The earlier fortunes of the house
of Aescendune must here obtrude themselves upon the
notice of the reader, in order that he may more easily
comprehend the subsequent pages of our veritable history.
Sebbald, the remote ancestor of the
family, was amongst the earliest Saxon conquerors
of Mercia. He fell in battle with the Britons,
or Welshmen as our ancestors called them, leaving
sons valiant as their sire, to whom were given the
fertile lands lying between the river Avon and the
mighty midland forests, to which they gave the name
“Aescendune.”
They had held their own for three
hundred years with varying fortunes; once or twice
home and hearth were desolated by the fierce tide of
Danish invasion, but the wars subsided, and the old
family resumed its position, amidst the joy of their
dependants and serfs, to whom they were endeared by
a thousand memories of past benefits.
But a generation only had passed since
the shadow of a great woe fell on the family of Aescendune.
Offa, who was then the thane, had
two sons, Oswald the elder, and Ella the younger,
with whom our readers are already acquainted.
The elder possessed few of the family
virtues save brute courage. He was ever rebellious,
even in boyhood, and arrived at man’s estate
in the midst of unsettled times of war and tumult.
Weary of the restraints of home, he joined a band
of Danish marauders, and shared their victories, enriching
himself with the spoils of his own countrymen.
Thus he remained an outlaw, for his father disowned
him in consequence of his crime, until, fighting against
his own people in the great battle of Brunanburgh,
[iv] where Athelstane so gloriously conquered the allied
Danes, Scots, and Welsh, he was taken prisoner.
The victor king sat in judgment upon
the recreant, surrounded by his chief nobility and
vassal kings. The guilt of the prisoner was evident,
nay undenied, and the respect in which his sire was
held alone delayed the doom of a cruel death from
being pronounced upon him.
While the council yet deliberated,
Offa appeared amongst them, and, like a second Brutus,
took his place amongst his peers. Disclaiming
all personal interest in the matter, he sternly proposed
that the claims of justice should be satisfied.
Yet they hesitated to shed Oswald’s
blood: the alternative they adopted was perhaps
not more merciful-although a common doom
in those times. They selected a crazy worm-eaten
boat, and sent the criminal to sea, without sail,
oar, or rudder, with a loaf of bread and cruse of water,
the wind blowing freshly from off the land.
Oswald was never heard of again; but
after his supposed death, information was brought
to his father that the outlaw had been married to
a Danish woman, and had left a son-an orphan-for
the mother died in childbirth.
Offa resolved to seek the boy, and
to adopt him, as if in reparation for the past.
The effort he had made had cost him a bitter pang,
and the father’s heart was well-nigh broken.
For a time the inquiries were unsuccessful. It
was discovered that the mother was dead, that she had
died before the tragedy, but not a word could be learned
respecting the boy, and many had begun to doubt his
existence, when, after years had elapsed, one of the
executioners of the cruel doom deposed on his deathbed
that a boy of some ten summers had appeared on the
beach, had called the victim “father,”
and had so persistently entreated to share his doom,
that they had allowed him to do so, but had concealed
the fact, rightly fearing blame, if not punishment.
The priest who had attended his dying bed, and heard
his last confession, bore the tidings to Offa at the
penitent’s desire.
The old thane never seemed to lift
up his head again: the sacrifice his sense of
duty had exacted from him had been too great for a
heart naturally full of domestic affection, and he
sank and died after a few months in the arms of his
younger and beloved son Ella.
The foundation of the neighbouring
priory and church of St. Wilfred had been the consolation
of his later years, but the work was only half completed
at his death. It was carried on with equal zeal
by Ella, now the Thane of Aescendune.
He married Edith, the daughter of
a rich thane of Wessex, and the marriage proved a
most happy one.
Sincerely religious, after the fashion
of their day, they honoured God with their substance,
enriched the church of St. Wilfred, where the dust
of the aged Offa awaited the resurrection of the just,
and continued the labour of building the priory.
Day after day they were constant in their attendance
at mass and evensong, and strove to live as foster
parents to their dependants and serfs.
The chief man in his hundred, Ella
acted as reeve or magistrate, holding his court for
the administration of justice each month, and giving
such just judgment as became one who had the fear
of God before him. No appeal was ever made from
him to the ealdorman (earl) or scirgerefa (sheriff)
and the wisdom and mercy of his rule were universally
renowned.
His land was partly cultivated by
his own theows, who were in those days slaves attached
to the soil, and partly let out to free husbandmen
(or ceorls) who owed their lord rent in kind or in
money, and paid him, as “his men,” feudal
service.
Around his hospitable board the poor
of the district found sustenance, while work was made
for all in draining mères, mending roads, building
the priory, or in the various agricultural labours
of the year.
In the first year of King Edmund the
lady Edith presented her lord with his first-born
son, to whom in baptism they gave the name Elfric,
and a year later Alfred was born, and named after
the great king. One daughter, named Edgitha,
completed the fruits of their happy union, and in
their simple fashion they strove to train their children
in the fear of the Lord.
We will now resume the thread of our story.
It was now the hour of eventide, and
the time for “laying the board” drew near.
From forest and field came in ceorl and theow, hanging
up their weapons or agricultural implements around
the lower end of the hall. Meanwhile the domestics
brought in large tressels, and then huge heavy boards,
which they arranged so as to form the dining table,
shaped like the letter T, the upper portion being
furnished with the richest dainties for the family
and their guest, the lower with simpler fare for the
dependents.
A wild boar caught in the forest formed
the chief dish, and was placed at the upper end, while
mutton and beef; dressed in various ways, flanked
it on either side.
The thane, Ella, occupied the central
seat at the high table: his chair, rudely carved,
had borne the weight of his ancestors before him; on
his left hand was seated the once lovely Edith.
Age had deprived her of her youthful beauty, but not
of the sweet expression which told of her gentleness
and purity of heart; they had left their impress on
each line of her speaking countenance; and few left
her presence unimpressed with respect and esteem.
On his right hand sat Prince Edwy,
“Edwy the fair” men called him, and right
well he deserved the name. His face was one which
inspired interest at a glance: his large blue
eyes, his golden hair which floated over his shoulders,
his sweet voice, his graceful bearing, all united to
impress the beholders.
Elfric, Alfred, and their sister Edgitha,
completed the company at the high table.
The hungry crowd of ceorls and serfs,
who were, as we have said, fresh from field or forest,
sat at the lower table, which was spread with huge
joints of roasted meat, loaves of bread, wedges of
cheese, piles of cabbage or other vegetables, rolls
or coils of broiled eels, and huge pieces of boiled
pork or bacon.
Around the table sat the hounds and
other dogs, open jawed, waiting such good luck as
they might hope to receive at the hands of their masters,
while many “loaf eaters,” as the serfs
were called who fed at their master’s table,
stood with the dogs, or sat on the rush-strewn floor,
for want of room at the board.
It was marvellous to see how the food
disappeared, as hand after hand was stretched out
to the dishes, in the absence of forks-a
modern invention-and huge horns of ale
helped the meat downwards.
Game, steaks of beef and venison on
spits, were handed round. The choicer joints
were indeed reserved for the upper board, but profusion
was the rule everywhere throughout the hall, and there
was probably not a serf; nay, not even a dog, whose
appetite was not fully satisfied before the end of
the feast.
The prince seemed thoroughly to have
recovered his spirits, somewhat damped perhaps before
by his adventure with the wolf; and exerted his talents
to make himself agreeable. He had seen life on
an extended scale, young as he was, and his anecdotes
of London and the court, if a little wild, were still
interesting. Elfric and Alfred listened to his
somewhat random talk, with that respect boys ever pay
to those who have seen more of the wide world than
themselves-a respect perhaps heightened
by the high rank of their princely guest, who was,
however, only a month or two older than Elfric.
As they heard of the marvels of London,
and of the court, home and its attractions seemed
to become dim by comparison, and Elfric especially
longed to share such happiness.
Their father seemed to wish to change
the conversation, as he asked the prince whether he
had been long in Mercia.
Edwy replied, “Nay, my host;
this is almost my first day of perfect freedom, and
I only left London, and my uncle the king, a few days
back. Dunstan has gone down to Glastonbury, for
which the Saints be thanked, and I am released for
a few days from poring over the musty old manuscripts
to which he dooms me.”
“It is well, my prince, that
you should have a preceptor so well qualified to instruct
you in the arts your great ancestor King Alfred so
nobly adorned.”
“Ah yes, Alfred,” said
Edwy, yawning; “but you know we can’t all
be saints or heroes like him: for my part, I
sometimes wish he had never lived.”
The astonished looks of the company
seemed to demand further explanation.
“Because it is always, ‘Alfred
did this,’ and ‘Alfred did that.’
If I am tired of ‘hic, haec, hoc,’
I am told Alfred was never weary; if I complain of
a headache, Dunstan says Alfred never complained of
pain or illness, but bore all with heroic fortitude,
and all the rest of it. If I want a better dinner
than my respected uncle gives us on fast days in the
palace, I am told Alfred never ate anything beyond
a handful of parched corn on such days; if I lose
my temper, I am told Alfred never lost his; and so
on, till I get sick of his name; and here it greets
me in the woods of Mercia.”
“I crave pardon, my liege,”
said Ella, who hardly knew whether to smile or frown
at the sarcastic petulance of his guest, who went on
with a sly smile-“And now old Dunstan
does not know where I am. He left me with a huge
pile of books in musty Latin, or crabbed English, and
I had to read this and to write that, as if I were
no prince, but a scrivener, and had to get my living
by my pen; but as soon as he was gone I had a headache,
and persuaded my venerable uncle the king, through
the physician, that I needed change of air.”
“But what will Dunstan say?”
“Oh, he must fight it out with
Sigebert the leech, and Sigebert knows which side
his bread is buttered.”
The whole tone of Edwy indicated plainly
that the headache was but a pretence, but he spoke
with such sly simplicity that the boys could not help
joining in his contagious laughter; sympathising, doubtless,
in his love of a holiday in the woods.
“Your headache is not gone yet,
I trust, my prince,” said Elfric.
“Why?” said Edwy, turning his eyes upon
him with a smile.
“Because we have splendid woods
near here for hunting, and I must have” (he
whispered these words into Edwy’s ear) “a
headache, too.”
Edwy quite understood the request
conveyed in these words, and turning to the old thane
requested him to allow his boys to join the sport on
the morrow as a kind of bodyguard, adding some very
complimentary words on the subject of Elfric’s
courage shown in the rescue that afternoon.
“Why, yes,” said the old
thane, “I have always tried to bring up the
boys so as to fear neither man nor beast, and Elfric
did indifferently well in the tussle. So he has
earned a holiday for himself and brother, with Father
Cuthbert’s leave,” and Ella turned to the
ecclesiastic.
“They are good boys,”
said the priest, “only, my lord, Elfric is somewhat
behind in his studies.”
Elfric’s looks expressed his
contempt of the “studies,” but he dared
not express the feeling before his father.
“But I trust, my prince,”
said Ella, “that we shall not keep you from
your duties at court. Dunstan is a severe, although
a holy man.”
“Oh, he is gone to have another
encounter with the Evil One at Glastonbury, and is
fashioning a pair of tongs for the purpose,”
said Edwy, alluding to the legend already current
amongst the credulous populace; “and I wish,”
he muttered, “the Evil One would get the best
of it and fly away with him. But” (in a
louder tone) “he cannot return for a month,
which means a month’s holiday for me.”
Ella could interpose no further objection,
although scarcely satisfied with the programme.
The conversation here became general.
It turned upon the subject of hunting and war, and
the enthusiasm of young Edwy quite captivated the
thane, who seemed to see Edmund, the father of the
young prince, before his eyes, as he had known him
in his own impetuous youth. Dear, indeed, had
that prince been to Ella, both before and after his
elevation to the throne, and as he heard the sweet
boyish voice of Edwy, his thoughts were guided by
memory to that ill-omened feast at Pucklechurch, where
the vindictive outlaw Leolf had murdered his king.
The sword of Ella had been amongst those which avenged
the crime on the murderer, but they could not call
back the vital spark which had fled. “Edmund
the Magnificent,” as they loved to call him,
was dead.
So, as Ella listened, he could hardly
help condoning the wild speeches of the young prince
in deference to the memory of the past.
And now they removed the festive board
from the hall, while kneeling serfs offered basin
and towel to the thane and his guest to wash their
hands. Wine began to circulate freely in goblets
of wood inlaid with gold or silver; the clinking of
cups, the drinking of healths and pledges opened the
revel, cupbearers poured out the wine. The glee-wood
(harp) was introduced, while pipes, flutes, and soft
horns accompanied its strains. So they sang-
Here Athelstane king,
Of earls the lord,
To warriors the ring-giver
Glory world-long
Had won in the strife,
By edge of the sword,
At Brunanburgh.
And Ella-who had stood
by his father’s side in that dread field where
Danes, Scots, and Welshmen fled before the English
sword-listened with enthusiasm, till he
thought of his brother Oswald, when tears, unobserved,
rolled down his cheeks.
Not so with the boys. They had
no secret sorrow to hide, and they listened like those
whose young blood boils at the thought of mighty deeds,
and longed to imitate them. And when the gleeman
finished his lengthy flight of music and poesy, they
applauded him till the roof rang again.
Song followed song, legend legend,
the revelry grew louder, while the lady Edith, with
her daughter, retired to their bower, where they employed
their needles on delicate embroidery. A representation
in bright colours of the consecration of the church
of St. Wilfred occupied the hands of the little Edgitha,
while her mother wove sacred pictures to serve as
hangings for the sanctuary of the priory church.
But soon the tolling of the bell announced
that it was the compline hour, nine o’clock,
and that hour was never allowed to pass unobserved
at Aescendune, but formed the termination of the labour
or the feast, after which it was customary for the
whole household to retire, as well they might who
rose with the early dawn.
Neither was it passed by on this occasion,
although the boys looked very disappointed, for they
would fain have listened to song or legend till midnight,
if not later.
“Come, my children,” said
the thane; “we must rise early, so let us all
commit ourselves to the keeping of God and His holy
angels, and seek our pillows.”
So the whole party repaired to the
chapel, where the chaplain said the compline office
or night song, after which Ella saluted his royal guest
with reverent affection, and bestowed his paternal
benediction upon his children. Then the whole
party separated for the night.
The household was speedily buried
in sleep, save the solitary sentinel who paced around
the building. Not that danger was apprehended
from any source, but precaution had become habitual
in those days of turmoil. Occasionally the howl
of the wolf was heard from the woods, and the sleepers
half awoke, then dreamt of the chase as the night flew
by.