<h3> CHAPTER V </h3>
<p>It was after hall one day, in the middle of July, that
Mr. Cartwright came up to me with the great news.</p>
<p>'Our time has come at last, Jasper,' said he; 'this
day the Vice-Chancellor has received a letter from
Mr. Secretary with very sharp orders for the burying of our
differences, seeing that the Queen's grace will make
progress here early in August.'</p>
<p>'That is news indeed,' said I; 'will there not be
great things done for her entertainment?'</p>
<p>'That is the way my content lies,' answered Mr. Cartwright,
radiant. 'There will be disputations, great
disputations, where we shall pour into her gracious ear
the true wisdom of Reformation, and refute our
backsliding, halting adversaries.'</p>
<p>'But it is always said,' I replied, 'that the Queen
clings to ceremonies and superstitions.'</p>
<p>'So she does,' he said, 'and were it not that that
godly man, Lord Robert Dudley, is ever at her side,
things might go harder with the faithful than they do.'</p>
<p>'Truly,' said I, 'our High Steward is very earnest
for the truth, but how shall we prevail with her better
than he?'</p>
<p>'God will give us strength, and words, and wisdom,'
he answered excitedly. 'I shall stand forth in His might
at the great disputation, and speak words of fire that
the Lord shall whisper in my ears. She shall listen and
know it is the word of God that she hears; and lo! she
shall go forth from Cambridge henceforth thrice blessed,
to search out and destroy utterly throughout the length
and breadth of the land all that the people have
disobediently saved from the destruction of Amalek.'</p>
<p>'But will she surely hearken?' I said, half pitying
and half fearing to see him lifting up his voice like one
of the prophets.</p>
<p>'Ay, lad!' he cried, growing more and more excited,
'I know she will. She is young and good and wise.
She has been surrounded by evil councillors, but the
Lord has bidden me go cry to her, that she may see
the way of England's, ay, and the world's, salvation.'</p>
<p>It was not until the day after the Queen arrived,
when she rode out of her lodgings at King's to visit the
colleges, that my eyes were gladdened with the sight of
that most sublime Princess.</p>
<p>I took my stand in Trinity, near the door of the hall,
to see her ride into it. I shall never forget that sight
as she passed on erect upon her horse, in a black velvet
gown and hat. It was before the present monstrous
fashions had come into use, and her costume so set off the
brilliancy of her complexion and the ruddy glow of her
hair that she looked radiant as a goddess in the joy of
her reception, and the full flush and beauty of youthful
womanhood.</p>
<p class="capcenter">
<SPAN name="img-067"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="imgcenter" src="images/img-067.jpg" alt="QUEEN ELIZABETH" />
<br/>
QUEEN ELIZABETH</p>
<p>As she rode on into the hall I fell upon my knees to
worship what seemed to me, who had never spoken to
and hardly seen a beautiful woman before, the most
lovely sight my eyes had ever beheld.</p>
<p>With all my lungs I shouted 'Vivat Regina Divina.' She
heard my cry and smiled down upon me, and I, poor
soul, like I know not how many more beside me that
day, rose up over ears in love with my Queen.</p>
<p>And why should I not? Could a gentleman have a
more worthy love? Some speak of her littlenesses, and
mumble over her womanly faults. I, for one, will not
listen to them. I did not see them. I worshipped
what I saw. What that was all men know.</p>
<p>What witnesses could I call in her defence were she
arraigned before a Court of Perfect Womanhood! And
those not her own subjects either—it is only natural
that they should praise—but foreigners, as any may
know who have heard, as I have, Signor Giordano
Bruno, the wisest of all who in my time have travelled
hither, and my good friend, exhaust his surpassing
eloquence in praising her.</p>
<p>'I hold her,' so I have heard him say, 'for a princess
without peer or rival, a woman so gifted and favoured
of Heaven, that whether for heroism or learning or
sagacity, no soldier, or lawyer, or statesman in her
kingdom is her equal. I tell you that the wisdom, the dignity,
the statesmanship, the wit, the beauty of that most royal
lady has won her a throne upon the steps of which must
humbly take their place, Semiramis, Dido, Cleopatra,
and all princesses of whom the world has boasted
hitherto. See where she sits upon her lofty seat, with
the eyes of Christendom fixed upon her in astonishment
and admiration, wondering to see how, in her beauty
and dignity, as by the mere force that shines from her
glorious face, she kept back from her beloved kingdom
for well-nigh thirty years the storm that surged and
roared upon the face of Europe; and, when at last it
burst in frantic fury on your shores, hurled it back with
one majestic sweep of her arm, and bound it down once
more to receive what it was her will to send.'</p>
<p>Happy, happy for the world if thou, my peerless
Queen, like the new sun-goddess Aphrodite that thou art,
shouldst open thy girdle till it embraced not only
England and Ireland, but the whole globe. Then under thy
benignant universal rule it should deserve the title thou
hast won for thine own realm amongst the wisest of
other lands; then should it be named, as they have
named England, 'the pattern of perfect monarchy,'
'<i>domicilium quietatis et humanitatis</i>.'</p>
<p>Such, at any rate, was Cambridge while the sun stayed
with us; and such indeed was England by the side of
other realms. So completely did the fair flowers of
scholarship which blossomed in the sunbeams of her
presence obscure the thorns beneath, that Cambridge indeed
appeared the garden of learning that she thought it.</p>
<p>It was a sight I am proud to have seen when she
sat in great St. Mary's Church beneath her canopy, with
the Doctors and Bachelors in due order around her upon
the great stage that had been erected there for the
disputations.</p>
<p>'Surely it is a second Sheba,' whispered Mr. Cartwright
to me, as I stood by his side with the books he
required for setting forth his arguments. 'She has
come from the South to hear the wisdom of Heaven.
Pray God he may give me this day some shred of the
spirit of Solomon.'</p>
<p>'Would God, sir,' said I, 'you might turn her heart,
though I fear the ungodly have sorely hardened it.'</p>
<p>'Why do you say that?' asked he.</p>
<p>'Did she not last night,' I answered, 'listen to a play
of Plautus in King's Chapel after evening prayer, and
did they not use the rood-loft as a gallery for her
women?'</p>
<p>'Better use it for that,' said Mr. Cartwright, 'than for
the lewd mockery of God they hold there daily. What
wonder the poor Queen is led astray in that pestilent
slough of Papacy where she lodges. But peace now, for
the Proctor calls on the Respondent to begin the act.'</p>
<p>Mr. Thomas Byng of Peterhouse set forth the questions
of the philosophy act. They were two, namely,
'Monarchy is the best form of government;' and secondly,
'The constant changing of the laws is dangerous.'</p>
<p>When his oration was finished the masters who were
called to the disputation came forward. Mr. Cartwright's
opponent in this was Mr. Thomas Preston of
King's, a man of very goodly presence and sufficient
wit, though more fit for a courtier than a scholar, and at
heart little better Reformation man than the rest of the
King's fellows.</p>
<p>He made a speech well wrought enough, and
delivered with courtly gesture, and very trippingly, to the
great pleasure of the Queen. Yet for fire, learning,
persuasion, and all that pertains to true rhetoric and
philosophy, it was, to my mind, but the chatter of a jay
beside my Mr. Cartwright's speaking.</p>
<p>I could see the Queen was well pleased with what he
said. It was like being in paradise with the angels for
me to watch her beautiful face, wherein was delicately
mirrored all the subtle perceiving qualities of her most
polished mind, as each was stirred by the magic of my
master's tongue.</p>
<p>As I look back to it now it seems to me like the
shining surface of some tropic lake, wherein the great
soul of God, that dwells in the trees and flowers and
vines, is mirrored each moment more gloriously as the
soft breath of heaven from time to time breaks up the
reflected image.</p>
<p>I dwell on this because some have said, most wantonly,
that Mr. Cartwright was so vexed at the favour
the Queen afterwards showed to Mr. Preston that he
thenceforward became a bitter enemy of the church she
loved. I say it is a wanton lie to speak so. My master
was too great a soul to harbour such littleness. His
hatred of prelacy and superstitious forms was of older
and firmer standing than that. If at that time he
changed at all in opinion, it was that he saw too well
there was no hope of winning the Queen, and that it
was to Parliament and the people he must henceforth
look.</p>
<p>He was very silent as we left the church, and in
spite of all I could say concerning the Queen's plain
pleasure in his speech, I could see the melancholy of his
face grow deeper and its resolution sterner. I know
that he saw at once that he had failed, and perceived
clearly before him the long life of toil and pain and
bitterness through which he was thenceforth to fight his way.</p>
<p>I was very glad that evening as we sat together
gloomily in our lodging to hear a knocking at the door.
I went to open it, and found there a gentleman of the
Court, tall of stature, but so wrapped in his cloak and
shaded by a large Spanish hat that I could not tell
who it was.</p>
<p>'Is Mr. Cartwright within?' said the gentleman.</p>
<p>'Would you have speech with him?' asked I.</p>
<p>'Yes, and alone,' answered the gentleman. I knew
not what to do, but Mr. Cartwright, who had started up
at the sound of the stranger's voice, cried out at once to
me that I should go.</p>
<p>I went out straightway to King's College to see the
seniors and Court ladies go in to the play of Dido, which
was being presented there that night, wherein Mr. Thomas
Preston was playing a chief part.</p>
<p>In an hour's time I returned, but hearing voices still
within my lodging, waited outside, where a lamp swung
over the door. Very soon the voices ceased, and the
gentleman came out. He seemed so occupied with his
recent talk with Mr. Cartwright that he took no pains
to conceal his face, and as he passed out by the lamp I
could see it was none other than Lord Robert Dudley.</p>
<p>'What said Lord Robert about it?' I asked when I
went in, thinking he had certainly come from the Queen
to speak with my master about his oration.</p>
<p>'How knew you it was Lord Robert?' said he
quickly.</p>
<p>'I saw his face by the lamp-light,' said I, surprised
at his sharpness.</p>
<p>'Then tell no man what you saw,' he answered. He
was silent a moment, and then, as though he thought
best to tell me more, since I knew so much, or perhaps
for very longing to speak with some one, he went on.</p>
<p>'He came not to speak of the oration,' said he, 'but
of deeper matters, of things which nearly concern our
Reformation. God grant he be a true man!'</p>
<p>'But is he not surely a true friend of ours?' I
asked.</p>
<p>'I know not, lad, I know not,' he said. 'He speaks
fair enough, but I doubt there is too much wind under
his cap for us to count too much on his steadfastness.
Still, better a popinjay at Court than no friend at all.
Things look black indeed if all he says be true. God
knows what counsel is being breathed in the Queen's
ears, but 'tis certain her right hand is held out to Spain.
Since peace was made with France, I thought there
would be leisure for England to complete the good work
within herself; but now this dallying with Spain and
the woman of Scotland of which I hear may mar all,
and we perhaps shall have to fight the fight again.
Heaven send these piracies—of which Mr. Drake writes
to us, and of which Lord Robert speaks—may by God's
help prosper, till they make a breach between His
people and the spawn of antichrist, such as no Queen
or King or embassy can heal.'</p>
<p>It surprised me to hear so godly a man as Mr. Cartwright
speak of Heaven prospering piracy, but I
was wont to believe all he said was right, and held my
peace. He went on then to tell me how earnest her
Majesty was that Lord Robert should marry the Queen
of Scots, and how well she had received the new Spanish
ambassador at Richmond, and many other evil signs.</p>
<p>'But surely, sir,' said I, 'in this she deserves the
praise of our party, seeing that if the Queen of Scots
had so godly a husband as our High Steward, all practices
against the cause in Scotland would end, and a true
succession be assured.'</p>
<p>'Speak not of it, lad,' Mr. Cartwright replied. 'It is
but cozening of the Lord to dally thus with antichrist.
England must have no part with the accursed thing.
Rome and Reformation, there are these two, and no
other; and we must choose between them. Pray, lad,
and watch and toil by night and day, by thought and
deed, that the choice may be the right. Above all, pray,
as I have ever bid you, that we may see the Queen
speedily matched to some godly Protestant lord, so that,
being blessed with issue, she may keep the succession
clear from all fear of Romish taint. Wrestle, lad, with
the Lord for that. It is the only hope and safeguard
of Reformation in England.'</p>
<p>He uttered no more than we all thought then from
the wisest and most wide-seeing to the most ignorant
and bigoted. He, I think, saw it more plainly than
many, and during the rest of the Queen's visit we spoke
of little but these things, till I fully shared his thought
that the tide of Rome, which, had begun to flow again,
and had already covered so many fair Protestant
provinces, was setting hard towards England; and each
morn and night my prayers went up with those of all
our party, and many a one beside, that the Queen might
soon be wed.</p>
<p>So moved was I by all this talk that I could take
but little note of the disputations, plays, and pageants
with which my university entertained the Queen, the
more so as Mr. Cartwright took no more part in them.
Still, I saw her every day, and dreamed of her every
night, feeling I loved her more and more for the dangers
that surrounded her, and that I would spare not even
my life to ward her from her enemies.</p>
<p>On the 10th of August, after a morning shower of
degrees upon all the Court, the Queen left Cambridge,
and I not long afterwards, being troubled with an ague,
went home to Longdene.</p>
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