<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poem">
<p>For I have given here my full consent</p>
<p>To undeck the pompous body of a king,</p>
<p>Make glory base, and sovereignty a slave,</p>
<p>Proud majesty a subject, state a peasant.</p>
<p class="i12"><i>Richard II.</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The next day opened a grave scene. King René
had not forgotten to arrange the pleasures of the
day, when, to his horror and discomfiture, Margaret
demanded an interview upon serious business.
If there was a proposition in the world
which René from his soul detested, it was any
that related to the very name of business.</p>
<p>"What was it that his child wanted?" he said.
"Was it money? He would give her whatever
ready sums he had, though he owned his exchequer
was somewhat bare; yet he had received his income
for the season. It was ten thousand crowns.
How much should he desire to be paid to her?—the
half—three parts—or the whole? All was
at her command."</p>
<p>"Alas, my dear father," said Margaret, "it is
not my affairs, but your own, on which I desire
to speak with you."</p>
<p>"If the affairs are mine," said René, "I am
surely master to put them off to another day—to
some rainy dull day, fit for no better purpose.
See, my love, the hawking-party are all on their
steeds and ready—the horses are neighing and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</SPAN></span>
pawing—the gallants and maidens mounted, and
ready with hawk on fist—the spaniels struggling
in the leash. It were a sin, with wind and weather
to friend, to lose so lovely a morning."</p>
<p>"Let them ride their way," said Queen Margaret,
"and find their sport; for the matter I have
to speak concerning involves honour and rank, life
and means of living."</p>
<p>"Nay, but I have to hear and judge between
Calezon and John of Acqua Mortis, the two most
celebrated Troubadours."</p>
<p>"Postpone their cause till to-morrow," said
Margaret, "and dedicate an hour or two to more
important affairs."</p>
<p>"If you are peremptory," replied King René,
"you are aware, my child, I cannot say you
nay."</p>
<p>And with reluctance he gave orders for the
hawkers to go on and follow their sport, as he
could not attend them that day.</p>
<p>The old King then suffered himself, like an unwilling
greyhound withheld from the chase, to be
led into a separate apartment. To insure privacy,
Margaret stationed her secretary Mordaunt, with
Arthur, in an antechamber, giving them orders
to prevent all intrusion.</p>
<p>"Nay, for myself, Margaret," said the good-natured
old man, "since it must be, I consent to
be put <i>au secret</i>; but why keep old Mordaunt from
taking a walk in this beautiful morning; and why
prevent young Arthur from going forth with the
rest? I promise you, though they term him a
philosopher, yet he showed as light a pair of heels
last night, with the young Countess de Boisgelin,
as any gallant in Provence."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"They are come from a country," said Margaret,
"in which men are trained from infancy to prefer
their duty to their pleasure."</p>
<p>The poor King, led into the council-closet, saw
with internal shuddering the fatal cabinet of
ebony, bound with silver, which had never been
opened but to overwhelm him with weariness, and
dolefully calculated how many yawns he must
strangle ere he sustained the consideration of its
contents. They proved, however, when laid before
him, of a kind that excited even his interest,
though painfully.</p>
<p>His daughter presented him with a short and
clear view of the debts which were secured on his
dominions, and for which they were mortgaged in
various pieces and parcels. She then showed him,
by another schedule, the large claims of which
payment was instantly demanded, to discharge
which no funds could be found or assigned. The
King defended himself like others in his forlorn
situation. To every claim of six, seven, or eight
thousand ducats, he replied by the assertion that
he had ten thousand crowns in his chancery, and
showed some reluctance to be convinced, till repeatedly
urged upon him, that the same sum could
not be adequate to the discharge of thirty times
the amount.</p>
<p>"Then," said the King, somewhat impatiently,
"why not pay off those who are most pressing,
and let the others wait till receipts come round?"</p>
<p>"It is a practice which has been too often
resorted to," replied the Queen, "and it is but a
part of honesty to pay creditors who have advanced
their all in your Grace's service."</p>
<p>"But are we not," said René, "King of both the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</SPAN></span>
Sicilies, Naples, Arragon, and Jerusalem? And
why is the monarch of such fair kingdoms to be
pushed to the wall, like a bankrupt yeoman, for a
few bags of paltry crowns?"</p>
<p>"You are indeed monarch of these kingdoms,"
said Margaret; "but is it necessary to remind your
Majesty that it is but as I am Queen of England,
in which I have not an acre of land, and cannot
command a penny of revenue? You have no
dominions which are a source of revenue, save
those which you see in this scroll, with an exact
list of the income they afford. It is totally
inadequate, you see, to maintain your state, and
to pay the large engagements incurred to former
creditors."</p>
<p>"It is cruel to press me to the wall thus," said
the poor King. "What can I do? If I am poor,
I cannot help it. I am sure I would pay the debts
you talk of, if I knew the way."</p>
<p>"Royal father, I will show it you.—Resign
your useless and unavailing dignity, which, with
the pretensions attending it, serves but to make
your miseries ridiculous. Resign your rights as
a sovereign, and the income which cannot be
stretched out to the empty excesses of a beggarly
court will enable you to enjoy, in ease and opulence,
all the pleasures you most delight in, as
a private baron."</p>
<p>"Margaret, you speak folly," answered René,
somewhat sternly. "A king and his people are
bound by ties which neither can sever without
guilt. My subjects are my flock, I am their shepherd.
They are assigned to my governance by
Heaven, and I dare not renounce the charge of
protecting them."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Were you in condition to do so," answered the
Queen, "Margaret would bid you fight to the death.
But don your harness, long disused—mount your
war-steed—cry, René for Provence! and see if a
hundred men will gather round your standard.
Your fortresses are in the hands of strangers; army
you have none; your vassals may have good-will,
but they lack all military skill and soldierlike
discipline. You stand but the mere skeleton of
monarchy, which France or Burgundy may prostrate
on the earth, whichever first puts forth his
arm to throw it down."</p>
<p>The tears trickled fast down the old King's
cheeks, when this unflattering prospect was set
before him, and he could not forbear owning
his total want of power to defend himself and
his dominions, and admitting that he had often
thought of the necessity of compounding for his
resignation with one of his powerful neighbours.</p>
<p>"It was thy interest, Margaret, harsh and severe
as you are, which prevented my entering, before
now, into measures most painful to my feelings,
but perhaps best calculated for my advantage.
But I had hoped it would hold on for my day;
and thou, my child, with the talents Heaven has
given thee, wouldst, I thought, have found remedy
for distresses which I cannot escape, otherwise
than by shunning the thoughts of them."</p>
<p>"If it is in earnest you speak of my interest,"
said Margaret, "know, that your resigning Provence
will satisfy the nearest, and almost the only
wish that my bosom can form; but, so judge me
Heaven, as it is on your account, gracious sire, as
well as mine, that I advise your compliance."</p>
<p>"Say no more on't, child; give me the parchment
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</SPAN></span>
of resignation, and I will sign it: I see thou
hast it ready drawn; let us sign it, and then
we will overtake the hawkers. We must suffer
woe, but there is little need to sit down and weep
for it."</p>
<p>"Do you not ask," said Margaret, surprised at
his apathy, "to whom you cede your dominions?"</p>
<p>"What boots it," answered the King, "since
they must be no more my own? It must be either
to Charles of Burgundy, or my nephew Louis—both
powerful and politic princes. God send my
poor people may have no cause to wish their old
man back again, whose only pleasure was to see
them happy and mirthful."</p>
<p>"It is to Burgundy you resign Provence," said
Margaret.</p>
<p>"I would have preferred him," answered René;
"he is fierce, but not malignant. One word more.
Are my subjects' privileges and immunities fully
secured?"</p>
<p>"Amply," replied the Queen; "and your own
wants of all kinds honourably provided for. I
would not leave the stipulations in your favour
in blank, though I might perhaps have trusted
Charles of Burgundy, where money alone is concerned."</p>
<p>"I ask not for myself—with my viol and my
pencil, René the Troubadour will be as happy as
ever was René the King."</p>
<p>So saying, with practical philosophy he whistled
the burden of his last composed ariette, and signed
away the rest of his royal possessions without pulling
off his glove, or even reading the instrument.</p>
<p>"What is this?" he said, looking at another
and separate parchment of much briefer contents.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</SPAN></span>
"Must my kinsman Charles have both the Sicilies,
Catalonia, Naples, and Jerusalem, as well as the
poor remainder of Provence? Methinks, in decency,
some greater extent of parchment should
have been allowed to so ample a cession."</p>
<p>"That deed," said Margaret, "only disowns and
relinquishes all countenance of Ferrand de Vaudemont's
rash attempt on Lorraine, and renounces
all quarrel on that account against Charles of
Burgundy."</p>
<p>For once Margaret miscalculated the tractability
of her father's temper. René positively started,
coloured, and stammered with passion, as he interrupted
her—"<i>Only</i> disown—<i>only</i> relinquish—<i>only</i>
renounce the cause of my grandchild, the son
of my dear Yolande—his rightful claims on his
mother's inheritance!—Margaret, I am ashamed
for thee. Thy pride is an excuse for thy evil
temper but what is pride worth which can stoop
to commit an act of dishonourable meanness? To
desert, nay, disown, my own flesh and blood, because
the youth is a bold knight under shield, and
disposed to battle for his right—I were worthy
that harp and horn rung out shame on me, should
I listen to thee."</p>
<p>Margaret was overcome in some measure by
the old man's unexpected opposition. She endeavoured,
however, to show that there was no
occasion, in point of honour, why René should
engage in the cause of a wild adventurer, whose
right, be it good be it bad, was only upheld by
some petty and underhand supplies of money
from France, and the countenance of a few of the
restless banditti who inhabit the borders of all
nations. But ere René could answer, voices, raised
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</SPAN></span>
to an unusual pitch, were heard in the antechamber,
the door of which was flung open by an armed
knight, covered with dust, who exhibited all the
marks of a long journey.</p>
<p>"Here I am," he said, "father of my mother—behold
your grandson—Ferrand de Vaudemont;
the son of your lost Yolande kneels at your feet,
and implores a blessing on him and his enterprise."</p>
<p>"Thou hast it," replied René, "and may it
prosper with thee, gallant youth, image of thy
sainted mother—my blessings, my prayers, my
hopes, go with you!"</p>
<p>"And you, fair aunt of England," said the
young knight, addressing Margaret, "you who are
yourself dispossessed by traitors, will you not own
the cause of a kinsman who is struggling for his
inheritance?"</p>
<p>"I wish all good to your person, fair nephew,"
answered the Queen of England, "although your
features are strange to me. But to advise this old
man to adopt your cause, when it is desperate in
the eyes of all wise men, were impious madness."</p>
<p>"Is my cause then so desperate?" said Ferrand.
"Forgive me if I was not aware of it. And does
my aunt Margaret say this, whose strength of
mind supported Lancaster so long, after the spirits
of her warriors had been quelled by defeat? What—forgive
me, for my cause must be pleaded—what
would you have said had my mother Yolande
been capable to advise her father to disown your
own Edward, had God permitted him to reach
Provence in safety?"</p>
<p>"Edward," said Margaret, weeping as she spoke,
"was incapable of desiring his friends to espouse
a quarrel that was irremediable. His, too, was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</SPAN></span>
a cause for which mighty princes and peers laid
lance in rest."</p>
<p>"Yet Heaven blessed it not—" said Vaudemont.</p>
<p>"Thine," continued Margaret, "is but embraced
by the robber nobles of Germany, the upstart
burghers of the Rhine cities, the paltry and clownish
Confederates of the Cantons."</p>
<p>"But Heaven <i>has blessed it</i>," replied Vaudemont.
"Know, proud woman, that I come to interrupt
your treacherous intrigues; no petty adventurer,
subsisting and maintaining warfare by sleight
rather than force, but a conqueror from a bloody
field of battle, in which Heaven has tamed the
pride of the tyrant of Burgundy."</p>
<p>"It is false!" said the Queen, starting. "I
believe it not."</p>
<p>"It is true," said De Vaudemont, "as true as
heaven is above us.—It is four days since I left
the field of Granson (<SPAN href="#ednote_d" name="enanchor_d" id="enanchor_d" ><i>d</i></SPAN>), heaped with Burgundy's
mercenaries—his wealth, his jewels, his plate,
his magnificent decorations, the prize of the poor
Swiss, who scarce can tell their value. Know
you this, Queen Margaret?" continued the young
soldier, showing the well-known jewel which
decorated the Duke's Order of the Golden Fleece;
"think you not the lion was closely hunted when
he left such trophies as these behind him?"</p>
<p>Margaret looked, with dazzled eyes and bewildered
thoughts, upon a token which confirmed the
Duke's defeat, and the extinction of her last
hopes. Her father, on the contrary, was struck
with the heroism of the young warrior, a quality
which, except as it existed in his daughter Margaret,
had, he feared, taken leave of his family.
Admiring in his heart the youth who exposed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</SPAN></span>
himself to danger for the meed of praise, almost as
much as he did the poets by whom the warrior's
fame is rendered immortal, he hugged his grandson
to his bosom, bidding him "gird on his sword
in strength," and assuring him, if money could
advance his affairs, he, King René, could command
ten thousand crowns, any part, or the whole of
which, was at Ferrand's command; thus giving
proof of what had been said of him, that his head
was incapable of containing two ideas at the same
time.</p>
<p>We return to Arthur, who, with the Queen of
England's secretary, Mordaunt, had been not a
little surprised by the entrance of the Count de
Vaudemont, calling himself Duke of Lorraine,
into the anteroom, in which they kept a kind of
guard, followed by a tall strong Swiss, with a
huge halberd over his shoulder. The prince naming
himself, Arthur did not think it becoming to
oppose his entrance to the presence of his grandfather
and aunt, especially as it was obvious that
his opposition must have created an affray. In
the huge staring halberdier, who had sense enough
to remain in the anteroom, Arthur was not a little
surprised to recognise Sigismund Biederman, who,
after staring wildly at him for a moment, like a
dog which suddenly recognises a favourite, rushed
up to the young Englishman with a wild cry of
gladness, and in hurried accents told him how
happy he was to meet with him, and that he had
matters of importance to tell him. It was at no
time easy for Sigismund to arrange his ideas, and
now they were altogether confused, by the triumphant
joy which he expressed for the recent victory
of his countrymen over the Duke of Burgundy;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</SPAN></span>
and it was with wonder that Arthur heard his
confused and rude but faithful tale.</p>
<p>"Look you, King Arthur, the Duke had come
up with his huge army as far as Granson, which
is near the outlet of the great lake of Neufchatel.
There were five or six hundred Confederates in the
place, and they held it till provisions failed, and
then you know they were forced to give it over.
But though hunger is hard to bear, they had better
have borne it a day or two longer, for the butcher
Charles hung them all up by the neck, upon trees
round the place,—and there was no swallowing
for them, you know, after such usage as that.
Meanwhile all was busy on our hills, and every
man that had a sword or lance accoutred himself
with it. We met at Neufchatel, and some Germans
joined us with the noble Duke of Lorraine.
Ah, King Arthur, there is a leader!—we all think
him second but to Rudolph of Donnerhugel—you
saw him even now—it was he that went
into that room—and you saw him before,—it is
he that was the Blue Knight of Bâle; but we
called him Laurenz then, for Rudolph said his
presence among us must not be known to our
father, and I did not know myself at that time
who he really was. Well, when we came to Neufchatel
we were a goodly company; we were fifteen
thousand stout Confederates, and of others, Germans
and Lorraine men, I will warrant you five
thousand more. We heard that the Burgundian
was sixty thousand in the field; but we heard, at
the same time, that Charles had hung up our
brethren like dogs, and the man was not among
us—among the Confederates, I mean—who would
stay to count heads, when the question was to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</SPAN></span>
avenge them. I would you could have heard the
roar of fifteen thousand Swiss demanding to be led
against the butcher of their brethren! My father
himself, who, you know, is usually so eager for
peace, now gave the first voice for battle; so, in
the grey of the morning, we descended the lake
towards Granson, with tears in our eyes and weapons
in our hands, determined to have death or
vengeance. We came to a sort of strait, between
Vauxmoreux and the lake; there were horse on
the level ground between the mountain and the
lake, and a large body of infantry on the side of
the hill. The Duke of Lorraine and his followers
engaged the horse, while we climbed the hill to
dispossess the infantry. It was with us the affair
of a moment. Every man of us was at home
among the crags, and Charles's men were stuck
among them as thou wert, Arthur, when thou
didst first come to Geierstein. But there were no
kind maidens to lend them their hands to help
them down. No, no—There were pikes, clubs,
and halberds, many a one, to dash and thrust them
from places where they could hardly keep their
feet had there been no one to disturb them. So
the horsemen, pushed by the Lorrainers, and seeing
us upon their flanks, fled as fast as their horses
could carry them. Then we drew together again
on a fair field, which is <i>buon campagna</i>, as the
Italian says, where the hills retire from the lake.
But lo you, we had scarce arrayed our ranks, when
we heard such a din and clash of instruments,
such a trample of their great horses, such a shouting
and crying of men, as if all the soldiers, and
all the minstrels in France and Germany, were
striving which should make the loudest noise.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</SPAN></span>
Then there was a huge cloud of dust approaching
us, and we began to see we must do or die, for
this was Charles and his whole army come to
support his vanguard. A blast from the mountain
dispersed the dust, for they had halted to prepare
for battle. Oh, good Arthur! you would have
given ten years of life but to have seen the sight.
There were thousands of horse all in complete
array, glancing against the sun, and hundreds of
knights with crowns of gold and silver on their
helmets, and thick masses of spears on foot, and
cannon, as they call them. I did not know what
things they were, which they drew on heavily
with bullocks and placed before their army, but I
knew more of them before the morning was over.
Well, we were ordered to draw up in a hollow
square, as we are taught at exercise, and before we
pushed forwards we were commanded, as is the
godly rule and guise of our warfare, to kneel down
and pray to God, Our Lady, and the blessed saints;
and we afterwards learned that Charles, in his
arrogance, thought we asked for mercy—Ha! ha!
ha! a proper jest. If my father once knelt to
him, it was for the sake of Christian blood and
godly peace; but on the field of battle Arnold
Biederman would not have knelt to him and his
whole chivalry, though he had stood alone with
his sons on that field. Well, but Charles, supposing
we asked grace, was determined to show
us that we had asked it at a graceless face, for he
cried, 'Fire my cannon on the coward slaves; it
is all the mercy they have to expect from me!'—Bang—bang—bang—off
went the things I told
you of, like thunder and lightning, and some mischief
they did, but the less that we were kneeling;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</SPAN></span>
and the saints doubtless gave the huge balls a
hoist over the heads of those who were asking
grace from them, but from no mortal creatures.
So we had the signal to rise and rush on, and I
promise you there were no sluggards. Every man
felt ten men's strength. My halberd is no child's
toy—if you have forgotten it, there it is—and
yet it trembled in my grasp as if it had been a
willow wand to drive cows with. On we went,
when suddenly the cannon were silent, and the
earth shook with another and continued growl and
battering, like thunder under ground. It was the
men-at-arms rushing to charge us. But our leaders
knew their trade, and had seen such a sight before—it
was, Halt, halt—kneel down in the front—stoop
in the second rank—close shoulder to
shoulder like brethren, lean all spears forward and
receive them like an iron wall! On they rushed,
and there was a rending of lances that would have
served the Unterwalden old women with splinters
of firewood for a twelvemonth. Down went armed
horse—down went accoutred knight—down went
banner and bannerman—down went peaked boot
and crowned helmet, and of those who fell not a
man escaped with life. So they drew off in confusion,
and were getting in order to charge again,
when the noble Duke Ferrand and his horsemen
dashed at them in their own way, and we moved
onward to support him. Thus on we pressed, and
the foot hardly waited for us, seeing their cavalry
so handled. Then if you had seen the dust and
heard the blows! the noise of a hundred thousand
thrashers, the flight of the chaff which they
drive about, would be but a type of it. On my
word, I almost thought it shame to dash about
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</SPAN></span>
my halberd, the rout was so helplessly piteous.
Hundreds were slain unresisting, and the whole
army was in complete flight."</p>
<p>"My father—my father!" exclaimed Arthur.
"In such a rout, what can have become of him?"</p>
<p>"He escaped safely," said the Swiss; "fled
with Charles."</p>
<p>"It must have been a bloody field ere he fled,"
replied the Englishman.</p>
<p>"Nay," answered Sigismund, "he took no part
in the fight, but merely remained by Charles; and
prisoners said it was well for us, for that he is
a man of great counsel and action in the wars.
And as to flying, a man in such a matter must go
back if he cannot press forward, and there is no
shame in it, especially if you be not engaged in
your own person."</p>
<p>As he spoke thus, their conversation was interrupted
by Mordaunt, with "Hush, hush—the
King and Queen come forth."</p>
<p>"What am I to do?" said Sigismund, in some
alarm. "I care not for the Duke of Lorraine;
but what am I to do when kings and queens
enter?"</p>
<p>"Do nothing but rise, unbonnet yourself, and be
silent."</p>
<p>Sigismund did as he was directed.</p>
<p>King René came forth arm in arm with his
grandson; and Margaret followed, with deep disappointment
and vexation on her brow. She
signed to Arthur as she passed, and said to him—"Make
thyself master of the truth of this most
unexpected news, and bring the particulars to me.
Mordaunt will introduce thee."</p>
<p>She then cast a look on the young Swiss, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</SPAN></span>
replied courteously to his awkward salutation.
The royal party then left the room, René bent on
carrying his grandson to the sporting-party, which
had been interrupted, and Margaret to seek the
solitude of her private apartment, and await the
confirmation of what she regarded as evil tidings.</p>
<p>They were no sooner passed than Sigismund
observed,—"And so that is a King and Queen!—Peste!
the King looks somewhat like old Jacomo,
the violer, that used to scrape on the fiddle to us
when he came to Geierstein in his rounds. But
the Queen is a stately creature. The chief cow of
the herd, who carries the bouquets and garlands,
and leads the rest to the chalet, has not a statelier
pace. And how deftly you approached her and
spoke to her! I could not have done it with
so much grace—But it is like that you have
served apprentice to the court trade?"</p>
<p>"Leave that for the present, good Sigismund,"
answered Arthur, "and tell me more of this
battle."</p>
<p>"By St. Mary, but I must have some victuals
and drink first," said Sigismund, "if your credit
in this fine place reaches so far."</p>
<p>"Doubt it not, Sigismund," said Arthur; and,
by the intervention of Mordaunt, he easily procured,
in a more retired apartment, a collation and
wine, to which the young Biederman did great
honour, smacking his lips with much gusto after
the delicious wines, to which, in spite of his
father's ascetic precepts, his palate was beginning
to be considerably formed and habituated. When
he found himself alone with a flask of <i>côté roti</i> and
a biscuit, and his friend Arthur, he was easily led
to continue his tale of conquest.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Well—where was I?—Oh, where we broke
their infantry—well—they never rallied, and
fell into greater confusion at every step—and we
might have slaughtered one half of them, had we
not stopped to examine Charles's camp. Mercy
on us, Arthur, what a sight was there! Every
pavilion was full of rich clothes, splendid armour,
and great dishes and flagons, which some men
said were of silver; but I knew there was not so
much silver in the world, and was sure they must
be of pewter, rarely burnished. Here there were
hosts of laced lackeys, and grooms, and pages, and
as many attendants as there were soldiers in the
army; and thousands, for what I knew, of pretty
maidens. By the same token, both menials and
maidens placed themselves at the disposal of the
victors; but I promise you that my father was
right severe on any who would abuse the rights of
war. But some of our young men did not mind
him, till he taught them obedience with the staff
of his halberd. Well, Arthur, there was fine
plundering, for the Germans and French that were
with us rifled everything, and some of our men
followed the example—it is very catching—So I
got into Charles's own pavilion, where Rudolph
and some of his people were trying to keep out
every one, that he might have the spoiling of it
himself, I think; but neither he, nor any Bernese
of them all, dared lay truncheon over my pate; so
I entered, and saw them putting piles of pewter-trenchers,
so clean as to look like silver, into
chests and trunks. I pressed through them into
the inner place, and there was Charles's pallet-bed—I
will do him justice, it was the only hard one
in his camp—and there were fine sparkling stones
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</SPAN></span>
and pebbles lying about among gauntlets, boots,
vambraces, and suchlike gear—So I thought of
your father and you, and looked for something,
when what should I see but my old friend here"
(here he drew Queen Margaret's necklace from his
bosom), "which I knew, because you remember I
recovered it from the Scharfgerichter at Brisach.—'Oho!
you pretty sparklers,' said I, 'you shall be
Burgundian no longer, but go back to my honest
English friends,' and therefore"——</p>
<p>"It is of immense value," said Arthur, "and
belongs not to my father or to me, but to the Queen
you saw but now."</p>
<p>"And she will become it rarely," answered
Sigismund. "Were she but a score, or a score
and a half years younger, she were a gallant wife
for a Swiss landholder. I would warrant her to
keep his household in high order."</p>
<p>"She will reward thee liberally for recovering
her property," said Arthur, scarce suppressing a
smile at the idea of the proud Margaret becoming
the housewife of a Swiss shepherd.</p>
<p>"How—reward!" said the Swiss. "Bethink
thee I am Sigismund Biederman, the son of the
Landamman of Unterwalden—I am not a base
lanzknecht, to be paid for courtesy with piastres.
Let her grant me a kind word of thanks, or the
matter of a kiss, and I am well contented."</p>
<p>"A kiss of her hand, perhaps," said Arthur,
again smiling at his friend's simplicity.</p>
<p>"Umph, the hand! Well, it may do for a
queen of some fifty years and odd, but would be
poor homage to a Queen of May."</p>
<p>Arthur here brought back the youth to the subject
of his battle, and learned that the slaughter
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</SPAN></span>
of the Duke's forces in the flight had been in no
degree equal to the importance of the action.</p>
<p>"Many rode off on horseback," said Sigismund;
"and our German <i>reiters</i> flew on the spoil, when
they should have followed the chase. And besides,
to speak truth, Charles's camp delayed our
very selves in the pursuit; but had we gone half
a mile farther, and seen our friends hanging on
trees, not a Confederate would have stopped from the
chase while he had limbs to carry him in pursuit."</p>
<p>"And what has become of the Duke?"</p>
<p>"Charles has retreated into Burgundy, like a
boar who has felt the touch of the spear, and is
more enraged than hurt; but is, they say, sad and
sulky. Others report that he has collected all his
scattered army, and immense forces besides, and
has screwed his subjects to give him money, so
that we may expect another brush. But all Switzerland
will join us after such a victory."</p>
<p>"And my father is with him?" said Arthur.</p>
<p>"Truly he is, and has in a right godly manner
tried to set afoot a treaty of peace with my own
father. But it will scarce succeed. Charles is as
mad as ever; and our people are right proud of our
victory, and so they well may. Nevertheless, my
father forever preaches that such victories, and
such heaps of wealth, will change our ancient
manners, and that the ploughman will leave his
labour to turn soldier. He says much about it;
but why money, choice meat and wine, and fine
clothing should do so much harm, I cannot bring
my poor brains to see—And many better heads
than mine are as much puzzled.—Here's to you,
friend Arthur!—This is choice liquor!"</p>
<p>"And what brings you and your general, Prince
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</SPAN></span>
Ferrand, post to Nancy?" said the young Englishman.</p>
<p>"Faith, you are yourself the cause of our
journey."</p>
<p>"I the cause?" said Arthur.—"Why, how
could that be?"</p>
<p>"Why, it is said you and Queen Margaret are
urging this old fiddling King René to yield up his
territories to Charles, and to disown Ferrand in
his claim upon Lorraine. And the Duke of Lorraine
sent a man that you know well—that is,
you do not know <i>him</i>, but you know some of his
family, and he knows more of you than you wot—to
put a spoke in your wheel, and prevent your
getting for Charles the county of Provence, or preventing
Ferrand being troubled or traversed in his
natural rights over Lorraine."</p>
<p>"On my word, Sigismund, I cannot comprehend
you," said Arthur.</p>
<p>"Well," replied the Swiss, "my lot is a hard
one. All our house say that I can comprehend
nothing, and I shall be next told that nobody can
comprehend me.—Well, in plain language, I
mean my uncle, Count Albert, as he calls himself,
of Geierstein—my father's brother."</p>
<p>"Anne of Geierstein's father!" echoed Arthur.</p>
<p>"Ay, truly; I thought we should find some
mark to make you know him by."</p>
<p>"But I never saw him."</p>
<p>"Ay, but you have, though—An able man he
is, and knows more of every man's business than
the man does himself. Oh! it was not for nothing
that he married the daughter of a Salamander!"</p>
<p>"Pshaw, Sigismund, how can you believe that
nonsense?" answered Arthur.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Rudolph told me you were as much bewildered
as I was that night at Graffs-lust," answered the
Swiss.</p>
<p>"If I were so, I was the greater ass for my
pains," answered Arthur.</p>
<p>"Well, but this uncle of mine has got some of
the old conjuring books from the library at Arnheim,
and they say he can pass from place to place
with more than mortal speed; and that he is
helped in his designs by mightier counsellors than
mere men. Always, however, though so able and
highly endowed, his gifts, whether coming from a
lawful or unlawful quarter, bring him no abiding
advantage. He is eternally plunged into strife
and danger."</p>
<p>"I know few particulars of his life," said
Arthur, disguising as much as he could his anxiety
to hear more of him; "but I have heard that he
left Switzerland to join the Emperor."</p>
<p>"True," answered the young Swiss, "and married
the young Baroness of Arnheim,—but afterwards
he incurred my namesake's imperial displeasure,
and not less that of the Duke of Austria. They
say you cannot live in Rome and strive with the
Pope; so my uncle thought it best to cross the
Rhine, and betake himself to Charles's court, who
willingly received noblemen from all countries, so
that they had good sounding names, with the title
of Count, Marquis, Baron, or suchlike, to march
in front of them. So my uncle was most kindly
received; but within this year or two all this
friendship has been broken up. Uncle Albert
obtained a great lead in some mysterious societies,
of which Charles disapproved, and set so hard at
my poor uncle, that he was fain to take orders and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</SPAN></span>
shave his hair, rather than lose his head. But
though he cut off his hair, his brain remains as
busy as ever; and although the Duke suffered him
to be at large, yet he found him so often in his
way, that all men believed he waited but an
excuse for seizing upon him and putting him to
death. But my uncle persists that he fears not
Charles; and that, Duke as he is, Charles has more
occasion to be afraid of him.—And so you saw
how boldly he played his part at La Ferette."</p>
<p>"By St. George of Windsor!" exclaimed Arthur,
"the Black Priest of St. Paul's?"</p>
<p>"Oho! you understand me now. Well, he took
it upon him that Charles would not dare to punish
him for his share in De Hagenbach's death; and
no more did he, although uncle Albert sat and
voted in the Estates of Burgundy, and stirred them
up all he could to refuse giving Charles the money
he asked of them. But when the Swiss war broke
out, uncle Albert became assured his being a
clergyman would be no longer his protection, and
that the Duke intended to have him accused of
corresponding with his brother and countrymen;
and so he appeared suddenly in Ferrand's camp at
Neufchatel, and sent a message to Charles that he
renounced his allegiance, and bid him defiance."</p>
<p>"A singular story of an active and versatile
man," said the young Englishman.</p>
<p>"Oh, you may seek the world for a man like
uncle Albert. Then he knows everything; and he
told Duke Ferrand what you were about here, and
offered to go and bring more certain information—ay,
though he left the Swiss camp but five or six
days before the battle, and the distance between
Arles and Neufchatel be four hundred miles complete,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</SPAN></span>
yet he met him on his return, when Duke
Ferrand, with me to show him the way, was hastening
hitherward, having set off from the very
field of battle."</p>
<p>"Met him!" said Arthur—"Met whom?—Met
the Black Priest of St. Paul's?"</p>
<p>"Ay, I mean so," replied Sigismund; "but he
was habited as a Carmelite monk."</p>
<p>"A Carmelite!" said Arthur, a sudden light
flashing on him; "and I was so blind as to recommend
his services to the Queen! I remember well
that he kept his face much concealed in his cowl—and
I, foolish beast, to fall so grossly into the
snare!—And yet perhaps it is as well the transaction
was interrupted, since I fear, if carried successfully
through, all must have been disconcerted
by this astounding defeat."</p>
<p>Their conversation had thus far proceeded, when
Mordaunt appearing, summoned Arthur to his
royal mistress's apartment. In that gay palace,
a gloomy room, whose windows looked upon some
part of the ruins of the Roman edifice, but excluded
every other object, save broken walls and tottering
columns, was the retreat which Margaret had
chosen for her own. She received Albert with a
kindness more touching that it was the inmate of
so proud and fiery a disposition,—of a heart assailed
with many woes, and feeling them severely.</p>
<p>"Alas, poor Arthur!" she said, "thy life begins
where thy father's threatens to end, in useless
labour to save a sinking vessel. The rushing leak
pours in its waters faster than human force can
lighten or discharge. All—all goes wrong, when
our unhappy cause becomes connected with it—Strength
becomes weakness, wisdom folly, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</SPAN></span>
valour cowardice. The Duke of Burgundy, hitherto
victorious in all his bold undertakings, has but to
entertain the momentary thought of yielding succour
to Lancaster, and behold his sword is broken
by a peasant's flail; and his disciplined army,
held to be the finest in the world, flies like chaff
before the wind; while their spoils are divided by
renegade German hirelings, and barbarous Alpine
shepherds!—What more hast thou learned of this
strange tale?"</p>
<p>"Little, madam, but what you have heard. The
worst additions are, that the battle was shamefully
cowardlike, and completely lost, with every
advantage to have won it—the best, that the
Burgundian army has been rather dispersed than
destroyed, and that the Duke himself has escaped,
and is rallying his forces in Upper Burgundy."</p>
<p>"To sustain a new defeat, or engage in a protracted
and doubtful contest, fatal to his reputation
as defeat itself. Where is thy father?"</p>
<p>"With the Duke, madam, as I have been informed,"
replied Arthur.</p>
<p>"Hie to him, and say I charge him to look after
his own safety, and care no further for my interests.
This last blow has sunk me—I am without
an ally, without a friend, without treasure"——</p>
<p>"Not so, madam," replied Arthur. "One piece
of good fortune has brought back to your Grace
this inestimable relic of your fortunes."—And,
producing the precious necklace, he gave the history
of its recovery.</p>
<p>"I rejoice at the chance which has restored these
diamonds," said the Queen, "that in point of
gratitude, at least, I may not be utterly bankrupt.
Carry them to your father—tell him my schemes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</SPAN></span>
are over—and my heart, which so long clung to
hope, is broken at last.—Tell him the trinkets are
his own, and to his own use let him apply them.
They will but poorly repay the noble earldom of
Oxford, lost in the cause of her who sends them."</p>
<p>"Royal madam," said the youth, "be assured
my father would sooner live by service as a
<i>schwarzreiter</i>, than become a burden on your
misfortunes."</p>
<p>"He never yet disobeyed command of mine,"
said Margaret; "and this is the last I will lay
upon him. If he is too rich or too proud to benefit
by his Queen's behest, he will find enough of
poor Lancastrians who have fewer means or fewer
scruples."</p>
<p>"There is yet a circumstance I have to communicate,"
said Arthur, and recounted the history
of Albert of Geierstein, and the disguise of a
Carmelite monk.</p>
<p>"Are you such a fool," answered the Queen, "as
to suppose this man has any supernatural powers
to aid him in his ambitious projects and his hasty
journeys?"</p>
<p>"No, madam—but it is whispered that the
Count Albert of Geierstein, or this Black Priest of
St. Paul's, is a chief amongst the Secret Societies
of Germany, which even princes dread whilst they
hate them; for the man that can command a hundred
daggers must be feared even by those who
rule thousands of swords."</p>
<p>"Can this person," said the Queen, "being now
a Churchman, retain authority amongst those who
deal in life and death? It is contrary to the
canons."</p>
<p>"It would seem so, royal madam; but everything
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">279</SPAN></span>
in these dark institutions differs from what
is practised in the light of day. Prelates are
often heads of a Vehmique bench, and the Archbishop
of Cologne exercises the dreadful office of
their chief as Duke of Westphalia, the principal
region in which these societies flourish.<SPAN name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</SPAN>
Such
privileges attach to the secret influence of the
chiefs of this dark association, as may well seem
supernatural to those who are unapprised of circumstances
of which men shun to speak in plain
terms."</p>
<p>"Let him be wizard or assassin," said the Queen,
"I thank him for having contributed to interrupt
my plan of the old man's cession of Provence,
which, as events stand, would have stripped René
of his dominions, without furthering our plan of
invading England.—Once more, be stirring with
the dawn, and bend thy way back to thy father, and
charge him to care for himself and think no more
of me. Bretagne, where the heir of Lancaster
resides, will be the safest place of refuge for its
bravest followers. Along the Rhine, the Invisible
Tribunal, it would seem, haunts both shores, and
to be innocent of ill is no security; even here the
proposed treaty with Burgundy may take air, and
the Provençaux carry daggers as well as crooks
and pipes. But I hear the horses fast returning
from the hawking-party, and the silly old man,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">280</SPAN></span>
forgetting all the eventful proceedings of the day,
whistling as he ascends the steps. Well, we will
soon part, and my removal will be, I think, a
relief to him. Prepare for banquet and ball, for
noise and nonsense—above all, to bid adieu to
Aix with morning dawn."</p>
<p>Thus dismissed from the Queen's presence,
Arthur's first care was to summon Thiebault to
have all things in readiness for his departure; his
next, to prepare himself for the pleasures of the
evening, not perhaps so heavily affected by the
failure of his negotiation as to be incapable of
consolation in such a scene; for the truth was,
that his mind secretly revolted at the thoughts of
the simple old King being despoiled of his dominions
to further an invasion of England, in which,
whatever interest he might have in his daughter's
rights, there was little chance of success.</p>
<p>If such feelings were censurable, they had their
punishment. Although few knew how completely
the arrival of the Duke of Lorraine, and the intelligence
he brought with him, had disconcerted the
plans of Queen Margaret, it was well known there
had been little love betwixt the Queen and his
mother Yolande; and the young Prince found
himself at the head of a numerous party in the
court of his grandfather, who disliked his aunt's
haughty manners, and were wearied by the unceasing
melancholy of her looks and conversation,
and her undisguised contempt of the frivolities
which passed around her. Ferrand, besides, was
young, handsome, a victor just arrived from a field
of battle, fought gloriously, and gained against all
chances to the contrary. That he was a general
favourite, and excluded Arthur Philipson, as an
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">281</SPAN></span>
adherent of the unpopular Queen, from the notice
her influence had on a former evening procured
him, was only a natural consequence of their
relative condition. But what somewhat hurt Arthur's
feelings was to see his friend Sigismund the
Simple, as his brethren called him, shining with
the reflected glory of the Duke Ferrand of Lorraine,
who introduced to all the ladies present the gallant
young Swiss as Count Sigismund of Geierstein.
His care had procured for his follower a dress
rather more suitable for such a scene than the
country attire of the count, otherwise Sigismund
Biederman.</p>
<p>For a certain time, whatever of novelty is introduced
into society is pleasing, though it has
nothing else to recommend it. The Swiss were
little known personally out of their own country,
but they were much talked of; it was a recommendation
to be of that country. Sigismund's
manners were blunt—a mixture of awkwardness
and rudeness, which was termed frankness during
the moment of his favour. He spoke bad French
and worse Italian—it gave naïveté to all he said.
His limbs were too bulky to be elegant; his
dancing, for Count Sigismund failed not to dance,
was the bounding and gambolling of a young elephant;
yet they were preferred to the handsome
proportions and courtly movements of the youthful
Englishman, even by the black-eyed countess in
whose good graces Arthur had made some progress
on the preceding evening. Arthur, thus thrown
into the shade, felt as Mr. Pepys afterwards did
when he tore his camlet cloak—the damage was
not great, but it troubled him.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the passing evening brought him
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</SPAN></span>
some revenge. There are some works of art the
defects of which are not seen till they are injudiciously
placed in too strong a light, and such was
the case with Sigismund the Simple. The quick-witted
though fantastic Provençaux soon found out
the heaviness of his intellect, and the extent of
his good-nature, and amused themselves at his
expense, by ironical compliments and well-veiled
raillery. It is probable they would have been less
delicate on the subject, had not the Swiss brought
into the dancing-room along with him his eternal
halberd, the size and weight and thickness of
which boded little good to any one whom the
owner might detect in the act of making merry at
his expense. But Sigismund did no further mischief
that night, except that, in achieving a superb
<i>entrechat</i>, he alighted with his whole weight on
the miniature foot of his pretty partner, which he
well-nigh crushed to pieces.</p>
<p>Arthur had hitherto avoided looking towards
Queen Margaret during the course of the evening,
lest he should disturb her thoughts from the channel
in which they were rolling, by seeming to lay
a claim on her protection. But there was something
so whimsical in the awkward physiognomy
of the maladroit Swiss, that he could not help
glancing an eye to the alcove where the Queen's
chair of state was placed, to see if she observed
him. The very first view was such as to rivet his
attention. Margaret's head was reclined on the
chair, her eyes scarcely open, her features drawn
up and pinched, her hands closed with effort. The
English lady of honour who stood behind her—old,
deaf, and dim-sighted—had not discovered
anything in her mistress's position more than the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</SPAN></span>
abstracted and indifferent attitude with which the
Queen was wont to be present in body and absent
in mind during the festivities of the Provençal
court. But when Arthur, greatly alarmed, came
behind the seat to press her attention to her mistress,
she exclaimed, after a minute's investigation,
"Mother of Heaven, the Queen is dead!"
And it was so. It seemed that the last fibre of
life, in that fiery and ambitious mind, had, as she
herself prophesied, given way at the same time
with the last thread of political hope.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />