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- CHAPTER XXX.
-
- Approach the chamber, look upon his bed.
- His is the passing of no peaceful ghost,
- Which, as the lark arises to the sky,
- 'Mid morning's sweetest breeze and softest dew,
- Is wing'd to heaven by good men's sighs and tears!---
- Anselm parts otherwise.
- _Old Play._
-
- During the interval of quiet which followed the
- first success of the besiegers, while the one party
- was preparing to pursue their advantage, and the
- other to strengthen their means of defence, the
- Templar and De Bracy held brief council together
- in the hall of the castle.
-
- ``Where is Front-de-B<oe>uf?'' said the latter,
- who had superintended the defence of the fortress
- on the other side; ``men say he hath been slain.''
-
- ``He lives,'' said the Templar, coolly, ``lives as
- yet; but had he worn the bull's head of which he
- bears the name, and ten plates of iron to fence it
- withal, he must have gone down before yonder fatal
- axe. Yet a few hours, and Front-de-B<oe>uf is with
- his fathers---a powerful limb lopped off Prince
- John's enterprise.''
-
- ``And a brave addition to the kingdom of Satan,''
- said De Bracy; ``this comes of reviling saints and
- angels, and ordering images of holy things and holy
- men to be flung down on the heads of these rascaille
- yeomen.''
-
- ``Go to---thou art a fool,'' said the Templar;
- ``thy superstition is upon a level with Front-de-B<oe>uf's
- want of faith; neither of you can render a
- reason for your belief or unbelief.''
-
- ``Benedicite, Sir Templar,'' replied De Bracy,
- ``pray you to keep better rule with your tongue
- when I am the theme of it. By the Mother of
- Heaven, I am a better Christian man than thou and
- thy fellowship; for the _bruit_ goeth shrewdly out,
- that the most holy Order of the Temple of Zion
- nurseth not a few heretics within its bosom, and
- that Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert is of the number.''
-
- ``Care not thou for such reports,'' said the Templar;
- ``but let us think of making good the castle.
- ---How fought these villain yeomen on thy side?''
-
- ``Like fiends incarnate,'' said De Bracy. ``They
- swanned close up to the walls, headed, as I think,
- by the knave who won the prize at the archery, for
- I knew his horn and baldric. And this is old
- Fitzurse's boasted policy, encouraging these malapert
- knaves to rebel against us! Had I not been
- armed in proof, the villain had marked me down
- seven times with as little remorse as if I had been
- a buck in season. He told every rivet on my armour
- with a cloth-yard shaft, that rapped against
- my ribs with as little compunction as if my bones
- had been of iron---But that I wore a shirt of Spanish
- mail under my plate-coat, I had been fairly
- sped.''
-
- ``But you maintained your post?'' said the Templar.
- ``We lost the outwork on our part.''
-
- ``That is a shrewd loss,'' said De Bracy; ``the
- knaves will find cover there to assault the castle
- more closely, and may, if not well watched, gain
- some unguarded corner of a tower, or some forgotten
- window, and so break in upon us. Our numbers
- are too few for the defence of every point, and
- the men complain that they can nowhere show
- themselves, but they are the mark for as many arrows
- as a parish-butt on a holyday even. Front-de-B<oe>uf
- is dying too, so we shall receive no more
- aid from his bull's head and brutal strength. How
- think you, Sir Brian, were we not better make a
- virtue of necessity, and compound with the rogues
- by delivering up our prisoners?''
-
- ``How?'' exclaimed the Templar; ``deliver up
- our prisoners, and stand an object alike of ridicule
- and execration, as the doughty warriors who dared
- by a night-attack to possess themselves of the persons
- of a party of defenceless travellers, yet could
- not make good a strong castle against a vagabond
- troop of outlaws, led by swineherds, jesters, and
- the very refuse of mankind?---Shame on thy counsel,
- Maurice de Bracy!---The ruins of this castle
- shall bury both my body and my shame, ere I consent
- to such base and dishonourable composition.''
-
- ``Let us to the walls, then,'' said De Bracy, carelessly;
- ``that man never breathed, be he Turk or
- Templar, who held life at lighter rate than I do.
- But I trust there is no dishonour in wishing I had
- here some two scores of my gallant troop of Free
- Companions?---Oh, my brave lances! if ye knew
- but how hard your captain were this day bested,
- how soon should I see my banner at the head of
- your clump of spears! And how short while would
- these rabble villains stand to endure your encounter!''
-
- ``Wish for whom thou wilt,'' said the Templar,
- ``but let us make what defence we can with the
- soldiers who remain---They are chiefly Front-de-B<oe>uf's
- followers, hated by the English for a thousand
- acts of insolence and oppression.''
-
- ``The better,'' said De Bracy; ``the rugged
- slaves will defend themselves to the last drop of
- their blood, ere they encounter the revenge of the
- peasants without. Let us up and be doing, then,
- Brian de Bois-Guilbert; and, live or die, thou shalt
- see Maurice de Bracy bear himself this day as a
- gentleman of blood and lineage.''
-
- ``To the walls!'' answered the Templar; and
- they both ascended the battlements to do all that
- skill could dictate, and manhood accomplish, in defence
- of the place. They readily agreed that the
- point of greatest danger was that opposite to the
- outwork of which the assailants had possessed
- themselves. The castle, indeed, was divided from
- that barbican by the moat, and it was impossible
- that the besiegers could assail the postern-door,
- with which the outwork corresponded, without surmounting
- that obstacle; but it was the opinion both
- of the Templar and De Bracy, that the besiegers,
- if governed by the same policy their leader had already
- displayed, would endeavour, by a formidable
- assault, to draw the chief part of the defenders'
- observation to this point, and take measures to avail
- themselves of every negligence which might take
- place in the defence elsewhere. To guard against
- such an evil, their numbers only permitted the
- knights to place sentinels from space to space along
- the walls in communication with each other, who
- might give the alarm whenever danger was threatened.
- Meanwhile, they agreed that De Bracy should
- command the defence at the postern, and the Templar
- should keep with him a score of men or thereabouts
- as a body of reserve, ready to hasten to any
- other point which might be suddenly threatened.
- The loss of the barbican had also this unfortunate
- effect, that, notwithstanding the superior height of
- the castle walls, the besieged could not see from
- them, with the same precision as before, the operations
- of the enemy; for some straggling underwood
- approached so near the sallyport of the outwork,
- that the assailants might introduce into it
- whatever force they thought proper, not only under
- cover, but even without the knowledge of the
- defenders. Utterly uncertain, therefore, upon what
- point the storm was to burst, De Bracy and his
- companion were under the necessity of providing
- against every possible contingency, and their followers,
- however brave, experienced the anxious
- dejection of mind incident to men enclosed by enemies,
- who possessed the power of choosing their
- time and mode of attack.
-
- Meanwhile, the lord of the beleaguered and endangered
- castle lay upon a bed of bodily pain and
- mental agony. He had not the usual resource of
- bigots in that superstitious period, most of whom
- were wont to atone for the crimes they were guilty
- of by liberality to the church, stupefying by this
- means their terrors by the idea of atonement and
- forgiveness; and although the refuge which success
- thus purchased, was no more like to the peace
- of mind which follows on sincere repentance, than
- the turbid stupefaction procured by opium resembles
- healthy and natural slumbers, it was still a
- state of mind preferable to the agonies of awakened
- remorse. But among the vices of Front-de-B<oe>uf,
- a hard and griping man, avarice was predominant;
- and he preferred setting church and
- churchmen at defiance, to purchasing from them
- pardon and absolution at the price of treasure and
- of manors. Nor did the Templar, an infidel of another
- stamp, justly characterise his associate, when
- he said Front-de-B<oe>uf could assign no cause for
- his unbelief and contempt for the established faith;
- for the Baron would have alleged that the Church
- sold her wares too dear, that the spiritual freedom
- which she put up to sale was only to be bought like
- that of the chief captain of Jerusalem, ``with a great
- sum,'' and Front-de-B<oe>uf preferred denying the
- virtue of the medicine, to paying the expense of the
- physician.
-
- But the moment had now arrived when earth and
- all his treasures were gliding from before his eyes,
- and when the savage Baron's heart, though hard as
- a nether millstone, became appalled as he gazed
- forward into the waste darkness of futurity. The
- fever of his body aided the impatience and agony
- of his mind, and his death-bed exhibited a mixture
- of the newly awakened feelings of horror, combating
- with the fixed and inveterate obstinacy of his disposition;
- ---a fearful state of mind, only to be equalled
- in those tremendous regions, where there are
- complaints without hope, remorse without repentance,
- a dreadful sense of present agony, and a presentiment
- that it cannot cease or be diminished!
-
- ``Where be these dog-priests now,'' growled the
- Baron, ``who set such price on their ghostly mummery?
- ---where be all those unshod Carmelites, for
- whom old Front-de-B<oe>uf founded the convent of
- St Anne, robbing his heir of many a fair rood of
- meadow, and many a fat field and close---where be
- the greedy hounds now?---Swilling, I warrant me,
- at the ale, or playing their juggling tricks at the
- bedside of some miserly churl.---Me, the heir of
- their founder---me, whom their foundation binds
- them to pray for---me---ungrateful villains as they
- are!---they suffer to die like the houseless dog on
- yonder common, unshriven and tinhouseled!---Tell
- the Templar to come hither---he is a priest, and
- may do something---But no!---as well confess myself
- to the devil as to Brian de Bois-Guilbert, who
- recks neither of heaven nor of hell.---I have heard
- old men talk of prayer---prayer by their own voice
- ---Such need not to court or to bribe the false priest
- ---But I---I dare not!''
-
- ``Lives Reginald Front-de-B<oe>uf,'' said a broken
- and shrill voice close by his bedside, ``to say there
- is that which he dares not!''
-
- The evil conscience and the shaken nerves of
- Front-de-B<oe>uf heard, in this strange interruption
- to his soliloquy, the voice of one of those demons,
- who, as the superstition of the times believed, beset
- the beds of dying men to distract their thoughts,
- and turn them from the meditations which concerned
- their eternal welfare. He shuddered and
- drew himself together; but, instantly summoning
- up his wonted resolution, he exclaimed, ``Who is
- there?---what art thou, that darest to echo my
- words in a tone like that of the night-raven?---
- Come before my couch that I may see thee.''
-
- ``I am thine evil angel, Reginald Front-de-B<oe>uf,''
- replied the voice.
-
- ``Let me behold thee then in thy bodily shape,
- if thou best indeed a fiend,'' replied the dying
- knight; ``think not that I will blench from thee.
- ---By the eternal dungeon, could I but grapple
- with these horrors that hover round me, as I have
- done with mortal dangers, heaven or hell should
- never say that I shrunk from the conflict!''
-
- ``Think on thy sins, Reginald Front-de-B<oe>uf,''
- said the almost unearthly voice, ``on rebellion, on
- rapine, on murder!---Who stirred up the licentious
- John to war against his grey-headed father---against
- his generous brother?''
-
- ``Be thou fiend, priest, or devil,'' replied Front-de-B<oe>uf,
- ``thou liest in thy throat!---Not I stirred
- John to rebellion---not I alone---there were
- fifty knights and barons, the flower of the midland
- counties---better men never laid lance in rest---And
- must I answer for the fault done by fifty?---False
- fiend, I defy thee! Depart, and haunt my couch
- no more---let me die in peace if thou be mortal---
- if thou be a demon, thy time is not yet come.''
-
- ``In peace thou shalt =not= die,'' repeated the
- voice; ``even in death shalt thou think on thy murders
- ---on the groans which this castle has echoed---
- on the blood that is engrained in its floors!''
-
- ``Thou canst not shake me by thy petty malice,''
- answered Front-de-B<oe>uf, with a ghastly and constrained
- laugh. ``The infidel Jew---it was merit
- with heaven to deal with him as I did, else wherefore
- are men canonized who dip their hands in the
- blood of Saracens?---The Saxon porkers, whom I
- have slain, they were the foes of my country, and
- of my lineage, and of my liege lord.---Ho! ho!
- thou seest there is no crevice in my coat of plate---
- Art thou fled?---art thou silenced?''
-
- ``No, foul parricide!'' replied the voice; ``think
- of thy father!---think of his death!---think of his
- banquet-room flooded with his gore, and that poured
- forth by the hand of a son!''
-
- ``Ha!'' answered the Baron, after a long pause,
- ``an thou knowest that, thou art indeed the author
- of evil, and as omniscient as the monks call thee!
- ---That secret I deemed locked in my own breast,
- and in that of one besides---the temptress, the partaker
- of my guilt.---Go, leave me, fiend! and seek
- the Saxon witch Ulrica, who alone could tell thee
- what she and I alone witnessed.---Go, I say, to her,
- who washed the wounds, and straighted the corpse,
- and gave to the slain man the outward show of one
- parted in time and in the course of nature---Go to
- her, she was my temptress, the foul provoker, the
- more foul rewarder, of the deed---let her, as well as
- I, taste of the tortures which anticipate hell!''
-
- ``She already tastes them,'' said Ulrica, stepping
- before the couch of Front-de-B<oe>uf; ``she hath
- long drunken of this cup, and its bitterness is now
- sweetened to see that thou dost partake it.---Grind
- not thy teeth, Front-de-B<oe>uf---roll not thine eyes
- ---clench not thine hand, nor shake it at me with that
- gesture of menace!---The hand which, like that of
- thy renowned ancestor who gained thy name, could
- have broken with one stroke the skull of a mountain-bull,
- is now unnerved and powerless as mine
- own!''
-
- ``Vile murderous hag!'' replied Front-de-B<oe>uf;
- ``detestable screech-owl! it is then thou who art
- come to exult over the ruins thou hast assisted to
- lay low?''
-
- ``Ay, Reginald Front-de-B<oe>uf,'' answered she,
- ``it is Ulrica!---it is the daughter of the murdered
- Torquil Wolfganger!---it is the sister of his
- slaughtered sons!---it is she who demands of thee,
- and of thy father's house, father and kindred, name
- and fame---all that she has lost by the name of
- Front-de-B<oe>uf!---Think of my wrongs, Front-de-B<oe>uf,
- and answer me if I speak not truth. Thou
- hast been my evil angel, and I will be thine---I will
- dog thee till the very instant of dissolution!''
-
- ``Detestable fury!'' exclaimed Front-de-B<oe>uf,
- ``that moment shalt thou never witness---Ho!
- Giles, Clement, and Eustace! Saint Maur, and
- Stephen! seize this damned witch, and hurl her
- from the battlements headlong---she has betrayed
- us to the Saxon!---Ho! Saint Maur! Clement!
- false-hearted, knaves, where tarry ye?''
-
- ``Call on them again, valiant Baron,'' said the
- hag, with a smile of grisly mockery; ``summon thy
- vassals around thee, doom them that loiter to the
- scourge and the dungeon---But know, mighty chief,''
- she continued, suddenly changing her tone, ``thou
- shalt have neither answer, nor aid, nor obedience
- at their hands.---Listen to these horrid sounds,''
- for the din of the recommenced assault and defence
- now rung fearfully loud from the battlements of
- the castle; ``in that war-cry is the downfall of thy
- house---The blood-cemented fabric of Front-de-B<oe>uf's
- power totters to the foundation, and before
- the foes he most despised!---The Saxon, Reginald!
- ---the scorned Saxon assails thy walls!---Why liest
- thou here, like a worn-out hind, when the Saxon
- storms thy place of strength?''
-
- ``Gods and fiends!'' exclaimed the wounded
- knight; ``O, for one moment's strength, to drag
- myself to the _m<e^>l<e'>e_, and perish as becomes my
- name!''
-
- ``Think not of it, valiant warrior!'' replied she;
- ``thou shalt die no soldier's death, but perish like
- the fox in his den, when the peasants have set fire
- to the cover around it.''
-
- ``Hateful hag! thou liest!'' exclaimed Front-de-B<oe>uf;
- ``my followers bear them bravely---my
- walls are strong and high---my comrades in arms
- fear not a whole host of Saxons, were they headed
- by Hengist and Horsa!---The war-cry of the Templar
- and of the Free Companions rises high over
- the conflict! And by mine honour, when we kindle
- the blazing beacon, for joy of our defence, it shall
- consume thee, body and bones; and I shall live to
- hear thou art gone from earthly fires to those of
- that hell, which never sent forth an incarnate fiend
- more utterly diabolical!''
-
- ``Hold thy belief,'' replied Ulrica, ``till the
- proof reach thee---But, no!'' she said, interrupting
- herself, ``thou shalt know, even now, the doom,
- which all thy power, strength, and courage, is unable
- to avoid, though it is prepared for thee by this
- feeble band. Markest thou the smouldering and
- suffocating vapour which already eddies in sable
- folds through the chamber?---Didst thou think it
- was but the darkening of thy bursting eyes---the
- difficulty of thy cumbered breathing?---No! Front-de-B<oe>uf,
- there is another cause---Rememberest
- thou the magazine of fuel that is stored beneath
- these apartments?''
-
- ``Woman!'' he exclaimed with fury, ``thou hast
- not set fire to it?---By heaven, thou hast, and the
- castle is in flames!''
-
- ``They are fast rising at least,'' said Ulrica, with
- frightful composure; ``and a signal shall soon wave
- to warn the besiegers to press hard upon those
- who would extinguish them.---Farewell, Front-de-B<oe>uf!
- ---May Mista, Skogula, and Zernebock,
- gods of the ancient Saxons---fiends, as the priests
- now call them---supply the place of comforters at
- your dying bed, which Ulrica now relinquishes!---
- But know, if it will give thee comfort to know it,
- that Ulrica is bound to the same dark coast with
- thyself, the companion of thy punishment as the
- companion of thy guilt.---And now, parricide, farewell
- for ever!---May each stone of this vaulted roof
- find a tongue to echo that title into thine ear!''
-
- So saying, she left the apartment; and Front-de-B<oe>uf
- could hear the crash of the ponderous key,
- as she locked and double-locked the door behind
- her, thus cutting off the most slender chance of
- escape. In the extremity of agony he shouted upon
- his servants and allies--``Stephen and Saint Maur!
- ---Clement and Giles!---I burn here unaided!---
- To the rescue---to the rescue, brave Bois-Guilbert,
- valiant De Bracy!---It is Front-de-B<oe>uf who calls!
- ---It is your master, ye traitor squires!---Your ally
- ---your brother in arms, ye perjured and faithless
- knights!---all the curses due to traitors upon your
- recreant heads, do you abandon me to perish thus
- miserably!---They hear me not---they cannot hear
- me---my voice is lost in the din of battle.---The
- smoke rolls thicker and thicker---the fire has caught
- upon the floor below---O, for one drought of the
- air of heaven, were it to be purchased by instant
- annihilation!'' And in the mad frenzy of despair,
- the wretch now shouted with the shouts of the
- fighters, now muttered curses on himself, on mankind,
- and on Heaven itself.---``The red fire flashes
- through the thick smoke!'' he exclaimed; ``the
- demon marches against me under the banner of his
- own element---Foul spirit, avoid!---I go not with
- thee without my comrades---all, all are thine, that
- garrison these walls---Thinkest thou Front-de-B<oe>uf
- will be singled out to go alone?---No---the
- infidel Templar---the licentious De Bracy---Ulrica,
- the foul murdering strumpet---the men who
- aided my enterprises---the dog Saxons and accursed
- Jews, who are my prisoners---all, all shall attend
- me---a goodly fellowship as ever took the
- downward road---Ha, ha, ha!'' and he laughed in
- his frenzy till the vaulted roof rang again. ``Who
- laughed there?'' exclaimed Front-de-B<oe>uf, in altered
- mood, for the noise of the conflict did not
- prevent the echoes of his own mad laughter from
- returning upon his ear---``who laughed there?---
- Ulrica, was it thou?---Speak, witch, and I forgive
- thee---for, only thou or the fiend of hell himself
- could have laughed at such a moment. Avaunt---
- avaunt!------''
-
- But it were impious to trace any farther the
- picture of the blasphemer and parricide's deathbed.
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
-
- Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more,
- Or, close the wall up with our English dead.
- --------------- And you, good yeomen,
- Whose limbs were made in England, show us here
- The mettle of your pasture---let us swear
- That you are worth your breeding.
- _King Henry V._
-
- Cedric, although not greatly confident in Ulrica's
- message, omitted not to communicate her
- promise to the Black Knight and Locksley. They
- were well pleased to find they had a friend within
- the place, who might, in the moment of need, be
- able to facilitate their entrance, and readily agreed
- with the Saxon that a storm, under whatever disadvantages,
- ought to be attempted, as the only means
- of liberating the prisoners now in the hands of the
- cruel Front-de-B<oe>uf.
-
- ``The royal blood of Alfred is endangered,'' said
- Cedric.
-
- ``The honour of a noble lady is in peril,'' said
- the Black Knight.
-
- ``And, by the Saint Christopher at my baldric,''
- said the good yeoman, ``were there no other cause
- than the safety of that poor faithful knave, Wamba,
- I would jeopard a joint ere a hair of his head were
- hurt.''
-
- ``And so would I,'' said the Friar; ``what, sirs!
- I trust well that a fool---I mean, d'ye see me, sirs,
- a fool that is free of his guild and master of his
- craft, and can give as much relish and flavour to a
- cup of wine as ever a flitch of bacon can---I say,
- brethren, such a fool shall never want a wise clerk
- to pray for or fight for him at a strait, while I can
- say a mass or flourish a partisan.''
-
- And with that he made his heavy halberd to play
- around his head as a shepherd boy flourishes his
- light crook.
-
- ``True, Holy Clerk,'' said the Black Knight,
- ``true as if Saint Dunstan himself had said it.---
- And now, good Locksley, were it not well that
- noble Cedric should assume the direction of this
- assault?''
-
- ``Not a jot I,'' returned Cedric; ``I have never
- been wont to study either how to take or how to
- hold out those abodes of tyrannic power, which the
- Normans have erected in this groaning land. I will
- fight among the foremost; but my honest neighbours
- well know I am not a trained soldier in the
- discipline of wars, or the attack of strongholds.''
-
- ``Since it stands thus with noble Cedric,'' said
- Locksley, ``I am most willing to take on me the
- direction of the archery; and ye shall hang me up
- on my own Trysting-tree, an the defenders be permitted
- to show themselves over the walls without
- being stuck with as many shafts as there are cloves
- in a gammon of bacon at Christmas.''
-
- ``Well said, stout yeoman,'' answered the Black
- Knight; ``and if I be thought worthy to have a
- charge in these matters, and can find among these
- brave men as many as are willing to follow a true
- English knight, for so I may surely call myself, I
- am ready, with such skill as my experience has
- taught me, to lead them to the attack of these walls.''
-
- The parts being thus distributed to the leaders,
- they commenced the first assault, of which the
- reader has already heard the issue.
-
- When the barbican was carried, the Sable Knight
- sent notice of the happy event to Locksley, requesting
- him at the same time, to keep such a strict
- observation on the castle as might prevent the defenders
- from combining their force for a sudden
- sally, and recovering the outwork which they had
- lost. This the knight was chiefly desirous of avoiding,
- conscious that the men whom he led, being
- hasty and untrained volunteers, imperfectly armed
- and unaccustomed to discipline, must, upon any sudden
- attack, fight at great disadvantage with the
- veteran soldiers of the Norman knights, who were
- well provided with arms both defensive and offensive;
- and who, to match the zeal and high spirit
- of the besiegers, had all the confidence which arises
- from perfect discipline and the habitual use of weapons.
-
- The knight employed the interval in causing to
- be constructed a sort of floating bridge, or long raft,
- by means of which he hoped to cross the moat in
- despite of the resistance of the enemy. This was
- a work of some time, which the leaders the less regretted,
- as it gave Ulrica leisure to execute her plan
- of diversion in their favour, whatever that might be.
-
- When the raft was completed, the Black Knight
- addressed the besiegers:---``It avails not waiting
- here longer, my friends; the sun is descending to
- the west---and I have that upon my hands which
- will not permit me to tarry with you another day.
- Besides, it will be a marvel if the horsemen come
- not upon us from York, unless we speedily accomplish
- our purpose. Wherefore, one of ye go to
- Locksley, and bid him commence a discharge of
- arrows on the opposite side of the castle, and move
- forward as if about to assault it; and you, true
- English hearts, stand by me, and be ready to thrust
- the raft endlong over the moat whenever the postern
- on our side is thrown open. Follow me boldly
- across, and aid me to burst yon sallyport in the
- main wall of the castle. As many of you as like
- not this service, or are but ill armed to meet it, do
- you man the top of the outwork, draw your bow-strings
- to your ears, and mind you quell with your
- shot whatever shall appear to man the rampart---
- Noble Cedric, wilt thou take the direction of those
- which remain?''
-
- ``Not so, by the soul of Hereward!'' said the
- Saxon; ``lead I cannot; but may posterity curse
- me in my grave, if I follow not with the foremost
- wherever thou shalt point the way---The quarrel is
- mine, and well it becomes me to be in the van of
- the battle.''
-
- ``Yet, bethink thee, noble Saxon,'' said the
- knight, ``thou hast neither hauberk, nor corslet, nor
- aught but that light helmet, target, and sword.''
-
- ``The better!'' answered Cedric; ``I shall be
- the lighter to climb these walls. And,---forgive the
- boast, Sir Knight,---thou shalt this day see the
- naked breast of a Saxon as boldly presented to the
- battle as ever ye beheld the steel corslet of a Norman.''
-
- ``In the name of God, then,'' said the knight,
- ``fling open the door, and launch the floating bridge.''
-
- The portal, which led from the inner-wall of the
- barbican to the moat, and which corresponded with
- a sallyport in the main wall of the castle, was now
- suddenly opened; the temporary bridge was then
- thrust forward, and soon flashed in the waters, extending
- its length between the castle and outwork,
- and forming a slippery and precarious passage for
- two men abreast to cross the moat. Well aware of
- the importance of taking the foe by surprise, the
- Black Knight, closely followed by Cedric, threw
- himself upon the bridge, and reached the opposite
- side. Here he began to thunder with his axe upon
- the gate of the castle, protected in part from the
- shot and stones cast by the defenders by the ruins
- of the former drawbridge, which the Templar had
- demolished in his retreat from the barbican, leaving
- the counterpoise still attached to the upper part
- of the portal. The followers of the knight had no
- such shelter; two were instantly shot with cross-bow
- bolts, and two more fell into the moat; the
- others retreated back into the barbican.
-
- The situation of Cedric and of the Black Knight
- was now truly dangerous, and would have been still
- more so, but for the constancy of the archers in the
- barbican, who ceased not to shower their arrows
- upon the battlements, distracting the attention of
- those by whom they were manned, and thus affording
- a respite to their two chiefs from the storm of
- missiles which must otherwise have overwhelmed
- them. But their situation was eminently perilous,
- and was becoming more so with every moment.
-
- ``Shame on ye all!'' cried De Bracy to the soldiers
- around him; ``do ye call yourselves cross-bowmen,
- and let these two dogs keep their station
- under the walls of the castle?---Heave over the
- coping stones from the battlements, an better may
- not be---Get pick-axe and levers, and down with
- that huge pinnacle!'' pointing to a heavy piece of
- stone carved-work that projected from the parapet.
-
- At this moment the besiegers caught sight of the
- red flag upon the angle of the tower which Ulrica
- had described to Cedric. The stout yeoman Locksley
- was the first who was aware of it, as he was
- hasting to the outwork, impatient to see the progress
- of the assault.
-
- ``Saint George!'' he cried, ``Merry Saint George
- for England!---To the charge, bold yeomen!---why
- leave ye the good knight and noble Cedric to storm
- the pass alone?---make in, mad priest, show thou
- canst fight for thy rosary,---make in, brave yeomen!
- ---the castle is ours, we have friends within---See
- yonder flag, it is the appointed signal---Torquilstone
- is ours!---Think of honour, think of spoil---One
- effort, and the place is ours!''
-
- With that he bent his good bow, and sent a shaft
- right through the breast of one of the men-at-arms,
- who, under De Bracy's direction, was loosening a
- fragment from one of the battlements to precipitate
- on the heads of Cedric and the Black Knight. A
- second soldier caught from the hands of the dying
- man the iron crow, with which he heaved at and
- had loosened the stone pinnacle, when, receiving an
- arrow through his head-piece, he dropped from the
- battlements into the moat a dead man. The men-at-arms
- were daunted, for no armour seemed proof
- against the shot of this tremendous archer.
-
- ``Do you give ground, base knaves!'' said De
- Bracy; ``_Mount joye Saint Dennis!_---Give me the
- lever!''
-
- And, snatching it up, he again assailed the
- loosened pinnacle, which was of weight enough, if
- thrown down, not only to have destroyed the remnant
- of the drawbridge, which sheltered the two
- foremost assailants, but also to have sunk the rude
- float of planks over which they had crossed. All
- saw the danger, and the boldest, even the stout
- Friar himself, avoided setting foot on the raft.
- Thrice did Locksley bend his shaft against De
- Bracy, and thrice did his arrow bound back from
- the knight's armour of proof.
-
- ``Curse on thy Spanish steel-coat!'' said Locksley,
- ``had English smith forged it, these arrows
- had gone through, an as if it had been silk or sendal.''
- He then began to call out, ``Comrades!
- friends! noble Cedric! bear back, and let the ruin
- fall.''
-
- His warning voice was unheard, for the din
- which the knight himself occasioned by his strokes
- upon the postern would have drowned twenty war-trumpets.
- The faithful Gurth indeed sprung forward
- on the planked bridge, to warn Cedric of his
- impending fate, or to share it with him. But his
- warning would have come too late; the massive
- pinnacle already tottered, and De Bracy, who still
- heaved at his task, would have accomplished it, had
- not the voice of the Templar sounded close in his
- ears:---
-
- ``All is lost, De Bracy, the castle burns.''
-
- ``Thou art mad to say so!'' replied the knight.
-
- ``It is all in a light flame on the western side.
- I have striven in vain to extinguish it.''
-
- With the stern coolness which formed the basis
- of his character, Brian de Bois-Guilbert communicated
- this hideous intelligence, which was not so
- calmly received by his astonished comrade.
-
- ``Saints of Paradise!'' said De Bracy; ``what is
- to be done? I vow to Saint Nicholas of Limoges
- a candlestick of pure gold---''
-
- ``Spare thy vow,'' said the Templar, ``and mark
- me. Lead thy men down, as if to a sally; throw
- the postern-gate open---There are but two men who
- occupy the float, fling them into the moat, and push
- across for the barbican. I will charge from the main
- gate, and attack the barbican on the outside; and
- if we can regain that post, be assured we shall defend
- ourselves until we are relieved, or at least till
- they grant us fair quarter.''
-
- ``It is well thought upon,'' said De Bracy; ``I
- will play my part---Templar, thou wilt not fail
- me?''
-
- ``Hand and glove, I will not!'' said Bois-Guilbert.
- ``But haste thee, in the name of God!''
-
- De Bracy hastily drew his men together, and
- rushed down to the postern-gate, which he caused
- instantly to be thrown open. But scarce was this
- done ere the portentous strength of the Black
- Knight forced his way inward in despite of De
- Bracy and his followers. Two of the foremost instantly
- fell, and the rest gave way notwithstanding
- all their leader's efforts to stop them.
-
- ``Dogs!'' said De Bracy, ``will ye let _two_ men
- win our only pass for safety?''
-
- ``He is the devil!'' said a veteran man-at-arms,
- bearing back from the blows of their sable antagonist.
-
- ``And if he be the devil,'' replied De Bracy,
- ``would you fly from him into the mouth of hell?
- ---the castle burns behind us, villains!---let despair
- give you courage, or let me forward! I will cope
- with this champion myself''
-
- And well and chivalrous did De Bracy that day
- maintain the fame he had acquired in the civil wars
- of that dreadful period. The vaulted passage to
- which the postern gave entrance, and in which these
- two redoubted champions were now fighting hand
- to hand, rung with the furious blows which they
- dealt each other, De Bracy with his sword, the
- Black Knight with his ponderous axe. At length
- the Norman received a blow, which, though its
- force was partly parried by his shield, for otherwise
- never more would De Bracy have again moved
- limb, descended yet with such violence on his crest,
- that he measured his length on the paved floor.
-
- ``Yield thee, De Bracy,'' said the Black Champion,
- stooping over him, and holding against the
- bars of his helmet the fatal poniard with which the
- knights dispatched their enemies, (and which was
- called the dagger of mercy,)---``yield thee, Maurice
- de Bracy, rescue or no rescue, or thou art but a
- dead man.''
-
- ``I will not yield,'' replied De Bracy faintly, ``to
- an unknown conqueror. Tell me thy name, or
- work thy pleasure on me---it shall never be said
- that Maurice de Bracy was prisoner to a nameless
- churl.''
-
- The Black Knight whispered something into the
- ear of the vanquished.
-
- ``I yield me to be true prisoner, rescue or no
- rescue,'' answered the Norman, exchanging his tone
- of stern and determined obstinacy for one of deep
- though sullen submission.
-
- ``Go to the barbican,'' said the victor, in a tone
- of authority, ``and there wait my further orders.''
-
- ``Yet first, let me say,'' said De Bracy, ``what
- it imports thee to know. Wilfred of Ivanhoe is
- wounded and a prisoner, and will perish in the
- burning castle without present help.''
-
- ``Wilfred of Ivanhoe!'' exclaimed the Black
- Knight---``prisoner, and perish!---The life of every
- man in the castle shall answer it if a hair of his
- head be singed---Show me his chamber!''
-
- ``Ascend yonder winding stair,'' said De Bracy;
- ``it leads to his apartment---Wilt thou not accept
- my guidance?'' he added, in a submissive voice.
-
- ``No. To the barbican, and there wait my orders.
- I trust thee not, De Bracy.''
-
- During this combat and the brief conversation
- which ensued, Cedric, at the head of a body of men,
- among whom the Friar was conspicuous, had pushed
- across the bridge as soon as they saw the postern
- open, and drove back the dispirited and despairing
- followers of De Bracy, of whom some asked
- quarter, some offered vain resistance, and the
- greater part fled towards the court-yard. De Bracy
- himself arose from the ground, and cast a sorrowful
- glance after his conqueror. ``He trusts me
- not!'' he repeated; ``but have I deserved his trust?''
- He then lifted his sword from the floor, took off his
- helmet in token of submission, and, going to the
- barbican, gave up his sword to Locksley, whom he
- met by the way.
-
- As the fire augmented, symptoms of it became
- soon apparent in the chamber, where Ivanhoe was
- watched and tended by the Jewess Rebecca. He
- had been awakened from his brief slumber by the
- noise of the battle; and his attendant, who had,
- at his anxious desire, again placed herself at the
- window to watch and report to him the fate of the
- attack, was for some time prevented from observing
- either, by the increase of the smouldering and
- stifling vapour. At length the volumes of smoke
- which rolled into the apartment---the cries for water,
- which were heard even above the din of the
- battle made them sensible of the progress of this
- new danger.
-
- ``The castle burns,'' said Rebecca; ``it burns!
- ---What can we do to save ourselves?''
-
- ``Fly, Rebecca, and save thine own life,'' said
- Ivanhoe, ``for no human aid can avail me.''
-
- ``I will not fly,'' answered Rebecca; ``we will
- be saved or perish together---And yet, great God!
- ---my father, my father---what will be his fate!''
-
- At this moment the door of the apartment flew
- open, and the Templar presented himself,---a ghastly
- figure, for his gilded armour was broken and
- bloody, and the plume was partly shorn away,
- partly burnt from his casque. ``I have found
- thee,'' said he to Rebecca; ``thou shalt prove I
- will keep my word to share weal and woe with
- thee---There is but one path to safety, I have cut
- my way through fifty dangers to point it to thee
- ---up, and instantly follow me!''*
-
- * The author has some idea that this passage is imitated from
- * the appearance of Philidaspes, before the divine Mandane, when
- * the city of Babylon is on fire, and he proposes to carry her from
- * the flames. But the theft, if there be one, would be rather too
- * severely punished by the penance of searching for the original
- * passage through the interminable volumes of the Grand Cyrus.
-
-
- ``Alone,'' answered Rebecca, ``I will not follow
- thee. If thou wert born of woman---if thou hast
- but a touch of human charity in thee---if thy heart
- be not hard as thy breastplate---save my aged father
- ---save this wounded knight!''
-
- ``A knight,'' answered the Templar, with his
- characteristic calmness, ``a knight, Rebecca, must
- encounter his fate, whether it meet him in the shape
- of sword or flame---and who recks how or where
- a Jew meets with his?''
-
- ``Savage warrior,'' said Rebecca, ``rather will I
- perish in the flames than accept safety from thee!''
-
- ``Thou shalt not choose, Rebecca---once didst
- thou foil me, but never mortal did so twice.''
-
- So saying, he seized on the terrified maiden,
- who filled the air with her shrieks, and bore her
- out of the room in his arms in spite of her cries,
- and without regarding the menaces and defiance
- which Ivanhoe thundered against him. ``Hound
- of the Temple---stain to thine Order---set free the
- damsel! Traitor of Bois-Guilbert, it is Ivanhoe
- commands thee!---Villain, I will have thy heart's
- blood!''
-
- ``I had not found thee, Wilfred,'' said the Black
- Knight, who at that instant entered the apartment,
- ``but for thy shouts.''
-
- ``If thou best true knight,'' said Wilfred, ``think
- not of me---pursue yon ravisher---save the Lady
- Rowena---look to the noble Cedric!''
-
- ``In their turn,'' answered he of the Fetterlock,
- ``but thine is first.''
-
- And seizing upon Ivanhoe, he bore him off with
- as much ease as the Templar had carried off Rebecca,
- rushed with him to the postern, and having
- there delivered his burden to the care of two yeomen,
- he again entered the castle to assist in the
- rescue of the other prisoners.
-
- One turret was now in bright flames, which
- flashed out furiously from window and shot-hole.
- But in other parts, the great thickness of the walls
- and the vaulted roofs of the apartments, resisted
- the progress of the flames, and there the rage of
- man still triumphed, as the scarce more dreadful
- element held mastery elsewhere; for the besiegers
- pursued the defenders of the castle from chamber
- to chamber, and satiated in their blood the vengeance
- which had long animated them against the
- soldiers of the tyrant Front-de-B<oe>uf. Most of
- the garrison resisted to the uttermost---few of them
- asked quarter---none received it. The air was filled
- with groans and clashing of arms---the floors
- were slippery with the blood of despairing and expiring
- wretches.
-
- Through this scene of confusion, Cedric rushed
- in quest of Rowena, while the faithful Gurth, following
- him closely through the _me<e^>l<e'>e_, neglected
- his own safety while he strove to avert the blows
- that were aimed at his master. The noble Saxon
- was so fortunate as to reach his ward's apartment
- just as she had abandoned all hope of safety, and,
- with a crucifix clasped in agony to her bosom, sat
- in expectation of instant death. He committed
- her to the charge of Gurth, to be conducted in
- safety to the barbican, the road to which was now
- cleared of the enemy, and not yet interrupted by
- the flames. This accomplished, the loyal Cedric
- hastened in quest of his friend Athelstane, determined,
- at every risk to himself, to save that last
- scion of Saxon royalty. But ere Cedric penetrated
- as far as the old hall in which he had himself been
- a prisoner, the inventive genius of Wamba had
- procured liberation for himself and his companion
- in adversity.
-
- When the noise of the conflict announced that
- it was at the hottest, the Jester began to shout,
- with the utmost power of his lungs, ``Saint George
- and the dragon!---Bonny Saint George for merry
- England!---The castle is won!'' And these sounds
- he rendered yet more fearful, by banging against
- each other two or three pieces of rusty armour
- which lay scattered around the hall.
-
- A guard, which had been stationed in the outer,
- or anteroom, and whose spirits were already in a
- state of alarm, took fright at Wamba's clamour,
- and, leaving the door open behind them, ran to tell
- the Templar that foemen had entered the old hall.
- Meantime the prisoners found no difficulty in making
- their escape into the anteroom, and from
- thence into the court of the castle, which was now
- the last scene of contest. Here sat the fierce Templar,
- mounted on horseback, surrounded by several
- of the garrison both on horse and foot, who had
- united their strength to that of this renowned leader,
- in order to secure the last chance of safety and
- retreat which remained to them. The drawbridge
- had been lowered by his orders, but the passage
- was beset; for the archers, who had hitherto only
- annoyed the castle on that side by their missiles,
- no sooner saw the flames breaking out, and the
- bridge lowered, than they thronged to the entrance,
- as well to prevent the escape of the garrison, as to
- secure their own share of booty ere the castle should
- be burnt down. On the other hand, a party of the
- besiegers who had entered by the postern were now
- issuing out into the court-yard, and attacking with
- fury the remnant of the defenders who were thus
- assaulted on both sides at once.
-
- Animated, however, by despair, and supported
- by the example of their indomitable leader, the remaining
- soldiers of the castle fought with the utmost
- valour; and, being well-armed, succeeded more
- than once in driving back the assailants, though
- much inferior in numbers. Rebecca, placed on
- horseback before one of the Templar's Saracen
- slaves, was in the midst of the little party; and
- Bois-Guilbert, notwithstanding the confusion of
- the bloody fray, showed every attention to her
- safety. Repeatedly he was by her side, and, neglecting
- his own defence, held before her the fence
- of his triangular steel-plated shield; and anon starting
- from his position by her, he cried his war-cry,
- dashed forward, struck to earth the most forward
- of the assailants, and was on the same instant once
- more at her bridle rein.
-
- Athelstane, who, as the reader knows, was slothful,
- but not cowardly, beheld the female form whom
- the Templar protected thus sedulously, and doubted
- not that it was Rowena whom the knight was
- carrying off, in despite of all resistance which could
- be offered.
-
- ``By the soul of Saint Edward,'' he said, ``I will
- rescue her from yonder over-proud knight, and he
- shall die by my hand!''
-
- ``Think what you do!'' cried Wamba; ``hasty
- hand catches frog for fish---by my bauble, yonder
- is none of my Lady Rowena---see but her long
- dark locks!---Nay, an ye will not know black from
- white, ye may be leader, but I will be no follower
- ---no bones of mine shall be broken unless I know
- for whom.---And you without armour too!---Bethink
- you, silk bonnet never kept out steel blade.
- ---Nay, then, if wilful will to water, wilful must
- drench.---_Deus vobiscum_, most doughty Athelstane!''
- ---he concluded, loosening the hold which he had
- hitherto kept upon the Saxon's tunic.
-
- To snatch a mace from the pavement, on which
- it lay beside one whose dying grasp had just relinquished
- it---to rush on the Templar's band, and
- to strike in quick succession to the right and left,
- levelling a warrior at each blow, was, for Athelstane's
- great strength, now animated with unusual
- fury, but the work of a single moment; he was
- soon within two yards of Bois-Guilbert, whom he
- defied in his loudest tone.
-
- ``Turn, false-hearted Templar! let go her
- whom thou art unworthy to touch---turn, limb of
- a hand of murdering and hypocritical robbers!''
-
- ``Dog!'' said the Templar, grinding his teeth,
- ``I will teach thee to blaspheme the holy Order of
- the Temple of Zion;'' and with these words, half-wheeling
- his steed, he made a demi-courbette towards
- the Saxon, and rising in the stirrups, so as to
- take full advantage of the descent of the horse, he
- discharged a fearful blow upon the head of Athelstane.
-
- Well said Wamba, that silken bonnet keeps out
- no steel blade. So trenchant was the Templar's
- weapon, that it shore asunder, as it had been a willow
- twig, the tough and plaited handle of the mace,
- which the ill-fated Saxon reared to parry the blow,
- and, descending on his head, levelled him with the
- earth.
-
- ``_Ha! Beau-seant!_'' exclaimed Bois-Guilbert,
- ``thus be it to the maligners of the Temple-knights!''
- Taking advantage of the dismay which
- was spread by the fall of Athelstane, and calling
- aloud, ``Those who would save themselves, follow
- me!'' he pushed across the drawbridge, dispersing
- the archers who would have intercepted them. He
- was followed by his Saracens, and some five or six
- men-at-arms, who had mounted their horses. The
- Templar's retreat was rendered perilous by the
- numbers of arrows shot off at him and his party;
- but this did not prevent him from galloping round
- to the barbican, of which, according to his previous
- plan, he supposed it possible De Bracy might have
- been in possession.
-
- ``De Bracy! De Bracy!'' he shouted, ``art thou
- there?''
-
- ``I am here,'' replied De Bracy, ``but I am a
- prisoner.''
-
- ``Can I rescue thee?'' cried Bois-Guilbert.
-
- ``No,'' replied De Bracy; ``I have rendered me,
- rescue or no rescue. I will be true prisoner. Save
- thyself---there are hawks abroad---put the seas betwixt
- you and England---I dare not say more.''
-
- ``Well,'' answered the Templar, ``an thou wilt
- tarry there, remember I have redeemed word and
- glove. Be the hawks where they will, methinks
- the walls of the Preceptory of Templestowe will be
- cover sufficient, and thither will I, like heron to
- her haunt.''
-
- Having thus spoken, he galloped off with his followers.
-
- Those of the castle who had not gotten to horse,
- still continued to fight desperately with the besiegers,
- after the departure of the Templar, but
- rather in despair of quarter than that they entertained
- any hope of escape. The fire was spreading
- rapidly through all parts of the castle, when Ulrica,
- who had first kindled it, appeared on a turret, in
- the guise of one of the ancient furies, yelling forth
- a war-song, such as was of yore raised on the field
- of battle by the scalds of the yet heathen Saxons.
- Her long dishevelled grey hair flew back from her
- uncovered head; the inebriating delight of gratified
- vengeance contended in her eyes with the fire
- of insanity; and she brandished the distaff which
- she held in her hand, as if she had been one of the
- Fatal Sisters, who spin and abridge the thread of
- human life. Tradition has preserved some wild
- strophes of the barbarous hymn which she chanted
- wildly amid that scene of fire and of slaughter:---
-
- 1.
-
- Whet the bright steel,
- Sons of the White Dragon!
- Kindle the torch,
- Daughter of Hengist!
- The steel glimmers not for the carving of the banquet,
- It is hard, broad, and sharply pointed;
- The torch goeth not to the bridal chamber,
- It steams and glitters blue with sulphur.
- Whet the steel, the raven croaks!
- Light the torch, Zernebock is yelling!
- Whet the steel, sons of the Dragon!
- Kindle the torch, daughter of Hengist!
-
- 2.
-
- The black cloud is low over the thane's castle
- The eagle screams--he rides on its bosom.
- Scream not, grey rider of the sable cloud,
- Thy banquet is prepared!
- The maidens of Valhalla look forth,
- The race of Hengist will send them guests.
- Shake your black tresses, maidens of Valhalla!
- And strike your loud timbrels for joy!
- Many a haughty step bends to your halls,
- Many a helmed head.
-
- 3.
-
- Dark sits the evening upon the thanes castle,
- The black clouds gather round;
- Soon shall they be red as the blood of the valiant!
- The destroyer of forests shall shake his red crest against them.
- He, the bright consumer of palaces,
- Broad waves he his blazing banner,
- Red, wide and dusky,
- Over the strife of the valiant:
- His joy is in the clashing swords and broken bucklers;
- He loves to lick the hissing blood as it bursts warm from the wound!
-
- 4.
-
- All must perish!
- The sword cleaveth the helmet;
- The strong armour is pierced by the lance;
- Fire devoureth the dwelling of princes,
- Engines break down the fences of the battle.
- All must perish!
- The race of Hengist is gone---
- The name of Horsa is no more!
- Shrink not then from your doom, sons of the sword!
- Let your blades drink blood like wine;
- Feast ye in the banquet of slaughter,
- By the light of the blazing halls!
- Strong be your swords while your blood is warm,
- And spare neither for pity nor fear,
- For vengeance hath but an hour;
- Strong hate itself shall expire
- I also must perish! *
-
- * Note F. Ulrica's Death Song
-
- The towering flames had now surmounted every
- obstruction, and rose to the evening skies one huge
- and burning beacon, seen far and wide through the
- adjacent country. Tower after tower crashed down,
- with blazing roof and rafter; and the combatants
- were driven from the court-yard. The vanquished,
- of whom very few remained, scattered and escaped
- into the neighbouring wood. The victors, assembling
- in large bands, gazed with wonder, not unmixed
- with fear, upon the flames, in which their own
- ranks and arms glanced dusky red. The maniac
- figure of the Saxon Ulrica was for a long time visible
- on the lofty stand she had chosen, tossing her
- arms abroad with wild exultation, as if she reined
- empress of the conflagration which she had raised.
- At length, with a terrific crash, the whole turret
- gave way, and she perished in the flames which had
- consumed her tyrant. An awful pause of horror
- silenced each murmur of the armed spectators, who,
- for the space of several minutes, stirred not a finger,
- save to sign the cross. The voice of Locksley
- was then heard, ``Shout, yeomen!---the den of
- tyrants is no more! Let each bring his spoil to our
- chosen place of rendezvous at the Trysting-tree in
- the Harthill-walk; for there at break of day will
- we make just partition among our own bands, together
- with our worthy allies in this great deed of
- vengeance.''
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
-
- Trust me each state must have its policies:
- Kingdoms have edicts, cities have their charters;
- Even the wild outlaw, in his forest-walk,
- Keeps yet some touch of civil discipline;
- For not since Adam wore his verdant apron,
- Hath man with man in social union dwelt,
- But laws were made to draw that union closer.
- _Old Play._
-
-
- The daylight had dawned upon the glades of
- the oak forest. The green boughs glittered with
- all their pearls of dew. The hind led her fawn
- from the covert of high fern to the more open walks
- of the greenwood, and no huntsman was there to
- watch or intercept the stately hart, as he paced at
- the head of the antler'd herd.
-
- The outlaws were all assembled around the
- Trysting-tree in the Harthill-walk, where they had
- spent the night in refreshing themselves after the
- fatigues of the siege, some with wine, some with
- slumber, many with hearing and recounting the
- events of the day, and computing the heaps of plunder
- which their success had placed at the disposal
- of their Chief.
-
- The spoils were indeed very large; for, notwithstanding
- that much was consumed, a great deal of
- plate, rich armour, and splendid clothing, had been
- secured by the exertions of the dauntless outlaws,
- who could be appalled by no danger when such
- rewards were in view. Yet so strict were the laws
- of their society, that no one ventured to appropriate
- any part of the booty, which was brought into
- one common mass, to be at the disposal of their
- leader.
-
- The place of rendezvous was an aged oak; not
- however the same to which Locksley had conducted
- Gurth and Wamba in the earlier part of the
- story, but one which was the centre of a silvan
- amphitheatre, within half a mile of the demolished
- castle of Torquilstone. Here Locksley assumed his
- seat---a throne of turf erected under the twisted
- branches of the huge oak, and the silvan followers
- were gathered around him. He assigned to the
- Black Knight a seat at his right hand, and to Cedric
- a place upon his left.
-
- ``Pardon my freedom, noble sirs,'' he said, ``but
- in these glades I am monarch---they are my kingdom;
- and these my wild subjects would reck but
- little of my power, were I, within my own dominions,
- to yield place to mortal man.---Now, sirs,
- who hath seen our chaplain? where is our curtal
- Friar? A mass amongst Christian men best begins
- a busy morning.''---No one had seen the Clerk of
- Copmanhurst. ``Over gods forbode!'' said the
- outlaw chief, ``I trust the jolly priest hath but
- abidden by the wine-pot a thought too late. Who
- saw him since the castle was ta'en?''
-
- ``I,'' quoth the Miller, ``marked him busy about
- the door of a cellar, swearing by each saint in the
- calendar he would taste the smack of Front-de-B<oe>uf's
- Gascoigne wine.''
-
- ``Now, the saints, as many as there be of them,''
- said the Captain, ``forefend, lest he has drunk too
- deep of the wine-butts, and perished by the fall of
- the castle!---Away, Miller!---take with you enow
- of men, seek the place where you last saw him---
- throw water from the moat on the scorching ruins
- ---I will have them removed stone by stone ere I
- lose my curtal Friar.''
-
- The numbers who hastened to execute this duty,
- considering that an interesting division of spoil was
- about to take place, showed how much the troop
- had at heart the safety of their spiritual father.
-
- ``Meanwhile, let us proceed,'' said Locksley;
- ``for when this bold deed shall be sounded abroad,
- the bands of De Bracy, of Malvoisin, and other
- allies of Front-de-B<oe>uf, will be in motion against
- us, and it were well for our safety that we retreat
- from the vicinity.---Noble Cedric,'' he said, turning
- to the Saxon, ``that spoil is divided into two portions;
- do thou make choice of that which best suits
- thee, to recompense thy people who were partakers
- with us in this adventure.''
-
- ``Good yeoman,'' said Cedric, ``my heart is
- oppressed with sadness. The noble Athelstane of
- Coningsburgh is no more---the last sprout of the
- sainted Confessor! Hopes have perished with him
- which can never return!---A sparkle hath been
- quenched by his blood, which no human breath can
- again rekindle! My people, save the few who are
- now with me, do but tarry my presence to transport
- his honoured remains to their last mansion.
- The Lady Rowena is desirous to return to Rotherwood,
- and must be escorted by a sufficient force. I
- should, therefore, ere now, have left this place; and
- I waited---not to share the booty, for, so help me
- God and Saint Withold! as neither I nor any of
- mine will touch the value of a liard,---I waited but
- to render my thanks to thee and to thy bold yeomen,
- for the life and honour ye have saved.''
-
- ``Nay, but,'' said the chief Outlaw, ``we did but
- half the work at most---take of the spoil what may
- reward your own neighbours and followers.''
-
- ``I am rich enough to reward them from mine
- own wealth,'' answered Cedric.
-
- ``And some,'' said Wamba, ``have been wise
- enough to reward themselves; they do not march
- off empty-handed altogether. We do not all wear
- motley.''
-
- ``They are welcome,'' said Locksley; ``our laws
- bind none but ourselves.''
-
- ``But, thou, my poor knave,'' said Cedric, turning
- about and embracing his Jester, ``how shall I
- reward thee, who feared not to give thy body to
- chains and death instead of mine!---All forsook
- me, when the poor fool was faithful!''
-
- A tear stood in the eye of the rough Thane as
- he spoke---a mark of feeling which even the death
- of Athelstane had not extracted; but there was
- something in the half-instinctive attachment of his
- clown, that waked his nature more keenly than even
- grief itself.
-
- ``Nay,'' said the Jester, extricating himself from
- master's caress, ``if you pay my service with
- the water of your eye, the Jester must weep for
- company, and then what becomes of his vocation?
- ---But, uncle, if you would indeed pleasure me, I
- pray you to pardon my playfellow Gurth, who stole
- a week from your service to bestow it on your son.''
-
- ``Pardon him!'' exclaimed Cedric; ``I will both
- pardon and reward him.---Kneel down, Gurth.''---
- The swineherd was in an instant at his master's
- feet---``=Theow= and =Esne=* art thou no longer,''
-
- * Thrall and bondsman.
-
- said Cedric touching him with a wand; ``=Folkfree=
- and =Sacless=* art thou in town and from
-
- * A lawful freeman.
-
- town, in the forest as in the field. A hide of land
- I give to thee in my steads of Walbrugham, from
- me and mine to thee and thine aye and for ever;
- and God's malison on his head who this gainsays!''
-
- No longer a serf, but a freeman and a landholder,
- Gurth sprung upon his feet, and twice bounded
- aloft to almost his own height from the ground.
-
- ``A smith and a file,'' he cried, ``to do away the
- collar from the neck of a freeman!---Noble master!
- doubled is my strength by your gift, and doubly
- will I fight for you!---There is a free spirit in my
- breast---I am a man changed to myself and all
- around.---Ha, Fangs!'' he continued,---for that
- faithful cur, seeing his master thus transported, began
- to jump upon him, to express his sympathy,---
- ``knowest thou thy master still?''
-
- ``Ay,'' said Wamba, ``Fangs and I still know
- thee, Gurth, though we must needs abide by the
- collar; it is only thou art likely to forget both us
- and thyself.''
-
- ``I shall forget myself indeed ere I forget thee,
- true comrade,'' said Gurth; ``and were freedom
- fit for thee, Wamba, the master would not let thee
- want it.''
-
- ``Nay,'' said Wamba, ``never think I envy thee,
- brother Gurth; the serf sits by the hall-fire when
- the freeman must forth to the field of battle---And
- what saith Oldhelm of Malmsbury---Better a fool
- at a feast than a wise man at a fray.''
-
- The tramp of horses was now heard, and the
- Lady Rowena appeared, surrounded by several riders,
- and a much stronger party of footmen, who
- joyfully shook their pikes and clashed their brown-bills
- for joy of her freedom. She herself, richly attired,
- and mounted on a dark chestnut palfrey, had
- recovered all the dignity of her manner, and only
- an unwonted degree of paleness showed the sufferings
- she had undergone. Her lovely brow, though
- sorrowful, bore on it a cast of reviving hope for
- the future, as well as of grateful thankfulness for
- the past deliverance---She knew that Ivanhoe was
- safe, and she knew that Athelstane was dead. The
- former assurance filled her with the most sincere
- delight; and if she did not absolutely rejoice at the
- latter, she might be pardoned for feeling the full
- advantage of being freed from further persecution
- on the only subject in which she had ever been contradicted
- by her guardian Cedric.
-
- As Rowena bent her steed towards Locksley's
- seat, that bold yeoman, with all his followers, rose
- to receive her, as if by a general instinct of courtesy.
- The blood rose to her cheeks, as, courteously
- waving her hand, and bending so low that her
- beautiful and loose tresses were for an instant mixed
- with the flowing mane of her palfrey, she expressed
- in few but apt words her obligations and
- her gratitude to Locksley and her other deliverers.
- ---``God bless you, brave men,'' she concluded,
- ``God and Our Lady bless you and requite you
- for gallantly perilling yourselves in the cause of the
- oppressed!---If any of you should hunger, remember
- Rowena has food---if you should thirst, she has
- many a butt of wine and brown ale---and if the
- Normans drive ye from these walks, Rowena has
- forests of her own, where her gallant deliverers
- may range at full freedom, and never ranger ask
- whose arrow hath struck down the deer.''
-
- ``Thanks, gentle lady,'' said Locksley; ``thanks
- from my company and myself. But, to have saved
- you requites itself. We who walk the greenwood
- do many a wild deed, and the Lady Rowena's deliverance
- may be received as an atonement.''
-
- Again bowing from her palfrey, Rowena turned
- to depart; but pausing a moment, while Cedric,
- who was to attend her, was also taking his leave,
- she found herself unexpectedly close by the prisoner
- De Bracy. He stood under a tree in deep
- meditation, his arms crossed upon his breast, and
- Rowena was in hopes she might pass him unobserved.
- He looked up, however, and, when aware
- of her presence, a deep flush of shame suffused his
- handsome countenance. He stood a moment most
- irresolute; then, stepping forward, took her palfrey
- by the rein, and bent his knee before her.
-
- ``Will the Lady Rowena deign to cast an eye
- ---on a captive knight---on a dishonoured soldier?''
-
- ``Sir Knight,'' answered Rowena, ``in enterprises
- such as yours, the real dishonour lies not in
- failure, but in success.''
-
- ``Conquest, lady, should soften the heart,'' answered
- De Bracy; ``let me but know that the
- Lady Rowena forgives the violence occasioned by
- an ill-fated passion, and she shall soon learn that
- De Bracy knows how to serve her in nobler ways.''
-
- ``I forgive you, Sir Knight,'' said Rowena, ``as
- a Christian.''
-
- ``That means,'' said Wamba, ``that she does not
- forgive him at all.''
-
- ``But I can never forgive the misery and desolation
- your madness has occasioned,'' continued
- Rowena.
-
- ``Unloose your hold on the lady's rein,'' said
- Cedric, coming up. ``By the bright sun above us,
- but it were shame, I would pin thee to the earth
- with my javelin---but be well assured, thou shalt
- smart, Maurice de Bracy, for thy share in this foul
- deed.''
-
- ``He threatens safely who threatens a prisoner,''
- said De Bracy; ``but when had a Saxon any touch
- of courtesy?''
-
- Then retiring two steps backward, he permitted
- the lady to move on.
-
- Cedric, ere they departed, expressed his peculiar
- gratitude to the Black Champion, and earnestly
- entreated him to accompany him to Rotherwood.
-
- ``I know,'' he said, ``that ye errant knights desire
- to carry your fortunes on the point of your
- lance, and reck not of land or goods; but war is a
- changeful mistress, and a home is sometimes desirable
- even to the champion whose trade is wandering.
- Thou hast earned one in the halls of Rotherwood,
- noble knight. Cedric has wealth enough to
- repair the injuries of fortune, and all he has is his
- deliverer's---Come, therefore, to Rotherwood, not
- as a guest, but as a son or brother.''
-
- ``Cedric has already made me rich,'' said the
- Knight,---``he has taught me the value of Saxon
- virtue. To Rotherwood will I come, brave Saxon,
- and that speedily; but, as now, pressing matters
- of moment detain me from your halls. Peradventure
- when I come hither, I will ask such a boon as
- will put even thy generosity to the test.''
-
- ``It is granted ere spoken out,'' said Cedric,
- striking his ready hand into the gauntleted palm
- of the Black Knight,---``it is granted already, were
- it to affect half my fortune.''
-
- ``Gage not thy promise so lightly,'' said the
- Knight of the Fetterlock; ``yet well I hope to
- gain the boon I shall ask. Meanwhile, adieu.''
-
- ``I have but to say,'' added the Saxon, ``that,
- during the funeral rites of the noble Athelstane, I
- shall be an inhabitant of the halls of his castle of
- Coninsburgh---They will be open to all who choose
- to partake of the funeral banqueting; and, I speak
- in name of the noble Edith, mother of the fallen
- prince, they will never be shut against him who
- laboured so bravely, though unsuccessfully, to save
- Athelstane from Norman chains and Norman steel.''
-
- ``Ay, ay,'' said Wamba, who had resumed his
- attendance on his master, ``rare feeding there will
- be---pity that the noble Athelstane cannot banquet
- at his own funeral.---But he,'' continued the Jester,
- lifting up his eyes gravely, ``is supping in Paradise,
- and doubtless does honour to the cheer.''
-
- ``Peace, and move on,'' said Cedric, his anger at
- this untimely jest being checked by the recollection
- of Wamba's recent services. Rowena waved
- a graceful adieu to him of the Fetterlock---the
- Saxon bade God speed him, and on they moved
- through a wide glade of the forest.
-
- They had scarce departed, ere a sudden procession
- moved from under the greenwood branches,
- swept slowly round the silvan amphitheatre, and
- took the same direction with Rowena and her followers.
- The priests of a neighbouring convent, in
- expectation of the ample donation, or _soul-scat_,
- which Cedric had propined, attended upon the car
- in which the body of Athelstane was laid, and sang
- hymns as it was sadly and slowly borne on the
- shoulders of his vassals to his castle of Coningsburgh,
- to be there deposited in the grave of Hengist,
- from whom the deceased derived his long descent.
- Many of his vassals had assembled at the
- news of his death, and followed the bier with all
- the external marks, at least, of dejection and sorrow.
- Again the outlaws arose, and paid the same
- rude and spontaneous homage to death, which they
- had so lately rendered to beauty---the slow chant
- and mournful step of the priests brought back to
- their remembrance such of their comrades as had
- fallen in the yesterday's array. But such recollections
- dwell not long with those who lead a life of
- danger and enterprise, and ere the sound of the
- death-hymn had died on the wind, the outlaws
- were again busied in the distribution of their spoil.
-
- ``Valiant knight,'' said Locksley to the Black
- Champion, ``without whose good heart and mighty
- arm our enterprise must altogether have failed, will
- it please you to take from that mass of spoil whatever
- may best serve to pleasure you, and to remind
- you of this my Trysting-tree?''
-
- ``I accept the offer,'' said the Knight, ``as frankly
- as it is given; and I ask permission to dispose
- of Sir Maurice de Bracy at my own pleasure.''
-
- ``He is thine already,'' said Locksley, ``and well
- for him! else the tyrant had graced the highest
- bough of this oak, with as many of his Free-Companions
- as we could gather, hanging thick as acorns
- around him.---But he is thy prisoner, and he is safe,
- though he had slain my father.''
-
- ``De Bracy,'' said the Knight, ``thou art free---
- depart. He whose prisoner thou art scorns to take
- mean revenge for what is past. But beware of the
- future, lest a worse thing befall thee.---Maurice de
- Bracy, I say =beware=!''
-
- De Bracy bowed low and in silence, and was
- about to withdraw, when the yeomen burst at once
- into a shout of execration and derision. The proud
- knight instantly stopped, turned back, folded his
- arms, drew up his form to its full height, and exclaimed,
- ``Peace, ye yelping curs! who open upon
- a cry which ye followed not when the stag was at
- bay---De Bracy scorns your censure as he would
- disdain your applause. To your brakes and caves,
- ye outlawed thieves! and be silent when aught
- knightly or noble is but spoken within a league of
- your fox-earths.''
-
- This ill-timed defiance might have procured for
- De Bracy a volley of arrows, but for the hasty and
- imperative interference of the outlaw Chief. Meanwhile
- the knight caught a horse by the rein, for
- several which had been taken in the stables of
- Front-de-B<oe>uf stood accoutred around, and were a
- valuable part of the booty. He threw himself upon
- the saddle, and galloped off through the wood.
-
- When the bustle occasioned by this incident was
- somewhat composed, the chief Outlaw took from
- his neck the rich horn and baldric which he had recently
- gained at the strife of archery near Ashby.
-
- ``Noble knight.'' he said to him of the Fetterlock,
- ``if you disdain not to grace by your acceptance
- a bugle which an English yeoman has once
- worn, this I will pray you to keep as a memorial of
- your gallant bearing---and if ye have aught to do,
- and, as happeneth oft to a gallant knight, ye chance
- to be hard bested in any forest between Trent and
- Tees, wind three mots* upon the horn thus, _Wa-sa-hoa!_
-
- * The notes upon the bugle were anciently called mots, and
- * are distinguished in the old treatises on hunting, not by musical
- * characters, but by written words.
-
- and it may well chance ye shall find helpers
- and rescue.''
-
- He then gave breath to the bugle, and winded
- once and again the call which be described, until the
- knight had caught the notes.
-
- ``Gramercy for the gift, bold yeoman,'' said the
- Knight; ``and better help than thine and thy rangers
- would I never seek, were it at my utmost need.''
- And then in his turn he winded the call till all the
- greenwood rang.
-
- ``Well blown and clearly,'' said the yeoman;
- ``beshrew me an thou knowest not as much of
- woodcraft as of war!---thou hast been a striker of
- deer in thy day, I warrant.---Comrades, mark these
- three mots---it is the call of the Knight of the Fetterlock;
- and he who hears it, and hastens not to
- serve him at his need, I will have him scourged out
- of our band with his own bowstring.''
-
- ``Long live our leader!'' shouted the yeomen,
- ``and long live the Black Knight of the Fetterlock!---
- May he soon use our service, to prove how
- readily it will be paid.''
-
- Locksley now proceeded to the distribution of
- the spoil, which he performed with the most laudable
- impartiality. A tenth part of the whole was
- set apart for the church, and for pious uses; a portion
- was next allotted to a sort of public treasury;
- a part was assigned to the widows and children of
- those who had fallen, or to be expended in masses
- for the souls of such as had left no surviving family.
- The rest was divided amongst the outlaws, according
- to their rank and merit, and the judgment of
- the Chief, on all such doubtful questions as occurred,
- was delivered with great shrewdness, and received
- with absolute submission. The Black Knight
- was not a little surprised to find that men, in a
- state so lawless, were nevertheless among themselves
- so regularly and equitably governed, and all
- that he observed added to his opinion of the justice
- and judgment of their leader.
-
- When each had taken his own proportion of the
- booty, and while the treasurer, accompanied by four
- tall yeomen, was transporting that belonging to the
- state to some place of concealment or of security,
- the portion devoted to the church still remained
- unappropriated.
-
- ``I would,'' said the leader, ``we could hear tidings
- of our joyous chaplain---he was never wont
- to be absent when meat was to be blessed, or spoil
- to be parted; and it is his duty to take care of these
- the tithes of our successful enterprise. It may be
- the office has helped to cover some of his canonical
- irregularities. Also, I have a holy brother of his
- a prisoner at no great distance, and I would fain
- have the Friar to help me to deal with him in due
- sort---I greatly misdoubt the safety of the bluff
- priest.''
-
- ``I were right sorry for that,'' said the Knight
- of the Fetterlock, ``for I stand indebted to him for
- the joyous hospitality of a merry night in his cell.
- Let us to the ruins of the castle; it may be we shall
- there learn some tidings of him.''
-
- While they thus spoke, a loud shout among the
- yeomen announced the arrival of him for whom they
- feared, as they learned from the stentorian voice of
- the Friar himself, long before they saw his burly
- person.
-
- ``Make room, my merry-men!'' he exclaimed;
- ``room for your godly father and his prisoner---
- Cry welcome once more.---I come, noble leader,
- like an eagle with my prey in my clutch.''---And
- making his way through the ring, amidst the laughter
- of all around, he appeared in majestic triumph,
- his huge partisan in one hand, and in the other a
- halter, one end of which was fastened to the neck
- of the unfortunate Isaac of York, who, bent down
- by sorrow and terror, was dragged on by the victorious
- priest, who shouted aloud, ``Where is
- Allan-a-Dale, to chronicle me in a ballad, or if it
- were but a lay?---By Saint Hermangild, the jingling
- crowder is ever out of the way where there is
- an apt theme for exalting valour!''
-
- ``Curtal Priest,'' said the Captain, ``thou hast
- been at a wet mass this morning, as early as it is.
- In the name of Saint Nicholas, whom hast thou got
- here?''
-
- ``A captive to my sword and to my lance, noble
- Captain,'' replied the Clerk of Copmanhurst; ``to
- my bow and to my halberd, I should rather say;
- and yet I have redeemed him by my divinity from
- a worse captivity. Speak, Jew---have I not ransomed
- thee from Sathanas?---have I not taught
- thee thy _credo_, thy _pater_, and thine _Ave Maria_?
- ---Did I not spend the whole night in drinking to
- thee, and in expounding of mysteries?''
-
- ``For the love of God!'' ejaculated the poor Jew,
- ``will no one take me out of the keeping of this
- mad---I mean this holy man?''
-
- ``How's this, Jew?'' said the Friar, with a menacing
- aspect; ``dost thou recant, Jew?---Bethink
- thee, if thou dost relapse into thine infidelity,
- though thou are not so tender as a suckling pig---
- I would I had one to break my fast upon---thou
- art not too tough to be roasted! Be conformable,
- Isaac, and repeat the words after me. _Ave Maria_!---''
-
- ``Nay, we will have no profanation, mad Priest,''
- said Locksley; ``let us rather hear where you found
- this prisoner of thine.''
-
- ``By Saint Dunstan,'' said the Friar, ``I found
- him where I sought for better ware! I did step into
- the cellarage to see what might be rescued there;
- for though a cup of burnt wine, with spice, be an
- evening's drought for an emperor, it were waste,
- methought, to let so much good liquor be mulled
- at once; and I had caught up one runlet of sack,
- and was coming to call more aid among these lazy
- knaves, who are ever to seek when a good deed is
- to be done, when I was avised of a strong door---
- Aha! thought I, here is the choicest juice of all in
- this secret crypt; and the knave butler, being disturbed
- in his vocation, hath left the key in the door
- ---In therefore I went, and found just nought besides
- a commodity of rusted chains and this dog of
- a Jew, who presently rendered himself my prisoner,
- rescue or no rescue. I did but refresh myself after
- the fatigue of the action, with the unbeliever, with
- one humming cup of sack, and was proceeding to
- lead forth my captive, when, crash after crash, as
- with wild thunder-dint and levin-fire, down toppled
- the masonry of an outer tower, (marry beshrew
- their hands that built it not the firmer!) and blocked
- up the passage. The roar of one falling tower
- followed another---I gave up thought of life; and
- deeming it a dishonour to one of my profession to
- pass out of this world in company with a Jew, I
- heaved up my halberd to beat his brains out; but
- I took pity on his grey hairs, and judged it better
- to lay down the partisan, and take up my spiritual
- weapon for his conversion. And truly, by the blessing
- of Saint Dunstan, the seed has been sown in
- good soil; only that, with speaking to him of mysteries
- through the whole night, and being in a
- manner fasting, (for the few droughts of sack which
- I sharpened my wits with were not worth marking,)
- my head is wellnigh dizzied, I trow.---But I was
- clean exhausted.---Gilbert and Wibbald know in
- what state they found me---quite and clean exhausted.''
-
- ``We can bear witness,'' said Gilbert; ``for
- when we had cleared away the ruin, and by Saint
- Dunstan's help lighted upon the dungeon stair, we
- found the runlet of sack half empty, the Jew half
- dead, and the Friar more than half---exhausted, as
- he calls it.''
-
- ``Ye be knaves! ye lie!'' retorted the offended
- Friar; ``it was you and your gormandizing companions
- that drank up the sack, and called it your
- morning draught---I am a pagan, an I kept it not
- for the Captain's own throat. But what recks it?
- The Jew is converted, and understands all I have
- told him, very nearly, if not altogether, as well as
- myself.''
-
- ``Jew,'' said the Captain, ``is this true? hast
- thou renounced thine unbelief?''
-
- ``May I so find mercy in your eyes,'' said the
- Jew, ``as I know not one word which the reverend
- prelate spake to me all this fearful night. Alas! I
- was so distraught with agony, and fear, and grief,
- that had our holy father Abraham come to preach
- to me, he had found but a deaf listener.''
-
- ``Thou liest, Jew, and thou knowest thou dost.''
- said the Friar; ``I will remind thee of but one
- word of our conference---thou didst promise to give
- all thy substance to our holy Order.''
-
- ``So help me the Promise, fair sirs,'' said Isaac,
- even more alarmed than before, ``as no such sounds
- ever crossed my lips! Alas! I am an aged beggar'd
- man---I fear me a childless---have ruth on
- me, and let me go!''
-
- ``Nay,'' said the Friar, ``if thou dost retract
- vows made in favour of holy Church, thou must do
- penance.''
-
- Accordingly, he raised his halberd, and would
- have laid the staff of it lustily on the Jew's shoulders,
- had not the Black Knight stopped the blow,
- and thereby transferred the Holy Clerk's resentment
- to himself.
-
- ``By Saint Thomas of Kent,'' said he, ``an I
- buckle to my gear, I will teach thee, sir lazy lover,
- to mell with thine own matters, maugre thine iron
- case there!''
-
- ``Nay, be not wroth with me,'' said the Knight;
- ``thou knowest I am thy sworn friend and comrade.''
-
- ``I know no such thing,'' answered the Friar;
- ``and defy thee for a meddling coxcomb!''
-
- ``Nay, but,'' said the Knight, who seemed to
- take a pleasure in provoking his quondam host,
- ``hast thou forgotten how, that for my sake (for I
- say nothing of the temptation of the flagon and
- the pasty) thou didst break thy vow of fast and
- vigil?''
-
- ``Truly, friend,'' said the Friar, clenching his
- huge fist, ``I will bestow a buffet on thee.''
-
- ``I accept of no such presents,'' said the Knight;
- ``I am content to take thy cuff* as a loan, but I will
-
- * Note G. Richard C<oe>ur-de-Lion.
-
- repay thee with usury as deep as ever thy prisoner
- there exacted in his traffic.''
-
- ``I will prove that presently,'' said the Friar.
-
- ``Hola!'' cried the Captain, ``what art thou
- after, mad Friar? brawling beneath our Trysting-tree?''
-
- ``No brawling,'' said the Knight, ``it is but a
- friendly interchange of courtesy.---Friar, strike an
- thou darest---I will stand thy blow, if thou wilt
- stand mine.''
-
- ``Thou hast the advantage with that iron pot
- on thy head,'' said the churchman; ``but have at
- thee---Down thou goest, an thou wert Goliath of
- Gath in his brazen helmet.''
-
- The Friar bared his brawny arm up to the elbow,
- and putting his full strength to the blow, gave the
- Knight a buffet that might have felled an ox. But
- his adversary stood firm as a rock. A loud shout
- was uttered by all the yeomen around; for the Clerk's
- cuff was proverbial amongst them, and there were
- few who, in jest or earnest, had not had the occasion
- to know its vigour.
-
- ``Now, Priest,'' said, the Knight, pulling off his
- gauntlet, ``if I had vantage on my head, I will have
- none on my hand---stand fast as a true man.''
-
- ``_Genam meam dedi vapulatori_---I have given my
- cheek to the smiter,'' said the Priest; ``an thou
- canst stir me from the spot, fellow, I will freely bestow
- on thee the Jew's ransom.''
-
- So spoke the burly Priest, assuming, on his part,
- high defiance. But who may resist his fate? The
- buffet of the Knight was given with such strength
- and good-will, that the Friar rolled head over heels
- upon the plain, to the great amazement of all the
- spectators. But he arose neither angry nor crestfallen.
-
- ``Brother,'' said he to the Knight, ``thou shouldst
- have used thy strength with more discretion. I had
- mumbled but a lame mass an thou hadst broken
- my jaw, for the piper plays ill that wants the nether
- chops. Nevertheless, there is my hand, in friendly
- witness, that I will exchange no more cuffs with
- thee, having been a loser by the barter. End now
- all unkindness. Let us put the Jew to ransom,
- since the leopard will not change his spots, and a
- Jew he will continue to be.''
-
- ``The Priest,'' said Clement, ``is not have so confident
- of the Jew's conversion, since he received
- that buffet on the ear.''
-
- ``Go to, knave, what pratest thou of conversions?
- ---what, is there no respect?---all masters and no
- men?---I tell thee, fellow, I was somewhat totty
- when I received the good knight's blow, or I had
- kept my ground under it. But an thou gibest more
- of it, thou shalt learn I can give as well as take.''
-
- ``Peace all!'' said the Captain. ``And thou, Jew,
- think of thy ransom; thou needest not to be told
- that thy race are held to be accursed in all Christian
- communities, and trust me that we cannot endure
- thy presence among us. Think, therefore,
- of an offer, while I examine a prisoner of another
- cast.''
-
- ``Were many of Front-de-B<oe>uf's men taken?''
- demanded the Black Knight.
-
- ``None of note enough to be put to ransom,'' answered
- the Captain; ``a set of hilding fellows there
- were, whom we dismissed to find them a new master---
- enough had been done for revenge and profit;
- the bunch of them were not worth a cardecu. The
- prisoner I speak of is better booty---a jolly monk
- riding to visit his leman, an I may judge by his
- horse-gear and wearing apparel.---Here cometh the
- worthy prelate, as pert as a pyet.'' And, between
- two yeomen, was brought before the silvan throne
- of the outlaw Chief, our old friend, Prior Aymer
- of Jorvaulx.
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
- ---Flower of warriors,
- How is't with Titus Lartius?
- _Marcius_. As with a man busied about decrees,
- Condemning some to death and some to exile,
- Ransoming him or pitying, threatening the other.
- _Coriolanus_
-
- The captive Abbot's features and manners exhibited
- a whimsical mixture of offended pride, and
- deranged foppery and bodily terror.
-
- ``Why, how now, my masters?'' said he, with
- a voice in which all three emotions were blended.
- ``What order is this among ye? Be ye Turks or
- Christians, that handle a churchman?---Know ye
- what it is, _manus imponere in servos Domini_? Ye
- have plundered my mails---torn my cope of curious
- cut lace, which might have served a cardinal!---
- Another in my place would have been at his _excommunicabo
- vos_; but I am placible, and if ye order
- forth my palfreys, release my brethren, and restore
- my mails, tell down with all speed an hundred
- crowns to be expended in masses at the high altar
- of Jorvaulx Abbey, and make your vow to eat no
- venison until next Pentecost, it may be you shall
- hear little more of this mad frolic.''
-
- ``Holy Father,'' said the chief Outlaw, ``it
- grieves me to think that you have met with such
- usage from any of my followers, as calls for your
- fatherly reprehension.''
-
- ``Usage!'' echoed the priest, encouraged by the
- mild tone of the silvan leader; ``it were usage fit
- for no hound of good race---much less for a Christian
- ---far less for a priest---and least of all for the
- Prior of the holy community of Jorvaulx. Here is
- a profane and drunken minstrel, called Allan-a-Dale
- ---_nebulo quidam_---who has menaced me with
- corporal punishment---nay, with death itself, an I
- pay not down four hundred crowns of ransom, to
- the boot of all the treasure he hath already robbed
- me of---gold chains and gymmal rings to an unknown
- value; besides what is broken and spoiled
- among their rude hands, such as my pouncer-box
- and silver crisping-tongs.''
-
- ``It is impossible that Allan-a-Dale can have thus
- treated a man of your reverend bearing,'' replied
- the Captain.
-
- ``It is true as the gospel of Saint Nicodemus,''
- said the Prior; ``he swore, with many a cruel north-country
- oath, that he would hang me up on the
- highest tree in the greenwood.''
-
- ``Did he so in very deed? Nay, then, reverend
- father, I think you had better comply with his demands
- ---for Allan-a-Dale is the very man to abide
- by his word when he has so pledged it.'' *
-
- * A commissary is said to have received similar consolation
- * from a certain Commander-in-chief, to whom he complained
- * that a general officer had used some such threat towards him as
- * that in the text.
-
- ``You do but jest with me,'' said the astounded
- Prior, with a forced laugh; ``and I love a good jest
- with all my heart. But, ha! ha! ha! when the
- mirth has lasted the livelong night, it is time to be
- grave in the morning.''
-
- ``And I am as grave as a father confessor,'' replied
- the Outlaw; ``you must pay a round ransom,
- Sir Prior, or your convent is likely to be called to
- a new election; for your place will know you no
- more.''
-
- ``Are ye Christians,'' said the Prior, ``and hold
- this language to a churchman?''
-
- ``Christians! ay, marry are we, and have divinity
- among us to boot,'' answered the Outlaw.
- ``Let our buxom chaplain stand forth, and expound
- to this reverend father the texts which concern this
- matter.''
-
- The Friar, half-drunk, half-sober, had huddled
- a friar's frock over his green cassock, and now summoning
- together whatever scraps of learning he had
- acquired by rote in former days, ``Holy father,'' said
- he, ``_Deus faciat salvam benignitatem vestram_---
- You are welcome to the greenwood.''
-
- ``What profane mummery is this?'' said the
- Prior. ``Friend, if thou best indeed of the church,
- it were a better deed to show me how I may escape
- from these men's hands, than to stand ducking and
- grinning here like a morris-dancer.''
-
- ``Truly, reverend father,'' said the Friar, ``I
- know but one mode in which thou mayst escape.
- This is Saint Andrew's day with us, we are taking
- our tithes.''
-
- ``But not of the church, then, I trust, my good
- brother?'' said the Prior.
-
- ``Of church and lay,'' said the Friar; ``and
- therefore, Sir Prior _facite vobis amicos de Mammone
- iniquitatis_---make yourselves friends of the
- Mammon of unrighteousness, for no other friendship
- is like to serve your turn.''
-
- ``I love a jolly woodsman at heart,'' said the
- Prior, softening his tone; ``come, ye must not deal
- too hard with me---I can well of woodcraft, and can
- wind a horn clear and lustily, and hollo till every
- oak rings again---Come, ye must not deal too hard
- with me.''
-
- ``Give him a horn,'' said the Outlaw; ``we will
- prove the skill he boasts of.''
-
- The Prior Aymer winded a blast accordingly.
- The Captain shook his head.
-
- ``Sir Prior,'' he said, ``thou blowest a merry
- note, but it may not ransom thee---we cannot afford,
- as the legend on a good knight's shield hath it, to
- set thee free for a blast. Moreover, I have found
- thee---thou art one of those, who, with new French
- graces and Tra-li-ras, disturb the ancient English
- bugle notes.---Prior, that last flourish on the recheat
- hath added fifty crowns to thy ransom, for
- corrupting the true old manly blasts of venerie.''
-
- ``Well, friend,'' said the Abbot, peevishly, ``thou
- art ill to please with thy woodcraft. I pray thee
- be more conformable in this matter of my ransom.
- At a word---since I must needs, for once, hold a
- candle to the devil---what ransom am I to pay for
- walking on Watling-street, without having fifty
- men at my back?''
-
- ``Were it not well,'' said the Lieutenant of the
- gang apart to the Captain, ``that the Prior should
- name the Jew's ransom, and the Jew name the
- Prior's?''
-
- ``Thou art a mad knave,'' said the Captain, ``but
- thy plan transcends!---Here, Jew, step forth---
- Look at that holy Father Aymer, Prior of the rich
- Abbey of Jorvaulx, and tell us at what ransom we
- should hold him?---Thou knowest the income of
- his convent, I warrant thee.''
-
- ``O, assuredly,'' said Isaac. ``I have trafficked
- with the good fathers, and bought wheat and barley,
- and fruits of the earth, and also much wool.
- O, it is a rich abbey-stede, and they do live upon
- the fat, and drink the sweet wines upon the lees,
- these good fathers of Jorvaulx. Ah, if an outcast
- like me had such a home to go to, and such incomings
- by the year and by the month, I would pay
- much gold and silver to redeem my captivity.''
-
- ``Hound of a Jew!'' exclaimed the Prior, ``no
- one knows better than thy own cursed self, that
- our holy house of God is indebted for the finishing
- of our chancel---''
-
- ``And for the storing of your cellars in the last
- season with the due allowance of Gascon wine,'' interrupted
- the Jew; ``but that---that is small matters.''
-
- ``Hear the infidel dog!'' said the churchman;
- he jangles as if our holy community did come under
- debts for the wines we have a license to drink,
- _propter necessitatem, et ad frigus depellendum_. The
- circumcised villain blasphemeth the holy church,
- and Christian men listen and rebuke him not!''
-
- ``All this helps nothing,'' said the leader.
- ---``Isaac, pronounce what be may pay, without flaying
- both hide and hair.''
-
- ``An six hundred crowns,'' said Isaac, ``the good
- Prior might well pay to your honoured valours,
- and never sit less soft in his stall.''
-
- ``Six hundred crowns,'' said the leader, gravely;
- ``I am contented---thou hast well spoken, Isaac---
- six hundred crowns.---It is a sentence, Sir Prior.''
-
- ``A sentence!---a sentence!'' exclaimed the band;
- ``Solomon had not done it better.''
-
- ``Thou hearest thy doom, Prior,'' said the leader.
-
- ``Ye are mad, my masters,'' said the Prior;
- ``where am I to find such a sum? If I sell the
- very pyx and candlesticks on the altar at Jorvaulx,
- I shall scarce raise the half; and it will be necessary
- for that purpose that I go to Jorvaulx myself;
- ye may retain as borrows* my two priests.''
-
- * Borghs, or borrows, signifies pledges. Hence our word to
- * borrow, because we pledge ourselves to restore what is lent.
-
-
- ``That will be but blind trust,'' said the Outlaw;
- ``we will retain thee, Prior, and send them to fetch
- thy ransom. Thou shalt not want a cup of wine
- and a collop of venison the while; and if thou lovest
- woodcraft, thou shalt see such as your north country
- never witnessed.''
-
- ``Or, if so please you,'' said Isaac, willing to
- curry favour with the outlaws, ``I can send to York
- for the six hundred crowns, out of certain monies
- in my hands, if so be that the most reverend Prior
- present will grant me a quittance.''
-
- ``He shall grant thee whatever thou dost list,
- Isaac,'' said the Captain; ``and thou shalt lay down
- the redemption money for Prior Aymer as well as
- for thyself.''
-
- ``For myself! ah, courageous sirs,'' said the Jew,
- ``I am a broken and impoverished man; a beggar's
- staff must be my portion through life, supposing
- I were to pay you fifty crowns.''
-
- ``The Prior shall judge of that matter,'' replied
- the Captain.---``How say you, Father Aymer?
- Can the Jew afford a good ransom?''
-
- ``Can he afford a ransom?'' answered the Prior
- ``Is he not Isaac of York, rich enough to redeem
- the captivity of the ten tribes of Israel, who were
- led into Assyrian bondage?---I have seen but little
- of him myself, but our cellarer and treasurer have
- dealt largely with him, and report says that his
- house at York is so full of gold and silver as is a
- shame in any Christian land. Marvel it is to all
- living Christian hearts that such gnawing adders
- should be suffered to eat into the bowels of the
- state, and even of the holy church herself, with
- foul usuries and extortions.''
-
- ``Hold, father,'' said the Jew, ``mitigate and
- assuage your choler. I pray of your reverence to
- remember that I force my monies upon no one.
- But when churchman and layman, prince and prior,
- knight and priest, come knocking to Isaac's door,
- they borrow not his shekels with these uncivil
- terms. It is then, Friend Isaac, will you pleasure
- us in this matter, and our day shall be truly kept,
- so God sa' me?---and Kind Isaac, if ever you served
- man, show yourself a friend in this need! And
- when the day comes, and I ask my own, then what
- hear I but Damned Jew, and The curse of Egypt on
- your tribe, and all that may stir up the rude and
- uncivil populace against poor strangers! ''
-
- ``Prior,'' said the Captain, ``Jew though be be,
- he hath in this spoken well. Do thou, therefore,
- name his ransom, as he named thine, without farther
- rude terms.''
-
- ``None but _latro famosus_---the interpretation
- whereof,'' said the Prior, ``will I give at some other
- time and tide---would place a Christian prelate and
- an unbaptized Jew upon the same bench. But since
- ye require me to put a price upon this caitiff, I tell
- you openly that ye will wrong yourselves if you
- take from him a penny under a thousand crowns.''
-
- ``A sentence!---a sentence!'' exclaimed the chief
- Outlaw.
-
- ``A sentence!---a sentence!'' shouted his assessors;
- ``the Christian has shown his good nurture,
- and dealt with us more generously than the Jew.''
-
- ``The God of my fathers help me!'' said the
- Jew; ``will ye bear to the ground an impoverished
- creature?---I am this day childless, and will ye
- deprive me of the means of livelihood?''
-
- ``Thou wilt have the less to provide for, Jew,
- if thou art childless,'' said Aymer.
-
- ``Alas! my lord,'' said Isaac, ``your law permits
- you not to know how the child of our bosom is entwined
- with the strings of our heart---O Rebecca!
- laughter of my beloved Rachel! were each leaf on
- that tree a zecchin, and each zecchin mine own, all
- that mass of wealth would I give to know whether
- thou art alive, and escaped the hands of the Nazarene!''
-
- ``Was not thy daughter dark-haired?'' said one
- of the outlaws; ``and wore she not a veil of twisted
- sendal, broidered with silver?''
-
- ``She did!---she did!'' said the old man, trembling
- with eagerness, as formerly with fear. ``The
- blessing of Jacob be upon thee! canst thou tell me
- aught of her safety?''
-
- ``It was she, then,'' said the yeoman, ``who was
- carried off by the proud Templar, when he broke
- through our ranks on yester-even. I had drawn
- my bow to send a shaft after him, but spared him
- even for the sake of the damsel, who I feared might
- take harm from the arrow.''
-
- ``Oh!'' answered the Jew, ``I would to God
- thou hadst shot, though the arrow had pierced her
- bosom!---Better the tomb of her fathers than the
- dishonourable couch of the licentious and savage
- Templar. Ichabod! Ichabod! the glory hath departed
- from my house!''
-
- ``Friends,'' said the Chief, looking round, ``the
- old man is but a Jew, natheless his grief touches
- me.---Deal uprightly with us, Isaac---will paying
- this ransom of a thousand crowns leave thee altogether
- penniless?''
-
- Isaac, recalled to think of his worldly goods, the
- love of which, by dint of inveterate habit, contended
- even with his parental affection, grew pale, stammered,
- and could not deny there might be some
- small surplus.
-
- ``Well---go to---what though there be,'' said the
- Outlaw, ``we will not reckon with thee too closely.
- Without treasure thou mayst as well hope to
- redeem thy child from the clutches of Sir Brian de
- Bois-Guilbert, as to shoot a stag-royal with a headless
- shaft.---We will take thee at the same ransom
- with Prior Aymer, or rather at one hundred crowns
- lower, which hundred crowns shall be mine own
- peculiar loss, and not light upon this worshipful
- community; and so we shall avoid the heinous offence
- of rating a Jew merchant as high as a Christian
- prelate, and thou wilt have six hundred crowns
- remaining to treat for thy daughter's ransom. Templars
- love the glitter of silver shekels as well as the
- sparkle of black eyes.---Hasten to make thy crowns
- chink in the ear of De Bois-Guilbert, ere worse
- comes of it. Thou wilt find him, as our scouts have
- brought notice, at the next Preceptory house of
- his Order.---Said I well, my merry mates?''
-
- The yeomen expressed their wonted acquiescence
- in their leader's opinion; and Isaac, relieved of
- one half of his apprehensions, by learning that his
- daughter lived, and might possibly be ransomed,
- threw himself at the feet of the generous Outlaw,
- and, rubbing his beard against his buskins, sought
- to kiss the hem of his green cassock. The Captain
- drew himself back, and extricated himself from
- the Jew's grasp, not without some marks of contempt.
-
- ``Nay, beshrew thee, man, up with thee! I am
- English born, and love no such Eastern prostrations
- ---Kneel to God, and not to a poor sinner, like me.''
-
- ``Ay, Jew,'' said Prior Aymer; ``kneel to God,
- as represented in the servant of his altar, and who
- knows, with thy sincere repentance and due gifts to
- the shrine of Saint Robert, what grace thou mayst
- acquire for thyself and thy daughter Rebecca? I
- grieve for the maiden, for she is of fair and comely
- countenance,---I beheld her in the lists of Ashby.
- Also Brian de Bois-Guilbert is one with whom I
- may do much---bethink thee how thou mayst deserve
- my good word with him.''
-
- ``Alas! alas!'' said the Jew, ``on every hand the
- spoilers arise against me---I am given as a prey unto
- the Assyrian, and a prey unto him of Egypt.''
-
- ``And what else should be the lot of thy accursed
- race?'' answered the Prior; ``for what saith
- holy writ, _verbum Dominii projecterunt, et sapientia
- est nulla in eis_---they have cast forth the word of
- the Lord, and there is no wisdom in them; _propterea
- dabo mulieres eorum exteris_---I will give their
- women to strangers, that is to the Templar, as in
- the present matter; _et thesauros eorum h<ae>redibus
- alienis_, and their treasures to others---as in the
- present case to these honest gentlemen.''
-
- Isaac groaned deeply, and began to wring his
- hands, and to relapse into his state of desolation
- and despair. But the leader of the yeomen led him
- aside.
-
- ``Advise thee well, Isaac,'' said Locksley, ``what
- thou wilt do in this matter; my counsel to thee is
- to make a friend of this churchman. He is vain,
- Isaac, and he is covetous; at least he needs money
- to supply his profusion. Thou canst easily gratify
- his greed; for think not that I am blinded by thy
- pretexts of poverty. I am intimately acquainted,
- Isaac, with the very iron chest in which thou dost
- keep thy money-bags---What! know I not the
- great stone beneath the apple-tree, that leads into
- the vaulted chamber under thy garden at York?''
- The Jew grew as pale as death---``But fear nothing
- from me,'' continued the yeoman, ``for we
- are of old acquainted. Dost thou not remember
- the sick yeoman whom thy fair daughter Rebecca
- redeemed from the gyves at York, and kept him in
- thy house till his health was restored, when thou
- didst dismiss him recovered, and with a piece of
- money?---Usurer as thou art, thou didst never place
- coin at better interest than that poor silver mark,
- for it has this day saved thee five hundred crowns.''
-
- ``And thou art he whom we called Diccon Bend-the-Bow?''
- said Isaac; ``I thought ever I knew
- the accent of thy voice.''
-
- ``I am Bend-the-Bow,'' said the Captain, ``and
- Locksley, and have a good name besides all these.''
-
- ``But thou art mistaken, good Bend-the-Bow,
- concerning that same vaulted apartment. So help
- me Heaven, as there is nought in it but some merchandises
- which I will gladly part with to you---
- one hundred yards of Lincoln green to make doublets
- to thy men, and a hundred staves of Spanish
- yew to make bows, and a hundred silken bowstrings,
- tough, round, and sound---these will I send
- thee for thy good-will, honest Diccon, an thou wilt
- keep silence about the vault, my good Diccon.''
-
- ``Silent as a dormouse,'' said the Outlaw; ``and
- never trust me but I am grieved for thy daughter.
- But I may not help it---The Templars lances are
- too strong for my archery in the open field---they
- would scatter us like dust. Had I but known it
- was Rebecca when she was borne off, something
- might have been done; but now thou must needs
- proceed by policy. Come, shall I treat for thee
- with the Prior?''
-
- ``In God's name, Diccon, an thou canst, aid me
- to recover the child of my bosom!''
-
- ``Do not thou interrupt me with thine ill-timed
- avarice,'' said the Outlaw, ``and I will deal with
- him in thy behalf.''
-
- He then turned from the Jew, who followed him,
- however, as closely as his shadow.
-
- ``Prior Aymer,'' said the Captain, ``come apart
- with me under this tree. Men say thou dost love
- wine, and a lady's smile, better than beseems thy
- Order, Sir Priest; but with that I have nought to
- do. I have heard, too, thou dost love a brace of good
- dogs and a fleet horse, and it may well be that,
- loving things which are costly to come by, thou
- hatest not a purse of gold. But I have never heard
- that thou didst love oppression or cruelty.---Now,
- here is Isaac willing to give thee the means of pleasure
- and pastime in a bag containing one hundred
- marks of silver, if thy intercession with thine ally
- the Templar shall avail to procure the freedom of
- his daughter.''
-
- ``In safety and honour, as when taken from me,''
- said the Jew, ``otherwise it is no bargain.''
-
- ``Peace, Isaac,'' said the Outlaw, ``or I give up
- thine interest.---What say you to this my purpose,
- Prior Aymer?''
-
- ``The matter,'' quoth the Prior, ``is of a mixed
- condition; for, if I do a good deal on the one hand,
- yet, on the other, it goeth to the vantage of a Jew,
- and in so much is against my conscience. Yet, if
- the Israelite will advantage the Church by giving
- me somewhat over to the building of our dortour,*
-
- * _Dortour_, or dormitory.
-
- I will take it on my conscience to aid him in the
- matter of his daughter.''
-
- ``For a score of marks to the dortour,'' said the
- Outlaw,---``Be still, I say, Isaac!---or for a brace
- of silver candlesticks to the altar, we will not stand
- with you.''
-
- ``Nay, but, good Diccon Bend-the-Bow''---said
- Isaac, endeavouring to interpose.
-
- ``Good Jew---good beast---good earthworm!''
- said the yeoman, losing patience; ``an thou dost go
- on to put thy filthy lucre in the balance with thy
- daughter's life and honour, by Heaven, I will strip
- thee of every maravedi thou hast in the world, before
- three days are out!''
-
- Isaac shrunk together, and was silent.
-
- ``And what pledge am I to have for all this?''
- said the Prior.
-
- ``When Isaac returns successful through your
- mediation,'' said the Outlaw, ``I swear by Saint
- Hubert, I will see that he pays thee the money in
- good silver, or I will reckon with him for it in such
- sort, he had better have paid twenty such sums.''
-
- ``Well then, Jew,'' said Aymer, ``since I must
- needs meddle in this matter, let me have the use
- of thy writing-tablets---though, hold---rather than
- use thy pen, I would fast for twenty-four hours,
- and where shall I find one?''
-
- ``If your holy scruples can dispense with using
- the Jew's tablets, for the pen I can find a remedy,''
- said the yeoman; and, bending his bow, he aimed
- his shaft at a wild-goose which was soaring over
- their heads, the advanced-guard of a phalanx of his
- tribe, which were winging their way to the distant
- and solitary fens of Holderness. The bird came
- fluttering down, transfixed with the arrow.
-
- ``There, Prior,'' said the Captain, ``are quills
- enow to supply all the monks of Jorvaulx for the
- next hundred years, an they take not to writing
- chronicles.''
-
- The Prior sat down, and at great leisure indited
- an epistle to Brian de Bois-Guilbert, and having
- carefully sealed up the tablets, delivered them to
- the Jew, saying, ``This will be thy safe-conduct
- to the Preceptory of Templestowe, and, as I think,
- is most likely to accomplish the delivery of thy
- daughter, if it be well backed with proffers of advantage
- and commodity at thine own hand; for,
- trust me well, the good Knight Bois-Guilbert is of
- their confraternity that do nought for nought.''
-
- ``Well, Prior,'' said the Outlaw, ``I will detain
- thee no longer here than to give the Jew a quittance
- for the six hundred crowns at which thy ransom
- is fixed---I accept of him for my pay-master;
- and if I hear that ye boggle at allowing him in his
- accompts the sum so paid by him, Saint Mary refuse
- me, an I burn not the abbey over thine head,
- though I hang ten years the sooner!''
-
- With a much worse grace than that wherewith
- he had penned the letter to Bois-Guilbert, the Prior
- wrote an acquittance, discharging Isaac of York of
- six hundred crowns, advanced to him in his need
- for acquittal of his ransom, and faithfully promising
- to hold true compt with him for that sum.
-
- ``And now,'' said Prior Aymer, ``I will pray
- you of restitution of my mules and palfreys, and
- the freedom of the reverend brethren attending upon
- me, and also of the gymmal rings, jewels, and
- fair vestures, of which I have been despoiled, having
- now satisfied you for my ransom as a true prisoner.''
-
- ``Touching your brethren, Sir Prior,'' said Locksley,
- ``they shall have present freedom, it were unjust
- to detain them; touching your horses and
- mules, they shall also be restored, with such spending-money
- as may enable you to reach York, for
- it were cruel to deprive you of the means of journeying.
- ---But as concerning rings, jewels, chains,
- and what else, you must understand that we are
- men of tender consciences, and will not yield to a
- venerable man like yourself, who should be dead
- to the vanities of this life, the strong temptation to
- break the rule of his foundation, by wearing rings,
- chains, or other vain gauds.''
-
- ``Think what you do, my masters,'' said the Prior,
- ``ere you put your hand on the Church's patrimony
- ---These things are _inter res sacras_, and I wot not
- what judgment might ensue were they to be handled
- by laical hands.''
-
- ``I will take care of that, reverend Prior,'' said
- the Hermit of Copmanhurst; ``for I will wear
- them myself.''
-
- ``Friend, or brother,'' said the Prior, in answer
- to this solution of his doubts, ``if thou hast really
- taken religious orders, I pray thee to look how
- thou wilt answer to thine official for the share thou
- hast taken in this day's work.''
-
- ``Friend Prior,'' returned the Hermit, ``you are
- to know that I belong to a little diocese, where I
- am my own diocesan, and care as little for the Bishop
- of York as I do for the Abbot of Jorvaulx,
- the Prior, and all the convent.''
-
- ``Thou art utterly irregular,'' said the Prior;
- ``one of those disorderly men, who, taking on them
- the sacred character without due cause, profane
- the holy rites, and endanger the souls of those who
- take counsel at their hands; _lapides pro pane condonantes
- iis_, giving them stones instead of bread
- as the Vulgate hath it.''
-
- ``Nay,'' said the Friar, ``an my brain-pan could
- have been broken by Latin, it had not held so long
- together.---I say, that easing a world of such misproud
- priests as thou art of their jewels and their
- gimcracks, is a lawful spoiling of the Egyptians.''
-
- ``Thou be'st a hedge-priest,''* said the Prior, in
-
- * Note H. Hedge-Priests.
-
- great wrath, ``_excommuicabo vos_.''
-
- ``Thou best thyself more like a thief and a heretic,''
- said the Friar, equally indignant; ``I will
- pouch up no such affront before my parishioners,
- as thou thinkest it not shame to put upon me, although
- I be a reverend brother to thee. _Ossa enis
- perfringam_, I will break your bones, as the Vulgate
- hath it.''
-
- ``Hola!'' cried the Captain, ``come the reverend
- brethren to such terms?---Keep thine assurance of
- peace, Friar.---Prior, an thou hast not made thy
- peace perfect with God, provoke the Friar no further.
- ---Hermit, let the reverend father depart in
- peace, as a ransomed man.''
-
- The yeomen separated the incensed priests, who
- continued to raise their voices, vituperating each
- other in bad Latin, which the Prior delivered the
- more fluently, and the Hermit with the greater
- vehemence. The Prior at length recollected himself
- sufficiently to be aware that he was compromising
- his dignity, by squabbling with such a hedge-priest
- as the Outlaw's chaplain, and being joined
- by his attendants, rode off with considerably less
- pomp, and in a much more apostolical condition,
- so far as worldly matters were concerned, than he
- had exhibited before this rencounter.
-
- It remained that the Jew should produce some
- security for the ransom which he was to pay on the
- Prior's account, as well as upon his own. He gave,
- accordingly, an order sealed with his signet, to a
- brother of his tribe at York, requiring him to pay
- to the bearer the sum of a thousand crowns, and to
- deliver certain merchandises specified in the note.
-
- ``My brother Sheva,'' he said, groaning deeply,
- ``hath the key of my warehouses.''
-
- ``And of the vaulted chamber,'' whispered Locksley.
-
- ``No, no---may Heaven forefend!'' said Isaac;
- ``evil is the hour that let any one whomsoever into
- that secret!''
-
- ``It is safe with me,'' said the Outlaw, ``so be
- that this thy scroll produce the sum therein nominated
- and set down.---But what now, Isaac?
- art dead? art stupefied? hath the payment of a
- thousand crowns put thy daughter's peril out of
- thy mind?''
-
- The Jew started to his feet---``No, Diccon, no
- ---I will presently set forth.---Farewell, thou whom
- I may not call good, and dare not and will not call
- evil.''
-
- Yet ere Isaac departed, the Outlaw Chief bestowed
- on him this parting advice:---``Be liberal
- of thine offers, Isaac, and spare not thy purse for
- thy daughter's safety. Credit me, that the gold
- thou shalt spare in her cause, will hereafter give
- thee as much agony as if it were poured molten
- down thy throat.''
-
- Isaac acquiesced with a deep groan, and set forth
- on his journey, accompanied by two tall foresters,
- who were to be his guides, and at the same time
- his guards, through the wood.
-
- The Black Knight, who had seen with no small
- interest these various proceedings, now took his
- leave of the Outlaw in turn; nor could he avoid
- expressing his surprise at having witnessed so much
- of civil policy amongst persons cast out from all the
- ordinary protection and influence of the laws.
-
- ``Good fruit, Sir Knight,'' said the yeoman,
- ``will sometimes grow on a sorry tree; and evil
- times are not always productive of evil alone and
- unmixed. Amongst those who are drawn into this
- lawless state, there are, doubtless, numbers who
- wish to exercise its license with some moderation,
- and some who regret, it may be, that they are
- obliged to follow such a trade at all.''
-
- ``And to one of those,'' said the Knight, ``I am
- now, I presume, speaking?''
-
- ``Sir Knight,'' said the Outlaw, ``we have each
- our secret. You are welcome to form your judgment
- of me, and I may use my conjectures touching
- you, though neither of our shafts may hit the
- mark they are shot at. But as I do not pray to be
- admitted into your mystery, be not offended that I
- preserve my own.''
-
- ``I crave pardon, brave Outlaw,'' said the Knight,
- ``your reproof is just. But it may be we shall meet
- hereafter with less of concealment on either side.---
- Meanwhile we part friends, do we not?''
-
- ``There is my hand upon it,'' said Locksley;
- ``and I will call it the hand of a true Englishman,
- though an outlaw for the present.''
-
- ``And there is mine in return,'' said the Knight,
- ``and I hold it honoured by being clasped with
- yours. For he that does good, having the unlimited
- power to do evil, deserves praise not only for
- the good which he performs, but for the evil which
- he forbears. Fare thee well, gallant Outlaw!''
-
- Thus parted that fair fellowship; and He of the
- Fetterlock, mounting upon his strong war-horse,
- rode off through the forest.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
- _King John_. I'll tell thee what, my friend,
- He is a very serpent in my way;
- And wheresoe'er this foot of mine doth tread,
- He lies before me.---Dost thou understand me?
- _King John._
-
- There was brave feasting in the Castle of York,
- to which Prince John had invited those nobles, prelates,
- and leaders, by whose assistance he hoped to
- carry through his ambitious projects upon his brother's
- throne. Waldemar Fitzurse, his able and
- politic agent, was at secret work among them, tempering
- all to that pitch of courage which was necessary
- in making an open declaration of their purpose.
- But their enterprise was delayed by the
- absence of more than one main limb of the confederacy.
- The stubborn and daring, though brutal
- courage of Front-de-B<oe>uf; the buoyant spirits and
- bold bearing of De Bracy; the sagacity, martial
- experience, and renowned valour of Brian de Bois-Guilbert,
- were important to the success of their
- conspiracy; and, while cursing in secret their unnecessary
- and unmeaning absence, neither John nor
- his adviser dared to proceed without them. Isaac
- the Jew also seemed to have vanished, and with
- him the hope of certain sums of money, making up
- the subsidy for which Prince John had contracted
- with that Israelite and his brethren. This deficiency
- was likely to prove perilous in an emergency
- so critical.
-
- It was on the morning after the fall of Torquilstone,
- that a confused report began to spread abroad
- in the city of York, that De Bracy and Bois-Guilbert,
- with their confederate Front-de-B<oe>uf, had
- been taken or slain. Waldemar brought the rumour
- to Prince John, announcing, that he feared
- its truth the more that they had set out with a
- small attendance, for the purpose of committing an
- assault on the Saxon Cedric and his attendants.
- At another time the Prince would have treated this
- deed of violence as a good jest; but now, that it
- interfered with and impeded his own plans, he exclaimed
- against the perpetrators, and spoke of the
- broken laws, and the infringement of public order
- and of private property, in a tone which might have
- become King Alfred.
-
- ``The unprincipled marauders,'' he said---``were
- I ever to become monarch of England, I would
- hang such transgressors over the drawbridges of
- their own castles.''
-
- ``But to become monarch of England,'' said his
- Ahithophel coolly, ``it is necessary not only that your
- Grace should endure the transgressions of these
- unprincipled marauders, but that you should afford
- them your protection, notwithstanding your laudable
- zeal for the laws they are in the habit of infringing.
- We shall be finely helped, if the churl
- Saxons should have realized your Grace's vision, of
- converting feudal drawbridges into gibbets; and
- yonder bold-spirited Cedric seemeth one to whom
- such an imagination might occur. Your Grace is
- well aware, it will be dangerous to stir without
- Front-de-B<oe>uf, De Bracy, and the Templar; and
- yet we have gone too far to recede with safety.''
-
- Prince John struck his forehead with impatience,
- and then began to stride up and down the apartent.
-
- ``The villains,'' he said, ``the base treacherous
- villains, to desert me at this pinch!''
-
- ``Nay, say rather the feather-pated giddy madmen,''
- said Waldemar, ``who must be toying with
- follies when such business was in hand.''
-
- ``What is to be done?'' said the Prince, stopping
- short before Waldemar.
-
- ``I know nothing which can be done,'' answered
- his counsellor, ``save that which I have already
- taken order for.---I came not to bewail this evil
- chance with your Grace, until I had done my best
- to remedy it.''
-
- ``Thou art ever my better angel, Waldemar,''
- said the Prince; ``and when I have such a chancellor
- to advise withal, the reign of John will be
- renowned in our annals.---What hast thou commanded?''
-
- ``I have ordered Louis Winkelbrand, De Bracy's
- lieutenant, to cause his trumpet sound to horse, and
- to display his banner, and to set presently forth towards
- the castle of Front-de-B<oe>uf, to do what yet
- may be done for the succour of our friends.''
-
- Prince John's face flushed with the pride of a
- spoilt child, who has undergone what it conceives
- to be an insult.
-
- ``By the face of God!'' he said, ``Waldemar
- Fitzurse, much hast thou taken upon thee! and
- over malapert thou wert to cause trumpet to blow,
- or banner to be raised, in a town where ourselves
- were in presence, without our express command.''
-
- ``I crave your Grace's pardon,'' said Fitzurse,
- internally cursing the idle vanity of his patron;
- ``but when time pressed, and even the loss of minutes
- might be fatal, I judged it best to take this
- much burden upon me, in a matter of such importance
- to your Grace's interest.''
-
- ``Thou art pardoned, Fitzurse,'' said the prince,
- gravely; ``thy purpose hath atoned for thy hasty
- rashness.---But whom have we here?---De Bracy
- himself, by the rood!---and in strange guise doth
- he come before us.''
-
- It was indeed De Bracy---``bloody with spurring,
- fiery red with speed.'' His armour bore all
- the marks of the late obstinate fray, being broken,
- defaced, and stained with blood in many places,
- and covered with clay and dust from the crest to
- the spur. Undoing his helmet, he placed it on the
- table, and stood a moment as if to collect himself
- before be told his news.
-
- ``De Bracy,'' said Prince John, ``what means
- this?---Speak, I charge thee!---Are the Saxons in
- rebellion?''
-
- ``Speak, De Bracy,'' said Fitzurse, almost in the
- same moment with his master, ``thou wert wont to
- be a man---Where is the Templar?---where Front-de-B<oe>uf?''
-
- ``The Templar is fled,'' said De Bracy; ``Front-de-B<oe>uf
- you will never see more. He has found
- a red grave among the blazing rafters of his own
- castle and I alone am escaped to tell you.''
-
- ``Cold news,'' said Waldemar, ``to us, though
- you speak of fire and conflagration.''
-
- ``The worst news is not yet said,'' answered De
- Bracy; and, coming up to Prince John, he uttered
- in a low and emphatic tone---``Richard is in
- England---I have seen and spoken with him.''
-
- Prince John turned pale, tottered, and caught
- at the back of an oaken bench to support himself
- ---much like to a man who receives an arrow in his
- bosom.
-
- ``Thou ravest, De Bracy,'' said Fitzurse, ``it
- cannot be.''
-
- ``It is as true as truth itself,'' said De Bracy;
- ``I was his prisoner, and spoke with him.''
-
- ``With Richard Plantagenet, sayest thou?'' continued
- Fitzurse.
-
- ``With Richard Plantagenet,'' replied De Bracy,
- with Richard C<oe>ur-de-Lion---with Richard
- of England.''
-
- ``And thou wert his prisoner?'' said Waldemar;
- ``he is then at the head of a power?''
-
- ``No---only a few outlawed yeomen were around
- him, and to these his person is unknown. I heard
- him say he was about to depart from them. He
- joined them only to assist at the storming of Torquilstone.''
-
- ``Ay,'' said Fitzurse, ``such is indeed the fashion
- of Richard---a true knight-errant he, and will wander
- in wild adventure, trusting the prowess of his
- single arm, like any Sir Guy or Sir Bevis, while
- the weighty affairs of his kingdom slumber, and his
- own safety is endangered.---What dost thou propose
- to do De Bracy?''
-
- ``I?---I offered Richard the service of my Free
- Lances, and he refused them---I will lead them to
- Hull, seize on shipping, and embark for Flanders;
- thanks to the bustling times, a man of action will
- always find employment. And thou, Waldemar,
- wilt thou take lance and shield, and lay down thy
- policies, and wend along with me, and share the
- fate which God sends us?''
-
- ``I am too old, Maurice, and I have a daughter,''
- answered Waldemar.
-
- ``Give her to me, Fitzurse, and I will maintain
- her as fits her rank, with the help of lance and stirrup,''
- said De Bracy.
-
- ``Not so,'' answered Fitzurse; ``I will take
- sanctuary in this church of Saint Peter---the
- Archbishop is my sworn brother.'
-
- During this discourse, Prince John had gradually
- awakened from the stupor into which he had
- been thrown by the unexpected intelligence, and
- had been attentive to the conversation which passed
- betwixt his followers. ``They fall off from me,''
- he said to himself, ``they hold no more by me than
- a withered leaf by the bough when a breeze blows
- on it?---Hell and fiends! can I shape no means for
- myself when I am deserted by these cravens?''---
- He paused, and there was an expression of diabolical
- passion in the constrained laugh with which
- he at length broke in on their conversation.
-
- ``Ha, ha, ha! my good lords, by the light of
- Our Lady's brow, I held ye sage men, bold men,
- ready-witted men; yet ye throw down wealth, honour,
- pleasure, all that our noble game promised
- you, at the moment it might be won by one bold
- cast!''
-
- ``I understand you not,'' said De Bracy. ``As
- soon as Richard's return is blown abroad, he will be
- at the head of an army, and all is then over with us.
- I would counsel you, my lord, either to fly to France
- or take the protection of the Queen Mother.''
-
- ``I seek no safety for myself,'' said Prince John,
- haughtily; ``that I could secure by a word spoken
- to my brother. But although you, De Bracy, and
- you, Waldemar Fitzurse, are so ready to abandon
- me, I should not greatly delight to see your heads
- blackening on Clifford's gate yonder. Thinkest
- thou, Waldemar, that the wily Archbishop will not
- suffer thee to be taken from the very horns of the
- altar, would it make his peace with King Richard?
- And forgettest thou, De Bracy, that Robert Estoteville
- lies betwixt thee and Hull with all his forces,
- and that the Earl of Essex is gathering his followers?
- If we had reason to fear these levies even
- before Richard's return, trowest thou there is any
- doubt now which party their leaders will take?
- Trust me, Estoteville alone has strength enough
- to drive all thy Free Lances into the Humber.---''
- Waldemar Fitzurse and De Bracy looked in each
- other's faces with blank dismay.---``There is but
- one road to safety,'' continued the Prince, and his
- brow grew black as midnight; ``this object of our
- terror journeys alone---He must be met withal.''
-
- ``Not by me,'' said De Bracy, hastily; ``I was
- his prisoner, and he took me to mercy. I will not
- harm a feather in his crest.''
-
- ``Who spoke of harming him?'' said Prince
- John, with a hardened laugh; ``the knave will
- say next that I meant he should slay him!---No---
- a prison were better; and whether in Britain or
- Austria, what matters it?---Things will be but as
- they were when we commenced our enterprise---
- It was founded on the hope that Richard would
- remain a captive in Germany---Our uncle Robert
- lived and died in the castle of Cardiffe.''
-
- ``Ay, but,'' said Waldemar, ``your sire Henry
- sate more firm in his seat than your Grace can. I
- say the best prison is that which is made by the
- sexton---no dungeon like a church-vault! I have
- said my say.''
-
- ``Prison or tomb,'' said De Bracy, ``I wash my
- hands of the whole matter.''
-
- ``Villain!'' said Prince John, ``thou wouldst not
- bewray our counsel?''
-
- ``Counsel was never bewrayed by me,'' said De
- Bracy, haughtily, ``nor must the name of villain
- be coupled with mine!''
-
- ``Peace, Sir Knight!'' said Waldemar; ``and
- you, good my lord, forgive the scruples of valiant
- De Bracy; I trust I shall soon remove them.''
-
- ``That passes your eloquence, Fitzurse,'' replied
- the Knight.
-
- ``Why, good Sir Maurice,'' rejoined the wily
- politician, ``start not aside like a scared steed, without,
- at least, considering the object of your terror.
- ---This Richard---but a day since, and it would
- have been thy dearest wish to have met him hand
- to hand in the ranks of battle---a hundred times I
- have heard thee wish it.''
-
- ``Ay,'' said De Bracy, ``but that was as thou
- sayest, hand to hand, and in the ranks of battle!
- Thou never heardest me breathe a thought of assaulting
- him alone, and in a forest.''
-
- ``Thou art no good knight if thou dost scruple
- at it,'' said Waldemar. ``Was it in battle that
- Lancelot de Lac and Sir Tristram won renown?
- or was it not by encountering gigantic knights under
- the shade of deep and unknown forests?''
-
- ``Ay, but I promise you,'' said De Bracy, ``that
- neither Tristram nor Lancelot would have been
- match, hand to hand, for Richard Plantagenet, and
- I think it was not their wont to take odds against
- a single man.''
-
- ``Thou art mad, De Bracy---what is it we propose
- to thee, a hired and retained captain of Free
- Companions, whose swords are purchased for Prince
- John's service? Thou art apprized of our enemy,
- and then thou scruplest, though thy patron's fortunes,
- those of thy comrades, thine own, and the
- life and honour of every one amongst us, be at
- stake!''
-
- ``I tell you,'' said De Bracy, sullenly, ``that he
- gave me my life. True, he sent me from his presence,
- and refused my homage---so far I owe him
- neither favour nor allegiance---but I will not lift
- hand against him.''
-
- ``It needs not---send Louis Winkelbrand and a
- score of thy lances.''
-
- ``Ye have sufficient ruffians of your own,'' said
- De Bracy; ``not one of mine shall budge on such
- an errand.''
-
- ``Art thou so obstinate, De Bracy?'' said Prince
- John; ``and wilt thou forsake me, after so many
- protestations of zeal for my service?''
-
- ``I mean it not,'' said De Bracy; ``I will abide
- by you in aught that becomes a knight, whether in
- the lists or in the camp; but this highway practice
- comes not within my vow.''
-
- ``Come hither, Waldemar,'' said Prince John.
- ``An unhappy prince am I. My father, King
- Henry, had faithful servants---He had but to say
- that he was plagued with a factious priest, and the
- blood of Thomas-a-Becket, saint though he was,
- stained the steps of his own altar.---Tracy, Morville,
- Brito * loyal and daring subjects, your names, your
-
- * Reginald Fitzurse, William de Tracy, Hugh de Morville,
- * and Richard Brito, were the gentlemen of Henry the Second's
- * household, who, instigated by some passionate expressions of
- * their sovereign, slew the celebrated Thomas-a-Becket.
-
- spirit, are extinct! and although Reginald Fitzurse
- hath left a son, he hath fallen off from his father's
- fidelity and courage.''
-
- ``He has fallen off from neither,'' said Waldemar
- Fitzurse; ``and since it may not better be, I
- will take on me the conduct of this perilous enterprise.
- Dearly, however, did my father purchase the
- praise of a zealous friend; and yet did his proof of
- loyalty to Henry fall far short of what I am about
- to afford; for rather would I assail a whole calendar
- of saints, than put spear in rest against C<oe>ur-de-Lion.
- ---De Bracy, to thee I must trust to keep
- up the spirits of the doubtful, and to guard Prince
- John's person. If you receive such news as I trust
- to send you, our enterprise will no longer wear a
- doubtful aspect.---Page,'' he said, ``hie to my lodgings,
- and tell my armourer to be there in readiness;
- and bid Stephen Wetheral, Broad Thoresby, and
- the Three Spears of Spyinghow, come to me instantly;
- and let the scout-master, Hugh Bardon,
- attend me also.---Adieu, my Prince, till better
- times.'' Thus speaking, he left the apartment.
- ``He goes to make my brother prisoner,'' said
- Prince John to De Bracy, ``with as little touch of
- compunction, as if it but concerned the liberty of a
- Saxon franklin. I trust he will observe our orders,
- and use our dear Richard's person with all due
- respect.''
-
- De Bracy only answered by a smile.
-
- ``By the light of Our Lady's brow,'' said Prince
- John, ``our orders to him were most precise---
- though it may be you heard them not, as we stood
- together in the oriel window---Most clear and positive
- was our charge that Richard's safety should
- be cared for, and woe to Waldemar's head if he
- transgress it!''
-
- ``I had better pass to his lodgings,'' said De
- Bracy, ``and make him fully aware of your Grace's
- pleasure; for, as it quite escaped my ear, it may
- not perchance have reached that of Waldemar.''
-
- ``Nay, nay,'' said Prince John, impatiently, ``I
- promise thee he heard me; and, besides, I have
- farther occupation for thee. Maurice, come hither;
- let me lean on thy shoulder.''
-
- They walked a turn through the hall in this familiar
- posture, and Prince John, with an air of
- the most confidential intimacy, proceeded to say,
- ``What thinkest thou of this Waldemar Fitzurse,
- my De Bracy?---He trusts to be our Chancellor.
- Surely we will pause ere we give an office so high
- to one who shows evidently how little he reverences
- our blood, by his so readily undertaking this enterprise
- against Richard. Thou dost think, I warrant,
- that thou hast lost somewhat of our regard, by thy
- boldly declining this unpleasing task---But no,
- Maurice! I rather honour thee for thy virtuous
- constancy. There are things most necessary to be
- done, the perpetrator of which we neither love nor
- honour; and there may be refusals to serve us,
- which shall rather exalt in our estimation those
- who deny our request. The arrest of my unfortunate
- brother forms no such good title to the high
- office of Chancellor, as thy chivalrous and courageous
- denial establishes in thee to the truncheon of
- High Marshal. Think of this, De Bracy, and begone
- to thy charge.''
-
- ``Fickle tyrant!'' muttered De Bracy, as he left
- the presence of the Prince; ``evil luck have they
- who trust thee. Thy Chancellor, indeed!---He
- who hath the keeping of thy conscience shall have
- an easy charge, I trow. But High Marshal of
- England! that,'' he said, extending his arm, as if
- to grasp the baton of office, and assuming a loftier
- stride along the antechamber, ``that is indeed a
- prize worth playing for!''
-
- De Bracy had no sooner left the apartment than
- Prince John summoned an attendant.
-
- ``Bid Hugh Bardon, our scout-master, come
- hither, as soon as he shall have spoken with Waldemar
- Fitzurse.''
-
- The scout-master arrived after a brief delay,
- during which John traversed the apartment with,
- unequal and disordered steps.
-
- ``Bardon,'' said he, ``what did Waldemar desire
- of thee?''
-
- ``Two resolute men, well acquainted with these
- northern wilds, and skilful in tracking the tread of
- man and horse.''
-
- ``And thou hast fitted him?''
-
- ``Let your grace never trust me else,'' answered
- the master of the spies. ``One is from Hexamshire;
- he is wont to trace the Tynedale and Teviotdale
- thieves, as a bloodhound follows the slot of a
- hurt deer. The other is Yorkshire bred, and has
- twanged his bowstring right oft in merry Sherwood;
- he knows each glade and dingle, copse and
- high-wood, betwixt this and Richmond.''
-
- ``'Tis well,'' said the Prince.---``Goes Waldemar
- forth with them?''
-
- ``Instantly,'' said Bardon.
-
- ``With what attendance?'' asked John, carelessly.
-
- ``Broad Thoresby goes with him, and Wetheral,
- whom they call, for his cruelty, Stephen Steel-heart;
- and three northern men-at-arms that belonged to
- Ralph Middleton's gang---they are called the Spears
- of Spyinghow.''
-
- ``'Tis well,'' said Prince John; then added, after
- a moment's pause, ``Bardon, it imports our service
- that thou keep a strict watch on Maurice De Bracy
- ---so that he shall not observe it, however---And
- let us know of his motions from time to time---
- with whom he converses, what he proposeth. Fail
- not in this, as thou wilt be answerable.''
-
- Hugh Bardon bowed, and retired.
-
- ``If Maurice betrays me,'' said Prince John---
- ``if he betrays me, as his bearing leads me to fear,
- I will have his head, were Richard thundering at
- the gates of York.''
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
-
- Arouse the tiger of Hyrcanian deserts,
- Strive with the half-starved lion for his prey;
- Lesser the risk, than rouse the slumbering fire
- Of wild Fanaticism.
- _Anonymus_.
-
-
- Our tale now returns to Isaac of York.---Mounted
- upon a mule, the gift of the Outlaw, with two
- tall yeomen to act as his guard and guides, the Jew
- had set out for the Preceptory of Templestowe, for
- the purpose of negotiating his daughter's redemption.
- The Preceptory was but a day's journey from
- the demolished castle of Torquilstone, and the Jew
- had hoped to reach it before nightfall; accordingly,
- having dismissed his guides at the verge of the forest,
- and rewarded them with a piece of silver, he
- began to press on with such speed as his weariness
- permitted him to exert. But his strength failed
- him totally ere he had reached within four miles
- of the Temple-Court; racking pains shot along his
- back and through his limbs, and the excessive anguish
- which he felt at heart being now augmented
- by bodily suffering, he was rendered altogether incapable
- of proceeding farther than a small market-town,
- were dwelt a Jewish Rabbi of his tribe,
- eminent in the medical profession, and to whom
- Isaac was well known. Nathan Ben Israel received
- his suffering countryman with that kindness which
- the law prescribed, and which the Jews practised
- to each other. He insisted on his betaking himself
- to repose, and used such remedies as were then in
- most repute to check the progress of the fever,
- which terror, fatigue, ill usage, and sorrow, had
- brought upon the poor old Jew.
-
- On the morrow, when Isaac proposed to arise and
- pursue his journey, Nathan remonstrated against
- his purpose, both as his host and as his physician.
- It might cost him, he said, his life. But Isaac replied,
- that more than life and death depended upon
- his going that morning to Templestowe.
-
- ``To Templestowe!'' said his host with surprise
- again felt his pulse, and then muttered to himself,
- ``His fever is abated, yet seems his mind somewhat
- alienated and disturbed.''
-
- ``And why not to Templestowe?'' answered his
- patient. ``I grant thee, Nathan, that it is a dwelling
- of those to whom the despised Children of the
- Promise are a stumbling-block and an abomination;
- yet thou knowest that pressing affairs of traffic
- sometimes carry us among these bloodthirsty Nazarene
- soldiers, and that we visit the Preceptories
- of the Templars, as well as the Commanderies of
- the Knights Hospitallers, as they are called.'' *
-
- * The establishments of the Knight Templars were called
- * Preceptories, and the title of those who presided in the Order
- * was Preceptor; as the principal Knights of Saint John were
- * termed Commanders, and their houses Commanderies. But
- * these terms were sometimes, it would seem, used indiscriminately.
-
-
- ``I know it well,'' said Nathan; ``but wottest
- thou that Lucas de Beaumanoir, the chief of their
- Order, and whom they term Grand Master, is now
- himself at Templestowe?''
-
- ``I know it not,'' said Isaac; ``our last letters
- from our brethren at Paris advised us that he was
- at that city, beseeching Philip for aid against the
- Sultan Saladine.''
-
- ``He hath since come to England, unexpected
- by his brethren,'' said Ben Israel; ``and he cometh
- among them with a strong and outstretched arm to
- correct and to punish. His countenance is kindled
- in anger against those who have departed from the
- vow which they have made, and great is the fear
- of those sons of Belial. Thou must have heard of
- his name?''
-
- ``It is well known unto me,'' said Isaac; ``the
- Gentiles deliver this Lucas Beaumanoir as a man
- zealous to slaying for every point of the Nazarene
- law; and our brethren have termed him a fierce
- destroyer of the Saracens, and a cruel tyrant to the
- Children of the Promise.''
-
- ``And truly have they termed him,'' said Nathan
- the physician. ``Other Templars may be
- moved from the purpose of their heart by pleasure,
- or bribed by promise of gold and silver; but Beaumanoir
- is of a different stamp---hating sensuality,
- despising treasure, and pressing forward to that
- which they call the crown of martyrdom---The
- God of Jacob speedily send it unto him, and unto
- them all! Specially hath this proud man extended
- his glove over the children of Judah, as holy David
- over Edom, holding the murder of a Jew to be all
- offering of as sweet savour as the death of a Saracen.
- Impious and false things has he said even of
- the virtues of our medicines, as if they were the
- devices of Satan---The Lord rebuke him!''
-
- ``Nevertheless,'' said Isaac, ``I must present
- myself at Templestowe, though he hath made his
- face like unto a fiery furnace seven times heated.''
-
- He then explained to Nathan the pressing cause
- of his journey. The Rabbi listened with interest,
- and testified his sympathy after the fashion of his
- people, rending his clothes, and saying, ``Ah, my
- daughter!---ah, my daughter!---Alas! for the beauty
- of Zion!---Alas! for the captivity of Israel!''
-
- ``Thou seest,'' said Isaac, ``how it stands with
- me, and that I may not tarry. Peradventure, the
- presence of this Lucas Beaumanoir, being the chief
- man over them, may turn Brian de Bois-Guilbert
- from the ill which he doth meditate, and that he
- may deliver to me my beloved daughter Rebecca.''
-
- ``Go thou,'' said Nathan Ben Israel, ``and be
- wise, for wisdom availed Daniel in the den of lions
- into which he was cast; and may it go well with
- thee, even as thine heart wisheth. Yet, if thou canst,
- keep thee from the presence of the Grand Master,
- for to do foul scorn to our people is his morning
- and evening delight. It may be if thou couldst
- speak with Bois-Guilbert in private, thou shalt the
- better prevail with him; for men say that these
- accursed Nazarenes are not of one mind in the Preceptory---
- May their counsels be confounded and
- brought to shame! But do thou, brother, return
- to me as if it were to the house of thy father, and
- bring me word how it has sped with thee; and well
- do I hope thou wilt bring with thee Rebecca, even
- the scholar of the wise Miriam, whose cures the
- Gentiles slandered as if they had been wrought by
- necromancy.''
-
- Isaac accordingly bade his friend farewell, and
- about an hour's riding brought him before the Preceptory
- of Templestowe.
-
- This establishment of the Templars was seated
- amidst fair meadows and pastures, which the devotion
- of the former Preceptor had bestowed upon
- their Order. It was strong and well fortified, a
- point never neglected by these knights, and which
- the disordered state of England rendered peculiarly
- necessary. Two halberdiers, clad in black, guarded
- the drawbridge, and others, in the same sad livery,
- glided to and fro upon the walls with a funereal
- pace, resembling spectres more than soldiers. The
- inferior officers of the Order were thus dressed, ever
- since their use of white garments, similar to those
- of the knights and esquires, had given rise to a
- combination of certain false brethren in the mountains
- of Palestine, terming themselves Templars,
- and bringing great dishonour on the Order. A
- knight was now and then seen to cross the court in
- his long white cloak, his head depressed on his
- breast, and his arms folded. They passed each
- other, if they chanced to meet, with a slow, solemn,
- and mute greeting; for such was the rule of their
- Order, quoting thereupon the holy texts, ``In many
- words thou shalt not avoid sin,'' and ``Life and
- death are in the power of the tongue.'' In a word,
- the stern ascetic rigour of the Temple discipline,
- which had been so long exchanged for prodigal and
- licentious indulgence, seemed at once to have revived
- at Templestowe under the severe eye of Lucas
- Beaumanoir.
-
- Isaac paused at the gate, to consider how he
- might seek entrance in the manner most likely to
- bespeak favour; for he was well aware, that to his
- unhappy race the reviving fanaticism of the Order
- was not less dangerous than their unprincipled licentiousness;
- and that his religion would be the
- object of hate and persecution in the one case, as
- his wealth would have exposed him in the other to
- the extortions of unrelenting oppression.
-
- Meantime Lucas Beaumanoir walked in a small
- garden belonging to the Preceptory, included within
- the precincts of its exterior fortification, and held
- sad and confidential communication with a brother
- of his Order, who had come in his company from
- Palestine.
-
- The Grand Master was a man advanced in age,
- as was testified by his long grey beard, and the
- shaggy grey eyebrows overhanging eyes, of which,
- however, years had been unable to quench the fire.
- A formidable warrior, his thin and severe features
- retained the soldier's fierceness of expression; an
- ascetic bigot, they were no less marked by the emaciation
- of abstinence, and the spiritual pride of the
- self-satisfied devotee. Yet with these severer traits
- of physiognomy, there was mixed somewhat striking
- and noble, arising, doubtless, from the great
- part which his high office called upon him to act
- among monarchs and princes, and from the habitual
- exercise of supreme authority over the valiant and
- high-born knights, who were united by the rules of
- the Order. His stature was tall, and his gait, undepressed
- by age and toil, was erect and stately.
- His white mantle was shaped with severe regularity,
- according to the rule of Saint Bernard himself,
- being composed of what was then called Burrel
- cloth, exactly fitted to the size of the wearer, and
- bearing on the left shoulder the octangular cross
- peculiar to the Order, formed of red cloth. No vair
- or ermine decked this garment; but in respect of
- his age, the Grand Master, as permitted by the
- rules, wore his doublet lined and trimmed with the
- softest lambskin, dressed with the wool outwards,
- which was the nearest approach he could regularly
- make to the use of fur, then the greatest luxury of
- dress. In his hand he bore that singular _abacus_,
- or staff of office, with which Templars are usually
- represented, having at the upper end a round plate,
- on which was engraved the cross of the Order, inscribed
- within a circle or orle, as heralds term it.
- His companion, who attended on this great personage,
- had nearly the same dress in all respects, but
- his extreme deference towards his Superior showed
- that no other equality subsisted between them. The
- Preceptor, for such he was in rank, walked not in
- a line with the Grand Master, but just so far behind
- that Beaumanoir could speak to him without
- turning round his head.
-
- ``Conrade,'' said the Grand Master, ``dear companion
- of my battles and my toils, to thy faithful
- bosom alone I can confide my sorrows. To thee
- alone can I tell how oft, since I came to this kingdom,
- I have desired to be dissolved and to be with
- the just. Not one object in England hath met mine
- eye which it could rest upon with pleasure, save
- the tombs of our brethren, beneath the massive roof
- of our Temple Church in yonder proud capital. O,
- valiant Robert de Ros! did I exclaim internally,
- as I gazed upon these good soldiers of the cross,
- where they lie sculptured on their sepulchres,---O,
- worthy William de Mareschal! open your marble
- cells, and take to your repose a weary brother, who
- would rather strive with a hundred thousand pagans
- than witness the decay of our Holy Order!''
-
- ``It is but true,'' answered Conrade Mont-Fitchet;
- ``it is but too true; and the irregularities of
- our brethren in England are even more gross than
- those in France.''
-
- ``Because they are more wealthy,'' answered the
- Grand Master. ``Bear with me, brother, although
- I should something vaunt myself. Thou knowest
- the life I have led, keeping each point of my Order,
- striving with devils embodied and disembodied,
- striking down the roaring lion, who goeth about
- seeking whom be may devour, like a good knight
- and devout priest, wheresoever I met with him---
- even as blessed Saint Bernard hath prescribed to us
- in the forty-fifth capital of our rule, _Ut Leo semper
- feriatur_.* But by the Holy Temple! the zeal
-
- * In the ordinances of the Knights of the Temple, this phrase
- * is repeated in a variety of forms, and occurs in almost every
- * chapter, as if it were the signal-word of the Order; which may
- * account for its being so frequently put in the Grand Master's
- * month.
-
- which hath devoured my substance and my life, yea,
- the very nerves and marrow of my bones; by that
- very Holy Temple I swear to thee, that save thyself
- and some few that still retain the ancient severity
- of our Order, I look upon no brethren whom
- I can bring my soul to embrace under that holy
- name. What say our statutes, and how do our brethren
- observe them? They should wear no vain or
- worldly ornament, no crest upon their helmet, no
- gold upon stirrup or bridle-bit; yet who now go
- pranked out so proudly and so gaily as the poor
- soldiers of the Temple? They are forbidden by
- our statutes to take one bird by means of another,
- to shoot beasts with bow or arblast, to halloo to a
- hunting-horn, or to spur the horse after game. But
- now, at hunting and hawking, and each idle sport
- of wood and river, who so prompt as the Templars
- in all these fond vanities? They are forbidden to
- read, save what their Superior permitted, or listen
- to what is read, save such holy things as may be
- recited aloud during the hours of refaction; but lo!
- their ears are at the command of idle minstrels, and
- their eyes study empty romaunts. They were commanded
- to extirpate magic and heresy. Lo! they
- are charged with studying the accursed cabalistical
- secrets of the Jews, and the magic of the Paynim
- Saracens. Simpleness of diet was prescribed to
- them, roots, pottage, gruels, eating flesh but thrice
- a-week, because the accustomed feeding on flesh is
- a dishonourable corruption of the body; and behold,
- their tables groan under delicate fare! Their
- drink was to be water, and now, to drink like a
- Templar, is the boast of each jolly boon companion!
- This very garden, filled as it is with curious herbs
- and trees sent from the Eastern climes, better becomes
- the harem of an unbelieving Emir, than the
- plot which Christian Monks should devote to raise
- their homely pot-herbs.---And O, Conrade! well it
- were that the relaxation of discipline stopped even
- here!---Well thou knowest that we were forbidden
- to receive those devout women, who at the beginning
- were associated as sisters of our Order, because,
- saith the forty-sixth chapter, the Ancient
- Enemy hath, by female society, withdrawn many
- from the right path to paradise. Nay, in the last
- capital, being, as it were, the cope-stone which our
- blessed founder placed on the pure and underled
- doctrine which he had enjoined, we are prohibited
- from offering, even to our sisters and our mothers,
- the kiss of affection--_-ut omnium mulierum fugiantur
- oscula_.---I shame to speak---I shame to think---
- of the corruptions which have rushed in upon us
- even like a flood. The souls of our pure founders,
- the spirits of Hugh de Payen and Godfrey de Saint
- Omer, and of the blessed Seven who first joined in
- dedicating their lives to the service of the Temple,
- are disturbed even in the enjoyment of paradise
- itself. I have seen them, Conrade, in the visions
- of the night---their sainted eyes shed tears for the
- sins and follies of their brethren, and for the foul
- and shameful luxury in which they wallow. Beaumanoir,
- they say, thou slumberest---awake! There
- is a stain in the fabric of the Temple, deep and foul
- as that left by the streaks of leprosy on the walls
- of the infected houses of old.* The soldiers of the
-
- * See the 13th chapter of Leviticus.
-
- Cross, who should shun the glance of a woman as
- the eye of a basilisk, live in open sin, not with the
- females of their own race only, but with the daughters
- of the accursed heathen, and more accursed
- Jew. Beaumanoir, thou sleepest; up, and avenge
- our cause!---Slay the sinners, male and female!---
- Take to thee the brand of Phineas!---The vision
- fled, Conrade, but as I awaked I could still hear
- the clank of their mail, and see the waving of their
- white mantles.---And I will do according to their
- word, I =will= purify the fabric of the Temple! and
- the unclean stones in which the plague is, I will
- remove and cast out of the building.''
-
- ``Yet bethink thee, reverend father,'' said Mont-Fitchet,
- ``the stain hath become engrained by time
- and consuetude; let thy reformation be cautious,
- as it is just and wise.''
-
- ``No, Mont-Fitchet,'' answered the stern old
- man---``it must be sharp and sudden---the Order is
- on the crisis of its fate. The sobriety, self-devotion,
- and piety of our predecessors, made us powerful
- friends---our presumption, our wealth, our luxury,
- have raised up against us mighty enemies.---We
- must cast away these riches, which are a temptation
- to princes---we must lay down that presumption,
- which is an offence to them---we must reform that
- license of manners, which is a scandal to the whole
- Christian world! Or---mark my words---the Order
- of the Temple will be utterly demolished---and the
- Place thereof shall no more be known among the
- nations.''
-
- ``Now may God avert such a calamity!'' said the
- Preceptor.
-
- ``Amen,'' said the Grand Master, with solemnity,
- ``but we must deserve his aid. I tell thee,
- Conrade, that neither the powers in Heaven, nor
- the powers on earth, will longer endure the wickedness
- of this generation---My intelligence is sure
- ---the ground on which our fabric is reared is already
- undermined, and each addition we make to
- the structure of our greatness will only sink it the
- sooner in the abyss. We must retrace our steps,
- and show ourselves the faithful Champions of the
- Cross, sacrificing to our calling, not alone our blood
- and our lives---not alone our lusts and our vices---
- but our ease, our comforts, and our natural affections,
- and act as men convinced that many a pleasure
- which may be lawful to others, is forbidden to
- the vowed soldier of the Temple.''
-
- At this moment a squire, clothed in a threadbare
- vestment, (for the aspirants after this holy Order
- wore during their noviciate the cast-off garments of
- the knights,) entered the garden, and, bowing profoundly
- before the Grand Master, stood silent,
- awaiting his permission ere he presumed to tell his
- errand.
-
- ``Is it not more seemly,'' said the Grand Master,
- ``to see this Damian, clothed in the garments of
- Christian humility, thus appear with reverend silence
- before his Superior, than but two days since,
- when the fond fool was decked in a painted coat,
- and jangling as pert and as proud as any popinjay?
- ---Speak, Damian, we permit thee---What is thine
- errand?''
-
- ``A Jew stands without the gate, noble and reverend
- father,'' said the Squire, ``who prays to
- speak with brother Brian de Bois-Guilbert.''
-
- ``Thou wert right to give me knowledge of it,''
- said the Grand Master; ``in our presence a Preceptor
- is but as a common compeer of our Order,
- who may not walk according to his own will, but
- to that of his Master---even according to the text,
- `In the hearing of the ear he hath obeyed me.'---
- It imports us especially to know of this Bois-Guilbert's
- proceedings,'' said he, turning to his companion.
-
- ``Report speaks him brave and valiant,'' said
- Conrade.
-
- ``And truly is he so spoken of,'' said the Grand
- Master; ``in our valour only we are not degenerated
- from our predecessors, the heroes of the Cross.
- But brother Brian came into our Order a moody
- and disappointed man, stirred, I doubt me, to take
- our vows and to renounce the world, not in sincerity
- of soul, but as one whom some touch of light
- discontent had driven into penitence. Since then,
- he hath become an active and earnest agitator, a
- murmurer, and a machinator, and a leader amongst
- those who impugn our authority; not considering
- that the rule is given to the Master even by the
- symbol of the staff and the rod---the staff to support
- the infirmities of the weak---the rod to correct
- the faults of delinquents.---Damian,'' he continued,
- ``lead the Jew to our presence.''
-
- The squire departed with a profound reverence,
- and in a few minutes returned, marshalling in Isaac
- of York. No naked slave, ushered into the presence
- of some mighty prince, could approach his
- judgment-seat with more profound reverence and
- terror than that with which the Jew drew near to
- the presence of the Grand Master. When he had
- approached within the distance of three yards, Beaumanoir
- made a sign with his staff that he should
- come no farther. The Jew kneeled down on the
- earth which he kissed in token of reverence; then
- rising, stood before the Templars, his hands folded
- on his bosom, his head bowed on his breast, in all
- the submission of Oriental slavery.
-
- ``Damian,'' said the Grand Master, ``retire, and
- have a guard ready to await our sudden call; and
- suffer no one to enter the garden until we shall leave
- it.''---The squire bowed and retreated.---``Jew,''
- continued the haughty old man, ``mark me. It
- suits not our condition to hold with thee long communication,
- nor do we waste words or time upon
- any one. Wherefore be brief in thy answers to
- what questions I shall ask thee, and let thy words
- be of truth; for if thy tongue doubles with me, I
- will have it torn from thy misbelieving jaws.''
-
- The Jew was about to reply, but the Grand
- Master went on.
-
- ``Peace, unbeliever!---not a word in our presence,
- save in answer to our questions.---What is
- thy business with our brother Brian de Bois-Guilbert?''
-
- Isaac gasped with terror and uncertainty. To tell
- his tale might be interpreted into scandalizing the
- Order; yet, unless he told it, what hope could he
- have of achieving his daughter's deliverance? Beaumanoir
- saw his mortal apprehension, and condescended
- to give him some assurance.
-
- ``Fear nothing,'' he said, ``for thy wretched person,
- Jew, so thou dealest uprightly in this matter.
- I demand again to know from thee thy business
- with Brian de Bois-Guilbert?''
-
- ``I am bearer of a letter,'' stammered out the Jew,
- ``so please your reverend valour, to that good
- knight, from Prior Aymer of the Abbey of Jorvaulx.''
-
- ``Said I not these were evil times, Conrade?''
- said the Master. ``A Cistertian Prior sends a letter
- to a soldier of the Temple, and can find no more
- fitting messenger than an unbelieving Jew.---Give
- me the letter.''
-
- The Jew, with trembling hands, undid the folds
- of his Armenian cap, in which he had deposited
- the Prior's tablets for the greater security, and was
- about to approach, with hand extended and body
- crouched, to place it within the reach of his grim
- interrogator.
-
- ``Back, dog!'' said the Grand Master; ``I touch
- not misbelievers, save with the sword.---Conrade,
- take thou the letter from the Jew, and give it to
- me.''
-
- Beaumanoir, being thus possessed of the tablets,
- inspected the outside carefully, and then proceeded
- to undo the packthread which secured its folds.
- ``Reverend father,'' said Conrade, interposing,
- though with much deference, ``wilt thou break the
- seal?''
-
- ``And will I not?'' said Beaumanoir, with a
- frown. ``Is it not written in the forty-second capital,
- _De Lectione Literarum_, that a Templar shall
- not receive a letter, no not from his father, without
- communicating the same to the Grand Master, and
- reading it in his presence?''
-
- He then perused the letter in haste, with an expression
- of surprise and horror; read it over again
- more slowly; then holding it out to Conrade with
- one hand, and slightly striking it with the other,
- exclaimed---``Here is goodly stuff for one Christian
- man to write to another, and both members,
- and no inconsiderable members, of religious professions!
- When,'' said he solemnly, and looking upward,
- ``wilt thou come with thy fanners to purge
- the thrashing-floor?''
-
- Mont-Fitchet took the letter from his Superior,
- and was about to peruse it. ``Read it aloud, Conrade,''
- said the Grand Master,---``and do thou'' (to
- Isaac) ``attend to the purport of it, for we will question
- thee concerning it.''
-
- Conrade read the letter, which was in these
- words: ``Aymer, by divine grace, Prior of the
- Cistertian house of Saint Mary's of Jorvaulx, to
- Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert, a Knight of the holy
- Order of the Temple, wisheth health, with the
- bounties of King Bacchus and of my Lady Venus.
- Touching our present condition, dear Brother, we
- are a captive in the hands of certain lawless and
- godless men, who have not feared to detain our
- person, and put us to ransom; whereby we have
- also learned of Front-de-B<oe>uf's misfortune, and
- that thou hast escaped with that fair Jewish sorceress,
- whose black eyes have bewitched thee. We
- are heartily rejoiced of thy safety; nevertheless, we
- pray thee to be on thy guard in the matter of this
- second Witch of Endor; for we are privately assured
- that your Great Master, who careth not a
- bean for cherry cheeks and black eyes, comes from
- Normandy to diminish your mirth, and amend your
- misdoings. Wherefore we pray you heartily to
- beware, and to be found watching, even as the
- Holy Text hath it, _Invenientur vigilantes_. And the
- wealthy Jew her father, Isaac of York, having prayed
- of me letters in his behalf, I gave him these,
- earnestly advising, and in a sort entreating, that
- you do hold the damsel to ransom, seeing he will
- pay you from his bags as much as may find fifty
- damsels upon safer terms, whereof I trust to have
- my part when we make merry together, as true
- brothers, not forgetting the wine-cup. For what
- saith the text, _Vinum l<ae>tificat cor hominis_; and
- again, _Rex delectabitur pulchritudine tua_.
-
- ``Till which merry meeting, we wish you farewell.
- Given from this den of thieves, about the
- hour of matins,
-
- ``Aymer Pr. S. M. Jorvolciencis.
-
-
- ``_Postscriptum_. Truly your golden chain hath not
- long abidden with me, and will now sustain, around
- the neck of an outlaw deer-stealer, the whistle
- wherewith he calleth on his hounds.''
-
- ``What sayest thou to this, Conrade?'' said the
- Grand Master---``Den of thieves! and a fit residence
- is a den of thieves for such a Prior. No wonder
- that the hand of God is upon us, and that in
- the Holy Land we lose place by place, foot by foot,
- before the infidels, when we have such churchmen
- as this Aymer.---And what meaneth he, I trow,
- by this second Witch of Endor?'' said he to his
- confident, something apart.
-
- Conrade was better acquainted (perhaps by practice)
- with the jargon of gallantry, than was his Superior;
- and he expounded the passage which embarrassed
- the Grand Master, to be a sort of language
- used by worldly men towards those whom
- they loved _par amours_; but the explanation did
- not satisfy the bigoted Beaumanoir.
-
- ``There is more in it than thou dost guess,
- Conrade; thy simplicity is no match for this deep
- abyss of wickedness. This Rebecca of York was
- a pupil of that Miriam of whom thou hast heard.
- Thou shalt hear the Jew own it even now.'' Then
- turning to Isaac, he said aloud, ``Thy daughter,
- then, is prisoner with Brian de Bois-Guilbert?''
-
- ``Ay, reverend valorous sir,'' stammered poor
- Isaac, ``and whatsoever ransom a poor man may
- pay for her deliverance------''
-
- ``Peace!'' said the Grand Master. ``This thy
- daughter hath practised the art of healing, hath she
- not?''
-
- ``Ay, gracious sir,'' answered the Jew, with more
- confidence; ``and knight and yeoman, squire and
- vassal, may bless the goodly gift which Heaven
- hath assigned to her. Many a one can testify that
- she hath recovered them by her art, when every
- other human aid hath proved vain; but the blessing
- of the God of Jacob was upon her.''
-
- Beaumanoir turned to Mont-Fitchet with a grim
- smile. ``See, brother,'' he said, ``the deceptions
- of the devouring Enemy! Behold the baits with
- which he fishes for souls, giving a poor space of
- earthly life in exchange for eternal happiness hereafter.
- Well said our blessed rule, __Semper percutiatur leo vorans_.
- ---Up on the lion! Down with the
- destroyer!'' said he, shaking aloft his mystic abacus,
- as if in defiance of the powers of darkness---
- ``Thy daughter worketh the cures, I doubt not,''
- thus he went on to address the Jew, ``by words
- and sighs, and periapts, and other cabalistical mysteries.''
-
- ``Nay, reverend and brave Knight,'' answered
- Isaac, ``but in chief measure by a balsam of marvellous
- virtue.''
-
- ``Where had she that secret?'' said Beaumanoir.
-
- ``It was delivered to her,'' answered Isaac, reluctantly,
- ``by Miriam, a sage matron of our tribe.''
-
- ``Ah, false Jew!'' said the Grand Master; ``was
- it not from that same witch Miriam, the abomination
- of whose enchantments have been heard of
- throughout every Christian land?'' exclaimed the
- Grand Master, crossing himself. ``Her body was
- burnt at a stake, and her ashes were scattered to
- the four winds; and so be it with me and mine
- Order, if I do not as much to her pupil, and more
- also! I will teach her to throw spell and incantation
- over the soldiers of the blessed Temple.---
- There, Damian, spurn this Jew from the gate---
- shoot him dead if he oppose or turn again. With
- his daughter we will deal as the Christian law and
- our own high office warrant.''
-
- Poor Isaac was hurried off accordingly, and expelled
- from the preceptory; all his entreaties, and
- even his offers, unheard and disregarded. He could
- do not better than return to the house of the Rabbi,
- and endeavour, through his means, to learn how his
- daughter was to be disposed of. He had hitherto
- feared for her honour, he was now to tremble for
- her life. Meanwhile, the Grand Master ordered
- to his presence the Preceptor of Templestowe.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
- Say not my art is fraud---all live by seeming.
- The beggar begs with it, and the gay courtier
- Gains land and title, rank and rule, by seeming;
- The clergy scorn it not, and the bold soldier
- Will eke with it his service.---All admit it,
- All practise it; and he who is content
- With showing what he is, shall have small credit
- In church, or camp, or state---So wags the world.
- _Old Play_.
-
- Albert Malvoisin, President, or, in the language
- of the Order, Preceptor of the establishment
- of Templestowe, was brother to that Philip Malvoisin
- who has been already occasionally mentioned
- in this history, and was, like that baron, in close
- league with Brian de Bois-Guilbert.
-
- Amongst dissolute and unprincipled men, of
- whom the Temple Order included but too many,
- Albert of Templestowe might be distinguished;
- but with this difference from the audacious Bois-Guilbert,
- that he knew how to throw over his vices
- and his ambition the veil of hypocrisy, and to assume
- in his exterior the fanaticism which be internally
- despised. Had not the arrival of the Grand
- Master been so unexpectedly sudden, he would
- have seen nothing at Templestowe which might
- have appeared to argue any relaxation of discipline.
- And, even although surprised, and, to a certain extent,
- detected, Albert Malvoisin listened with such
- respect and apparent contrition to the rebuke of
- his Superior, and made such haste to reform the
- particulars he censured,---succeeded, in fine, so well
- in giving an air of ascetic devotion to a family
- which had been lately devoted to license and pleasure,
- that Lucas Beaumanoir began to entertain a
- higher opinion of the Preceptor's morals, than the
- first appearance of the establishment had inclined
- him to adopt.
-
- But these favourable sentiments on the part of
- the Grand Master were greatly shaken by the intelligence
- that Albert had received within a house
- of religion the Jewish captive, and, as was to be
- feared, the paramour of a brother of the Order;
- and when Albert appeared before him, be was regarded
- with unwonted sternness.
-
- ``There is in this mansion, dedicated to the purposes
- of the holy Order of the Temple,'' said the
- Grand Master, in a severe tone, ``a Jewish woman,
- brought hither by a brother of religion, by your
- connivance, Sir Preceptor.''
-
- Albert Malvoisin was overwhelmed with confusion;
- for the unfortunate Rebecca had been confined
- in a remote and secret part of the building,
- and every precaution used to prevent her residence
- there from being known. He read in the looks of
- Beaumanoir ruin to Bois-Guilbert and to himself,
- unless he should be able to avert the impending
- storm.
-
- ``Why are you mute?'' continued the Grand
- Master.
-
- ``Is it permitted to me to reply?'' answered the
- Preceptor, in a tone of the deepest humility, although
- by the question he only meant to gain an instant's
- space for arranging his ideas.
-
- ``Speak, you are permitted,'' said the Grand
- Master---``speak, and say, knowest thou the capital
- of our holy rule,---_De commilitonibus Templi in
- sancta civitate, qui cun miserrimis mulieribus versantur,
- propter oblectationem carnis?''*
-
- * The edict which he quotes, is against communion with
- * women of light character.
-
- ``Surely, most reverend father,'' answered the
- Preceptor, ``I have not risen to this office in the
- Order, being ignorant of one of its most important
- prohibitions.''
-
- ``How comes it, then, I demand of thee once
- more, that thou hast suffered a brother to bring
- a paramour, and that paramour a Jewish sorceress,
- into this holy place, to the stain and pollution
- thereof?''
-
- ``A Jewish sorceress!'' echoed Albert Malvoisin;
- ``good angels guard us!''
-
- ``Ay, brother, a Jewish sorceress!'' said the
- Grand Master, sternly. ``I have said it. Darest
- thou deny that this Rebecca, the daughter of that
- wretched usurer Isaac of York, and the pupil of
- the foul witch Miriam, is now---shame to be thought
- or spoken!---lodged within this thy Preceptory?''
-
- ``Your wisdom, reverend father,'' answered the
- Preceptor, ``hath rolled away the darkness from
- my understanding. Much did I wonder that so
- good a knight as Brian de Bois-Guilbert seemed so
- fondly besotted on the charms of this female, whom
- I received into this house merely to place a bar
- betwixt their growing intimacy, which else might
- have been cemented at the expense of the fall of
- our valiant and religious brother.''
-
- ``Hath nothing, then, as yet passed betwixt
- them in breach of his vow?'' demanded the Grand
- Master.
-
- ``What! under this roof?'' said the Preceptor,
- crossing himself; ``Saint Magdalene and the ten
- thousand virgins forbid!---No! if I have sinned in
- receiving her here, it was in the erring thought that
- I might thus break off our brother's besotted devotion
- to this Jewess, which seemed to me so wild
- and unnatural, that I could not but ascribe it to
- some touch of insanity, more to be cured by pity
- than reproof. But since your reverend wisdom
- hath discovered this Jewish quean to be a sorceress,
- perchance it may account fully for his enamoured
- folly.''
-
- ``It doth!---it doth!'' said Beaumanoir. ``See,
- brother Conrade, the peril of yielding to the first
- devices and blandishments of Satan! We look
- upon woman only to gratify the lust of the eye,
- and to take pleasure in what men call her beauty;
- and the Ancient Enemy, the devouring Lion, obtains
- power over us, to complete, by talisman and spell,
- a work which was begun by idleness and folly. It
- may be that our brother Bois-Guilbert does in this
- matter deserve rather pity than severe chastisement;
- rather the support of the staff, than the
- strokes of the rod; and that our admonitions and
- prayers may turn him from his folly, and restore
- him to his brethren.''
-
- ``It were deep pity,'' said Conrade Mont-Fitchet,
- to lose to the Order one of its best lances, when
- the Holy Community most requires the aid of its
- sons. Three hundred Saracens hath this Brian de
- Bois-Guilbert slain with his own hand.''
-
- ``The blood of these accursed dogs,'' said the
- Grand Master, ``shall be a sweet and acceptable
- offering to the saints and angels whom they despise
- and blaspheme; and with their aid will we
- counteract the spells and charms with which our
- brother is entwined as in a net. He shall burst the
- bands of this Delilah, as Sampson burst the two
- new cords with which the Philistines had bound
- him, and shall slaughter the infidels, even heaps
- upon heaps. But concerning this foul witch, who
- hath flung her enchantments over a brother of the
- Holy Temple, assuredly she shall die the death.''
-
- ``But the laws of England,''---said the Preceptor,
- who, though delighted that the Grand Master's
- resentment, thus fortunately averted from himself
- and Bois-Guilbert, had taken another direction, began
- now to fear he was carrying it too far.
-
- ``The laws of England,'' interrupted Beaumanoir,
- ``permit and enjoin each judge to execute justice
- within his own jurisdiction. The most petty baron
- may arrest, try, and condemn a witch found within
- his own domain. And shall that power be denied
- to the Grand Master of the Temple within a preceptory
- of his Order?---No!---we will judge and
- condemn. The witch shall be taken out of the land,
- and the wickedness thereof shall be forgiven. Prepare
- the Castle-hall for the trial of the sorceress.''
-
- Albert Malvoisin bowed and retired,---not to
- give directions for preparing the hall, but to seek
- out Brian de Bois-Guilbert, and communicate to
- him how matters were likely to terminate. It was
- not long ere he found him, foaming with indignation
- at a repulse he had anew sustained from the
- fair Jewess. ``The unthinking,'' he said, ``the ungrateful,
- to scorn him who, amidst blood and flames,
- would have saved her life at the risk of his own!
- By Heaven, Malvoisin! I abode until roof and
- rafters crackled and crashed around me. I was the
- butt of a hundred arrows; they rattled on mine
- armour like hailstones against a latticed casement,
- and the only use I made of my shield was for her
- protection. This did I endure for her; and now
- the self-willed girl upbraids me that I did not
- leave her to perish, and refuses me not only the
- slightest proof of gratitude, but even the most distant
- hope that ever she will be brought to grant
- any. The devil, that possessed her race with obstinacy,
- has concentrated its full force in her single
- person!''
-
- ``The devil,'' said the Preceptor, ``I think, possessed
- you both. How oft have I preached to you
- caution, if not continence? Did I not tell you that
- there were enough willing Christian damsels to be
- met with, who would think it sin to refuse so brave
- a knight _le don d'amoureux merci_, and you must
- needs anchor your affection on a wilful, obstinate
- Jewess! By the mass, I think old Lucas Beaumanoir
- guesses right, when he maintains she hath
- cast a spell over you.''
-
- ``Lucas Beaumanoir!''---said Bois-Guilbert reproachfully
- ---``Are these your precautions, Malvoisin?
- Hast thou suffered the dotard to learn that
- Rebecca is in the Preceptory?''
-
- ``How could I help it?'' said the Preceptor. ``I
- neglected nothing that could keep secret your mystery;
- but it is betrayed, and whether by the devil
- or no, the devil only can tell. But I have turned
- the matter as I could; you are safe if you renounce
- Rebecca. You are pitied---the victim of magical
- delusion. She is a sorceress, and must suffer as
- such.''
-
- ``She shall not, by Heaven!'' said Bois-Guilbert.
-
- ``By Heaven, she must and will!'' said Malvoisin.
- ``Neither you nor any one else can save her.
- Lucas Beaumanoir hath settled that the death of a
- Jewess will be a sin-offering sufficient to atone for
- all the amorous indulgences of the Knights Templars;
- and thou knowest he hath both the power
- and will to execute so reasonable and pious a purpose.''
-
- ``Will future ages believe that such stupid bigotry
- ever existed!'' said Bois-Guilbert, striding up
- and down the apartment.
-
- ``What they may believe, I know not,'' said
- Malvoisin, calmly; ``but I know well, that in this
- our day, clergy and laymen, take ninety-nine to the
- hundred, will cry _amen_ to the Grand Master's sentence.''
-
- ``I have it,'' said Bois-Guilbert. ``Albert, thou
- art my friend. Thou must connive at her escape,
- Malvoisin, and I will transport her to some place
- of greater security and secrecy.''
-
- ``I cannot, if I would,'' replied the Preceptor;
- ``the mansion is filled with the attendants of the
- Grand Master, and others who are devoted to him.
- And, to be frank with you, brother, I would not
- embark with you in this matter, even if I could
- hope to bring my bark to haven. I have risked
- enough already for your sake. I have no mind to
- encounter a sentence of degradation, or even to lose
- my Preceptory, for the sake of a painted piece of
- Jewish flesh and blood. And you, if you will be
- guided by my counsel, will give up this wild-goose
- chase, and fly your hawk at some other game.
- Think, Bois-Guilbert,---thy present rank, thy future
- honours, all depend on thy place in the Order.
- Shouldst thou adhere perversely to thy passion for
- this Rebecca, thou wilt give Beaumanoir the power
- of expelling thee, and he will not neglect it. He
- is jealous of the truncheon which he holds in his
- trembling gripe, and he knows thou stretchest thy
- bold hand towards it. Doubt not he will ruin thee,
- if thou affordest him a pretext so fair as thy protection
- of a Jewish sorceress. Give him his scope
- in this matter, for thou canst not control him.
- When the staff is in thine own firm grasp, thou
- mayest caress the daughters of Judah, or burn
- them, as may best suit thine own humour.''
-
- ``Malvoisin,'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``thou art a
- cold-blooded---''
-
- ``Friend,'' said the Preceptor, hastening to fill
- up the blank, in which Bois-Guilbert would probably
- have placed a worse word,---``a cold-blooded
- friend I am, and therefore more fit to give thee advice.
- I tell thee once more, that thou canst not
- save Rebecca. I tell thee once more, thou canst but
- perish with her. Go hie thee to the Grand Master
- ---throw thyself It his feet and tell him---''
-
- ``Not at his feet, by Heaven! but to the dotard's
- very beard will I say---''
-
- ``Say to him, then, to his beard,'' continued Malvoisin,
- coolly, ``that you love this captive Jewess
- to distraction; and the more thou dost enlarge on
- thy passion, the greater will be his haste to end it
- by the death of the fair enchantress; while thou,
- taken in flagrant delict by the avowal of a crime
- contrary to thine oath, canst hope no aid of thy
- brethren, and must exchange all thy brilliant visions
- of ambition and power, to lift perhaps a mercenary
- spear in some of the petty quarrels between
- Flanders and Burgundy.''
-
- ``Thou speakest the truth, Malvoisin,'' said Brian
- de Bois-Guilbert, after a moment's reflection. ``I
- will give the hoary bigot no advantage over me;
- and for Rebecca, she hath not merited at my hand
- that I should expose rank and honour for her sake.
- I will cast her off---yes, I will leave her to her fate,
- unless---''
-
- ``Qualify not thy wise and necessary resolution,''
- said Malvoisin; ``women are but the toys which
- amuse our lighter hours---ambition is the serious
- business of life. Perish a thousand such frail baubles
- as this Jewess, before thy manly step pause in
- the brilliant career that lies stretched before thee!
- For the present we part, nor must we be seen to
- hold close conversation---I must order the hall for
- his judgment-seat.''
-
- ``What!'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``so soon?''
-
- ``Ay,'' replied the Preceptor, ``trial moves rapidly
- on when the judge has determined the sentence
- beforehand.''
-
- ``Rebecca,'' said Bois-Guilbert, when he was left
- alone, ``thou art like to cost me dear---Why cannot
- I abandon thee to thy fate, as this calm hypocrite
- recommends?---One effort will I make to save
- thee---but beware of ingratitude! for if I am again
- repulsed, my vengeance shall equal my love. The
- life and honour of Bois-Guilbert must not be hazarded,
- where contempt and reproaches are his only
- reward.''
-
- The Preceptor had hardly given the necessary
- orders, when he was joined by Conrade Mont-Fitchet,
- who acquainted him with the Grand Master's
- resolution to bring the Jewess to instant trial for
- sorcery.
-
- ``It is surely a dream,'' said the Preceptor; ``we
- have many Jewish physicians, and we call them not
- wizards though they work wonderful cures.''
-
- ``The Grand Master thinks otherwise,'' said
- Mont-Fitchet; ``and, Albert, I will be upright
- with thee---wizard or not, it were better that this
- miserable damsel die, than that Brian de Bois-Guilbert
- should be lost to the Order, or the Order
- divided by internal dissension. Thou knowest his
- high rank, his fame in arms---thou knowest the
- zeal with which many of our brethren regard him
- ---but all this will not avail him with our Grand
- Master, should he consider Brian as the accomplice,
- not the victim, of this Jewess. Were the souls of
- the twelve tribes in her single body, it were better
- she suffered alone, than that Bois-Guilbert were
- partner in her destruction.''
-
- ``I have been working him even now to abandon
- her,'' said Malvoisin; ``but still, are there grounds
- enough to condemn this Rebecca for sorcery?---
- Will not the Grand Master change his mind when
- he sees that the proofs are so weak?''
-
- ``They must be strengthened, Albert,'' replied
- Mont-Fitchet, ``they must be strengthened. Dost
- thou understand me?''
-
- ``I do,'' said the Preceptor, ``nor do I scruple to
- do aught for advancement of the Order---but there
- is little time to find engines fitting.''
-
-
- ``Malvoisin, they _must_ be found,'' said Conrade;
- ``well will it advantage both the Order and thee.
- This Templestowe is a poor Preceptory---that of
- Maison-Dieu is worth double its value---thou
- knowest my interest with our old Chief---find those
- who can carry this matter through, and thou art
- Preceptor of Maison-Dieu in the fertile Kent---
- How sayst thou?''
-
- ``There is,'' replied Malvoisin, ``among those
- who came hither with Bois-Guilbert, two fellows
- whom I well know; servants they were to my
- brother Philip de Malvoisin,and passed from his
- service to that of Front-de-B<oe>uf---It may be they
- know something of the witcheries of this woman.''
-
- ``Away, seek them out instantly---and hark thee,
- if a byzant or two will sharpen their memory, let
- them not be wanting.''
-
- ``They would swear the mother that bore them
- a sorceress for a zecchin,'' said the Preceptor.
-
- ``Away, then,'' said Mont-Fitchet; ``at noon the
- affair will proceed. I have not seen our senior in
- such earnest preparation since he condemned to the
- stake Hamet Alfagi, a convert who relapsed to the
- Moslem faith.''
-
- The ponderous castle-bell had tolled the point of
- noon, when Rebecca heard a trampling of feet upon
- the private stair which led to her place of confinement.
- The noise announced the arrival of several
- persons, and the circumstance rather gave her joy;
- for she was more afraid of the solitary visits of the
- fierce and passionate Bois-Guilbert than of any evil
- that could befall her besides. The door of the
- chamber was unlocked, and Conrade and the Preceptor
- Malvoisin entered, attended by four warders
- clothed in black, and bearing halberds.
-
- ``Daughter of an accursed race!'' said the Preceptor,
- ``arise and follow us.''
-
- ``Whither,'' said Rebecca, ``and for what purpose?''
-
- ``Damsel,'' answered Conrade, ``it is not for
- thee to question, but to obey. Nevertheless, be it
- known to thee, that thou art to be brought before
- the tribunal of the Grand Master of our holy Order,
- there to answer for thine offences.''
-
- ``May the God of Abraham be praised!'' said
- Rebecca, folding her hands devoutly; ``the name
- of a judge, though an enemy to my people, is to me
- as the name of a protector. Most willingly do I
- follow thee---permit me only to wrap my veil around
- my head.''
-
- They descended the stair with slow and solemn
- step, traversed a long gallery, and, by a pair of
- folding doors placed at the end, entered the great
- hall in which the Grand Master had for the time
- established his court of justice.
-
- The lower part of this ample apartment was
- filled with squires and yeomen, who made way not
- without some difficulty for Rebecca, attended by
- the Preceptor and Mont-Fitchet, and followed by
- the guard of halberdiers, to move forward to the
- seat appointed for her. As she passed through the
- crowd, her arms folded and her head depressed, a
- scrap of paper was thrust into her hand, which she
- received almost unconsciously, and continued to
- hold without examining its contents. The assurance
- that she possessed some friend in this awful
- assembly gave her courage to look around, and to
- mark into whose presence she had been conducted.
- She gazed, accordingly, upon the scene, which we
- shall endeavour to describe in the next chapter.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
- Stern was the law which bade its vot'ries leave
- At human woes with human hearts to grieve;
- Stern was the law, which at the winning wile
- Of frank and harmless mirth forbade to smile;
- But sterner still, when high the iron-rod
- Of tyrant power she shook, and call'd that power of God.
- _The Middle Ages._
-
- The Tribunal, erected for the trial of the innocent
- and unhappy Rebecca, occupied the dais or
- elevated part of the upper end of the great hall---
- a platform, which we have already described as the
- place of honour, destined to be occupied by the
- most distinguished inhabitants or guests of an ancient
- mansion.
-
- On an elevated seat, directly before the accused,
- sat the Grand Master of the Temple, in full and
- ample robes of flowing white, holding in his hand
- the mystic staff, which bore the symbol of the Order.
- At his feet was placed a table, occupied by
- two scribes, chaplains of the Order, whose duty it
- was to reduce to formal record the proceedings of
- the day. The black dresses, bare scalps, and demure
- looks of these church-men, formed a strong contrast
- to the warlike appearance of the knights who attended,
- either as residing in the Preceptory, or as
- come thither to attend upon their Grand Master.
- The Preceptors, of whom there were four present,
- occupied seats lower in height, and somewhat drawn
- back behind that of their superior; and the knights,
- who enjoyed no such rank in the Order, were placed
- on benches still lower, and preserving the same distance
- from the Preceptors as these from the Grand
- Master. Behind them, but still upon the dais or
- elevated portion of the hall, stood the esquires of
- the Order, in white dresses of an inferior quality.
-
- The whole assembly wore an aspect of the most
- profound gravity; and in the faces of the knights
- might be perceived traces of military daring, united
- with the solemn carriage becoming men of a religious
- profession, and which, in the presence of
- their Grand Master, failed not to sit upon every
- brow.
-
- The remaining and lower part of the hall was
- filled with guards, holding partisans, and with other
- attendants whom curiosity had drawn thither, to
- see at once a Grand Master and a Jewish sorceress.
- By far the greater part of those inferior persons
- were, in one rank or other, connected with the Order,
- and were accordingly distinguished by their
- black dresses. But peasants from the neighbouring
- country were not refused admittance; for it was
- the pride of Beaumanoir to render the edifying
- spectacle of the justice which he administered as
- public as possible. His large blue eyes seemed to
- expand as be gazed around the assembly, and his
- countenance appeared elated by the conscious dignity,
- and imaginary merit, of the part which he
- was about to perform. A psalm, which he himself
- accompanied with a deep mellow voice, which age
- had not deprived of its powers, commenced the proceedings
- of the day; and the solemn sounds, _Venite
- exultemus Domino_, so often sung by the Templars
- before engaging with earthly adversaries, was
- judged by Lucas most appropriate to introduce the
- approaching triumph, for such he deemed it, over
- the powers of darkness. The deep prolonged notes,
- raised by a hundred masculine voices accustomed
- to combine in the choral chant, arose to the vaulted
- roof of the hill, and rolled on amongst its arches
- with the pleasing yet solemn sound of the rushing
- of mighty waters.
-
- When the sounds ceased, the Grand Master
- glanced his eye slowly around the circle, and observed
- that the seat of one of the Preceptors was vacant.
- Brian de Bois-Guilbert, by whom it had been
- occupied, had left his place, and was now standing
- near the extreme corner of one of the benches occupied
- by the Knights Companions of the Temple,
- one hand extending his long mantle, so as in some
- degree to hide his face; while the other held his
- cross-handled sword, with the point of which, sheathed
- as it was, he was slowly drawing lines upon the
- oaken floor.
-
- ``Unhappy man!'' said the Grand Master, after
- favouring him with a glance of compassion. ``Thou
- seest, Conrade, how this holy work distresses him.
- To this can the light look of woman, aided by the
- Prince of the Powers of this world, bring a valiant
- and worthy knight!---Seest thou he cannot look
- upon us; he cannot look upon her; and who knows
- by what impulse from his tormentor his hand forms
- these cabalistic lines upon the floor?---It may be
- our life and safety are thus aimed at; but we spit
- at and defy the foul enemy. _Semper Leo percutiatur!''
-
- This was communicated apart to his confidential
- follower, Conrade Mont-Fitchet. The Grand Master
- then raised his voice, and addressed the assembly.
-
- ``Reverend and valiant men, Knights, Preceptors,
- and Companions of this Holy Order, my brethren
- and my children!---you also, well-born and
- pious Esquires, who aspire to wear this holy Cross!
- ---and you also, Christian brethren, of every degree!
- ---Be it known to you, that it is not defect
- of power in us which hath occasioned the assembling
- of this congregation; for, however unworthy
- in our person, yet to us is committed, with this
- batoon, full power to judge and to try all that regards
- the weal of this our Holy Order. Holy
- Saint Bernard, in the rule of our knightly and religious
- profession, hath said, in the fifty-ninth capital,*
-
- * The reader is again referred to the Rules of the Poor Military
- * Brotherhood of the Temple, which occur in the Works of
- * St Bernard.---L. T.
-
- that he would not that brethren be called
- together in council, save at the will and command
- of the Master; leaving it free to us, as to those
- more worthy fathers who have preceded us in this
- our office, to judge, as well of the occasion as of the
- time and place in which a chapter of the whole
- Order, or of any part thereof, may be convoked.
- Also, in all such chapters, it is our duty to hear
- the advice of our brethren, and to proceed according
- to our own pleasure. But when the raging
- wolf hath made an inroad upon the flock, and carried
- off one member thereof, it is the duty of the
- kind shepherd to call his comrades together, that
- with bows and slings they may quell the invader,
- according to our well-known rule, that the lion is
- ever to be beaten down. We have therefore summoned
- to our presence a Jewish woman, by name
- Rebecca, daughter of Isaac of York---a woman infamous
- for sortileges and for witcheries; whereby
- she hath maddened the blood, and besotted the
- brain, not of a churl, but of a Knight---not of a
- secular Knight, but of one devoted to the service
- of the Holy Temple---not of a Knight Companion,
- but of a Preceptor of our Order, first in honour as
- in place. Our brother, Brian de Bois-Guilbert, is
- well known to ourselves, and to all degrees who
- now hear me, as a true and zealous champion of
- the Cross, by whose arm many deeds of valour have
- been wrought in the Holy Land, and the holy
- places purified from pollution by the blood of those
- infidels who defiled them. Neither have our brother's
- sagacity and prudence been less in repute
- among his brethren than his valour and discipline;
- in so much, that knights, both in eastern and western
- lands, have named De Bois-Guilbert as one
- who may well be put in nomination as successor to
- this batoon, when it shall please Heaven to release
- us from the toil of bearing it. If we were told
- that such a man, so honoured, and so honourable,
- suddenly casting away regard for his character, his
- vows, his brethren, and his prospects, had associated
- to himself a Jewish damsel, wandered in this
- lewd company, through solitary places, defended her
- person in preference to his own, and, finally, was so
- utterly blinded and besotted by his folly, as to
- bring her even to one of our own Preceptories, what
- should we say but that the noble knight was possessed
- by some evil demon, or influenced by some
- wicked spell?---If we could suppose it otherwise,
- think not rank, valour, high repute, or any earthly
- consideration, should prevent us from visiting him
- with punishment, that the evil thing might be removed,
- even according to the text, _Auferte malum
- ex vobis_. For various and heinous are the acts of
- transgression against the rule of our blessed Order
- in this lamentable history.---1st, He hath walked
- according to his proper will, contrary to capital 33,
- _Quod nullus juxta propriam voluntatem incedat_.
- ---2d, He hath held communication with an excommunicated
- person, capital 57, _Ut fratres non participent
- cum excommunicatis_, and therefore hath a
- portion in _Anathema Maranatha_.---3d, He hath conversed
- with strange women, contrary to the capital,
- _Ut fratres non conversantur cum extraneis mulieribus.
- ---4th, He hath not avoided, nay, he hath, it is
- to be feared, solicited the kiss of woman; by
- which, saith the last rule of our renowned Order,
- _Ut fugiantur oscula_, the soldiers of the Cross are
- brought into a snare. For which heinous and multiplied
- guilt, Brian de Bois-Guilbert should be cut
- off and cast out from our congregation, were he the
- right hand and right eye thereof.''
-
- He paused. A low murmur went through the
- assembly. Some of the younger part, who had been
- inclined to smile at the statute _De osculis fugiendis_,
- became now grave enough, and anxiously waited
- what the Grand Master was next to propose.
-
- ``Such,'' he said, ``and so great should indeed
- be the punishment of a Knight Templar, who wilfully
- offended against the rules of his Order in such
- weighty points. But if, by means of charms and
- of spells, Satan had obtained dominion over the
- Knight, perchance because he cast his eyes too
- lightly upon a damsel's beauty, we are then rather
- to lament than chastise his backsliding; and, imposing
- on him only such penance as may purify him
- from his iniquity, we are to turn the full edge of
- our indignation upon the accursed instrument, which
- had so wellnigh occasioned his utter falling away.
- ---Stand forth, therefore, and bear witness, ye who
- have witnessed these unhappy doings, that we may
- judge of the sum and bearing thereof; and judge
- whether our justice may be satisfied with the punishment
- of this infidel woman, or if we must go
- on, with a bleeding heart, to the further proceeding
- against our brother.''
-
- Several witnesses were called upon to prove the
- risks to which Bois-Guilbert exposed himself in
- endeavouring to save Rebecca from the blazing
- castle, and his neglect of his personal defence in
- attending to her safety. The men gave these details
- with the exaggerations common to vulgar minds
- which have been strongly excited by any remarkable
- event, and their natural disposition to the marvellous
- was greatly increased by the satisfaction
- which their evidence seemed to afford to the eminent
- person for whose information it had been delivered.
- Thus the dangers which Bois-Guilbert
- surmounted, in themselves sufficiently great, became
- portentous in their narrative. The devotion
- of the Knight to Rebecca's defence was exaggerated
- beyond the bounds, not only of discretion, but
- even of the most frantic excess of chivalrous zeal;
- and his deference to what she said, even although
- her language was often severe and upbraiding, was
- painted as carried to an excess, which, in a man of
- his haughty temper, seemed almost preternatural.
-
- The Preceptor of Templestowe was then called
- on to describe the manner in which Bois-Guilbert
- and the Jewess arrived at the Preceptory. The
- evidence of Malvoisin was skilfully guarded. But
- while he apparently studied to spare the feelings
- of Bois-Guilbert, he threw in, from time to time,
- such hints, as seemed to infer that he laboured under
- some temporary alienation of mind, so deeply
- did he appear to be enamoured of the damsel whom
- he brought along with him. With sighs of penitence,
- the Preceptor avowed his own contrition for
- having admitted Rebecca and her lover within the
- walls of the Preceptory---``But my defence,'' he
- concluded, ``has been made in my confession to our
- most reverend father the Grand Master; he knows
- my motives were not evil, though my conduct may
- have been irregular. Joyfully will I submit to any
- penance he shall assign me.''
-
- ``Thou hast spoken well, Brother Albert,'' said
- Beaumanoir; ``thy motives were good, since thou
- didst judge it right to arrest thine erring brother in
- his career of precipitate folly. But thy conduct was
- wrong; as he that would stop a runaway steed,
- and seizing by the stirrup instead of the bridle, receiveth
- injury himself, instead of accomplishing his
- purpose. Thirteen paternosters are assigned by
- our pious founder for matins, and nine for vespers;
- be those services doubled by thee. Thrice a-week
- are Templars permitted the use of flesh; but do
- thou keep fast for all the seven days. This do for six
- weeks to come, and thy penance is accomplished.''
-
- With a hypocritical look of the deepest submission,
- the Preceptor of Templestowe bowed to the
- ground before his Superior, and resumed his seat.
-
- ``Were it not well, brethren,'' said the Grand
- Master, ``that we examine something into the former
- life and conversation of this woman, specially
- that we may discover whether she be one likely to
- use magical charms and spells, since the truths
- which we have heard may well incline us to suppose,
- that in this unhappy course our erring brother
- has been acted upon by some infernal enticement
- and delusion?''
-
- Herman of Goodalricke was the Fourth Preceptor
- present; the other three were Conrade, Malvoisin,
- and Bois-Guilbert himself. Herman was an
- ancient warrior, whose face was marked with sears
- inflicted by the sabre of the Moslemah, and had
- great rank and consideration among his brethren.
- He arose and bowed to the Grand Master, who instantly
- granted him license of speech. ``I would
- crave to know, most Reverend Father, of our valiant
- brother, Brian de Bois-Guilbert, what he says
- to these wondrous accusations, and with what eye
- he himself now regards his unhappy intercourse
- with this Jewish maiden?''
-
- ``Brian de Bois-Guilbert,'' said the Grand Master,
- ``thou hearest the question which our Brother
- of Goodalricke desirest thou shouldst answer. I
- command thee to reply to him.''
-
- Bois-Guilbert turned his head towards the Grand
- Master when thus addressed, and remained silent.
-
- ``He is possessed by a dumb devil,'' said the
- Grand Master. ``Avoid thee, Sathanus!---Speak,
- Brian de Bois-Guilbert, I conjure thee, by this
- symbol of our Holy Order.''
-
- Bois-Guilbert made an effort to suppress his rising
- scorn and indignation, the expression of which,
- he was well aware, would have little availed him.
- ``Brian de Bois-Guilbert,'' he answered, ``replies
- not, most Reverend Father, to such wild and vague
- charges. If his honour be impeached, he will defend
- it with his body, and with that sword which
- has often fought for Christendom.''
-
- ``We forgive thee, Brother Brian,'' said the
- Grand Master; ``though that thou hast boasted thy
- warlike achievements before us, is a glorifying of
- thine own deeds, and cometh of the Enemy, who
- tempteth us to exalt our own worship. But thou
- hast our pardon, judging thou speakest less of thine
- own suggestion than from the impulse of him whom
- by Heaven's leave, we will quell and drive forth
- from our assembly.'' A glance of disdain flashed
- from the dark fierce eyes of Bois-Guilbert, but he
- made no reply.---``And now,'' pursued the Grand
- Master, ``since our Brother of Goodalricke's question
- has been thus imperfectly answered, pursue we
- our quest, brethren, and with our patron's assistance,
- we will search to the bottom this mystery of
- iniquity.---Let those who have aught to witness of
- the life and conversation of this Jewish woman,
- stand forth before us.'' There was a bustle in the
- lower part of the hall, and when the Grand Master
- enquired the reason, it was replied, there was
- in the crowd a bedridden man, whom the prisoner
- had restored to the perfect use of his limbs, by a
- miraculous balsam.
-
- The poor peasant, a Saxon by birth, was dragged
- forward to the bar, terrified at the penal consequences
- which he might have incurred by the
- guilt of having been cured of the palsy by a Jewish
- damsel. Perfectly cured be certainly was not, for
- he supported himself forward on crutches to give
- evidence. Most unwilling was his testimony, and
- given with many tears; but he admitted that two
- years since, when residing at York, he was suddenly
- afflicted with a sore disease, while labouring for
- Isaac the rich Jew, in his vocation of a joiner; that
- he had been unable to stir from his bed until the
- remedies applied by Rebecca's directions, and especially
- a warming and spicy-smelling balsam, had in
- some degree restored him to the use of his limbs.
- Moreover, he said, she had given him a pot of that
- precious ointment, and furnished him with a piece
- of money withal, to return to the house of his father,
- near to Templestowe. ``And may it please
- your gracious Reverence,'' said the man, ``I cannot
- think the damsel meant harm by me, though
- she hath the ill hap to be a Jewess; for even when
- I used her remedy, I said the Pater and the Creed,
- and it never operated a whit less kindly---''
-
- ``Peace, slave,'' said the Grand Master, ``and
- begone! It well suits brutes like thee to be tampering
- and trinketing with hellish cures, and to
- be giving your labour to the sons of mischief. I
- tell thee, the fiend can impose diseases for the very
- purpose of removing them, in order to bring into
- credit some diabolical fashion of cure. Hast thou
- that unguent of which thou speakest?''
-
- The peasant, fumbling in his bosom with a trembling
- hand, produced a small box, bearing some
- Hebrew characters on the lid, which was, with
- most of the audience, a sure proof that the devil
- had stood apothecary. Beaumanoir, after crossing
- himself, took the box into his hand, and, learned in
- most of the Eastern tongues, read with ease the
- motto on the lid,---_The Lion of the tribe of Judah
- hath conquered_. ``Strange powers of Sathanas.''
- said he, ``which can convert Scripture into blasphemy,
- mingling poison with our necessary food!---Is
- there no leech here who can tell us the ingredients
- of this mystic unguent?''
-
- Two mediciners, as they called themselves, the
- one a monk, the other a barber, appeared, and
- avouched they knew nothing of the materials, excepting
- that they savoured of myrrh and camphire,
- which they took to be Oriental herbs. But with the
- true professional hatred to a successful practitioner
- of their art, they insinuated that, since the medicine
- was beyond their own knowledge, it must necessarily
- have been compounded from an unlawful
- and magical pharmacopeia; since they themselves,
- though no conjurors, fully understood every branch
- of their art, so far as it might be exercised with the
- good faith of a Christian. When this medical research
- was ended, the Saxon peasant desired humbly
- to have back the medicine which he had found
- so salutary; but the Grand Master frowned severely
- at the request. ``What is thy name, fellow?''
- said he to the cripple.
-
- ``Higg, the son of Snell,'' answered the peasant.
-
- ``Then Higg, son of Snell,'' said the Grand
- Master, ``I tell thee it is better to be bedridden,
- than to accept the benefit of unbelievers' medicine
- that thou mayest arise and walk; better to despoil
- infidels of their treasure by the strong hand, than
- to accept of them benevolent gifts, or do them service
- for wages. Go thou, and do as I have said.''
-
- ``Alack,'' said the peasant, ``an it shall not displease
- your Reverence, the lesson comes too late
- for me, for I am but a maimed man; but I will tell
- my two brethren, who serve the rich Rabbi Nathan
- Ben Samuel, that your mastership says it is more
- lawful to rob him than to render him faithful service.''
-
- ``Out with the prating villain!'' said Beaumanoir,
- who was not prepared to refute this practical
- application of his general maxim.
-
- Higg, the son of Snell, withdrew into the crowd,
- but, interested in the fate of his benefactress, lingered
- until he should learn her doom, even at the
- risk of again encountering the frown of that severe
- judge, the terror of which withered his very heart
- within him.
-
- At this period of the trial, the Grand Master
- commanded Rebecca to unveil herself. Opening
- her lips for the first time, she replied patiently, but
- with dignity,---``That it was not the wont of the
- daughters of her people to uncover their faces when
- alone in an assembly of strangers.'' The sweet tones.
- of her voice, and the softness of her reply, impressed
- on the audience a sentiment of pity and sympathy.
- But Beaumanoir, in whose mind the suppression
- of each feeling of humanity which could
- interfere with his imagined duty, was a virtue of
- itself, repeated his commands that his victim should
- be unveiled. The guards were about to remove her
- veil accordingly, when she stood up before the
- Grand Master and said, ``Nay, but for the love of
- your own daughters---Alas,'' she said, recollecting
- herself, ``ye have no daughters!---yet for the remembrance
- of your mothers---for the love of your
- sisters, and of female decency, let me not be thus
- handled in your presence; it suits not a maiden to
- be disrobed by such rude grooms. I will obey you,''
- she added, with an expression of patient sorrow in
- her voice, which had almost melted the heart of
- Beaumanoir himself; ``ye are elders among your
- people, and at your command I will show the features
- of an ill-fated maiden.''
-
- She withdrew her veil, and looked on them with
- a countenance in which bashfulness contended with
- dignity. Her exceeding beauty excited a murmur
- of surprise, and the younger knights told each other
- with their eyes, in silent correspondence, that Brian's
- best apology was in the power of her real charms,
- rather than of her imaginary witehcraft. But Higg,
- the son of Snell, felt most deeply the effect produced
- by the sight of the countenance of his benefactress.
- ``Let me go forth,'' he said to the warders
- at the door of the hall,---``let me go forth!---To
- look at her again will kill me, for I have had a share
- in murdering her.''
-
- ``Peace, poor man,'' said Rebecca, when she
- heard his exclamation; ``thou hast done me no
- harm by speaking the truth---thou canst not aid me
- by thy complaints or lamentations. Peace, I pray
- thee---go home and save thyself.''
-
- Higg was about to be thrust out by the compassion
- of the warders, who were apprehensive lest
- his clamorous grief should draw upon them reprehension,
- and upon himself punishment. But he promised
- to be silent, and was permitted to remain.
- The two men-at-arms, with whom Albert Malvoisin
- had not failed to communicate upon the import of
- their testimony, were now called forward. Though
- both were hardened and inflexible villains, the sight
- of the captive maiden, as well as her excelling
- beauty, at first appeared to stagger them; but an
- expressive glance from the Preceptor of Templestowe
- restored them to their dogged composure;
- and they delivered, with a precision which would
- have seemed suspicious to more impartial judges,
- circumstances either altogether fictitious or trivial,
- and natural in themselves, but rendered pregnant
- with suspicion by the exaggerated manner in which
- they were told, and the sinister commentary which
- the witnesses added to the facts. The circumstances
- of their evidence would have been, in modern days,
- divided into two classes---those which were immaterial,
- and those which were actually and physically
- impossible. But both were, in those ignorant
- and superstitions times, easily credited as proofs of
- guilt.---The first class set forth, that Rebecca was
- heard to mutter to herself in an unknown tongue
- ---that the songs she sung by fits were of a strangely
- sweet sound, which made the ears of the hearer
- tingle, and his heart throb---that she spoke at times
- to herself, and seemed to look upward for a reply
- ---that her garments were of a strange and mystic
- form, unlike those of women of good repute---that
- she had rings impressed with cabalistical devices,
- and that strange characters were broidered on her
- veil.
-
- All these circumstances, so natural and so trivial,
- were gravely listened to as proofs, or, at least,
- as affording strong suspicions that Rebecca had unlawful
- correspondence with mystical powers.
-
- But there was less equivocal testimony, which
- the credulity of the assembly, or of the greater part,
- greedily swallowed, however incredible. One of
- the soldiers had seen her work a cure upon a wounded
- man, brought with them to the castle of Torquilstone.
- She did, he said, make certain signs
- upon the wound, and repeated certain mysterious
- words, which he blessed God he understood not,
- when the iron head of a square cross-bow bolt disengaged
- itself from the wound, the bleeding was
- stanched, the wound was closed, and the dying
- man was, within a quarter of an hour, walking
- upon the ramparts, and assisting the witness in
- managing a mangonel, or machine for hurling
- stones. This legend was probably founded upon
- the fact, that Rebecca had attended on the wounded
- Ivanhoe when in the castle of Torquilstone.
- But it was the more difficult to dispute the accuracy
- of the witness, as, in order to produce real
- evidence in support of his verbal testimony, he drew
- from his pouch the very bolt-head, which, according
- to his story, had been miraculously extracted
- from the wound; and as the iron weighed a full
- ounce, it completely confirmed the tale, however
- marvellous.
-
- His comrade had been a witness from a neighbouring
- battlement of the scene betwixt Rebecca
- and Bois-Guilbert, when she was upon the point of
- precipitating herself from the top of the tower.
- Not to be behind his companion, this fellow stated,
- that he had seen Rebecca perch herself upon the
- parapet of the turret, and there take the form of a
- milk-white swan, under which appearance she flitted
- three times round the castle of Torquilstone;
- then again settle on the turret, and once more assume
- the female form.
-
- Less than one half of this weighty evidence
- would have been sufficient to convict any old woman,
- poor and ugly, even though she had not been
- a Jewess. United with that fatal circumstance, the
- body of proof was too weighty for Rebecca's youth,
- though combined with the most exquisite beauty.
-
- The Grand Master had collected the suffrages,
- and now in a solemn tone demanded of Rebecca
- what she had to say against the sentence of condemnation,
- which he was about to pronounce.
-
- ``To invoke your pity,'' said the lovely Jewess,
- with a voice somewhat tremulous with emotion,
- ``would, I am aware, be as useless as I should hold
- it mean. To state that to relieve the sick and
- wounded of another religion, cannot be displeasing
- to the acknowledged Founder of both our faiths,
- were also unavailing; to plead that many things
- which these men (whom may Heaven pardon!)
- have spoken against me are impossible, would avail
- me but little, since you believe in their possibility;
- and still less would it advantage me to explain, that
- the peculiarities of my dress, language, and manners,
- are those of my people---I had wellnigh said
- of my country, but alas! we have no country. Nor
- will I even vindicate myself at the expense of my
- oppressor, who stands there listening to the fictions
- and surmises which seem to convert the tyrant into
- the victim.---God be judge between him and
- me! but rather would I submit to ten such deaths
- as your pleasure may denounce against me, than
- listen to the suit which that man of Belial has urged
- upon me---friendless, defenceless, and his prisoner.
- But he is of your own faith, and his lightest
- affirmance would weigh down the most solemn protestations
- of the distressed Jewess. I will not therefore
- return to himself the charge brought against
- me---but to himself---Yes, Brian de Bois-Guilbert,
- to thyself I appeal, whether these accusations are
- not false? as monstrous and calumnious as they are
- deadly?''
-
- There was a pause; all eyes turned to Brain de
- Bois-Guilbert. He was silent.
-
- ``Speak,'' she said, ``if thou art a man---if thou
- art a Christian, speak!---I conjure thee, by the
- habit which thou dost wear, by the name thou dost
- inherit---by the knighthood thou dost vaunt---by
- the honour of thy mother---by the tomb and the
- bones of thy father---I conjure thee to say, are these
- things true?''
-
- ``Answer her, brother,'' said the Grand Master,
- ``if the Enemy with whom thou dost wrestle will
- give thee power.''
-
- In fact, Bois-Guilbert seemed agitated by contending
- passions, which almost convulsed his features,
- and it was with a constrained voice that at
- last he replied, looking to Rebecca,---``The scroll!
- ---the scroll!''
-
- ``Ay,'' said Beaumanoir, ``this is indeed testimony!
- The victim of her witcheries can only name
- the fatal scroll, the spell inscribed on which is,
- doubtless, the cause of his silence.''
-
- But Rebecca put another interpretation on the
- words extorted as it were from Bois-Guilbert, and
- glancing her eye upon the slip of parchment which
- she continued to hold in her hand, she read written
- thereupon in the Arabian character, _Demand a
- Champion!_ The murmuring commentary which
- ran through the assembly at the strange reply of
- Bois-Guilbert, gave Rebecca leisure to examine and
- instantly to destroy the scroll unobserved. When
- the whisper had ceased, the Grand Master spoke.
-
- ``Rebecca, thou canst derive no benefit from the
- evidence of this unhappy knight, for whom, as we
- well perceive, the Enemy is yet too powerful. Hast
- thou aught else to say?''
-
- ``There is yet one chance of life left to me,'' said
- Rebecca, ``even by your own fierce laws. Life has
- been miserable---miserable, at least, of late---but I
- will not cast away the gift of God, while he affords
- me the means of defending it. I deny this charge
- ---I maintain my innocence, and I declare the falsehood
- of this accusation---I challenge the privilege
- of trial by combat, and will appear by my champion.''
-
- ``And who, Rebecca,'' replied the Grand Master,
- ``will lay lance in rest for a sorceress? who will
- be the champion of a Jewess?''
-
- ``God will raise me up a champion,'' said Rebecca---
- ``It cannot be that in merry England---the
- hospitable, the generous, the free, where so many
- are ready to peril their lives for honour, there will
- not be found one to fight for justice. But it is
- enough that I challenge the trial by combat---there
- lies my gage.''
-
- She took her embroidered glove from her hand,
- and flung it down before the Grand Master with
- an air of mingled simplicity and dignity, which excited
- universal surprise and admiration.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
- ------There I throw my gage,
- To prove it on thee to the extremest point
- Of martial daring.
- _Richard II._
-
- Even Lucas Beaumanoir himself was affected
- by the mien and appearance of Rebecca. He was
- not originally a cruel or even a severe man; but
- with passions by nature cold, and with a high,
- though mistaken, sense of duty, his heart had been
- gradually hardened by the ascetic life which he
- pursued, the supreme power which he enjoyed, and
- the supposed necessity of subduing infidelity and
- eradicating heresy, which he conceived peculiarly
- incumbent on him. His features relaxed in their
- usual severity as he gazed upon the beautiful creature
- before him, alone, unfriended, and defending
- herself with so much spirit and courage. He crossed
- himself twice, as doubting whence arose the unwonted
- softening of a heart, which on such occasions
- used to resemble in hardness the steel of his
- sword. At length he spoke.
-
- ``Damsel,'' he said, ``if the pity I feel for thee
- arise from any practice thine evil arts have made
- on me, great is thy guilt. But I rather judge it
- the kinder feelings of nature, which grieves that so
- goodly a form should be a vessel of perdition. Repent,
- my daughter---confess thy witchcrafts---turn
- thee from thine evil faith---embrace this holy emblem,
- and all shall yet be well with thee here and
- hereafter. In some sisterhood of the strictest order,
- shalt thou have time for prayer and fitting penance,
- and that repentence not to be repented of. This do
- and live---what has the law of Moses done for thee
- that thou shouldest die for it?''
-
- ``It was the law of my fathers,'' said Rebecca;
- ``it was delivered in thunders and in storms upon
- the mountain of Sinai, in cloud and in fire. This,
- if ye are Christians, ye believe---it is, you say, recalled;
- but so my teachers have not taught me.''
-
- ``Let our chaplain,'' said Beaumanoir, ``stand
- forth, and tell this obstinate infidel---''
-
- ``Forgive the interruption,'' said Rebecca, meekly;
- ``I am a maiden, unskilled to dispute for my
- religion, but I can die for it, if it be God's will.---
- Let me pray your answer to my demand of a champion.''
-
- ``Give me her glove,'' said Beaumanoir. ``This
- is indeed,'' he continued, as he looked at the flimsy
- texture and slender fingers, ``a slight and frail gage
- for a purpose so deadly!---Seest thou, Rebecca, as
- this thin and light glove of thine is to one of our
- heavy steel gauntlets, so is thy cause to that of
- the Temple, for it is our Order which thou hast
- defied.''
-
- ``Cast my innocence into the scale,'' answered
- Rebecca, ``and the glove of silk shall outweigh the
- glove of iron.''
-
- ``Then thou dost persist in thy refusal to confess
- thy guilt, and in that bold challenge which
- thou hast made?''
-
- ``I do persist, noble sir,'' answered Rebecca.
-
- ``So be it then, in the name of Heaven,'' said
- the Grand Master; ``and may God show the
- right!''
-
- ``Amen,'' replied the Preceptors around him,
- and the word was deeply echoed by the whole assembly.
-
- ``Brethren,'' said Beaumanoir, ``you are aware
- that we might well have refused to this woman the
- benefit of the trial by combat---but though a Jewess
- and an unbeliever, she is also a stranger and defenceless,
- and God forbid that she should ask the
- benefit of our mild laws, and that it should be refused
- to her. Moreover, we are knights and soldiers
- as well as men of religion, and shame it were to us
- upon any pretence, to refuse proffered combat.
- Thus, therefore, stands the case. Rebecca, the
- daughter of Isaac of York, is, by many frequent
- and suspicious circumstances, defamed of sorcery
- practised on the person of a noble knight of our
- holy Order, and hath challenged the combat in
- proof of her innocence. To whom, reverend brethren,
- is it your opinion that we should deliver the
- gage of battle, naming him, at the same time, to
- be our champion on the field?''
-
- ``To Brian de Bois-Guilbert, whom it chiefly
- concerns,'' said the Preceptor of Goodalricke, ``and
- who, moreover, best knows how the truth stands
- in this matter.''
-
- ``But if,'' said the Grand Master, ``our brother
- Brian be under the influence of a charm or a spell
- ---we speak but for the sake of precaution, for to
- the arm of none of our holy Order would we more
- willingly confide this or a more weighty cause.''
-
- ``Reverend father,'' answered the Preceptor of
- Goodalricke, ``no spell can effect the champion who
- comes forward to fight for the judgment of God.''
-
- ``Thou sayest right, brother,'' said the Grand
- Master. ``Albert Malvoisin, give this gage of battle
- to Brian de Bois-Guilbert.---It is our charge to
- thee, brother,'' he continued, addressing himself to
- Bois-Guilbert, ``that thou do thy battle manfully,
- nothing doubting that the good cause shall triumph.
- ---And do thou, Rebecca, attend, that we assign
- thee the third day from the present to find a champion.''
-
- ``That is but brief space,'' answered Rebecca,
- ``for a stranger, who is also of another faith, to find
- one who will do battle, wagering life and honour
- for her cause, against a knight who is called an approved
- soldier.''
-
- ``We may not extend it,'' answered the Grand
- Master; ``the field must be foughten in our own
- presence, and divers weighty causes call us on the
- fourth day from hence.''
-
- ``God's will be done!'' said Rebecca; ``I put
- my trust in Him, to whom an instant is as effectual
- to save as a whole age.''
-
- ``Thou hast spoken well, damsel,'' said the Grand
- Master; ``but well know we who can array himself
- like an angel of light. It remains but to name a
- fitting place of combat, and, if it so hap, also of execution.
- ---Where is the Preceptor of this house?''
-
- Albert Malvoisin, still holding Rebecca's glove
- in his hand, was speaking to Bois-Guilbert very
- earnestly, but in a low voice.
-
- ``How!'' said the Grand Master, ``will he not
- receive the gage?''
-
- ``He will---he doth, most Reverend Father,''
- said Malvoisin, slipping the glove under his own
- mantle. ``And for the place of combat, I hold the
- fittest to be the lists of Saint George belonging to
- this Preceptory, and used by us for military exercise.''
-
- ``It is well,'' said the Grand Master.---``Rebecca,
- in those lists shalt thou produce thy champion; and
- if thou failest to do so, or if thy champion shall be
- discomfited by the judgment of God, thou shalt
- then die the death of a sorceress, according to
- doom.---Let this our judgment be recorded, and the
- record read aloud, that no one may pretend ignorance.''
-
- One of the chaplains, who acted as clerks to the
- chapter, immediately engrossed the order in a huge
- volume, which contained the proceedings of the
- Templar Knights when solemnly assembled on such
- occasions; and when he had finished writing, the
- other read aloud the sentence of the Grand Master,
- which, when translated from the Norman-French
- in which it was couched, was expressed as follows.---
-
- ``Rebecca, a Jewess, daughter of Isaac of York,
- being attainted of sorcery, seduction, and other damnable
- practices, practised on a Knight of the most
- Holy Order of the Temple of Zion, doth deny
- the same; and saith, that the testimony delivered
- against her this day is false, wicked, and disloyal;
- and that by lawful _essoine_* of her body as being
-
- * _Essoine_ signifies excuse, and here relates to the appellant's
- * privilege of appearing by her champion, in excuse of her own
- * person on account of her sex.
-
- unable to combat in her own behalf, she doth offer,
- by a champion instead thereof, to avouch her case,
- he performing his loyal _devoir_ in all knightly sort,
- with such arms as to gage of battle do fully appertain,
- and that at her peril and cost. And therewith
- she proffered her gage. And the gage having been
- delivered to the noble Lord and Knight, Brian de
- Bois-Guilbert, of the Holy Order of the Temple of
- Zion, he was appointed to do this battle, in behalf
- of his Order and himself, as injured and impaired
- by the practices of the appellant. Wherefore the
- most reverend Father and puissant Lord, Lucas
- Marquis of Beaumanoir, did allow of the said challenge,
- and of the said _essoine_ of the appellant's body,
- and assigned the third day for the said combat, the
- place being the enclosure called the lists of Saint
- George, near to the Preceptory of Templestowe.
- And the Grand Master appoints the appellant to
- appear there by her champion, on pain of doom, as
- a person convicted of sorcery or seduction; and
- also the defendant so to appear, under the penalty
- of being held and adjudged recreant in case of default;
- and the noble Lord and most reverend Father
- aforesaid appointed the battle to be done in
- his own presence, and according to all that is commendable
- and profitable in such a case. And may
- God aid the just cause!''
-
- ``Amen!'' said the Grand Master; and the word
- was echoed by all around. Rebecca spoke not, but
- she looked up to heaven, and, folding her hands,
- remained for a minute without change of attitude.
- She then modestly reminded the Grand Master,
- that she ought to be permitted some opportunity
- of free communication with her friends, for the purpose
- of making her condition known to them, and
- procuring, if possible, some champion to fight in
- her behalf.
-
- ``It is just and lawful,'' said the Grand Master;
- ``choose what messenger thou shalt trust, and he
- shall have free communication with thee in thy
- prison-chamber.''
-
- ``Is there,'' said Rebecca, ``any one here, who,
- either for love of a good cause, or for ample hire,
- will do the errand of a distressed being?''
-
- All were silent; for none thought it safe, in the
- presence of the Grand Master, to avow any interest
- in the calumniated prisoner, lest he should be suspected
- of leaning towards Judaism. Not even the
- prospect of reward, far less any feelings of compassion
- alone, could surmount this apprehension.
-
- Rebecca stood for a few moments in indescribable
- anxiety, and then exclaimed, ``Is it really thus?
- ---And, in English land, am I to be deprived of
- the poor chance of safety which remains to me, for
- want of an act of charity which would not be refused
- to the worst criminal?''
-
- Higg, the son of Snell, at length replied, ``I am
- but a maimed man, but that I can at all stir or move
- was owing to her charitable assistance.---I will do
- thine errand,'' he added, addressing Rebecca, ``as
- well as a crippled object can, and happy were my
- limbs fleet enough to repair the mischief done by
- my tongue. Alas! when I boasted of thy charity,
- I little thought I was leading thee into danger!''
-
- ``God,'' said Rebecca, ``is the disposer of all.
- He can turn back the captivity of Judah, even by
- the weakest instrument. To execute his message
- the snail is as sure a messenger as the falcon. Seek
- out Isaac of York---here is that will pay for horse
- and man---let him have this scroll.---I know not if
- it be of Heaven the spirit which inspires me, but
- most truly do I judge that I am not to die this
- death, and that a champion will be raised up for
- me. Farewell!---Life and death are in thy haste.''
-
- The peasant took the scroll, which contained only
- a few lines in Hebrew. Many of the crowd would
- have dissuaded him from touching a document so
- suspicious; but Higg was resolute in the service
- of his benefactress. She had saved his body, he
- said, and he was confident she did not mean to peril
- his soul.
-
- ``I will get me,'' he said, ``my neighbour Buthan's
- good capul,* and I will be at York within as
-
- * _Capul_, i.e. horse; in a more limited sense, work-horse.
-
- brief space as man and beast may.''
-
- But as it fortuned, he had no occasion to go so
- far, for within a quarter of a mile from the gate of
- the Preceptory he met with two riders, whom, by
- their dress and their huge yellow caps, he knew to
- be Jews; and, on approaching more nearly, discovered
- that one of them was his ancient employer,
- Isaac of York. The other was the Rabbi Ben Samuel;
- and both had approached as near to the Preceptory
- as they dared, on hearing that the Grand
- Master had summoned a chapter for the trial of a
- sorceress.
-
- ``Brother Ben Samuel,'' said Isaac, ``my soul
- is disquieted, and I wot not why. This charge of
- necromancy is right often used for cloaking evil
- practices on our people.''
-
- ``Be of good comfort, brother,'' said the physician;
- ``thou canst deal with the Nazarenes as one
- possessing the mammon of unrighteousness, and
- canst therefore purchase immunity at their hands
- ---it rules the savage minds of those ungodly men,
- even as the signet of the mighty Solomon was said
- to command the evil genii.---But what poor wretch
- comes hither upon his crutches, desiring, as I think,
- some speech of me?---Friend,'' continued the physician,
- addressing Higg, the son of Snell, ``I refuse
- thee not the aid of mine art, but I relieve not
- with one asper those who beg for alms upon the
- highway. Out upon thee!---Hast thou the palsy
- in thy legs? then let thy hands work for thy livelihood;
- for, albeit thou best unfit for a speedy post,
- or for a careful shepherd, or for the warfare, or for
- the service of a hasty master, yet there be occupations
- ---How now, brother?'' said he, interrupting
- his harangue to look towards Isaac, who had but
- glanced at the scroll which Higg offered, when,
- uttering a deep groan, he fell from his mule like a
- dying man, and lay for a minute insensible.
-
- The Rabbi now dismounted in great alarm, and
- hastily applied the remedies which his art suggested
- for the recovery of his companion. He had even
- taken from his pocket a cupping apparatus, and was
- about to proceed to phlebotomy, when the object
- of his anxious solicitude suddenly revived; but it
- was to dash his cap from his head, and to throw
- dust on his grey hairs. The physician was at first
- inclined to ascribe this sudden and violent emotion
- to the effects of insanity; and, adhering to his original
- purpose, began once again to handle his implements.
- But Isaac soon convinced him of his
- error.
-
- ``Child of my sorrow,'' he said, ``well shouldst
- thou be called Benoni, instead of Rebecca! Why
- should thy death bring down my grey hairs to the
- grave, till, in the bitterness of my heart, I curse
- God and die!''
-
- ``Brother,'' said the Rabbi, in great surprise,
- ``art thou a father in Israel, and dost thou utter
- words like unto these?---I trust that the child of
- thy house yet liveth?''
-
- ``She liveth,'' answered Isaac; ``but it is as
- Daniel, who was called Beltheshazzar, even when
- within the den of the lions. She is captive unto
- those men of Belial, and they will wreak their
- cruelty upon her, sparing neither for her youth nor
- her comely favour. O! she was as a crown of green
- palms to my grey locks; and she must wither in a
- night, like the gourd of Jonah!---Child of my love!
- ---child of my old age!---oh, Rebecca, daughter of
- Rachel! the darkness of the shadow of death hath
- encompassed thee.''
-
- ``Yet read the scroll,'' said the Rabbi; ``peradventure
- it may be that we may yet find out a way
- of deliverance.''
-
- ``Do thou read, brother,'' answered Isaac, ``for
- mine eyes are as a fountain of water.''
-
- The physician read, but in their native language,
- the following words:---
-
- ``To Isaac, the son of Adonikam, whom the
- Gentiles call Isaac of York, peace and the blessing
- of the promise be multiplied unto thee!---My
- father, I am as one doomed to die for that which
- my soul knoweth not---even for the crime of witchcraft.
- My father, if a strong man can be found to
- do battle for my cause with sword and spear, according
- to the custom of the Nazarenes, and that
- within the lists of Templestowe, on the third day
- from this time, peradventure our fathers' God will
- give him strength to defend the innocent, and her
- who hath none to help her. But if this may not be,
- let the virgins of our people mourn for me as for
- one cast off, and for the hart that is stricken by the
- hunter, and for the flower which is cut down by
- the scythe of the mower. Wherefore look now
- what thou doest, and whether there be any rescue.
- One Nazarene warrior might indeed bear arms in
- my behalf, even Wilfred, son of Cedric, whom the
- Gentiles call Ivanhoe. But he may not yet endure
- the weight of his armour. Nevertheless, send the
- tidings unto him, my father; for he hath favour
- among the strong men of his people, and as he was
- our companion in the house of bondage, he may find
- some one to do battle for my sake. And say unto
- him, even unto him, even unto Wilfred, the son of
- Cedric, that if Rebecca live, or if Rebecca die, she
- liveth or dieth wholly free of the guilt she is charged
- withal. And if it be the will of God that thou
- shalt be deprived of thy daughter, do not thou tarry,
- old man, in this land of bloodshed and cruelty;
- but betake thyself to Cordova, where thy brother
- liveth in safety, under the shadow of the throne,
- even of the throne of Boabdil the Saracen; for
- less cruel are the cruelties of the Moors unto the
- race of Jacob, than the cruelties of the Nazarenes
- of England.''
-
- Isaac listened with tolerable composure while
- Ben Samuel read the letter, and then again resumed
- the gestures and exclamations of Oriental sorrow,
- tearing his garments, besprinkling his head with
- dust, and ejaculating, ``My daughter! my daughter!
- flesh of my flesh, and bone of my bone!''
-
- ``Yet,'' said the Rabbi, ``take courage, for this
- grief availeth nothing. Gird up thy loins, and seek
- out this Wilfred, the son of Cedric. It may be he
- will help thee with counsel or with strength; for
- the youth hath favour in the eyes of Richard, called
- of the Nazarenes C<oe>ur-de-Lion, and the tidings
- that he hath returned are constant in the land. It
- may be that be may obtain his letter, and his signet,
- commanding these men of blood, who take
- their name from the Temple to the dishonour
- thereof, that they proceed not in their purposed
- wickedness.''
-
- ``I will seek him out,'' said Isaac, ``for he is a
- good youth, and hath compassion for the exile of
- Jacob. But he cannot bear his armour, and what
- other Christian shall do battle for the oppressed of
- Zion?''
-
- ``Nay, but,'' said the Rabbi, ``thou speakest as
- one that knoweth not the Gentiles. With gold
- shalt thou buy their valour, even as with gold thou
- buyest thine own safety. Be of good courage, and
- do thou set forward to find out this Wilfred of
- Ivanhoe. I will also up and be doing, for great sin
- it were to leave thee in thy calamity. I will hie
- me to the city of York, where many warriors and
- strong men are assembled, and doubt not I will
- find among them some one who will do battle for
- thy daughter; for gold is their god, and for riches
- will they pawn their lives as well as their lands.---
- Thou wilt fulfil, my brother, such promise as I may
- make unto them in thy name?''
-
- ``Assuredly, brother,'' said Isaac, ``and Heaven
- be praised that raised me up a comforter in my misery.
- Howbeit, grant them not their full demand
- at once, for thou shalt find it the quality of this
- accursed people that they will ask pounds, and peradventure
- accept of ounces---Nevertheless, be it as
- thou willest, for I am distracted in this thing, and
- what would my gold avail me if the child of my
- love should perish!''
-
- ``Farewell,'' said the physician, ``and may it be
- to thee as thy heart desireth.''
-
- They embraced accordingly, and departed on
- their several roads. The crippled peasant remained
- for some time looking after them.
-
- ``These dog-Jews!'' said he; ``to take no more
- notice of a free guild-brother, than if I were a bond
- slave or a Turk, or a circumcised Hebrew like themselves!
- They might have flung me a mancus or
- two, however. I was not obliged to bring their unhallowed
- scrawls, and run the risk of being bewitched,
- as more folks than one told me. And
- what care I for the bit of gold that the wench gave
- me, if I am to come to harm from the priest next
- Easter at confession, and be obliged to give him
- twice as much to make it up with him, and be called
- the Jew's flying post all my life, as it may hap,
- into the bargain? I think I was bewitched in earnest
- when I was beside that girl!---But it was always
- so with Jew or Gentile, whosoever came
- near her---none could stay when she had an errand
- to go---and still, whenever I think of her, I would
- give shop and tools to save her life.''
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
- O maid, unrelenting and cold as thou art,
- My bosom is proud as thine own.
- _Seward_.
-
- It was in the twilight of the day when her trial,
- if it could be called such, had taken place, that a
- low knock was heard at the door of Rebecca's prison-chamber.
- It disturbed not the inmate, who was
- then engaged in the evening prayer recommended
- by her religion, and which concluded with a hymn
- we have ventured thus to translate into English.
-
- When Israel, of the Lord beloved,
- Out of the land of bondage came,
- Her father's God before her moved,
- An awful guide, in smoke and flame.
- By day, along the astonish'd lands
- The cloudy pillar glided slow;
- By night, Arabia's crimson'd sands
- Return'd the fiery column's glow.
-
- There rose the choral hymn of praise,
- And trump and timbrel answer'd keen,
- And Zion's daughters pour'd their lays,
- With priest's and warrior's voice between.
- No portents now our foes amaze,
- Forsaken Israel wanders lone;
- Our fathers would not know =Thy= ways,
- And =Thou= hast left them to their own.
-
- But, present still, though now unseen;
- When brightly shines the prosperous day,
- Be thoughts of =Thee= a cloudy screen
- To temper the deceitful ray.
- And oh, when stoops on Judah's path
- In shade and storm the frequent night,
- Be =Thou=, long-suffering, slow to wrath,
- A burning, and a shining light!
-
- Our harps we left by Babel's streams,
- The tyrant's jest, the Gentile's scorn;
- No censer round our altar beams,
- And mute our timbrel, trump, and horn.
- But =Thou= hast said, the blood of goat,
- The flesh of rams, I will not prize;
- A contrite heart, and humble thought,
- Are mine accepted sacrifice.
-
- When the sounds of Rebecca's devotional hymn
- had died away in silence, the low knock at the door
- was again renewed. ``Enter,'' she said, ``if thou
- art a friend; and if a foe, I have not the means of
- refusing thy entrance.''
-
- ``I am,'' said Brian de Bois-Guilbert, entering
- the apartment, ``friend or foe, Rebecca, as the event
- of this interview shall make me.''
-
- Alarmed at the sight of this man, whose licentious
- passion she considered as the root of her misfortunes,
- Rebecca drew backward with a cautious
- and alarmed, yet not a timorous demeanour, into
- the farthest corner of the apartment, as if determined
- to retreat as far as she could, but to stand
- her ground when retreat became no longer possible.
- She drew herself into an attitude not of defiance,
- but of resolution, as one that would avoid provoking
- assault, yet was resolute to repel it, being offered,
- to the utmost of her power.
-
- ``You have no reason to fear me, Rebecca,'' said
- the Templar; ``Or if I must so qualify my speech,
- you have at least _now_ no reason to fear me.''
-
- ``I fear you not, Sir Knight,'' replied Rebecca,
- although her short-drawn breath seemed to belie
- the heroism of her accents my trust is strong,
- and I fear thee not.''
-
- ``You have no cause,'' answered Bois-Guilbert,
- gravely; ``my former frantic attempts you have
- not now to dread. Within your call are guards,
- over whom I have no authority. They are designed
- to conduct you to death, Rebecca, yet would
- not suffer you to be insulted by any one, even by
- me, were my frenzy---for frenzy it is---to urge me
- so far.''
-
- ``May Heaven be praised!'' said the Jewess;
- ``death is the least of my apprehensions in this
- den of evil.''
-
- ``Ay,'' replied the Templar, ``the idea of death
- is easily received by the courageous mind, when
- the road to it is sudden and open. A thrust with
- a lance, a stroke with a sword, were to me little---
- To you, a spring from a dizzy battlement, a stroke
- with a sharp poniard, has no terrors, compared
- with what either thinks disgrace. Mark me---I
- say this---perhaps mine own sentiments of honour
- are not less fantastic, Rebecca, than thine are; but
- we know alike how to die for them.''
-
- ``Unhappy man,'' said the Jewess; ``and art
- thou condemned to expose thy life for principles,
- of which thy sober judgment does not acknowledge
- the solidity? Surely this is a parting with your
- treasure for that which is not bread---but deem not
- so of me. Thy resolution may fluctuate on the
- wild and changeful billows of human opinion, but
- mine is anchored on the Rock of Ages.''
-
- ``Silence, maiden,'' answered the Templar;
- ``such discourse now avails but little. Thou art
- condemned to die not a sudden and easy death,
- such as misery chooses, and despair welcomes, but
- a slow, wretched, protracted course of torture, suited
- to what the diabolical bigotry of these men calls
- thy crime.''
-
- ``And to whom---if such my fate---to whom do
- I owe this?'' said Rebecca ``surely only to him,
- who, for a most selfish and brutal cause, dragged
- me hither, and who now, for some unknown purpose
- of his own, strives to exaggerate the wretched
- fate to which he exposed me.''
-
- ``Think not,'' said the Templar, ``that I have
- so exposed thee; I would have bucklered thee
- against such danger with my own bosom, as freely
- as ever I exposed it to the shafts which had otherwise
- reached thy life.''
-
- ``Had thy purpose been the honourable protection
- of the innocent,'' said Rebecca, ``I had thanked
- thee for thy care---as it is, thou hast claimed
- merit for it so often, that I tell thee life is worth
- nothing to me, preserved at the price which thou
- wouldst exact for it.''
-
- ``Truce with thine upbraidings, Rebecca,'' said
- the Templar; ``I have my own cause of grief, and
- brook not that thy reproaches should add to it.''
-
- ``What is thy purpose, then, Sir Knight?'' said
- the Jewess; ``speak it briefly.---If thou hast aught
- to do, save to witness the misery thou hast caused,
- let me know it; and then, if so it please you, leave
- me to myself---the step between time and eternity
- is short but terrible, and I have few moments to
- prepare for it.''
-
- ``I perceive, Rebecca,'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``that
- thou dost continue to burden me with the charge
- of distresses, which most fain would I have prevented.''
-
- ``Sir Knight,'' said Rebecca, ``I would avoid
- reproaches---But what is more certain than that I
- owe my death to thine unbridled passion?''
-
- ``You err---you err,''---said the Templar, hastily,
- ``if you impute what I could neither foresee
- nor prevent to my purpose or agency.---Could I
- guess the unexpected arrival of yon dotard, whom
- some flashes of frantic valour, and the praises yielded
- by fools to the stupid self-torments of an ascetic,
- have raised for the present above his own merits,
- above common sense, above me, and above the hundreds
- of our Order, who think and feel as men free
- from such silly and fantastic prejudices as are the
- grounds of his opinions and actions?''
-
- ``Yet,'' said Rebecca, ``you sate a judge upon
- me, innocent---most innocent---as you knew me to
- be---you concurred in my condemnation, and, if I
- aright understood, are yourself to appear in arms
- to assert my guilt, and assure my punishment.''
-
- ``Thy patience, maiden,'' replied the Templar.
- ``No race knows so well as thine own tribes how
- to submit to the time, and so to trim their bark as
- to make advantage even of an adverse wind.''
-
- ``Lamented be the hour,'' said Rebecca, ``that
- has taught such art to the House of Israel! but
- adversity bends the heart as fire bends the stubborn
- steel, and those who are no longer their own
- governors, and the denizens of their own free independent
- state, must crouch before strangers. It is
- our curse, Sir Knight, deserved, doubtless, by our
- own misdeeds and those of our fathers; but you---
- you who boast your freedom as your birthright,
- how much deeper is your disgrace when you stoop
- to soothe the prejudices of others, and that against
- your own conviction?''
-
- ``Your words are bitter, Rebecca,'' said Bois-Guilbert,
- pacing the apartment with impatience,
- ``but I came not hither to bandy reproaches with
- you.---Know that Bois-Guilbert yields not to created
- man, although circumstances may for a time
- induce him to alter his plan. His will is the mountain
- stream, which may indeed be turned for a little
- space aside by the rock, but fails not to find its
- course to the ocean. That scroll which warned thee
- to demand a champion, from whom couldst thou
- think it came, if not from Bois-Guilbert? In whom
- else couldst thou have excited such interest?''
-
- ``A brief respite from instant death,'' said Rebecca,
- ``which will little avail me---was this all thou
- couldst do for one, on whose head thou hast heaped
- sorrow, and whom thou hast brought near even
- to the verge of the tomb?''
-
- ``No maiden,'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``this was _not_
- all that I purposed. Had it not been for the accursed
- interference of yon fanatical dotard, and the
- fool of Goodalricke, who, being a Templar, affects
- to think and judge according to the ordinary rules
- of humanity, the office of the Champion Defender
- had devolved, not on a Preceptor, but on a Companion
- of the Order. Then I myself---such was
- my purpose---had, on the sounding of the trumpet,
- appeared in the lists as thy champion, disguised
- indeed in the fashion of a roving knight, who seeks
- adventures to prove his shield and spear; and then,
- let Beaumanoir have chosen not one, but two or three
- of the brethren here assembled, I had not doubted
- to cast them out of the saddle with my single lance.
- Thus, Rebecca, should thine innocence have been
- avouched, and to thine own gratitude would I have
- trusted for the reward of my victory.''
-
- ``This, Sir Knight,'' said Rebecca, ``is but idle
- boasting---a brag of what you would have done
- had you not found it convenient to do otherwise.
- You received my glove, and my champion, if a
- creature so desolate can find one, must encounter
- your lance in the lists---yet you would assume the
- air of my friend and protector!''
-
- ``Thy friend and protector,'' said the Templar,
- gravely, ``I will yet be---but mark at what risk, or
- rather at what certainty, of dishonour; and then
- blame me not if I make my stipulations, before I
- offer up all that I have hitherto held dear, to save
- the life of a Jewish maiden.''
-
- ``Speak,'' said Rebecca; ``I understand thee not.''
-
- ``Well, then,'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``I will speak
- as freely as ever did doting penitent to his ghostly
- father, when placed in the tricky confessional.---
- Rebecca, if I appear not in these lists I lose fame
- and rank---lose that which is the breath of my nostrils,
- the esteem, I mean, in which I am held by my
- brethren, and the hopes I have of succeeding to that
- mighty authority, which is now wielded by the bigoted
- dotard Lucas de Beaumanoir, but of which
- I should make a different use. Such is my certain
- doom, except I appear in arms against thy
- cause. Accursed be he of Goodalricke, who baited
- this trap for me! and doubly accursed Albert de
- Malvoisin, who withheld me from the resolution I
- had formed, of hurling back the glove at the face
- of the superstitious and superannuated fool, who
- listened to a charge so absurd, and against a creature
- so high in mind, and so lovely in form as thou
- art!''
-
- ``And what now avails rant or flattery?'' answered
- Rebecca. ``Thou hast made thy choice between
- causing to be shed the blood of an innocent woman,
- or of endangering thine own earthly state and earthly
- hopes---What avails it to reckon together?---thy
- choice is made.''
-
- ``No, Rebecca,'' said the knight, in a softer tone,
- and drawing nearer towards her; ``my choice is
- =not= made---nay, mark, it is thine to make the election.
- If I appear in the lists, I must maintain my
- name in arms; and if I do so, championed or unchampioned,
- thou diest by the stake and faggot,
- for there lives not the knight who hath coped with
- me in arms on equal issue, or on terms of vantage,
- save Richard C<oe>ur-de-Lion, and his minion of
- Ivanhoe. Ivanhoe, as thou well knowest, is unable
- to bear his corslet, and Richard is in a foreign
- prison. If I appear, then thou diest, even although
- thy charms should instigate some hot-headed youth
- to enter the lists in thy defence.''
-
- ``And what avails repeating this so often?'' said
- Rebecca.
-
- ``Much,'' replied the Templar; ``for thou must
- learn to look at thy fate on every side.''
-
- ``Well, then, turn the tapestry,'' said the Jewess,
- ``and let me see the other side.''
-
- ``If I appear,'' said Bois-Guilbert, ``in the fatal
- lists, thou diest by a slow and cruel death, in pain
- such as they say is destined to the guilty hereafter.
- But if I appear not, then am I a degraded and dishonoured
- knight, accused of witchcraft and of communion
- with infidels---the illustrious name which
- bas grown yet more so under my wearing, becomes
- a hissing and a reproach. I lose fame, I lose honour,
- I lose the prospect of such greatness as scarce
- emperors attain to---I sacrifice mighty ambition, I
- destroy schemes built as high as the mountains
- with which heathens say their heaven was once
- nearly scaled---and yet, Rebecca,'' he added, throwing
- himself at her feet, ``this greatness will I sacrifice,
- this fame will I renounce, this power will I
- forego, even now when it is half within my grasp,
- if thou wilt say, Bois-Guilbert, I receive thee for
- my lover.''
-
- ``Think not of such foolishness, Sir Knight,''
- answered Rebecca, ``but hasten to the Regent, the
- Queen Mother, and to Prince John---they cannot,
- in honour to the English crown, allow of the proceedings
- of your Grand Master. So shall you give
- me protection without sacrifice on your part, or the
- pretext of requiring any requital from me.''
-
- ``With these I deal not,'' he continued, holding
- the train of her robe---``it is thee only I address;
- and what can counterbalance thy choice? Bethink
- thee, were I a fiend, yet death is a worse, and it is
- death who is my rival.''
-
- ``I weigh not these evils,'' said Rebecca, afraid
- to provoke the wild knight, yet equally determined
- neither to endure his passion, nor even feign to endure
- it. ``Be a man, be a Christian! If indeed
- thy faith recommends that mercy which rather
- your tongues than your actions pretend, save me
- from this dreadful death, without seeking a requital
- which would change thy magnanimity into base
- barter.''
-
- ``No, damsel!'' said the proud Templar, springing
- up, ``thou shalt not thus impose on me---if I
- renounce present fame and future ambition, I renounce
- it for thy sake, and we will escape in company.
- Listen to me, Rebecca,'' he said, again
- softening his tone; ``England,---Europe,---is not
- the world. There are spheres in which we may act,
- ample enough even for my ambition. We will go
- to Palestine, where Conrade, Marquis of Montserrat,
- is my friend---a friend free as myself from
- the doting scruples which fetter our free-born reason
- ----rather with Saladin will we league ourselves,
- than endure the scorn of the bigots whom we contemn.
- ---I will form new paths to greatness,'' he continued,
- again traversing the room with hasty strides
- ---``Europe shall hear the loud step of him she
- has driven from her sons!---Not the millions whom
- her crusaders send to slaughter, can do so much to
- defend Palestine---not the sabres of the thousands
- and ten thousands of Saracens can hew their way
- so deep into that land for which nations are striving,
- as the strength and policy of me and those
- brethren, who, in despite of yonder old bigot, will
- adhere to me in good and evil. Thou shalt be a
- queen, Rebecca---on Mount Carmel shall we pitch
- the throne which my valour will gain for you, and
- I will exchange my long-desired batoon for a sceptre!''
-
- ``A dream,'' said Rebecca; ``an empty vision
- of the night, which, were it a waking reality, affects
- me not. Enough, that the power which thou mightest
- acquire, I will never share; nor hold I so light
- of country or religious faith, as to esteem him who
- is willing to barter these ties, and cast away the
- bonds of the Order of which he is a sworn member,
- in order to gratify an unruly passion for the
- daughter of another people.---Put not a price on my
- deliverance, Sir Knight---sell not a deed of generosity
- ---protect the oppressed for the sake of charity,
- and not for a selfish advantage---Go to the
- throne of England; Richard will listen to my appeal
- from these cruel men.''
-
- ``Never, Rebecca!'' said the Templar, fiercely.
- ``If I renounce my Order, for thee alone will I renounce
- it---Ambition shall remain mine, if thou
- refuse my love; I will not be fooled on all hands.
- ---Stoop my crest to Richard?---ask a boon of that
- heart of pride?---Never, Rebecca, will I place the
- Order of the Temple at his feet in my person. I
- may forsake the Order, I never will degrade or betray
- it.''
-
- ``Now God be gracious to me,'' said Rebecca,
- ``for the succour of man is wellnigh hopeless!''
-
- ``It is indeed,'' said the Templar; ``for, proud
- as thou art, thou hast in me found thy match. If
- I enter the lists with my spear in rest, think not
- any human consideration shall prevent my putting
- forth my strength; and think then upon thine own
- fate---to die the dreadful death of the worst of criminals
- ---to be consumed upon a blazing pile---dispersed
- to the elements of which our strange forms
- are so mystically composed---not a relic left of
- that graceful frame, from which we could say this
- lived and moved!---Rebecca, it is not in woman to
- sustain this prospect---thou wilt yield to my suit.''
-
- ``Bois-Guilbert,'' answered the Jewess, ``thou
- knowest not the heart of woman, or hast only conversed
- with those who are lost to her best feelings.
- I tell thee, proud Templar, that not in thy fiercest
- battles hast thou displayed more of thy vaunted
- courage, than has been shown by woman when called
- upon to suffer by affection or duty. I am myself
- a woman, tenderly nurtured, naturally fearful
- of danger, and impatient of pain---yet, when we
- enter those fatal lists, thou to fight and I to suffer,
- I feel the strong assurance within me, that my
- courage shall mount higher than thine. Farewell
- ---I waste no more words on thee; the time that remains
- on earth to the daughter of Jacob must be
- otherwise spent---she must seek the Comforter,
- who may hide his face from his people, but who
- ever opens his ear to the cry of those who seek him
- in sincerity and in truth.''
-
- ``We part then thus?'' said the Templar, after a
- short pause; ``would to Heaven that we had never
- met, or that thou hadst been noble in birth and
- Christian in faith!---Nay, by Heaven! when I
- gaze on thee, and think when and how we are next
- to meet, I could even wish myself one of thine own
- degraded nation; my hand conversant with ingots
- and shekels, instead of spear and shield; my head
- bent down before each petty noble, and my look
- only terrible to the shivering and bankrupt debtor
- ---this could I wish, Rebecca, to be near to thee in
- life, and to escape the fearful share I must have in
- thy death.''
-
- ``Thou hast spoken the Jew,'' said Rebecca, ``as
- the persecution of such as thou art has made him.
- Heaven in ire has driven him from his country, but
- industry has opened to him the only road to power
- and to influence, which oppression has left unbarred.
- Read the ancient history of the people of God,
- and tell me if those, by whom Jehovah wrought
- such marvels among the nations, were then a people
- of misers and of usurers!---And know, proud
- knight, we number names amongst us to which
- your boasted northern nobility is as the gourd compared
- with the cedar---names that ascend far back
- to those high times when the Divine Presence
- shook the mercy-seat between the cherubim, and
- which derive their splendour from no earthly prince,
- but from the awful Voice, which bade their fathers
- be nearest of the congregation to the Vision---Such
- were the princes of the House of Jacob.''
-
- Rebecca's colour rose as she boasted the ancient
- glories of her race, but faded as she added, with at
- sigh, ``Such _were_ the princes of Judah, now such
- no more!---They are trampled down like the shorn
- grass, and mixed with the mire of the ways. Yet
- are there those among them who shame not such
- high descent, and of such shall be the daughter of
- Isaac the son of Adonikam! Farewell!---I envy
- not thy blood-won honours---I envy not thy barbarous
- descent from northern heathens---I envy thee
- not thy faith, which is ever in thy mouth, but never
- in thy heart nor in thy practice.''
-
- ``There is a spell on me, by Heaven!'' said Bois-Guilbert.
- ``I almost think yon besotted skeleton
- spoke truth, and that the reluctance with which
- I part from thee hath something in it more than
- is natural.---Fair creature!'' he said, approaching
- near her, but with great respect,---``so young, so
- beautiful, so fearless of death! and yet doomed to
- die, and with infamy and agony. Who would not
- weep for thee?---The tear, that has been a stranger
- to these eyelids for twenty years, moistens them
- as I gaze on thee. But it must be---nothing may
- now save thy life. Thou and I are but the blind
- instruments of some irresistible fatality, that hurries
- us along, like goodly vessels driving before the
- storm, which are dashed against each other, and so
- perish. Forgive me, then, and let us part at least
- as friends part. I have assailed thy resolution in
- vain, and mine own is fixed as the adamantine decrees
- of fate.''
-
- ``Thus,'' said Rebecca, ``do men throw on fate
- the issue of their own wild passions. But I do forgive
- thee, Bois-Guilbert, though the author of my
- early death. There are noble things which cross
- over thy powerful mind; but it is the garden of the
- sluggard, and the weeds have rushed up, and conspired
- to choke the fair and wholesome blossom.''
-
- ``Yes,'' said the Templar, ``I am, Rebecca, as
- thou hast spoken me, untaught, untamed---and
- proud, that, amidst a shoal of empty fools and crafty
- bigots, I have retained the preeminent fortitude
- that places me above them. I have been a child of
- battle from my youth upward, high in my views,
- steady and inflexible in pursuing them. Such must
- I remain---proud, inflexible, and unchanging; and
- of this the world shall have proof.---But thou forgivest
- me, Rebecca?''
-
- ``As freely as ever victim forgave her executioner.''
-
- ``Farewell, then,'' said the Templar, and left
- the apartment.
-
- The Preceptor Albert waited impatiently in an
- adjacent chamber the return of Bois-Guilbert.
-
- ``Thou hast tarried long,'' he said; ``I have
- been as if stretched on red-hot iron with very impatience.
- What if the Grand Master, or his spy
- Conrade, had come hither? I had paid dear for
- my complaisance.---But what ails thee, brother?---
- Thy step totters, thy brow is as black as night.
- Art thou well, Bois-Guilbert?''
-
- ``Ay,'' answered the Templar, ``as well as the
- wretch who is doomed to die within an hour.---Nay,
- by the rood, not half so well---for there be those in
- such state, who can lay down life like a cast-off
- garment. By Heaven, Malvoisin, yonder girl hath
- wellnigh unmanned me. I am half resolved to go
- to the Grand Master, abjure the Order to his very
- teeth, and refuse to act the brutality which his
- tyranny has imposed on me.''
-
- ``Thou art mad,'' answered Malvoisin; ``thou
- mayst thus indeed utterly ruin thyself, but canst
- not even find a chance thereby to save the life of
- this Jewess, which seems so precious in thine eyes.
- Beaumanoir will name another of the Order to
- defend his judgment in thy place, and the accused
- will as assuredly perish as if thou hadst taken the
- duty imposed on thee.''
-
- ``'Tis false---I will myself take arms in her behalf,''
- answered the Templar, haughtily; ``and,
- should I do so, I think, Malvoisin, that thou knowest
- not one of the Order, who will keep his saddle
- before the point of my lance.''
-
- ``Ay, but thou forgettest,'' said the wily adviser,
- ``thou wilt have neither leisure nor opportunity to
- execute this mad project. Go to Lucas Beaumanoir,
- and say thou hast renounced thy vow of obedience,
- and see how long the despotic old man will
- leave thee in personal freedom. The words shall
- scarce have left thy lips, ere thou wilt either be an
- hundred feet under ground, in the dungeon of the
- Preceptory, to abide trial as a recreant knight; or,
- if his opinion holds concerning thy possession, thou
- wilt be enjoying straw, darkness, and chains, in
- some distant convent cell, stunned with exorcisms,
- and drenched with holy water, to expel the foul
- fiend which hath obtained dominion over thee.
- Thou must to the lists, Brian, or thou art a lost and
- dishonoured man.''
-
- ``I will break forth and fly,'' said Bois-Guilbert
- ---``fly to some distant land, to which folly and
- fanaticism have not yet found their way. No drop
- of the blood of this most excellent creature shall be
- spilled by my sanction.''
-
- ``Thou canst not fly,'' said the Preceptor; ``thy
- ravings have excited suspicion, and thou wilt not
- be permitted to leave the Preceptory. Go and
- make the essay---present thyself before the gate,
- and command the bridge to be lowered, and mark
- what answer thou shalt receive.---Thou are surprised
- and offended; but is it not the better for thee?
- Wert thou to fly, what would ensue but the reversal
- of thy arms, the dishonour of thine ancestry,
- the degradation of thy rank?---Think on it.
- Where shall thine old companions in arms hide
- their heads when Brian de Bois-Guilbert, the best
- lance of the Templars, is proclaimed recreant, amid
- the hisses of the assembled people? What grief
- will be at the Court of France! With what joy
- will the haughty Richard hear the news, that the
- knight that set him hard in Palestine, and well-nigh
- darkened his renown, has lost fame and honour
- for a Jewish girl, whom he could not even
- save by so costly a sacrifice!''
-
- ``Malvoisin,'' said the Knight, ``I thank thee---
- thou hast touched the string at which my heart most
- readily thrills!---Come of it what may, recreant
- shall never be added to the name of Bois-Guilbert.
- Would to God, Richard, or any of his vaunting
- minions of England, would appear in these lists!
- But they will be empty---no one will risk to break
- a lance for the innocent, the forlorn.''
-
- ``The better for thee, if it prove so,'' said the
- Preceptor; ``if no champion appears, it is not by
- thy means that this unlucky damsel shall die, but
- by the doom of the Grand Master, with whom rests
- all the blame, and who will count that blame for
- praise and commendation.''
-
- ``True,'' said Bois-Guilbert; ``if no champion
- appears, I am but a part of the pageant, sitting indeed
- on horseback in the lists, but having no part
- in what is to follow.''
-
- ``None whatever,'' said Malvoisin; ``no more
- than the armed image of Saint George when it
- makes part of a procession.''
-
- ``Well, I will resume my resolution,'' replied
- the haughty Templar. ``She has despised me---
- repulsed me---reviled me---And wherefore should
- I offer up for her whatever of estimation I have in
- the opinion of others? Malvoisin, I will appear in
- the lists.''
-
- He left the apartment hastily as he uttered these
- words, and the Preceptor followed, to watch and
- confirm him in his resolution; for in Bois-Guilbert's
- fame he had himself a strong interest, expecting
- much advantage from his being one day at the head
- of the Order, not to mention the preferment of
- which Mont-Fitchet had given him hopes, on condition
- he would forward the condemnation of the
- unfortunate Rebecca. Yet although, in combating
- his friend's better feelings, he possessed all the advantage
- which a wily, composed, selfish disposition
- has over a man agitated by strong and contending
- passions, it required all Malvoisin's art to keep
- Bois-Guilbert steady to the purpose he had prevailed
- on him to adopt. He was obliged to watch
- him closely to prevent his resuming his purpose
- of flight, to intercept his communication with the
- Grand Master, lest he should come to an open rupture
- with his Superior, and to renew, from time to
- time, the various arguments by which he endeavoured
- to show, that, in appearing as champion on
- this occasion, Bois-Guilbert, without either accelerating
- or ensuring the fate of Rebecca, would follow
- the only course by which be could save himself
- from degradation and disgrace.
-