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<h2> CHAPTER II THE BATTLE OF TEWKESBURY </h2>
<p>Riding fast, Sir Thomas Tresham crossed the Thames at Reading before any
news of the battle of Barnet had arrived there. On the third day after
leaving St. Albans he reached Westbury, and there heard that the news had
been received of the queen's landing at Plymouth on the very day on which
her friends had been defeated at Barnet, and that she had already been
joined by the Duke of Somerset, the Earl of Devon, and others, and that
Exeter had been named as the point of rendezvous for her friends. As the
Lancastrians were in the majority in Wiltshire and Somerset, there was no
longer any fear of arrest by partisans of York, and after resting for a
day Sir Thomas Tresham rode quietly on to Exeter, where the queen had
already arrived.</p>
<p>The battle of Barnet had not, in reality, greatly weakened the Lancastrian
cause. The Earl of Warwick was so detested by the adherents of the Red
Rose that comparatively few of them had joined him, and the fight was
rather between the two sections of Yorkists than between York and
Lancaster. The Earl's death had broken up his party, and York and
Lancaster were now face to face with each other, without his disturbing
influence on either side. Among those who had joined the queen was
Tresham's great friend, the Grand Prior of St. John's. Sir Thomas took up
his lodgings in the house where he had established himself. The queen was
greatly pleased at the arrival of Dame Tresham, and at her earnest request
the latter shared her apartments, while Gervaise remained with his father.</p>
<p>“So this is the young Knight of St. John,” the prior said, on the evening
of the arrival of Sir Thomas. “I would, Tresham, that I were at present at
Rhodes, doing battle with the infidels, rather than engaged in this
warfare against Englishmen and fellow Christians.”</p>
<p>“I can well understand that,” Sir Thomas said.</p>
<p>“I could not hold aloof here, Tresham. The vows of our Order by no means
hinder us from taking part in the affairs of our own country. The rule of
the Order is indeed against it, but the rule is constantly broken. Were it
otherwise there could be no commanderies in this or any other country; we
should have, on entering the Order, to abandon our nationality, and to
form part of one community in the East. The Order is true to its oaths. We
cannot defend the Holy Sepulchre, for that, for the present, is hopelessly
lost; but we can and do wage war with the infidel. For this funds are
necessary as well as swords, and our commanderies throughout Europe supply
the funds by which the struggle is maintained, and, when it is needed,
send out contingents to help those fighting in the East. It was from the
neglect of this cardinal point that the Templars fell. Their commanderies
amassed wealth and wide possessions, but unlike us the knights abstained
altogether from fulfilling their vows, and ceased to resist the infidel.
Therefore they were suppressed, and, with the general approval of Europe,
a portion of their possessions was handed over to the knights of St. John.
However, as I understand, it is your wish that as soon as the boy comes of
age to wield arms he shall go to Rhodes and become an active member of the
Order. This is indeed the rule with all neophytes, but having served a
certain time they are then permitted to return and join one of the
commanderies in their native countries.”</p>
<p>“I do not wish that for Gervaise,” his father said; “at least, I wish him
to remain at Rhodes until all the civil troubles are absolutely at an end
here. My life has been ruined by them. Loving retirement and quiet, and
longing for nothing so much as a life among my tenantry, I have almost
from a boy been actively engaged in warfare or have been away as an exile.
Here every one of gentle blood has been more or less mixed up in these
civil broils. To few of us does it personally matter whether a member of
the House of York or Lancaster sits on the throne, and yet we have been
almost compelled to take sides with one or the other; and now, in my
middle age I am on the eve of another battle in which I risk my life and
fortune. If we win I gain naught but the satisfaction of seeing young
Edward made King of England. If we lose I am going into exile again, or I
may leave my wife a widow, and my child penniless.”</p>
<p>“It is too true, Tresham; and as I am as likely to fall as you are, the
child might be left without a protector as well as fatherless. However,
against that I will provide. I will write a letter to Peter D'Aubusson,
who is the real governor of Rhodes, for the Grand Master Orsini is so old
that his rule is little more than nominal. At his death D'Aubusson is
certain to be elected Grand Master. He is a dear friend of mine. We
entered the Order the same year, and were comrades in many a fight with
the Moslems, and I am quite sure that when I tell him that it is my last
request of him, he will, in memory of our long friendship, appoint your
son as one of the Grand Master's pages. As you know, no one, however high
his rank, is accepted as a novice before the age of sixteen. After a
year's probation he is received into the body of the Order as a professed
knight, and must go out and serve for a time in Rhodes. After three years
of active service he must reside two more at the convent, and can then be
made a commander. There is but one exception to the rule—namely,
that the pages of the grand master are entitled to the privilege of
admission at the age of twelve, so that they become professed knights at
thirteen. Your son is now but nine, you say, and we must remember that
D'Aubusson is not yet Grand Master, and Orsini may live for some years
yet. D'Aubusson, however, can doubtless get him to appoint the boy as one
of his pages. But, in any case, there are three years yet to be passed
before he can go out. Doubtless these he will spend under his mother's
care; but as it is as well to provide against everything, I will furnish
your dame with a letter to the knight who will probably succeed me as
Grand Prior of the English langue, asking him to see to the care and
education of the boy up to the time when he can proceed to Rhodes. We may
hope, my dear Tresham, that there will be no occasion to use such
documents, and that you and I may both be able personally to watch over
his career. Still, it is as well to take every precaution. I shall, of
course, give D'Aubusson full particulars about you, your vow, and your
wishes.”</p>
<p>“I thank you greatly, old friend,” Sir Thomas said. “It has taken a load
off my mind. I shall leave him here with his mother when we march forward,
and bid her, if ill befalls me, cross again to France, and then to keep
Gervaise with her until she can bring herself to part with him. She has
her jewels and a considerable sum of money which I accepted from the man
who has been enjoying my estates for the last five years, in lieu of the
monies that he had received during that time. Therefore, she will not lack
means for some years to come. Besides, Queen Margaret has a real affection
for her, and will, doubtless, be glad to have her with her again in
exile.”</p>
<p>“When I am old enough,” Gervaise said, suddenly looking up from a missal
of the Grand Prior's which he had been examining, “I will chop off the
head of the Duke of York, and bring mother back to England.”</p>
<p>“You will be a valiant champion no doubt, my boy,” the prior said,
laughing. “But that is just what your father does not want. Chop off the
heads of as many infidels as you will, but leave Englishmen alone, be they
dukes or commoners. It is a far more glorious career to be aiding to
defend Europe against the Moslem than to be engaged in wars with your own
countrymen. If the great lords will fight, let them fight it out
themselves without our aid; but I hope that long before you become a man
even they will be tired of these perpetual broils, and that some agreement
may be arrived at, and peace reign in this unhappy land.”</p>
<p>“Besides, Gervaise,” his father added, “you must bear in mind always that
my earnest wish and hope is that you will become a champion of the Cross.
I took a solemn vow before you were born that if a son were granted to me
I would dedicate him to the service of the Cross, and if I am taken from
you, you must still try to carry that oath into effect. I trust that, at
any rate for some years after you attain manhood, you will expend your
whole strength and powers in the defence of Christianity, and as a worthy
knight of the Order of St. John. Too many of the knights, after serving
for three years against the infidels, return to their native countries and
pass the rest of their lives in slothful ease at their commanderies, save
perhaps when at any great crisis they go out for a while and join in the
struggle. Such is not the life I should wish you to lead. At the death of
your mother and myself, you will have no family ties in England—nothing
to recall you here. If the House of York succeeds in establishing itself
firmly on the throne, my estates will be forfeited. Therefore, regard
Rhodes as your permanent home, and devote your life to the Order.
Beginning so young, you may hope to distinguish yourself—to gain
high rank in it; but remember that though these are my wishes, they are
not my orders, and that your career must be in your own hands.”</p>
<p>“I will be a brave knight, father,” the boy said firmly.</p>
<p>“That is right, my boy. Now go upstairs to your bed; it is already late. I
do not regret my vow,” he went on, after Gervaise had left the room,
“though I regret that he is my only son. It is singular that men should
care about what comes after them, but I suppose it is human nature. I
should have liked to think that my descendants would sit in the old house,
and that men of my race and name would long own the estates. But doubtless
it is all for the best; for at least I can view the permanent loss of my
estates, in case the Yorkists triumph, without any poignant regret.”</p>
<p>“Doubtless it is for the best, Tresham, and you must remember that things
may not, even now, turn out as you think. A knight who has done a brave
service does not find much difficulty in obtaining from the Pope a
dispensation from his vows. Numbers of knights have so left the Order and
have married and perpetuated their name. It is almost a necessity that it
should be so, for otherwise many princes and barons would object to their
sons entering the Order. Its object is to keep back the irruption of the
Moslems, and when men have done their share of hard work no regret need be
felt if they desire to leave the Order. Our founder had no thought of
covering Europe with monasteries, and beyond the fact that it is necessary
there should be men to administer our manors and estates, I see no reason
why any should not freely leave when they reach the age of thirty or
thirty-five, and indeed believe that it would strengthen rather than
weaken us were the vows, taken at the age of seventeen, to be for fifteen
years only.”</p>
<p>“There is something in that,” the knight said thoughtfully. “However, that
is far in the distance, and concerns me but little; still, I agree with
you, for I see no advantage in men, after their time of usefulness to the
Order is past, being bound to settle down to a monastic life if by nature
and habit unsuited for it. There are some spirits who, after long years of
warfare, are well content so to do, but there are assuredly others to whom
a life of forced inactivity, after a youth and manhood spent in action,
must be well nigh unendurable. And now tell me frankly what you think of
our chances here.”</p>
<p>“Everything depends upon time. Promises of aid have come in from all
quarters, and if Edward delays we shall soon be at the head of an
overwhelming force. But Edward, with all his faults and vices, is an able
and energetic leader, and must be well aware that if he is to strike
successfully he must strike soon. We must hope that he will not be able to
do this. He cannot tell whether we intend to march direct to London, or to
join Pembroke in Wales, or to march north, and until he divines our
purpose, he will hardly dare to move lest we should, by some rapid
movement, interpose between himself and London. If he gives us a month,
our success is certain. If he can give battle in a fortnight, no one can
say how the matter will end.”</p>
<p>Edward, indeed, was losing no time. He stayed but a few days in London
after his victory at Barnet, and on the 19th of April left for Windsor,
ordering all his forces to join him there. The Lancastrians had
endeavoured to puzzle him as to their intended movements by sending
parties out in various directions; but as soon as he had gathered a force,
numerically small, but composed of veteran soldiers, he hurried west,
determined to bring on a battle at the earliest opportunity. The queen's
advisers determined to move first to Wells, as from that point they could
either go north or march upon London. Edward entered Abingdon on the 27th,
and then, finding the Lancastrians still at Wells, marched to the
northwest, by which means he hoped to intercept them if they moved north,
while he would be able to fall back and bar their road to London if they
advanced in that direction. He therefore moved to Cirencester, and waited
there for news until he learned that they had visited Bristol and there
obtained reinforcements of men and supplies of money and cannon, and had
then started on the high road to Gloucester.</p>
<p>He at once sent off messengers to the son of Lord Beauchamp, who held the
Castle of Gloucester for him, assuring him that he was following at full
speed, and would come to his aid forthwith. The messengers arrived in
time, and when the queen, after a long march, arrived before Gloucester,
she found the gates shut in her face. The governor had taken steps to
prevent her numerous adherents in the town from rising on her behalf, and,
manning the walls, refused to surrender. Knowing that Edward was coming up
rapidly, it was evident that there was no time to spare in an attempt to
take the town, and the queen's army therefore pressed on, without waiting,
to Tewkesbury. Once across the river they would speedily be joined by the
Earl of Pembroke, and Edward would be forced to fall back at once.</p>
<p>By the time they reached the river, however, they were thoroughly
exhausted. They had marched thirty-six miles without rest, along bad roads
and through woods, and were unable to go farther. The queen urged that the
river should be crossed, but the leaders of the force were of opinion that
it was better to halt. Edward would be able to follow them across the
river, and were he to attack them when in disorder, and still further
wearied by the operation of making the passage, he would certainly crush
them. Moreover, a further retreat would discourage the soldiers, and as a
battle must now be fought, it was better to fight where they were,
especially as they could choose a strong position. The queen gave way, and
the army encamped on a large field in front of the town. The position was
well calculated for defence, for the country around was so broken and
intercepted with lanes and deep hedges and ditches, that it was extremely
difficult of approach.</p>
<p>In the evening Edward came up, his men having also marched some
six-and-thirty miles, and encamped for the night within three miles of the
Lancastrian position. The queen's troops felt confident of victory. In
point of numbers they were superior to their antagonists, and had the
advantage of a strong position. Sir Thomas Tresham had, as he proposed,
left his wife and son at Exeter when the force marched away.</p>
<p>“Do not be despondent, love,” he said to his weeping wife, as he bade her
goodbye. “Everything is in our favour, and there is a good hope of a happy
termination to this long struggle. But, win or lose, be assured it is the
last time I will draw my sword. I have proved my fidelity to the House of
Lancaster; I have risked life and fortune in their cause; but I feel that
I have done my share and more, and whichever way Providence may now decide
the issue of the struggle, I will accept it. If we lose, and I come
scatheless through the fight, I will ride hither, and we will embark at
Plymouth for France, and there live quietly until the time comes when
Edward may feel himself seated with sufficient firmness on the throne to
forgive past offences and to grant an amnesty to all who have fought
against him. In any other case, dear, you know my wishes, and I bid you
carry them out within twenty-four hours of your receiving news of a
defeat, without waiting longer for my appearance.”</p>
<p>As soon as it was light, Edward advanced to the attack. The Duke of
Gloucester was in command of the vanguard. He himself led the centre,
while the rear was commanded by the Marquis of Dorset and Lord Hastings.
The most advanced division of Lancastrians was commanded by the Duke of
Somerset and his brother. The Grand Prior of the Order of St. John and
Lord Wenlock were stationed in the centre, the Earl of Devon with the
reserve. Refreshed by their rest, the queen's troops were in good spirits.
While awaiting the attack, she and the prince rode among the ranks,
encouraging the men with fiery speeches, and promising large rewards to
all in case of victory.</p>
<p>Gloucester made his advance with great difficulty. The obstacles to his
progress were so many and serious that his division was brought to a halt
before it came into contact with the defenders. He therefore brought up
his artillery and opened a heavy cannonade upon Somerset's position,
supporting his guns with flights of arrows, and inflicting such heavy loss
upon him that the duke felt compelled to take the offensive.</p>
<p>Having foreseen that he might be obliged to do so, he had, early in the
morning, carefully examined the ground in front of him, and had found some
lanes by which he could make a flank attack on the enemy. Moving his force
down these lanes, where the trees and hedges completely hid his advance
from the Yorkists, he fell suddenly upon Edward's centre, which, taken by
surprise at the unexpected attack, was driven in confusion up the hill
behind it. Somerset was quick to take advantage of his success, and
wheeling his men round fell upon the Duke of Gloucester's division, and
was equally successful in his attack upon it. Had the centre, under Lord
Wenlock, moved forward at once to his support, the victory would have been
assured; but Wenlock lay inactive, and Somerset was now engaged in
conflict with the whole of Edward's force. But even under these
circumstances he still gained ground, when suddenly the whole aspect of
the battle was changed.</p>
<p>Before it began Edward had sent two hundred spearmen to watch a wood near
the defenders' lines, as he thought that the Lancastrians might place a
force there to take him in flank as he attacked their front. He ordered
them, if they found the wood unoccupied, to join in the fight as
opportunity might offer. The wood was unoccupied, and the spearmen, seeing
the two divisions of their army driven backwards, and being thereby cut
off from their friends, issued from the wood and, charging down in a body,
fell suddenly upon Somerset's rear.</p>
<p>Astounded and confused by an attack from such a quarter, and believing
that it was an act of treachery by one of their own commanders, Somerset's
men, who had hitherto been fighting with the greatest bravery, fell into
confusion. Edward's quick eye soon grasped the opportunity, and rallying
his troops he charged impetuously down upon the Lancastrians, seconded
hotly by Gloucester and his division.</p>
<p>The disorder in Somerset's lines speedily grew into a panic, and the
division broke up and fled through the lanes to the right and left.
Somerset, after in vain trying to stop the panic, rode furiously back into
the camp, followed by his principal officers, and riding up to Lord
Wenlock he cleft his head in two with a battleaxe. His resentment,
although justified by the inactivity of this nobleman at such a crisis,
was yet disastrous, as it left the centre without a leader, and threw it
into a state of disorganization, as many must have supposed that Somerset
had turned traitor and gone over to the enemy. Before any disposition
could be made, Edward and Gloucester poured their forces into the camp,
and the Lancastrians at once broke and fled. Many of their leaders took
refuge in the church, an asylum which they deemed inviolable, and which
the Lancastrians had honourably respected in their hour of triumph.</p>
<p>Among them were the Duke of Somerset, the Grand Prior of the Order of St.
John, Sir Humphrey Audely, Sir Gervis of Clifton, Sir William Gainsby, Sir
William Cary, Sir Henry Rose, Sir Thomas Tresham, and seven esquires.
Margaret of Anjou fell into the hands of the victors. As to the fate of
the young prince, accounts differ. Some authorities say that he was
overtaken and slain on the field, but the majority related that he was
captured and taken before Edward, who asked him, “What brought you to
England?” On his replying boldly, “My father's crown and mine own
inheritance,” Edward struck him in the mouth with his gauntlet, and his
attendants, or some say his brothers, at once despatched the youth with
their swords.</p>
<p>The king, with Gloucester and Clarence, then went to the church at
Tewkesbury, where the knights had taken refuge, burst open the doors, and
entered it. A priest, bearing the holy vessels, threw himself before the
king, and would not move until he promised to pardon all who had taken
sanctuary there. The king then retired, and trusting in the royal word,
the gentlemen made no attempt to escape, although it is said that they
could easily have done so. Two days later a party of soldiers by the
king's orders broke into the church, dragged them from the foot of the
altar, and beheaded them outside.</p>
<p>The news of the issue of the fatal battle of Tewkesbury, the capture of
the queen, and the death of the prince, was borne to Exeter by fugitives
on the following day. Beyond the fact that the Earl of Devon and other
nobles were known to have been killed, and Somerset with a party of
knights had taken sanctuary, they could give no details as to the fate of
individuals. In the deepest distress at the utter ruin of the cause, and
in ignorance of the fate of her husband, who she could only hope was one
of those who had gained sanctuary, Dame Tresham prepared for flight. This
accomplished, she had only to wait, and sit in tearless anguish at the
window, listening intently whenever a horseman rode past. All night her
watch continued. Gervaise, who had cried himself to sleep, lay on a couch
beside her. Morning dawned, and she then knew that her husband would not
come, for had he escaped from the field he would long ere this have been
with her. The messenger with the news had arrived at eight the previous
morning, and, faithful to her husband's wishes, at that hour she ordered
the horses to be brought round, and, joining a party of gentlemen who were
also making for the coast, rode with them to Plymouth. Arrangements were
at once made with the captain of a small ship in the port, and two days
later they landed at Honfleur, where Sir Thomas had enjoined his wife to
wait until she heard from him or obtained sure news of his fate.</p>
<p>A week after her arrival the news was brought by other fugitives of the
violation of the sanctuary by the king, and the murder of Somerset and the
gentlemen with him, of whom Sir Thomas Tresham was known to have been one.</p>
<p>The blow proved fatal to Dame Tresham. She had gone through many trials
and misfortunes, and had ever borne them bravely, but the loss of her
husband completely broke her down. Save to see his wishes concerning their
son carried out, she had no longer any interest in life or any wish to
live. But until the future of Gervaise was assured, her mission was
unfulfilled. His education was her sole care; his mornings were spent at a
monastery, where the monks instructed the sons of such of the nobles and
gentry of the neighbourhood as cared that they should be able to read and
write. In the afternoon he had the best masters in the town in military
exercises. His evenings he spent with his mother, who strove to instill in
him the virtues of patience, mercy to the vanquished, and valour, by
stories of the great characters of history. She herself spent her days in
pious exercises, in attending the services of the Church, and in acts of
charity and kindness to her poorer neighbours. But her strength failed
rapidly, and she was but a shadow of her former self when, two years and a
half after her arrival at Honfleur, she felt that if she was herself to
hand Gervaise over to the Order of St. John, she must no longer delay.
Accordingly she took ship to London, and landing there made her way with
him to the dwelling of the Order at Clerkenwell. It was in process of
rebuilding, for in 1381 it had been first plundered and then burned by the
insurgents under Wat Tyler. During the ninety years that had elapsed since
that event the work of rebuilding had proceeded steadily, each grand prior
making additions to the pile which, although not yet fully completed, was
already one of the grandest and stateliest abodes in England.</p>
<p>On inquiring for the grand prior, and stating that she had a letter of
importance for him, Dame Tresham and her son were shown up to his
apartment, and on entering were kindly and courteously received by him
when informed that she was the widow of the late Sir Thomas Tresham.</p>
<p>“I am the bearer of a letter for you, given into my hand by my husband's
dear friend your predecessor,” she said, “a few days before his murder at
Tewkesbury. It relates to my son here.”</p>
<p>The grand prior opened the letter and read it.</p>
<p>“Assuredly, madam, I will carry out the wishes here expressed,” he said.
“They are, that I should forward at once the letter he has given you to
Sir Peter D'Aubusson, and that until an answer is received from him, I
should take care of the boy here, and see that he is instructed in all
that is needful for a future knight of our Order. I grieve to see that you
yourself are looking so ill.”</p>
<p>“My course is well nigh run,” she said. “I have, methinks, but a few days
to live. I am thankful that it has been permitted to me to carry out my
husband's wishes, and to place my boy in your hands. That done, my work on
earth is finished, and glad indeed am I that the time is at hand when I
can rejoin my dear husband.”</p>
<p>“We have a building here where we can lodge ladies in distress or need,
Dame Tresham, and trust that you will take up your abode there.”</p>
<p>“I shall indeed be thankful to do so,” she replied. “I know no one in
London, and few would care to lodge a dying woman.”</p>
<p>“We are Hospitallers,” the grand prior said. “That was our sole mission
when we were first founded, and before we became a military order, and it
is still a part of our sworn duty to aid the distressed.”</p>
<p>A few minutes later Dame Tresham was conducted to a comfortable apartment,
and was given into the charge of a female attendant. The next day she had
another interview with the grand prior, to whom she handed over her jewels
and remaining money. This she prayed him to devote to the furnishing of
the necessary outfit for Gervaise. She spent the rest of the day in the
church of the hospital, had a long talk with her son in the evening,
giving him her last charges as to his future life and conduct, and that
night, as if she had now fulfilled her last duty on earth, she passed
away, and was found by her attendant lying with a look of joy and
peacefulness on her dead face.</p>
<p>Gervaise's grief was for a time excessive. He was nearly twelve years old,
and had never until now been separated from her even for a day. She had
often spoken to him of her end being near, but until the blow came he had
never quite understood that it could be so. She had, on the night before
her death, told him that he must not grieve overmuch for her, for that in
any case they must have soon been sundered, and that it was far better
that he should think of her as at rest, and happy, than as leading a
lonely and sorrowful life.</p>
<p>The grand prior, however, wisely gave him but little time to dwell upon
his loss, but as soon as her funeral had taken place, handed him over to
the knights who had the charge of the novices on probation, and instructed
them in their military exercises, and of the chaplain who taught them such
learning as was considered requisite for a knight of the Order.</p>
<p>The knights were surprised at the proficiency the lad had already attained
in the use of his weapons.</p>
<p>“By St. Agatha,” one of them exclaimed, after the conclusion of his first
lesson, “you have had good teachers, lad, and have availed yourself rarely
of them. If you go on like this you will become a distinguished knight of
our Order. With a few more years to strengthen your arms I warrant me you
will bear your part well in your first tussle with the Moslem corsairs.”</p>
<p>It fortunately happened that a party of knights were starting for Rhodes a
few days after the admission of Gervaise to the Hospital, and the letter
to Sir Peter D'Aubusson was committed to their charge. They were to
proceed to Bordeaux by ship, then to journey by land to Marseilles, and
thence, being joined by some French knights, to sail direct to Rhodes. Two
months later an answer was received. D'Aubusson wrote to the grand prior
saying that he would gladly carry out the last wishes of his dead friend,
and that he had already obtained from the grand master the appointment of
Gervaise Tresham as one of his pages, and begged that he might be sent out
with the next party of knights leaving England. It was three months before
such an opportunity occurred. During that time Gervaise remained at the
house of St. John's studying diligently, and continuing his military
exercises. These were severe; for the scions of noble houses, who hoped
some day to distinguish themselves as knights, were put through many
gymnastic exercises—were taught to spring on to a horse when clad in
full armour, to wield heavy battleaxes, to run and climb, and to prepare
themselves for all the possibilities of the mode of fighting of the day.</p>
<p>Gervaise gained the encomiums, not only of his special preceptor, but of
the various knights in the house, and of the grand prior himself, both for
his strength and activity, and for the earnestness with which he worked.
When the time approached for his leaving England, the grand prior ordered
for him the outfit which would be necessary in his position as a page of
the grand master. The dresses were numerous and rich, for although the
knights of St. John wore over their armour the simple mantle of their
order, which was a sleeveless garment of black relieved only by a white
cross on the chest, they indulged in the finest and most costly armour,
and in rich garments beneath their black mantles when not in armour.</p>
<p>“I am well pleased with you, Gervaise,” the grand prior said, on the
evening before he was to leave, “and I see in you the making of a valiant
knight of the Order. Maintain the same spirit you have shown here; be
obedient and reverent to your superiors; give your whole mind to your
duties; strive earnestly during the three or four years that your pagedom
will last, to perfect yourself in military exercises, that when the time
comes for you to buckle on armour you will be able to bear yourself
worthily. Remember that you will have to win your knighthood, for the
Order does not bestow this honour, and you must remain a professed knight
until you receive it at the hands of some distinguished warrior. Ever bear
in mind that you are a soldier of the Cross. Avoid luxury, live simply and
modestly; be not led away by others, upon whom their vows may sit but
lightly; keep ever in your mind that you have joined the Order neither to
gain fame nor personal advantage, but simply that you may devote the
strength and the intelligence that God has given you to protect
Christendom from the advance of the infidel. I shall hear of you from time
to time from D'Aubusson, and feel sure that the expectations I have formed
of you will be fulfilled.”</p>
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