<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> III. </h2>
<p>Of the Grand Procession to Windsor Castle—Of the Meeting of<br/>
King Henry the Eighth and Anne Boleyn at the Lower Gate-Of<br/>
their Entrance into the Castle—And how the Butcher was<br/>
Hanged from the Curfew Tower.<br/></p>
<p>A joyous day was it for Windsor and great were the preparations made by
its loyal inhabitants for a suitable reception to their sovereign. At an
early hour the town was thronged with strangers from the neighbouring
villages, and later on crowds began to arrive from London, some having
come along the highway on horseback, and others having rowed in various
craft up the river. All were clad in holiday attire, and the streets
presented an appearance of unwonted bustle and gaiety. The Maypole in
Bachelors' Acre was hung with flowers. Several booths, with flags floating
above them, were erected in the same place, where ale, mead, and hypocras,
together with cold pasties, hams, capons, and large joints of beef and
mutton, might be obtained. Mummers and minstrels were in attendance, and
every kind of diversion was going forward. Here was one party wrestling;
there another, casting the bar; on this side a set of rustics were dancing
a merry round with a bevy of buxom Berkshire lasses; on that stood a
fourth group, listening to a youth playing on the recorders. At one end of
the Acre large fires were lighted, before which two whole oxen were
roasting, provided in honour of the occasion by the mayor and burgesses of
the town; at the other, butts were set against which the Duke of
Shoreditch and his companions, the five marquises, were practising. The
duke himself shot admirably, and never failed to hit the bulls-eye; but
the great feat of the day was performed by Morgan Fenwolf, who thrice
split the duke's shafts as they stuck in the mark.</p>
<p>"Well done!" cried the duke, as he witnessed the achievement; "why, you
shoot as bravely as Herne the Hunter. Old wives tell us he used to split
the arrows of his comrades in that fashion."</p>
<p>"He must have learnt the trick from Herne himself in the forest," cried
one of the bystanders.</p>
<p>Morgan Fenwolf looked fiercely round in search of the speaker, but could
not discern him. He, however, shot no more, and refusing a cup of hypocras
offered him by Shoreditch, disappeared among the crowd.</p>
<p>Soon after this the booths were emptied, the bar thrown down, the Maypole
and the butts deserted, and the whole of Bachelors' Acre cleared of its
occupants—except those who were compelled to attend to the mighty
spits turning before the fires—by the loud discharge of ordnance
from the castle gates, accompanied by the ringing of bells, announcing
that the mayor and burgesses of Windsor, together with the officers of the
Order of the Garter, were setting forth to Datchet Bridge to meet the
royal procession.</p>
<p>Those who most promptly obeyed this summons beheld the lower castle gate,
built by the then reigning monarch, open, while from it issued four
trumpeters clad in emblazoned coats, with silken bandrols depending from
their horns, blowing loud fanfares. They were followed by twelve henchmen,
walking four abreast, arrayed in scarlet tunics, with the royal cypher
H.R. worked in gold on the breast, and carrying gilt poleaxes over their
shoulders. Next came a company of archers, equipped in helm and
brigandine, and armed with long pikes, glittering, as did their steel
accoutrements, in the bright sunshine. They were succeeded by the bailiffs
and burgesses of the town, riding three abreast, and enveloped in gowns of
scarlet cloth; after which rode the mayor of Windsor in a gown of crimson
velvet, and attended by two footmen, in white and red damask, carrying
white wands. The mayor was followed by a company of the town guard, with
partisans over the shoulders. Then came the sheriff of the county and his
attendants. Next followed the twenty-six alms-knights (for such was their
number), walking two and two, and wearing red mantles, with a scutcheon of
Saint George on the shoulder, but without the garter surrounding it. Then
came the thirteen petty canons, in murrey-coloured gowns, with the arms of
Saint George wrought in a roundel on the shoulder; then the twelve canons,
similarly attired; and lastly the dean of the college, in his cope.</p>
<p>A slight pause ensued, and the chief officers of the Garter made their
appearance. First walked the Black Rod, clothed in a russet-coloured
mantle, faced with alternate panes of blue and red, emblazoned with
flower-de-luces of gold and crowned lions. He carried a small black rod,
the ensign of his office, surmounted with the lion of England in silver.
After the Black Rod came the Garter, habited in a gown of crimson satin,
paned and emblazoned like that of the officer who preceded him, hearing a
white crown with a sceptre upon it, and having a gilt crown in lieu of a
cap upon his head. The Garter was followed by the register, a grave
personage, in a black gown, with a surplice over it, covered by a mantelet
of furs. Then came the chancellor of the Order, in his robe of
murrey-coloured velvet lined with sarcenet, with a badge on the shoulder
consisting of a gold rose, enclosed in a garter wrought with pearls of
damask gold. Lastly came the Bishop of Winchester, the prelate of the
Order, wearing his mitre, and habited in a robe of crimson velvet lined
with white taffeta, faced with blue, and embroidered on the right shoulder
with a scutcheon of Saint George, encompassed with the Garter, and adorned
with cordons of blue silk mingled with gold.</p>
<p>Brought up by a rear guard of halberdiers, the procession moved slowly
along Thames Street, the houses of which, as well as those in Peascod
Street, were all more or less decorated—the humbler sort being
covered with branches of trees, intermingled with garlands of flowers,
while the better description was hung with pieces of tapestry, carpets,
and rich stuffs. Nor should it pass unnoticed that the loyalty of Bryan
Bowntance, the host of the Garter, had exhibited itself in an arch thrown
across the road opposite his house, adorned with various coloured ribbons
and flowers, in the midst of which was a large shield, exhibiting the
letters, b. and h. (in mystic allusion to Henry and Anne Boleyn)
intermingled and surrounded by love-knots.</p>
<p>Turning off on the left into the lower road, skirting the north of the
castle, and following the course of the river to Datchet, by which it was
understood the royal cavalcade would make its approach, the procession
arrived at an open space by the side of the river, where it came to a
halt, and the dean, chancellor, and prelate, together with other officers
of the Garter, embarked in a barge moored to the bank, which was towed
slowly down the stream in the direction of Datchet Bridge—a band of
minstrels stationed within it playing all the time.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the rest of the cavalcade, having again set for ward, pursued
their course along the banks of the river, proceeding at a foot's pace,
and accompanied by crowds of spectators, cheering them as they moved
along. The day was bright and beautiful, and nothing was wanting to
enhance the beauty of the spectacle. On the left flowed the silver Thames,
crowded with craft, filled with richly-dressed personages of both sexes,
amid which floated the pompous barge appropriated to the officers of the
Garter, which was hung with banners and streamers, and decorated at the
sides with targets, emblazoned with the arms of St. George. On the
greensward edging the stream marched a brilliant cavalcade, and on the
right lay the old woods of the Home Park, with long vistas opening through
them, giving exquisite peeps of the towers and battlements of the castle.</p>
<p>Half an hour brought the cavalcade to Datchet Bridge, at the foot of which
a pavilion was erected for the accommodation of the mayor and burgesses.
And here, having dismounted, they awaited the king's arrival.</p>
<p>Shortly after this a cloud of dust on the Staines Road seemed to announce
the approach of the royal party, and all rushed forth and held themselves
in readiness to meet it. But the dust appeared to have been raised by a
company of horsemen, headed by Captain Bouchier, who rode up the next
moment. Courteously saluting the mayor, Bouchier informed him that
Mistress Anne Boleyn was close behind, and that it was the king's pleasure
that she should be attended in all state to the lower gate of the castle,
there to await his coming, as he himself intended to enter it with her.
The mayor replied that the sovereign's behests should be implicitly
obeyed, and he thereupon stationed himself at the farther side of the
bridge in expectation of Anne Boleyn's arrival.</p>
<p>Presently the sound of trumpets smote his ear, and a numerous and splendid
retinue was seen advancing, consisting of nobles, knights, esquires, and
gentlemen, ranged according to their degrees, and all sumptuously
apparelled in cloths of gold and silver, and velvets of various colours,
richly embroidered. Besides these, there were pages and other attendants
in the liveries of their masters, together with sergeants of the guard and
henchmen in their full accoutrements. Among the nobles were the Dukes of
Norfolk and Suffolk—the king being desirous of honouring as much as
possible her whom he had resolved to make his queen. The former was
clothed in tissue, embroidered with roses of gold, with a baldric across
his body of massive gold, and was mounted on a charger likewise trapped in
gold; and the latter wore a mantle of cloth of silver, pounced in the form
of letters, and lined with blue velvet, while his horse was trapped
hardwise in harness embroidered with bullion gold curiously wrought. Both
also wore the collar of the Order of the Garter. Near them rode Sir Thomas
Boleyn, who, conscious of the dignity to which his daughter was to be
advanced, comported himself with almost intolerable haughtiness.</p>
<p>Immediately behind Sir Thomas Boleyn came a sumptuous litter covered with
cloth of gold, drawn by four white palfreys caparisoned in white damask
down to the ground, and each having a page in white and blue satin at its
head. Over the litter was borne a canopy of cloth of gold supported by
four gilt staves, and ornamented at the corners with silver bells, ringing
forth sweet music as it moved along. Each staff was borne by a knight, of
whom sixteen were in attendance to relieve one another when fatigued.</p>
<p>In this litter sat Anne Boleyn. She wore a surcoat of white tissue, and a
mantle of the same material lined with ermine. Her gown, which, however,
was now concealed by the surcoat, was of cloth of gold tissue, raised with
pearls of silver damask, with a stomacher of purple gold similarly raised,
and large open sleeves lined with chequered tissue. Around her neck she
wore a chain of orient pearls, from which depended a diamond cross. A
black velvet cap, richly embroidered with pearls and other precious
stones, and ornamented with a small white plume, covered her head; and her
small feet were hidden in blue velvet brodequins, decorated with diamond
stars.</p>
<p>Anne Boleyn's features were exquisitely formed, and though not regular,
far more charming than if they had been so. Her nose was slightly
aquiline, but not enough so to detract from its beauty, and had a little
retrousse; point that completed its attraction. The rest of her features
were delicately chiselled: the chin being beautifully rounded, the brow
smooth and white as snow, while the rose could not vie with the bloom of
her cheek. Her neck—alas! that the fell hand of the executioner
should ever touch it—was long and slender, her eyes large and blue,
and of irresistible witchery—sometimes scorching the beholder like a
sunbeam, anon melting him with soul-subduing softness.</p>
<p>Of her accomplishments other opportunities will be found to speak; but it
may be mentioned that she was skilled on many instruments, danced and sang
divinely, and had rare powers of conversation and wit. If to these she had
not added the dangerous desire to please, and the wish to hold other
hearts than the royal one she had enslaved, in thraldom, all might,
perhaps, have been well. But, alas like many other beautiful women, she
had a strong tendency to coquetry. How severely she suffered for it, it is
the purpose of this history to relate. An excellent description of her has
been given by a contemporary writer, the Comte de Chateaubriand, who,
while somewhat disparaging her personal attractions, speaks in rapturous
terms of her accomplishments: "Anne," writes the Comte, "avait un esprit
si deslie qui c'estoit a qui l'ouiroit desgoiser; et ci venoitelle a
poetiser, telle qu' Orpheus, elle eust faict les ours et rochers
attentifs: puis saltoit, balloit, et dancoit toutes dances Anglaises ou
Estranges, et en imagina nombre qui ont garde son nom ou celluy du galant
pour qui les feit: puis scavoit tous les jeux, qu'elle jouoit avec non
plus d'heur que d'habilite puis chantoit comme syrene, s'accompagnant de
luth; harpoit mieueix que le roy David, et manioit fort gentilment fleuste
et rebec; puis s'accoustroit de tant et si merveilleuses facons, que ses
inventions, faisoient d'elle le parangon de toutes des dames les plus
sucrees de la court; mais nulle n'avoit sa grace, laquelle, au dire d'un
ancien, passe venuste'." Such was the opinion of one who knew her well
during her residence at the French court, when in attendance on Mary of
England, consort of Louis XII., and afterwards Duchess of Suffolk.</p>
<p>At this moment Anne's eyes were fixed with some tenderness upon one of the
supporters of her canopy on the right—a very handsome young man,
attired in a doublet and hose of black tylsent, paned and cut, and whose
tall, well-proportioned figure was seen to the greatest advantage,
inasmuch as he had divested himself of his mantle, for his better
convenience in walking.</p>
<p>"I fear me you will fatigue yourself, Sir Thomas Wyat," said Anne Boleyn,
in tones of musical sweetness, which made the heart beat and the colour
mount to the cheeks of him she addressed. "You had better allow Sir Thomas
Arundel or Sir John Hulstone to relieve you."</p>
<p>"I can feel no fatigue when near you, madam," replied Wyat, in a low tone.</p>
<p>A slight blush overspread Anne's features, and she raised her embroidered
kerchief to her lips.</p>
<p>"If I had that kerchief I would wear it at the next lists, and defy all
comers," said Wyat.</p>
<p>"You shall have it, then," rejoined Anne. "I love all chivalrous exploits,
and will do my best to encourage them."</p>
<p>"Take heed, Sir Thomas," said Sir Francis Weston, the knight who held the
staff on the other side, "or we shall have the canopy down. Let Sir Thomas
Arundel relieve you."</p>
<p>"No," rejoined Wyat, recovering himself; "I will not rest till we come to
the bridge."</p>
<p>"You are in no haste to possess the kerchief," said Anne petulantly.</p>
<p>"There you wrong me, madam!" cried Sir Thomas eagerly.</p>
<p>"What ho, good fellows!" he shouted to the attendants at the palfreys'
heads, "your lady desires you to stop."</p>
<p>"And I desire them to go on—I, Will Sommers, jester to the high and
mighty King Harry the Eighth!" cried a voice of mock authority behind the
knight. "What if Sir Thomas Wyat has undertaken to carry the canopy
farther than any of his companions, is that a reason he should be
relieved? Of a surety not—go on, I say!"</p>
<p>The person who thus spoke then stepped forward, and threw a glance so full
of significance at Anne Boleyn that she did not care to dispute the order,
but, on the contrary, laughingly acquiesced in it.</p>
<p>Will Sommers—the king's jester, as he described himself—was a
small middle-aged personage, with a physiognomy in which good nature and
malice, folly and shrewdness, were so oddly blended, that it was difficult
to say which predominated. His look was cunning and sarcastic, but it was
tempered by great drollery and oddity of manner, and he laughed so
heartily at his own jests and jibes, that it was scarcely possible to help
joining him. His attire consisted of a long loose gown of spotted crimson
silk, with the royal cipher woven in front in gold; hose of blue cloth,
guarded with red and black cloth; and red cordovan buskins. A sash tied
round his waist served him instead of a girdle, and he wore a
trencher-shaped velvet cap on his head, with a white tufted feather in it.
In his hand he carried a small horn. He was generally attended by a
monkey, habited in a crimson doublet and hood, which sat upon his
shoulder, and played very diverting tricks, but the animal was not with
him on the present occasion.</p>
<p>Will Sommers was a great favourite with the king, and ventured upon
familiarities which no one else dared to use with him. The favour in which
he stood with his royal master procured him admittance to his presence at
all hours and at all seasons, and his influence, though seldom exerted,
was very great. He was especially serviceable in turning aside the edge of
the king's displeasure, and more frequently exerted himself to allay the
storm than to raise it. His principal hostility was directed against
Wolsey, whose arrogance and grasping practices were the constant subjects
of his railing. It was seldom, such was his privileged character, and the
protection he enjoyed from the sovereign, that any of the courtiers
resented his remarks; but Sir Thomas Wyat's feelings being now deeply
interested, he turned sharply round, and said, "How now, thou meddling
varlet, what business hast thou to interfere?"</p>
<p>"I interfere to prove my authority, gossip Wyat," replied Sommers, "and to
show that, varlet as I am, I am as powerful as Mistress Anne Boleyn—nay,
that I am yet more powerful, because I am obeyed, while she is not."</p>
<p>"Were I at liberty," said Sir Thomas angrily, "I would make thee repent
thine insolence."</p>
<p>"But thou art not at liberty, good gossip," replied the jester, screaming
with laughter; "thou art tied like a slave to the oar, and cannot free
thyself from it—ha! ha!" Having enjoyed the knight's discomposure
for a few seconds, he advanced towards him, and whispered in his ear,
"Don't mistake me, gossip. I have done thee good service in preventing
thee from taking that kerchief. Hadst thou received it in the presence of
these witnesses, thou wouldst have been lodged in the Round Tower of
Windsor Castle to-morrow, instead of feasting with the knights-companions
in Saint George's Hall."</p>
<p>"I believe thou art right, gossip," said Wyat in the same tone.</p>
<p>"Rest assured I am," replied Sommers; "and I further more counsel thee to
decline this dangerous gift altogether, and to think no more of the fair
profferer, or if thou must think of her, let it be as of one beyond thy
reach. Cross not the lion's path; take a friendly hint from the jackal."</p>
<p>And without waiting for a reply, he darted away, and mingled with the
cavalcade in the rear.</p>
<p>Immediately behind Anne Boleyn's litter rode a company of henchmen of the
royal household, armed with gilt partisans. Next succeeded a chariot
covered with red cloth of gold, and drawn by four horses richly
caparisoned, containing the old Duchess of Norfolk and the old Marchioness
of Dorset. Then came the king's natural son, the Duke of Richmond—a
young man formed on the same large scale, and distinguished by the same
haughty port, and the same bluff manner, as his royal sire. The duke's
mother was the Lady Talboys, esteemed one of the most beautiful women of
the age, and who had for a long time held the capricious monarch captive.
Henry was warmly attached to his son, showered favours without number upon
him, and might have done yet more if fate had not snatched him away at an
early age.</p>
<p>Though scarcely eighteen, the Duke of Richmond looked more than twenty,
and his lips and chin were clothed with a well-grown though
closely-clipped beard. He was magnificently habited in a doublet of cloth
of gold of bawdekin, the placard and sleeves of which were wrought with
flat gold, and fastened with aiglets. A girdle of crimson velvet, enriched
with precious stones, encircled his waist, and sustained a poniard and a
Toledo sword, damascened with gold. Over all he wore a loose robe, or
housse, of scarlet mohair, trimmed with minever, and was further decorated
with the collar of the Order of the Garter. His cap was of white velvet,
ornamented with emeralds, and from the side depended a small azure plume.
He rode a magnificent black charger, trapped in housings of cloth of gold,
powdered with ermine.</p>
<p>By the duke's side rode the Earl of Surrey attired—as upon the
previous day, and mounted on a fiery Arabian, trapped in crimson velvet
fringed with Venetian gold. Both nobles were attended by their esquires in
their liveries.</p>
<p>Behind them came a chariot covered with cloth of silver, and drawn, like
the first, by four horses in rich housings, containing two very beautiful
damsels, one of whom attracted so much of the attention of the youthful
nobles, that it was with difficulty they could preserve due order of
march. The young dame in question was about seventeen; her face was oval
in form, with features of the utmost delicacy and regularity. Her
complexion was fair and pale, and contrasted strikingly with her jetty
brows and magnificent black eyes, of oriental size, tenderness, and
lustre. Her dark and luxuriant tresses were confined by a cap of black
velvet faced with white satin, and ornamented with pearls. Her gown was of
white satin worked with gold, and had long open pendent sleeves, while
from her slender and marble neck hung a cordeliere—a species of
necklace imitated from the cord worn by Franciscan friars, and formed of
crimson silk twisted with threads of Venetian gold..</p>
<p>This fair creature was the Lady Elizabeth Fitzgerald, daughter of Gerald
Fitzgerald, ninth Earl of Kildare, who claimed descent from the Geraldi
family of Florence; but she was generally known by the appellation of the
Fair Geraldine—a title bestowed upon her, on account of her beauty,
by the king, and by which she still lives, and will continue to live, as
long as poetry endures, in the deathless and enchanting strains of her
lover, the Earl of Surrey. At the instance of her mother, Lady Kildare,
the Fair Geraldine was brought up with the Princess Mary, afterwards Queen
of England; but she had been lately assigned by the royal order as one of
the attendants—a post equivalent to that of maid of honour—to
Anne Boleyn.</p>
<p>Her companion was the Lady Mary Howard, the sister of the Earl of Surrey,
a nymph about her own age, and possessed of great personal attractions,
having nobly-formed features, radiant blue eyes, light tresses, and a
complexion of dazzling clearness. Lady Mary Howard nourished a passion for
the Duke of Richmond, whom she saw with secret chagrin captivated by the
superior charms of the Fair Geraldine. Her uneasiness, however, was in
some degree abated by the knowledge, which as confidante of the latter she
had obtained, that her brother was master of her heart. Lady Mary was
dressed in blue velvet, cut and lined with cloth of gold, and wore a
headgear of white velvet, ornamented with pearls.</p>
<p>Just as the cavalcade came in sight of Datchet Bridge, the Duke of
Richmond turned his horse's head, and rode up to the side of the chariot
on which the Fair Geraldine was sitting.</p>
<p>"I am come to tell you of a marvellous adventure that befell Surrey in the
Home Park at Windsor last night," he said. "He declares he has seen the
demon hunter, Herne."</p>
<p>"Then pray let the Earl of Surrey relate the adventure to us himself,"
replied the Fair Geraldine. "No one can tell a story so well as the hero
of it."</p>
<p>The duke signed to the youthful earl, who was glancing rather wistfully at
them, and he immediately joined them, while Richmond passed over to the
Lady Mary Howard. Surrey then proceeded to relate what had happened to him
in the park, and the fair Geraldine listened to his recital with
breathless interest.</p>
<p>"Heaven shield us from evil spirits!" she exclaimed, crossing herself.
"But what is the history of this wicked hunter, my lord? and why did he
incur such a dreadful doom?"</p>
<p>"I know nothing more than that he was a keeper in the forest, who, having
committed some heinous crime, hanged himself from a branch of the oak
beneath which I found the keeper, Morgan Fenwolf, and which still bears
his name," replied the earl. "For this unrighteous act he cannot obtain
rest, but is condemned to wander through the forest at midnight, where he
wreaks his vengeance in blasting the trees."</p>
<p>"The legend I have heard differs from yours," observed the Duke of
Richmond: "it runs that the spirit by which the forest is haunted is a
wood-demon, who assumes the shape of the ghostly hunter, and seeks to
tempt or terrify the keepers to sell their souls to him."</p>
<p>"Your grace's legend is the better of the two," said Lady Mary Howard, "or
rather, I should say, the more probable. I trust the evil spirit did not
make you any such offer, brother of Surrey?"</p>
<p>The earl gravely shook his head.</p>
<p>"If I were to meet him, and he offered me my heart's dearest wish, I fear
he would prevail with me," observed the duke, glancing tenderly at the
Fair Geraldine.</p>
<p>"Tush!—the subject is too serious for jesting, Richmond," said
Surrey almost sternly.</p>
<p>"His grace, as is usual in compacts with the fiend, might have reason to
rue his bargain," observed Lady Mary Howard peevishly.</p>
<p>"If the Earl of Surrey were my brother," remarked the Fair Geraldine to
the Lady Mary, "I would interdict him from roaming in the park after
nightfall."</p>
<p>"He is very wilful," said Lady Mary, smiling, "and holds my commands but
lightly."</p>
<p>"Let the Fair Geraldine lay hers upon me, and she shall not have to
reproach me with disobedience," rejoined the earl.</p>
<p>"I must interpose to prevent their utterance," cried Richmond, with a
somewhat jealous look at his friend, "for I have determined to know more
of this mystery, and shall require the earl's assistance to unravel it. I
think I remember Morgan Fenwolf, the keeper, and will send for him to the
castle, and question him. But in any case, I and Surrey will visit Herne's
Oak to-night."</p>
<p>The remonstrances of both ladies were interrupted by the sudden appearance
of Will Sommers.</p>
<p>"What ho! my lords—to your places! to your places!" cried the
jester, in a shrill angry voice. "See ye not we are close upon Datchet
Bridge? Ye can converse with these fair dames at a more fitting season;
but it is the king's pleasure that the cavalcade should make a goodly
show. To your places, I say!"</p>
<p>Laughing at the jester's peremptory injunction, the two young nobles
nevertheless obeyed it, and, bending almost to the saddle-bow to the
ladies, resumed their posts.</p>
<p>The concourse assembled on Datchet Bridge welcomed Anne Boleyn's arrival
with loud acclamations, while joyous strains proceeded from sackbut and
psaltery, and echoing blasts from the trumpets. Caps were flung into the
air, and a piece of ordnance was fired from the barge, which was presently
afterwards answered by the castle guns. Having paid his homage to Anne
Boleyn, the mayor rejoined the company of bailiffs and burgesses, and the
whole cavalcade crossed the bridge, winding their way slowly along the
banks of the river, the barge, with the minstrels playing in it,
accompanying them the while. In this way they reached Windsor; and as Anne
Boleyn gazed up at the lordly castle above which the royal standard now
floated, proud and aspiring thoughts swelled her heart, and she longed for
the hour when she should approach it as its mistress. Just then her eye
chanced on Sir Thomas Wyat, who was riding behind her amongst the knights,
and she felt, though it might cost her a struggle, that love would yield
to ambition.</p>
<p>Leaving the barge and its occupants to await the king's arrival, the
cavalcade ascended Thames Street, and were welcomed everywhere with
acclamations and rejoicing. Bryan Bowntance, who had stationed himself on
the right of the arch in front of his house, attempted to address Anne
Boleyn, but could not bring forth a word. His failure, how ever, was more
successful than his speech might have been, inasmuch as it excited
abundance of merriment.</p>
<p>Arrived at the area in front of the lower gateway, Anne Boleyn's litter
was drawn up in the midst of it, and the whole of the cavalcade grouping
around her, presented a magnificent sight to the archers and arquebusiers
stationed on the towers and walls.</p>
<p>Just at this moment a signal gun was heard from Datchet Bridge, announcing
that the king had reached it, and the Dukes of Suffolk, Norfolk, and
Richmond, together with the Earl of Surrey, Sir Thomas Wyat, and a few of
their gentle men, rode back to meet him. They had scarcely, however,
reached the foot of the hill when the royal party appeared in view, for
the king with his characteristic impatience, on drawing near the castle,
had urged his attendants quickly forward.</p>
<p>First came half a dozen trumpeters, with silken bandrols fluttering in the
breeze, blowing loud flourishes. Then a party of halberdiers, whose
leaders had pennons streaming from the tops of their tall pikes. Next came
two gentlemen ushers bareheaded, but mounted and richly habited, belonging
to the Cardinal of York, who cried out as they pressed forward, "On
before, my masters, on before!—make way for my lord's grace."</p>
<p>Then came a sergeant-of-arms bearing a great mace of silver, and two
gentlemen carrying each a pillar of silver. Next rode a gentleman carrying
the cardinal's hat, and after him came Wolsey himself, mounted on a mule
trapped in crimson velvet, with a saddle covered with the same stuff, and
gilt stirrups. His large person was arrayed in robes of the finest crimson
satin engrained, and a silk cap of the same colour contrasted by its
brightness with the pale purple tint of his sullen, morose, and bloated
features. The cardinal took no notice of the clamour around him, but now
and then, when an expression of dislike was uttered against him, for he
had already begun to be unpopular with the people, he would raise his eyes
and direct a withering glance at the hardy speaker. But these expressions
were few, for, though tottering, Wolsey was yet too formidable to be
insulted with impunity. On either side of him were two mounted attend
ants, each caring a gilt poleaxe, who, if he had given the word, would
have instantly chastised the insolence of the bystanders, while behind him
rode his two cross-bearers upon homes trapped in scarlet.</p>
<p>Wolsey's princely retinue was followed by a litter of crimson velvet, in
which lay the pope's legate, Cardinal Campeggio, whose infirmities were so
great that he could not move without assistance. Campeggio was likewise
attended by a numerous train.</p>
<p>After a long line of lords, knights, and esquires, came Henry the Eighth.
He was apparelled in a robe of crimson velvet furred with ermines, and
wore a doublet of raised gold, the placard of which was embroidered with
diamonds, rubies, emeralds, large pearls, and other precious stones. About
his neck was a baldric of balas rubies, and over his robe he wore the
collar of the Order of the Garter. His horse, a charger of the largest
size, and well able to sustain his vast weight, was trapped in crimson
velvet, purfled with ermines. His knights and esquires were clothed in
purple velvet, and his henchmen in scarlet tunics of the same make as
those worn by the warders of the Tower at the present day.</p>
<p>Henry was in his thirty-eighth year, and though somewhat overgrown and
heavy, had lost none of his activity, and but little of the grace of his
noble proportions. His size and breadth of limb were well displayed in his
magnificent habiliment. His countenance was handsome and manly, with a
certain broad burly look, thoroughly English in its character, which won
him much admiration from his subjects; and though it might be objected
that the eyes were too small, and the mouth somewhat too diminutive, it
could not be denied that the general expression of the face was kingly in
the extreme. A prince of a more "royal presence" than Henry the Eighth was
never seen, and though he had many and grave faults, want of dignity was
not amongst the number.</p>
<p>Henry entered Windsor amid the acclamations of the spectators, the
fanfares of trumpeters, and the roar of ordnance from the castle walls.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Anne Boleyn, having descended from her litter, which passed
through the gate into the lower ward, stood with her ladies beneath the
canopy awaiting his arrival.</p>
<p>A wide clear space was preserved before her, into which, however, Wolsey
penetrated, and, dismounting, placed himself so that he could witness the
meeting between her and the king. Behind him stood the jester, Will
Sommers, who was equally curious with himself. The litter of Cardinal
Campeggio passed through the gateway and proceeded to the lodgings
reserved for his eminence.</p>
<p>Scarcely had Wolsey taken up his station than Henry rode up, and,
alighting, consigned his horse to a page, and, followed by the Duke of
Richmond and the Earl of Surrey, advanced towards Anne Boleyn, who
immediately stepped forward to meet him.</p>
<p>"Fair mistress," he said, taking her hand, and regarding her with a look
of passionate devotion, "I welcome you to this my castle of Windsor, and
trust soon to make you as absolute mistress of it as I am lord and
master."</p>
<p>Anne Boleyn blushed, and cast down her eyes, and Sir Thomas Wyat, who
stood at some little distance with his hand upon his saddle, regarding
her, felt that any hopes he might have entertained were utterly
annihilated.</p>
<p>"Heard you that, my lord cardinal?" said Will Sommers to Wolsey. "She will
soon be mistress here. As she comes in, you go out—mind that!"</p>
<p>The cardinal made no answer further than was conveyed by the deepened
colour of his cheeks.</p>
<p>Amid continued fanfares and acclamations, Harry then led Anne Boleyn
through the gateway, followed by the ladies in waiting, who were joined by
Richmond and Surrey. The prelate, chancellor, register, black rod, and
other officers of the Garter, together with the whole of the royal retinue
who had dismounted, came after them. A vast concourse of spectators,
extending almost as far as the Lieutenant's Tower, was collected in front
of the alms-knights' houses; but a wide space had been kept clear by the
henchmen for the passage of the sovereign and his train, and along this
Henry proceeded with Anne Boleyn, in the direction of the upper ward. Just
as he reached the Norman Tower, and passed the entrance to the keep, the
Duke of Shoreditch, who was standing beneath the gateway, advanced towards
him and prostrated himself on one knee.</p>
<p>"May it please your majesty," said Shoreditch, "I last night arrested a
butcher of Windsor for uttering words highly disrespectful of your
highness, and of the fair and virtuous lady by your side."</p>
<p>"Ah! God's death!" exclaimed the king. "Where is the traitor? Bring him
before us."</p>
<p>"He is here," replied Shoreditch.</p>
<p>And immediately Mark Fytton was brought forward by a couple of
halberdiers. He still preserved his undaunted demeanour, and gazed sternly
at the king.</p>
<p>"So, fellow, thou hast dared to speak disrespectfully of us—ha!"
cried Henry.</p>
<p>"I have spoken the truth," replied the butcher fearlessly. "I have said
you were about to divorce your lawful consort, Catherine of Arragon, and
to take the minion, Anne Boleyn, who stands beside you, to your bed. And I
added, it was a wrongful act."</p>
<p>"Foul befall thy lying tongue for saying so!" replied Henry furiously. "I
have a mind to pluck it from thy throat, and cast it to the dogs. What ho!
guards, take this caitiff to the summit of the highest tower of the castle—the
Curfew Tower—and hang him from it, so that all my loyal subjects in
Windsor may see how traitors are served."</p>
<p>"Your highness has judged him justly," said Anne Boleyn. "You say so now,
Mistress Anne Boleyn," rejoined the butcher; "but you yourself shall one
day stand in as much peril of your life as I do, and shall plead as vainly
as I should, were I to plead at all, which I will never do to this
inexorable tyrant. You will then remember my end."</p>
<p>"Away with him!" cried Henry. "I myself will go to the Garter Tower to see
it done. Farewell for a short while, sweetheart. I will read these
partisans of Catherine a terrible lesson."</p>
<p>As the butcher was hurried off to the Curfew Tower, the king proceeded
with his attendants to the Garter Tower, and ascended to its summit.</p>
<p>In less than ten minutes a stout pole, like the mast of a ship, was thrust
through the battlements of the Curfew Tower, on the side looking towards
the town. To this pole a rope, of some dozen feet in length, and having a
noose at one end, was firmly secured. The butcher was then brought forth,
bound hand and foot, and the noose was thrown over his neck.</p>
<p>While this was passing, the wretched man descried a person looking at him
from a window in a wooden structure projecting from the side of the tower.</p>
<p>"What, are you there, Morgan Fenwolf?" he cried. "Remember what passed
between us in the dungeon last night, and be warned! You will not meet
your end as firmly as I meet mine?"</p>
<p>"Make thy shrift quickly, fellow, if thou hast aught to say," interposed
one of the halberdiers.</p>
<p>"I have no shrift to make," rejoined the butcher. "I have already settled
my account with Heaven. God preserve Queen Catherine!"</p>
<p>As he uttered these words, he was thrust off from the battlements by the
halberdiers, and his body swung into the abyss amid the hootings and
execrations of the spectators below.</p>
<p>Having glutted his eyes with the horrible sight, Henry descended from the
tower, and returned to Anne Boleyn.</p>
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