with St. Louis, than
+ in the miserable quarrels, expedients, and perplexities, at home; and thus
+ he grew up generous, chivalrous, and devout, his whole character strongly
+ influenced by the example he had seen at Paris. His features were fair,
+ and of the noblest cast, perfectly regular, and only blemished by a slight
+ trace of his father&rsquo;s drooping eyelid; the expression full of fire and
+ sweetness, though at times somewhat stern. His height exceeded that of any
+ man in England, and his strength was in proportion; he was perfectly
+ skilled in all martial exercises, and we are told that he could leap into
+ the saddle when in full armor without putting his hand on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the wealth in the family had always been in the hands of Prince
+ Richard, Earl of Cornwall, whose tin mines yielded such a revenue that he
+ was esteemed the richest prince in Europe. He had wisely refused the
+ Pope&rsquo;s offer of the crown of Sicily; but at this time, the death of
+ Friedrich II., and of his son Conrad, leaving vacant the imperial crown,
+ he was so far allured by it, that he set off to offer himself as a
+ candidate, carrying with him thirty-two wagons, each drawn by eight
+ horses, and laden with a hogshead of gold. Judiciously distributed, it
+ purchased his election by the Archbishop of Mainz and some of the
+ electors, while others gave their votes to Alfonso of Castile, whose
+ offers had been also considerable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alfonso thenceforth was called <i>El Emperador</i>, and Richard was
+ generally known as King of the Romans, and his son as Henry d&rsquo;Almayne, or
+ of Germany; but the Germans took no notice of either claimant beyond
+ taking their presents, and the only consequence was, that Richard was a
+ poorer man, and that his brother, the King, was ruined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1258, while Richard was gone to be crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle,
+ that the long-gathering peril began to burst. There had been a severe
+ famine, which added to the general discontent; and though Richard sent
+ home forty vessels laden with corn, his absence was severely felt, and his
+ mediation was missed. The King saw Simon de Montfort in conference with
+ the nobles, and feared the consequences. Once, when overtaken by a sudden
+ storm on his way to the Tower, Henry was forced to take refuge at Durham
+ House, then the abode of the Earl, who came down to meet him, bidding him
+ not to be alarmed, as the storm was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much as I dread thunder and lightning, I fear thee more than all,&rdquo; said
+ the poor King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said Montfort, &ldquo;you have no need to dread your only true
+ friend, who would save you from the destruction your false councillors are
+ preparing for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words were better understood when, on the 2d of May, Henry, on going
+ to meet his parliament at Westminster, found all his Barons sheathed in
+ full armor, and their swords drawn. These they laid aside on his entrance,
+ but when he demanded, &ldquo;What means this? Am I your prisoner?&rdquo; Roger Bigod,
+ Earl of Norfolk, a proud, violent man, who had once before given the lie
+ to the King, answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, sir; but your love of foreigners, and your own extravagance, have
+ brought great misery on the realm. We therefore demand that the powers of
+ government be entrusted to a committee of Barons and Prelates, who may
+ correct abuses and enact sound laws.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William de Valence, one of Henry&rsquo;s half-brothers, took upon him to reply,
+ and high words passed between him and the Earl of Leicester; but the royal
+ party were overmatched, and were obliged to consent to give a commission
+ to reform the state to twenty-four persons, half from the King&rsquo;s council,
+ and half to be chosen by the Barons themselves, in a parliament to be held
+ at Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This meeting, noted in history as the Mad Parliament, commenced on the
+ 11th of June, and the Barons brought to it their bands of armed retainers,
+ so as to overpower all resistance. The regulations were made entirely at
+ their will, and the chief were thus: That parliaments should assemble
+ thrice a year, that four knights from each county should lay before them
+ every grievance, and that they should overlook all the accounts of the
+ Chancellor and Treasurer. For the next twelve years this committee were to
+ take to themselves the power of disposing of the government of the royal
+ castles, of revoking any grant made without their consent, and of
+ forbidding the great seal to be affixed to any charter&mdash;the same
+ species of restraint as that under which King John had been placed at
+ Runnymede.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King&rsquo;s half-brothers would not yield up the castles in their
+ possession, but Montfort told William de Valence that he would have them,
+ or his head, and brought charges against them before the council, which so
+ alarmed them, that they all fled to Wolvesham Castle, belonging to Aymar,
+ as intended Bishop of Winchester. Thither the Barons pursued them, and,
+ making them prisoners, sent them out of the realm, with only six thousand
+ marks in their possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their defeat proved how vain was resistance, and the whole royal family
+ were obliged to swear to observe the Acts of Oxford, as they were called.
+ The King&rsquo;s nephew, Henry d&rsquo;Almayne, protested that they were of no force
+ in the absence of his father, the King of the Romans. &ldquo;Let your father
+ look to himself,&rdquo; said Leicester. &ldquo;If he refuse to act with the Barons of
+ England, not a foot of land shall he have in the whole realm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And accordingly, on his return, Richard was not allowed to land till he
+ had promised to take the oath, which he did at Dover, in the presence of
+ the King and Barons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen Eleanor expressed herself petulantly as to the oath, and Prince
+ Edward was scarcely persuaded to take it; but at length he was forced to
+ yield, and having done so, retired from the kingdom in grief and vexation;
+ for, having sworn it, he meant to abide by it, not being as well
+ accustomed to oaths and dispensations as his father, who, of course,
+ quickly sent to Rome for absolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, when the twenty-four had to swear to it, the most
+ backward to do so was Simon de Montfort himself, who probably discerned
+ that the pledge was likely to be a mere mockery. When he at length
+ consented, it was with the words, &ldquo;By the arm of St. James, though I take
+ this oath, the last, and by compulsion, yet I will so observe it that none
+ shall be able to impeach me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Edward might have said the same; he even incurred the displeasure
+ of his mother for refusing to elude or transgress his oath, and was for a
+ time accused of having joined the Barons&rsquo; party. Meanwhile, the King and
+ Queen were constantly and needlessly affronting their subjects. &ldquo;What! are
+ you so bold with me, Sir Earl?&rdquo; said the King to Roger Bigod. &ldquo;Do you not
+ know I could issue my royal warrant for threshing out all your corn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; returned the Earl; &ldquo;and could not I send you the heads of the
+ threshers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hot-tempered, light-minded Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s open contempt of the
+ English drew upon her such hatred, that vituperative ballads were made on
+ her, some of which have come down to our times. One attacks even her
+ virtue as a wife, and another is entitled a &ldquo;Warning against Pride, being
+ the Fall of Queen Eleanor, who for her pride sank into the earth at
+ Charing Cross, and rose again at Queenhithe, after killing the Lady
+ Mayoress.&rdquo; Unfortunately, popular inaccuracy has imputed her errors to the
+ gentle Eleanor of Castile, her daughter-in-law, and thus the ballad calls
+ her wife to Edward I., instead of Henry III. &ldquo;A Spanish dame,&rdquo; was a term
+ that might fairly be applied to the Provençal Eleanor, whose language was
+ nearly akin to Spanish, and whose luxury was sufficient to lead to the
+ accusation of
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Bringing in fashions strange and new,
+ With golden garments bright;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And that
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The wheat, that daily made her bread
+ Was bolted twenty times:
+ The food that fed this stately dame
+ Was boiled in costly wines.
+ The water that did spring from ground
+ She would not touch at all,
+ But washed her hands with dew of heaven
+ That on sweet roses fall.
+ She bathed her body many a time
+ In fountains filled with milk,
+ And every day did change attire
+ In costly Median silk.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Eleanor of Provence, when &ldquo;drest in her brief authority&rdquo; as Lady
+Chancellor, had arbitrarily imprisoned the Lord Mayor, and this the
+ballad converts into a persecution of the unfortunate Lady Mayoress,
+ whom she sent&rdquo;&mdash;into Wales with speed,
+ And kept her secret there,
+ And used her still more cruelly
+ Than ever man did bear.
+ She mude her wash, she made her starch,
+ She made her drudge alway,
+ She made her nurse up children small,
+ And labor night and day,&rdquo;
+ and in conclusion slew her by means of two snakes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Afterward her coach stood still in London, and could not move, when she
+ was accused of the crime, and, denying it, sunk into the ground, and rose
+ again at Queenhithe; after which she languished for twenty days, and made
+ full confession of her sins!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real disaster that befell Queen Eleanor in London was an attack by the
+ mob as she was going down the Thames in her barge. She was pelted with
+ rotten eggs, sheeps&rsquo; bones, and all kinds of offal, with loud cries of
+ &ldquo;Drown the witch!&rdquo; and at length even stones and beams from some houses
+ building on the bank assailed her, and she was forced, to return in speed
+ to the Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Edward was not always blameless. He had been employed against the
+ Welsh, and after the campaign, not knowing whither to turn for means of
+ paying his troops, he broke into the chests of the Knights Templars, to
+ whom his mother&rsquo;s jewels had been pledged, and carried off not only these,
+ but much property besides that had been committed to the keeping of the
+ order by other parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the unfortunate Jews, each party considered them fair game; and
+ there were frequent attacks upon them, and frightful massacres, when the
+ choice of death or of Christianity was offered to them, and the Barons
+ seized their treasures. The curses of Deuteronomy, of the trembling heart,
+ and the uncertainty of life and possession, were indeed fulfilled on the
+ unhappy race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For four years the committee of twenty-four held their power with few
+ fluctuations, until matters were driven to extremity by a proposal to
+ render the present state of things permanent, and at the same time by an
+ attack on the property of the moderate and popular King of the Romans on
+ the part of the Barons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this the royal party determined to submit the dispute to the
+ arbitration of the King of France, whose wise and fair judgments were so
+ universally famed that the Barons readily consented, with the exception of
+ Leicester, who was convinced that Louis would incline to the side of
+ Henry, both as fellow-king and as brother-in-law, and therefore refused to
+ attend the conference, or to consider himself bound by its decisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judgment of Louis IX, was perfectly just and moderate. He declared
+ that Magna Charta was indeed binding on the King of England, and that he
+ had no right to transgress it; but that the coercion in which he had been
+ placed by the Mad Parliament was illegal, and that the Acts of Oxford were
+ null, since no subjects had a right to deprive their sovereign of the
+ custody of his castles, nor of the choice of his ministers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Montfort had foreseen, the Barons would not accept this decision, and
+ its sole effect was to release Prince Edward&rsquo;s conscience, and open the
+ way to civil war. The two Eleanors, of Provence and Castile, were left
+ under the charge of St. Louis; and their namesakes of the other party, the
+ Countess of Leicester and her daughter, the Damoiselle de Montfort,
+ fortified themselves in their castle of Kenilworth, while arms were taken
+ up on either side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, who held that the guilt of perjury rested with the other party,
+ and who had with him the clergy opposed to the Italian usurpation, deemed
+ it a holy war, and marked the breasts of his soldiers with white crosses,
+ imagining himself the champion of the truth, as he had been taught to
+ think himself, when bearing his first arms under his father in what was
+ esteemed the Provençal Crusade. Alas, when honorable and devout minds have
+ the fine edge of conscience blunted! Thus did the gallant and beloved &ldquo;Sir
+ Simon the Righteous&rdquo; become a traitor and a rebel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scholars of Oxford, who had not at all forgotten their quarrel with
+ king and legate, came out <i>en masse</i> under the banner of the
+ University (for once disloyal), to join Leicester&rsquo;s second son, Simon, who
+ was collecting a body of troops to lead to his father in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Edward, however, attacked them at Northampton, and effected a
+ breach in the wall. Young Montfort attempted a desperate sally, but was
+ defeated, and his life only saved by his cousin, the Prince, who
+ extricated him from beneath his fallen steed, and made him prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King and Prince next marched to seize the Cinque Ports, and, while in
+ Sussex, Leicester followed them, and came up with them in a hollow valley
+ near Lewes. Here, with a sort of satire, the Barons sent to offer the King
+ 30,000 marks if he would make peace, and a like sum to the King of the
+ Romans if he would bring him to terms. The proposals were angrily repelled
+ by Edward, who, with accusations of his godfather as traitor and &ldquo;<i>foi
+ menti</i>,&rdquo; sent him a personal challenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester spent the night in prayer, and in early morning knighted Gilbert
+ de Clare, the young Earl of Gloucester, who was at this time
+ enthusiastically attached to him. The battle then began, each army being
+ arrayed in three divisions. Prince Edward and Henry d&rsquo;Almayne were opposed
+ to their two cousins, Henry and Guy de Montfort, with the bands from
+ London. Mindful of the outrage that his mother had sustained from the
+ citizens, Edward charged them furiously, and pursued them with great
+ slaughter, never drawing rein till he reached Croydon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, as they rode back to Lewes, the impetuous young soldiers beheld a
+ sight very different from their triumphant anticipations. The field was
+ scattered with the corpses of the Royalists, and the white-crossed troops
+ of the Barons were closely gathered round the castle and priory of Lewes.
+ In dismay, William and Guy de Lusignan turned their horses, and rode off
+ to embark at Pevensey. Seven hundred men followed them, and Edward and
+ Henry were left with the sole support of Roger Mortimer, a Welsh-border
+ friend of the former, with his followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hot pursuit of the fugitive plunderers had ruined the day. Montfort
+ had concentrated his forces, and had totally routed the two kings; Richard
+ was already his prisoner, and Henry had no chance of holding out in the
+ priory. The princes undauntedly strove to collect their shattered forces,
+ and break through to his rescue, but were forced to desist by a message
+ that, on their first attack, the head of the King of the Romans should be
+ struck off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To save his life, the two cousins therefore agreed to a treaty called the
+ Mise of Lewes, May 15th, 1264, by which they gave themselves up to the
+ Barons as hostages for their fathers, stipulating that the matter at issue
+ should be decided by deputies from the King of France, and that the
+ prisoners on either side should be set free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now began the great trial of Simon de Montfort&mdash;that of power and
+ prosperity&mdash;and he failed under it. Whatever might have been his
+ first intentions in taking up arms, he now proved himself unwilling to lay
+ aside the authority placed in his hands, even though he violated his oaths
+ in maintaining it, and incurred the sentence of excommunication which the
+ Pope launched against him. But when the most saintly English bishops of
+ their own time had died under it, it lost its power on the conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No measures were taken for the French arbitration, nor were the prisoners
+ set free. The King of the Romans was confined at Kenilworth, and the two
+ young princes at Dover, the custody of which castle was committed to one
+ of their cousins, the Montforts, who allowed them no amusement but the
+ companionship of Thomas de Clare, the young brother of the Earl of
+ Gloucester. King Henry was indeed nominally at liberty, but watched
+ perpetually by Leicester&rsquo;s guards, and not allowed to take a step or to
+ write a letter without his superintendence; and when the Mayor of London
+ swore fealty to him, it was with the words, &ldquo;As long as he was good to
+ them.&rdquo; Edward was made, on promise of liberation, to swear to terms far
+ harder than even the Acts of Oxford, and when the bitter oath had been
+ taken, he was pronounced at full liberty, and then carried off, under as
+ close a guard as ever, to Wallingford Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen Eleanor was acting with great spirit abroad, gathering money and
+ collecting troops in hopes of better times, and seven knights still held
+ out Bristol for the King. They made a sudden expedition to Wallingford, in
+ hopes of rescuing the Prince; but the garrison were on the alert, and
+ called out to them that, if they wanted the prince, they might have him,
+ but only tied hand and foot, and shot from a mangonel; and Edward himself,
+ appearing on the walls, declared that, if they wished to save his life,
+ they must retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This violent threat went beyond the instructions of Leicester, who removed
+ his nephew from the keeping of this garrison, and placed him at
+ Kenilworth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Simon was made to feel that he had little control over his followers,
+ and especially over his wild sons, who had learnt no respect to authority
+ at all, and outran in their violence even the doings of the Lusignan
+ family. Henry de Montfort seized all the wool in England, which was sold
+ for his profit, while Simon and Guy fitted out a fleet and plundered the
+ vessels in the Channel, without distinction of English or foreigners, and
+ thus turned aside the popularity which Leicester had hitherto enjoyed in
+ London. The Barons, too, already discontented at having only changed their
+ masters, so as to have the mighty Montfort over them instead of the weak
+ Plantagenet, could not bear with the additional lawlessness of sons who
+ made themselves vile without restraint. A violent quarrel arose between
+ these youths and Earl Gilbert de Clare, who challenged them to a joust at
+ Dunstable; but their father, dreading fatal consequences, forbade it, and
+ Gloucester retired to his estates in high displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he was joined by his brother Thomas, who came full of descriptions of
+ the princely courtesy and sweetness of manner of the royal Edward, which
+ contrasted so strongly with the presumption of his upstart cousins that
+ the young Earl was brought over to concert measures with the Prince&rsquo;s
+ friend, Roger Mortimer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to overawe the Welsh borderers, who were much attached to Edward,
+ Simon had carried his captive to Hereford Castle, whither Thomas de Clare
+ now returned as his attendant, taking with him a noble steed, provided by
+ Mortimer, with a message that his friends would be on the alert to receive
+ him at a certain spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward mounted his horse, rode out with his guard, set them to race, and
+ looked on as umpire, till, their steeds being duly tired, he galloped off,
+ and the last they saw of him was far in advance meeting with a party of
+ spears, beneath the pennon of Mortimer. And now the Earl of Leicester
+ experienced that &ldquo;success but signifies vicissitude.&rdquo; After his reign of
+ one year, his fall was rapid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Gloucester had at once joined Edward, and in vain did
+ Leicester use the King&rsquo;s name in calling on the military tenants of the
+ Crown; only a small proportion of his old partisans came to his aid, and
+ he remained on the banks of the Severn, waiting to be joined by his son
+ Simon, who had been besieging Pevensey, but now marched to his aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way, young Simon summoned Winchester, but was refused admittance.
+ However, the treacherous monks of St. Swithin&rsquo;s let in his forces through
+ a window of their convent on the wall, and the city was horribly sacked,
+ especially the Jewry. Afterward he went to the family castle of
+ Kenilworth, where he awaited orders from his father. A woman named Margot
+ informed the Prince that it was the habit of Simon and his knights to
+ sleep outside the walls, for the convenience of bathing in the summer
+ mornings; and Edward, suddenly making a night-march, fell upon them while
+ in the very act, and took most of them prisoners, Simon just escaping into
+ the castle with his pages in their shirts and drawers, all his baggage and
+ treasures being taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ignorant of this disaster, the Earl of Leicester proceeded, in hopes of
+ effecting a junction with his son, and had just arrived at Evesham when
+ banners were seen in the distance. Nicholas, his barber, who pretended to
+ have some knowledge of heraldry, declared that they belonged to Sir
+ Simon&rsquo;s troops; but the Earl, not fully satisfied, bade him mount the
+ church-steeple and look from thence. The affrighted barber recognized the
+ Lions of England, the red chevrons of De Clare, the azure bars of
+ Mortimer, waving over a forest of lances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are dead men, my Lord,&rdquo; he said, as he descended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And truly, when the Earl beheld the marshalling of the hostile array, he
+ could not help exclaiming, &ldquo;They have learnt this style from me! Now God
+ have mercy on our souls, for our bodies are the Prince&rsquo;s!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry, the only son who was with him, exhorted him not to despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not, my son,&rdquo; replied the Earl; &ldquo;but your presumption, and the pride
+ of your brothers, have brought me to this pass. I firmly believe I shall
+ die for the cause of God and justice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He prayed, and received the sacrament, as he always did before going into
+ battle; then arrayed his troops, bringing out the poor old King, in order
+ to make his followers imagine themselves the Royalists. He tried in vain
+ to force the road to Kenilworth; then drew his troops into a compact
+ circle, that last resource of gallant men in extremity, such as those of
+ Hastings and Flodden. Their ranks were hewn down little by little, and the
+ Prince&rsquo;s troops were pressing on, when a lamentable cry was heard, &ldquo;Save
+ me! save me! I am Henry of Winchester!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward knew the voice, and, springing to the rescue, drew out a wounded
+ warrior, whom he bore away to a place of safety. In his absence,
+ Leicester&rsquo;s voice asked if quarter was given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No quarter for traitors,&rdquo; said some revengeful Royalist; and at the same
+ moment Henry de Montfort fell, slain, at his father&rsquo;s feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the arm of St. James, it is time for me to die!&rdquo; cried the Earl; and,
+ grasping his sword in both hands, he rushed into the thickest of the foe,
+ and, after doing wonders, was struck down and slain. Terrible slaughter
+ was done on the &ldquo;desperate ring;&rdquo; one hundred and sixty knights, with all
+ their followers, were slain, and scarcely twelve gentlemen survived. The
+ savage followers of Mortimer cut off the head and hands of Leicester, and
+ carried the former as a present to their lady; but this was beyond the
+ bounds of the orders of Prince Edward, who caused the corpses of his
+ godfather and cousin to be brought into the abbey church of Evesham, wept
+ over the playfellow of his childhood, and honored the burial with his
+ presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle of Evesham was fought on the 4th of August, 1265, fourteen
+ months after the misused victory of Lewes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So died the Earl of Leicester, termed, by the loving people of England,
+ &ldquo;Sir Simon the Righteous&rdquo;&mdash;a man of high endowments and principles of
+ rectitude unusual in his age. His devotion was sincere, his charities
+ extensive, his conduct always merciful&mdash;no slight merit in one bred
+ up among the savage devastators of Provence&mdash;and his household
+ accounts prove the order and religious principle that he enforced. His
+ friends were among the staunch supporters of the English Church, and,
+ unlike his father, who thought to merit salvation as the instrument of the
+ iniquities of Rome, he disregarded such injunctions and threats of hers as
+ disagreed with the plain dictates of conscience. Thinking for himself at
+ length led to contempt of lawful authority; but it was an age when the
+ shepherds were fouling the springs, and making their own profit of the
+ flock; and what marvel was it if the sheep went astray?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was enthusiastically loved by the English, especially the commonalty,
+ who, excommunicate as he was, believed him a saint, imputed many miracles
+ to his remains, and murmured greatly that he was not canonized.
+ After-times may judge him as a noble character, wrecked upon great
+ temptations, and dying as befitted a brave and resigned man drawn into
+ fatal error.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;If ever, in temptation strong,
+ Thou left&rsquo;st the right path for the wrong,
+ If every devious step thus trode
+ Still led thee further from the road,
+ Dread thou to speak presumptuous doom
+ On noble &lsquo;Montfort&rsquo;s&rsquo; lowly tomb;
+ But say, &lsquo;he died a gallant knight,
+ With sword in hand, for England&rsquo;s right.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ For, though the rebellion cannot be justified, it was by the efforts and
+ strife of this reign that Magna Charta was fixed, not as the concession
+ wrung for a time by force from a reluctant monarch, but as the basis of
+ English law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Edward, in the plenitude of his victory, did not attempt to repeal
+ it; but, at a parliament held at Marlborough, 1267, led his father to
+ accept not this only, but such of the regulations of the Barons as were
+ reasonable, and consistent with the rigid maintenance of the authority of
+ the Crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evesham was the overthrow of the Montfort family. Henry was there slain
+ with his father&mdash;though, according to ballad lore, he had another
+ fate&mdash;the blow only depriving him of sight, and he being found on the
+ field by a &ldquo;baron&rsquo;s faire daughter,&rdquo; she conveyed him to a place of
+ safety, tended him, and finally became his wife, and made him &ldquo;glad father
+ of pretty Bessee.&rdquo; For years he lived and throve (as it appears) as the
+ blind beggar of Bethnal Green, till his daughter, who had been brought up
+ as a noble lady, was courted by various suitors. On her making known,
+ however, that she was a beggar&rsquo;s daughter,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Nay, then,&rsquo; quoth the merchant, &lsquo;thou art not for me.&rsquo;
+ &lsquo;Nor,&rsquo; quoth the inn-holder, &lsquo;my wiffe shalt thou be.&rsquo;
+ &lsquo;I lothe,&rsquo; said the gentle, &lsquo;a beggar&rsquo;s degree;
+ And therefore adewe, my pretty Bessee.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ However, there was a gentle knight whose love for &ldquo;pretty Bessee&rdquo; was
+ proof against the discovery of her father&rsquo;s condition and the entreaties
+ of his friends; and after he had satisfied her by promises not to despise
+ her parents, the blind beggar counted out so large a portion, that he
+ could not double it, and on the wedding-day the beggar revealed his own
+ high birth, to the general joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, it does not appear as if Henry de Montfort might not have
+ prospered without his disguise. His mother was generously treated by the
+ King and Prince, and retired beyond sea with her sons Amaury and Richard;
+ and her daughter Eleanor, and his brother Simon, a desperate and violent
+ man, held out Kenilworth for some months, which was with difficulty
+ reduced; afterward he joined his brother Guy, and wandered about the
+ Continent, brooding on revenge for his father&rsquo;s death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last rebel to be overcome was the brave outlaw, Adam de Gourdon, who,
+ haunting Alton Wood as a robber after the death of Leicester, was sought
+ out by Prince Edward, subdued by his personal prowess, and led to the feet
+ of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brave and dutiful Prince became the real ruler of the kingdom, and
+ England at length reposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXI. THE LAST OF THE CRUSADERS. (1267-1291.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1216. Henry III.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1249. Alexander III.
+ 1285. Margaret.
+ (Interregnum.)
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1226. Louis IX.
+ 1270. Philippe III.
+ 1285. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1273. Rodolph I.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1265. Clement IV.
+ 1271. Gregory X.
+ 1276. Innocent V.
+ 1277. John XXI.
+ 1277. Nicholas III.
+ 1281. Martin IV.
+ 1285. Honorius IV.
+ 1288. Nicholas IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A hundred and seventy years had elapsed since the hills of Auvergne had
+ re-echoed the cry of <i>Dieu le veult</i>, and the Cross had been signed
+ on the shoulders of Godfrey and Tancred. Jerusalem had been held by the
+ Franks for a short space; but their crimes and their indolence had led to
+ their ruin, and the Holy City itself was lost, while only a few
+ fortresses, detached and isolated, remained to bear the name of the
+ Kingdom of Palestine. The languishing Royal Line was even lost, becoming
+ extinct in Conradine, the grandson of Friedrich II. and of Yolande of
+ Jerusalem, that last member of the house of Hohenstaufen on whom the Pope
+ and Charles of Anjou wreaked their vengeance for the crimes of his
+ fore-fathers. Charles of Anjou, brother of St. Louis, but of utterly
+ dissimilar character, had seized Conradine&rsquo;s kingdom of the two Sicilies,
+ and likewise assumed his title to that of Jerusalem, thus acquiring a
+ personal interest in urging on another Crusade for the recovery of
+ Palestine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Less and less of that kingdom existed. Bibars, or Bendocdar Elbondukdari,
+ one of the Mameluke emirs, who had become Sultan of Egypt during the
+ confusion that followed the death of Touran Chah, was so great a warrior
+ that he was surnamed the Pillar of the Mussulman Religion and the Father
+ of Victories&mdash;titles which he was resolved to merit by exterminating
+ the Franks. Cesarea, Antioch, Joppa, fell into his hands in succession,
+ and Tripoli and Acre alone remained in the possession of the Templars and
+ Hospitallers, who appealed to their brethren in Europe for assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hope of a more effective crusade than his first had never been absent
+ from the mind of Louis IX.; he had carried it with him through court and
+ camp, dwelt on it while framing wise laws for his people, instructing his
+ nobles, or sitting to do justice beneath the spreading oak-tree of
+ Vincennes. Since his return from Damietta, he had always lived as one
+ devoted, never wearing gold on his spurs nor in his robes, and spending
+ each moment that he could take from affairs of state in prayer and reading
+ of the Scripture; and though his health was still extremely frail and
+ feeble, his resolution was taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 23d of March, 1267, he convoked his barons in the great hall of the
+ Louvre, and entered the assembly, holding in his hand that sacred relic,
+ the Crown of Thorns, which had been found by the Empress Helena with the
+ True Cross. He then addressed them, describing the needs of their Eastern
+ brethren, and expressing his own intention of at once taking the Cross.
+ There was a deep and mournful silence among his hearers, who too well
+ remembered the sufferings of their last campaign, and who looked with
+ despair at their beloved King&rsquo;s worn and wasted form, so weak that he
+ could hardly bear the motion of a horse, and yet bent on encountering the
+ climate and the labors that had well-nigh proved fatal to him before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legate, the Cardinal Ottoboni, then made an exhortation, after which
+ Louis assumed the Cross, and was imitated by his three sons, Philippe,
+ Tristan, and Pierre, and his son-in-law, Thibault, King of Navarre, with
+ other knights, but in no great numbers, for the barons were saying to each
+ other, that it was one of the saddest days that France had ever seen. &ldquo;If
+ we take the Cross,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;we lose our King; if we take it not, we
+ lose our God, since we will not take the Cross for Him.&rdquo; The Sire de
+ Joinville absolutely refused on account of his vassals, and openly
+ pronounced it a mortal sin to counsel the King to undertake such an
+ expedition in his present state of health; but Louis&rsquo; determination was
+ fixed, and in the course of the next three years he collected a number of
+ gallant young Crusaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had always had a strong influence over his nephew, Edward of England,
+ and the conclusion of the war with Montfort, as well as a personal escape
+ of his own, had at this period strongly disposed the Prince to acts of
+ devotion. While engaged in a game at chess with a knight at Windsor
+ Castle, a sudden impulse seized him to rise from his seat. He had scarcely
+ done so, when a stone, becoming detached from the groined roof over his
+ head, fell down on the very spot where he had been sitting. His
+ preservation was attributed by him to Our Lady of Walsingham, and the
+ beautiful church still existing there attests the veneration paid to her
+ in consequence, while he further believed himself marked out for some
+ especial object, and eagerly embraced the proposal of accompanying the
+ French King on his intended voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ottoboni preached the Crusade at Northampton on the 25th of June, 1269,
+ after which he gave the Cross to King Henry, to the Princes Edward and
+ Edmund, to their cousin Henry of Almayne, son to Richard of Cornwall, and
+ to about one hundred and fifty knights. The King intended as little to go
+ on the expedition as on any of the former ones, and he soon made over his
+ Cross to his son. Edward, who was fully in earnest, made every arrangement
+ for the safety of the realm in his absence, taking with him the turbulent
+ Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, and appointing guardians for his two
+ infant sons, John and Henry, in case the old King should die during his
+ absence. His wife, Eleanor of Castile, insisted on accompanying him; and
+ when the perils of the expedition were represented to her, she replied,
+ &ldquo;Nothing ought to part those whom God hath joined together. The way to
+ heaven is as near, if not nearer, from Syria as from England or my native
+ Spain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last solemnity in which Edward assisted before his departure was the
+ translation of the remains of Edward the Confessor to their new tomb in
+ Westminster Abbey, the shrine of gold and precious stones being borne upon
+ the shoulders of King Henry himself, after which the princes took leave of
+ their father, and commenced their expedition, meeting on the way their
+ uncle, the King of the Romans, who was bringing home a young German wife,
+ Beatrice von Falkmart. Embarking at Dover on the 20th of August, 1270, the
+ princes made all speed to hasten across France, so as to come up with
+ Louis, who had set sail from Aigues Mortes on the 1st of July, with his
+ three sons, his daughter Isabelle, and her husband the King of Navarre,
+ and Isabelle the wife of his eldest son Philippe, as well as a gallant
+ host of Crusaders. He had appointed Cagliari as the place of meeting with
+ Edward of England, and with his brother Charles, King of Sicily; but he
+ found his sojourn there inconvenient; the Pisans, who held Sardinia, were
+ unfriendly, provisions were scarce, and the water unwholesome, and he
+ became desirous of changing his quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reasons which conduced to his fatal resolution have never been clearly
+ ascertained: whether he was influenced by his brother, the King of Sicily,
+ who might reasonably wish to see the Moors of Tunis, his near neighbors,
+ overpowered; or whether he was drawn along by the impatience of his
+ forces, who were weary of inaction, and thought the plunder of any
+ Mahometan praiseworthy; or whether he had any hope of converting the King
+ of Tunis, Omar, with whom he had at one time been in correspondence. When
+ some ambassadors from Tunis were at his court, a converted Jew had been
+ baptized in their presence, and he had said to them, &ldquo;Tell your master
+ that I am so desirous of the salvation of his soul, that I would spend the
+ rest of my life in a Saracen prison, and never see the light of day, if I
+ could render your King and his people Christians like that man.&rdquo; It does
+ not seem improbable that Louis might have hoped that his arrival might
+ encourage Omar to declare himself a Christian. But be this as it might, he
+ sailed from Cagliari, and on the 17th of June appeared upon the coast of
+ Africa, close to the ruins of ancient Carthage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the inhabitants fled to the mountains, and the shore was deserted, so
+ that the French might have disembarked at once; but Louis hesitated, and
+ waited till the next morning, when they found the coast covered with
+ Moors. However, the landing proceeded, the Moors all taking flight&mdash;happily
+ for the Christians, for their disorder was so great, that a hundred men
+ might have prevented their disembarkation. A proclamation was then read,
+ taking possession of the territory in the name of our Lord, and of Louis,
+ King of France. His servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spot where the army had landed was a sandy island, a league in length,
+ and very narrow, separated from the mainland by a channel fordable at low
+ water, without any green thing growing on it, and with only one spring of
+ fresh water, which was guarded by a tower filled with Moorish soldiers. A
+ hundred men would have been sufficient to dislodge them; but few horses
+ had been landed, and those were injured by their voyage, and the knights
+ could do nothing without them. The men who went in search of water were
+ killed by the Moorish guard, and thirst, together with the burning heat of
+ the sun reflected by the arid sand, caused the Christians to suffer
+ terribly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the King of Tunis, far from fulfilling Louis&rsquo; hopes, he sent him
+ word that he was coming to seek him at the head of 100,000 men, and that
+ he would only seek baptism on the field of battle; and at the same time he
+ seized and imprisoned every Christian in his dominions, threatening to cut
+ off all their heads the instant the French should attack Tunis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three days&rsquo; misery in the island, the Christians advanced across the
+ canal, and entered a beautiful green valley, where Carthage once had
+ stood, full of rich gardens, watered by springs arranged for irrigation.
+ The Moors buzzed round them, throwing their darts, but galloping off on
+ their advance without doing any harm. There was a garrison in the citadel,
+ which was all that remained of the once mighty town; and the Genoese
+ mariners, supported by the cavalry, undertook to dislodge them. This was
+ effected, and the ruinous city was in the hands of the French. A number of
+ the inhabitants had hidden themselves, with their riches, in the extensive
+ vaults and catacombs, and, to the shame of the Crusaders, their employment
+ was to search these wretches out and kill them, often by filling the
+ vaults with smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis had promised his brother Charles to wait for him before marching
+ against Tunis, and messengers daily arrived with intelligence that the
+ Sicilian troops were embarking; but, as the days passed on, the malaria of
+ the ruined city and the heat of the climate were more fatal to the French
+ army than would have been a lost battle. The desert winds which swept over
+ them were hot as flame, and brought with them clouds of sand, which
+ blinded the men and choked up the wells, while the water of the springs
+ swarmed with insects, and all vegetable food failed. Disease could not be
+ long wanting in such a situation, and a week after the taking of Carthage
+ the whole camp was full of fever and dysentery, till the living had not
+ strength to bury the dead, but heaped them up in the vaults and the
+ trenches round the camp, where their decay added to the infection of the
+ air. The Moors charged up to the lines, and killed the soldiers at their
+ posts every day; and a poet within Tunis made the menacing verses: &ldquo;Frank,
+ knowest thou not that Tunis is the sister of Cairo? Thou wilt find before
+ this town thy tomb, instead of the house of Lokman; and the two terrible
+ angels, Munkir and Nekir, will take the place of the eunuch Sahil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lokman and Sahil had been Louis&rsquo; guards in his Egyptian captivity, and the
+ Moorish poet contrasts them with the two angels whom the Mahometans
+ believed received and interrogated the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as his strength lasted, Louis went about among the tents,
+ encouraging and succoring the sufferers; but nearly at the same time
+ himself and his two sons, Philippe and Tristan, were attacked by the
+ malady. On Tristan, a boy of sixteen, born in the last Crusade, the
+ illness made rapid progress, and the physicians judged it right to carry
+ him from his father&rsquo;s tent and place him on board ship. His strength
+ rapidly gave way, and he expired soon after the transit. Louis constantly
+ inquired for his son, but was met by a mournful silence until the eighth
+ day, when he was plainly told of his death, and shed many tears, though he
+ trusted soon to rejoin his young champion of the Cross in a better world.
+ The Cardinal of Alba, the papal legate, was the next to die; and Louis&rsquo;
+ fever increasing, so that he could no longer attend to the government of
+ the army, he sent for his surviving children, Philippe and Isabelle, and
+ addressed to them a few words of advice, giving them each a letter written
+ with his own hand, in which the same instructions were more developed.
+ They were beautiful lessons in holy living, piety, and justice, such as
+ his descendant, the Dauphin, son of Louis XV., might well call his most
+ precious inheritance. He bids his daughter to &ldquo;have one desire that should
+ never part from you&mdash;that is to say, how you may most please our
+ Lord; and set your heart on this, that, though you should be sure of
+ receiving no guerdon for any good you may do, nor any punishment for doing
+ evil, you should still keep from doing what might displease God, and seek
+ to do what may please Him, purely for love of Him.&rdquo; He desires her, in
+ adornment, to incline &ldquo;to the less rather than the more,&rdquo; and not to have
+ too great increase of robes and jewels, but rather to make of them her
+ alms, and to remember that she was an example to others. His parting
+ blessing is, &ldquo;May our Lord make you as good in all things as I desire, and
+ even more than I know how to desire. Amen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To her he gave two ivory boxes, containing the scourge and hair-cloth
+ which he used in self-discipline, and which she afterward employed for the
+ same purpose, though unknown even to her confessor, until she mentioned it
+ at her death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Philippe he said much of justice and mercy, desiring him always to take
+ part against himself, and to give the preference to the weak over the
+ strong. He exhorted him to be careful in bestowing the benefices of the
+ Church, and to keep a careful watch over his nobles and governors, lest
+ they should injure the clergy or the poor. To reverence in church, and to
+ guarded language, he also exhorted him. Indeed, Joinville records, that in
+ all the years that he knew the King, he never heard from him one careless
+ mention of the name of God, or of the saints, nor did he hear him ever
+ lightly speak of the devil; and in this the Seneschal so followed his
+ example, that a blow was given in the Castle of Joinville for every
+ profane word, so that he hoped the ill habit was there checked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good King thus concludes: &ldquo;Dear son, I give thee all the blessing that
+ father can and ought to give to son. May God of His mercy guard and defend
+ thee from doing aught against His will; may He give thee grace to do His
+ will; so that He may be honored and served by thee; and this may our Lord
+ grant to me and thee by His great largesse, in such manner that, after
+ this mortal life, we may see and laud and love Him without end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His children then took leave of him, and he remained with his confessors,
+ after which he received the last rites of the Church, and was so fully
+ conscious, that he made all the responses in the penitential Psalms. When
+ the Host was brought in, he threw himself out of bed, and received it
+ kneeling on the ground, after which he refused to be replaced in bed, but
+ lay upon a hair-cloth strewn with ashes. This was on Sunday, at three
+ o&rsquo;clock, and from that time, while voice lasted, he never ceased praising
+ God aloud, and praying for his people. &ldquo;Lord God,&rdquo; he often said, &ldquo;give us
+ grace to despise earthly things, and to forget the things of this world,
+ so that we may fear no evil;&rdquo; or, &ldquo;Make Thy people holy, and watch over
+ them.&rdquo; On Monday he became speechless; but he often looked around him <i>débonnairement</i>,
+ and fixed his eyes on the cross planted at the foot of his bed, while
+ sometimes his attendants caught a faint whisper of &ldquo;O Jerusalem!
+ Jerusalem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the heavenly Jerusalem that was before him now; and after lying as
+ if asleep for half an hour, he joined his hands, saying, &ldquo;Good Lord, have
+ mercy on the people that remain here, and bring them back to their own
+ land, that they may not fall into the hands of their enemies, nor be
+ forced to deny Thy holy name!&rdquo; Soon after, &ldquo;Father, into Thy hands I
+ commend my spirit,&rdquo; and, looking up to heaven, &ldquo;I will enter into Thy
+ house, and worship in Thy tabernacle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon of the 25th of August, when Louis
+ drew his last breath, and his chaplains were still standing round his bed
+ of ashes, when, the sound of trumpets fell on their ears. The Sicilian
+ fleet had anchored, and the troops had landed while all the French were
+ hanging in suspense on each report of the failing strength of their King,
+ and had not even watched for that long-delayed arrival. The dead silence
+ that met the newcomers was their first intimation of the calamity; and
+ when Charles of Anjou reached his brother&rsquo;s tent, and saw his calm
+ features fixed in death, he threw himself on his knees, and bitterly
+ reproached himself for his tardiness in coming to his aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sicilian troops gained some advantages over the Moors, and it was
+ proposed to finish the enterprise St. Louis had begun; but sickness still
+ made great ravages in the army, and the new King, Philippe III., was so
+ ill, that a speedy departure could alone save his life: a peace was
+ therefore concluded with the Tunisians, which was hardly signed when
+ Edward, with his English force, arrived upon the coast. He accompanied the
+ melancholy remains of the French army to Trapani in Sicily, whither
+ misfortunes still followed them. The young wife of Philippe III. was
+ thrown from her horse, and died in consequence; and his sister Isabelle,
+ and her husband the King of Navarre, both sank under the disorders brought
+ from Carthage. Broken in health and spirit, Philippe resolved to desist
+ from the Crusade, and both he and his uncle would have persuaded the
+ English to do the same, since their small force alone could effect
+ nothing; but Edward was undaunted. &ldquo;I would go,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if I had no one
+ with me but Fowen, my groom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe set out on his return to France, carrying with him five coffins&mdash;those
+ of his father, his brother, his wife, his sister, and brother-in-law.
+ Henry d&rsquo;Almayne took the opportunity of his escort to return to England,
+ since the failing health of Henry III., and of his brother Richard, made
+ his presence desirable. He had arrived at Viterbo, when he entered a
+ church to hear mass. The Host had just been elevated, when a loud voice
+ broke on the solemnity of the service, &ldquo;Henry, thou traitor, thou shalt
+ not escape!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry turned, and beheld his cousins, Simon and Guy de Montfort, the
+ latter of whom had married the daughter of the Italian Count Aldobrandini,
+ and was living in the neighborhood. Their daggers were raised, and Henry
+ was unarmed. He sprang to the altar, and the two officiating priests
+ interposed; but the sacrilegious Montforts killed one, and left the other
+ for dead, and, piercing Henry again and again, slew him at the foot of the
+ altar. Then going to the church-door, where their horses awaited them, one
+ of them said, &ldquo;I have satisfied my vengeance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said an attendant, &ldquo;was not your father dragged through the
+ streets of Evesham?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words the savages returned, and dragged the corpse by the hair to
+ the door of the church, after which they rode safely off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry&rsquo;s body was carried home, and buried in the Abbey of Hales. His
+ father probably never was aware of his death, for his own took place a few
+ months after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The murderers were never traced out, and the remissness on the part of
+ Philippe and Charles left an impression on Edward&rsquo;s mind that they had
+ connived at the murder. Of this Philippe at least may be acquitted; he
+ completed his sad journey, and buried his father at St. Denis, amid the
+ mourning of the whole nation, and yet their exultation, for miracles were
+ thought to be wrought at his tomb, and the Papal authority enrolled him
+ among the Saints. Old Joinville was cheered by a dream, in which he beheld
+ him resplendent with glory, and telling him that he would not quickly
+ depart from him, whereupon he placed an altar in the castle chapel to his
+ honor, and caused a mass to be said there every day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ St. Louis&rsquo; wisdom should be judged of rather by his admirable conduct in
+ daily life, and in the government of his people, than by his actions in
+ his unfortunate Crusades, when he seemed to give up all guidance and
+ common sense. At home he was so prudent, just, and wise, that few kings
+ have ever equalled him, and even the enemies of the faith that prompted
+ him cannot withhold their testimony that &ldquo;virtue could be pushed no
+ further.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring, Edward, with 300 knights, sailed for Acre, and, on arriving
+ here [Footnote: Edward at Acre, 1271], made an expedition to Nazareth,
+ where he put all the garrison to the sword. He spent the winter in Cyprus,
+ and returned again to Syria in the spring; but he could never collect more
+ than 7,000 men under his standard, and an advance on Jerusalem was
+ impossible. He therefore remained in his camp before Acre, while his
+ knights went on pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and, while there, he narrowly
+ escaped becoming a seventh royal victim, to the Crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heat of the weather had affected his health, and he was lying on his
+ couch, only covered with a single garment, when a messenger approached
+ with letters purporting to be from the Emir of Joppa. While he was reading
+ them, the man suddenly drew out a poniard, and was striking at his side,
+ when Edward, perceiving his intention, caught the blow on his arm, and
+ threw him to the ground by a kick on the breast. The murderer arose, and
+ took aim again, but had only grazed his; forehead, when the Prince dashed
+ out his brains with a wooden stool. The attendants rushed in, and were
+ beginning to make up for their negligence by blows on the corpse, when
+ Edward stopped them, by sternly demanding what was the use of striking a
+ dead man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is on the authority of a Spanish chronicle that we hear that Eleanor,
+ apprehending that the weapon had been poisoned, at once sucked the blood
+ from her husband&rsquo;s wounds. The fear was too well founded, and Edward was
+ in great danger; so that his men, in their first rage, were about to put
+ to death all their Saracen captives, when he roused himself to prevent
+ them, by urging, that not only were these men innocent, but that the enemy
+ would retaliate upon the many Christian pilgrims absent from the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grand Master of the Templars brought a surgeon, who gave hopes of
+ saving the gallant English prince by cutting out the flesh around the
+ wound. Edward replied by bidding him work boldly, and spare not; but
+ Eleanor could not restrain her lamentations, till he desired his brother
+ Edmund to lead her from the tent, when she was carried away, struggling
+ and sobbing, while Edmund roughly told her that it was better she should
+ scream and cry, than all England mourn and lament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The operation was safely performed, but Edward made his will, and resigned
+ himself to die. In fifteen days, however, he was able to mount his horse,
+ and nearly at the same time Eleanor gave birth to her eldest daughter,
+ Joan, called of Acre, whose wild, headstrong temper was little fitted to
+ the child of a Crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army was weakened by sickness, and Edward decided on prolonging his
+ stay no longer; therefore, as soon as Eleanor had recovered, he left the
+ Holy Land, with keen regret, and many vows to return with a greater force.
+ These vows were never fulfilled, nor was it well they should have been.
+ Acre was a nest of corruption, filled with the scum of the European
+ nations, and a standing proof that the Latin Christians were unworthy to
+ hold a foot of the hallowed ground; and in 1291, eighteen years after the
+ conclusion of the seventh Crusade, it was taken by the Sultan Keladun,
+ after a brave defence by the Templars and Hospitallers; and since that
+ time Palestine has remained under the Mahometan, dominion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis and Edward were the last princely Crusaders, though the idea lived
+ on in almost every high-souled man through the Middle Ages. Henry V. and
+ Philip le Bon of Burgundy both schemed the recovery of the Holy Sepulchre;
+ and the hope that chiefly impelled the voyage of Columbus was, that his
+ Western discoveries might open a way to the redemption of the Holy Land.
+ &ldquo;Remember the Holy Sepulchre!&rdquo; is a cry that can never pass from the ears
+ of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Death had been busy in England as in the crusading host, and the tidings
+ met Edward in Sicily that his home was desolate. His kind and generous
+ uncle, Richard, his gentle, affectionate father, and his two young
+ children, had all died during his absence. The grief that the stern Edward
+ showed for his father&rsquo;s death was so overpowering, that Charles of Sicily,
+ who probably had little esteem for Henry, and thought the kingdom a
+ sufficient consolation, marvelled that he could grieve more for an aged
+ father than for two promising sons. &ldquo;The Lord, who gave me these, can give
+ me other children,&rdquo; said Edward; &ldquo;but a father can never be restored!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his return to England, Edward obtained from Pope Gregory X. justice
+ upon the murderers of Henry d&rsquo;Almayne. Simon was dead, but Guy was
+ declared incapable of inheriting or possessing property, or of filling any
+ office of trust, and was excommunicated and outlawed. After Edward had
+ left Italy, the unhappy man ventured to meet the Pope at Florence in his
+ shirt, with a halter round his neck, and implored that his sentence might
+ be changed to imprisonment. The Pope had pity on him, and, after a
+ confinement of eleven years, he was liberated, and returned to his wife&rsquo;s
+ estates. He afterward was taken prisoner in the wars in Sicily, but his
+ subsequent fate does not appear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of the last of the Crusaders must not be quitted without
+ mentioning that the scene of St. Louis&rsquo; death is now in the hands of the
+ French, and that the spot has been marked by a chapel erected by his
+ descendant, Louis Philippe; and that our own Edward sleeps in his father&rsquo;s
+ church of Westminster, beneath a huge block, unornamented indeed, but of
+ the same rock as the hills of Palestine; nay, it is believed that it is
+ probably one of those great stones whereof it was said; that not one
+ should remain on another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXII. The CYMRY. (B.C. 66 A.D. 1269.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In ancient times the whole of Europe seems to have been inhabited by the
+ Keltic nation, until they were dispossessed by the more resolute tribes of
+ Teuton origin, and driven to the extreme West, where the barrier of rugged
+ hills that guards the continent from the Atlantic waves has likewise
+ protected this primitive race from extinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cym, or Cyn, denoting in their language &ldquo;first,&rdquo; was the root of their
+ name of Cymry, applied to the original tribe, and of which we find traces
+ across the whole map of Europe, beginning from the Cimmerian Bosphorus,
+ going on to the Cimbri, conquered by Marius, while in our own country we
+ still possess Cumberland and Cambria, the land inhabited by the Cymry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gael, another pure Keltic tribe, who followed the Cymry, have bestowed
+ more names, as living more near to the civilized world, and being better
+ known to history. Even in Asia Minor, a settlement of them had been called
+ Galatians, and the whole tract from the north of Italy to the Atlantic
+ was, to the Romans, Gallia. The name still survives in the Cornouailles of
+ Brittany and the Cornwall of England (both meaning the horn of Gallia), in
+ Gaul, in Galles, in the Austrian and Spanish Galicias, in the Irish Galway
+ and the Scottish Galloway, while the Gael themselves are still a people in
+ the Highlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mingling with the Teutons, though receding before them, there was a third
+ tribe, called usually by the Teuton word &ldquo;<i>Welsh</i>&rdquo; meaning strange;
+ and these, being the first to come in contact with the Romans, were termed
+ by them Belgae. The relics of this appellation are found in the German
+ &ldquo;Welschland,&rdquo; the name given to Italy, because the northern part of that
+ peninsula had a Keltic population, in Wallachia, in the Walloons of the
+ Netherlands, who have lately assumed the old Latinized name of Belgians,
+ and in the Welsh of our own Wales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last was the region, scarcely subdued by the Romans, where the Cymry
+ succeeded in maintaining their independence, whilst the Angles and Saxons
+ gained a footing in the whole of the eastern portion of Britain. The
+ Britons were for the most part Christian, and partly civilized by the
+ Romans; but there was a wild element in their composition, and about the
+ time of the departure of the Roman legions there had been a reaction
+ toward the ancient Druidical religion, as if the old national faith was to
+ revive with the national independence. The princes were extremely savage
+ and violent, and their contemporary historian, Gildas, gives a melancholy
+ account of their wickedness, not even excepting the great Pendragon,
+ Arthur, in spite of his twelve successful battles with the Saxons. Merlin,
+ the old, wild soothsayer of romance, seems to have existed at this period
+ under the name of Merddyn-wilt, or the Wild, and bequeathed dark sayings
+ ever since deemed prophetic, and often curiously verified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of the attempt to blend the Druid philosophy with Christianity arose
+ the Pelagian heresy, first taught by Morgan, or Pelagius, a monk of
+ Bangor, and which made great progress in Wales even after its refutation
+ by St. Jerome. It was on this account that St. Germain preached in Wales,
+ and produced great effect. The Pelagians gave up their errors, and many
+ new converts were collected to receive the rite of baptism at Mold, in
+ Flintshire, when a troop of marauding enemies burst, on them. The
+ neophytes were unarmed and in their white robes, but, borne up by the
+ sense of their new life, they had no fears for their body, and with one
+ loud cry of &ldquo;Hallelujah!&rdquo; turned, with the Bishop at their head, to meet
+ the foe. The enemy retreated in terror; and the name of Maes Garman still
+ marks the scene of this bloodless victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this the heresy died away, but the more innocent customs of the
+ Druids continued, and the system of bards was carried on, setting apart
+ the clergy, the men of wisdom, and the poets, by rites derived from
+ ancient times. Be it observed, that a Christian priest was not necessarily
+ of one of the Druidical or Bardic orders, although this was generally
+ preferred. Almost all instructions were still oral, and, for convenience
+ of memory, were drawn up in triads, or verses of three&mdash;a mystic
+ number highly esteemed. Many of these convey a very deep philosophy. For
+ instance, the three unsuitable judgments in any person whatsoever: The
+ thinking himself wise&mdash;the thinking every other person unwise&mdash;the
+ thinking all he likes becoming in him. Or the three requisites of poetry:
+ An eye that can see Nature&mdash;a heart that can feel Nature&mdash;a
+ resolution that dares to follow Nature. And the three objects of poetry:
+ Increase of goodness&mdash;increase of understanding&mdash;increase of
+ delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such maxims were committed to the keeping of the Bards, who were admitted
+ to their office after a severe probation and trying initiatory rites,
+ among which the chief was, that they should paddle alone, in a little
+ coracle, to a shoal at some distance from the coast of Caernarvonshire&mdash;a
+ most perilous voyage, supposed to be emblematic both of the trials of Noah
+ and of the troubles of life. Afterward the Bard wore sky-blue robes, and
+ was universally honored, serving as the counsellor, the herald, and the
+ minstrel of his patron. The domestic Bard and the chief of song had their
+ office at the King&rsquo;s court, with many curious perquisites, among which was
+ a chessboard from the King. The fine for insulting the Bard was 6 cows and
+ 120 pence; for slaying him, 126 cows. With so much general respect, and
+ great powers of extemporizing, the Bards were well able to sway the
+ passions of the nation, and greatly contributed to keep up the fiery
+ spirit of independence which the Cymry cherished in their mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Saxons began to embrace Christianity, and Augustine came on his
+ mission from Rome, the Welsh clergy, who had made no attempts at
+ converting their enemies, looked on him with no friendly eyes. He brought
+ claims, sanctioned by Gregory the Great, to an authority over them
+ inconsistent with that of the Archbishop of Caerleon; and the period for
+ observing Easter was, with them, derived from the East, and differed by
+ some weeks from that ordained by the Roman Church. An old hermit advised
+ the British clergy, who went to meet Augustine, to try him by the test of
+ humility, and according as he should rise to greet them, or remain seated,
+ to listen to his proposals favorably or otherwise. Unfortunately,
+ Augustine retained his seat: they rejected his plans of union; and he told
+ them that, because they would not preach to the Angles the way of life,
+ they would surely at their hands suffer death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after, the heathen king, Ethelfrith, attacked Brocmail, the Welsh
+ prince of Powys, who brought to the field 1,200 monks of Bangor to pray
+ for his success. The heathens fell at once on the priests, and, before
+ they could be protected, slew all except fifty; and this, though the Welsh
+ gained the victory, was regarded by the Saxon Church as a judgment, and by
+ the Welsh, unhappily, as a consequence of Augustine&rsquo;s throat. The hatred
+ became more bitter than ever, and the Welsh would not even enter the same
+ church with the Saxons, nor eat of a meal of which they had partaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cadwallader, the last of the Pendragons, was a terrible enemy to the kings
+ of Mercia and Northumbria, and with him the Cymry consider that their
+ glory ended. Looking on themselves for generation after generation as the
+ lawful owners of the soil, and on the Saxons as robbers, they showed no
+ mercy in their forays, and inflicted frightful cruelties on their
+ neighbors on the Marches. Offa&rsquo;s curious dyke, still existing in
+ Shropshire, was a bulwark raised in the hope of confining them within
+ their own bounds:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That Offa (when he saw his countries go to wrack), From bick&rsquo;ring with
+ his folk, to keep the Britons back, Cast up that mightly mound of eighty
+ miles in length, Athwart from sea to sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Danish invasions, by ruining the Saxons, favored the Welsh; and
+ contemporary with Alfred lived Roderic Mawr, or the Great, who had his
+ domains in so peaceful a state, that Alfred turned thither for aid in his
+ revival of learning, and invited thence to his court his bosom friend
+ Asser, the excellent monk and bard. Roderic divided his dominions&mdash;Aberfraw,
+ or North Wales, Dinasvawr, or South Wales, and Powys, or Shropshire&mdash;between
+ his three sons; but they became united again under his grandson, Howell
+ Dha, the lawgiver of Wales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Actuated perhaps by the example of Alfred, Howell collected his clergy and
+ bards at his hunting-lodge at Tenby, a palace built of peeled rods, and
+ there, after fasting and praying for inspiration, the collective wisdom of
+ the kingdom compiled a body of laws, which the King afterward carried in
+ person to Rome to receive the confirmation of the Pope; and much edified
+ must the Romans have been if they chanced to glance over the code, since,
+ besides many wise and good laws, it regulated the minute etiquettes and
+ perquisites of the royal household. If any one should insult the King, the
+ fine was to be, among other valuables, a golden dish as broad as the royal
+ face, and as thick as the nail of a husbandman who has been a husbandman,
+ seven years. Each officer&rsquo;s distance from the royal fire was regulated,
+ and even the precedence of each officer&rsquo;s horse in the stable&mdash;proving
+ plainly the old saying, that the poorer and more fiery is a nation, the
+ more precise is their point of honor. It seems to have been in his time,
+ as a more enlightened prince, that the Welsh conformed their time of
+ keeping Easter to that of the rest of the Western Church. But Howell was
+ no longer independent of the English: he had begun to pay a yearly tribute
+ of dogs, horses, and hawks, to Ethelstane, and the disputes that followed
+ his death brought the Welsh so much lower, that Edgar the Peaceable easily
+ exacted his toll of wolves&rsquo; heads; and Howell of North Wales was one of
+ the eight royal oarsmen who rowed the Emperor of Britain to the Minster of
+ St. John, on the river Dee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Welsh had destroyed all their wolves before the close of Dunstan&rsquo;s
+ regency, and Ethelred the Unready not being likely to obtain much respect,
+ the tribute was discontinued, until the marauding Danes again exacted it
+ under another form and title of &ldquo;Tribute of the Black Army.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fierce quarrels of their own prevented the Welsh from often taking
+ advantage of the disturbances of England. As in Ireland, the right of
+ gavelkind was recognized; yet primogeniture was also so far regarded as to
+ make both claims uncertain; and the three divisions of Wales were
+ constantly being first partitioned, and then united, by some prince who
+ ruled by the right of the strongest, till dethroned by another, who, to
+ prove his right of birth, carried half his genealogy in his patronymic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Llewellyn ap Sithfylht, under whom &ldquo;the earth brought forth double,
+ the cattle increased in great number, and there was neither beggar nor
+ poor man from the South to the North Sea,&rdquo; was slain in battle, in 1021,
+ by Howell ap Edwin ap Eneon ap Owayn ap Howell Dha, who reigned over South
+ Wales till the son of Llewellyn, or, rather, Gryflyth ap Llewellyn ap
+ Sithfylht ap, &amp;c., coming to age, dispossessed him, and gained all
+ Wales. It was this Gryffyth who received and sheltered Fleance, the son of
+ Banquo, when flying from Macbeth, and gave him in marriage his daughter
+ Nesta, who became the mother of Walter, the ancestor of the line of kings
+ shadowed in Macbeth&rsquo;s mirror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early part of Gryffyth&rsquo;s reign, the Welsh flourished greatly. Earl
+ Godwin, in his banishment, made friends with him, and, favored by Saxon
+ treachery, he overran Herefordshire, and pillaged the cathedral. But,
+ after Godwin&rsquo;s death, Harold, as Earl of Wessex, deemed it time to repress
+ these inroads, and, training his men to habits of diet and methods of
+ warfare that rendered them as light and dexterous as the wild
+ mountaineers, he pursued them into their own country, and burnt the palace
+ and ships at Rhuddlan, while Gryffyth was forced to take refuge in one of
+ his vessels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold set up a pillar with the inscription, &ldquo;Here Harold conquered;&rdquo; and
+ the Welsh gave hostages, and promised to pay tribute, while Harold erected
+ a hunting-seat in Monmouthshire, and made an ordinance that any Welshman
+ seen bearing weapons beyond Offa&rsquo;s dyke should lose his right hand.
+ Welshwomen might marry Englishmen, but none of the highborn Cymry might
+ aspire to wed an Englishwoman. Hating the prince under whom they had come
+ to so much disgrace, the Welsh themselves captured poor Gryffyth, and sent
+ his head, his hands, and the beak of his ship, to Edward the Confessor,
+ from whom they accepted the appointment of three of their native princes
+ to the three provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the strength of Wales was so far broken, that William the Conqueror
+ had only to bring a force with him, under pretext of a pilgrimage to the
+ shrine of St. David, to obtain the submission of the princes; and, in
+ fact, the Cymry found the Norman nobles far more aggressive neighbors than
+ the Angles had been since their first arrival in Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mark, or frontier, once the kingdom of Mercia, was now called the
+ March of Wales, where the Norman knights began to effect settlements, by
+ the right of the strongest, setting up their impregnable castles, round
+ which the utmost efforts of the Welsh were lost. Martin de Tours was one
+ of the first, and his glittering host of mail-clad men so overawed the
+ inhabitants of Whitchurch that they readily submitted, and he quietly
+ established himself in their bounds, treating them, as it appears, with
+ more fairness and friendliness than was then usual. He was a great
+ chess-player, and the sport descended from father to son, even among the
+ peasantry of Whitchurch, who long after were most skilful in the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh Lupus, the fierce old Earl of Chester, was likewise a Lord Marcher,
+ and had, like the Bishop of Durham, the almost royal powers of a Count
+ Palatine, because, dwelling on the frontier, it was necessary that the
+ executive power should be prompt and absolute. Indeed, the Lords Marchers,
+ as these border barons were called, lived necessarily in a state of
+ warfare, which made it needful to entrust them with greater powers than
+ their neighbors, around whom they formed a sort of <i>cordon</i>, to
+ protect them from the forays of the half-savage Welsh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-one baronies were formed in this manner along the March of Wales,
+ which constantly travelled toward the west. Robert Fitzaymon, by an
+ alliance with one Welsh chief, dispossessed another of Glamorgan, which he
+ left to his daughter Amabel, the wife of Earl Robert of Gloucester; and
+ Gilbert de Clare, commonly called Strongbow (the father of the Irish
+ Conqueror), obtained a grant from Henry I. of Chepstow and Pembroke, but
+ had to fight hard for the lands which had more lawful owners. In and out
+ among these Lords Marchers, and making common cause with them, were
+ settlements of Flemings. Flanders, that commercial state where
+ cloth-weaving first flourished as a manufacture, had suffered greatly from
+ the inundations of the sea, and the near connection subsisting between the
+ native princes and the sons of the Conqueror had led to an intercourse,
+ which ended in the weavers, who had lost their all, being invited by Henry
+ I. to take up their abode in Pembrokeshire, where they carried on their
+ trade while defending themselves against the Welsh, and thus first
+ commenced the manufactures of England. Resolute in resistance, though not
+ rash nor aggressive, and of industrious habits, they acted as a great
+ protection to the English counties, and down even to the time of Charles
+ I. they had a language of their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owayn ap Gwynned, King of Aberfraw, or North Wales, had many wars with
+ Henry II.; and, uniting with the bard king, Owayn Cyvelioc, of Powysland,
+ did fearful damage to the English, which Henry attempted to revenge by an
+ incursion into Merionethshire; but though he gained a battle at Ceiroc, he
+ was forced to retreat through the inhospitable country, his troops
+ harassed by the weather, and cut off by the Welsh, who swarmed on the
+ mountains, so that his army arrived at Chester in a miserable state. He
+ had many unfortunate hostages in his hands, the children of the noblest
+ families, and on these he wreaked a cowardly vengeance, cutting off the
+ noses and ears of the maidens, and putting out the eyes of the boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well might Becket, in his banishment, exclaim, on hearing such tidings,
+ &ldquo;His wise men are become fools; England reels and stagers like a drunken
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will never subdue Wales, unless Heaven be against them,&rdquo; said an old
+ hermit to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Henry had been carried by a frightened horse over a ford, of
+ which the old prophecies declared that, when it should be crossed by a
+ freckled king, the power of the Cymry should fall, and this superstition
+ took away greatly from satisfaction in the victory. The Welsh princes were
+ becoming habituated to the tribute, and in 1188, under pretext of
+ preaching a Crusade, Archbishop Baldwin came into Wales, and asserted the
+ long-disputed supremacy of Canterbury over the Welsh bishopries. He was
+ attended by Gerald Barry, or Giraldus Cambrensis, a half-Norman half-Welsh
+ ecclesiastic, who was one of the chief historians of the period, and had
+ the ungracious office of tutor to Prince John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Owayn ap Gwynned died, in 1169, the kingdom of Aberfraw, or North
+ Wales, was reduced to the isle of Anglesea and the counties of Merioneth
+ and Caernarvon, with parts of Denbigh and Cardigan. A great dispute broke
+ out for the succession. Jorwarth, the oldest son, was set aside because he
+ had a broken nose; and Davydd, the eldest son by a second wife, seized the
+ inheritance, and slew all the brethren save one, named Madoc, who sailed
+ away to the West in search of new regions. Several years after, he again
+ made his appearance in Aberfraw, declaring that he had found a pleasant
+ country, and was come to collect colonists, with whom, accordingly, he
+ departed, and returned no more. Many have believed that his Western Land
+ was no other than America, and on this supposition Drayton speaks of him,
+ in the &ldquo;Polyolbion,&rdquo; as having reached the great continent &ldquo;Ere the
+ Iberian powers had found her long-sought bay, or any western ear had heard
+ the sound of Florida.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Southey has, in his poem, made Madoc combine with the Aztecs in the
+ settlement of Mexico, but traces were said to be found of habits and
+ countenances resembling those of the Welsh among the Indians of the
+ Missouri; and, in our own days, the traveller Mr. Buxton was struck by
+ finding the Indians of the Rocky Mountains weaving a fabric resembling the
+ old Welsh blanket. If this be so, Christianity and civilization must have
+ died out among Madoc&rsquo;s descendants: but the story is one of the exciting
+ riddles of history, such as the similar one of the early Norwegian
+ discovery of America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXIII. THE ENGLISH JUSTINIAN. (1272-1292.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+
+ <i>Kings of Scotland</i>.
+ 1249. Alexander III.
+ 1285. Margaret.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1270. Philippe III.
+ 1235. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1273. Rodolph I.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1271. Gregory X.
+ 1276. Innocent V.
+ 1277. John XXI.
+ 1277. Nicholas III.
+ 1281. Martin IV.
+ 1288. Nicholas IV.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Never was coronation attended by more outward splendor or more heartfelt
+ joy than was that of Edward I. and Eleanor of Castile, when, fresh from
+ the glory of their Crusade, they returned to their kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward was the restorer of peace after a lengthened civil strife; his
+ prowess was a just subject of national pride, and the affection of his
+ subjects was further excited by the perils he had encountered. Not only
+ had he narrowly escaped the dagger of the Eastern assassin, but while at
+ Bordeaux, during his return, while the royal pair were sitting on the same
+ couch, a flash of lightning had passed between them, leaving them
+ uninjured, but killing two attendants who stood behind them. At
+ Châlons-sur-Marne he had likewise been placed in great danger by
+ treachery. The Count de Châlons had invited him to a tournament, and he
+ had accepted, contrary to the advice of the Pope, who warned him of evil
+ designs; but he declared that no king ever refused such a challenge, and
+ arrived at Châlons with a gallant following. The Pope&rsquo;s suspicions were
+ verified; the Count, after breaking a lance with the King, made a sudden,
+ unchivalrous attack on him, throwing his arms round his body, and striving
+ to hurl him from the saddle; but Edward sat firm as a rock, and, touching
+ his horse with his spur, caused it to bound forward, dragging the Count to
+ the ground, where he lay, encumbered with his heavy armor; and Edward,
+ after harmlessly ringing on the steel with his sword, forced him to
+ surrender to an archer, as one unworthy to be reckoned a knight. A fight
+ had, in the meantime, taken place between the attendants on either side,
+ and so many of the men of the French party were killed, that the fray was
+ termed the Little Battle of Châlons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years had elapsed since the death of King Henry, when, on the 18th of
+ August, 1274, the city of London welcomed their gallant, crusading King.
+ The rejoicings attested both his popularity and the prosperity which his
+ government had restored, for each house along the streets was decked with
+ silk and tapestry hangings, the aldermen showered handfuls of gold and
+ silver from their windows, and the fountains flowed with white and red
+ wine. The King rode along the streets, in the pride of manhood,
+ accompanied by his beautiful and beloved Eleanor; by his brother Edmund
+ and his young wife, Eveline of Lancaster; his sister Margaret and her
+ husband, Alexander II., the excellent King of Scotland; the young Princess
+ Eleanor, a girl of eleven, who alone survived of the children left in
+ England, and her infant brother Alfonso, who had been born at Maine, and
+ was looked on as heir to the throne. The Princess, Joan of Acre, was left
+ with her grandmother, the Queen of Castile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two kings, the princes, and nobles, on arriving at Westminster Abbey,
+ released their gallant steeds to run loose among the people, a free gift
+ to whoever should be able to catch them; for Edward had learnt from his
+ kindly father that the poor should have a plenteous share in all his
+ festivities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There stood the West Minster on the bank of the Thames, rising amid green
+ fields and trees, at a considerable distance from the walled city, and
+ only connected with it by here and there a convent or church. Still
+ incomplete, the two fair towers showed the fresh creaminess of new
+ stonework, their chiselings and mouldings as yet untouched by time,
+ unsoiled by smoke, when Edward and his five hundred bold vassals sprang
+ from their steeds before the gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the train came a captive. Gaston de Monçda, Count de Béarn, one of
+ his Gascon vassals, had offended against him, and appealing to the
+ suzerain, the King of France, had been by him delivered up to Edward&rsquo;s
+ justice, and was forced to ride in the gorgeous procession with a halter
+ round his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Archbishop Kilwardby had anointed and crowned the King and
+ Queen, and the barons offered their homage, the unfortunate culprit came
+ forward on his knees to implore pardon, and Edward graced his coronation
+ by an act of clemency, restoring Gaston fully to his lands and honors, and
+ winning him thus to be his friend forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The royal banquet was held in Westminster Hall, and far beyond it. Wooden
+ buildings had been erected with openings at the top to let out the smoke,
+ and here, for a whole fortnight, cooking and feasting went on without
+ intermission. Every comer, of every degree, was made welcome, and enjoyed
+ the cheer, the pageantries, and the religious ceremonies of the
+ coronation. Three hundred and eighty head of cattle, four hundred and
+ thirty sheep, four hundred and fifty swine, besides eighteen wild boars,
+ and two hundred and seventy-eight flitches of bacon, with poultry to the
+ number of 19,660, were only a part of the provisions consumed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, the country still felt the effects of the lawless reign of Henry
+ III., and Edward&rsquo;s first care was to set affairs on a more regular
+ footing. He sent commissioners to inquire into the title-deeds by which
+ all landed proprietors held their estates, and, wherever these were
+ defective, exacted, a fee for freshly granting them. The inquisition might
+ be expedient, considering the late condition of the nation, but the King&rsquo;s
+ own impoverished exchequer caused it to be carried on ungraciously, and
+ great offence was given. When called on to prove his claims, the Earl
+ Warrenne drew his sword, saying, &ldquo;This is the instrument by which I hold
+ my lands, and by the same I mean to defend them. Our forefathers, who came
+ in with William, the Bastard, acquired their lands by their good swords.
+ He did not conquer alone; they were helpers and sharers with him.&rdquo; The
+ stout Earl&rsquo;s title was truly found amply sufficient!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not so was it with the Jews, who inhabited England in great numbers, and
+ were found through purchase, usury, or mortgage, to have become possessors
+ of various estates, which conferred on them the power of appearing on
+ juries, of, in some cases, presenting to church benefices, and of the
+ wardship of vassals. This was a serious grievance; and the King interfered
+ by decreeing that, in every instance, the lands should be restored either
+ to the original heirs on repayment of the original loan, or disposed of to
+ other Christians on the same terms. The King was, by long custom of the
+ realm, considered the absolute master of the life and property of every
+ Jew in his dominions, so that he was thought to be only taking his own
+ when he exacted sums from them, or forced them to pay him a yearly rate
+ for permission to live in his country and to act as money-lenders. Edward
+ thus believed himself to be making a sacrifice for the general good when
+ he forbade the Jews ever to lend money on usury, and in compensation
+ granted them permission to trade without paying toll; and he further took
+ the best means he could discover for procuring the conversion of this
+ people. The Friars Preachers were commanded to instruct them, and the
+ royal bailiffs to compel their attendance on this teaching; every favor
+ was shown to proselytes, and a hospital was built for the support of the
+ poorer among them, and maintained by the poll-tax obtained from their race
+ by the King. Should a Jew be converted, the King at once gave up his claim
+ to his property, only stipulating that half should go to support this
+ foundation. One young maiden, child of a wealthy Jew of London, on being
+ converted, became a godchild of Edward&rsquo;s eldest daughter, Eleanor, whose
+ name she received; and she was shortly after married to the Count de la
+ Marcho, the King&rsquo;s cousin, and one of the noble line of Lusignan&mdash;a
+ plain proof that in the royal family there was not the loathing for the
+ Israelite race that existed in Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jews were obliged to wear a distinctive mark on their dress&mdash;a
+ yellow fold of cloth cut in the form of the two tables of the Law; and,
+ thus distinguished, often became a mark for popular odium, which fastened
+ every accusation upon them, from the secret murder of Christian children
+ to the defacing of the King&rsquo;s coin. There was, in fact, a great quantity
+ of light money in circulation, and as halfpence and farthings were
+ literally what their name declares&mdash;silver pennies cut into halves
+ and quarters&mdash;it was easy for a thief to help himself to a portion of
+ the edge. However, Edward called in these mutilated pieces, and issued a
+ coinage of halfpence and farthings&mdash;that which raised the delusive
+ hopes of the Welsh. The clipping became more evident than ever, and the
+ result was an order, that all suspected of the felony should be arrested
+ on the same day. Jews, as well as Christians were seized; the possession
+ of the mutilated coin was taken as a proof of guilt; and in 1279, after a
+ trial that occupied some months, and in which popular prejudice would
+ doubtless make the case strong against the Jews, two hundred and eighty
+ persons, male and female, were hanged on the same day; after which a
+ pardon was proclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English nation continued to hold the Jews in detestation, which was
+ regarded as a religious duty, and, year after year, petitioned the King to
+ drive them out of his dominions; but his patience was sustained by
+ continual gifts from the persecuted race until the year 1287, when, for
+ some unknown offence, he threw into prison the whole of them in his
+ dominions, up to the number of 15,000; and though their release was
+ purchased by a gift of £12,000, in 1290, their sentence of banishment was
+ pronounced. He permitted them to carry away their property with them, and
+ sent his officers to protect them from injury or insult in their
+ embarkation; but in some instances the sailors, who hated their freight,
+ threw them overboard, and seized their treasures. These murders, when
+ proved, were punished with death; but it was hard to gain justice for a
+ Jew against a Christian: and the edict of banishment was regarded by the
+ nation as such a favor, that the King was rewarded by a grant of a tenth
+ from the clergy and a fifteenth from the laity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The merchants had earlier given him a large subsidy as a return for the
+ treaty which he had made in their favor with Flanders, which derived its
+ wool from England. Edward was very anxious to promote manufactures here,
+ and had striven to do so by forbidding the importation of foreign cloth;
+ but this not succeeding, the mutual traffic was placed on a friendly
+ footing. There was violent jealousy of foreigners among the English, and
+ it was only in Edward&rsquo;s time that merchants of other countries were
+ allowed to settle in England, and then only under heavy restrictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward I. was the sovereign who, more than any other since Alfred,
+ contributed to bring the internal condition of England into a state of
+ security for life and limb. Robberies and murders had become frightfully
+ common; so much so, that the Statute of Winton, in 1285, enacted that no
+ ditch, bush, or tree, capable of hiding a man, should be left within two
+ hundred feet of any highway. If anything like this had been previously in
+ force, it was no wonder that Davydd of Wales objected to having a road
+ made through his forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all walled towns the gates were to be kept shut from sunset to sunrise,
+ and any stranger found at large after dark was liable to be seized by the
+ watch; nor could he find lodging at night unless his host would be his
+ surety. Thieves seem to have gone about in bands, so that their capture
+ was a matter of danger and difficulty, and therefore, on the alarm of a
+ felony, every man was to issue forth with armor according to his degree,
+ and raise the hue and cry from town to town till the criminal was seized
+ and delivered to the sheriff. The whole hundred was answerable for his
+ capture&mdash;a remnant of the old Saxon law, and a most wise regulation,
+ since it rendered justice the business of every man, and also accustomed
+ the peasantry to the use of arms, the great cause of the English
+ victories. Judges were first appointed to go on circuit in the year 1285,
+ when they were sent into every shire two or three times a year to hold a
+ general jail delivery. But Edward had to form his judges as well as his
+ constitution, for, in 1289, he discovered that the whole bench were in the
+ habit of receiving bribes, from the Grand Justiciary downward: whereupon
+ he threw them all into the Tower, banished the chief offenders, degraded
+ and fined the rest, and caused future judges to be sworn to take neither
+ gift nor fee, only to accept as much as a breakfast, provided there was no
+ excess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the jurymen, [Footnote: On Thomas á Becket&rsquo;s last journey to
+ Canterbury, Raoul de Broc&rsquo;s followers had cut off the tails of his
+ pack-horses. It was a vulgar reproach to the men of Kent that the outrage
+ had been punished by the growth of the same appendage on the whole of the
+ inhabitants of the county; and, whereas the English populace applied the
+ accusation to the Kentishmen, foreigners extended it to the whole nation
+ when in a humor for insult and abuse, such as that of this unhappy
+ prince.] who were as much witnesses as what we now call jurors, were often
+ liable to be beaten and maltreated in revenge, and officers, called
+ &ldquo;justices of <i>trailebaston&rdquo;</i> were sent to search out the like
+ offences, which they did with success and good-will; and in, order that
+ speedy justice might be done in cases of minor importance, local
+ magistrates were appointed, the commencement of our present justices of
+ the peace. They were at first chosen by the votes of the freeholders, but
+ in Edward III.&lsquo;s time began to be nominated by the Crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Burnel, the Chancellor, Bishop of Bath and Wells, probably had a
+ great share in these enactments. He was a better Chancellor than Bishop,
+ but he left to his see the beautiful episcopal palace still in existence
+ at Wells. He also built a splendid castle at his native place, Acton
+ Burnel, where some of the early Parliaments were held.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Parliaments were only summoned by Edward I. when in great want of
+ money, for in general he raised the needful sums by gifts and talliages,
+ and only in cases of unusual pressure did he call on his subjects for
+ further aid. Four knights were chosen from each shire, and two burgesses
+ [Footnote: For a lively picture of a trial of the thirteenth century, see
+ Sir F. Palgrave&rsquo;s &ldquo;Merchant and Friar.&rdquo;] from every town, of consequence;
+ and, besides, bishops and the barons, who had their seats by their rank;
+ but the two houses were not always divided:&mdash;except, indeed, that
+ sometimes the Northern representatives met at York, the Southern at
+ Northampton, and the county palatine of Durham had a little parliament to
+ itself. Serving in Parliament was expensive and unpopular, and the sheriff
+ of the county had not only to preside over the election of the member, but
+ to send him safe to the place of meeting; and often the Commons broke up
+ as soon as they had granted the required sum, leaving the Lords to
+ deliberate on the laws, or to bring grievances before the King, such
+ things being quite beyond their reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a time of great prosperity to the whole country, and such internal
+ tranquillity had scarcely prevailed since the time of Henry II., when the
+ difference between Saxon and Norman was far less smoothed down than at
+ present, and the feudal system weighed far more heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Splendid castles were built, the King setting the example, and making more
+ arrangements for comfort in the interior than had yet been ventured upon;
+ and sacred architecture came to the highest perfection it has ever
+ attained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wherever we find a portion of our cathedrals with deep mouldings in
+ massive walls, slender columns of darker marble standing detached from
+ freestone piers, sharply-pointed arches, capitals of rich foliage folding
+ over the hollow formed by their curve, and windows either narrow lancet,
+ or with the flowing lines of flamboyant tracery, there we are certain to
+ hear that this part was added in the thirteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward gave liberally to the Church, especially to the order of Dominican,
+ or Preaching Friars; but it was found that in some instances the clergy
+ had worked on men&rsquo;s consciences to obtain from them the bequest of lands
+ to the injury of their heirs, and a statute was therefore passed to
+ prevent such legacies from being valid unless they received the sanction
+ of the Crown. This was called the Statute of <i>Mortmain</i>, or Dead
+ Hands, because the framers of the act considered the hands of the monastic
+ orders as dead and unprofitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the world itself could hardly award the meed of unprofitable to the
+ studies of Roger Bacon, a native of Ilchester, born in 1214, who, after
+ studying at Oxford and at Paris, became a member of the Franciscan, or
+ Minorite Friars, and settled again at Oxford, where he pursued his studies
+ under the patronage of Bishop Robert Grostête. He made himself a perfect
+ master of Greek in order to understand Aristotle in the original, and
+ working on by himself he proceeded far beyond any chemist of his time in
+ discoveries in natural philosophy. Grostête and the more enlightened men
+ of the university provided him with means to carry on his experiments,
+ and, in twenty years he had expended no less than £2,000: but not without
+ mighty results; for he ascertained the true length of the solar year, made
+ many useful discoveries in chemistry and medicine, and anticipated many of
+ the modern uses of glass, learning the powers of convex and concave lenses
+ for the telescope, microscope, burning-glasses, and the camera obscura.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all, he was the inventor of gunpowder, the compound which was
+ destined to change the whole character of warfare and the destiny of
+ nations. But he was too much in advance of his time to be understood, and
+ the friars of his order, becoming terrified by his experiments, decided
+ that he was a magician, and after the death of his friend Grostête, kept
+ him in close confinement, and only permitted one copy of his works to pass
+ out of the monastery, and this, which was sent to the Pope, Clement IV.,
+ procured his liberation. A few years after, the General of the
+ Franciscans, again taking fright, imprisoned him once more, and this
+ lasted eleven or twelve years; but Pope Nicholas IV. again released him,
+ and neither age nor imprisonment could break down his energy; he continued
+ steadily to pursue his discoveries, and add a further polish to his
+ various works, till his death, in 1292. Little as he was appreciated, he
+ left a strong impression on the popular mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tradition declares that he constructed a huge head of brass, which uttered
+ the words, &ldquo;Time is! Time was! Time will be!&rdquo; and has connected this with
+ Brazen-Nose College, which, not having been founded till one hundred years
+ after, must in that case, as Fuller says, make time to be again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is a hero of the popular chap-books of old times, where he and his
+ associate, Friar Bungay, are represented as playing tricks on his servant
+ Miles, and as summoning the spirits of Julius Caesar and Hercules for the
+ edification of the kings of France and England, from whom, however, he
+ would accept no reward. Legends vary between his being flown away with
+ bodily by demons, and his making a grand repentance, when he confessed
+ that knowledge had been a heavy burden, that kept down good thoughts,
+ burnt his books, parted with his goods, and caused himself to be walled up
+ in a cell in the church and fed through a hole, and finally dug his grave
+ with his own nails! Thus, probably, has ignorant tradition perverted the
+ sense that coming death would surely bring, that earthly knowledge is but
+ vanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still worse has fared his friend, Michael Scott of Balwirie, called by the
+ learned the Mathematician, by the unlearned, the Wizard. After the usual
+ course of university learning at Oxford and Paris, he went to Italy, where
+ he gained the patronage of the Emperor Friedrich II. He was learned in
+ Greek and in Arabic, and an excellent mathematician, but he bewildered
+ himself with alchemy and astrology; and, though he died unmolested in his
+ own country, in 1290 his fame remained in no good odor. Dante describes
+ him among those whose faces were turned backward, because they had refused
+ to turn the right way:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Michele Scotto fu, che veramente
+ De le magiche frode seppe il gioco.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ In Scotland marvellous tales were current of him, and his own clansman,
+ Sir Walter, in his lay, has spread the mysterious tale of the Wizard and
+ his mighty book far and wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a period of very considerable learning among the studious among the
+ clergy in all countries, and every art of peace was making rapid progress
+ in England, under the fostering care of the King and Queen. No sovereign
+ was more respected in Europe than Edward; his contemporary, Dante, cites
+ him as an instance of a gallant son of a feeble parent: and he was often
+ called on as the arbiter of disputes, as when the kings of Arragon and
+ France defied each other to a wager of battle, to take place in his
+ dominions in Southern France, which combat, however, never took place. He
+ was a most faithful and affectionate husband and indulgent father, and the
+ household rolls afford evidences of the kindly intercourse between him and
+ his numerous daughters, judging by the interchange of gifts between them.
+ Eleanor, the eldest, who as princess could only give a gold ring, when
+ Duchesse de Bar brought as a Christmas-gift a leathern dressing-case,
+ containing a comb, a mirror silver-gilt, and a silver bodkin, so much
+ valued by the King that he kept them with him as long as he lived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joan of Acre, a wilful, lively girl, was wedded when very young to her
+ father&rsquo;s turbulent friend, Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester; Margaret
+ was married, at fifteen, to the Duke of Brabant; and Mary was devoted to
+ the cloister. She became a nun of Fontevraud at the priory Ambresbury, in
+ accordance with the exhortations of the clergy to her parents; but there
+ was not much vocation to the cloister in her disposition, and she was as
+ often present at court pageants as her secular sisters. The Abbess of
+ Fontevraud would fain have had the princess among her own nuns, but Mary
+ resisted, and remained in the branch establishment, probably by exerting
+ her influence over her father, who seems seldom to have refused anything
+ to his children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stern in executing his duty, gentle to the distressed, most devout in
+ religious exercises, pure in life, true to his word, a wise lawgiver, and
+ steady in putting down vice, Edward seemed to be well deserving of the
+ honor of being the nephew of St. Louis, and to be walking in his
+ footsteps, but with greater force of character and good sense. The Holy
+ Land was still the object of his thoughts, and he had serious intentions
+ of attempting to rescue it, with forces now more complete and better
+ trained than those which he had drawn together in his younger days. His
+ views of this kind were strengthened by a serious illness, and he
+ announced his determination to take the Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the twentieth year of Edward&rsquo;s reign came his great temptation.
+ Ambition was the latent fault of his character, and a decision was brought
+ before him that placed a flattering prize within his grasp. He yielded,
+ and seized the prey; injustice, violence, anger, and cruelty followed,
+ promises were violated, his subjects oppressed, his honor forfeited, and
+ his name stained. From the time that Edward I. gave way to the lust of
+ conquest, his history is one of painful deterioration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unfortunate for him that, at the very time that the lure was held
+ out to him, he was deprived of the gentle wife whose influence had always
+ turned him to the better course. Eleanor of Castile was on her way to join
+ him on his first expedition to the Scottish border, when she fell sick at
+ Grantham, in Lincolnshire; and though he travelled day and night to see
+ her, she died before his arrival, on the 29th of November, 1292. In
+ overwhelming grief Edward accompanied her funeral to Westminster, a
+ journey of thirteen days. Each evening the bier rested in the market-place
+ of the town, where the procession halted, till the clergy came to convey
+ it with solemn chantings to the chief church, where it was placed before
+ the high altar. At each of these resting-places Edward raised a
+ richly-carved market cross in memory of his queen; but, of the whole
+ thirteen, Northampton and Waltham are the only towns that have retained
+ these beautiful monuments to the gracious Eleanor, one of the best-beloved
+ names of our English history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXIV. THE HAMMER OF THE SCOTS. (1292-1305.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1292. John Balliol.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1285. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1292. Adolph.
+ 1298. Albert I.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1287. Nicholas IV.
+ 1291. Boniface VIII.
+ 1294. Celestine V.
+ 1303. Benedict XI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The gallant line of Scottish kings descended from &ldquo;the gracious Duncan&rdquo;
+ suddenly decayed and dwindled away in the latter part of the thirteenth
+ century. They had generally been on friendly terms with the English, to
+ whom Malcolm Ceanmore and Edgar both owed their crown; they had usually
+ married ladies of English birth; and holding the earldom of Huntingdon,
+ the county of Cumberland, and the three Lothians, under the English crown,
+ they stood in nearly the same relation to our Anglo-Norman sovereigns as
+ did these to the kings of France. If France were esteemed a more polished
+ country, and her language and manners were adopted by the Plantagenet
+ kings, who were French nobles as well as independent sovereigns of the
+ ruder Saxons, so, again, England was the model of courtesy and refinement
+ to the earlier Scottish kings, who, in the right of inheritance from St.
+ David&rsquo;s queen, Earl Waltheof&rsquo;s heiress, were barons of the civilized court
+ of England, where they learnt modes of taming their own savage Highland
+ and island domains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, with few exceptions, the terms of alliance were well understood, and
+ many of the Cumbrian barons were liegemen to both the English and Scottish
+ kings. Scotland was in a flourishing and fast-improving condition, and
+ there was no mutual enmity or jealousy between the two nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander III. was the husband of Margaret, the eldest sister of Edward
+ I., and frequently was present at the pageants of the English court. He
+ was a brave and beloved monarch, and his wife was much honored and loved
+ in Scotland; but, while still a young man, a succession of misfortunes
+ befell him. His queen died in 1275, and his only son a year or two after;
+ his only other child, Margaret, who had been married to Eric, Prince of
+ Norway, likewise died, leaving an infant daughter named Margaret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding himself left childless, Alexander contracted a second marriage
+ with Yolande, daughter of the Count de Dreux; and a splendid bridal took
+ place at Jedburgh, with every kind of amusements, especially mumming and
+ masquing. In the midst, some reckless reveller glided in arrayed in
+ ghastly vestments, so as to personate death, and after making fearful
+ gestures, vanished away, leaving an impression of terror among the guests
+ that they did not quickly shake off&mdash;the jest was too earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Less than a year subsequently, Alexander gave a great feast to his nobles
+ at Edinburgh, on the 15th of March, 1286. It was a most unsuitable day for
+ banquetting, for it was Lent; and, moreover, popular imagination, always
+ trying to guess the times and seasons only known to the Most High, had
+ fixed on tins as destined to be the Last Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Scottish nobles feasted and revelled, mocking at the delusion of
+ the populace, till, when at a late hour they broke up, the night was
+ discovered to be intensely dark and stormy. King Alexander was, however,
+ bent on joining his queen, who was at Kinghorn&mdash;perhaps he had
+ promised to come to calm her alarms&mdash;and all the objections urged by
+ his servants could not deter him. He bade one of his servants remain at
+ home, since he seemed to fear the storm. &ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;it
+ would ill become me to refuse to die for your father&rsquo;s son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Inverkeithing the storm became more violent, and again the royal
+ followers remonstrated; but the King laughed at them, and only desired to
+ have two runners to show him the way, when they might all remain in
+ shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was thought to have been &ldquo;fey&rdquo;&mdash;namely, in high spirits&mdash;recklessly
+ hastening to a violent death; for as he rode along the crags close above
+ Kinghorn, his horse suddenly stumbled, and he was thrown over its head to
+ the bottom of a frightful precipice, where he lay dead. The spot is still
+ called the King&rsquo;s Crag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly it was the last day of Scotland&rsquo;s peace and prosperity. Thomas of
+ Ereildoune, called the Rymour, who was believed to possess second sight,
+ had declared that on the 16th of March the greatest wind should blow
+ before noon that Scotland had ever known. The morning, however, rose fair
+ and calm, and he was reproached for his prediction. &ldquo;Noon is not yet
+ gone!&rdquo; he answered; and ere long came a messenger to the gate, with
+ tidings that the King was killed. &ldquo;Gone is the wind that shall blow to the
+ great calamity and trouble of all Scotland,&rdquo; said Thomas the Rymour&mdash;a
+ saying that needed no powers of prophecy, when the only remaining scion of
+ the royal line was a girl of two years old, the child of a foreign prince,
+ himself only eighteen years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The oldest poem in the Scottish tongue that has been preserved is a lament
+ over the last son of St. David.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;When Alysander, our king, was dead,
+ That Scotland led in love and lee,
+ Away was sons of ale and bread,
+ Of wine and wax, of game and glee;
+ Our gold was changed into lead.
+ Christ, born in to virginity,
+ Succour Scotland, and remede
+ That stead is in perplexity.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The perplexity began at once, for the realm of Scotland had never yet
+ descended to the &ldquo;spindle,&rdquo; and the rights of the little &ldquo;Maid of Norway&rdquo;
+ were contested by her cousins, Robert Bruce and John Balliol, two of the
+ Cumbrian barons, half-Scottish and half-English, who, though their claims
+ were only through females, thought themselves fitter to rule than the
+ infant Margaret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Eric of Norway sent to entreat counsel from Edward of England, and
+ thus first kindled his hopes of uniting the whole island under his sway.
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the time is come when Scotland and her petty kings shall
+ be reduced under my power.&rdquo; The Scottish nobles came at the same time to
+ request his decision, which was readily given in favor of the little
+ heiress, whom he further proposed to betroth to his only son, Edward of
+ Caernarvon; and as the children were first cousins once removed, he sent
+ to Rome for a dispensation, while Margaret sailed from Norway to be placed
+ in his keeping. Thus would the young Prince have peaceably succeeded to
+ the whole British dominions; but the will of Heaven was otherwise, and
+ three hundred years of war were to elapse before the crowns were placed on
+ the same brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stormy passage from Norway was injurious to the tender frame of the
+ little Queen: she was landed in the Orkney Isles, in the hope of saving
+ her life, but in vain; she died, after having scarcely touched her
+ dominions, happy in being spared so wild a kingdom and so helpless a
+ husband as were awaiting her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twelve claimants for the vacant throne at once arose, all so distant that
+ it was a nice matter to weigh their several rights, since the very nearest
+ were descendants of Henry, son of St. David, five generations back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scots agreed to refer the question to the arbitration of one hitherto
+ so noted for wisdom and justice as Edward I. They little knew that their
+ realm was the very temptation that was most liable to draw him aside from
+ the strict probity he had hitherto observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He called on the competitors and the states of Scotland to meet him at
+ Norham Castle on the 10th of May, 1291, and the conference was opened by
+ his justiciary, Robert Brabazon, who, in a speech of some length, called
+ on the assembly to begin by owning the King as Lord Paramount of Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had never been fully understood for how much of their domains the
+ Scottish kings did homage to the English, and the more prudent princes had
+ avoided opening the question, so that there might honestly be two opinions
+ on the subject. Still Edward was acting as the King of France would have
+ done had he claimed to be Paramount of England, because Edward paid homage
+ for Gascony, and he ought to have known that he was taking an ungenerous
+ advantage of the kingless state of his neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They made answer that they were incapable of making such an
+ acknowledgment; but Edward answered, &ldquo;Tell them that by the holy St.
+ Edward, whose crown I wear, I will either have my rights recognized, or
+ die in the vindication of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave them three weeks to consider his challenge, but in the meantime
+ issued writs for assembling his army; and thus left the more
+ quietly-disposed to expect an invasion, without any leader to oppose it;
+ while each of the twelve claimants could not but conceive the hope of
+ being raised to the throne, if he would consent to make the required
+ acknowledgment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, they all yielded; and when the next meeting took place at
+ Hollywell Haugh, a green plain close to &ldquo;Norham&rsquo;s castled height,&rdquo; the
+ whole body owned Edward as their feudal superior; after which the kingdom
+ of Scotland was delivered over to him, and the great seal placed in the
+ joint keeping of the Scottish and English chancellors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following year, on the 17th of November, the final decision was
+ made. Nine of the claimants had such frivolous claims, that no attention
+ was paid to them, and the only ones worth consideration were those derived
+ from David, Earl of Huntingdon, the crusading comrade of Coeur de Lion,
+ and son of Henry, son of St. David. This Earl had left three daughters,
+ Margaret, Isabel, and Ada. Margaret had married Allan of Galloway, and
+ John Balliol was the son of her only daughter Devorgoil. Isabel married
+ Robert Bruce, and her son, Robert, Earl of Carrick, was the claimant; and
+ Ada had left a grandson, Florence Hastings, Earl of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A baron leaving daughters alone would divide his heritage equally among
+ them, and this was what Hastings desired; but Scotland was pronounced
+ indivisible, and he retired from the field. Bruce contended that, as son
+ of one sister, he was nearer the throne than the grandson of the other,
+ although the elder; but this was completely untenable, and Balliol, having
+ been adjudged the rightful heir, was declared King of Scotland, was
+ crowned, and paid homage to Edward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He soon found that the fealty he had sworn was not, as he had hoped, to be
+ a mere dead letter, as with the former kings. Edward used to the utmost
+ the suzerain&rsquo;s privilege of hearing appeals from the vassal-prince&mdash;a
+ practice never put in force by his predecessors, and excessively galling
+ to the new Scottish King, who found himself fettered in all his measures,
+ and degraded in the eyes of his rude and savage subjects, who regarded him
+ as having given away the honor of their crown. Whenever there was an
+ appeal, he was cited to appear in person at the English court, and was
+ treated, in fact, like a mere feudal noble, instead of the King of a brave
+ and ancient kingdom. Indeed, the Scots called him the &ldquo;toom tabard,&rdquo; or
+ empty herald&rsquo;s coat&mdash;a name not unsuited to such a king of vain show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by a war broke out between England and France, and Edward sent
+ summonses to the Scottish barons to attend him with their vassals. It was
+ no concern of theirs, and many flatly refused to come, whereupon he
+ declared them to have forfeited their fiefs, and thus pushed his
+ interference beyond their endurance. John Balliol, their unfortunate King,
+ who was personally attached to Edward, and at the same time greatly in
+ dread of his fierce vassals, was utterly confused and distressed; and
+ finding no help in him, his subjects seized him, placed him in a fortress,
+ under the keeping of a council of twelve, and in his name declared war
+ against England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick, to whom his father&rsquo;s claims had descended,
+ remained faithful to King Edward, who, to punish the rebellion of the
+ Scots, collected an army of 30,000 foot and 4,000 horse, and, with the
+ sacred standards of Durham at their head, marched them into Scotland.
+ Berwick, then a considerable merchant-town, closed her gates against him,
+ and further provoked him by the plunder of some English merchant-ships. He
+ offered terms of surrender, but these were refused; and he led his men to
+ the assault of the dyke, that was the only defence of the town. He was the
+ first to leap the dyke on his horse Bayard, and the place was won after a
+ brave resistance, sufficient to arouse the passions of the soldiery, who
+ made a most shocking massacre, without respect to age or sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The report of these horrors so shocked John Balliol, that he sent to
+ renounce his allegiance to Edward, and to defy his power. &ldquo;Felon and
+ fool!&rdquo; cried Edward, &ldquo;if he will not come to us, we must go to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So frightful ravages were carried on by the English on one side and the
+ Scots on the other, till a battle took place at Dunbar, which so utterly
+ ruined the Scots, that they were forced to make submission, and Balliol
+ sued for peace. But Edward would not treat with him as a king, and only
+ sent Anthony Beck, the Bishop of Durham, to meet him at Brechin. He was
+ forced to appear, and was declared a rebel, stripped of his crown and
+ robes, and made to stand with a white rod in his hand, confessing that he
+ had acted rebelliously, and that Edward had justly invaded his realm.
+ After this humiliation, he resigned all his rights to Scotland, declaring
+ himself worn out with the malice and fraud of the nation, which was
+ probably quite true. He was sent at first to the Tower, but afterward was
+ released, lived peaceably on his estates in France, and founded the
+ college at Oxford that bears his name and arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The misfortunes endured by this puppet did not deter the Earl of Carrick
+ from aspiring to his seat; but Edward harshly answered, &ldquo;Have I nothing to
+ do but to conquer kingdoms for you?&rdquo; and sent him away with his eldest
+ son, a third Robert Bruce, to pacify their own territories of Carrick and
+ Annandale. Edward did nothing without law enough to make him believe
+ himself in the right, and poor Balliol&rsquo;s forfeiture gave him, as he
+ imagined, the power to assume Scotland as a fief of his own. He caused
+ himself to be acknowledged as King of Scotland, destroyed the old Scottish
+ charters, and transported to Westminster the Scottish crown and sceptre,
+ together with the stone from Scone Abbey, on which, from time immemorial,
+ the Kings of Scotland had been placed when crowned and anointed. All the
+ castles were delivered up into his hands, and every noble in his dominions
+ gave him the oath of allegiance, excepting one, William, Lord Douglas, who
+ steadily refused, and was therefore carried off a prisoner to England,
+ where he remained to the day of his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward did not come in as a severe or cruel conqueror; he gave privileges
+ to the Scottish clergy, and re-instated the families of the barons killed
+ in the war. Doubtless he hoped to do great good to the wild population,
+ and bring them into the same order as the English; but the flaw in his
+ title made this impossible; the Scots regarded his soldiery as their
+ enemies and oppressors, and though the nobles had given in a
+ self-interested adhesion to the new government, they abhorred it all the
+ time, and the mutual hatred between the English garrisons and Scottish
+ inhabitants led to outrages in which neither party was free from blame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Hereward the Saxon had been stirred up against the Norman invaders, so
+ a champion arose who kept alive the memory of Scottish independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William Wallace was the younger son of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Ellerslie,
+ near Paisley, one of the lesser gentry, not sufficiently high in rank to
+ be required to take oaths to the English King. William was a youth of
+ unusual stature, noble countenance, and great personal strength and skill
+ in the use of arms, and he grew up with a violent hatred to the English
+ usurpers, which various circumstances combined to foster. While very
+ young, he had been fishing in the river Irvine, attended by a boy who
+ carried his basket, when some English soldiers, belonging to the garrison
+ of Ayr meeting him, insisted on seizing his trout. A fray took place, and
+ Wallace killed the foremost Englishman with a blow from the butt of his
+ fishing-rod, took his sword, and put the rest to flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This obliged him to fly to the hills. But in those lawless times such
+ adventures soon blew over, and, a year or two after, he was walking in the
+ market-place of Lanark, dressed in green, and with, a dagger by his side,
+ when an Englishman, coming up, insulted him on account of his gay attire,
+ and his passionate temper, thus inflamed, led to a fray, in which the
+ Englishman was killed. He then fled to the house where he was lodging, and
+ while the sheriff and his force were endeavoring to break in, the lady of
+ the house contrived his escape by a back way to a rocky glen called the
+ Crags, where he hid himself in a cave. The disappointed sheriff wreaked
+ his vengeance on the unfortunate lady, slew her, and burnt the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thenceforth Wallace was an outlaw, and the most implacable foe to the
+ English. In his wild retreat he quickly gathered round him other men
+ ill-used, or discontented, or patriotic, or lovers of the wild life which
+ he led, and at their head he not only cut off the parties sent to seize
+ him, but watched his opportunity for marauding on the English or their
+ allies. There is a horrible story that the English governor of Ayr,
+ treacherously inviting the Scottish gentry to a feast, hung them all as
+ they entered, and that Wallace revenged the slaughter with equal cruelty
+ by burning the English alive in their sleep in the very buildings where
+ the murder took place, the Barns of Ayr, as they were called. The history
+ is unauthenticated, but it is believed in the neighborhood of Ayr, and has
+ been handed down by Wallace&rsquo;s Homer, Blind Harry, whose poem on the
+ exploits of the Knight of Ellerslie was published sixty years from this
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fame of Wallace&rsquo;s prowess swelled his party, and many knights and
+ nobles began to join him. He raised his banner in the name of King John of
+ Scotland, and, with the help of another outlaw chief, Sir William Douglas,
+ pounced on the English justiciary, Ormesby, while holding his court at
+ Scone, put him to flight, and seized a large booty and many prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His forays were the more successful because the King was absent in
+ England, and the Chancellor, Hugh Cressingham, was not well agreed with
+ the lay-governor, John de Warrenne, Earl of Surrey. Many of the higher
+ nobility took his side, among them the younger Robert Bruce; but as the
+ English force began to be marshalled against him, they took flight for
+ their estates, and returned to the stronger party. It may have been that
+ they found that Wallace was not a suitable chief for more than a mere
+ partisan camp; brave as he was, he could not keep men of higher rank in
+ obedience. He lived by plunder, and horrible atrocities were constantly
+ committed by his men, especially against such English clergy as had
+ received Scottish preferment. Whenever one of these fell into their hands,
+ his sacred character could not save him; his arms were tied behind his
+ back, and he was thrown from a high bridge into a river, while the
+ merciless Scots derided his agony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Warrene and Cressingham drew together a mighty force, and marched to the
+ relief of Stirling, which Wallace had threatened. The Scots had come
+ together to the number of 40,000, but they had only 180 horse; and
+ Warrenne had 50,000 foot and 1,000 horse. The Scots were, however, in a
+ far more favorable position, encamped on the higher ground on the bank of
+ the river Forth; and Warrenne, wishing to avoid a battle, sent two friars
+ to propose terms. &ldquo;Return to your friends,&rdquo; said Wallace; &ldquo;tell them we
+ came with no peaceful intent, but determined to avenge ourselves and set
+ our country free. Let them come and attack us; we are ready to meet them
+ beard to beard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On hearing this answer, the English shouted to be led against the bold
+ rebel; but the more prudent leaders thought it folly to attempt to cross
+ the bridge, exposed as it, was to the enemy, but that a chosen body should
+ cross a ford, attack them in the flank, and clear the way. Cressingham
+ thought this policy timid. &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said he to Warrenne, &ldquo;should we protract
+ the war, and spend the King&rsquo;s money? Let us pass on, and do our duty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Warrenne weakly gave way, and the English troops began to cross the
+ bridge, the Scots retaining their post on the high ground until Sir
+ Marmaduke Twenge, an English knight, impetuously spurred up the hill, when
+ about half the army had crossed, and charged the Scottish ranks. In the
+ meantime, Wallace had sent a chosen force to march down the side of the
+ hill and cut off the troops who had crossed from the foot of the bridge,
+ and he himself, rushing down on the advancing horsemen, entirely, broke
+ them, and made a fearful slaughter of all on that side of the river,
+ seizing on the bridge, so that there was no escape. One of the knights
+ proposed to swim their horses across the river. &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said Sir Marmaduke
+ Twenge, &ldquo;drown myself, when I can cut my way through the midst of them by
+ the bridge? Never let such foul slander fall on me!&rdquo; He then set spurs to
+ his horse, and, with his nephew and armor-bearer, forced his way back to
+ his friends, across the bridge, by weight of man and horse, through the
+ far more slightly-armed Scots. Warrenne was obliged to march off, with,
+ the loss of half his army, and of Cressingham, whose corpse was found
+ lying on the plain, and was barbarously, mangled by the Scots. They cut
+ the skin into pieces, and used it for saddle-girths; even Wallace himself
+ being said to have had a sword-belt made of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This decisive victory threw the greater part of Scotland into Wallace&rsquo;s
+ hands; and though most of the great earls still held with the English, the
+ towns and castles were given up to him, and the mass of the people was
+ with him. He plundered without mercy the lands of such as would not join
+ him, and pushed his forays into England, where he frightfully ravaged
+ Cumberland and Northumberland; and from St. Luke&rsquo;s to St. Martin&rsquo;s-day all
+ was terror and dismay, not a priest remaining between Newcastle and
+ Carlisle to say mass. At last the winter drove him back, and on his return
+ he went to Hexham, a rich convent, which had been plundered on the
+ advance, but to which three of the monks had just returned, hoping the
+ danger was over. Seeing the enemy entering, they fled into a little
+ chapel; but the Scots had seen them, and, rushing on them, demanded their
+ treasures. &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said they, &ldquo;you yourselves best know where they are!&rdquo;
+ Wallace, coming in, silenced his men, and bade the priests say mass; but
+ in one moment, while he turned aside to take off his helmet, his fierce
+ soldiery snatched away the chalice from the altar, and tore off the
+ ornaments and sacred vestments. He ordered that the perpetrators should be
+ put to death, and said to the priests, &ldquo;My presence alone can secure you.
+ My men are evil-disposed. I cannot justify, I dare not punish them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On returning to Scotland, he assumed the title of Governor, and strove to
+ bring matters into a more regular state, but without success; the great
+ nobles either feared to offend the English, or would not submit to his
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1298, Edward, having freed himself from his difficulties in England and
+ France, hurried to the North to put down in person what in his eyes was
+ not patriotism, but rebellion. How violently enraged he was, was shown by
+ his speech to Sir John Marmaduke, who was sent by Anthony Beck, Bishop of
+ Durham, to ask his pleasure respecting Dirleton Castle and two other
+ fortresses to which he had laid siege. &ldquo;Tell Anthony,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that he
+ is right to be pacific when he is acting the bishop, but that, in his
+ present business, he must forget his calling. As for yourself, you are a
+ relentless soldier, and I have too often had to reprove you for too cruel
+ an exultation over the death of your enemies. But, now, return whence you
+ came, and be as relentless as you choose; you will have my thanks, not my
+ censure; and, look you, do not see my face again till those three castles
+ be razed to the ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The castles were taken and overthrown, but the difficulties of the English
+ continued to be great; the fleet was detained by contrary winds, and this
+ delay of supplies caused a famine in the camp. Edward was obliged to
+ command a retreat; but at that juncture, just as the country was so nearly
+ rescued by the wise dispositions of Wallace, two Scottish nobles, the
+ Earls of Dunbar and Angus, were led by a mean jealousy to betray him to
+ the English, disclosing the place where he was encamped in the forest of
+ Falkirk, and his intention of making a night-attack upon the English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward was greatly rejoiced at the intelligence. &ldquo;Thanks be to God,&rdquo; he
+ exclaimed, &ldquo;who has saved me from every danger! They need not come after
+ me, since I will go to meet them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He immediately put on his armor, and rode through the camp, calling on his
+ soldiers to march immediately, and at three o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon all
+ were on their way to Falkirk. They halted for the night on a heath, where
+ they lay down to sleep in their armor, with their horses picketed beside
+ them In the course of the night the King&rsquo;s horse trod upon him, breaking
+ two of his ribs; and a cry arose among those around him that he was slain,
+ and the enemy were upon them. But Edward, regardless of the pain, made the
+ alarm serve as a reveillè, mounted his horse, rallied his troops, and, as
+ it was near morning, gave orders to march. The light of the rising sun
+ showed, on the top of the opposite hill, the lances of the Scottish
+ advanced guard; but when they reached the summit, they found it deserted,
+ and in the distance could see the enemy preparing for battle, the foot
+ drawn up in four compact bodies of pikemen, the foremost rank kneeling, so
+ that the spears of those behind rested on their shoulders. &ldquo;I have brought
+ you to the ring; hop if ye can,&rdquo; was the brief exhortation of the outlawed
+ patriot to his men; and grim was the dance prepared for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward heard mass in a tent set up on the hill, and afterward held a
+ council on the manner of attack. An immediate advance was determined on,
+ and they charged the Scots with great fury. The horse, consisting of the
+ time-serving and cowardly nobility, fled without a blow, leaving Wallace
+ and his archers unsupported, to be overwhelmed by the numbers of the
+ English. Wallace, after a long resistance, was compelled to retreat into
+ the woods, with a loss of 15,000, while on the English side the slain were
+ very few.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward pushed on, carrying all before him, and wasting the country with
+ fire and sword; but, as has happened in every invasion of Scotland, famine
+ proved his chief enemy, and he was obliged to return to England, leaving
+ unsubdued all the lands north of the Forth. But his determination was
+ sternly fixed, and he made everything else give way to his Scottish wars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last stronghold which held out against him was Stirling Castle, under
+ Sir William Oliphant, who, with only one hundred and forty men, for ninety
+ days resisted with the most desperate valor; when the walls were broken
+ down, taking shelter in caverns hewn out of the rock on which their
+ fortress was founded. Edward, who led the attack, was often exposed to
+ great danger; his horse was thrown down by a stone, and his armor pierced
+ by an arrow; but he would not consent to use greater precautions, saying
+ that he fought in a just war, and Heaven would protect him. At last the
+ brave garrison were reduced to surrender, and came down from their castle
+ in a miserable, dejected state, to implore his mercy. The tenderness of
+ his nature revived as he saw brave men in such a condition. He could not
+ restrain his tears, and he received them to his favor, sending them in
+ safety to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scotland was now completely tranquil, and entirely reduced. Every noble
+ had sworn allegiance, every castle was garrisoned by English. Balliol was
+ in Normandy, Bruce in the English army, and at last, in August, 1305, the
+ brave outlaw, Sir William Wallace, was, by his former friend, Monteith,
+ betrayed into the hands of the English. He was brought to Westminster,
+ tried as a traitor to King Edward, and sentenced to die. He had never
+ sworn fealty to Edward, but this could not save him; and on the 23d of
+ August, 1305, he was dragged on a hurdle to Smithfield, and suffered the
+ frightful death that the English laws allotted to a traitor. His head was
+ placed on a pole on London Bridge, and his several limbs sent to the
+ different towns in Scotland, where they were regarded far more as relics
+ than as tokens of disgrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Edward appreciated and pardoned the gallant Scot, it would have been a
+ noble deed. But his death should not be regarded as an act of personal,
+ revenge. Wallace had disregarded many a proclamation of mercy, and had
+ carried on a most savage warfare upon the Scots who had submitted to the
+ English with every circumstance of cruelty. Edward, who believed himself
+ the rightful King, was not likely to regard him as otherwise than a
+ pertinacious bandit, with whom the law might properly take its course.
+ More mercy might have been hoped from the prince who fought hand to hand
+ with Adam de Gourdon; but ambition had greatly warped and changed Edward
+ since those days, and the fifteen years of effort to retain his usurpation
+ had hardened his whole nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wallace himself, half a robber, half a knight, has won for himself a place
+ in the affections of his countrymen, and has lived ever since in story and
+ song. To the last century it was regarded as rude to turn a loaf in the
+ presence of a Monteith, because that was the signal for the admission of
+ the soldiers who seized Wallace; and there can be little doubt that this
+ constant recollection was well deserved, since assuredly it was the spirit
+ of resistance maintained by Wallace, though unsuccessful, that lived to
+ flourish again after his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was one of those men whose self-devotion bears visible fruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXV. THE EVIL TOLL. (1294-1305.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1296. Edward I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1285. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1292. Adolf.
+ 1298. Albert I.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1294. Boniface VIII.
+ 1303. Benedict XI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Unlike the former Plantagenets, Edward I. was a thorough Englishman; his
+ schemes, both for good and evil, were entirely insular; and as he became
+ more engrossed in the Scottish war, he almost neglected his relations with
+ the Continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most wily and unscrupulous men who ever wore a crown was seated
+ on the throne of France&mdash;the fair-faced and false-hearted Philippe
+ IV., the &ldquo;pest of France,&rdquo; the oppressor of the Church, and the murderer
+ of the Templars; and eagerly did he watch to take any advantage of the
+ needs of his mighty vassal in Aquitaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward had made alliances to strengthen himself. He had married his
+ daughter Eleanor to the Count of Bar, and Margaret to the heir of Brabant,
+ and betrothed his son Edward to the only daughter of Guy Dampierre, Count
+ of Flanders, thus hoping to restrain Philippe without breaking the peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unluckily, in 1294, a sailors&rsquo; quarrel took place between the crews of an
+ English and a Norman ship upon the French coast. They had both landed to
+ replenish their stock of water, and disputed which had the right first to
+ fill their casks. In the fray, a Norman was killed, and his shipmates,
+ escaping, took their revenge by boarding another English vessel, and
+ hanging a poor, innocent Bayonne merchant from the masthead, with a dog
+ fastened to his feet. Retaliation followed upon revenge; and while the two
+ kings professed to be at peace, every ship from their ports went armed,
+ and fierce struggles took place wherever there was an encounter. Slaughter
+ and plunder fell upon the defeated, for the sailors were little better
+ than savage pirates, and were unrestrained by authority. Edward, who had a
+ right to a share in all captures made by his subjects, refused to accept
+ of any portion of these, though he did not put a stop to them. The Irish
+ and Dutch vessels took part with the English, the Genoese with the French.
+ At last, upward of two hundred French ships met at St. Mahé in Brittany,
+ and their crews rejoiced over the captures which they had obtained, and
+ held a great carousal. Eighty well-manned English vessels had, however,
+ sailed from the Cinque Ports, and, surrounding St. Mahé, sent a challenge
+ to their enemies. It was accepted; a ship was moored in the midst, as a
+ point round which the two fleets might assemble, and a hot contest took
+ place, fiercely fought upon either side; but English seamanship prevailed
+ over superior numbers, every French ship was sunk or taken, and, horrible
+ to relate, not one of their crews was spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such destruction provoked Philippe, and he summoned Edward, as Duke of
+ Aquitaine, to deliver up to him such Gascons as had taken part in the
+ battle. This Edward neglected, whereupon Philippe sent to seize the lands
+ of Perigord, and, on being repulsed by the seneschal, called on Edward to
+ appear at his court within twenty days, to answer for his misdeeds, on
+ pain of forfeiting the province of Gascony. Edward sent first the Bishop
+ of London, and afterward his brother Edmund Crouchback, to represent him.
+ Edmund&rsquo;s second wife was the mother of Philippe&rsquo;s queen, and it was
+ therefore expected that he would the more easily come to terms, especially
+ as he was commissioned to offer the hand of his royal brother to Blanche,
+ the sister of Philippe, a maiden who inherited the unusual beauty of her
+ family. Apparently all was easily arranged: Philippe promised Edmund that
+ if, as a matter of form, Gascony were put into his hands by way of
+ forfeit, it should be restored at the end of forty days on the
+ intercession of the two ladies, and Blanche should be betrothed to the
+ King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was thus arranged. But at the end of the forty days it proved that
+ what Philippe had once grasped he had no notion of releasing; and,
+ moreover, that Blanche la Belle was promised to Albert of Hapsburg! If
+ Edward chose to marry any French princess at all, he was welcome to her
+ little sister Marguerite, a child of eleven, while Edward was fifty-five.
+ The excuse offered was, that Edward, had not obeyed the summons in person,
+ and that another outrage had been perpetrated on the coast. After another
+ summons, he was adjudged to lose not only Gascony, but all Aquitaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On discovering how he had been duped, Edward&rsquo;s first impulse was to send
+ out his writs to collect his vassals to recover Gascony, chastise the
+ insolent ill faith of Philippe, and to stir up his foreign connections to
+ support him. He collected his troops at Portsmouth, hoping to augment his
+ army by a general release of prisoners, Scottish, Welsh, and malefactors
+ alike; but while he was detained seven weeks by contrary winds, all these
+ men, after taking his pay, made their escape, and either returned to their
+ countries, or marauded in the woods. A great insurrection broke out in
+ Wales, and he was forced to hasten thither, and from thence was called
+ away to quell the rising of the Scottish barons against Balliol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, it fared ill with his foreign allies. The Duke of Brabant,
+ father-in-law to his daughter Margaret, was killed in a tournament at the
+ court of her sister Eleanor; and when Eleanor&rsquo;s husband, Henri of Bar,
+ took up arms in the English cause, and marched into Champagne, he was
+ defeated, and made prisoner by the Queen of France. The poor old Count of
+ Flanders and his Countess were invited to Paris by Philippe, who insisted
+ that they should bring his godchild and namesake, the betrothed of young
+ Edward, to visit him. When they arrived, they were all thrown into the
+ prison of the Louvre, on the plea that Guy had no right to bestow his
+ daughter in marriage without permission from his suzerain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward&rsquo;s head was so full of Scotland, that he was shamefully indifferent
+ to the sufferings of his friends in his behalf. Poor Eleanor of Bar, after
+ striving hard to gain her husband&rsquo;s freedom, died of grief, after a few
+ months; and Guy of Flanders contrived to obtain his own release by
+ promising to renounce the English alliance; but Philippe would not set
+ free the poor young Philippa, whom he kept in his hands as a hostage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One cause of the King&rsquo;s neglect was his great distress for money. He had
+ learnt to have recourse to his father&rsquo;s disgraceful plea of a sham
+ Crusade, and thus, for six years, gained a tenth of the Church revenues;
+ but in 1294, requiring a further supply, he made a demand of half the
+ year&rsquo;s income of the clergy. The new Archbishop, Robert Winchelsea, was
+ gone to Rome to receive his pall; the Dean of St. Paul&rsquo;s, who was sent to
+ remonstrate with the King, died suddenly in his presence; but Edward was
+ not touched, and sent a knight to address the assembled clergy, telling
+ them that any reverend father who dared to oppose the royal will would be
+ considered to have broken the King&rsquo;s peace. In terror they yielded for
+ that time; but they sent a petition to the Pope, who, in return, granted a
+ bull forbidding any subsidies to be paid by church lands to the King
+ without his permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little did Edward reck of this decree. He knew that Boniface VIII. had his
+ hands full of his quarrels with the Romans and with Philippe le Bel, and
+ his own ambition was fast searing the conscience once so generous and
+ tender. Again he convened the clergy to grant his exactions, but
+ Archbishop Winchelsea replied that they had two lords, spiritual and
+ temporal; they owed the superior obedience to the spiritual lord, and
+ would therefore grant nothing till the Pope should have ratified the
+ demand; for which purpose they would send messengers to Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lay barons backed Edward in making a declaration of outlawry against
+ the clergy, and seizing all the ecclesiastical property, both lands and
+ treasures, except what was within churches or burying-grounds, declaring
+ that, if not redeemed by submission before Easter, all should be forfeited
+ forever. The Archbishop of York came to terms; but the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury held out, and was deprived of everything, retiring to a country
+ village, where he acted as parish priest, and lived upon the alms of the
+ parishioners. He held a synod, where excommunication was denounced on
+ those who seized church property; but the censures of the Church had lost
+ their terrors, and the clergy gradually made their peace with the King,
+ Winchelsea himself among the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laity had looked on quietly at the oppression of the clergy, and
+ indeed had borne their share of exactions; but these came at last to a
+ point beyond endurance, and Edward&rsquo;s need, and their obstinate resistance,
+ led to another step in the formation of our constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1297 he made a new alliance with Guy of Flanders, and was fitting out
+ three armies, against Scotland, Guienne, and Flanders. To raise the means,
+ he exacted five marks as a duty on each sack of wool exported to Flanders,
+ and made ruinous requisitions for wheat on the landowners. Merchants and
+ burghers, barons and clergy, took counsel together, and finding each other
+ all of one mind, resolved to make a stand against this tax on wool, which
+ was called the &ldquo;Evil Toll,&rdquo; and to establish what Magna Carta had already
+ declared, that the nation would not be taxed against its own consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King&rsquo;s brother, Edmund of Lancaster, had lately died while commanding
+ in Guienne, and Edward, meeting his vassals at Salisbury, gave the command
+ of the army, thus left without a head, to Humphrey Bohun, Earl of
+ Hereford, and Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk&mdash;the one Constable, the
+ other Marshal of England. To his great wrath, they answered that their
+ offices only bound them to attend the King&rsquo;s person in war, and that they
+ would not go. Edward swore a fierce oath that they should either go, or
+ hang. Bigod coolly repeated the same oath, that he would neither go nor
+ hang, and back to their own estates they went, and after them thirty
+ bannerets, and 1,500 knights, who, by main force, hindered the King&rsquo;s
+ officers from making any further levies on their barns and storehouses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing was left Edward, but to speak them fair. He summoned his vassals
+ to meet him in London, reconciled himself to Archbishop Winchelsea, and on
+ the 14th of July, 1297, when all were assembled at Westminster, he stood
+ forth on a platform, attended by his son, the Primate, and the Earl of
+ Warwick, and harangued the people. He told them that he grieved at the
+ burthens which he was forced to impose on them, but it was for their
+ defence; for that the Scots, Welsh, and French thirsted for their blood,
+ and it was better to lose a part, than the whole. &ldquo;I am going to risk my
+ life for your sake,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If I return, receive me; and I will make
+ you amends. If I fall, here is my son: he will reward you, if faithful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice was broken by tears; and his people, remembering what he once
+ had been rather than what he was now, broke into loud shouts of loyal
+ affection. He appointed his son as regent, and set out for Flanders, but
+ not in time to prevent poor Guy from again falling into captivity, and
+ pursued by requisitions, to which he promised to attend on his return. All
+ the nobles who held with him accompanied him, and Bohun and Bigod were
+ left to act in their own way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rode to London with a large train, lodged complaints of the illegal
+ exaction before the Exchequer, and then, going to the Guildhall, worked up
+ the citizens to be ready to assert their rights, and compel the King to
+ revoke the evil toll, and to observe the charter. They had scrupulously
+ kept within the law, and, though accompanied by so many armed followers,
+ neither murder nor pillage was permitted; and thus they obtained the
+ sympathies of the whole country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Edward of Caernarvon was but thirteen, and could only submit; and a
+ Parliament was convoked by his authority, when the present taxes were
+ repealed, the important clause was added to the Great Charter which
+ declared that no talliage or aid should thenceforth be levied without the
+ consent of the bishops, peers, burgesses, and freemen of the realm, nor
+ should any goods be taken for the King without consent of the owners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further, it was enacted that Magna Charta should be rehearsed twice a year
+ in all the cathedrals, with a sentence of excommunication on all who
+ should infringe it. The Archbishop enforced this order strictly, adding
+ another sentence of excommunication to be rehearsed in each church on
+ every Sunday against any who should beat or imprison clergymen, desiring
+ it to be done with tolling of bell and putting out of candle, because
+ these solemnities had the greater effect on the laity. This statute is a
+ sad proof how much too cheaply sacred things were held, and how habit was
+ leading even the clergy to debase them by over-frequent and frivolous use
+ of the most awful emblems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Edward and his council signed the acts, and they were sent to the
+ King for ratification, with a promise that his barons would thereupon join
+ him in Flanders, or march to Scotland, at his pleasure. He was three days
+ in coming to his resolution, but finally agreed, though it was suspected
+ that he might set aside his signature as invalid, because made in a
+ foreign country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wallace&rsquo;s proceedings in Scotland made Edward anxious to hasten thither
+ and rid himself of the French war. He therefore accepted the mediation of
+ Boniface VIII., and consented to sacrifice his unfortunate ally, Guy of
+ Flanders, whom he left in his captivity, as well as his poor young
+ daughter. Both died in the prison to which the daughter had been consigned
+ at twelve years old. The Prince of Wales, for whose sake her bloom wasted
+ in prison, was contracted to Isabelle, the daughter of her persecutor,
+ Philippe le Bel; and old King Edward himself received the hand of the
+ Princess Marguerite, now about seventeen, fair and good. Aquitaine was
+ restored, though not Gascony; but Edward only wanted to be free, that he
+ might hasten to Scotland. And, curiously enough, the outlaw Wallace,
+ whatever he did for his own land, unconsciously fought the battles of his
+ foes, the English nation; for it was his resistance that weakened Edward&rsquo;s
+ power, and made necessity extort compliance with the demands of the
+ Barons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At York, Bigod and Bohun claimed a formal ratification of the charter of
+ Westminster. He put them off by pleading the urgency of affairs in
+ Scotland, and hastened on; but when he returned, in 1299, the staunch
+ Barons again beset him, and he confirmed the charter, but added the
+ phrase, &ldquo;Saving the rights of the Crown,&rdquo; which annulled the whole force
+ of the decree. The two barons instantly went off in high displeasure, with
+ a large number of their friends; and Edward, to try the temper of the
+ people, ordered the charter to be rehearsed at St. Paul&rsquo;s Cross; but when
+ the rights of the Crown were mentioned, such a storm of hootings and
+ curses arose, that Edward, taught by the storms of his youth not to push
+ matters to extremity, summoned a new parliament, and granted the right of
+ his subjects to tax themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This right has often since been proved to be the main strength of the
+ Parliament, by preventing the King from acting against their opinion, and
+ by rendering it the interest of all classes of men to attend to the
+ proceedings of the sovereign: it has not only kept kings in check, but it
+ has saved the nobles and commonalty from sinking into that indifference to
+ public affairs which has been the bane of foreign nations. For,
+ unfortunately, the mass of men are more easily kept on the alert when
+ wealth is affected, than by any deeper or higher consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we yearly hear of Parliament granting the supplies ere the close of
+ the session, they are exercising the right first claimed at Runnymede,
+ striven for by Simon de Montfort, and won by Humphrey Bohun, who succeeded
+ through the careful self-command and forbearance which hindered him from
+ ever putting his party in the wrong by violence or transgression of the
+ laws. He should be honored as a steadfast bulwark to the freedom of his
+ country, teaching the might of steady resolution, even against the boldest
+ and ablest of all our kings. In spite of rough words, Edward and Bohun
+ respected each other, and the heir of Hereford, likewise named Humphrey,
+ married Elizabeth, the youngest surviving daughter left by good Queen
+ Eleanor. Another of Edward&rsquo;s daughters had been married to an English
+ earl. Joan of Acre, the high-spirited, wilful girl, who was born in the
+ last Crusade, had been given as a wife to her father&rsquo;s stout old comrade,
+ Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester. He died when she was only
+ twenty-three, and before the end of a year she secretly married her
+ squire, Ralph de Monthermer, and her father only discovered the union when
+ he had promised her to the Count of Savoy. Monthermer was imprisoned; but
+ Edward, always a fond father, listened to Joan&rsquo;s pleading, that, as an
+ Earl could ennoble a woman of mean birth, it was hard that she might not
+ raise a gallant youth to rank. Ralph was released, and bore for the rest
+ of his life the title of Earl of Gloucester, which properly belonged only
+ to Joan&rsquo;s young son, Gilbert. Joan was a pleasure-loving lady, expensive
+ in her habits, and neglectful of her children; but her father&rsquo;s indulgence
+ for her never failed: he lent her money, pardoned her faults, and took on
+ himself the education of her son Gilbert, who was the companion of his own
+ two young sons by his second marriage, Thomas of Brotherton and Edmund of
+ Woodstock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their mother, Margaret of France, was a fair and gentle lady, who lived on
+ the best terms with her stepdaughters, many of whom were her elders; and
+ she followed the King on his campaigns, as her predecessor Eleanor had
+ done. Mary, the princess who had taken the veil, was almost always with
+ her, and contrived to spend a far larger income than any of her sisters,
+ though without the same excuse of royal apparel; but she was luxurious in
+ diet, fond of pomp and display; never moving without twenty-four horses,
+ and so devoted to amusement that she lost large sums at dice. She must
+ have been an unedifying abbess at Ambresbury, though not devoid of
+ kindness of heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archbishop Winchelsea held a synod at Mertoun in 1305, where various
+ decrees were made respecting the books and furniture which each parish was
+ bound to provide for the Divine service. The books were to be &ldquo;a legend&rdquo;
+ containing the lessons for reading, with others containing the Psalms and
+ Services. The vestments were &ldquo;two copes, a chasuble, a dalmatic, three
+ surplices, and a frontal for the altar.&rdquo; And, besides these, a chalice of
+ silver, a pyx of ivory or silver, a censer, two crosses, a font with lock
+ and key, a vessel for holy water, a great candlestick, and a lantern and
+ bell, which were carried before the Host when taken to the dying, a board
+ with a picture to receive the kiss of peace, and all the images of the
+ Church. The nave, then as now, was the charge of the parish; the chancel,
+ of the rector.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This synod was Archbishop Winchelsea&rsquo;s last act before the King took
+ vengeance on him for his past resistance. His friend and supporter,
+ Boniface VIII., was dead, harassed to death by the persecutions of
+ Philippe IV.; and Clement V., the new Pope, was a miserable time-server,
+ raised to the papal chair by the machinations of the French King, and
+ ready to serve as the tool of any injustice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward disliked the Archbishop for having withstood him in the matter of
+ the tithe, as well as for having cited him in the name of the Pope to
+ leave Scotland in peace. The King now induced Clement to summon him to
+ answer for insubordination. Winchelsea was very unwilling to go to Rome;
+ but Edward seized his temporalities, banished eighty monks for giving him
+ support, and finally exiled him. He died in indigence at Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a prelate of the same busy class as Langton, not fulfilling the
+ highest standard of his sacred office, but spirited, uncompromising, and
+ an ardent though unsuccessful champion of the rights of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Langton be honored for his part in Magna Charta, Winchelsea merits a
+ place by his side, for it was the resistance of his party to the &ldquo;Evil
+ Toll&rdquo; that placed taxation in the power of the English nation, and in the
+ wondrous ways of Providence caused the Scottish and French wars to work
+ for the good of our constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXVI. ROBERT THE BRUCE (1305-1308.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1285 Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1298. Albert I.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ 1305. Clement V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The state of Scotland had, ever since the death of the good King
+ Alexander, been such that even honest men could scarcely retain their
+ integrity, nor see with whom to hold. The realm had been seized by a
+ foreign power, with a perplexing show of justice, the rightful King had
+ been first set up and then put down by external force, and the only
+ authority predominant in the land was unacknowledged by the heart of any,
+ though terror had obtained submission from the lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strict justice which was loved and honored in orderly England, was
+ loathed in barbarous Scotland. It would have been hated from a native
+ sovereign; how much more so from a conqueror, and, above all, from a
+ hostile race, exasperated by resistance! Whether Edward I. were an
+ intentional tyrant or not, his deputies in Scotland were harsh rulers, and
+ the troops scattered throughout the castles in the kingdom used such cruel
+ license and exaction as could not but make the yoke intolerable, and the
+ enmity irreconcilable, especially in a race who never forgot nor forgave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The higher nobility were in a most difficult situation, since to them it
+ fell to judge between the contending parties, and to act for themselves.
+ Few preserved either consistency or good faith; they wavered between fear
+ of Edward and love of independence; and among the lowland baronage there
+ seems to have been only William Douglas, of Douglasdale, who never
+ committed himself by taking oaths of fealty to the English king. Some
+ families, who were vassals at once of the English and Scottish crowns,
+ were in still greater straits; and among these there was the line of
+ Bruce. Robert de Brus had come from Normandy with William the Conqueror,
+ and obtained from him large grants in Yorkshire, as well as the lordship
+ of Annandale from one of the Scottish kings; and thus a Bruce stood
+ between both parties, and strove to mediate at the battle of the Standard.
+ His grandson married Isabel of Huntingdon, the daughter of the crusader,
+ David of Scotland, and thus acquired still larger estates and influence in
+ both countries. His son Robert made another English marriage with Isabel
+ de Clare, daughter of the Earl of Gloucester. The eldest son, Robert
+ Bruce, had gone as a crusader to Palestine, in company with his friend
+ Adam de Kilcontack, who was Earl of Carrick in right of his wife Martha.
+ Kilcontack died at the siege of Acre, and Bruce, returning, married the
+ young countess, and had a large family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were three Robert Bruces living at the time of the judgment at
+ Norham&mdash;the father, Lord of Annandale; the son, Earl of Carrick; and
+ the grandson, still a child. As he grew up, he was sent to serve in the
+ English army, and for some time did so without apparent misgivings; and
+ the connection was drawn closer by his marriage with Joan de Valence, one
+ of the cousins of Edward I. In order to secure a part of the property at
+ all events, the father gave up his Scottish fiefs to his son, and returned
+ to England, there to live in unbroken allegiance to Edward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Balliol was driven to declare against Edward, he confiscated the
+ estates of all who adhered to the English, and gave Annandale to John
+ Comyn of Badenoch, the son of his sister Marjory. The Red Comyn, as he was
+ called, seized Bruce&rsquo;s Castle of Lochmaben, and sowed seeds of deadly
+ hatred; but on the downfall of Balliol he shared the captivity of the
+ unfortunate &ldquo;toom tabard,&rdquo; and did not return to Scotland for some years.
+ When Wallace&rsquo;s revolt broke out, young Bruce, who was only twenty-three,
+ at first followed his instinct of obedience to Edward, and took an oath to
+ support him against all his enemies, and in pursuance of it ravaged the
+ lands of the brave Douglas, and carried his wife and children into
+ captivity. Some sense either of ambition or patriotism, however, stirred
+ within him, and assembling his men of Annandale, he told them that he had
+ taken a foolish oath, but that he deeply repented of it, and would be
+ absolved from it, inviting them to join him in maintaining the cause of
+ their country. They took alarm, and all disappeared in the course of the
+ night, and he joined the patriots alone, but not with all his heart, for
+ he soon made his peace with Edward, and gave his only child, Marjory, as a
+ hostage. Thenceforward he vacillated, sometimes inclining to the King,
+ sometimes to the Scottish party, and apparently endeavoring to discover
+ how far he could be secure of the Scots giving him their crown, provided
+ he took their part. He showed a lamentable contempt for his word; for, on
+ his father&rsquo;s death, he again did homage, and swore fealty to Edward, both
+ for his lands in England and Scotland, and at the same time he was making
+ secret treaties with Lamberton, Bishop of St. Andrew&rsquo;s, and with Comyn.
+ Balliol having resigned the crown, and being in prison with all his
+ family, was considered to be set aside, and Bruce proposed to Comyn, that
+ whichever of them should claim the kingdom, should purchase the support of
+ the other by resigning to him his own inheritance. Comyn appeared to
+ agree, and, to prevent suspicion, Bruce attended the court in London; but
+ while he was there, Comyn wrote to betray his proposal to Edward, who took
+ measures for seizing the conspirator; but these becoming known to his
+ cousin, young Gilbert de Clare, the King&rsquo;s grandson, he contrived to give
+ Bruce warning by sending him a pair of spurs and some pieces of gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce understood the hint, and galloped off with his horse&rsquo;s shoes turned
+ backward, so as to baffle pursuit. He came safely, on the fifth day, to
+ his own border castle of Lochmaben, where he found his brother Edward.
+ Keeping watch, they seized a messenger on his way to the English court,
+ bearing letters from Comyn, which explained to Bruce what the peril had
+ been, and who the traitor. Still he was forced to dissemble, and went as
+ usual to the court of the English justiciary at Dumfries, which he was
+ bound to attend. Comyn was likewise present, and there were deadly glances
+ between the two. Bruce called Comyn to hold a private interview with him
+ in the church of the Minorite friars, and, while their words waxed fierce,
+ Bruce reproached Comyn with treachery. The answer was, &ldquo;You lie!&rdquo; and
+ Bruce, enraged, struck with his dagger at his enemy; then, horror-struck
+ at seeing him fall, rushed out of the church, and called, &ldquo;To horse!&rdquo; Two
+ of his attendants, Lindsay and Kirkpatrick, struck by his pale looks and
+ wild eyes, asked what had befallen him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I have slain the Red Comyn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You doubt!&rdquo; cried Kirkpatrick; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll mak sicker&rdquo;&mdash;or sure: and, so
+ saying, hurried back into the church, and slew not only the wounded man,
+ but his uncle, Sir Robert Comyn, who tried to defend him. The &ldquo;bloody
+ dirk&rdquo; and the words &ldquo;mak sicker&rdquo; were adopted as crest and motto by the
+ Kirkpatrick family. Strange instance of barbarism, that the dastardly,
+ sacrilegious murder of a helpless man on the steps of the altar should be
+ regarded as an achievement worthy of pride!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the fruits of that deed were the deliverance of Scotland. The man
+ who had hitherto wavered, cast about by circumstances, and swayed by
+ family interest, assumed a new character, and became the patient,
+ undaunted champion of his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In utter desperation, Bruce&rsquo;s first measure was to defend himself against
+ the English justiciaries, and, rallying his friends, he took possession of
+ the castle of Dumfries, where they were holding their court in a hall.
+ They barricaded themselves within, but the fierce Scots set fire to the
+ doors, and they surrendered, whereupon Bruce permitted them to depart in
+ safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing was left for Bruce, blood-stained and branded with treachery and
+ impiety, but to set up his standard and fight to the last; since he had
+ offended too deeply ever to find mercy, and the lot of Davydd or of
+ Wallace were samples of what he had to expect. He was handsome, well
+ educated, of great personal strength and prowess, and frank, winning
+ address, and the Scots had suffered so much under their oppressors, that
+ they were ready to rally round the first leader who offered himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Going to his castle of Lochmaben, he mustered his adherents. They amounted
+ only to three bishops, two earls, and fourteen barons, with their
+ followers, and his own four brothers, Edward, Nigel, Thomas, and
+ Alexander. With his little force he get out for Scone, where the Scottish
+ kings were crowned, and on his way met a young knight, riding alone, but
+ well mounted and well armed. As he raised his visor to do his homage to
+ the King Robert of Scotland, and showed his dark hair and complexion, he
+ was recognized as James, the eldest son of that William, Baron Douglas, of
+ Douglasdale, who alone had withheld his allegiance from Edward, and whose
+ lands, after Bruce himself had ravaged them, had been given to the English
+ Lord Clifford. The youth had been educated in France, and brought the
+ graces of a gentler school of chivalry when he cast in his lot with his
+ ill-used country men. Thus began the lifelong friendship of Bruce and
+ &ldquo;good Sir James Douglas,&rdquo; who was, &ldquo;wise, wight, and worthy,&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Was never over-glad in winning, nor over-sad in tyneing.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ From Scone, the crown, royal stone, and robes had been carried off to
+ England; and the Earl of Fife, who, since the days of Macduff, had had the
+ right of placing the King upon his throne, was in the hands of the
+ English: but the Bishop of Glasgow provided rich raiment; a little circlet
+ of gold was borrowed of an English goldsmith; and Isabel, Countess of
+ Buchan, the sister of the Earl of Fife, rode to Scone, bringing her
+ husband&rsquo;s war-horses, and herself enthroned King Robert. The coronation
+ took place on the Feast of the Annunciation, 1306, and thus began a
+ dynasty whose fate was remarkably similar to the sacrilege and murder in
+ which their rise was founded. Never was royal line of whom it could so
+ truly be said, that the sword never departed from them, and there was not
+ an old man in their house for ever. High endowments and honest purposes
+ could not redeem them, and Scotland never rested nor was purified from
+ deadly hate and the shedding of innocent blood till the last of them was
+ dying, a childless exile, and her sceptre was in the hands of that power
+ against which Bruce arose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of Brace&rsquo;s coronation filled Edward I. with rage. Fourteen years&rsquo;
+ work, at the cost of honor, mercy, and the love of his people, all was
+ undone, and the spirit of independence still uncrushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward regarded Bruce as so sacrilegious a traitor, that a war with him
+ was almost sacred; he swore to revenge Red Comyn&rsquo;s death, and prepared for
+ the war in the most solemn manner. His son Edward was in his 22d year, and
+ had not yet been knighted, and the King convoked all the young nobles to
+ share in the solemnity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Whitsun-eve three hundred tents were erected in the Temple gardens, and
+ in each was a young esquire of noble blood, clad in white linen and
+ scarlet cloth, from the King&rsquo;s own wardrobe. Around the circular church of
+ the Temple they watched their armor, and in the early morning the Prince
+ received knighthood in private from the hands of his father, who had
+ become too unwell to encounter the whole fatigue of the day. The Prince
+ conferred the order on his companions, and a magnificent banquet took
+ place in Westminster Hall, where the old King himself presided. In the
+ midst a golden net was brought in containing two swans, the emblems of
+ constancy and truth; and laying his hand on these, the King vowed that he
+ would never sleep two nights in the same place till he should have
+ chastised the Scots, and that he then would embark for Palestine, and die
+ in the holy war. All the young knights made the same vow; and Edward made
+ them swear that, if he should die in the course of the war, they would
+ keep his body above ground till the conquest should be completed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Clement V. had visited Bruce&rsquo;s crime with
+ excommunication; and though the primate, Lamberton, would not receive the
+ letters bearing the sentence, it was less easy to be inattentive to the
+ enormous force that Edward I. had despatched under his viceroy, Aymar de
+ Valence, Earl of Pembroke, while he followed with mind only bent on
+ revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce ravaged Galloway, and marching on Perth, where De Valence was in
+ garrison, challenged him to come out to battle. Aymar answered that it was
+ too late in the day, and he must wait till morning; and the Scots settled
+ themselves in the wood of Methven, where they were cooking their suppers,
+ when Valence ungenerously took them by surprise, falling on them with a
+ far superior force. Robert was on the alert, and killed Aymar&rsquo;s horse; but
+ three times he was himself unhorsed: and once Philippe Mowbray was crying
+ out that he had the new-made King, when Christopher Seton came to the
+ rescue, and killed the Englishman. Robert, with about five hundred men,
+ retreated safely into the rugged country of Athol; but he lost many of his
+ best friends, who were slain or made prisoners, the latter being for the
+ most part hung as rebels, except his sister&rsquo;s son, Thomas Randolph, who
+ made his peace by renouncing his uncle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King Edward had advanced as far as Carlisle. But he was now in his 67th
+ year, and though his blue eye was not dim, nor his tall form bent, age was
+ beginning to tell on him, and he was detained by sickness. His armies
+ advanced, and while their cruelties shocked even his stern heart, he set
+ them a fatal example by the unsparing manner in which he ordered the
+ execution of all whom he considered as accomplices in rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King and his small band of followers lived a wild, outlaw life, in the
+ hills, hunting and fishing; and his English wife, Joan de Valence, with
+ his two sisters, Mary and Christian, and the Countess of Buchan, came,
+ under the escort of young Nigel Bruce, to join them. A few weeks ensued in
+ the wilds of Bredalbane which had all the grace of &ldquo;As You Like It.&rdquo; The
+ Queen and ladies were lodged in bowers of the branches of trees, slept on
+ the skins of deer and roe, and the King and his young knights hunted,
+ fished, or gathered the cranberry or the whortleberry for their food;
+ while the French courtliness of James Douglas, and the gracious beauty of
+ young Nigel, threw a romance over the whole of the sufferings so
+ faithfully and affectionately endured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But advancing autumn forced them to think of providing shelter, and as
+ they advanced toward the Tay, they came into the country of John
+ Macdougal, Lord of Lorn, a son-in-law of the Red Comyn, and therefore at
+ deadly feud with the Bruces. He collected his Highland vassals, and set
+ upon the little band in a narrow pass between a lake and a precipice,
+ where they could not use their horses: and the Highlanders did dreadful
+ execution with their Lochaber axes; James Douglas was wounded, and so many
+ of the horses destroyed, that Bruce ordered a retreat, and set himself to
+ cover it, almost alone. Lorn himself was reminded of the heroes of
+ Highland romance, as he saw the knightly figure riding calmly along the
+ shore of the lake, guarding his flying army by the might of his presence,
+ and the Archdeacon of Aberdeen found a simile for him in the romances of
+ Alexander; but three men named M&rsquo;Androsser, a father and two sons, all of
+ great strength, sprang forward, vowing to slay the champion, or make him
+ prisoner. One seized his rein, and at the same moment Bruce&rsquo;s sword
+ sheared off the detaining hand, but not before the other brother had
+ grasped his leg to hurl him from the saddle. With a touch of the spur the
+ horse leaped forward, and as the man fell, his head was cleft by the
+ King&rsquo;s sword. The grapple with the father was more severe; he grasped the
+ King&rsquo;s mantle, and when Bruce dashed out his brains with his mace, the
+ death-clutch was so fast, that Bruce was forced to undo the brooch at his
+ throat to free himself from the dead man. The brooch was brought as a
+ trophy to Lorn, whose party could not help breaking out into expressions
+ of admiration, which began to anger him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems to give you pleasure,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to see such havoc made among
+ us.&rdquo; &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; answered one; &ldquo;but be he friend or foe who achieves high
+ deeds of knighthood, men should do faithful witness to his valor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the King had safely conducted his friends from this danger, he
+ decided that the ladies should be placed in Kildrummie Castle, in Mar,
+ under the keeping of young Nigel, while his followers dispersed for the
+ winter, and he would shelter in the Hebrides. It was a sad and long
+ parting, for Kildrummie Castle was soon taken, and Edward sternly
+ condemned Nigel to be hung, in spite of his youth and innocence; and
+ Christopher Seton, the King&rsquo;s dearest friend, was soon after taken, and
+ shared the same fate. The bishops were carried in chains to England, and
+ Queen Joan also was sent home as a prisoner with her little daughter
+ Marjory. Mary Bruce and Isabel of Buchan were still more harshly treated,
+ being each shut up in an open cage of latticed wood, exposed to the
+ weather and to the public gaze, the one at Berwick, the other at Roxburgh
+ Castle. Christian had the better fate of being placed in a convent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Bruce and his few friends had wandered on to the banks of
+ Loch Lomond, where they could only find one leaky boat, unable to hold
+ more than three. Bruce, Douglas, and one other were the first to cross,
+ and the third then rowed back for another freight, while throughout this
+ tedious waiting the King made his friends forget their troubles by
+ reciting poems and tales of chivalry. He spent part of the winter in
+ Kentire, and the rest at the little island of Rachrin, so entirely lost to
+ the knowledge of his enemies, that derisive proclamation was made for
+ Robert Bruce, lost, stolen, or strayed. The Pope&rsquo;s legate solemnly
+ excommunicated him at Carlisle, with bell, book, and candle; and Annandale
+ was given to the Earl of Hereford, and Carrick to Henry Percy, whilst the
+ executions of his relatives and adherents were both savage and cruel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was while depressed by such dreadful tidings that Bruce, as he lay on
+ his bed at Rachrin, drew counsel and encouragement from the persevering
+ spider, resolved to stake his fortunes on another cast, and, if
+ unsuccessful, to die as a warrior in the Holy Land. The spring of 1307 was
+ coming on, and he had found a friend in Christina, the Lady of the Isles,
+ who furnished him with some vessels, in which Douglas descended upon the
+ Isle of Arran, and surprised Brodick Castle, which was full of supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce was not long in following them, and, landing secretly, blew his
+ bugle horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The King!&rdquo; cried James Douglas; &ldquo;I know his manner of blowing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The King!&rdquo; cried Robert Boyd; &ldquo;let us make speed to join him!&rdquo;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce had brought with him thirty-three galleys, and, meditating a landing
+ in his own county of Carrick, just opposite, he sent a trusty friend,
+ named Cuthbert, to feel his way; agreeing that, if he found the people
+ favorably disposed, he should light a fire as a signal on Turnberry Head.
+ The flame burst out at night, and Bruce and his little band embarked; but,
+ on landing, he found no welcome on the shore, only Cuthbert, who knelt in
+ dismay to assure the King that he knew not what hand had kindled the
+ blaze; it was none of his, for the people were terror-stricken, Turnberry
+ Castle was full of English, and he feared that it was the work of
+ treachery. Nor has that strange beacon ever been accounted for; it is
+ still believed to have been lit by no mortal hand, and the spot where it
+ shone forth is called the Bogle&rsquo;s Brae. Whether meteor or watch-fire, it
+ lit the way to Robert Bruce&rsquo;s throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took counsel whether to return, or not; but his fiery brother, Edward,
+ vowed that, for his part, he would never return to the sea, but would seek
+ his adventures by land, and Bruce decided on being led by his strange
+ destiny. Percy&rsquo;s horses and men were quartered in the villages round, and
+ falling on them by surprise, he made a rich booty, and drove the remainder
+ to take refuge in the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A lady of Bruce&rsquo;s kindred brought him forty men and a supply of money and
+ provisions, but, on the other hand, she told him the sad news of the loss
+ of Kildrummie and the death of Nigel; and nearly at the same time, his two
+ youngest brothers, who had been to collect forces in Ireland, were met as
+ they landed by the Macdowalls of Galloway, routed, wounded, and made
+ prisoners. They were taken to King Edward at Carlisle, and at once hanged
+ without mercy. Bruce vowed a deadly vengeance, but he was again put to
+ dreadful straits. He had four hundred men with him at Ammock, in Ayrshire,
+ when Aymar de Valence and John of Lorn pursued him with eight hundred
+ Highlanders and men-at-arms, setting on his traces a bloodhound, once a
+ favorite of his own, and whose instinct they basely employed against his
+ master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce, hoping to confuse them, divided his followers into three bands,
+ appointing them a place of meeting; but the hound was not to be thus
+ baffled, and followed up his master&rsquo;s footsteps. Again the royal party
+ broke up, the King keeping with him only his foster-brother; but again the
+ hound singled out his traces, and followed him closely. Lorn sent on five
+ of his fleetest Highlanders to outstrip the dog, believing them able to
+ cope with the two whose footmarks he saw. Bruce soon saw them dashing
+ alter him, and asked his foster-brother, &ldquo;What aid wilt them make?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The best I can,&rdquo; he said; and the King undertook to deal with three,
+ leaving the other two to his foster-brother; but he had to turn aside from
+ his own combat to rescue his companion, and four out of the five fell by
+ his hand; yet he thanked his foster-brother for his aid in the encounter.
+ The baying of the hound came near enough to be heard, revealing why the
+ enemy had so well distinguished his tread: and Bruce, who had been sitting
+ under a tree, spent with fatigue, sprang up, exclaiming that he had heard
+ that to wade a bow-shot through a stream would make any dog lose scent,
+ and he would put it to proof by walking down the little stream that
+ crossed the wood. This device succeeded, the running water effaced the
+ scent, the hound was at fault, and Lorn gave up the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still the hunted pair were in evil case; they had lost their way, and were
+ spent with fatigue, and they could not extricate themselves from the
+ forest. By and by they met three wild, vagabond-looking men coming with
+ swords and axes, and one with a sheep thrown over his shoulders. The King
+ accosted them, and asked whither they were bound. They said they sought
+ Robert Bruce, since, wherever he was, there would be fighting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I will take you to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this they changed countenance, so that he suspected them, and insisted
+ that they should walk on before him in front, without the two parties
+ mingling together. At nightfall they came to an empty shed, where they
+ killed the sheep; but Bruce, still on his guard, chose to have a separate
+ fire, and to eat and sleep apart beside it, himself and his foster-brother
+ taking turns to watch. The foster-brother, heavy and exhausted, dropped
+ off to sleep on his watch, and almost at the same moment the three robbers
+ fell upon them. Bruce, who slept lightly, was on the alert in a moment,
+ and slew the whole three, but not in time to save his foster-brother, who
+ died under a blow from the marauders. The King then went mournfully on his
+ way to the place of rendezvous, and by and by came to a farm, where he was
+ welcomed by a loyal goodwife, who declared that she wished well to all
+ travellers for the sake of one&mdash;King Robert. Here he was joined by
+ one hundred and fifty men, with his brother Edward, and James Douglas; and
+ the first remedy thought of for all their fatigues was to fall on their
+ pursuers, who were carousing in the villages. Attacking them suddenly,
+ they inflicted far more injury than had been suffered through this day of
+ pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce was gathering men so fast, that he ventured to give battle to Aymar
+ de Valence at London Hill, and defeated him chiefly by using the long
+ spears of the Scottish infantry against the horse of the English. Aymar
+ went to explain the state of affairs to King Edward at Carlisle. Such
+ tidings lashed the old monarch to more vehement action; he prepared to set
+ forth at once against the enemy; but it was not to be. Wars were over with
+ him forever. The sudden death of his daughter, Joan, strongly affected
+ him, and at only one day&rsquo;s march from Carlisle he became so ill, that he
+ was forced to rest at Burgh on the Sands, where he speedily declined. His
+ last injunctions to his son were, to be kind to his little brothers, and
+ to maintain three hundred knights for three years in the Holy Land. The
+ report went, that he further desired that his flesh might be boiled off
+ his bones, and these wrapped in a bull&rsquo;s hide to serve as a standard to
+ the army; but Edward&rsquo;s hatred never was so mad as this would have been,
+ and there is no reason to believe in so absurd a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could perhaps be found no more appropriate monument than that in
+ Westminster Abbey, contrasting, as it does, its stern simplicity with the
+ gorgeous grace of his father&rsquo;s inlaid shrine, and typifying well the whole
+ story of the fallen though still devout crusader&mdash;the dark-gray slab
+ of Purbeck marble, with the inscription:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Edwardus Primus. Malleus Scotorum, 1308. Pactum Serva.
+ Edward the First. The Hammer of the Scots. Keep covenants.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXVII. THE VICTIM OF BLACKLOW HILL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1307. Edward II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1385. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1308. Henry VII.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ 1305. Clement V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The foolishness of the people&rdquo; is a title that might be given to many a
+ son of a wise father. The very energy and prudence of the parent,
+ especially when employed on ambitious or worldly objects, seems to cause
+ distaste, and even opposition, in the youth on whom his father&rsquo;s pursuits
+ have been prematurely forced. Seeing the evil, and weary of the good, it
+ often requires a strong sense of duty to prevent him from flying to the
+ contrary extreme, or from becoming wayward, indifferent, and dissipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has been the history of many an heir-apparent, and of none more
+ decidedly than of Edward of Carnarvon. The Plantagenet weakness, instead
+ of the stern strength of the house of Anjou, had descended to him; and
+ though he had what Fuller calls &ldquo;a handsome man-case,&rdquo; his fair and
+ beautiful face was devoid of the resolute and fiery expression of his
+ father, and showed somewhat of the inanity of regular features, without a
+ spirit to illuminate them. Gentle, fond of music, dancing, and every kind
+ of sport, he had little turn for state affairs; and like his grandfather,
+ Henry III., but with more constancy, he clung to any one who had been able
+ to gain his affections, and had neither will nor judgment save that of the
+ friend who had won his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His first friend&mdash;and it was a friendship till death&mdash;was Piers
+ Gaveston, the son of a knight of Guienne. Piers was a few years older than
+ the Prince, and so graceful, handsome, ready of tongue, and complete in
+ every courtly accomplishment, that Edward I. highly approved of him as his
+ son&rsquo;s companion in early boyhood; and Piers shared in the education of the
+ young Prince of Wales and of his favorite sister, Elizabeth. Edward I. was
+ a fond father, and granted his son&rsquo;s friend various distinguished marks of
+ favor, among others the wardship of Roger, the son and heir of the
+ deceased Edmund Mortimer, warden of the Marches of Wales. Whatever were
+ the intentions of Gaveston, Roger Mortimer did little credit to his
+ education. The guardian had a license to use his ward&rsquo;s property like his
+ own till his majority, in order that he might levy the retainers for the
+ King&rsquo;s service, and he obtained a handsome gratuity from the relatives of
+ the lady to whom he gave the youth in marriage, and this, probably, was
+ the extent of the obligations to which Gaveston considered himself as
+ bound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both he and his Prince were strongly sensitive to all that was tasteful
+ and beautiful; they were profuse in their expenditure in dress, in
+ ornament, and in all kinds of elegances, and delighted in magnificent
+ entertainments. They gave one in the Tower of London to the princesses, on
+ which occasion an immense expenditure was incurred, when the Prince of
+ Wales was only fifteen; and his presents were always on the grandest scale
+ to his sisters, who seem to have loved him as sisters love an only
+ brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by, however, generosity became profusion, and love of pleasure ran
+ into dissipation. Grave men grew uneasy at the idle levity of the Prince,
+ and were seriously offended by the gibes and jests in which the tongue of
+ Gaveston abounded, and at which he was always ready to laugh. In 1305, the
+ Prince made application to Walter Langley, Bishop of Litchfield, the
+ King&rsquo;s treasurer, to supply him with money, but was refused, and spoke
+ improperly in his anger. It is even said that he joined Gaveston in the
+ wild frolic of breaking into Langley&rsquo;s park, and stealing his deer. At any
+ rate, at Midhurst, on the 13th of June, the Bishop seriously reproved him
+ for his idle life and love of low company; and the Prince replied with
+ such angry words, that the King, in extreme displeasure, sent him in a
+ sort of captivity to Windsor Castle, with only two servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All his sisters rose up to take their brother&rsquo;s part, and assure him of
+ their sympathy. The eager, high-spirited Joan, Countess of Gloucester,
+ sent him her seal, that he might procure whatever he pleased at her cost;
+ and Elizabeth, who was married to Humphrey de Bohun, the great Earl of
+ Hereford, wrote a letter of warm indignation, to which he replied by
+ begging her not to believe anything, save that his father was acting quite
+ rightly by him; but a few weeks after, he wrote to beg her to intercede
+ that his &ldquo;two valets,&rdquo; Gilbert de Clare and Perot de Gaveston, &ldquo;might be
+ restored to him, as they would alleviate much of his anguish.&rdquo; He
+ addressed a letter with the like petition to his stepmother, Queen
+ Margaret, and continued to evince his submission by refusing his sister
+ Mary&rsquo;s invitations to visit her at her convent at Ambresbury. At the
+ meeting of parliament, Edward met his father again, and received his
+ forgiveness. All went well for some time, and he gracefully played his
+ part in the pageantry of his knighthood and the vow of the Swans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston still continued about his person, and accompanied him to the
+ north of England. At the parliament of Carlisle, in 1307, the Prince
+ besought his father to grant his friend the earldom of Cornwall, the
+ richest appanage in the kingdom, just now vacant by the death of his
+ cousin, Edmund d&rsquo;Almaine, son of the King of the Romans. Whether this
+ presumptuous request opened the King&rsquo;s eyes to the inordinate power that
+ Gaveston exercised over his son, or whether he was exasperated against him
+ by the complaints of the nobles, his reply was, to decree that, after a
+ tournament fixed for the 9th of April, Gaveston must quit the kingdom
+ forever; and he further required an oath from both the friends, that they
+ would never meet, again, even after his death. Oaths were lightly taken in
+ those days, and neither of the gay youths was likely to resist the will of
+ the stern old monarch; so the pledge was taken, and the Prince of Wales
+ remained lonely and dispirited, while Piers hovered on the outskirts of
+ the English dominions, watching for tidings that could hardly be long in
+ coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much did Edward I. dread his influence, that, on his deathbed, he
+ obliged his son to renew his abjuration of Gaveston&rsquo;s company, and laid
+ him under his paternal malediction should he attempt to recall him. It
+ does not appear that Gaveston waited for a summons. He hurried to present
+ himself before his royal friend, who had, in pursuance of his father&rsquo;s
+ orders, advanced as far as Cumnock, in Ayrshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both had bitterly to rue their broken faith, and heavily did the father&rsquo;s
+ curse weigh upon them; but at first there was nothing but transport in
+ their meeting. The merry Piers renewed his jests and gayeties; he set
+ himself to devise frolics and pageantries for his young master, and
+ speedily persuaded him to cease from the toils of war in dreary Scotland,
+ and turn his face homeward to the more congenial delights of his
+ coronation, and his marriage with the fairest maiden in Europe. To have
+ made peace with Bruce because the war was an unjust aggression, would have
+ been noble; but it was base neither to fight nor to treat, and to leave
+ unsupported the brave men who held castles in his name in the heart of the
+ enemy&rsquo;s country. But Edward was only twenty-two, Gaveston little older,
+ and sport was their thought, instead of honor or principle. Piers even
+ mocked at the last commands of the great Edward, and not only persuaded
+ the new King to let the funeral take place without waiting for the
+ conquest of Scotland, but to bestow on him even the bequest set apart for
+ the maintenance of the knights in Palestine. At Dumfries, on his first
+ arrival, the coveted earldom of Cornwall was granted to him; and, on his
+ return, he was married to the King&rsquo;s niece, Margaret de Clare, daughter to
+ Joan of Acre. He held his head higher than ever, and showed great
+ discourtesy to the nobility. He had announced a tournament at Wallingford
+ in honor of his wedding, and hearing that a party of knights were coming
+ to the assistance of the barons who had accepted his encounter, he sallied
+ out privately with his followers, and attacked and dispersed the allies,
+ so as to have the advantage in his own hands in the melée. Such a
+ dishonorable trick was never forgotten, though probably the root was
+ chiefly vanity, which seems to have been the origin of all his crimes, and
+ of his ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chancellor and all the late King&rsquo;s tried ministers were displaced, and
+ some, among whom was the good Bishop of Litchfield, were imprisoned for
+ two years. Gaveston, without any regular appointment, took the great seal
+ into his own keeping, and set it to charters which he filled up after his
+ fancy. In the meantime, the King set off for France, to celebrate his
+ marriage with Isabel, the daughter of Philippe le Bel, the princess for
+ whose sake the Flemish maiden was pining to death in captivity. The seal
+ of this most wretched of unions was, that Philippe took this opportunity
+ of persuading the gentle, reluctant Edward II, to withdraw his protection
+ from the Templars in his dominions, and give them up to the horrible
+ cruelty and rapacity of their exterminator. Isabel&rsquo;s dowry was furnished
+ from their spoils. The wedding took place on St. Paul&rsquo;s Day, 1308, in the
+ presence of four kings and queens, and the festivities lasted a fortnight;
+ after which the young bride and bridegroom set off on their return to
+ Dover, where Edward&rsquo;s favorite sister, Elizabeth, was already come to
+ greet the little Queen, a beautiful girl of thirteen, proud,
+ high-spirited, and exacting, very unwilling to be treated as a child. Her
+ two uncles came with her, and a splendid train of nobles; and two days
+ after their landing, Gaveston arrived at Dover, when, at first sight of
+ him, Edward rushed into his arms, calling him brother, and disregarding
+ every one else. Almost at the same time the King gave his favorite the
+ whole of the rich jewelry and other gifts which had been bestowed on him
+ by his father-in-law, Philippe le Bel; and this was regarded as a great
+ affront by the young Queen and her uncles. Gaveston had a childish
+ complaint of his own to make&mdash;men would not call him by his new
+ title; and presently a proclamation came out, rendering it a crime to
+ speak of him as Piers, Piers Gaveston, or as anything but the Earl of
+ Cornwall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the more resented because he was not respectful with other men&rsquo;s
+ titles, and amused the King with nicknames for the nobles. Thomas, Earl of
+ Lancaster, the son of Edmund Crouchback, was &ldquo;the old hog&rdquo; and the
+ &ldquo;stage-player;&rdquo; pale, dark, Provençal Aymar de Valence, Earl of Pembroke,
+ he called &ldquo;Joseph the Jew;&rdquo; the fierce Guy, Earl of Warwick, &ldquo;the black
+ dog of Ardennes.&rdquo; The stout Earl swore that he should find that the dog
+ could show his teeth; and when Gaveston announced a tournament for the
+ 18th of February at Feversham, no one chose to attend it, whereupon he
+ jeered at them as cowards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King issued writs summoning his nobles to meet for his coronation on
+ the 25th of February, but they took the opportunity of insisting that
+ Gaveston should be dismissed from favor. Edward evasively answered that he
+ would attend to their wishes at the meeting of parliament, and they were
+ obliged to be content for the present; but they were exceedingly angry
+ that, at the coronation, Piers appeared more splendidly and richly attired
+ than the King himself, and bearing on a cushion the crown of St. Edward,
+ while the Earl of Lancaster carried curtana, the sword of mercy, and his
+ brother Henry the rod with the dove. The Bishop of Winchester performed
+ the ceremony, Archbishop Winchelsea not having returned from his exile;
+ and the King and Queen made magnificent offerings: the King&rsquo;s being first,
+ a figure of a king in gold, holding a ring; the second, of a pilgrim given
+ the ring; intended to commemorate the vision in which St. Edward received
+ the coronation-ring from St. John the Evangelist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston arranged the whole ceremony; but as his own display was his chief
+ thought, he managed to affront every one, and more especially the young
+ Queen and her uncles, so that Isabel wrote a letter to her father full of
+ complaints of her new lord and his favorite, and Philippe entered into
+ correspondence with the discontented nobility. In the tournaments in honor
+ of the coronation, Piers came off victorious over the Earls of Lancaster,
+ Hereford, Pembroke, and Warrenne, and this mortification greatly added to
+ their dislike. At the meeting of parliament, the Barons were so determined
+ against the favorite, that finally Edward was obliged to yield, and to
+ swear to keep him out of the kingdom; though, to soften the sentence, he
+ gave him the manors of High Peak and Cockermouth, and made him governor of
+ Ireland, bestowing on him, as a parting token, all the young Queen&rsquo;s gifts
+ to himself&mdash;rings, chains, and brooches; another great vexation to
+ Isabel. He was obliged, at the same time, to grant forty other articles,
+ giving greater security to the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston made a better governor of Ireland than could have been expected,
+ repressed several incursions of the wild Irish, and repaired the castles
+ on the borders of the English pale; but his haughty deportment greatly
+ affronted the Irish barons of English blood, and they were greatly
+ discontented with his rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was, in the meantime, doing his utmost to procure the recall of
+ the beloved Earl. He wrote to the Pope to obtain absolution from his oath,
+ and to the King of France to entreat him to relax his hostility; and he
+ strove to gain his nobles over one by one, granting offices to Lancaster,
+ and making concessions to all the rest. Philippe le Bel made no answer;
+ Clement V. sent exhortations to him to live in harmony with his subjects,
+ but at last absolved Gaveston, on condition that he should demean himself
+ properly, and submit his differences with the Barons to the judgment of
+ the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston hurried home on the instant; his master flew to meet him, and
+ received him at Chester with raptures of affection. Thence Edward sent
+ explanations to the sheriffs of each county, saying, that Gaveston having
+ been unjustly and violently banished, it was his duty to recall him, to
+ have his conduct examined into according to the laws. The Barons, on the
+ other hand, put forth other declarations, persuading the people that the
+ King having violated one of the oaths, he evidently meant to break the
+ other forty, which regarded their personal liberties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston did nothing to mitigate the general aversion. He had not learnt
+ wisdom by his first fall, and though the clergy and commons meeting at
+ Stamford granted a twenty-fifth of the year&rsquo;s produce to the King, and
+ consented to his remaining so long as he should demean himself properly,
+ he soon disgusted them also. He wore the crown-jewels openly, and affected
+ greater contempt than ever for the Barons, till it became popularly said
+ that there were two Kings, the real one a mere subject to the false. The
+ young Queen wrote piteous complaints to her father of her husband&rsquo;s
+ neglect; and the Countess of Cornwall had still greater wrongs from
+ Gaveston to complain of to her brother, the Earl of Gloucester. Dances,
+ sports, and gayeties were the occupation of the court, heedless of the
+ storm that was preparing. The Barons, jealous, alarmed, and irritated,
+ looked on in displeasure, and on the All-Saints&rsquo; Day of 1310, after high
+ mass at St. Paul&rsquo;s, the bold-spirited Archbishop Winchelsea, in his
+ pontifical robes, standing on the step of the altar, made a discourse to
+ the Earls of Lancaster, Lincoln, Pembroke, Hereford, and eight other
+ persons, after which he bound them by an oath to unite to deliver the
+ kingdom from the exactions of the favorite, and pronounced sentence of
+ excommunication against any who should reveal any part of their
+ confederation before the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Lincoln, the last of the Lacys, shortly after fell sick, and
+ made what he thought a death-bed exhortation to the Earl of Lancaster, who
+ had married his only daughter, not to abandon England to the King and the
+ Pope, but, like the former barons, to resist all infractions of their
+ privileges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Earl of Lancaster was the son of Edmund Crouchback and of Blanche of
+ Artois, mother of the Queen of France. He was a fine-looking man, devout
+ and gracious, and much beloved by the people, who called him the Gentle
+ Count; but Gaveston&rsquo;s nickname for him of the &ldquo;stage-player&rdquo; may not have
+ been unmerited, for he seems to have been over-greedy of popular applause
+ and influence, and to have had much personal ambition; and it does not
+ seem certain, though Gaveston might be vain, and his master weak and
+ foolish, that Lancaster and his friends did not exaggerate their faults,
+ and excite the malevolence of a nation never tolerant either of royal
+ favorites or of an expensive court. Pembroke was Aymar de Valence, son of
+ one of the foreign brothers who had been the bane of Henry III.; but now,
+ becoming a thorough Englishman, he bore the like malice to the unfortunate
+ Gascon who held the same post as his own father had done. Hereford, though
+ husband to the King&rsquo;s favorite sister Elizabeth, was true to the stout old
+ Bohun, his father, who had sworn to Edward I. that he would neither go nor
+ hang. Two poor butterflies, such as Edward II. and Gaveston, could have
+ done little injury to the realm, but the fierce warriors were resolved to
+ crush them, impatient of the calls upon their purses made needful by their
+ extravagance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tournament had been announced at Kennington, and preparations were made;
+ but Gaveston&rsquo;s jousts were not popular. None of the Barons accepted the
+ invitation, and in the night the lists and scaffolding were secretly
+ carried away. This mortification was ominous, but Edward&rsquo;s funds were so
+ low that he could not avoid summoning a parliament to meet at Westminster;
+ and at their meeting the nobles again resorted to the device of Montfort
+ at the Mad Parliament. They brought their armed followers, and forced the
+ King to consent to the appointment of a committee of ordainers, who made
+ him declare that this measure proceeded of his own free will, and was not
+ to prejudice the rights of the Crown; but that their office would expire
+ of itself on the ensuing Michaelmas-Day. So strangely and inconsistently
+ did they try to bring about their own ends without infringing on the
+ constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston had either previously hidden himself, or was driven away by the
+ ordainers; but the King, anxious to escape from their surveillance,
+ proclaimed an expedition to Scotland, and summoned his vassals to meet him
+ at York. Hardly any noble came except Gaveston, and they made an
+ ineffectual inroad into Scotland together, after which Gaveston shut
+ himself up in Bamborough Castle, while the King went to London to receive
+ the decision of the ordainers. The foremost was, of course, the banishment
+ of Gaveston; and he went, but only again to appear, before two months were
+ past, in the company of the King, at York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lancaster and his friends now look up arms and marched northward. Edward
+ and his court had proceeded to Newcastle, but no army was with them; and
+ on the report of the advance of the enemy the King fled to Tynemouth, and
+ embarked in a little boat with his friend, leaving behind him his wife,
+ discourteously perhaps, but hardly cruelly, for Isabel was the niece of
+ Lancaster, and probably would have been in more danger from a sea-voyage
+ in a rude vessel, than from the rebel lords. She was, however, greatly
+ offended, and was far more inclined to her uncle, who wrote her an
+ affectionate letter, than to her regardless husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward and Piers landed at Scarborough, where the King was obliged to
+ leave his friend for security, while he went on to raise his standard at
+ York. Few obeyed the summons, and Pembroke hastened to besiege
+ Scarborough. It was impossible to hold out, and Gaveston surrendered,
+ Pembroke and Henry Percy binding themselves for his safety to the King,
+ under forfeiture of life and limb. Gaveston was to be confined in his own
+ castle of Wallingford, and the Earl proceeded to escort him thither. But
+ at Dedington Pembroke left the party to visit his wife, who was in the
+ neighborhood, and, on rising in the morning, Gaveston beheld the guard
+ changed. They bore the badge of Warwick, and the grim black dog of
+ Ardennes rode exulting at their head. The unhappy man was set upon a mule,
+ and carried to Warwick Castle, where Lancaster, Hereford, and Surrey, were
+ met to decide his fate in the noble pile newly raised by Earl Guy, to whom
+ the loftiest tower owes its name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They set Piers before them, and gave him a mock trial. At first there was
+ a reluctance to shed blood, but a voice exclaimed, &ldquo;Let the fox go, and
+ you will have to hunt him again.&rdquo; And it was resolved that, in defiance of
+ law and of their own honor, Piers Gaveston should die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He flung himself on his knees before Lancaster, and implored mercy; but in
+ vain he called him &ldquo;Gentle Count.&rdquo; &ldquo;Old hog&rdquo; rankled in the mind of the
+ Earl, who, with his two confederates, rode-forth to Blacklow Hill, a knoll
+ between Warwick and Coventry, and there, beneath the clump of ragged
+ pine-trees, they sternly and ruthlessly looked on while, on June 19th,
+ 1312, the head of the unfortunate young Gaveston was struck off, a victim
+ to his own vanity and the inordinate affection of his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pembroke, regretting either his carelessness or his treachery, when he saw
+ the dreadful consequences, went to the King, and satisfied him of his
+ innocence. Poor Edward was at first wild with grief and rage, but his
+ efforts to punish the murderers were fruitless; and gradually his wrath
+ cooled enough to listen to the mediation of the Pope and King of France,
+ and he consented to grant the Barons a pardon. They wanted to force him,
+ for their own justification, to declare Gaveston a traitor; but weak as
+ Edward was, his affection could not be overcome. He could forgive the
+ murderers, but he could not denounce the memory of the murdered friend of
+ his youth. And the Barons were forced to content themselves with receiving
+ a free pardon after they had come to profess their penitence on their
+ knees before the King enthroned in Westminster Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gaveston had been buried by some friars at Oxford; but, twelve years
+ after, Edward showed how enduring his love had been, by transporting the
+ corpse to the church he had newly built at Langley, and placing with his
+ own hands two palls of gold on the tomb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXVIII. BANNOCKBURN. (1307-1313.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1307. Edward II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1285. Philippe IV.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1308. Henry VII.
+
+ <i>Pope</i>.
+ 1305. Clement VI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While the son of the Hammer of the Scots wasted his manhood in silken
+ ease, the brave though savage patriots of the North were foot by foot
+ winning back their native soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Clifford had posted an English garrison in Douglas Castle, and
+ reigned over Douglasdale, which had been granted to him by Edward I. on
+ the forfeiture of Baron William. It sorely grieved the spirit of James
+ Douglas to see his inheritance held by the stranger, and, with Bruce&rsquo;s
+ permission, he sought his own valley in disguise, revealing himself only
+ to an old servant, named Thomas Dickson, who burst into tears at the first
+ sight of his young lord, and gave him shelter in his cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Douglas lay concealed, while Dickson conducted to him, one by one,
+ his trusty vassals, and measures were concerted with total disregard to
+ the sacred holiday. Once, all Passion-tide would have been peaceful for
+ the sake of the Truce of God; but the wrongs of the Scots had blotted out
+ all the gentler influences that soften war, and in their eyes justified
+ treachery and sacrilege. On the Palm-Sunday of 1307, when the English
+ troops would come forth in procession to the Church of St. Bride, carrying
+ willow boughs in memory of the palm-branches at Jerusalem, the adherents
+ of Douglas intended to attack and beset them on all sides, and Douglas, by
+ way of encouragement, made a grant to Dickson of the lands of Hisleside.
+ Dickson and the other secret friends of the Scots mingled in the
+ procession, with their arms concealed, and entered the church with the
+ English, and no sooner had they disappeared within the low doorway, than
+ the loud slogan of &ldquo;Douglas! Douglas!&rdquo; was heard without. Dickson drew his
+ sword and ran upon the English, but the signal had been given too soon,
+ and he was overthrown and slain before Sir James came up. The English
+ bravely defended the chancel, but Douglas and his armed followers
+ prevailed, killed twenty-six, took twelve prisoners, and set out for the
+ castle, which, in full security, had been left with all the gates open,
+ with no one within but the porter, and the cook dressing the dinner, which
+ was eaten by very different guests from those whom they expected. Douglas
+ had not men enough to hold the castle, and had a great dislike to standing
+ a siege. &ldquo;I had rather hear the lark sing, than the mouse squeak,&rdquo; was his
+ saying, and he therefore resolved to return to his king on the mountains,
+ and carry off all the treasure and arms that could be transported from
+ Douglasdale. As to the remainder, he showed that French breeding had not
+ rooted the barbarian even out of the &ldquo;gentil Lord James.&rdquo; He broke up
+ every barrel of wheat, flour, or meal, staved every cask of wine or ale
+ among them on the floor of the hall, flung the corpses of dead men and
+ horses upon them, slew his prisoners on the top of the horrible compound,
+ and finally set fire to the castle, calling it, in derision, the Douglas
+ Larder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clifford, enraged at this horrible foray, came in person to Douglasdale,
+ cleansed the fire-scathed walls, built a new tower, and entrusted the
+ defence to a captain named Thirlwall. Him Sir James deluded by sending
+ fourteen men to drive a herd of cattle past the castle, when Thirlwall,
+ intending to plunder the drovers, came forth, fell into the ambush laid
+ for him by Douglas, and was slain with all his men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It went forth among the English, that Black Sir James had made oath that,
+ if he abode not within his father&rsquo;s castle, neither should any Englishman
+ dwell there. The knights of Edward&rsquo;s court named it the &ldquo;Perilous Castle
+ of Douglas,&rdquo; and Lord Clifford found that even brave men made excuses, and
+ were unwilling to risk the dishonor of the loss, or to run the chance of
+ serving to furnish a second Douglas larder. At this juncture a young lady,
+ enthusiastic in romance, bethought her of making her hand the reward of
+ any knight who would hold out the Perilous Castle for a year and a day.
+ The spirited Sir John de Walton took the damsel at her word, and shut
+ himself up in Douglas Castle; but his prudence did not equal his courage,
+ and he fell a prey to the same stratagem which had deluded Thirlwall,
+ except that the bait, in this case, was sacks of corn instead of wandering
+ cattle. The young knight was slain in the encounter, when his lady&rsquo;s
+ letters were found in his bosom, and brought to Sir James, who was so much
+ touched by this chivalrous incident that he spared the remainder of the
+ garrison, and gave them provisions and money to return in safety to
+ Clifford [Footnote: The wild adventures at the Perilous Castle derive a
+ most affecting interest from the chord they never failed to touch in the
+ heart of &ldquo;The Last Minstrel.&rdquo; Seen by him when a schoolboy, the Dale of
+ Douglas, the ruin of the castle, and the tombs at St. Bride&rsquo;s, aided to
+ form his spirit of romance; the Douglas ballad lore rang in his ears
+ through life, stirring his heart and swelling his eyes with tears; and the
+ home of the Douglas was the last spot he sought to explore, in the land
+ which he loved with more than a patriot&rsquo;s love. Castle Dangerous was the
+ last tale he told; and though the hand was feeble, the brain over-tasked,
+ and the strain faltering, yet still the same heart breathed in every word,
+ and it was a fit farewell from Scott to the haunted castles, glens, and
+ hills of his home.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Douglasdale, Ettrick Forest, and Jeddart, were thus made too terrible to
+ be held by the English; but Bruce himself was for a long time disabled by
+ a severe illness which gave slight hope of recovery. At Inverary, the Earl
+ of Buchan made an attack on him when he was still so weak as to be obliged
+ to be supported on horseback by a man on either side of him; but he gained
+ a complete victory, and followed it up by such a dreadful devastation,
+ that &ldquo;the harrying of Buchan&rdquo; was a proverb for half a century. The oaks
+ sunk deep in the mosses bear marks of fire on their trunks, as if in
+ memory of this destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another victory, a &ldquo;right fair point of chivalry,&rdquo; was gained in Galloway
+ by Edward Bruce, who in one year, 1308, took thirteen fortresses in that
+ district. Robert might well say that &ldquo;he was more afraid of the bones of
+ Edward I. than of the living Edward of Caernarvon, and that it was easier
+ to win a kingdom from the son than half a foot of land from the father.&rdquo;
+ Edward II. was always intending to come to Scotland in person, and wasting
+ time in preparations, spending subsidies as fast as he collected them, and
+ changing his governors. In less than a year six different rulers were
+ appointed, and, of course no consistent course could be pursued by nobles
+ following each other in such quick succession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a lonely house near Lyme Water, Sir James Douglas captured the King&rsquo;s
+ sister&rsquo;s son, Thomas Randolph, and led him to Bruce.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Nephew&rdquo; said Bruce, &ldquo;you have forgotten your allegiance.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have Done nothing of which I have been ashamed,&rdquo; returned Randolph. &ldquo;You
+ blame me, but you deserve blame. If you choose to defy the King of
+ England, why not debate the matter like a true knight in a pitched field?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may be hereafter,&rdquo; replied Bruce, calmly; &ldquo;but since thou art so
+ rude of speech, it is fitting thy proud words should be punished, till
+ thou learn my right and thy duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever was, strictly speaking, Bruce&rsquo;s <i>right</i>, his nephew learnt
+ in captivity to respect it, gave in his adhesion to King Robert, was
+ created Earl of Moray, and became one of the firmest friends of his
+ throne. The world was beginning to afford the successful man countenance,
+ and the cunning Philippe le Bel wrote letters which were to pass through
+ England under the address of the Earl of Carrick, but, within, bore the
+ direction to King Robert of Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A vain march of Edward II into Scotland was revenged by a horrible inroad
+ of the Scots into Northumberland, up to the very gates of Durham. On his
+ return, Robert tried to surprise Berwick, but was prevented by the barking
+ of a dog, which awakened the garrison. He next besieged Perth. After
+ having discovered the shallowest part of the moat, he made a feint of
+ raising the siege, and, after an absence of eight days, made a sudden
+ night-attack, wading through the moat with the water up to his neck, and a
+ scaling-ladder in one hand, while with the other he felt his way with his
+ spear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What,&rdquo; cried a French knight, &ldquo;shall we say of our lords, who live at
+ home in ease and jollity, when so brave a knight is here risking his life
+ to win a miserable hamlet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, the Frenchman rushed after the King and his men, and the town
+ was taken before the garrison were well awake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the same time Douglas came upon Roxburgh, when the garrison were
+ enjoying the careless mirth of Shrovetide. Hiding their armor with dark
+ cloaks, Sir James and his men crept on all-fours through the brushwood
+ till they came to the very foot of the battlements, and could hear a woman
+ singing to her child that the Black Douglas should not touch it, and the
+ sentries saying to each other that yonder oxen were out late. Planting
+ their ladders, the Scots gained the summit of the tower, killed the
+ sentinels, and burst upon the revelry with shouts of &ldquo;Douglas! Douglas!&rdquo;
+ The governor, a gallant Burgundian knight, named Fiennes, retreated into
+ the keep, and held out till he was badly wounded, and forced to surrender,
+ when he was spared, and retreated to die in England, while the castle was
+ levelled to the ground by Edward Bruce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The destruction of these strongholds was matter of great joy to the
+ surrounding peasantry, who had been cruelly despoiled by the English
+ soldiers there stationed; and a farmer, named Binning, actually made an
+ attempt upon the great fortress of Linlithgow, which was well garrisoned
+ by the English. He had been required to furnish the troops with hay, and
+ this gave him the opportunity of placing eight strong peasants well armed,
+ lying hidden, in the wagon, by which he walked himself, while it was
+ driven by a stout countryman with an axe at his belt, and another party
+ were concealed close without the walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drawbridge was lowered, and the portcullis raised to admit the forage,
+ when, at the moment that the wagon stood midway beneath the arch, at a
+ signal from the farmer, the driver with his axe cut asunder the yoke, the
+ horses started forward, and Binning, with a loud cry, &ldquo;Call all! call
+ all!&rdquo; drew the sword hidden under his carter&rsquo;s frock, and killed the
+ porter. The eight men leaped out from among the hay, and were joined by
+ their friends from the ambush without; the cart under the doorway
+ prevented the gates from being closed, and the pile of hay caught the
+ portcullis as it fell. The Englishmen, surprised and discomfited, had no
+ time to make head against the rustics, and were slaughtered or made
+ prisoners; the castle was given up to the King, and Binning received the
+ grant of an estate, and became a gentleman of coat-armor, with a wagon
+ argent on his shield, and the harnessed head of a horse for a crest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jedburgh, Stirling, and Edinburgh, were the last castles still in the
+ hands of the invaders. The Castle of Edinburgh, aloft on the rock frowning
+ above the town, had been held by the English full twenty years, and, when
+ Randolph was sent to besiege it, was governed by a Gascon knight named
+ Piers Luband, a kinsman of Gaveston. In hatred and suspicion of all
+ connected with the minion, the English soldiers rose against the
+ foreigner, threw him into a dungeon, and, electing a fresh captain, made
+ oath to hold out to the last. The rock was believed to be inaccessible,
+ and a blockade appeared to be the only means of reducing the garrison.
+ This had already lasted six weeks, when a man named Frank, coming secretly
+ to Randolph, told him that his father had formerly been governor, and that
+ he, when a youth, had been in the habit of scrambling down the south face
+ of the rock, at night, to visit a young damsel who lived in the
+ Grass-market, and returning in the same manner; and he undertook to guide
+ a party by this perilous ascent into the very heart of the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Randolph caught at the proposal, desperate as it was, and, selecting
+ thirty men, chose an excessively dark night for the adventure. Frank went
+ the first, climbing up the face of the precipice with hands and feet; then
+ followed Sir Andrew Grey; thirdly, Randolph himself; and then the rest of
+ the party. The ascent was exceedingly difficult and dangerous, especially
+ in utter darkness and to men in full armor, fearing to make the slightest
+ noise. Coming to a projecting crag, close under the wall, they rested to
+ collect their breath, and listen. It was the moment when the guards were
+ going their rounds, and, to their horror, they heard a soldier exclaim, as
+ he threw a pebble down on them, &ldquo;Away! I see you well!&rdquo; A few more stones,
+ and every man of them might have been hurled from the cliff by the
+ soldiers merely rolling down stones on them. They dared not more, and a
+ few moments&rsquo; silence proved that the alarm had been merely a trick to
+ startle the garrison&mdash;a jest soon to turn to earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the guard had passed on, the brave Scots crept to the foot of the
+ wall, where it was only twelve feet high, and fixed the iron hook of their
+ rope-ladder to the top of it. Ere all had mounted, the clank of their
+ weapons had been heard, shouts of &ldquo;Treason!&rdquo; arose, and the sentinels made
+ a brave resistance; but it was too late, and, after some hard fighting,
+ the survivors of the garrison were forced to surrender. Sir Piers Luband,
+ on being released from his dungeon, offered his services to King Robert,
+ whereupon the English laid all the blame of the loss of the castle upon
+ him, declaring that he had betrayed them. Randolph&rsquo;s seizure of Edinburgh
+ was considered as the most daring of all the many gallant exploits of the
+ Scots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce forayed Cumberland, and threatened Berwick, so that the poor
+ Countess of Buchan was removed from thence to a more secure place of
+ captivity. He also pursued his enemies, the Macdougals of Lorn, up the
+ passes of Cruachan Ben, and even hunted them into the Isle of Man, where
+ he took Rushyn Castle, and conquered the whole island. In his absence,
+ Edward Bruce took Dundee, and besieged Stirling, until the governor,
+ Philip Mowbray, was reduced to such straits by famine, that he begged for
+ a truce, in which to go and inform the King of England of the state of
+ affairs, promising to surrender on the Midsummer Day of the following
+ year, if he were not relieved before that time. Edward Bruce granted these
+ terms, and allowed Mowbray to depart. Robert was displeased at such a
+ treaty, giving a full year to the enemy to collect their forces: but his
+ brother boldly answered, &ldquo;Let Edward bring every man he has; we will fight
+ them&mdash;ay, and more too!&rdquo; King Robert saw more danger than did the
+ reckless prince, but he resolved to abide by his brother&rsquo;s word, though so
+ lightly given. It was, in fact, a challenge to the decisive battle, which
+ was to determine whether Bruce or Plantagenet should reign in Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mowbray&rsquo;s appeal met with attention at court. Edward II. had newly
+ recovered from the loss of Gaveston, and hoped by some signal success to
+ redeem his credit with his subjects. He sent his cousin, the Earl of
+ Pembroke, who was well experienced in Scottish wars, to the North;
+ despatched writs to ninety-three Barons to meet him with their retainers
+ at Newcastle, three weeks after Easter, 1313; summoned all the Irish
+ chiefs under his obedience to come with Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster;
+ called in Gascon troops, placed a fleet under the charge of John of
+ Argyle, and took every measure for the supply of his army with provisions,
+ tents, and every other necessary. For once the activity and spirit of his
+ father seemed to have descended upon him, and, as the summer of 1313 drew
+ on, he set out with Queen Isabel, and their infant son the Prince of
+ Wales, to St. Alban&rsquo;s Abbey, where, amid prayers and offerings for the
+ success of his enterprise, he bade her farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Berwick he met his host, and, to his disappointment, found that four of
+ the disaffected earls, Lancaster, Warwick, Arundel, and Warrenne, had
+ absented themselves; but they had sent their vassals in full force.
+ Edward&rsquo;s troops, at the lowest computation, could not have been less than
+ 100,000, of whom 40,000 were mounted, and 3,000 of these were knights and
+ squires, both men and horses sheathed in plate-armor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To meet this force, Bruce could only muster 40,000 men, poorly armed, and
+ few of them mounted, and those on small, rough mountain steeds, utterly
+ incapable of withstanding the shock of the huge Flemish chargers ridden by
+ the English knights. The fatal power of the English long-bow was like wise
+ well known to the Scots; but Bruce himself was a tried captain, and the
+ greater part of his followers had been long trained by succession of
+ fierce conflicts. They had many a wrong to revenge, and they fought for
+ home and hearth; stern, severe, savage, and resolute, they were men to
+ whom defeat would have brought far worse than death&mdash;unlike the gay
+ chivalry who had ridden from England as to a summer excursion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army met in the Torwood, near Stirling, and were reviewed with
+ cheerfulness by King Robert. He resolved to compensate for the inferiority
+ of his cavalry by fighting on foot, and by abiding the attack in a field
+ called the New Park, which was so covered with trees and brushwood, and
+ broken by swamps, that the enemy&rsquo;s horse would lose their advantage; and
+ on the left, in the only open and level ground near, he dug pits and
+ trenches, and filled them with pointed stakes and iron weapons called
+ calthorps, so as to impede the possible charge of the knights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little burn, or brook, of Bannock, running through rugged ground
+ covered with wood, protected his right, and the village of St. Ninian was
+ in front. He divided his little army into four parts: the first under his
+ brother Edward; the second under Douglas and young Walter, High Steward of
+ Scotland; the third under Randolph; and the fourth body, the reserve,
+ under his own command. The servants and baggage were placed on an eminence
+ in the rear, still called Gillies Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time it was the 23d of June, and early on Sunday morning the
+ soldiers heard mass and confessed as dying men, then kept the vigil of St.
+ John by fasting on bread and water. Douglas and Sir Robert Keith rode out
+ to reconnoitre, and came back, reporting to the King that the enemy were
+ advancing in full force, with banners displayed and in excellent array;
+ but warily spreading a rumor among the Scots that they were confused and
+ disorderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In effect, Edward II. had hurried on so hastily and inconsiderately, that
+ his men and horses were spent and ill-fed when he arrived in the
+ neighborhood of Stirling. Two miles from thence, he sent 800 horsemen with
+ Sir Robert Clifford, with orders to outflank the Scottish army, and throw
+ themselves into the town. Concealed by the village of St. Ninian, this
+ body had nearly effected their object, when they were observed by the keen
+ eye of Bruce, who had directed his nephew to be on the watch against this
+ very manoeuvre. Riding up on his little pony to Randolph, he upbraided
+ him, saying, &ldquo;Thoughtless man, you have lightly kept your trust! A rose
+ has fallen from your chaplet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Randolph at once hurried off with a small body of his best men to repair
+ his error; but presently his little party were seen so hotly pressed by
+ the English, that Douglas entreated to be allowed to hasten to his rescue.
+ &ldquo;You shall not move,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Let Randolph free himself as he may.
+ I will not alter my order of battle, nor lose my vantage of ground.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My liege,&rdquo; cried Lord James, as the heavily-armed knights and horses
+ closed in on the few Scottish foot, &ldquo;I cannot stand by and see Randolph
+ perish, when I can give him help! By your leave, I must go to his succor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert sighed consent, and Douglas hastened off; but at that moment he
+ beheld the English troop in confusion, some horses rushing away
+ masterless, and the rest galloping off, while the Scots stood compactly
+ among their dead enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Halt!&rdquo; then said Douglas, &ldquo;they have won; we will not lessen their glory
+ by seeking to share it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the foremost English battalions, with the Earls of Gloucester
+ and Hereford, had come into the New Park, and were near enough to see King
+ Robert, with a gold crown on his helmet, riding on his pony along the
+ front of his lines. A relation of Hereford&rsquo;s, Sir Henry Bohun, upon this
+ sight, rode impetuously forward to make a sudden attack on the leader,
+ expecting to bear him down at once by the weight of his war-horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce swerved aside, so as to avoid the thrust of the lance, and at the
+ same moment, rising in his stirrups, with his battle-axe in hand, he dealt
+ a tremendous blow as Sir Henry was carried past; and such was the force of
+ his arm, that the knight dropped dead from his horse, with his skull cleft
+ nearly in two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Scottish chiefs, proud of their King&rsquo;s prowess, but terrified by the
+ peril he had run, entreated him to be more careful of his person; but he
+ only returned by a tranquil smile, as he looked at the blunted edge of.
+ his weapon, saying &ldquo;he had spoilt his good battle-axe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In revenge for this attack, the Scots pursued the English vanguard for a
+ short distance, but the King recalled them to their ranks, and made a
+ speech, calling on them all to be in arms by break of day, forbidding any
+ man to break his line for pursuit or plunder, and promising that the heirs
+ of such as might fall should receive their inheritance without the
+ accustomed feudal fine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All night there was the usual scene; the smaller and more resolute army
+ watched and prayed, the larger revelled and slept. Edward, among his
+ favorites and courtiers, had hardly believed that there would &ldquo;be any
+ battle, and had no notion of generalship, keeping his whole army
+ compressed together, so that their large numbers were encumbering instead
+ of being available. Five hundred horse were closely attached to his
+ person, with the Earl of Pembroke, Sir Ingeltram de Umfraville, and Sir
+ Giles de Argentine, the last a gallant knight of St. John. When he rode
+ forward in the morning, Edward was absolutely amazed at the sight of the
+ well-ordered lines of Scottish infantry, and turning to Umfraville, asked
+ if he really thought those Scots would fight. At that moment Abbot
+ Maurice, of Inchaffray, who had just been celebrating mass, came
+ barefooted before the array, holding up a crucifix, and raising his hand
+ in blessing, as all the army bent to the earth, with the prayers of men
+ willingly offering themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They kneel! they kneel!&rdquo; cried Edward. &ldquo;They are asking mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are, my liege,&rdquo; said Umfraville, &ldquo;but it is of God, not of us. These
+ men will win the day, or die upon the field.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; said the King, and gave the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earls of Gloucester and Hereford rushed to the charge with loud
+ war-cries. Each Scot stood fast, blowing wild notes on the horn he wore at
+ his neck, and the close ranks of infantry stood like rocks against the
+ encounter of the mailed horse, their spears clattering against the armor
+ in the shock till the hills rang again. Randolph meanwhile led his square
+ steadily on, till it seemed swallowed up in the sea of English; and Keith,
+ with the five hundred horsemen of the Scots army, making a sudden turn
+ around Milton Bog, burst in flank upon the English archery, ever the main
+ strength of the army. The long-bow had won, and was again to win, many a
+ fair field; but at Bannockburn the manoeuvre of the Scots was ruinous to
+ the yeomanry, who had no weapons fit for a close encounter with mounted
+ men-at-arms, and were trodden down and utterly dispersed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ground was hotly contested by the two armies; banners rose and fell,
+ and the whole field was slippery with blood, and strewn with fragments of
+ armor, shivers of lances and arrows, and rags of scarfs and pennons. The
+ English troops began to waver. &ldquo;They fail! they fail!&rdquo; was the Scottish
+ cry, and as they pressed on with double vehemence, there rose a shout that
+ another host was coming to their aid. It was only the servants on the
+ Gillies Hill, crowding down in the excitement of watching the battle, but
+ to the dispirited English they appeared a formidable reinforcement of the
+ enemy; and Robert Bruce, profiting by the consternation thus occasioned,
+ charged with his reserve, and decided the fate of the day. His whole line
+ advancing, the English array finally broke, and began to disperse. Earl
+ Gilbert of Gloucester made an attempt to rally, and, mounted on a noble
+ steed&mdash;a present from the King&mdash;rode furiously against Edward
+ Bruce; but his retainers hung back, and he was borne down and slain before
+ his armorial bearings were recognized. Clifford and twenty-seven other
+ Barons were slain among the pits, and the rout became general. The Earl of
+ Pembroke, taking the King&rsquo;s horse by the bridle, turned him from the
+ field, and his five hundred guards went with him. Sir Giles de Argentine
+ saw them safely out of the battle, then, saying, &ldquo;It is not my custom to
+ fly!&rdquo; he bade Edward farewell, and turned back, crying, &ldquo;An Argentine!&rdquo;
+ and was slain by Edward Bruce&rsquo;s knights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Douglas followed hotly on the King, with sixty horse, and on the way met
+ Sir Laurence Abernethy with twenty more, coming to join the English; but
+ finding how matters stood, the time-serving knight gladly proceeded to
+ hunt the fugitives, and they scarcely let Edward II. draw rein till he had
+ ridden sixty miles, even to Dunbar, whence he escaped by sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bannockburn was the most total defeat which has ever befallen an English
+ army. Twenty-seven nobles were killed, twenty-two more and sixty knights
+ made prisoners, and the number of obscure soldiers slain, drowned in the
+ Forth, or killed by the peasantry, exceeds calculation. The camp was
+ taken, with an enormous booty in treasure, jewels, rich robes, fine
+ horses, herds of cattle, machines for the siege of towns, and, in short,
+ such an amount of baggage that the wagons for the transport were numerous
+ enough to extend in one line for sixty miles. Even the King&rsquo;s signet was
+ taken, and Edward was forced to cause another to be made to supply its
+ place. One prisoner was a Carmelite friar named Baston, whom Edward of
+ Caernarvon had brought with him to celebrate his victory in verse;
+ whereupon Robert imposed the same task by way of ransom; and the poem, in
+ long, rhyming Latin verses, is still extant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plunder was liberally shared among the Scottish army, and the
+ prisoners were treated with great courtesy and generosity. The slain were
+ reverently buried where they fell, except Lord Clifford and the Earl of
+ Gloucester, whose corpses were carried to St. Ninian&rsquo;s kirk, and sent with
+ all honor to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce had not forgotten that the blood of the Clares ran in his own veins,
+ and that Gloucester had warned him of his danger at King Edward&rsquo;s court:
+ he not only lamented for the young Earl, but he released Ralph de
+ Monthermer, the stepfather of Earl Gilbert, and gave him the signet-ring
+ of Edward II. to bear home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilbert was the last male of the stout old line of De Clares. Gloucester,
+ and his estates descended to his three sisters&mdash;Margaret, the widow
+ of Gaveston; Eleanor, the wife of Hugh le Despenser; and Elizabeth, who
+ shortly after married John de Burgh, Earl of Ulster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Hereford had taken refuge in Bothwell Castle, but was unable
+ to hold it out, and surrendered. He was exchanged for captives no less
+ precious to Robert Bruce than his well-earned crown. The wife, daughter,
+ and sister, who had been prisoners for eight years, were set free,
+ together with the Bishop of Glasgow, now blind, and the young Earl of Mar.
+ Marjory Bruce had grown from a child to a maiden in her English prison,
+ and she was soon betrothed to the young Walter, Steward of Scotland; but
+ it was enacted that, if she should remain without a brother, the crown
+ should descend to her uncle Edward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That midsummer battle of Bannockburn undid all the work of Edward I., and
+ made Scotland an independent kingdom for three hundred years longer.
+ Ill-government, a discontented nobility, and a feeble King, had brought
+ England so low, that the troops could not shake off their dejection, and a
+ hundred would flee before two or three Scottish soldiers. Bruce ravaged
+ the northern counties every summer, leaving famine and pestilence behind
+ him; but Edward II. had neither spirit nor resolution to make war or
+ peace. The mediation of the Pope and King of France was ineffectual, and
+ years of warfare passed on, impressing habits of perpetual license and
+ robbery upon the borderers of either nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XXXIX. THE KNIGHTS OF THE TEMPLE. (1292-1316.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1272. Edward I.
+ 1307. Edward II.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1285. Philippe IV.
+ 1314. Louis X.
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1292. Adolph.
+ 1296. Albert I.
+ 1308. Henry VII.
+ 1314. Louis V.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1296. Boniface VIII.
+ 1303. Benedict XI.
+ 1305. Clement V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Crusades were over. The dream of Edward I. had been but a dream, and
+ self-interest and ambition directed the swords of Christian princes
+ against each other rather than against the common foe. The Western Church
+ was lapsing into a state of decay and corruption, from which she was only
+ partially to recover at the cost of disruption and disunion, and the power
+ which the mighty Popes of the twelfth century had gathered into a head
+ became, for that very cause, the tool of an unscrupulous monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colony of Latins left in Palestine had proved a most unsuccessful
+ experiment; the climate enervated their constitutions; the <i>poulains</i>,
+ as those were called who were born in the East, had all the bad qualities
+ of degenerate races, and were the scorn, and derision of Arabs and
+ Europeans alike; nor could the defence have been kept up at all, had it
+ not been for the constant recruits from cooler climates. Adventurous young
+ men tried their swords in the East, banished men there sought to recover
+ their fame, the excommunicate strove to win pardon by his sword, or the
+ forgiven to expiate his past crime; and, besides these irregular aids, the
+ two military and monastic orders of Templars and Hospitallers were
+ constantly fed by supplies of young nobles trained to arms and discipline
+ in the numerous commanderies and preceptories scattered throughout the
+ West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admirable as warriors, desperate in battle, offering no ransom but their
+ scarf, these knightly monks were the bulwark of Christendom, and would
+ have been doubly effective save for the bitter jealousies of the two
+ orders against each other, and of both against all other Crusaders. Not a
+ disaster happened in the Holy Land but the treachery of one order or the
+ other was said to have occasioned it; and, on the whole, the greater
+ degree of obloquy seems usually, whether justly or not, to have lighted on
+ the Knights of the Temple. They were the richer and the prouder of the two
+ orders; and as the duties of the hospital were not included in their vows,
+ they neither had the same claims to gratitude, nor the softening influence
+ of the exercise of charity, and were simply stern, hated, dreaded
+ soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a desperate siege, Acre fell, in 1292, and the last remnant of the
+ Latin possessions in the East was lost. The Templars and Hospitallers
+ fought with the utmost valor, forgot their feuds in the common danger, and
+ made such a defence that the Mussulmans fancied that, when one Christian
+ died, another came out of his mouth and renewed the conflict; but at last
+ they were overpowered by force of numbers, and were finally buried under
+ the ruins of the Castle of the Templars. The remains of the two orders met
+ in the Island of Cyprus, which belonged to Henry de Lusignan, claimant of
+ the crown of Jerusalem. There they mustered their forces, in the hope of a
+ fresh Crusade; but as time dragged on, and their welcome wore out, they
+ found themselves obliged to seek new quarters. The Knights of the
+ Hospital, true to their vows, won sword in hand the Isle of Rhodes from
+ the Infidel, and prolonged their existence for five centuries longer as a
+ great maritime power, the guardians of the Mediterranean and the terror of
+ the African corsairs. The Knights Templars, in an evil hour for
+ themselves, resolved to spend their time of expectation in their numerous
+ rich commanderies in Europe, where they had no employment but to collect
+ their revenues and keep their swords bright; and it cannot but be supposed
+ that they would thus be tempted into vicious and overbearing habits, while
+ the sight of so formidable a band of warriors, owning no obedience but to
+ their Grand Master and the Pope, must have been alarming to the sovereign
+ of the country. Still there are no tokens of their having disturbed the
+ peace during the twenty-two years that their exile lasted, and it was the
+ violence of a king and the truckling of a pope that effected their ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philippe IV., the pest of France, had used his power over the French
+ clergy to misuse and persecute the fierce old pontiff, Boniface VIII., and
+ it was no fault of Philippe that the murder of Becket was not parodied at
+ Anagni. Fortunately for the malevolent designs of the King, his messengers
+ quailed, and contented themselves with terrifying the old man into a
+ frenzied suicide, instead of themselves slaying him. The next Pope lived
+ so few days after his election, that it was believed that poison had
+ removed him; and the cardinals remained shut up for nine months at
+ Perugia, trying in vain to come to a fresh choice. Finally, Philippe fixed
+ their choice on a wretched Gascon, who took the name of Clement V., first,
+ however, making him swear to fulfil six conditions, the last and most
+ dreadful of which was to remain a secret until the time when the
+ fulfilment should be required of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lest his unfortunate tool should escape from his grasp, or gain the
+ protection of any other sovereign, Philippe transplanted the whole papal
+ court to Avignon, which, though it used to belong to the Roman empire,
+ had, in the break-up after the fall of the Swabian house, become in effect
+ part of the French dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There the miserable Clement learned the sixth condition, and, not daring
+ to oppose it, gave the whole order of the Templars up into his cruel
+ hands, promising to authorize his measures, and pronounce their abolition.
+ Philippe&rsquo;s first measure was to get them all into his hands, and for this
+ purpose he proclaimed a Crusade, and actually himself took the Cross, with
+ his son-in-law Edward II., at the wedding of Isabel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jacque de Molay, the Grand Master, hastened from Cyprus, and convoked all
+ his chief knights to take counsel with the French King on this laudable
+ undertaking. He was treated with great distinction, and even stood
+ godfather to a son of the King. The greater number of the Templars were at
+ their own Tower of the Temple at Paris, with others dispersed in numbers
+ through the rest of France, living at ease and securely, respected and
+ feared, if not beloved, and busily preparing for an onslaught upon the
+ common foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, two of their number, vile men thrown into prison for former
+ crimes&mdash;one French, the other Italian&mdash;had been suborned by
+ Philippe&rsquo;s emissaries to make deadly accusations against their brethren,
+ such as might horrify the imagination of an age unused to consider
+ evidence. These tales, whispered into the ear of Edward II. by his wily
+ father-in-law, together with promises of wealth and lands to be wrested
+ from them, gained from him a promise that he would not withstand the
+ measures of the French King and Pope; and, though he was too much shocked
+ by the result not to remonstrate, his feebleness and inconsistency
+ unfitted him either to be a foe or a champion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 14th of September, 1307, Philippe sent out secret orders to his
+ seneschals. On the 13th of October, at dawn of day, each house of the
+ Templars was surrounded with armed men, and, ere the knights could rise
+ from their beds, they were singly mastered, and thrown into prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days after, on Sunday, after mass, the arrest was made known, and the
+ crimes of which the unfortunate men were accused. They were to be tried
+ before the grand inquisitor, Guillaume Humbert, a Dominican friar; but in
+ the meantime, to obtain witness against them, they were starved,
+ threatened, and tortured in their dungeons, to gain from them some
+ confession that could be turned against them. Out of six hundred knights,
+ besides a much greater number of mere attendants, there could not fail to
+ be some few whose minds could not withstand the misery of their condition,
+ and between these and the two original calumnies, a mass of horrible
+ stories was worked up in evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was said that, while outwardly wearing the white cross on their robe,
+ bearing the vows of chivalry, exercising the holy offices of priests, and
+ bound by the monastic rules, there was in reality an inner society, bound
+ to be the enemies of all that was holy, into which they were admitted upon
+ their reviling and denying their faith, and committing outrages on the
+ cross and the images of the saints. It was further said that they
+ worshipped the devil in the shape of a black cat, and wore his image on a
+ cord round their waists; that they anointed a great silver head with the
+ fat of murdered children; that they practised every kind of sorcery,
+ performed mass improperly, never went to confession, and had betrayed
+ Palestine to the Infidels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the last count of the indictment the blood that had watered Canaan for
+ two hundred years was answer enough. As to the confessional, the
+ accusation emanated from the Dominicans, who were jealous of the Templars
+ confessing to priests of their own order. With respect to the mass, it
+ appears that the habits of the Templars were similar to those of the
+ Cistercian monks; who, till The Lateran Council, had not elevated the Host
+ to receive adoration from the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The accusation of magic naturally adhered to able men conversant with the
+ East. The head was found in the Temple at Paris. It was made of silver,
+ resembled a beautiful woman, and was, in fact, a reliquary containing the
+ bones of one of the 11,000 virgins of Cologne. But truth was not wanted;
+ and under the influence of solitary imprisonment, hunger, damp and
+ loathsome dungeons, and two years of terror and misery, enough of
+ confessions had been extorted for Philippe&rsquo;s purpose by the year 1309.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many had died under their sufferings, and some had at first confessed in
+ their agonies, and, when no longer tortured, had retracted all their
+ declarations with horror. These became dangerous, and were therefore
+ declared to be relapsed heretics, and fifty-six were burnt by slow degrees
+ in a great inclosure, surrounded by stakes, all crying out, and praying
+ devoutly and like good Christians till the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus horribly intimidated recusant witnesses, the King caused the
+ Pope to convoke a synod at Paris, before which the Grand Master, Jacques
+ de Molay, was cited. He was a brave old soldier, but no scholar, and
+ darkness, hunger, torture, and distress had so affected him, that, when
+ brought into the light of day, he stood before the prelates and barons,
+ among whom he had once been foremost, so utterly bewildered and confused,
+ that the judges were forced to remand him for two days to recover his
+ faculties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When brought before them again, he was formally asked whether he would
+ defend his order, or plead for himself. He made answer that he should be
+ contemptible in his own eyes, and those of all the world, did he not
+ defend an order which had done so much for him, but that he was in such
+ poverty that he had not fourpence left in the world, and that he must beg
+ for an advocate, to whom he would mention the great kings, princes,
+ barons, bishops, and knights whose witness would at once clear his knights
+ from the monstrous charges brought against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon he was told that advocates were not allowed to men accused of
+ heresy, and that he had better take care how he contradicted his own
+ deposition, or he would be condemned as relapsed. His own deposition, as
+ three cardinals avouched that he had made it before them, was then
+ translated to him from the Latin, which he did not understand. In
+ horror-struck amazement at hearing such words ascribed to himself, the old
+ knight twice made the sign of the cross, and exclaimed, &ldquo;If the cardinals
+ were other sort of men, he should know how to deal with them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was told that the cardinals were not there to receive a challenge to
+ battle. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that was not what he meant; he only wished that
+ might befall them which was done by the Saracens and Tartars to infamous
+ liars&mdash;whose heads they cut off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was sent back to prison and brought back again, less vehement against
+ his accusers, but still declaring himself a faithful Christian, and
+ begging to be admitted to the rites of religion; but he was left to
+ languish in his dungeon for two years longer, while two hundred and
+ thirty-one witnesses were examined before the commissaries. In May, 1311,
+ five hundred and forty-four persons belonging to the order were led before
+ the judges from the different prisons, while eight of the most
+ distinguished knights, and their agent at Rome, undertook their defence.
+ Their strongest plea was, that not a Templar had criminated himself,
+ except in France, where alone torture had been employed; but they could
+ obtain no hearing, and a report was drawn up by the commissaries to the
+ so-called Council of Vienne. This was held by Clement V. in the early part
+ of 1312; and on the 6th of March it passed a decree abolishing the Order
+ of the Temple, and transmitting its possessions to the Knights of St.
+ John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were other councils held to try the Templars in the other lands
+ where they had also been seized. In England, the confessions of the
+ knights tortured in France were employed as evidence, together with the
+ witness of begging friars, minstrels, women, and discreditable persons;
+ and on the decision of the Council of Vienne, the poor knights confessed,
+ as well they might, that their order had fallen under evil report, and
+ were therefore pardoned and released, with the forfeiture of all their
+ property to the hospital. Their principal house in England was the Temple
+ in Fleet street, where they had built a curious round church in the
+ twelfth century, when it was consecrated by the Patriarch Heraclius of
+ Jerusalem. The shape was supposed to be like the Holy Sepulchre, to whose
+ service they were devoted; but want of space obliged them to add a square
+ building of three aisles beyond. This, with the rest of their property,
+ devolved on the Order of St. John, who, in the next reign, let the Temple
+ buildings for £10 per annum to the law-students of London, and in their
+ possession it has ever since continued. The ancient seal of the knights,
+ representing two men mounted upon one horse, was assumed by the benchers
+ of one side of the Temple, though in the classical taste of later times
+ the riders were turned into wings, and the steed into Pegasus; while their
+ brethren bear the lamb and banner, likewise a remembrance of the Crusaders
+ who founded the round church, eight of whom still lie in effigy upon the
+ floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Spain the bishops would hardly proceed at all against the Templars, and
+ secured pensions for them out of the confiscated property. In Portugal
+ they were converted into a new order for the defence of the realm. In
+ Germany, they were allowed to die out unmolested; but in Italy Philippe&rsquo;s
+ influence was more felt, and they were taken in the same net with those in
+ France. There the King&rsquo;s coffers were replenished with their spoil, very
+ little of which ever found its way to the Knights of St. John. The knights
+ who half confessed, and then recanted, were put to death; those who never
+ confessed at all, were left in prison; those who admitted the guilt of the
+ order, were rewarded by a miserable existence at large. The great
+ dignitaries&mdash;Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master, and Guy, the son of
+ the Dauphin of Auvergne, the Commander of Normandy, and two others&mdash;languished
+ in captivity till the early part of 1314, when they were led out before
+ Notre Dame to hear their sentence read, condemning them to perpetual
+ imprisonment, and rehearsing their own confession once more against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grand Master and Guy of Auvergne, both old men, wasted with
+ imprisonment and torture, no sooner saw the face of day, the grand old
+ cathedral, and the assembly of the people, than they loudly protested that
+ these false and shameful confessions were none of theirs; that their dead
+ brethren were noble knights and true Christians; and that these foul
+ slanders had never been uttered by them, but invented by wicked men, who
+ asked them questions in a language they did not understand, while they,
+ noble barons, belted knights, sworn Crusaders, were stretched on the rack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishops present were shocked at the exposure of their treatment, and
+ placed them in the hands of the Provost of Paris, saying that they would
+ consider their case the next morning. But Philippe, dreading a reaction in
+ their favor, declared them relapsed, and condemned them to the flames that
+ very night, the 18th of March. A picture is extant in Germany, said to
+ have been of the time, showing the meek face of the white-haired,
+ white-bearded Molay, his features drawn with wasting misery, his eyes one
+ mute appeal, his hands bound over the large cross on his breast. He died
+ proclaiming aloud the innocence of his order, and listened to with pity
+ and indignation by the people. His last cry, ere the flames stifled his
+ voice, was an awful summons to Pope Clement to meet him before the
+ tribunal of Heaven within forty days; to King Philippe to appear there in
+ a year and a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clement V. actually died on the 20th of April; and while his nephews and
+ servants were plundering his treasures, his corpse was consumed by fire
+ caught from the wax-lights around his bier. His tyrant, Philippe le Bel,
+ was but forty-six years of age, still young-looking and handsome; but the
+ decree had gone forth against him, and he fell into a bad state of health.
+ He was thrown from his horse while pursuing a wild boar, and the accident
+ brought on a low fever, which, on the 29th of November, 1314, brought him
+ likewise to the grave. He left three sons, all perishing, after unhappy
+ marriages, in the flower of their age, and one daughter, the disgrace and
+ misery of France and England alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So perished the Templars; so their persecutors! It is one of the darkest
+ tragedies of that age of tragedies; and in many a subsequent page shall we
+ trace the visitation for their blood upon guilty France and on the line of
+ Valois. They were not perfect men. They have left an evil name, for they
+ were hard, proud, often, licentious men, and the &ldquo;Red Monk&rdquo; figures in
+ many a tradition of horror; but there can be no doubt that the brotherhood
+ had its due proportion of gallant, devoted warriors, who fought well for
+ the cross they bore. Their fate has been well sung by Lord Houghton:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The warriors of the sacred grave,
+ Who looked to Christ for laws,
+ And perished for the faith they gave
+ Their comrades and the cause;
+
+ They perished, in one fate alike,
+ The veteran and the boy,
+ Where&rsquo;er the regal arm could strike,
+ To torture and destroy:
+
+ While darkly down the stream of time,
+ Devised by evil fame,
+ Float murmurs of mysterious crime,
+ And tales of secret shame.
+
+ How oft, when avarice, hate, or pride,
+ Assault some noble hand,
+ The outer world, that scorns the side
+ It does not understand,
+
+ Echoes each foul derisive word,
+ Gilds o&rsquo;er each hideous sight,
+ And consecrates the wicked sword
+ With names of holy right.
+
+ Yet by these lessons men awake
+ To know they cannot bind
+ Discordant will&rsquo;s in one, and make
+ An aggregate of mind.
+
+ For ever in our best essays
+ At close fraternal ties
+ An evil narrowness waylays
+ Our present sympathies;
+
+ And love, however bright it burns
+ For what it holds roost fond,
+ Is tainted by its unconcern
+ For all that lies beyond.
+
+ And still the earth has many a knight
+ By high vocation bound
+ To conquer in enduring tight
+ The Spirit&rsquo;s holy ground.
+
+ And manhood&rsquo;s pride and hopes of youth
+ Still meet the Templar&rsquo;s doom,
+ Crusaders of the ascended truth,
+ Not of the empty tomb.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XL. THE BARONS&rsquo; WARS. (1310-1327.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>King of England</i>.
+ 1307. Edward II.
+ 1314. Louis X.
+ 1316. Philippe V.
+ 1322. Charles IV.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+ 1314. Louis V.
+
+ <i>Kings of France</i>.
+ 1285. Philippe IV
+
+ <i>Emperors of Germany</i>.
+ 1308. Henry VII.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1305. Clement V.
+ 1316. John XXII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was the misfortune of Edward of Caernarvon that he could not attach
+ himself in moderation. Among the fierce Earls, and jealous, distrustful
+ Barons, he gladly distinguished a man of gentle mould, who could return
+ his affection; but he could not bestow his favor discreetly, and always
+ ended by turning the head of his favorite and offending his subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was at his court a noble old knight, Sir Hugh le Despenser, whose
+ ancestors had come over with William the Conqueror, and whose father had
+ been created a Baron in 1264, as a reward for his services against Simon
+ de Montfort. To this gentleman, and to his son Hugh, Edward became warmly
+ attached; and apparently not undeservedly, for they were both gallant and
+ knightly, and the son was highly accomplished, and of fine person. Edward
+ made him his chamberlain, and gave him in marriage Eleanor de Clare, the
+ sister of the Earl of Gloucester who was killed at Bannockburn, and one of
+ the heiresses of the great earldom, with all its rights on the Welsh
+ marches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the love and sympathy of the nation were with the King&rsquo;s cousin,
+ Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who probably obtained favor by liberality, or
+ by the arts for which poor Gaveston had named him the &ldquo;stage-player,&rdquo;
+ since his life seems to have been dissolute under much appearance of
+ devotion. The last great Earl of Lincoln had chosen him as his son-in-law,
+ while the intended bride, Alice, was yet a young child. In 1310, just
+ after Gaveston&rsquo;s fall, Lincoln died, and the little Countess Alice, then
+ only twelve years old, became the wife of Lancaster; but in 1317 mutual
+ accusations were made on the part of the Earl and Countess, and Alice
+ claimed to be set free, on account of a previous promise of marriage;
+ while Lancaster complained of Earl Warrenne for having allowed a
+ humpbacked knight, named Richard St. Martin, to carry Alice off to one of
+ his castles, called Caneford, and there to obtain from her the troth now
+ pleaded against him. Edward II. told Lancaster that he might proceed
+ against Warrenne in the ordinary course of law: but this he would not do,
+ as he did not wish to prove his wife&rsquo;s former contract, lest he should
+ lose her great estates with herself; and instead of going honorably to
+ work, he added this reply to his list of discontents against the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His friends even set it about that Edward II. was not the true son of
+ Edward I.; and a foolish man, named John Deydras, even came forward
+ professing to be the real Edward of Caernarvon, who had been changed at
+ nurse; but no one believed him, and he was hanged for treason. A like
+ story was invented, and even a ballad was current, making Queen Eleanor of
+ Provence confess that Edmund Crouchback, not Edward I., was the rightful
+ heir, but that he was set aside on account of his deformity; and
+ Lancaster, as Edmund&rsquo;s son, was on the watch to profit by the King&rsquo;s
+ unpopularity. Discontents were on the increase, and were augmented by a
+ severe famine, and by the constant incursions of the Scots. Such was the
+ want of corn, that, to prevent the consumption of grain, an edict was
+ enacted that no beer should be brewed; and meat of any kind was so scarce,
+ that, though the King decreed that, on pain of forfeiture, an ox should be
+ sold for sixteen shillings, a sheep for three and sixpence, and a fowl for
+ a penny, none of these creatures were forthcoming on any terms. Loathsome
+ animals were eaten; and it was even said that parents were forced to keep
+ a strict watch over their children, lest they should be stolen and
+ devoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the King and Queen were banquetting at Westminster, at Whitsuntide,
+ 1317, a masked lady rode into the hall on horseback, and delivered a
+ letter to the King. Imagining it to be some sportive challenge or gay
+ compliment, he ordered that it should be read aloud; but it proved to be a
+ direful lamentation over the state of England, and an appeal to him to
+ rouse himself from his pleasures and attend to the good of his people. The
+ bearer was at once pursued and seized, when she confessed that she had
+ been sent by a knight; and he, on being summoned, asked pardon, saying he
+ had not expected that the letter would be read in public, but that he
+ deemed it the only means of drawing the King&rsquo;s attention to the miseries
+ of his people. It may be feared that the letter met with the fate of
+ Jeremiah&rsquo;s roll.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cloud was already rising in the West, which seemed small and trifling,
+ but which was fraught with bitter hatred and envy, ere long to burst in a
+ storm upon the heads of the King and his friends. The first seeds of
+ strife were sown by the dishonesty of a knight on the borders of Wales,
+ one William de Breos. He began his career by trying to cheat his
+ stepmother of her dower of eight hundred marks; and when the law decided
+ against him, he broke out into such unseemly language against the judge,
+ that he was sentenced to walk bareheaded from the King&rsquo;s Bench to the
+ Exchequer to ask pardon, and then committed to the Tower. In after years
+ he returned to his lordship of Gower, and there committed an act of fraud
+ which led to the most fatal consequences. Having two daughters, Aliva and
+ Jane, the eldest of whom was married to John de Mowbray and the second to
+ James de Bohun, he executed a deed, settling his whole estate upon Aliva,
+ and, in case of her death without children, upon Jane. But concealing this
+ arrangement, he next proceeded to sell Gower three times over&mdash;to
+ young Le Despenser, to Roger Mortimer, and to the Earl of Hereford; and
+ having received all their purchase-money, he absconded therewith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mowbray took possession of Gower in right of his wife, and was thus first
+ in the field; but Hugh le Despenser, whose purchase had been sanctioned by
+ the King, came down upon him with a strong hand, and drove him out of the
+ property. Thereupon Mowbray made common cause with all the other cheated
+ claimants, De Bohun joining the head of his house, the great Earl of
+ Hereford, who, with Roger Mortimer and his uncle, another Mortimer of the
+ same name, revenged their wrongs by a foray upon Lady Eleanor le
+ Despenser&rsquo;s estates in Glamorganshire, killing her servants, burning her
+ castles, and driving off her cattle, so that in a few nights they had done
+ several thousand pounds&rsquo; worth of damage. The King, much incensed,
+ summoned the Earl of Hereford to appeal before the council; but the Earl
+ demanded that Hugh le Despenser should be previously placed in the custody
+ of the Earl of Lancaster until the next parliament; and, on the King&rsquo;s
+ refusal, made another inroad on the lands of the Despensers, and betook
+ himself to Yorkshire, where the Earl of Lancaster was collecting all the
+ malcontents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two Earls, the Lords of the Marches or borders of Wales, and
+ thirty-four Barons and Knights, bound themselves by a deed, agreeing to
+ prosecute the two Despensers until they should be driven into exile, and
+ to maintain the quarrel to the honor of Heaven and Holy Church, and the
+ profit of the King and his family. Lancaster proceeded to march upon
+ London, allowing his men to live upon the plunder of the estates of the
+ two favorites. From St. Alban&rsquo;s he sent a message to the King, requiring
+ the banishment of the father and son, and immunity for his own party.
+ Edward made a spirited answer, that the father was beyond sea in his
+ service; the son with the fleet; that he would never sentence any man
+ unheard; and that it would be contrary to his coronation oath to promise
+ immunity to men in arms against the public peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Barons advanced to London, and, quartering their followers in Holborn
+ and Clerkenwell, spent a fortnight in deliberation. It appears that the
+ token of adherence to their party was the wearing of a white favor, on
+ which account the session of 1321 was called the Parliament of the White
+ Bands. One day, when these white ensigns mustered strongly, the Barons
+ brought forward an accusation on eleven counts against the two Despensers,
+ and on their own authority, in the presence of the King, banished them
+ from the realm, and pardoned themselves for their rising in arms. Edward
+ had no power to resist, and, accordingly, the act was entered on the
+ rolls, and the younger Hugh was driven from Dover, to join his father on
+ the Continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This success rendered the Barons&rsquo; party insolent, and about two months
+ after, when Queen Isabel was on pilgrimage to Canterbury, and had sent her
+ purveyors to prepare a lodging for her at her own royal Castle of Leeds,
+ the Lady Badlesmere, wife to the Castellane, who was also governor of
+ Bristol and had received numerous favors from Edward, refused admittance,
+ fearing damage to her party; and the Queen riding up in the midst of the
+ parley, a volley of arrows was discharged from the castle, and six of the
+ royal escort were killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isabel of course complained loudly of such a reception at her own castle,
+ whereupon Bartholomew Badlesmere himself wrote from Bristol Castle an
+ impudent letter, justifying his wife&rsquo;s conduct. Isabel was much hurt,
+ since she had always been friendly to the Barons&rsquo; party; and when she
+ found that even her uncle of Lancaster stood by the Badlesmeres, she
+ persuaded the King to raise an army to revenge the affront offered to her.
+ Summonses were therefore sent out, and the Londoners, with whom the Queen
+ was very popular, came in great force, and laid siege to Leeds Castle.
+ Lady Badlesmere expected to be succored by Lancaster; but he would not
+ come forward, and in a few days her castle was taken, her steward, Walter
+ Culpepper, hanged, and herself committed to the Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a bold stroke on the King&rsquo;s part emboldened the elder Le Despenser
+ return to England and join his master. Thereupon Lancaster summoned the
+ other nobles to meet him at Doncaster, to consult what measures should be
+ taken against the minions, and led an army to seize Warwick Castle, which,
+ during the minority of Earl Thomas of Warwick, belonged to the King. In
+ the meantime, Hugh followed his father, but, with English respect for
+ order, put himself under custody until his sentence of banishment should
+ be revoked. The matter was tried before the Bishops of the province of
+ Canterbury, when it was argued, on behalf of Hugh, that Magna Charta had
+ been set at naught by his condemnation without a hearing, and that the
+ King&rsquo;s consent had been extorted by force; and the Earl of Kent, Edward&rsquo;s
+ brother, with several others, making oath that they had been overawed by
+ the White Bands, the banishment was declared illegal, and the prisoners
+ set at liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lancaster proceeded to raise the north of England; Hereford and the two
+ Mortimers went to the marches of Wales to collect their forces; and
+ Edward, for once under the wise counsel of the Chancellor John de Salmon,
+ set forth alertly in December toward the West, that he might deal with the
+ two armies separately. He was very popular on the Welsh border, and met
+ with rapid success, breaking up the forces of the Lords Marchers before
+ they could come to a head, and finally making both the Mortimers
+ prisoners, sending them to the Tower. Hereford, with 8,000 men, made his
+ way to join Lancaster, who was at the head of a considerable force, and
+ had already taken the miserable step of entering into correspondence with
+ Robert Bruce, Douglas, and Randolph. Elated by the succor which they
+ promised, Lancaster advanced and laid siege to Ticknall Castle, but was
+ forced to retreat on the approach of the King. At Burton-upon-Trent,
+ however, they halted for three days, with Edward opposite to them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Upon the mount the King his tentage fixt,
+ And in the town the Barons lay in sight,
+ When as the Trent was risen so betwixt,
+ That for a while prolonged the unnatural fight.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ However, a ford was found, and the royal army crossing, Lancaster set fire
+ to Burton, and retreated into Yorkshire, writing again from Puntefract
+ Castle under the signature of King Arthur, to ask aid from the Scots, and
+ secure his retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Michael Drayton observes, &ldquo;Bridges should seem to Barons ominous;&rdquo; for
+ at Boroughbridge, upon the Ure, Lancaster found Sir Andrew Harclay and Sir
+ Simon Ward, Governors of York and Carlisle, with a band of northern
+ troops, ready to cut off his retreat. The bridge was too narrow for
+ cavalry, and Hereford therefore led a charge on foot; but in this perilous
+ undertaking he was slain by a Welshman who was hidden under the bridge,
+ and who thrust a lance through a crevice of the boarding into his body as
+ he passed. His fall discomfited the rest, and Lancaster, who had been
+ attempting a ford, was driven back by the archery. He tried to bribe Sir
+ Andrew Harclay, and, failing, begged for a truce of one night, still
+ hoping that the Scots might arrive. Harclay granted this, but in early
+ morning summoned the sheriff and the county-force to arrest the Earl.
+ Lancaster retired into a chapel and, looking on the crucifix, said, &ldquo;Good
+ Lord, I render myself to Thee, and put myself into Thy mercy.&rdquo; He was
+ taken to York for one night, and afterward, to his own Castle of
+ Pontefract, where, on the King&rsquo;s last disastrous retreat from Scotland, he
+ had mocked and jeered at his sovereign from the battlements: and Harclay
+ took care to make generally known the treasonable correspondence with
+ Scotland, proofs of which had been found on the person of the dead
+ Hereford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King presently arriving at Pontefract, brought Lancaster to trial
+ before six Earls and a number of Barons; and as his treason was manifest,
+ he was told that it would be to no purpose to speak in his own defence,
+ and was sentenced to the death of a traitor. In consideration of his royal
+ blood, Edward remitted the chief horrors of the execution, and made it
+ merely decapitation; but as the Earl was led to a hill outside the town,
+ on a gray pony without a bridle, the mob pelted him and jeered him by his
+ assumed name of King Arthur. &ldquo;King of Heaven,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;grant me mercy!
+ for the king of earth hath forsaken me.&rdquo; He knelt by the black with his
+ face to the east, but he was bidden to turn to the north, that he might
+ look toward his friends, the Scots; and in this manner he was beheaded.
+ The inhabitants of the northern counties were not likely to think lightly
+ of the offence of bringing in the Scots, and yet in a short time there was
+ a strong change of feeling. Lancaster was mourned as &ldquo;the good Earl,&rdquo; and
+ miracles were said to be wrought at his tomb. The King was obliged to
+ write orders to the Bishop of London to forbid the people from offering
+ worship to his picture hung up in St. Paul&rsquo;s Church; and Drayton records a
+ tradition that &ldquo;grass would never grow where the battle of Boroughbridge
+ had been fought.&rdquo; It seemed as if Lancaster had succeeded to the
+ reputation of Montfort, as a protector of the liberties of the country:
+ but to our eyes he appears more like a mere factious, turbulent noble,
+ acting rather from spite and party spirit than as a redresser of wrongs;
+ never showing the respect for law and justice manifested by the opponents
+ of Edward I.; and, in fact, constraining the Royalists to appeal to Magna
+ Charta against him. Still there must have been something striking and
+ attractive about him, for, after his death, even his injured cousin Edward
+ lamented him, and reproached his nobles for not having interceded for him.
+ Fourteen bannerets and fourteen other knights were executed, being all who
+ were taken in arms against the King; the others were allowed to make
+ peace; and the Mortimers, who had been condemned to death, had their
+ sentence changed to perpetual imprisonment. Hereford&rsquo;s estates passed on
+ to the eldest of his large family, the King&rsquo;s own nephews. Lancaster left
+ no children, but his brother, Henry Wryneck, Earl of Derby, did not
+ receive his estates till they had been mulcted largely on behalf of the
+ Despensers. The father was created Earl of Winchester, and the son
+ received such bounty from the King, that all the old hatred against Piers
+ Gaveston was revived, though it does not appear that Hugh provoked dislike
+ by any such follies or extravagances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder Roger Mortimer, the uncle, died in the Tower. The younger
+ contrived, after a year&rsquo;s imprisonment, to make interest with one of the
+ servants in the Tower, Gerard de Asplaye, with whose assistance he gave an
+ entertainment to his guards, drugged their liquor, so as to throw them
+ into a heavy sleep, broke through the wall into the royal kitchen, and
+ thence escaped by a rope-ladder. Report afterward averred that it was the
+ fairest hand in England that drugged the wine and held the rope, and that
+ Queen Isabel,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;From the wall&rsquo;s height, as when he down did slide,
+ Had heard him cry, &lsquo;Now, Fortune, be my guide!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus far is certain, that Isabel and Mortimer were inmates of the Tower at
+ the same time, in the year 1321; for she was left there while the King was
+ gone in pursuit of Lancaster, and she there gave birth to her fourth
+ child, Joan. Whether the prisoner then sought an interview with her, is
+ not known, but he was a remarkably handsome man, and Isabel, at twenty-six
+ years of age, was beautiful, proud, and with bitterness in her heart
+ against her husband for his early neglect. She had been on fairly good
+ terms with him ever since the birth of the Prince of Wales, and her grace
+ and beauty, her affable manners, and the idea that she was ill-used, made
+ her a great favorite with the English nation; but she was angered by the
+ execution of her uncle, the Earl of Lancaster, and from the time of the
+ King&rsquo;s return she proceeded to manifest great discontent, and as much
+ dislike and jealousy of the Despensers as she had previously shown toward
+ Gaveston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mortimer escaped to France, and subsequent events made it seem as if she
+ had been acting in concert with him. He had married a French lady, Jeanne
+ de Joinville, and was taken at once into the service of King Charles IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles IV., le Bel, was the youngest of Isabel&rsquo;s brothers, who had
+ succeeded each other so quickly that it seemed as though the sacrilegious
+ murder of the Templars was to be visited by the extinction of the male
+ line of Philippe IV. To Charles, Isabel sent great complaints, declaring
+ that she was &ldquo;married to a gripple miser, and was no better than a
+ waiting-woman, living on a pension from the Despensers.&rdquo; There had, in
+ fact, been a fierce struggle with them for power, and they had prevailed
+ to have all her French attendants dismissed, very probably on the
+ discovery of the transactions with Mortimer in the Tower, and a yearly
+ income had been assigned to her in lieu of her royal estates. This was
+ very irregularly paid, for affairs were in a most confused and disorderly
+ state, managed in a most childish manner. It appears that, when hunting at
+ Windsor, the Chancellor Baldock gave the great seal to the King to keep,
+ and that the King made it over to William de Ayremyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were no doubt grounds for complaint on both sides; but Charles le
+ Bel saw only his sister&rsquo;s view of the question, and resolved to quarrel
+ with his brother-in-law. Homage for the Duchy of Aquitaine had not been
+ rendered to him, and on this pretext he began to exercise all possible
+ modes of annoyance on the borders, and to give judgment against any
+ Guiennois or Poitevins who sued against Edward as their liege lord, Edward
+ remonstrated in vain, and sent his brother Edmund, Earl of Kent, a
+ fine-looking but weak young man of twenty-two, to endeavor to make peace,
+ but in vain: on the first pretext, a war on the borders broke out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon Edward took into his custody all the castles belonging to his
+ wife, declaring that he could not leave them in her hands while she was in
+ correspondence with the enemies of the country; and yet, with his usual
+ inconsistent folly, he listened to a proposal from her that she should go
+ to Paris to bring about a peace with her brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With four knights, Isabel crossed the sea, and presently made her
+ appearance at Paris in the character of an injured Princess, kneeling
+ before her brother, and asking his protection against the cruelty of her
+ husband; to which Charles replied, &ldquo;Sister, be comforted; for, by my faith
+ to Monseigneur St. Denis, I will find a remedy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isabel was lodged at the court of France, and treated with distinction.
+ Mortimer and all the banished English repaired to her abode, and all the
+ chivalry of France regarded her as an exiled heroine. She wrote to her
+ husband that peace might be scoured by the performance of the neglected
+ homage, and he was actually setting out for the purpose, when, in a second
+ letter, she told him that his own presence was not needed, but that his
+ ceremony might be gone through by his son Edward, Prince of Wales,
+ provided the duchy were placed in his hands as an appanage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This proposal met with approval, and young Edward, then twelve years old,
+ under the charge of the Bishops of Exeter and Oxford, was sent to Paris,
+ after having promised his father to hasten his return, and not to marry
+ without his consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had the boy arrived, than the homage was performed, and Edward
+ expected the return of both mother and son; but they still delayed, and on
+ receiving urgent letters from him, the Queen made public declaration that
+ she did not believe her life in safety from the Despensers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor King Edward, amazed, and almost thinking her under a delusion, roused
+ all the prelates in the realm to write to her in defence of his friends,
+ and himself wrote to her brother, saying that she could have no reasonable
+ fear of any man in his dominions, since, if Hugh or any other person
+ wished to do her any harm, he himself would be the first to resent it. He
+ wrote likewise pre-emptorily to the Prince to return, but all in vain; and
+ a light was thrown on their proceedings, when Walter Stapleton, Bishop of
+ Exeter, returned home as a fugitive, having discovered a plot on
+ Mortimer&rsquo;s part against his own life, and bringing word that Isabel&rsquo;s
+ affection for Mortimer was the true cause of delay. It would also seem
+ that the Bishop had in part detected a conspiracy against his master, for
+ there were orders instantly sent to search all letters arriving at any of
+ the ports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Stapleton&rsquo;s return, Edward&rsquo;s letters to Charles, and even to the
+ Pope, became so pressing, that for very shame Charles could not allow his
+ sister to remain at Paris any longer, and, rather than provoke a war, he
+ dismissed her. She was a woman of great plausibility and fascination, and
+ she not only persuaded her young son to believe her in danger from his
+ father, but she also won over her brother-in-law, the Earl of Kent, as
+ well as her cousin, the Sieur Robert d&rsquo;Artois; and setting out from Paris
+ in their company, she proceeded to the independent German principalities
+ in the guise of a dame-errant of romance, misused by her husband,
+ maltreated by her brother, denied a refuge even in her native country, and
+ seeking aid from foreign princes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every chivalrous heart, deluded by appearances, glowed with enthusiasm. At
+ Ostrevant, John, the brother of the Count of Hainault, came and vowed
+ himself her knight, promising to redress her wrongs. He conducted her to
+ his brother&rsquo;s court at Hainault; and there the young Edward first beheld
+ the plump, blue-eyed, fair-haired, honest Philippa, a girl of about his
+ own age, and a youthful true-love sprang up between them&mdash;the sole
+ gleam of light in this dark period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Isabel&rsquo;s beautiful face and mournful tale deluded the young, as did
+ Mortimer&rsquo;s promises the covetous. She finally set sail from Dort with
+ 2,500 French and Brabançons, under the charge of Sir John of Hainault, and
+ landed at Orwell, in Suffolk. The King had ordered that any one who landed
+ on the coast should be treated as a traitor, except the Queen and the
+ Prince, and had set a price on the head of Mortimer; but no one attended
+ to him. Isabel had won the sympathy of the nation by her fancied wrongs;
+ and Adam Orleton, Bishop of Hereford, a former partisan of Lancaster, was
+ working in her cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both the King&rsquo;s brothers, and his cousin, Henry of Lancaster, were of her
+ party; and the universal dislike and jealousy of Despenser made the more
+ loyal disinclined to exert themselves in the King&rsquo;s behalf. He summoned
+ the Londoners to take up arms, but was answered, that though they would
+ shut the gates against all foreigners, they would not be led more than a
+ day&rsquo;s march beyond the city walls. He could only seek a refuge among his
+ more attached subjects, the Welsh; and leaving his younger children and
+ his niece, the wife of Hugh le Despenser, in the Tower, he set off for the
+ marches of Wales. No sooner was he gone, than the citizens rose, seized
+ the Tower, and murdered the loyal Bishop of Exeter at St. Paul&rsquo;s Cross,
+ throwing his body into the mud of the river, and sending his head to the
+ Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen, whose army increased every day, had arrived at Oxford, where
+ Adam Orleton preached a disgraceful sermon on the text, &ldquo;My head, my head
+ acheth,&rdquo; wherein he averred the startling prescription that the cure for
+ an aching head was to cut it off, and that the present head of England
+ needed this decisive remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor King had gone to Gloucester, whence he sent the elder Le
+ Despenser to hold out Bristol Castle; but the townspeople proved so
+ disaffected, that the castle was forced to surrender to the rebels on the
+ third day. The Queen appointed a judge, who sentenced the old man, ninety
+ years of age, to be put to death; and the murder was committed the
+ following day, with all the circumstances of atrocity that had been spared
+ to Lancaster. At Bristol, Isabel became aware that her husband had fled
+ farther to the West; he had, in fact, sailed, with Hugh le Despenser and
+ the Chancellor Baldock, for Ireland, but he was driven back by contrary
+ winds, and forced to land in Glamorganshire. He wandered from castle to
+ castle, and was besieged at Caerphilli, whence it is said that he escaped
+ at night in the disguise of a peasant; and, to avoid detection, himself
+ assisted in carrying brushwood to feed the fires of the besiegers. He next
+ took refuge in a farmhouse, where the farmer tried to baffle the pursuers
+ by setting him to dig; but his awkwardness in handling the spade had
+ nearly betrayed him. For a short time he tarried at Neath Abbey, but left
+ it lest the monks should suffer for giving him shelter. At the end of
+ another week Despenser and Baldock were discovered, and delivered up to
+ Henry of Lancaster; and on this Edward came forward and gave himself up,
+ to save them, or to share their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no hope; the King was kept in close custody, and Baldock was so
+ ill-treated that he died shortly after. Hugh le Despenser would eat no
+ food after he was taken; and, lest death should balk revenge, he was at
+ once brought to a sham trial, and accused of every misfortune that had
+ befallen England&mdash;of the loss of Bannockburn; of conspiracy against
+ the Queen; of counselling the death of Lancaster; and of suppressing the
+ miracles at his tomb. For all which deeds Sir Hugh le Despenser was
+ sentenced to die as a wicked and attainted traitor; and immediately after
+ he was drawn to execution in a black gown, with his scutcheon reversed,
+ and a wreath of nettles around his head&mdash;but, happily, nearly
+ insensible from exhaustion&mdash;and was hanged on a gallows fifty feet
+ high. His son Hugh, a spirited young man of nineteen, held out Caerphilli
+ Castle manfully, until he actually obtained a promise of safety, and lived
+ to transmit the honors of the oldest barony now existing in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Arundel was likewise executed, and Mortimer seized his
+ property; after which the Queen set out for London, summoning the
+ Parliament to meet at Westminster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Parliament Adam Orleton began by making outrageous speeches as to
+ the certain death it would be to the Queen and Prince if the King were
+ released and restored to his authority, and he called upon the Lords to
+ choose whether father or son should be King. The London mob clamored in
+ fury without, ardent for the ruin of the King; and the Archbishop, saying,
+ <i>Vox populi vox Dei</i>, added his influence. Young Edward was led
+ forward, and a few hymns being hastily sung, received the oaths of
+ allegiance of all the peers present, except the prelates of York, London,
+ Rochester, and Carlisle, who boldly maintained the rights of the captive
+ King, though with great danger to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop of Rochester was thrown down by the furious mob, and nearly
+ murdered; and the sight so terrified the other friends of the poor King,
+ that not a voice was raised in his defence. A bill was passed declaring
+ Edward II. deposed, and Edward III. the sovereign; whereupon Isabel, to
+ keep up appearances, lamented so much, that she actually deceived her son,
+ who came forward, and with great spirit declared that he would never
+ deprive his father of the crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was at Kenilworth, honorably treated by his cousin, Henry of
+ Lancaster, and thither a deputation was sent to force him to resign his
+ dignity. The Bishops of Winchester and Lincoln were first sent to him to
+ argue, threaten, and persuade, and, when they thought him sufficiently
+ prepared, led him in a plain black gown to make his formal renunciation.
+ At the sight of his mortal enemy, Orleton, Edward sank to the ground, but
+ recovered enough to listen to a violent discourse from that rebel prelate,
+ reproaching him with all his misconduct, and requiring him to lay aside
+ his crown. Meekly, and weeping floods of tears, Edward replied, that &ldquo;he
+ was in their hands, and they must do what seemed good to them; he only
+ thanked them for their goodness to his son, and owned his own sins to be
+ the sole cause of his misfortunes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Sir William Trussel, in the name of all England, revoked the oath of
+ allegiance, and the steward of the household broke his staff of office, as
+ he would have done had it been the funeral of his master. Would that it
+ had been his funeral, must have been the wish of the unfortunate Sir
+ Edward of Caernarvon, as he was thenceforth termed; disowned, degraded,
+ with wife, son, and brothers turned against him; not one voice uplifted in
+ his favor; all his friends murdered. He wrote some melancholy Latin verses
+ during his captivity, full of sad complaints of the inconstancy of
+ Fortune; but he had not yet experienced the worst that was in store for
+ him. At first, presents of clothes and kindly messages were sent to him by
+ the Queen; and when he begged to see her or his children, she replied that
+ it would not be permitted by Parliament. He pleaded again and again, and
+ Henry of Lancaster began so far to appear his friend, that Isabel took
+ alarm. The Pope refused her request that Thomas of Lancaster should be
+ canonized as a saint and martyr, and she feared that he might even
+ interfere on the King&rsquo;s behalf, and oblige her to give up Mortimer, and
+ return to her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orleton had been sent on an embassy to the Papal court, but he was there
+ consulted by the Queen whether the King should be allowed to live. His
+ answer was the ambiguous line: &ldquo;Edwardum occidere nolite timere bonum
+ est.&rdquo; (Edward to kill be unwilling to fear it is good.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubt, in such a case, is certain to end in evil. That the King should
+ die, was determined, and the charge of the unfortunate monarch was
+ therefore transferred to Maurice, Lord Berkeley, and to Sir John
+ Maltravers. The latter set out with two men, named Ogle and Gurney, to
+ escort the King from Kenilworth. At Bristol such demonstrations were made
+ in his favor, that, taking alarm, his keepers clad him in mean and scanty
+ garments, and made him ride toward Corfe in the chilly April night,
+ scoffing and jeering him; and when, in the morning, they paused to arrange
+ their dress, they set a crown of hay in derision on his head, and brought
+ him, in an old helmet, filthy ditch-water to shave with. With a shower of
+ tears he strove to smile, saying that, in spite of them, his cheeks were
+ covered with pure warm water enough. They brought him to Berkeley Castle,
+ on the Severn, and there, it is said, tried to poison him; but his
+ strength of constitution resisted the potion, and did not fail, under
+ confinement or insufficient diet. At last, when Berkeley was ill, and
+ absent, came the night,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;When Severn should re-echo with affright
+ The sounds of death through Berkeley&rsquo;s roofs that ring,
+ Shrieks of an agonizing king.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ At those cries many a countryman awoke, crossed himself, and prayed as for
+ a soul departing in torment. Seven months after his deposition, Edward of
+ Caernarvon lay dead in Berkeley Castle, and the gates were thrown open,
+ and the chief burghers of Bristol admitted to see his corpse. No sign of
+ violence was visible, but the features, once so beautiful, were writhed
+ into such a look of agony, that the citizens came away awed and horrified;
+ and hearing the villagers speak of the cries that had rung from the walls
+ the night before, felt certain that the late King had perished by a
+ strange and frightful murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But those were no days for inquiry, and the royal corpse was hastily borne
+ to Gloucester Abbey Church, and there buried. The impression, however,
+ could not be forgotten; multitudes flocked to pray at the shrine of the
+ dead sovereign, whom living no one would befriend: and such offerings were
+ made at his tomb, that the monks raised a beautiful new south aisle to the
+ church; nay, they could have built the church over again with the means
+ thus acquired. A monument was raised over his grave, and his effigy was
+ carved on it&mdash;a robed and crowned figure, with hands meekly folded,
+ and a face of such exquisite, appealing sweetness, dignity, and
+ melancholy, that it is hardly possible to look at it without tears, or to
+ help believing that even thus might Edward have looked when, in all the
+ nobleness of patience, he stood forgiving his persecutors, as they crowned
+ him in scorn with grass, and derided his misfortunes. A weak and frivolous
+ man, cruelly sinned against, Edward of Caernarvon was laid in his untimely
+ grave in the forty-third year of his age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the Barons&rsquo; Wars, no patriotic resistance of an opposition who
+ used sword and lance instead of the tongue and the pen, but the factious
+ jealousy of men who became ferocious in their hatred of favoritism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CAMEO XLI. GOOD KING ROBERT&rsquo;S TESTAMENT. (1314-1329.)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Kings of England</i>.
+ 1307. Edward II.
+ 1327. Edward III.
+ 1322. Charles IV.
+
+ <i>King of Scotland</i>.
+ 1306. Robert I.
+
+ <i>King of France</i>.
+ 1314. Louis X.
+ 1316. Philippe V.
+
+ <i>Emperor of Germany</i>.
+ 1314. Louis V.
+
+ <i>Popes</i>.
+ 1305. Clement V.
+ 1316. John XXII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As England waxed feebler, Scotland waxed stronger and became aggressive.
+ Robert&rsquo;s queen was dead, and he married Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of
+ Ulster, thus making his brother Edward doubtful whether the Scottish crown
+ would descend to him, and anxious to secure a kingdom for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ireland had not been reconciled in two centuries to the domination of the
+ Plantagenets. The Erse, or Irish, believed themselves brethren of the
+ Scots, and in all their wanderings and distresses the Bruces had found
+ shelter, sympathy, and aid in the wild province of Ulster. It seemed,
+ therefore, to Edward Bruce a promising enterprise to offer the Irish
+ chieftains deliverance from the English yoke; and they eagerly responded
+ to his proposal. In 1314, he crossed the sea with a small force, before
+ any one was ready for him, and was obliged at once to return, having thus
+ given the alarm; so that Sir Edward Butler, the Lord Deputy, hurried to
+ the defence, and had mustered his forces by the time Edward Bruce arrived,
+ the next spring, with 6,000 men. He was actually crowned King, and laid
+ siege to Carrickfergus, while the wild chieftains of Connaught broke into
+ the English settlements, and did great mischief, till they were defeated
+ at Athenry by the Earl of Ulster&rsquo;s brother and Sir Richard Bermingham.
+ After the battle, Sir Richard Bermingham sent out his page, John Hussy,
+ with a single attendant, to &ldquo;turn up and peruse&rdquo; the bodies, to see
+ whether his mortal foe O&rsquo;Kelly were among them. O&rsquo;Kelly presently started
+ out of a bush where he had been hidden, and thus addressed the youth:
+ &ldquo;Hussy, thou seest I am at all points armed, and have my esquire, a manly
+ man, beside me. Thou art thin, and a youngling; so that, if I loved thee
+ not for thine own sake, I might betray thee for thy master&rsquo;s. But come and
+ serve me at my request, and I promise thee, by St. Patrick&rsquo;s staff, to
+ make thee a lord in Connaught of more ground than thy master hath in
+ Ireland.&rdquo; Hussy treated the offer with scorn, whereupon his attendant, &ldquo;a
+ stout lubber, began to reprove him for not relenting to so rich a
+ proffer.&rdquo; Hussy&rsquo;s answer was, to cut down the knave; next, &ldquo;he raught to
+ O&rsquo;Kelly&rsquo;s squire a great rap under the pit of the ear, which overthrew
+ him; thirdly, he bestirred himself so nimbly, that ere any help could be
+ hoped for, he had also slain O&rsquo;Kelly, and perceiving breath in the squire,
+ he drawed him up again, and forced him upon a truncheon to bear his lord&rsquo;s
+ head into the high town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These notable exploits were rewarded by knighthood and the lordship of
+ Galtrim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Bruce brought a considerable army to the assistance of his brother,
+ and wasted the country up to the walls of Dublin; but Roger Mortimer
+ coming to the relief of the city, he was forced to retreat. It was a
+ horrible devastation that he made, and yet this was only what was then
+ supposed to be the necessity of war, for it was while burning many a
+ homestead, and reducing multitudes to perish with famine, that Bruce
+ halted his whole army to protect one sick and suffering washerwoman.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;This was a full great courtesy,
+ That swilk a king and so mighty
+ Gert his men dwell on this manner
+ But for a poor lavender.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Bruce was one of the many men tender to the friend, ruthless to the foe;
+ merciful to sufferings he beheld, merciless to those out of his sight. He
+ returned to Scotland, and Mortimer to England, both leaving horrible
+ hunger and distress behind them, and Mortimer in debt £1,000 to the city
+ of Dublin, &ldquo;whereof he payde not one smulkin, and many a bitter curse he
+ carried with him beyond sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Bruce continued to reign in Ulster until the 5th of October, 1318,
+ when the last and nineteenth battle was fought between him and the
+ English, contrary to the advice of his wisest captains. His numbers were
+ very inferior, and almost the whole were slain. Edward Bruce and Sir John
+ Malpas, an English knight, were found lying one upon the other, slain by
+ each other&rsquo;s hands in the deadly conflict. Robert, who was on the way to
+ bring reinforcements to his brother, turned back on hearing the tidings,
+ and employed his forces against his old foe, John of Lorn, in the Western
+ Isles, and it was on this occasion that, to avoid doubling the Mull of
+ Cantire, he dragged his ships upon a wooden slide across the neck of land
+ between the two locks of Tarbut&mdash;a feat often performed by the
+ fishermen, and easy with the small galleys of his fleet, but which had a
+ great effect on the minds of the Islemen, for there was an old saying&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;That he should gar shippes sua
+ Betwixt those seas with sailis gae
+ Should win the Islis sua till hand,
+ That nane with strength should him withstand.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly they submitted, and Lorn, being taken, was shut up for life in
+ Lochleven Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about the time of Edward Bruce&rsquo;s wild reign in Ulster that Dublin
+ University was founded by Archbishop Bigmore; and in contrast to this
+ advance in learning, a few years later, a horrible and barbarous warfare
+ raged, because Lord de la Poer was supposed to have insulted Maurice of
+ Desmond by calling him a rhymer. Moreover, at Kilkenny, a lady, called
+ Dame Alice Kettle, was cited before the Bishop of Ossory for witchcraft.
+ It was alleged that she had a familiar spirit, to whom she was wont to
+ sacrifice nine red cocks, and nine peacocks&rsquo; eyes; that she had a staff
+ &ldquo;on which she ambled through thick and thin;&rdquo; and that between compline
+ and twilight she was wont to sweep the streets, singing,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;To the house of William, my son,
+ Hie all the wealth of Kilkenny town.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She was acquitted on the charge of witchcraft, but her enemies next
+ attacked her on the ground of heresy, and succeeded in accomplishing her
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope at Avignon assisted the English cause by keeping Bruce and his
+ kingdom under an interdict; but the Scots continued to make inroads on
+ England, and year after year the most frightful devastation was committed.
+ In 1319, the Archbishop of York, hoping for another Battle of the
+ Standard, collected all his clergy and their tenants, and led them against
+ Douglas and Randolph at Mitton; but their efforts were unavailing, and
+ such multitudes were slain, that the field was covered with the white
+ surplices they wore over their armor, and the combat was called the
+ Chapter of Mitton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many long years were the northern provinces the constant prey of the
+ Scots, as the discords of the English laid their country open to invasion.
+ Bruce himself was indeed losing his strength, the leprosy contracted
+ during his life of wandering and distress was gaining ground on his
+ constitution, and unnerving his strong limbs; but Douglas and Randolph
+ gallantly supplied his place at the head of his armies, and his affairs
+ were everywhere prospering. He had indeed lost his eldest daughter
+ Marjorie, but she had left a promising son, Robert Stuart; and to himself
+ a son had likewise been born, named David, after the royal Saint of
+ Scotland, and so handsome and thriving a child, that it was augured that
+ he would be a warrior of high prowess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rome was induced, in 1323, to acknowledge Robert as King, on his promise
+ to go on a crusade to recover the Holy Land&mdash;a promise he was little
+ likely to be in a condition to fulfil; and Edward II began to enter into
+ negotiations, and make proposals, that disputes should be set aside by the
+ betrothal of the little David and his youngest daughter, Joan. But these
+ arrangements were broken off by the rebellion of Isabel, and the
+ deposition of Edward of Caernarvon; and Bruce sent Douglas and Randolph to
+ make a fresh attack upon Durham and Northumberland. The wild army were all
+ on horseback; the knights and squires on tolerable steeds, the poorer sort
+ on rough Galloways. They needed no forage for their animals save the grass
+ beneath their feet, no food for themselves except the cattle which they
+ seized, and whose flesh they boiled in their hides. Failing these, each
+ man had a bag of oatmeal, and a plate of metal on which he could bake his
+ griddle-cakes. This was their only baggage; true to the Lindsay motto, the
+ stars were their only tents: and thus they flashed from one county to
+ another, doing infinite mischief, and the dread of every one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While young Edward III was being crowned, they had well-nigh seized the
+ Castle of Norham. The tidings filled the boy with fire and indignation. He
+ was none of the meek, indifferent stock that the Planta Genista sometimes
+ bore, but all the resolution and brilliancy of the line had descended on
+ him in full measure, and all the sweetness and courtesy, together with all
+ the pride and ambition of his race, shone in his blue eye, and animated
+ his noble and gracious figure. He was well-read in chivalrous tales, and
+ it was time that he should perform deeds of arms worthy of his ladye-love,
+ the flaxen-haired Philippa of Hainault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange was the contrast of the pure, ardent spirit, with the scenes of
+ shame and disgrace of which he was as yet unconscious. He knew not that he
+ was a usurper&mdash;that one parent was perishing in a horrible captivity,
+ the other holding himself and his kingdom in shameful trammels, and giving
+ them over into the power of her traitorous lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Edward was sixteen, and Isabel and Mortimer could only hope to
+ continue their dominion by keeping him at a distance; and he was therefore
+ placed at the head of a considerable army, with Sir John of Hainault as
+ his adviser, and sent forth to deliver his country from the Scots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good Sir John of Hainault, accustomed to prick his heavy Flemish war-horse
+ over the Belgian undulating plains, that Nature would seem to have
+ designed for fair battle-fields, was no match for the light horsemen of
+ the Scots, trained to wild, desultory warfare. He and his young King
+ thought the respectable way of fighting was for one side to wait civilly
+ for the other, interchange polite defiances on either side, take no
+ advantage of ground, but ride fairly at each other with pennons flying and
+ trumpets sounding, like a tournament; and they did not at all approve of
+ enemies of whom they saw no trace but a little distant smoke in the
+ horizon, and black embers of villages wherever they marched. There was no
+ coming up with them. The barons set forth in the morning, fierce, and
+ wound up for a battle, pennons displayed, and armor burnished; but by and
+ by the steeds floundered in the peat-bogs, the steep mountain-sides were
+ hard to climb for men and horses cased in proof armor, and when shouts or
+ cries broke out at a distance, and with sore labor the knights struggled
+ to the spot in hopes of an engagement, it proved to have been merely the
+ hallooing of some other part of the army at the wild deer that bounded
+ away from the martial array. When, at night, they reached the banks of the
+ Tyne, and had made their way across the ford, they found themselves in
+ evil case, for all their baggage and provisions were far behind, stuck in
+ the bogs, or stumbling up the mountain-sides, and they had nothing to eat
+ but a single loaf, which each man had carried strapped behind him, and
+ which had a taste of all the various peat-bogs into which he had sunk. The
+ horses had nothing to eat, and there was nothing to fasten them to, so
+ that their masters were forced to spend the whole night holding them by
+ the bridles. They hoped for better things at dawn, but with it came rain,
+ which swelled the river so much that none of the foot or baggage could
+ hope to cross, nor, indeed, could any messenger return to find out where
+ they were. The gentlemen were forced to set to work with their swords to
+ cut down green boughs to weave into huts, and to seek for grass and leaves
+ for their horses. By and by came some peasants, who told them they were
+ fourteen miles from Newcastle and eleven from Carlisle, and no provisions
+ could be obtained any nearer. Messengers were instantly sent off,
+ promising safety and large prices to any one who would bring victuals to
+ the famishing camp, and the burghers of Newcastle and Carlisle seem to
+ have reaped a rich harvest, by sending a moderate supply of bread and wine
+ at exorbitant prices. For a whole week of rain did the army continue in
+ this disconsolate position, without tents, fire, or candle, and with
+ perpetual rain, till the saddles and girths were rotted, the horses wasted
+ to skeletons, and the army, with rusted mail and draggled banners and
+ plumes, a dismal contrast to the gay troops who had lately set forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After waiting a week, fancying the Scots must pass the ford, they gave up
+ this hope, and resolved to re-cross higher up. Edward set forth a
+ proclamation, that the man who should lead him where he could cope on dry
+ ground with the Scots, should be knighted by his own hand, and receive a
+ hundred pounds a year in land. Fifteen gentlemen, thus incited, galloped
+ off in quest of the enemy, and one of them, an esquire named Thomas
+ Rokeby, who made toward Weardale, not only beheld the Scots encamped on
+ the steep hill-side sloping toward the Wear, but was seized by their
+ outposts, and led before Douglas. Sir James was in a position where he had
+ no objection to see King Edward, with a natural fortification of rocks on
+ his flanks, a mountain behind, and the river foaming in a swollen torrent
+ over the rocks in the ravine in front of him. So, when Rokeby had told his
+ tale, Douglas gave him his ransom and liberty, on the sole condition that
+ he should not rest till he had brought the tidings to the King&mdash;terms
+ which he was not slow to fulfil. He found the English army on the Derwent,
+ at the ruined Augustinian monastery of Blanchland; and, highly delighted,
+ Edward gave the promised reward, and the army prepared for a battle by
+ confession and hearing mass. Then all set forth in high spirits, and came
+ to the spot, where they were so close to the enemy that they could see the
+ arms on the shields of the nobles, and the red, hairy buskins of the ruder
+ sort, shaped from the hides of the cattle they had killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward made his men dismount, thinking to cross the river; but, on
+ examination, he found this impossible. He then sent an invitation to the
+ Scottish leaders to come out and have a fair fight; but at this they
+ laughed, saying that they had burnt and spoiled in his land, and it was
+ his part to punish them as he could; they should stay there as long as
+ they pleased. As it was known that there was neither bread nor wine in
+ their camp, it was hoped that this would not be very long; but from the
+ merriment nightly heard round the watchfires, it seemed that oatmeal and
+ beef satisfied them just as well, and the English were far more miserable
+ in their position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the third night, though the fires blazed and the horns resounded at
+ midnight, by dawn nothing was to be seen but the bare, gray hill-side. The
+ Scots had made off during the night, and were presently discovered perched
+ in a similar spot on the river side, only with a wood behind them, called
+ Stanhope Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Edward encamped on the other side of the river, and watched the foe
+ in vain. One night, however, Douglas, with a small body of men, crept
+ across the river at a ford higher up, and stealing to the precincts of the
+ camp, rode past the sentry, crying out in an English tone, &ldquo;Ha, St.
+ George! no watch here!&rdquo; and made his way into the midst of the tents,
+ smiling to himself at the murmur of an English soldier, that the Black
+ Douglas might yet play them some trick. Presently, with loud shouts of
+ &ldquo;Douglas! Douglas! English thieves, ye shall die!&rdquo; his men fell on the
+ sleeping army, and had slain three hundred in a very short time, while he
+ made his way to the royal tent, cut the ropes, and as the boy, &ldquo;a soldier
+ then for holidays,&rdquo; awoke, &ldquo;by his couch, a grisly chamberlain,&rdquo; stood the
+ Black Lord James! His chaplain threw himself between, and fell in the
+ struggle, while Edward crept out under the canvas, and others of the
+ household came to his rescue. The whole army was now awakened, and Douglas
+ fought his way out on the other side of the camp, blowing his horn to
+ collect his men. On his return, Randolph asked him what he had done. &ldquo;Only
+ drawn a little blood,&rdquo; said Douglas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Randolph, &ldquo;we should have gone down with the whole army.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The risk would have been over-great,&rdquo; said Douglas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then must we fight them, by open day, for our provisions are failing, and
+ we shall soon be famished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Sir James, &ldquo;let us treat them as the fox did the fisherman,
+ who, finding him eating a salmon before the fire in his hut, drew his
+ sword, and stood in the doorway, meaning to slay him without escape. But
+ the fox seized a mantle, and drew it over the fire; the fisherman flew to
+ save his mantle, and Master Fox made off safely with the salmon by the
+ door unguarded!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this model the wary Scot arranged his retreat, making a multitude of
+ hurdles of wattled boughs to be laid across the softer places in the bog
+ behind them, and giving secret orders that all should be ready to move at
+ night. This could not be done so secretly that some tidings did not reach
+ the English; but they expected another night-attack, and, though they
+ continued under arms, made no attempt to ascertain the proceedings of the
+ enemy till daybreak, when, crossing the river, they found nothing alive
+ but five poor English prisoners bound naked to trees, with their legs
+ broken. Around them lay five hundred large cattle, killed because they
+ went too slowly to be driven along, three hundred skins filled with meat
+ and water hung over the fires, one hundred spits with meat on them, and
+ ten thousand of the hairy shoes of the Scots&mdash;the enemy were entirely
+ gone; and Edward, baffled, grieved, and ashamed, fairly burst into tears
+ at his disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His army was unable to continue the pursuit, and in two days arrived at
+ Durham, where the honest burghers had stored under outhouses all the
+ wagons that had been left behind in the advance thirty-two days before,
+ each with a little flag to show whose property it was. Tidings being
+ brought that the Scots had gone to their own country, Edward turned his
+ face southward, and, by the time he reached York, had had the
+ mortification of losing all his horses, from the privations the poor
+ creatures had undergone; while the discontent of his subjects found vent
+ in ascribing all the misfortunes to Roger Mortimer&rsquo;s treachery&mdash;an
+ additional crime of which he may fairly be acquitted. Edward continued at
+ York all that autumn, apparently keeping aloof from his mother&rsquo;s court; or
+ else it was her object to prevent him from perceiving the guilty counsels
+ that there prevailed, and which resulted in the murder of his father. To
+ York Sir John of Hainault fetched the young bride, his niece Philippa, and
+ the marriage took place in the cathedral on St. Paul&rsquo;s Day, 1328, the two
+ young people being then sixteen and fifteen years of age. Meantime, Robert
+ Bruce, partially recovering, laid siege to Norham, and in the exhausted
+ state of England it was decided to offer him peace, fully acknowledging
+ his right to the throne, yielding up the regalia and the royal stone of
+ Scotland, and uniting his son David with the little Princess Joan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nation were exceedingly angry at the peace, necessary as it was, and
+ charged the disgrace upon Mortimer. They rose in tumult, and prevented the
+ coronation-stone from being taken away, and they called the marriage a
+ base alliance. Even Edward himself refused to be present with his young
+ wife at the marriage of his little sister, which was to take place at
+ Berwick. His mother tried to induce him to come, by arranging a joust; she
+ had six spears painted splendidly for his use, others for his companions,
+ and three hundred and sixty more for other English gentlemen; but he was
+ resolved to keep his Philippa aloof from the company of Mortimer and his
+ mother, and remained with her at Woodstock, notwithstanding all
+ temptations to display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bruce was too ill to go to Berwick, but gave his son, then five years old,
+ into the charge of Douglas and Randolph. The little bride, called by the
+ Scots Joan Makepeace, was conducted by her mother and Mortimer with the
+ most brilliant pomp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mortimer&rsquo;s display and presumption outdid even poor Piers Gaveston: he had
+ one hundred and eighty knights in his own train alone, and their dress was
+ so fantastically gay that the Scots jested on them, and made rhymes long
+ current in the North:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Longbeards, heartless,
+ Gay coats, graceless,
+ Painted hoods, witless,
+ Maketh England thriftless.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Queen Isabel herself was wont to wear such a tower on her head, that
+ doorways had to be altered to enable her to pass under them; and her
+ expenses were so great, that no revenue was left to maintain her young
+ daughter-in-law Philippa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry, sometimes called Wryneck, Earl of Derby, brother of the rebel
+ Thomas of Lancaster, and Thomas and Edmund, Earls of Norfolk and Kent, the
+ youngest sons of Edward I., had begun bitterly to repent of having been
+ deceived by this wicked woman. Even Adam Orleton had quarrelled with her
+ for attempting to exact a monstrous bribe for making him Bishop of
+ Winchester; but Mortimer was determined to keep up his power by violence.
+ At a parliament at Salisbury, where the young King and Queen were
+ presiding, he broke in with his armed followers, and carried them off in a
+ sort of captivity to Winchester. The three Earls took up arms, but the
+ Earls of Kent and Norfolk, who seem to have had their full share of the
+ family folly, deserted Lancaster, and he was forced to make peace, after
+ paying an immense fine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still Isabel and Mortimer felt their insecurity, or else they had such an
+ appetite for treachery and murder, that they were driven on to commit
+ further crimes. A report was set about that Edward of Caernarvon was still
+ living in Corfe Castle, and one of his actual murderers, Maltravers,
+ offered the unfortunate Edmund of Kent to convey letters from him to his
+ brother; nay, it was arranged, for his further deception, that he should
+ peep into a dungeon and behold at a distance a captive, who had sufficient
+ resemblance to the late King to be mistaken for him in the gloom. Letters
+ were written by the Earl and his wife to the imaginary prisoner, and
+ entrusted to Maltravers, who carried them at once to Queen Isabel. A
+ sufficient body of evidence having thus been procured for her purposes,
+ the unfortunate Edmund was arraigned before the parliament at Winchester,
+ when he confessed that the letters had been written by himself; and,
+ further, that a preaching friar had conjured up a spirit on whose
+ authority he believed his brother to be alive. He was found guilty of
+ treason, and sentenced to death by persons who expected that his rank
+ would save him; but the She-wolf of France was resolved on having his
+ blood, and decreed that he should die the next day. Such was the horror at
+ the sentence, that the headsman stole secretly away from Winchester to
+ avoid performing his office, and for four long hours of the 13th of March,
+ 1329, did Earl Edmund Plantagenet stand on the scaffold above the castle
+ gate, waiting till some one could be found to put him to death, in the
+ name of his own nephew and by the will of his mother&rsquo;s niece. He was only
+ twenty-eight, and had four little children; and, in those dreary hours,
+ what must not have been his hopes that the young Edward would awaken to a
+ sense of the wickedness that was being perpetrated, so abhorrent to his
+ warm and generous nature! But hopes were vain. Queen Isabel &ldquo;kept her son
+ so beset&rdquo; all day, that no word could be spoken to him respecting his
+ uncle, and at length a felon was sought out, who, as the price of his own
+ pardon, dealt the death-stroke to the son of the great Edward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this act of intimidation, Mortimer&rsquo;s insolence went still farther,
+ and England was fully sensible that the minion now reigning united all the
+ faults of the former ones&mdash;the extravagance and rapacity of Gaveston,
+ and the pride and violence of the Despensers; and as if to bring upon
+ himself their very fate, he caused himself to be appointed Warden of the
+ Marches of Wales, and helped himself to manor after manor of the Despenser
+ property. His name and lineage were Welsh, and in memory of King Arthur he
+ held tournaments which he called Round Tables, and made this display so
+ frequent, that his own son Geoffrey became ashamed of them, and called him
+ the King of Folly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the modest and innocent young court at Woodstock was made happy
+ by the birth of the heir to the crown&mdash;a babe of such promise and
+ beauty that even grave chroniclers pause to record his noble aspect, and
+ the motherly fondness of the youthful Philippa, then only seventeen. Again
+ Queen Isabel was obliged to trust her son out of the hands of herself and
+ her minions. Her last brother, King Charles IV., was dead, leaving only
+ daughters; and though she fancied the claim of her son Edward to the
+ French crown to be nearer than that of Philippe, Count of Valois, the son
+ of her father&rsquo;s brother, it was not convenient to press the assumption,
+ and it was therefore resolved that young Edward should go to Amiens to
+ perform his homage to Philippe. He was only fifteen days absent from
+ England, and duly swore fealty to Philippe; the one robed in blue velvet
+ and golden lilies, the other in crimson velvet worked with the English
+ lions; but the pageant was a worthless ceremony, and the journey was
+ chiefly important as bringing him to a full sense of the esteem in which
+ his mother was held at home and abroad. Edward was nearly nineteen, and
+ was resolved that he and his country should be held in unworthy bondage no
+ longer. He confided his plans to Sir William Montacute, and they agreed to
+ bring about the downfall of Mortimer at the next parliament, which was
+ summoned to meet at Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So suspicious were the Queen and her favorite, that they always travelled
+ with a strong guard, and, on entering Nottingham Castle, the locks on all
+ the gates were changed, and the keys were every night brought to the
+ Queen, who hid them under her pillow. Edward himself was admitted, but
+ with only four attendants; and the Earls of Lancaster and Hereford were
+ not even allowed to lodge their followers in the town, but with insolent
+ words were quartered a mile off, to their own great discontent and that of
+ the country-folk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Montacute meanwhile held counsel with Sir Robert Eland, the governor of
+ the castle, who told him that far without the walls lay a cave, whence a
+ subterraneous gallery led into the keep of Nottingham Castle. It was
+ believed to have been made for a means of escape in the days of Danish
+ inroads, and it was still practicable to lead a body of men through it.
+ Montacute undertook the enterprise on the 19th of October, 1330. Whether
+ the King crept through the passage, or only joined Montacute after he
+ emerged on the stairs, is not certain; but together, and with a troop of
+ armed men behind them, they broke into the room where Mortimer was
+ consulting with the Earl of Lincoln, and seized upon his person. The
+ Queen, nearly undressed, hurried out of the next room, and Edward stood
+ behind the door, that she might not see him; but she guessed that he was
+ present, and cried out piteously, &ldquo;Fair son, have pity on gentle
+ Mortimer!&rdquo; Her cries were unheeded, and Mortimer was, in the early
+ morning, sent off to the Tower of London, while all Nottingham rang with
+ shouts of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward broke up the parliament, and summoned a new one to meet at
+ Westminster, where he called Mortimer to account for a tissue of such
+ horrible crimes that one alone would have secured his condemnation. The
+ Peers were asked what his sentence should be, and they all answered that
+ he ought to die like his victim, Hugh le Despenser, who had not had a
+ moment to speak in his own defence. Perhaps Edward dreaded to hear his
+ mother&rsquo;s crimes disclosed, for he forbade the confession to be made known
+ of two of the accomplices in his father&rsquo;s murder, and caused Mortimer to
+ die a traitor&rsquo;s death at once at Tyburn&mdash;the inaugurating execution
+ at that melancholy spot. This hasty sentence stood Mortimer&rsquo;s family in
+ good stead; for, as there was no sentence of attainder, they continued to
+ hold the earldom of March. Edward little thought that the grandson of his
+ father&rsquo;s murderer would become the heir to his own throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope wrote to Edward to intercede with him for his mother, but the
+ exhortation was hardly needed, for he showed the most delicate and filial
+ respect throughout for her name, and what truth and necessity compelled
+ him to declare against her, he charged on the evil influence of Mortimer.
+ Her grief and despair threw her into an absolute fit of madness at the
+ time of Mortimer&rsquo;s execution, and she continued subject to fits of
+ distraction for many years after. She was shut up in Risings Castle, and
+ respectfully attended upon by a sufficient train; her son visited her from
+ time to time, but she never saw any others of her family; and when, after
+ twenty-eight years, she died, she chose to be buried in the church of the
+ Gray Friars, at Newgate, where lay the remains of Mortimer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these events were taking place in England, one of the great spirits
+ of the time was passing away at Cardross, in Scotland. Robert the Bruce
+ lay on his death-bed, and, calling for his nobles, bade them swear fealty
+ to his infant son, and appointed Randolph, Earl of Moray, as regent for
+ the child; for Sir James Douglas he reserved a yet dearer, closer charge.
+ Long ago, as he lay on his bed at Rachrin, had he vowed to go on
+ pilgrimage to Jerusalem; but before he had given rest to his country, the
+ deadly sickness had seized on him which was cutting him off in his
+ fifty-fifth year. He therefore entreated that Douglas would carry his
+ heart, to fulfil his vow, instead of himself, and that, making his way to
+ Jerusalem, he would lay it finally in the Holy Sepulchre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weeping so that he could hardly speak, Sir James thanked his master for
+ the inestimable honor, and vowed, on his faith as a knight, to do his
+ bidding. Robert likewise gave his nobles a set of counsels for the defence
+ of his kingdom, showing how truly he estimated its resources and method of
+ warfare; for it is said that no reverse ever afterward befell the Scots
+ but by their disregard of what they called &ldquo;Good King Robert&rsquo;s Testament&rdquo;&mdash;precepts
+ he had obeyed all his life, and which stood nearly thus in old Scottish:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;On foot should be all Scottish war,
+ By hill and moss themselves to ware;
+ Let woods for walls be; bow and spear
+ And battle-axe their fighting gear:
+ That enemies do them na dreir,
+ In strait places gar keep all store,
+ And burn the plain land them before:
+ Then shall they pass away in haste,
+ When that they find nothing but waste;
+ With wiles and wakening of the night.
+ And mickle noise made on height;
+ Then shall they turn with great affray,
+ As they were chased with sword away.
+ This is the counsel and intent
+ Of Good King Robert&rsquo;s Testament.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ With these fierce, though sagacious counsels, the hero of Scotland died on
+ the 7th of June, 1329. He was buried in Dunfermline Abbey, after his heart
+ had been extracted and embalmed according to his command; but the
+ dissolution of the convents made sad havoc among the royal tombs of
+ Scotland, and two churches had risen and fallen above his marble tomb
+ before it was discovered among the ruins in 1819, and his remains were
+ found in a winding-sheet of cloth of gold, and the breastbone sawn
+ through. Multitudes were admitted to gaze on them, and there were many
+ tears shed, for, in the simple and beautiful words of Scott, &ldquo;There was
+ the wasted skull which once was the head that thought so wisely and boldly
+ for his country&rsquo;s deliverance; and there was the dry bone which had once
+ been the sturdy arm that killed Sir Henry de Bohun between the two armies
+ at a single blow, the evening before the battle of Bannockburn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bruce&rsquo;s heart was enclosed in a silver case, and hung round the neck
+ of Douglas, who sailed at once on his pilgrimage, taking with him a
+ retinue befitting the royal treasure that he bore. But on his way he
+ landed in Spain, and esteeming that any war with any Saracen was agreeable
+ to his vow, he offered his aid to King Alfonso, of Castile. But he was
+ ignorant of the Moorish mode of fighting, and, riding too far in advance
+ with his little band, was inclosed and cut off by the wheeling horsemen of
+ the Moors. Still he might have escaped, had he not turned to rescue Sir
+ William St. Clair, of Roslyn; but in doing this he was so entangled, that
+ he saw no escape, and taking from his neck his precious charge, he threw
+ it before him, shouting aloud, &ldquo;Pass onward as thou wert wont! I follow,
+ or die!&rdquo; He followed, and died. His corpse was found on the battle-field
+ lying over the heart of Bruce, and his friends, lifting up the body, bore
+ it back again to his own little church of St. Bride of Douglas, where it
+ lies interred; while the crowned and bleeding heart shines emblazoned on
+ the shield of the great Douglas line, a memorial of the time and hearty
+ love that knit together, through adversity and prosperity, the good King
+ Robert and the good Lord James. The heart itself was given into the charge
+ of Sir Simon Locard, of Lee, already the keeper of the curious talisman
+ called the Lee Penny, brought by Earl David of Huntingdon from the East;
+ but he did not deem it needful to carry his burthen to Jerusalem, and it
+ was buried beneath the altar at Melrose Abbey, Sir Simon changed his name
+ to Lockhart, and bore on his shield a heart with a fetterlock, on his
+ crest a hand with a key, and for his motto, &ldquo;<i>Corda serrata pando.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, we close the first series of Cameos, during which we have seen
+ the Norman conquerors gradually become English, and the kingdom take
+ somewhat of its present form. In another volume we hope to show the long
+ wars of the Middle Ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INDEX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Acre, the siege of,
+ Prince Edward there,
+ its final conquest
+ by the Saracens,
+Adela, William the Conqueror&rsquo;s daughter,
+ married to Stephen of Blois,
+Adrian IV., Pope,
+ Nicholas Brakespeare, an Englishman,
+ his grant of Ireland to Henry II.,
+Aelred, Abbot of Rivaux,
+ his visit to King David of Scotland,
+ death,
+Agatha, wife of Edward the Etheling,
+Alain Fergeant,
+ married to William the Conqueror&rsquo;s daughter Constance,
+Alberic, friend of Robert Courtheuse,
+Albigenses, the war against,
+ led by Simon de Montfort,
+Aldred, Archbishop of York,
+ consecrates Bishop Wulstan,
+ dies of grief,
+Alexander III., Pope,
+ his support of Becket,
+Alexander III., of Scotland,
+ at the coronation of Edward I.,
+ his character,
+ his shocking death,
+ troubles in Scotland after this,
+Alexis Comnenus, Greek Emperor,
+ his conduct to the crusaders,
+Alfonso I. of Castile,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s daughter Matilda promised to,
+Alfred, Archbishop of York, crowns Harold king of England,
+Alfred Atheling, son of Ethelred the Unready,
+ his expedition against Harold Harefoot,
+ his murder,
+Alftrude, tradition of Hereward&rsquo;s love for,
+Algar, son of Earl Leofric,
+Alice of France, Richard Coeur de Lion bethrothed to,
+ disputes about this,
+Alice of Louvain, second wife of Henry I.
+ married secondly to William de Albini,
+Almayne, Henry of, son of Richard king of the Romans,
+ joins the last crusade,
+ his murder by the De Montforts,
+ punishment of his murderers,
+Anjou, history of the Counts of,
+ loss of, by the English to Philippe Auguste,
+Anjou, Charles, Comte d&rsquo;,
+ joins the crusade of Louis IX,
+ seizes the crown of the Two Sicilies,
+ his conduct in the last crusade,
+ at the death of Louis IX.,
+ Prince Edward&rsquo;s reply to him,
+Anselm, Archbishop: Bishop Wulstan assists at his consecration,
+ his birth and parentage,
+ enters the Abbey of Bec,
+ the Archbishopric of Canterbury forced upon him,
+ his collision with William Rufus,
+ banished for life,
+ returns on the death of Rufus,
+ disputes with Henry I.,
+ again banished,
+ his return, death and character,
+Ansgard, Alderman, his conference with William the Conqueror,
+Antioch, siege of,
+ in the first crusade,
+Apulia, the Normans in,
+Aquitaine, acquired by Henry II&rsquo;s marriage with Eleanor,
+ account of the duchy of,
+Arnulf, Count of Flanders,
+ the foe of William Longsword,
+ makes war against Richard the Fearless,
+ Richard&rsquo;s generosity to him,
+Arques, Count d&rsquo;, his conspiracy against William the Conqueror,
+Arthur, King: history of his round table at Winchester,
+Arthur of Brittany,
+ the joy at his birth,
+ Richard I. acknowledges him heir,
+ his residence at the court of Philippe Auguste,
+ at the siege of Mirabeau,
+ taken prisoner by King John,
+ the parley between them,
+ John&rsquo;s attempted cruelty,
+ his murder by John,
+ avenged by Philippe Auguste,
+Artois, Robert, Comte d&rsquo;,
+ joins the crusade of Louis IX.,
+ insults Longespée,
+ his impetuous character,
+ killed at Mansourah,
+Ascalon, the crusaders at,
+Atheling, <i>vide</i> Etheling.
+Augustine, his dispute with the Welsh Church,
+Auvergne, Guy of,
+ his cruel treatment and death,
+Avignon, the papal court removed to,
+Ayr, story of the barns of,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Bacon, Roger, account of,
+Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury,
+Baldwin, Count of Flanders,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s overtures to,
+Baldwin I. king of Jerusalem,
+Baldwin II. king of Jerusalem,
+Balliol, John, lays claim to the crown of Scotland,
+ declared king,
+ treated as a vassal by Edward I.,
+ humiliation of,
+ and subsequent career,
+Bangor, slaughter of the monks of,
+Bannockburn, battle of,
+ its results,
+Bards, the, account of,
+Barons, the, assembly of,
+ to adopt the charter,
+ their revolt,
+ their meeting with King John at Runnymede,
+ their war with King John,
+ offer the crown to Louis the Lion,
+ their demands at the Parliament of Westminster,
+ the meeting of, in the Mad Parliament,
+ their dispute with Henry III. referred to Louis IX.,
+ refuse Louis IX.&lsquo;s decision,
+ their war with the king,
+ their discontent with Montfort,
+ their proceedings against Gaveston,
+ against the Despensers,
+Batalha in Portugal, account of the Abbey of,
+ Battle Abbey,
+ history of,
+ the roll of,
+ unsatisfactory compared with Domesday Book,
+Bayeux tapestry, description of the,
+Bec, Lanfranc abbot of,
+ Anselm there,
+Beck, Anthony, Bishop of Durham,
+ Edward I.&lsquo;s envoy to Balliol,
+ Edward I.&lsquo;s message to,
+Becket, Gilbert à, legend of,
+Becket, Thomas à, birth of,
+ his character and splendor,
+ appointed Archbishop of Canterbury,
+ his humility,
+ his quarrel with Henry II.
+ on the privileges of the clergy,
+ his reluctant consent to the Constitutions of Clarendon,
+ the King&rsquo;s sentence against him,
+ his acts at the Council of Northampton,
+ his flight to the Continent,
+ supported by the Pope, &amp;c.,
+ retires to Pontigny,
+ conference with King Henry II. at Montmirail,
+ at Montmartre,
+ the King&rsquo;s submission,
+ his return to Canterbury,
+ events of his martyrdom,
+ fate of his murderers,
+ his canonization,
+ general honor paid to him,
+ pilgrimages to his shrine,
+ its spoliation by Henry VIII,
+ summary of his character,
+Benefit of clergy, meaning of,
+Berengaria, Richard I.&lsquo;s attachment to,
+ their marriage,
+ her death,
+Bernard, Count of Harcourt,
+ the friend of William Longsword,
+ his support of Richard the Fearless,
+Bertrade, marries Foulques IV. of Anjou,
+ leaves him for Philippe I.,
+Bertram de Born, the troubadour,
+ laments Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s imprisonment,
+ affronted by Richard I.,
+ his interview with Henry II.,
+ his laments for Richard I.,
+ his death,
+ Dante&rsquo;s mention of him in the &ldquo;Inferno,&rdquo;
+ Berwick, Edward I.&lsquo;s cruelty at,
+Bigod, Roger, Earl of Norfolk, his answers to Henry III.,
+ his opposition to the exactions of Edward I.,
+Binning, his capture at Linlithgow,
+Bishops, dispute between King and Pope respecting the election of,
+Blanche of Castile, her marriage to Louis the Lion,
+ death of,
+Blondel, discovers Richard I. in captivity,
+Blondeville, Ranulf de, his marriage to Constance of Brittany,
+Boemond, joins the first crusade,
+ his conduct at the siege of Antioch,
+Bohun, Humphrey, Earl of Hereford, his opposition to Edward I.,
+ his success and high character,
+Bohun, Sir H., his encounter with King Robert Bruce,
+Boniface VIII., Pope, opposes Edward I.&lsquo;s exactions on the clergy,
+ death of,
+Border warfare with the Scots,
+Bosham, Herbert de, the friend of Archbishop Becket,
+Brand, Abbot of Peterborough,
+ confers knighthood on Hereward,
+Braose, William de, King John&rsquo;s cruelties to,
+Bretons, their joy at the birth of Prince Arthur,
+ their enmity to Richard I.,
+Brien Boru, King of Ireland,
+Brihtric Meau, Queen Matilda&rsquo;s love for,
+ her vengeance on his disdain,
+Brito, William, murderer of Becket,
+ his armorial bearings,
+Britons, the, after the departure of the Romans,
+Bruce, the line of, history of,
+ troubles of Scotland under,
+Bruce, Edward, besieges Stirling Castle,
+ commands a division at Bannockburn,
+ his invasion of Ireland,
+ death,
+Bruce, Robert, lays claim to the crown of Scotland,
+Bruce, Robert, the younger, joins Wallace,
+ lives in allegiance to Edward I.,
+Bruce, Robert III., vacillation of his early conduct,
+ his murder of the Red Comyn;
+ revolts against Edward I.;
+ coronation at Scone;
+ his excommunication;
+ his disaster at Methven;
+ wanderings, and adventures;
+ escape from the Lorns;
+ defeats Aymer de Valence;
+ his progress in the recovery of Scotland;
+ his preparations to meet Edward II.;
+ encounter with Sir Henry Bohun;
+ his victory at Bannockburn;
+ his invasion of Ireland;
+ inroads upon England;
+ recognised by the Pope;
+ his right to the throne acknowledged by England;
+ his dying injunctions and death;
+ fate of his heart.
+Bruce, William, resigns the charge of Prince Arthur.
+Bungay, Friar, the associate of Friar Bacon.
+Burgh, Hubert de, governor of Prince Arthur;
+ taken prisoner by the French;
+ his defence of Dover;
+ defeats the French fleet;
+ his care of the minority of Henry III.;
+ machinations against him;
+ his imprisonment and escape;
+ subsequent history.
+Burnel, Robert, Bishop, Edward I.&lsquo;s chancellor.
+Bury St. Edmund&rsquo;s, assembly of the Barons at.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Cadwallader, the last of the Pendragons.
+Caen, the two abbeys founded at,
+ by William the Conqueror and Matilda;
+ Abbaye aux Dames at,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s eldest daughter becomes Abbess of;
+ William the Conqueror buried at.
+Camp of refuge established in the Isle of Ely;
+ the principal fugitives there;
+ attacks on, by William the Conqueror;
+ betrayed by the monks of Ely;
+ cruelty to the captives taken there.
+Canterbury and York, jealousy between.
+Canterbury Cathedral, murder of Becket at;
+ Henry II. does penance in;
+ Becket&rsquo;s shrine at.
+Capet, Hugh, succeeds to the throne of France;
+ supported by Richard the Fearless;
+ importance of his recognition.
+Cardinals, the, choice of the Pope vested in.
+Carthage, Louis IX.&lsquo;s camp at;
+ his sickness and death there.
+Cecily, William the Conqueror&rsquo;s eldest daughter, becomes Abbess of Caen.
+Châlons, Count de, his treachery to Edward I.
+Charlemagne, receives the crown of the Holy Roman Empire;
+ degeneracy of his descendants;
+ overcome by the Northmen;
+ the race of, retire to Lorraine.
+Charles Martel, exploits of.
+Charles the Simple, King of France;
+ his contests with Rollo;
+ cedes Neustria to him;
+ Rollo marries his daughter.
+Charles IV., his conduct in Queen Isabel&rsquo;s quarrel with Edward II.
+Charter, the Great, adopted by the Barons;
+ King John promises to grant it;
+ his prevarication;
+ its enactments;
+ signed by John;
+ annulled by Pope Innocent III.;
+ the war of the Barons to obtain it;
+ Henry III. made to agree to it;
+ end of the wars about it;
+ its acceptance by Henry III.;
+ renewal of, by the Barons, under Edward I.
+Chateau Gaillard, the siege of.
+Christina, daughter of Edward Etheling;
+ retires to a convent;
+ becomes Abbess of Wilton.
+Christianity, conversion of the early French kings to;
+ acceptance of, by the Vikings.
+Church and State, struggles between, in the eleventh century;
+ theory of;
+ adjustment of the disputes between; further disputes.
+Church building in the early Norman days.
+Church patronage, quarrel of the Barons with Innocent IV. respecting.
+Clapham, derivation of its name.
+Clare, Gilbert de, Earl of Gloucester, knighted by Montfort;
+ secedes from the Barons;
+ joins the last crusade;
+ married to Joan of Acre, daughter of Edward I.;
+ death of.
+Clarendon, the Council and Constitutions of.
+Clement V., Pope, character of;
+ excommunicates Bruce;
+ gives absolution to Gaveston;
+ elected Pope by the influence of Philippe IV.;
+ gives up the Knights Templars to him;
+ abolishes the Templars;
+ his death.
+Clergy, the privileges of, Henry II.&lsquo;s opposition to;
+ Becket&rsquo;s support of.
+Clermont, council of, Peter the Hermit at.
+Coinage, the, Edward I.&lsquo;s laws upon.
+Comyn, Earl of Durham, murder of, by the townsmen.
+Comyn the Red, his treachery to Robert Bruce;
+ murdered by Bruce.
+Congé d&rsquo;élire, origin of.
+Conrad, King of Burgundy, makes war upon Richard the Fearless.
+Conrade of Montferrat, his enmity to Richard I.;
+ made King of Jerusalem;
+ his assassination.
+Constance, daughter of William the Conqueror, account of.
+Constance of Brittany, her marriage with Geoffrey Plantagenet;
+ has the care of Prince Arthur;
+ her second marriage;
+ is seized and imprisoned;
+ her death.
+Constantinople, Robert the Magnificent at,
+ Harold Hardrada&rsquo;s adventures there,
+Cordova, Emir of, King John&rsquo;s embassy to,
+Cressingham, Hugh, chancellor to Edward I.,
+ his expedition against Wallace,
+ killed at the battle of Stirling,
+Crusades, the, remarks upon,
+ the first led by Peter the Hermit,
+ its disastrous end,
+ followed by Godfrey de Bouillon and others,
+ account of,
+ the third account of,
+ the last history of,
+ the great abuse of them,
+Curfew bell, origin of,
+Cymry, the, original tribe of the Kelts,
+Cyprus, conquest of, by Richard Coeur de Lion,
+Damietta, the crusaders at,
+Danish conquest of England, effects of,
+David, Earl of Huntingdon,
+ joins the third crusade,
+ his adventures on his return home,
+David I. King of Scotland,
+ a visitor of Henry I.,
+ swears fealty to Maude,
+ his character,
+ invades England in favor of Maude,
+ defeated at the battle of the Standard,
+ his sorrows and death,
+De Courcy, Sir John, made governor of Ireland,
+ his government there,
+ made Earl of Ulster,
+ treachery against him,
+ his imprisonment,
+ undertakes the championship of England,
+ privilege granted to him and his descendants,
+Despensers, the, favorites of Edward II.,
+ the Barons procure their banishment,
+ their return,
+ the King&rsquo;s bounty to them,
+ their capture and execution,
+Des Roches, Guillaume, King John&rsquo;s promise to,
+ respecting Prince Arthur,
+ his remorse at the King&rsquo;s treachery,
+Des Roches, Peter, Bishop of Winchester,
+ refuses to acknowledge the interdict,
+ justiciary under Henry III.,
+ his intrigue against Hubert de Burgh,
+ causes the death of the Earl of Pembroke,
+ his dismissal and death,
+Divine service, decrees for,
+ at the Synod of Mertoun,
+Domesday book, account of,
+Donald Bane seizes the crown of Scotland,
+Douglas Castle, contests in its recovery and defence,
+Douglas, Sir James, his first meeting with Bruce, 391;
+ his constant adherence,
+ recovers his castle from the English,
+ his capture of Roxburgh Castle,
+ chivalrous conduct to Randolph,
+ his exploits on the Border,
+ Bruce&rsquo;s dying injunction to,
+ carries Bruce&rsquo;s heart to Spain,
+ his death there,
+Dover besieged by Louis the Lion,
+ the siege raised,
+ battle of,
+Dublin University, foundation of,
+Dunbar, battle of,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Earl, derivation of title of,
+ from the Danes,
+Edgar Atheling, son of Edward the Stranger,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s friendship for,
+ account of him,
+ proclaimed King of England,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s conduct to,
+ efforts of Malcolm III. in his favor,
+ renounces his claim to the crown of England,
+ his subsequent career,
+ his death and character,
+Edgar of Scotland restored to the throne,
+Edinburgh Castle captured from the English,
+Edith, wife of Edward the Confessor,
+ character of,
+Edith of the Swan neck finds the body of Harold,
+Edith, daughter of Margaret of Scotland, marries Henry I.,
+ changes her name to Matilda or Maude,
+ See Maude.
+Ediva, mother of Hereward,
+Edmund Ironside, his two sons,
+Edward the Confessor, son of Ethelred the Unready,
+ his gentle nurture in Normandy,
+ comes to his brother&rsquo;s court in England,
+ his character, &amp;c.,
+ why called the Confessor,
+ instance of his gentleness,
+ his Norman propensities,
+ visited by Duke William of Normandy,
+ founds Westminster Abbey,
+ death and burial there,
+ his desire to leave his crown to William of Normandy,
+ conversation with Harold on his death-bed,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s friendship for,
+ Henry III.&lsquo;s devotion to,
+ translation of his remains,
+Edward I., his marriage to Eleanor of Castile,
+ his character,
+ his conduct in taking the oath to the acts of Oxford,
+ his robbery of the Templars,
+ conduct at the siege of Northampton and the battle of Lees,
+ delivers himself up to the Barons,
+ his escape from Herford,
+ rescues his father at the battle of Evesham,
+ joins Louis IX. in the last Crusade,
+ his embarkation,
+ arrives at Acre,
+ attempted assassination there,
+ returns to England,
+ his tomb in Westminster Abbey,
+ Coronation of,
+ his treatment of the Jews
+ his laws,
+ parliaments,
+ prosperity of the kingdom in the early part of his reign,
+ respect shown him on the continent,
+ account of his daughters,
+ deterioration of his character in his later years,
+ death of his Queen Eleanor;
+ claims to be Lord paramount of Scotland;
+ the claim acknowledged;
+ invades Scotland;
+ deposes Balliol and gets himself acknowledged King;
+ his rage against Wallace;
+ wins the battle of Falkirk;
+ cruelty to Wallace;
+ duped by Philippe IV.;
+ is distressed for funds;
+ seizure of ecclesiastical property;
+ imposes the &ldquo;evil toll,&rdquo;;
+ marriage with Margaret of France;
+ grants the right of taxation to his subjects;
+ his vengeance on Abp. Winchelsea;
+ rage at Bruce&rsquo;s revolt;
+ his vow against the Scots;
+ arrives at Carlisle;
+ cruelty to Bruce&rsquo;s brothers;
+ his last injunctions and death;
+ his dread of Gaveston&rsquo;s influence over his son.
+Edward II., appointed regent in his father&rsquo;s absence;
+ ceremony of his knighthood;
+ his appearance and character;
+ influence of friends over him;
+ his inordinate attachment to Piers Gaveston;
+ neglects his father&rsquo;s injunctions respecting Scotland;
+ his marriage to Isabel of France;
+ the nobles demand Gaveston&rsquo;s dismissal;
+ his coronation;
+ disputes with his nobles respecting Gaveston;
+ his expedition against Bruce;
+ his defeat at Bannockburn;
+ his attachment to the Despensers;
+ discontent of his subjects;
+ his queen&rsquo;s complaints against him;
+ her invasion of England;
+ his wanderings and capture;
+ deposition;
+ captivity and ill-treatment;
+ his murder in Berkeley Castle;
+ his monument in Gloucester Cathedral.
+Edward III., his march to the Border;
+ account of his warfare there;
+ his narrow escape from Douglas;
+ causes Mortimer&rsquo;s arrest and execution;
+ his respectful conduct to Queen Isabel.
+Edward the Atheling, his infant son Edgar;
+ his daughters;
+Edward, son of Edmund Ironside;
+ his marriage;
+ owned as Etheling.
+Edwin, grandson of Earl Leofric;
+ enemy of Harold;
+ submits to the conqueror;
+ and is betrothed to his daughter Matilda;
+ joins the Camp of Refuge;
+ is killed in combat.
+Eghelemar, Bp. of Elmham.
+Eghelsie, Bp. of Selsey.
+Eghelwin. Bp. of Durham, joins the Camp of Refuge;
+ dies in captivity.
+Egypt, crusade in, under William Longespée the Elder;
+ under Louis IX..
+Eleanor of Aquitaine, married to Henry II.;
+ evils resulting from this;
+ not the murderess of Fair Rosamond;
+ kept in captivity by her husband;
+ her dislike to Constance of Brittany;
+ beseiged at Mirabeau by Prince Arthur;
+ intercedes for Prince Arthur;
+ dies of grief at Fontévraud.
+Eleanor of Castille, married to Edward I.;
+ accompanies him to the Holy Land;
+ sucks the poison from his wounds;
+ her death;
+ the crosses erected to her memory.
+Eleanor of Provence, married to Henry III.;
+ vituperative ballads made on her;
+ her unpopularity;
+ her spirited conduct in the Barons&rsquo; war.
+Elgiva, William the Conqueror&rsquo;s daughter, representation of,
+ in the Bayeaux tapestry.
+Ely, Isle of, the Camp of Refuge established there.
+Emma, daughter of the Count of Paris,
+ betrothed to Richard the Fearless.
+Emma, daughter of Richard the Fearless,
+ wife of Ethelred the Unready and Knut;
+ invites her sons to claim the throne of England.
+Emperors of the West, their influence on the election of Popes;
+ deprived of this by the Lateran Council;
+ their struggle to regain it.
+England, effects of the Danish conquest upon;
+ sad state of,
+ under William Rufus;
+ granted to France by Pope Innocent III.;
+ a fief of Rome;
+ the laws of,
+ adhered to by the Norman kings;
+ ignored by Henry II.,
+ prosperity of,
+ in the early part of Edward the First&rsquo;s reign;
+ increase of learning in;
+ discontented state of,
+ under Edward II..
+Ermengarde, mother of St. Anselm.
+Espriota, wife of William Longsword.
+Estates, inquisition into,
+ by Edward I..
+Etheling, account of the family of;
+ meaning of the term.
+Ethelred the Unready, husband of Emma, daughter of
+ Richard the Fearless;
+ father of Edward the Confessor.
+Eustace, Count de Mantes,
+ events of his visit to Edward the Confessor.
+Eustace de Blois, son of Stephen;
+ his excesses and death.
+Evesham, battle of.
+Evil Toll, the, imposed by Edward I.;
+ opposition to, by the barons;
+ results in the right of self-taxation.
+Exchequer, supposed derivation of.
+Eystein, son of Magnus, King of Norway;
+ his discussion with his brother Sigurd;
+ his conduct as King of Norway.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Fair Rosamond, history of.
+Falaise, William the Conqueror born at;
+ Prince Arthur in captivity there.
+Falkirk, battle of.
+Fescamp, Abbey of, Richard the Fearless buried there.
+Fitzadhelm, William, Governor of Ireland.
+Fitzosborn, William, the chief friend of William the Conqueror;
+ his counsel to William on Harold&rsquo;s usurpation;
+ his charge at Hastings.
+&mdash;&mdash; Roger, imprisoned by William the Conqueror.
+Fitzpiers, Geoffrey, Grand Justiciary under King John.
+Fitz-Richard, Gilbert, his noble conduct.
+Fitzurse, Reginald, murderer of Becket;
+ his arms.
+Fitzwalter, Lord, King John&rsquo;s outrage upon;
+ the Barons make him their general.
+Flambard, Ralph; made Bp. of Durham by William Rufus;
+ his subsequent career.
+Flemings, the, settlement of, in Pembrokeshire.
+Folliott, Gilbert, Bp. of London,
+ his disappointment at Becket&rsquo;s promotion;
+ supports the king against Becket;
+ the pope&rsquo;s reproof to him;
+ his excommunication.
+Fontévraud, the burial-place of Henry II.;
+ of Richard I. and Joan of Sicily;
+ of Eleanor of Aquitaine.
+Forest laws, the grievance of, under William the Conqueror;
+ their severity increased by William Rufus;
+ mitigated by Magna Charta.
+Foulques I., le Roux, Count of Anjou.
+Foulques II., le Bon, Count of Anjou.
+Foulques III., Ferra, Count of Anjou;
+ his violent crimes and penances.
+Foulques IV., le Réchin, Count of Anjou;
+ events of his marriage with Bertrade.
+Foulques V., Count of Anjou;
+ joins the crusade;
+ becomes King of Jerusalem.
+Franks, the conversion of their early kings to Christianity.
+France, the Northmen in;
+ becomes a kingdom.
+Franco, Abp., intercedes with the Northmen for Rouen;
+ his influence over Rollo.
+Frederick II., struggle between, and Pope Innocent IV.;
+ deposed by Council of Lyons.
+Frithric, Abbot of St. Alban&rsquo;s, his opposition to William the Conqueror;
+ joins the Camp of Refuge, and dies there.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Gael, the, a Keltic tribe.
+Gascony, seized by Philippe IV.
+Gastinois, countess de, accused of murdering her husband;
+ vindicated by Ingelger.
+Gattorm, brother of St. Olaf, story of his childhood.
+Gaveston, Piers, account of;
+ Edward of Caernarvon&rsquo;s attachment to;
+ banished by Edward I.;
+ returns on the accession of Edward II.;
+ his vanity and advancement;
+ his affronts to the nobles;
+ they demand his dismissal;
+ the king obliged to banish him;
+ his recall;
+ union of nobles against him;
+ his surrender;
+ his mock trial and death.
+Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, his war and personal combat with Duke William.
+Geoffrey, Grisegonelle, Count of Anjou;
+ legend of his name.
+Geoffrey Martel, Count of Anjou.
+Geoffrey, son of Foulques V., Count of Anjou.
+Geoffrey of Anjou, his appearance and character;
+ married to Empress Maude;
+ origin of his surname Plantagenet;
+ death.
+Geoffrey le Barbu, Count of Touraine.
+Geoffrey, third son of Henry II., married to Constance of Brittany;
+ rebels against his father;
+ his death.
+Geoffrey of Lincoln, son of Fair Rosamond, his fidelity to his father;
+ becomes Abp. of York and Chancellor;
+ driven abroad by King John, and dies there.
+Geoffroi de la Tour and the lion.
+Gerbervi, Robert Courtheuse besieged by his father there.
+Germain, St., effect of his preaching in Wales.
+Gifford, Walter, Count of Longueville, besieges Arques.
+Gillow, makes known to Duke William the conspiracy against him.
+Gisèle, the wife of Rollo.
+Gisors, the elm of, conferences under;
+ description of.
+Glanville, Ranulf de, Chancellor and Grand Justiciary to Henry II.
+Godfrey de Bouillon, his noble character;
+ conduct of, at the siege of Antioch;
+ at Jerusalem;
+ chosen King of Jerusalem;
+ dies, and is buried there.
+Godiva, Lady, probably date of the tradition of.
+Godstow, Fair Rosamond retires to.
+Godwin, Earl of Wessex;
+ traditions respecting his origin;
+ his services to Knut;
+ has Harold Harefoot crowned king;
+ his treachery to Alfred Atheling;
+ policy toward Edward the Confessor;
+ characters of his sons;
+ is driven into exile;
+ his reconciliation to Edward;
+ death and character.
+Goodwin sands, origin of.
+Gourdon, Adam de, the outlaw.
+Gourdon, Bertrand de, cause of death
+ of Richard I.
+Goutran, his accusation against the
+ Countess de Gastinois; overcome
+ by Ingelger.
+Gray, John de, elected Abp. of Canterbury;
+ his election declared null
+ by the Pope, refuses to acknowledge
+ the Interdict; his advice to
+ King John.
+Gregory VII., Pope, his struggle with
+ Henry IV. of Germany.
+Grosteste, Robert, Bp. of Lincoln, history
+ of; his contest with the Pope
+ for the rights of the Church; his
+ death.
+Gryffyth, King of Wales.
+Gualo, the Pope&rsquo;s legate; takes
+ charge of the minority of Henry III.
+Guerrin de Lire, abbot of Malmesbury.
+Guibert, the Antipope.
+Guimond of St. Leufroi, his noble rebuke of William the Conqueror.
+Gundred, doubts as to her being the daughter
+ of William the Conqueror.
+Gundulf, Bp. of Rochester, his answer
+ to William Rufus; supports Anselm
+ against the King; warns
+ Rufus against hunting in the New
+ Forest.
+Guy of Burgundy, his conspiracy against
+ William of Normandy.
+Guy of Flanders, treachery to, by Phillipe IV.;
+ Edward I.&lsquo;s alliance
+ with; his death in prison.
+Gyda, wife of Earl Godwin.
+Gyrtha, his advice to his brother Harold;
+ death at Hastings.
+Gytha, mother of Harold, her advice to
+ her son.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Hainault, Sir John of, heads Queen Isabel&rsquo;s
+ invasion of England; accompanies
+ Edward III. to the Border;
+ marriage of Edward III. to his
+ niece.
+Hako, grandson of Earl Godwin, hostage
+ to William of Normandy.
+Halfdan, brother of St. Olaf, story of
+ his childhood.
+Haro, supposed origin of the cry.
+Harold Bluetooth, his support of Richard
+ the Fearless.
+Harold Hardrada, Tostig seeks his alliance
+ against Harold of England;
+ stories of his childhood, succeeds to
+ the crown of Norway; accepts
+ Tostig&rsquo;s invitation to invade England;
+ Killed at Stamford bridge.
+Harold Harefoot, crowned King of England.
+Harold Harfagre, King of Norway.
+Harold, son of Earl Godwin; his
+ character; his popularity with the
+ king and people; hopes to secure
+ the crown, becomes prisoner to
+ William of Normandy, his oath
+ to assist him to the crown of England;
+ conversation at the death-bed of
+ Edward the Confessor, is crowned
+ King of England, defeats Harold
+ Hardrada at Stamford Bridge;
+ marches south to oppose William of
+ Normandy; his entrenchment at
+ Heathfield; wounded in the battle
+ of Hastings; his body found by
+ Edith; his burial at Waltham,
+ tradition of surviving the battle of
+ Hastings, his proceedings with
+ the Welsh.
+Harthaknut becomes King of England;
+ revenges his brother&rsquo;s wrongs;
+ sends for his brother Edward
+ from Normandy; his sudden death.
+Hasting the Sea-king at Rouen; his
+ exploits; his interview with Rolf,
+ settlement in France.
+Helie de la Flèche, conduct to, of William
+ Rufus; his claim to the
+ county of Maine.
+Helie de St. Saen, friend of Robert
+ Courtheuse.
+Henry I., Beauclerc, fourth son of William
+ the Conqueror; his interview
+ with his father on his death-bed;
+ ill-treated by his brothers; secures
+ the crown on the death of William
+ Rufus; suspicion that he
+ murdered Rufus; his disputes
+ with Anselm; marries Edith of
+ Scotland; Robert Courtheuse renounces
+ his English rights in his favor,
+ invades Normandy; his
+ misery at the shipwreck of his son;
+ his great abilities and learning;
+ marries Alice of Louvain;
+ declares his daughter Maude his successor,
+ marries her to Geoffrey
+ Plantagenet; remorse of his latter
+ years; his death.
+Henry II., Fitz-Empress, birth of;
+ his training by the Earl of Gloucester;
+ accession to the throne;
+ marriage to Eleanor of Aquitaine;
+ large dominions, activity and appearance;
+ his opposition to the
+ privileges of the clergy; quarrels
+ with Becket on this subject, condemns
+ Becket to forfeit his property;
+ his proceedings at the Council of
+ Northampton; conferences with
+ Becket at Montmirail and Montmartre;
+ complication of the quarrel;
+ submits to Becket, his hasty
+ imprecation against Becket; his
+ grief at Becket&rsquo;s murder; conditions
+ of his pardon, his penance
+ at Becket&rsquo;s tomb; invades Ireland;
+ the native princes submit
+ to him; his crimes, his marriage
+ the root of his misfortunes,
+ his family; rebellion of his sons;
+ arrogance of his son Henry;
+ his conduct to his queen; conference
+ with his sons at Limoges;
+ excites his son Richard to rebellion,
+ last interview with Phillippe Auguste,
+ grief at the treachery of
+ his son John, his miserable
+ death and burial, his proceedings
+ in Brittany respecting Prince Arthur,
+ ignores the Old English laws.
+Henry III., coronation of, made to
+ agree to Magna Charta, his guardians
+ during his minority, his
+ character, foreign favourites at his
+ court, his extravagance,
+ poverty and rapacity,
+ his dispute with Simon de Montfort,
+ swears to keep the Great Charter,
+ his dispute with the Barons,
+ referred to Louis IX.,
+ his position after the battle of Lewes,
+ his death.
+Henry VIII., his spoliation of Becket&rsquo;s shrine.
+Henry I., of France, William of Normandy placed under his protection.
+Henry IV., of Germany, his struggle with Pope Gregory VII.,
+ appoints an antipope.
+Henry V., of Germany marries Matilda, daughter of Henry Beauclerc,
+ strange stories about.
+Henry VI., of Germany, his conduct to Richard I..
+Henry de Blois made Bp. of Winchester,
+ besieged at Winchester by Maude,
+ consecrates Becket Abp. of Canterbury,
+ his generous support of Becket.
+Henry Plantagenet, eldest son of Henry II.,
+ his marriage with Margaret of France,
+ coronation of,
+ in his father&rsquo;s lifetime,
+ rebels against his father,
+ his arrogance to his father,
+ dispute with his brother Richard,
+ his unhappy death.
+Henry, son of David I. of Scotland,
+ his character.
+Hereward le Wake, parentage of,
+ attacks the Normans on his estate,
+ establishes the Camp of Refuge,
+ his prowess and courage,
+ his principal followers,
+ attacked by William the Conqueror at the Camp of Refuge,
+ his exploits there,
+ makes peace with William,
+ tradition of his love for Alftrude,
+ his latter days and death,
+ valued by William the Conqueror.
+Herluin, Count of Montreuil, the ally of William Longsword,
+ suspected of causing his death,
+ killed by the Danes.
+Hervé de Montmarais, his proceedings in Ireland.
+Hilary, Bp. of Chichester, supports Henry II. against Becket,
+ his ex-communication.
+Hilda, mother of Rolf Ganger.
+Hildebrand frees the Pope from the subjection of the Emperor.
+ See Gregory VII.
+Hildegarde, wife of Foulques III.,
+ Count of Anjou.
+Holy Land, the position of the Christians there at the last Crusade,
+ its colonization by the Latins unsuccessful.
+Holy Roman Empire, the, its foundation,
+ Charlemagne the first Emperor,
+ its extent, France falls away from it.
+Hospitallers and Templars, their jealousy of each other,
+ valor of the Hospitallers at the fall of the Acre,
+ their settlement at the Isle of Rhodes.
+Houghton, Lord, his poem on the fate of the Templars.
+Howell Dha, the Lawgiver of Wales.
+Hugh the White, Count of Paris,
+ his daughter betrothed to Richard the Fearless.
+Hugh the Wolf, Earl of Chester, his friendship for Anselm,
+ retires to a monastery,
+ his conduct as a Lord Marcher.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ingelger, the legend of, becomes first Count of Anjou.
+Ingulf of Croyland, his recollections of Queen Edith.
+Innocent III., Pope, nominates Stephen Langton Abp. of Canterbury,
+ places England under an interdict,
+ annuls Magna Charta,
+ interferes against the crown of England being given to Louis the Lion,
+ his death.
+Innocent IV., Pope, his exactions on England,
+ contests with Frederick II.,
+ his exactions on the clergy,
+ interference with the English Church,
+ quarrel with the English Barons respecting Church patronage,
+ Bp. Grosteste opposes his encroachments,
+ his death.
+Inquisition into estates by Edward I..
+Interdict, the, of England, by Pope Innocent III..
+Ireland, depredations of the pirates in,
+ the slave-trade with,
+ stopped by Bps. Wulstan and Lanfranc,
+ confusion of its early history,
+ its conversion to Christianity,
+ inroads of the Northmen,
+ Pope Adrian IV. grants it to Henry II.,
+ invaded by Strong bow,
+ submission of, to Henry II.,
+ regulations for the Church,
+ granted to John Lackland as his inheritance,
+ invasion of, by Edward and Robert Bruce.
+Isabelle of Angoulème engaged to Hugh de Lusignan,
+ marries King John,
+ her contempt for her husband,
+ marries Hugh de Lusignan,
+ her reputation for sorcery.
+Isabel of France, her marriage to Edward II.,
+ her complaints against Gaveston,
+ report of her aiding the escape of the younger Mortimer,
+ complains to the King of France of her treatment;
+ goes to the French court;
+ her affection for Mortimer;
+ invades England;
+ her successes against her husband;
+ her conduct with Mortimer;
+ cruelty to the Earl of Kent;
+ her pleading for Mortimer; despair at his execution;
+ her death.
+Italian clergy thrust into the English Church;
+ hatred of the English to these.
+Ivo de Grantmesnil, friend of Robert Courtheuse.
+Ivo Taillebois, Lord of Spalding; his overbearing conduct;
+ his expeditions against Hereward;
+ taken prisoner by him;
+ his outrages on Croyland Abbey;
+ banished by William Rufus.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Jerusalem, Robert the Magnificent at;
+ emotion of the first Crusaders at beholding it;
+ the slaughter there,
+ at its capture from the infidels;
+ King Richard&rsquo;s grief at his inability to take it.
+Jews, the persecution of, under Henry III;
+their treatment by Edward I.
+Joan, sister of Richard I.,
+ Queen of Sicily,
+ dispute with King Tancred about;
+ takes charge of Berengaria;
+ dies, and is buried with her brother.
+Joan of Acre, birth of;
+ marriage of, to Gilbert de Clare;
+ her second marriage to Ralph de Monthermer;
+ character;
+ her sudden death.
+John Lackland, Ireland given him as his inheritance;
+ his unworthy conduct there;
+ reason of his name;
+ his father&rsquo;s affection for him;
+ turns traitor to his father;
+ his conduct respecting Richard&rsquo;s captivity;
+ Richard&rsquo;s generous pardon to him;
+ bequeaths him the crown;
+ his marriage to Isabelle of Angoulême;
+ his promises respecting Prince Arthur;
+ imprisons him at Falaise;
+ his parley with him there and attempted cruelty;
+ murders Prince Arthur;
+ summoned by Philippe Auguste to answer for this;
+ his French fiefs declared forfeit;
+ conquered from him by Philippe;
+ his Queen&rsquo;s contempt for him;
+ his dispute with the Pope about the election to
+ the See of Canterbury;
+ his reply to the threat of an interdict;
+ excommunicated; deposed;
+ his embassy to the Emir of Cordova;
+ submission to the Pope;
+ yields himself a vassal to Rome;
+ his outrageous exactions;
+ the Barons revolt against these;
+ promises to grant the Great Charter;
+ attempts to cajole the Barons;
+ signs the Charter;
+ his rage, and efforts to annul it;
+ his war with the Barons;
+ contest with Louis the Lion and the Barons;
+ loss of his treasure at the Wash;
+ his despair and death.
+Joinville, Sieur de, accompanies Louis IX. on his crusade;
+ his bravery at Mansourah;
+ is taken prisoner;
+ opposes Louis&rsquo;s second crusade;
+ his notices of Louis IX.
+Joppa, the Crusaders at.
+Judith, wife of Earl Waltheof; her perfidy to her husband.
+Jumièges, Abbey of, restored by William Longsword.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Kelts, the history of.
+Kent, Edmund, Earl of, Queen Isabel&rsquo;s treachery and cruelty to.
+Kent, the men of, their treaty with William the Conqueror.
+Kings lost in battle, legends of their survival.
+Kirkpatrick, his share in the murder of the Red Comyn.
+Knut, husband of Emma, daughter of Richard the Fearless;
+ legends respecting his murder of Ulf.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Lacy, Hugo, made Governor of Ireland;
+ his murder.
+Lacy, Hugo de (2d), made Governor of Ireland by King John;
+ his treachery to De Courcy.
+Lancaster, Earl of, Gaveston&rsquo;s nickname for;
+ unites with other nobles against Gaveston;
+ his part in the downfall and death of Gaveston;
+ his discontent toward Edward II;
+ his proceeding against the Despensers;
+ his arrest and execution;
+ his character.
+Lanfranc, the first rise of;
+ his reputation at Rome;
+ becomes Abp. of Canterbury;
+ his esteem for Wulstan;
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s friendship for;
+ commanded by William the Conqueror to
+ crown Rufus King of England;
+ favors the views of Gregory VII;
+ his death.
+Langley, Walter, Bp. of Lichfield,
+ reproves Edward of Caernarvon;
+ his imprisonment.
+Langston, Simon, brother of the abp.
+Langton, Stephen, nominated by the Pope Abp. of Canterbury;
+ refused by King John; acknowledged by John;
+ takes possession of the see;
+ forbids John&rsquo;s violence;
+ his support of Magna Charta against the Pope;
+ gets the Barons to adopt it;
+ his mission to Rome on behalf of it and the Barons.
+Lateran Council, the, exactions of.
+Laws of England, adhered to by the Norman Kings;
+ ignored by Henry II;
+ their violation by King John;
+ Edward I&rsquo;s code of.
+Lay investiture of bishops, disputes about their settlement,
+Leofric, Earl of Mercia,
+ assists Edward the Confessor against Godwin,
+ his death,
+Leofric, father of Hereward, .
+Leofwyn, his advice to his brother Harold,
+ death at Hastings,
+Leopold of Austria at the siege of Acre,
+ his banner insulted by Richard,
+ his quarrel with Richard at Ascalon,
+ seizes Richard on his return,
+Lewes, the battle of,
+ its results,
+Lillebonne, the parliament at,
+Limoges, meeting of Henry II. and his sons at,
+Lincoln, the fair of,
+Linlithgow, the capture of, from the English,
+Lion, anecdote of its faithfulness,
+Lockhard, origin of the name of,
+London, becomes the Royal residence under the Danes,
+ preserves its rights at the Norman Conquest,
+ submits to William the Conqueror,
+Longchamp, William, Bp. of Ely, chancellor,
+arrogant character of,
+ his disgrace,
+Longespée, William, son of Fair Rosamond,
+ history of,
+ his death,
+Longespée, William, the second son of the above,
+ joins Richard Plantagenet&rsquo;s crusade,
+ gets a grant from the Pope for it,
+ joins the crusade of St. Louis,
+ his advice to Robert d&rsquo;Artois,
+ killed at Mansourah,
+Lords Marchers of Wales, the,
+Lorn, John of, Bruce&rsquo;s combat with,
+ his pursuit of Bruce,
+ is captured and imprisoned,
+Lothaire, son of Louis IV.,
+ companion of Richard the Fearless,
+ becomes hostage for his father,
+ succeeds to the throne of France,
+ his treachery to Richard the Fearless,
+ Richard&rsquo;s victory over him,
+Louis l&rsquo;éveillé of France sheltered by Henry I.,
+Louis IV. of France,
+ carries off Richard the Fearless,
+ declares war against the Normans,
+ is taken prisoner,
+ his death,
+Louis VI., le Jeune, why so named,
+Louis VII., divorced from Eleanor of Aquitaine,
+ his support of Becket,
+ turns against him at Montmirail,
+ their reconciliation,
+ his tributes to Becket&rsquo;s memory,
+ excites Henry II.&lsquo;s sons to rebellion.
+Louis IX., becomes King of France,
+ takes the cross,
+ his embarkation,
+ arrival at Damietta,
+ at the battle of Mansourah,
+ his encampment there,
+ taken captive by the Saracens,
+ his conduct to the Memelukes,
+ release and return,
+ the dispute between Henry III.
+ and his Barons referred to him,
+ again takes the Cross,
+ joined by Prince Edward of England,
+ his expedition against Tunis,
+ his expedition against Tunis,
+ his disasters at Carthage,
+ his sickness there,
+ last hours and death,
+ his character,
+ Louis Philippe&rsquo;s chapel on this spot of his death,
+Louis the Lion, his marriage to Blanche of Castile,
+ the crown of England offered to him,
+ interference of the Pope against this,
+ his invasion of England,
+ the Barons&rsquo; suspicious of him,
+ his various contests,
+ concludes a peace and
+ returns home, 285.
+Lusignan, Guy de, King of Jerusalem,
+Lusignan, Hugh de, Count de la Marche,
+ engaged to Isabelle of Angoulême,
+ takes part with Prince Arthur,
+ imprisoned by King John,
+ marries Isabelle after John&rsquo;s death,
+Lusignan, de, legend of the house of,
+ the family favored by Henry III., See Valence de.
+Lyons, council of,
+ the English deputies at,
+ deposes Frederick II.,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Macmorogh Dermod, King of Leinster,
+ his outrage and reverses,
+ gets assistance from Strongbow and others,
+Madoc, the story of,
+Mad Parliament, the,
+ meeting of, at Oxford,
+ its acts declared void by Louis IX.,
+Magna Charta. See Charta.
+Magnus, King of Norway,
+ gives his kingdom to Harold Hardrata,
+Mahometans, contract between the Saracenic and Turkish,
+Malachy, King of Meath, legends of,
+Malcolm III. of Scotland,
+ his kindness to the Etheling family,
+ his marriage to Margaret,
+ his character and reverence for his wife,
+ manner of his death,
+ troubles in Scotland after this,
+Malek el Afdal, Saladin&rsquo;s brother, his
+ courtesy to Richard I.,
+Malek el Kamel, sultan, opposes the Egyptian Crusaders,
+ his generosity,
+Mamelukes, the, revolt of,
+ in St. Louis&rsquo;s crusade,
+Mansourah, contests at,
+ in the first Egyptian crusade,
+ battle of,
+ in St. Louis&rsquo;s crusade,
+ horrors of encampment there,
+Mantes, the insurrection at, William
+ the Conqueror&rsquo;s fatal accident at,
+March of Wales, the, under the Normans,
+Margaret, daughter of Edward the Etheling;
+ marries Malcolm III. of Scotland;
+ her beneficial influence on Scotland and
+ the Scottish Church;
+ her death.
+Margaret, the infant Queen of Scotland, death of.
+Marguerite of Provence, Queen of France,
+ character of;
+ accompanies St. Louis on his crusade;
+ her sad position at Damietta.
+Marguerite of France, her marriage to Edward I.;
+ her character.
+Marlborough, the parliament of.
+Marmion of Fontenaye,
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s champion at his coronation.
+Maine, loss of, by England to Philippe Auguste.
+Martin, abbot of Jumièges,
+ his advice to William Longsword.
+Matilda of Anjou, married to William the Etheling;
+ retires to a nunnery.
+Matilda of Boulogne, wife of Stephen of Blois.
+Matilda of Flanders,
+ her marriage to William the Conqueror;
+ founds the Abbaye aux Dames at Caen;
+ her help toward the invasion of England;
+ works the Bayeux tapestry;
+ her coronation;
+ character;
+ her affection for Robert Courtheuse;
+ her death;
+ her husband&rsquo;s tender love for.
+Matilda of Huntingdon, married to David I. of Scotland.
+Matilda, daughter of William the Conqueror,
+ betrothed to Edwin;
+ her touching death.
+Matilda, daughter of Henry I.,
+ marries Henry V., of Germany.
+ See Maude.
+Maude, the good queen, her support of Abp. Anselm;
+ her character and death.
+Maude, or Matilda, daughter of Henry I.;
+ married to Henry V., of Germany;
+ Henry declares her his heir;
+ married secondly to Geoffrey Plantagenet;
+ her pride and haughtiness;
+ deprived by Stephen of the English crown;
+ her cause increases in strength;
+ proclaimed queen;
+ her disdainful manners;
+ her reverses at Winchester;
+ besieged by Stephen at Oxford;
+ escapes over the snow;
+ retires to Anjou.
+Maulac, Pierre de,
+ aids in the murder of Prince Arthur;
+ his further cruelties.
+Melisende, Princess of Jerusalem;
+ marries Foulques V. of Anjou.
+Melusine of Lusignan, legend of.
+Mercia, earldom of.
+Mertoun, the Synod of.
+Messina, Richard Coeur de Lion at.
+Methven, battle of.
+Milesians, the, myths concerning.
+Mirabeau, siege of, by Prince Arthur.
+Mitton, the Chapter of, the combat so called.
+Molay, Jacques de, grand master of the Templars;
+ his trial;
+ his cruel treatment and death.
+Monteil, Adhemar de, Bp. of Puy,
+ takes the Cross at the Council of Clermont.
+Montfort, Guy, lawless conduct of;
+ murders Henry d&rsquo;Almayne;
+ his excommunication and subsequent fate.
+Montfort, Henry, lawless conduct of;
+ his death at the battle of Evesham;
+ ballad lore version of his fate.
+Montford, Simon, the elder, history of;
+ his death.
+Montford, Simon, the younger,
+ marries a sister of Henry III.;
+ his popularity;
+ the king&rsquo;s jealousy of him;
+ his dispute with the king;
+ his conduct in taking the oath to the Acts of Oxford;
+ in the Barons&rsquo; war;
+ his behavior in prosperity;
+ violence and lawlessness of his sons;
+ his death at the battle of Evesham;
+ his noble character;
+ fate of his family.
+Montford, Simon (3d),
+ his conduct at the siege of Northampton;
+ his lawless conduct;
+ sacks Winchester;
+ his escape from Kenilworth;
+ murders Henry D&rsquo;Almayne.
+Montgomery, Roger,
+ messenger of Duke William of Normandy.
+Monthermer, Ralph de, his marriage to Joan of Acre.
+Montmirail,
+ conference between Henry II. and Becket at.
+Morkar, the grandson of Leofric;
+ the enemy of Harold;
+ submits to William the Conqueror;
+ joins the Camp of Refuge;
+ ends his life in captivity.
+Morogh O&rsquo;Brien, King of Ireland;
+ sends William Rufus oak for Westminster Hall.
+Mortimer, Roger, at the battle of Lewes;
+ aids the escape of Prince Edward from Hereford.
+Mortimer, Roger, senior and junior,
+ join the Barons against the Despensers;
+ taken prisoners by Edward II.;
+ sentenced to perpetual imprisonment;
+ death of the elder in the Tower.
+Mortimer, Roger, the younger,
+ his escape from the Tower;
+ Queen Isabel&rsquo;s affection for him;
+ anger of the nation at his display and presumption;
+ his arrest at Nottingham;
+ execution at Tyburn.
+Morville, Hugh, murderer of Becket;
+ his armorial bearings.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Neustria, the district in France conquered by Rollo;
+ ceded to him by the king;
+ afterward termed Normandy.
+New Forest, formation of, by William the Conqueror;
+ Richard, son of Robert Courtheuse, killed there;
+ death of William Rufus in.
+Nicaea, Robert the Magnificent dies at;
+ the crusading army at.
+Norham, conference at,
+ respecting the Crown of Scotland.
+Norman Barons,
+ their character at the accession of Duke William.
+Normandy, origin of its name;
+ sad state of, under William Rufus;
+ its troubles under Robert Courtheuse;
+ invasion and conquest of, by Henry I.;
+ lost to the English by John.
+Normans, the, character of;
+ their exploits in Apulia;
+ put in possession of English estates;
+ beneficial effect of this on the English race;
+ their opinion of Hereward;
+ their rapacity in England;
+ support the popes against the emperors.
+Northampton, council of,
+ proceedings against Becket at;
+ besieged by the Barons.
+Northmen, the, account of;
+ their character as pirates;
+ as settlers;
+ gave the name to Normandy;
+ change in their character;
+ their inroads on Ireland.
+ See Normans.
+Northumbria, the earldom of.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+O&rsquo;Connor, Roderick. King of Ireland;
+ his opposition to the invaders.
+Odo, Bp. of Bayeux,
+ joins William the Conqueror in his invasion of England;
+ commands the reserve at Hastings;
+ representation of him in the Bayeux tapestry;
+ his disgrace and imprisonment;
+ released by Robert Courtheuse;
+ takes the Cross;
+ blesses the unlawful marriage of Philippe I.
+Olaf, St., his prophecies of his young brothers;
+ his death in battle.
+Olaf Scotkonung, King of Sweden,
+ his charge of Edmund Ironside&rsquo;s children.
+Olaf Trygvesson in Ireland.
+Oraric of Meath, treachery of.
+Orleton, Adam, Bp. of Hereford,
+ his enmity to Edward II.;
+ his answer to Queen Isabel;
+ his quarrel with her.
+Osborn, Counte De Breteuil, murder of.
+Osgood, Clapa, the Dane, gives the name to Clapham.
+Osmund de Centeville,
+ his fidelity to Richard the Fearless.
+Otho, Emperor of Germany,
+ makes war against Richard the Fearless.
+Otho, the Pope&rsquo;s legate, tumult against, at Oxford.
+Ottoboni, Cardinal, preaches the Crusade in France and England.
+Oxford, Mande besieged at, by Stephen;
+ escapes from, over the snow;
+ meeting of the Mad Parliament at;
+ its acts declared void by Louis IX.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Pallium, the, Anselm&rsquo;s dispute with William Rufus about.
+Pandulfo, the Pope&rsquo;s legate, King John&rsquo;s submission to;
+ takes charge of Henry III. in his minority.
+Parliament, the, of Westminster;
+ the Mad, of Oxford;
+ those under Edward I.;
+ increase of its power through the right of self-taxation.
+Patriarch, the, of Rome,
+ acknowledged by the conquering tribes.
+Paschall II., Pope, Anselm consults.
+Pelagian heresy, the, in Wales.
+Pembroke, Richard, Earl of, assassination of.
+Pembroke, William, Earl of, has Henry III. crowned;
+ appointed his governor during his minority.
+Percy, legend of the origin of the name.
+Peter the Hermit, his appearance at the Council of Clermont;
+ leads the first Crusade;
+ defection of, at the siege of Antioch;
+ sings mass at the Holy Sepulchre.
+Pevensey, landing of the Normans at.
+Philippa of Hainault, Edward III.&lsquo;s first meeting with;
+ her marriage to him.
+Philippe I. of France,
+ refuses to aid William the Conqueror&rsquo;s invasion of England;
+ aids Robert Courtheuse against his father;
+ supports the insurrection at Mantes;
+ his connection with Bertrade,
+ wife of Foulques of Anjou.
+Philippe August, his birth and early character;
+ his accession to the throne of France;
+ agrees to join Richard Coeur de Lion in a crusade;
+ his last meeting with Henry II.;
+ sets out with Richard on the Crusade;
+ his intended treachery;
+ his jealousy of Richard;
+ returns home;
+ his conduct respecting Richard&rsquo;s captivity;
+ conduct toward Prince Arthur;
+ quarrel with King John;
+ summons John to answer for the murder of Prince Arthur;
+ invades his French fiefs;
+ wins back Normandy, Anjou, &amp;c., from the English;
+ England granted to him by the Pope.
+Philippe III., his father&rsquo;s last advice to him;
+ gives up the Crusade.
+Philippe IV., character of;
+ his deceit to Edward I.;
+ his treachery to the Count of Flanders;
+ persecution of Boniface VIII.;
+ causes the election of Clement V.;
+ his proceedings against the Templars;
+ his death.
+Plantagenet, Richard.
+ See Richard.
+Poer, Roger le, chaplain to Henry I., Bp. of Salisbury.
+Poitiers, Alfonse, Count de, at the Crusade of St. Louis;
+ left as a hostage.
+Pontigny, Becket retires to;
+ driven from thence.
+Pope, the, rescued from the Lombards by Charlemagne;
+ signification of the word;
+ early power of;
+ becomes head of the Western Church;
+ atrocities attending the election of,
+ the election of,
+ transferred from the emperor to the cardinals;
+ the struggle to regain this,
+Purkiss carries the body of William Rufus to Winchester;
+ his descendants still living in the New Forest.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ralph Flambard, Bishop of Durham, the friend of Rufus;
+ incites Robert Courtheuse against Henry I.
+Randolf de Brock, enemy of Becket;
+ assists his murderers.
+Randolph, Thomas, his reply to Robert Bruce;
+ gives him his allegiance;
+ captures Edinburgh Castle;
+ his exploits in border warfare;
+ appointed regent of Scotland.
+Raoul, Bp. of Durham, at the battle of the Standard.
+Raymond le Gros, friend of Strongbow;
+ his exploits in Ireland;
+ made Protector of the kingdom.
+Raymond of Toulouse joins the first crusade;
+ his conduct at the siege of Jerusalem.
+Reginald, elected Abp. of Canterbury;
+ his election declared null by the Pope;
+Rhodes, conquered by the Hospitallers.
+Rich, Edmund, Abp. of Canterbury, character of;
+ exposes the treachery of Des Roches;
+ his retirement and death.
+Richard, Apb. of Canterbury, character of.
+Richard Coeur de Lion, second son of Henry II.,
+ betrothed to Alice of France;
+ his love of Languedoc;
+ rebels against his father;
+ his dispute with his brother Henry;
+ origin of his surname;
+ agrees to join Philippe Auguste in a crusade;
+ disputes respecting his betrothal to Alice of France;
+ his attachment to Berengaria;
+ does homage to Philippe;
+ his last interview with his father;
+ remorse at his father&rsquo;s death;
+ his preparations for the crusade;
+ joins with Philippe;
+ instances of his violent nature;
+ his dispute with Tancred of Sicily;
+ his conquest of Cyprus;
+ his marriage to Berengaria;
+ gallantry at Acre,
+ exploits in the march from Acre;
+ quarrel with Leopold of Austria;
+ his grief at being unable to take Jerusalem;
+ his daring courage at Joppa,
+ a truce signed with Saladin;
+ sets out on his return home;
+ his adventures by the way,
+ capture and imprisonment;
+ discovered by Blondel;
+ his release and return home;
+ his dispute with Constance of Brittany;
+ besieges the castle of Chaluz,
+ manner of his death there.
+Richard Plantagenet, Earl of Cornwall,
+ undertakes a crusade;
+ its results;
+ elected King of the Romans;
+ takes the oath to the acts of Oxford;
+ taken prisoner at Lewes;
+ his death.
+Richard, son of Robert Courtheuse,
+ killed in the New Forest.
+Richard the Fearless,
+ son of William Longsword and Espriote;
+ succeeds to the dukedom,
+ carried off by Louis IV.
+ his escape,
+ does homage for his duchy;
+ his betrothal;
+ the wars against him,
+ attempts at his assassination;
+ his victory over Lothaire;
+ his character;
+ death, piety, etc.
+Richard the Good,
+ succeeds his father Richard the Fearless;
+ his character;
+ his protection of the sons of Ethelred.
+Richard, son of Richard the Good.
+Richard, William the Conqueror&rsquo;s second son,
+ early death of.
+Robert, Bp. of Hereford, the friend of St. Wulstan.
+Robert, count of Eu,
+ joins William the Conqueror in his invasion of England.
+Robert, Count of Paris.
+Robert Courtheuse, William the Conqueror&rsquo;s eldest son;
+ his dispute with his brothers at L&rsquo;aigle;
+ his rebellion against his father;
+ his mother&rsquo;s affection for him;
+ encounters his father in battle;
+ his war with William Rufus;
+ takes the cross;
+ superiority of his character to his brothers&rsquo;;
+ mortgages his dukedom to Rufus;
+ his conduct at the siege of Antioch;
+ declines being King of Jerusalem;
+ his friendship with Edgar Atheling;
+ his marriage;
+ gives up his rights to Henry I.;
+ Henry&rsquo;s intrigues against him, ;
+ is taken prisoner;
+ imprisoned in Cardiff castle, ;
+ his last years and death.
+Robert, Earl of Gloucester, son of Henry I.;
+ espouses the cause of the Empress Maude;
+ is taken prisoner;
+ exchanged for Stephen;
+ his staunch support of Maude;
+ his learning.
+Robert the Magnificent, his character;
+ resolves on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land;
+ declares his son (William the Conqueror) his heir,
+ his pilgrimage and death.
+Rochester, the siege of, by King John.
+Rockingham, the convocation at.
+Roderick Maur, the Welsh prince.
+Roger, Abp. of York, the enemy of Becket;
+ his excommunication,
+ his jealousy of the Abp. of Canterbury,
+Rognwald, earl, father of Rolf Ganger,
+Rolf Ganger, origin of his name,
+ outlawed for piracy,
+ attacks Rouen ,
+ his rude generosity,
+ interview with Hasting,
+ conquests in France,
+ Neustria (Normandy) ceded to him,
+ tradition of his homage to the King of France,
+ embraces Christianity,
+ his government of Normandy,
+ his history very doubtful,
+Rollo, the French name for Rolf,
+Roll of Battle Abbey, account of,
+Roman Empire, the, decay of,
+Rome, England a fief of
+Rosamund Clifford, history of,
+Rouen attacked by Rolf Ganger,
+ its surrender,
+ made the capital of the territory,
+ William Longsword buried at,
+ besieged by the enemies of Richard the Fearless,
+ the Abp. of, excommunicates William the Conqueror,
+Roxburgh, capture of, by Sir James Douglas,
+Rudel, Jauffred, the troubadour, the story of,
+Runnymede, the Great Charter signed at,
+Ryes, Hubert de, his service to Duke William,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Sailors&rsquo; quarrel between France and England,
+St. Laurence, Sir Almeric de,
+ brother in arms of Sir John de Courcy,
+ his exploits in Ireland,
+St. Mahé, the sea-fight at,
+St. Patrick, the conversion of Ireland by,
+St. Thomas&rsquo;s hospital, named after Archbishop Becket,
+Saladin obtains supreme power in Palestine,
+ his courtesies to Richard I.,
+Salisbury, John of, the friend of Becket,
+ exiled by Henry II.,
+Samson le Breton, messenger of Queen Matilda,
+Saracen Arabs, the, character of,
+Savoy palace, the, origin of,
+Saxons, the, held in no favor at Rome,
+ cause of their ruin at the Conquest,
+ their derision of the Normans,
+Scandinavia, the nurse of the Teuton race,
+Scotland, depredations of the pirates in,
+ its troubles after the death of Malcolm III.,
+ decay of the kings of,
+ the troubles of, following the death of Alexander III.,
+ claims to the crown of, referred to Edward I.,
+ Edward I. claims to be Lord paramount,
+ harsh government of, under Edward I.,
+ the troubles of, under the Bruce dynasty,
+ the strength of, under Robert Bruce,
+ peace concluded with, by England,
+Scottish Church, the, reformed by Queen Margaret,
+Scott, Michael, the wizard, account of,
+Septs, system of, in Ireland,
+Sepulchre, the Holy, the crusaders at,
+Sewell, Abp. of York,
+ his opposition to the encroachments of Rome,
+Ship, the White, story of the wreck of,
+Sigurd the Crusader, visitor to Henry I.,
+ his career,
+ his discussion with his brother Eystein,
+ his sad fate,
+Simon, Earl of Northampton, son of Matilda of Scotland,
+ his character,
+ his contempt for his brother Waltheof,
+ his repentance and death,
+Siward Biorn, Earl of Northumbria,
+ assists Edward the Confessor against Godwin,
+ his death,
+Sonnac, Guillaume de, in the Egyptian crusade,
+Stamford Bridge, battle of,
+Standard, the, battle of,
+Stapleton, Walter, Bp. of Exeter,
+ his murder at Paul&rsquo;s Cross,
+Stephen, Count of Blois,
+ married to William the Conqueror&rsquo;s daughter Adela,
+ takes the Cross,
+ his character,
+Stephen (II.) of Blois, favorite of Henry I.,
+ swears fealty to Maude,
+ his proceedings on the death of Henry I.,
+ obtains possession of England and Normandy,
+ his good qualities,
+ taken prisoner at Lincoln,
+ regains his liberty,
+ besieges Maude at Oxford,
+ retains the throne unmolested,
+ his death,
+Stephen, King of Hungary,
+ his charge of Edmund Ironside&rsquo;s children,
+ his character,
+Stigand, Abp.,
+ his absence from the coronation of Harold,
+ suspicion of, by the Court of Rome,
+ his deposition,
+Stiklestad, battle of,
+Stirling, battle of,
+ siege of,
+ siege of the castle by Edward Bruce,
+ Randolph&rsquo;s conduct at,
+Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke,
+ his invasion of Ireland,
+ Henry II. makes him seneschal,
+ and governor,
+ his death,
+Swend, quarrel of, with Harold Hardrada,
+Sweyne, son of Earl Godwin, his character and crimes,
+Sybil, daughter of Helie de la Flèche,
+ marries Foulques V. of Anjou,
+Sybilla, wife of Robert Courtheuse,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Taillefer, the minstrel knight at Hastings,
+Tancred de Hauteville, the kingdom of
+ the Two Sicilies founded by his sons.
+Tancred joins the first Crusade;
+ his prowess at Antioch;
+ at Jerusalem.
+Tancred of Sicily, disputes between him and
+ Richard Coeur de Lion;
+ Prince Arthur betrothed to his daughter.
+Templars, the Knights,
+ jealousy between them and the Hospitallers;
+ their valor at the fall of Acre;
+ their proceedings afterward;
+ given up by Clement V. to Philippe IV.;
+ their arrest and the accusations against them;
+ their order abolished by the Pope;
+ persecution of, in different kingdoms;
+ their character and fate.
+Temple, the, in London, history of.
+Teuchebray, battle of.
+Teutons, the, reared in Scandinavia;
+ their law regarding land.
+Theobald, Count de Blois, favorite of Henry I.
+Thibaut, Count de Chartes,
+ his treachery toward Richard the Fearless;
+ his submission to him.
+Thorer the Silent, son of Earl Rognwald.
+Thorold, Abbot of Malmesbury, appointed to Peterborough;
+ his expedition against Hereward;
+ is taken prisoner.
+Thurstan, Abp. of York.
+Torfrida, wife of Hereward.
+Torguatus, ancestor of the Anjou family.
+Tostig, son of Earl Godwin;
+ becomes Earl of Northumbria;
+ banished by Harold;
+ becomes his bitter enemy;
+ invites Harold Hardrada to invade England;
+ his interview with his brother Harold;
+ is killed at Stamford Bridge.
+Touraine, loss of, by the English to France.
+Tracy, William, the murderer of Becket;
+ his armorial bearings.
+Triefels, castle of, Richard Coeur de Lion immured in.
+Troubadours, the, account of;
+ their lament for Coeur de Lion.
+Tunis, Louis IX.&lsquo;s expedition against.
+Tunstan the White, standard-bearer at Hastings.
+Turges, the Dane, King of Ireland.
+Turks, the, character of;
+ the first crusade directed against them.
+Turlogh, King of Ireland.
+Tynte family, origin of their name and armorial bearings.
+Tyrrell, Walter, alone with Rufus at his death
+ in the New Forest.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Ulf, Earl Godwin&rsquo;s brother-in-law,
+ legends respecting.
+Ulfnoth, father of Earl Godwin;
+ remains in captivity till death.
+Ulfnoth son of Earl Godwin, hostage to William of Normandy.
+Urban II., Pope, elected by the cardinals;
+ presides at the Council of Clermont;
+ urges the first crusade.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Val des Dames, the battle of.
+Valence de, the English cognomen of the Lusignan family.
+Valence, Aymar de, his contest with Bruce;
+ his pursuit of him;
+ defeated by Bruce at Loudon Hill;
+ Gaveston&rsquo;s nick-name for him;
+ unites with other nobles against Gaveston;
+ his character;
+ his conduct at the death of Gaveston;
+ sent by Edward II. to Scotland against Bruce.
+Valence, William de, half-brother to Henry III.,
+ opposition between him and the Barons.
+Varangian guard, the.
+Vikings, the, account of.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Wakefield, Peter, of his prediction to King John;
+ John&rsquo;s cruelty to him.
+Wales, early history of.
+Walkelyn, Bishop of Winchester,
+ grant of timber to him by William the Conqueror.
+Wallace, William, history of;
+ declares against Edward I.;
+ wins the battle of Stirling;
+ assumes the title of Governor;
+ defeated at the battle of Falkirk;
+ his betrayal and execution.
+Wallingford Castle, Maude escapes to.
+Walsingham, our Lady of, origin of the church of.
+Walter, Hubert, Abp. of Canterbury, account of.
+Walter l&rsquo;Espee at the battle of the Standard.
+Walter the Penniless joins the first crusade.
+Waltham Abbey, Harold and his brothers buried at.
+Waltheof, Earl of Huntingdon, son of Siward Biorn;
+ rejects submission to William the Conqueror;
+ perfidious conduct of his wife;
+ executed at Winchester.
+&mdash;&mdash; son of Matilda of Scotland, character of;
+ becomes abbot of Melrose;
+ his meeting with King Stephen;
+ elected Bp. of St. Andrew&rsquo;s.
+Warrenne, John de, Earl of Surrey,
+ his sword his title to his estate;
+ his expedition against Wallace;
+ his conduct at the battle of Stirling.
+&mdash;&mdash; Isabel, her appeal to Henry III.
+Wash, the, loss of King John&rsquo;s treasure at.
+Welsh, the, a Keltic tribe;
+ their fierce internal quarrels;
+ their position under the Saxon and Norman kings.
+Wessex, the earldom of.
+Western Church, the, degeneration of, after the Crusades.
+Western Empire, the, break up of.
+Westminster Abbey, foundation of,
+ by Edward the Confessor;
+ Henry III.&lsquo;s benefactions to;
+ its appearance temp. Edward I.
+Westminster Hall, the oak for the roof sent from Ireland.
+White Ship, the story of the wreck of.
+William the Conqueror, son of Robert the Magnificent,
+ acknowledged his father&rsquo;s heir;
+ his accession;
+ early conspiracies against him;
+ defeats the rebels;
+ his war with Anjou;
+ marriage with Matilda of Flanders;
+ founds the Abbey of St. Stephen at Caen;
+ his grave and burial there;
+ his visit to Edward the Confessor;
+ Edward leaves the crown of England to him;
+ Harold becomes his prisoner;
+ obtains an oath of assistance from him;
+ receives tidings of Harold&rsquo;s coronation;
+ summons a parliament at Lillebonne;
+ prepares for the invasion of England;
+ lands at Pevensey;
+ his appearance at the battle of Hastings;
+ his victory there;
+ his coronation;
+ his mode of satisfying his followers;
+ attacks the Camp of Refuge;
+ makes peace with Hereward;
+ his high character;
+ his principal friends;
+ his many disappointments;
+ character of his wife;
+ of his daughters;
+ of his sons;
+ rebellion of Robert Courtheuse against him;
+ his grief at Queen Matilda&rsquo;s death;
+ his fatal accident at Mantes;
+ interview with his sons on his death-bed;
+ leaves the crown of England to William Rufus;
+ his death;
+ history of the submission of London to him;
+ his dealings with the Welsh.
+William Rufus, his father&rsquo;s love for him;
+ interview with his father on his death-bed;
+ he nominates him successor to the crown of England;
+ his oppression of the Church and people;
+ rapine under him in England and Normandy;
+ his remorse at his sacrilege;
+ makes Anselm Abp. of Canterbury;
+ his war with his brother Robert;
+ his disputes with Anselm;
+ exiles him for life;
+ his friend Ralph Flambard;
+ increases the severity of the Forest laws;
+ his dream the night before his death;
+ his death in the New Forest;
+ burial at Winchester;
+ relics of his death still remaining;
+ doubts by whom he was killed;
+ his conduct to Helie de la Flèche.
+William Etheling, eldest son of Henry I.;
+ marries Matilda of Anjou;
+ drowned in the White Ship.
+William Fitzosborne de Breteuil,
+ his proceedings on the death of Rufus.
+William of Scotland, captivity of;
+ purchases his freedom.
+William, son of Rollo,
+ his father leaves him his dukedom;
+ surnamed Longsword;
+ his character;
+ father of Richard the Fearless;
+ his base murder;
+ burial at Rouen.
+William, son of Robert Courtheuse;
+ given in charge of Helie de St. Saen;
+ his career and early death.
+Winchelsea, Robert, Abp. of Canterbury,
+ opposes Edward I.&lsquo;s exactions on the Clergy;
+ their reconciliation;
+ holds the Synod of Mertoun;
+ Edward&rsquo;s vengeance on him;
+ his death and character;
+ his denunciations of Gaveston.
+Winchester, the council of;
+ burial of Rufus at;
+ Maude besieged there;
+ sacking of, by Simon de Montfort.
+Wolves&rsquo; heads, the tribute of, from Wales.
+Woodstock, Fair Rosamond at.
+Worcester cathedral, rebuilt by Wulstan.
+Wulstan, the last Saxon bishop, account of;
+ chosen Bp. of Worcester;
+ his conduct at the council of Winchester;
+ legend of his staff at the Confessor&rsquo;s tomb;
+ retains his bishopric;
+ rebuilds his cathedral;
+ his death;
+ William the Conqueror&rsquo;s friendship for him.
+Wych, Richard, Bp. of Chichester, history of;
+ his good works and death.
+
+York and Canterbury, jealousy between.
+
+Zoe, Empress of Constantinople,
+ her love for Harold Hardrada.
+</pre>
+ <h3>
+ THE END
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cameos from English History, from
+Rollo to Edward II, by Charlotte Mary Yonge
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+</pre>
+
+ </body>
+</html>