<h4 id="id03394" style="margin-top: 2em">CHAPTER LXXVI.</h4>
<p id="id03395">Hawthorndean.</p>
<p id="id03396" style="margin-top: 2em">Next morning, instead of coming as usual directly to their acknowledged
protector, the Lothian chieftains were seen at different parts of the
camp, closely conversing in groups; and when any of Wallace's officers
approached, they separated, or withdrew to a greater distance. This
strange conduct Wallace attributed to its right source, and thought of
Bruce with a sigh, when he contemplated the variable substance of these
men's minds. However, he was so convinced that nothing but the
proclamation of Bruce, and that prince's personal exertions, could
preserve his country from falling again into the snare from which he
had just snatched it, that he was preparing to set out for Perthshire
with such persuasions, when Ker hastily entered his tent. He was
followed by the Lord Soulis, Lord Buchan, and several other chiefs of
equally hostile intentions. Soulis did not hesitate to declare his
errand.</p>
<p id="id03397">"We come, Sir William Wallace, by the command of the regent, and the
assembled abthanes of Scotland, to take these brave troops, which have
performed such good service to their country, from the power of a man
who, we have every reason to believe, means to turn their arms against
the liberties of the realm. Without a pardon from the state; without
the signature of the regent; in contempt of court, which, having found
you guilty of high treason, had in mercy delayed to pronounce the
sentence on your crime, you have presumed to place yourself at the head
of the national troops, and to take to yourself the merit of a victory
won by their prowess alone! Your designs are known, and the authority
you have despised is now roused to punish. You are to accompany us
this day to Stirling. We have brought a guard of four thousand men to
compel your obedience."</p>
<p id="id03398">Before the indignant spirit of Wallace could utter the answer his
wrongs dictated, Bothwell, who at sight of the regent's troops had
hastened to his general's tent, entered, followed by his chieftains:
"Were your guard forty thousand, instead of four," cried he, "they
should not force our commander from us—they should not extinguish the
glory of Scotland beneath the traitorous devices of hell-engendered
envy and murderous cowardice."</p>
<p id="id03399">Soulis turned on him with eyes of fire, and laid his hand on his sword.</p>
<p id="id03400">"Ay, cowardice!" reiterated Bothwell; "the midnight ravisher, the
slanderer of virtue, the betrayer of his country, knows in his heart
that he fears to draw aught but the assassin's steel. He dreads the
scepter of honor: Wallace must fall, that vice and her votaries may
reign in Scotland. A thousand brave Scots lie under these sods, and a
thousand yet survive who may share their graves; but they never will
relinquish their invincible leader into the hands of traitors!"</p>
<p id="id03401">The clamors of the citadel of Stirling now resounded through the tent
of Wallace. Invectives, accusations, threatenings, reproaches, and
revilings, joined in one turbulent uproar. Again swords were drawn;
and Wallace, in attempting to beat down the weapons of Soulis and
Buchan, aimed at Bothwell's heart, must have received the point of
Soulis' in his own body, had he not grasped the blade, and wrenching it
out of the chief's hand, broke it into shivers: "Such be the fate of
every sword which Scot draws against Scot!" cried he. "Put up your
weapons, my friends. The arm of Wallace is not shrunk, that he could
not defend himself, did he think that violence were necessary. Hear my
determination, once and forever!" added he. "I acknowledge no
authority in Scotland but the laws. The present regent and his
abthanes outrage them in every ordinance, and I should indeed be a
traitor to my country did I submit to such men's behests. I shall not
obey their summons to Stirling; neither will I permit a hostile arm to
be raised in this camp against their delegates, unless the violence
begins with them. This is my answer." Uttering these words he
motioned Bothwell to follow him, and left the tent.</p>
<p id="id03402">Crossing a rude plank-bridge, which then lay over the Eske, he met Lord<br/>
Ruthven, accompanied by Edwin and Lord Sinclair. The latter came to<br/>
inform Wallace that embassadors from Edward awaited his presence at<br/>
Roslyn.<br/></p>
<p id="id03403">"They came to offer peace to our distracted country," cried Sinclair.</p>
<p id="id03404">"Then," answered Wallace, "I shall not delay going where I may hear the
terms." Horses were brought; and, during their short ride, to prevent
the impassioned representations of the still raging Bothwell, Wallace
communicated, to his not less indignant friends, the particulars of the
scene he had left. "These contentions must be terminated," added he;
"and with God's blessing, a few days and they shall be so!"</p>
<p id="id03405">"Heaven grant it!" returned Sinclair, thinking he referred to the
proposed negotiation. "If Edward's offers be at all reasonable, I
would urge you to accept them; otherwise invasion from without, and
civil commotion within, will probably make a desert of poor Scotland."</p>
<p id="id03406">Ruthven interrupted him: "Despair not, my lord! Whatever be the fate
of this embassy, let us remember that it is our steadiest friend who
decides, and that his arm is still with us to repel invasion, to
chastise treason!"</p>
<p id="id03407">Edwin's eyes turned with a direful expression upon Wallace, while he
lowly murmured: "Treason! hydra treason!"</p>
<p id="id03408">Wallace understood him, and answered: "Grievous are the alternatives,
my friends, which your love for me would persuade you even to welcome.
But that which I shall choose will, I trust, indeed lay the land at
peace, or point its hostilities to the only aim against which a true
Scot ought to direct his sword at this crisis!"</p>
<p id="id03409">Being arrived at the gate of Roslyn, Wallace, regardless of those
ceremonials which often delay the business they pretend to dignify,
entered at once into the hall where the embassadors sat. Baron Hilton
was one, and Le de Spencer (father of the young and violent envoy of
that name) was the other. At sight of the Scottish chief they rose;
and the good baron, believing he came on a propitious errand, smiling,
said, "Sir William Wallace, it is your private ear I am commanded to
seek." While speaking, he looked on Sinclair and the other lords.</p>
<p id="id03410">"These chiefs are as myself," replied Wallace; "but I will not impede
your embassy by crossing the wishes of your master in a trifle." He
then turned to his friends: "Indulge the monarch of England in making
me the first acquainted with that which can only be a message to the
whole nation."</p>
<p id="id03411">The chiefs withdrew; and Hilton, without further parley, opened the
mission. He said that King Edward, more than ever impressed with the
wondrous military talents of Sir William Wallace, and solicitous to
make a friend of so heroic an enemy, had sent him an offer of grace,
which, if he contemned, must be the last. He offered him a theater
whereon he might display his peerless endowments to the admiration of
the world—the kingdom of Ireland, with its yet unreaped fields of
glory, and all the ample riches of its abundant provinces, should be
his! Edward only required, in return for this royal gift, that he
should abandon the cause of Scotland, swear fealty to him for Ireland,
and resign into his hands one whom he had proscribed as the most
ungrateful of traitors. In double acknowledgment for the latter
sacrifice Wallace need only send to England a list of those Scottish
lords against whom he bore resentment, and their fates should be
ordered according to his dictates. Edward concluded his offers by
inviting him immediately to London, to be invested with his new
sovereignty; and Hilton ended his address by showing him the madness of
abiding in a country where almost every chief, secretly or openly,
carried a dagger against his life; and therefore he exhorted him no
longer to contend for a nation so unworthy of freedom, that it bore
with impatience the only man who had the courage to maintain its
independence by virtue alone.</p>
<p id="id03412">Wallace replied calmly, and without hesitation:</p>
<p id="id03413">"To this message an honest man can make but one reply. As well might
your sovereign exact of me to dethrone the angels of heaven, as to
require me to subscribe to his proposals. They do but mock me; and
aware of my rejection, they are thus delivered, to throw the whole
blame of this cruelly-persecuting war upon me. Edward knows that as a
knight, a true Scot, and a man, I should dishonor myself to accept even
life, ay, or the lives of all my kindred, upon these terms."</p>
<p id="id03414">Hilton interrupted him by declaring the sincerity of Edward; and,
contrasting it with the ingratitude of the people whom he had served,
he conjured him, with every persuasive of rhetoric, every entreaty
dictated by a mind that revered the very firmness he strove to shake,
to relinquish his faithless country, and become the friend of a king
ready to receive him with open arms. Wallace shook his head; and with
an incredulous smile which spoke his thoughts of Edward, while his eyes
beamed kindness upon Hilton, he answered:</p>
<p id="id03415">"Can the man who would bribe me to betray a friend, be faithful in
friendship? But that is not the weight with me. I was not brought up
in those schools, my good baron, which teach that sound policy or true
self-interest can be separated from virtue. When I was a boy, my
father often repeated to me this proverb:</p>
<p id="id03416"> "Dico tibi verum, honestas, optima rerum,<br/>
Nunquam servili sub nexu vivitur fili."**<br/></p>
<p id="id03417">** This saying of the parental teacher of Wallace is recorded. It
means, "Know of a certainty that virtue, the best of possessions, never
can exist under the bond of servility."</p>
<p id="id03418">"I learned it then; I have since made it the standard of my actions, and
I answer your monarch in a word. Were all my countrymen to resign
their claims to the liberty which is their right, I alone would declare
the independence of my country; and by God's assistance, while I live,
acknowledge no other master than the laws of St. David, and the
legitimate heir of his blood!"</p>
<p id="id03419">The glow of resolute patriotism which overspread his countenance while
he spoke was reflected by a fluctuating color on that of Hilton.</p>
<p id="id03420">"Noble chief!" cried he; "I admire while I regret; I revere the virtue
which I am even now constrained to denounce. These principles, bravest
of men, might have suited the simple ages of Greece and Rome; a Phocion
or a Fabricius might have uttered the like, and compelled the homage of
their enemies; but in these days, such magnanimity is considered
frenzy, and ruin is its consequence."</p>
<p id="id03421">"And shall a Christian," cried Wallace, reddening with the flush of
honest shame, "deem the virtue which even heathens practiced with
veneration, of too pure a nature to be exercised by men taught by
Christ himself? There is blasphemy in the idea, and I can hear no
more."</p>
<p id="id03422">Hilton, in confusion, excused his argument by declaring that it
proceeded from his observations on the conduct of men.</p>
<p id="id03423">"And shall we," replied Wallace, "follow a multitude to do evil? I act
to one Being alone. Edward must acknowledge HIS supremacy, and by that
know that my soul is above all price!"</p>
<p id="id03424">"Am I answered?" said Hilton, and then hastily interrupting himself, he
added, in a voice even of supplication; "your fate rests on your reply!
Oh! noblest of warriors, consider only for the day!"</p>
<p id="id03425">"Not for a moment," said Wallace; "I am sensible of your kindness; but
my answer to Edward has been pronounced."</p>
<p id="id03426">Baron Hilton turned sorrowfully away, and Le de Spencer rose.</p>
<p id="id03427">"Sir William Wallace, my part of the embassy must be delivered to you
in the assembly of your chieftains."</p>
<p id="id03428">"In the congregation of my camp?" returned he; and opening the door of
the ante-room, in which his friends stood, he sent Edwin to summon his
chiefs to the platform before the council tent.</p>
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