It was Monday, and the eyes of London
and the Court were turned towards Greenwich Park,
where the Queen was to give entertainment to the French
Envoy who had come once more to urge upon the Queen
marriage with a son of the Medici, and to obtain an
assurance that she would return to France the widow
of the great Montgomery and his valiant lieutenant,
Michel de la Foret. The river was covered with
boats and barges, festooned, canopied, and hung with
banners and devices; and from sunrise music and singing
conducted down the stream the gaily dressed populace for
those were the days when a man spent on his ruff and
his hose and his russet coat as much as would feed
and house a family for a year; when the fine-figured
ruflier with sables about his neck, corked slipper,
trimmed buskin, and cloak of silk or damask furred,
carried his all upon his back.
Loud-voiced gallants came floating
by; men of a hundred guilds bearing devices pompously
held on their way to the great pageant; country bumpkins
up from Surrey roystered and swore that there was but
one land that God had blessed, and challenged the
grinning watermen from Gravesend and Hampton Court
to deny it; and the sun with ardour drove from the
sky every invading cloud, leaving Essex and Kent as
far as eye could see perfect green gardens of opulence.
Before Elizabeth had left her bed,
London had emptied itself into Greenwich Park.
Thither the London Companies had come in their varied
dazzling accoutrements hundreds armed in
fine corselets bearing the long Moorish
pike; tall halberdiers in the unique armour called
Almainrivets, and gunners or muleteers equipped in
shirts of mail with morions or steel caps.
Here too were to come the Gentlemen Pensioners, resplendent
in scarlet, to “run with the spear;” and
hundreds of men-at-arms were set at every point to
give garish bravery to all. Thousands of citizens,
openmouthed, gazed down the long arenas of green festooned
with every sort of decoration and picturesque invention.
Cages of large birds from the Indies, fruits, corn,
fishes, grapes, hung in the trees, players perched
in the branches discoursed sweet music, and poets
recited their verses from rustic bridges or on platforms
with weapons and armour hung trophy-wise on ragged
staves. Upon a small lake a dolphin four-and-twenty
feet in length came swimming, within its belly a lively
orchestra; Italian tumblers swung from rope to bar;
and crowds gathered at the places where bear and bull-baiting
were to excite the none too fastidious tastes of the
time.
All morning the gay delights went
on, and at high noon the cry was carried from mouth
to mouth: “The Queen! The Queen!”
She appeared on a balcony surrounded
by her lords and ladies, and there received the diplomatists,
speaking at length to the French Envoy in a tone of
lightness and elusive cheerfulness which he was at
a loss to understand and tried in vain to pierce by
cogent remarks bearing on matters of moment involved
in his embassage. Not far away stood Leicester,
but the Queen had done no more than note his presence
by a glance, and now and again with ostentatious emphasis
she spoke to Angele, whom she had had brought to her
in the morning before chapel-going. Thus early,
after a few questions and some scrutiny, she had sent
her in charge of a gentleman-at-arms and a maid of
the Duke’s Daughter to her father’s lodging,
with orders to change her robe, to return to the palace
in good time before noon, and to bring her father
to a safe place where he could watch the pleasures
of the people. When Angele came to the presence
again she saw that the Queen was wearing a gown of
pure white with the sleeves shot with black, such as
she herself had worn when admitted to audience yesterday.
Vexed, agitated, embittered as Elizabeth had been
by the news brought to her the night before, she had
kept her wardrobers and seamstresses at work the whole
night to alter a white satin habit to the simplicity
and style of that which Angele had worn.
“What think you of my gown,
my lady refugee?” she said to Angele at last,
as the Gentlemen Pensioners paraded in the space below,
followed by the Knights Tilters at their
head the Queen’s Champion, Sir Henry Lee:
twenty-five of the most gallant and favoured of the
courtiers of Elizabeth, including the gravest of her
counsellors and the youngest gallant who had won her
smile, Master Christopher Hatton. Some of these
brave suitors, taken from the noblest families, had
appeared in the tilt-yard every anniversary of the
year of her accession, and had lifted their romantic
office, which seemed but the service of enamoured
knights, into an almost solemn dignity.
The vast crowd disposed itself around
the great improvised yard where the Knights Tilters
were to engage, and the Queen, followed by her retinue,
descended to the dais which had been set up near the
palace. Her white satin gown, roped with pearls
only at the neck and breast, glistened in the bright
sun, and her fair hair took on a burnished radiance.
As Angele passed with her in the gorgeous procession,
she could not but view the scene with admiring eye,
albeit her own sweet sober attire, a pearly grey,
seemed little in keeping; for the ladies and lords
were most richly attired, and the damask and satin
cloaks, crimson velvet gowns, silk hoods, and jewelled
swords and daggers made a brave show. She was
like some moth in a whorl of butterflies.
Her face was pale, and her eye had
a curious disturbed look, as though they had seen
frightening things. The events of last evening
had tried her simple spirit, and she shrank from this
glittering show; but the knowledge that her lover’s
life was in danger, and that her happiness was here
and now at stake, held her bravely to her place, beset
as it was with peril; for the Queen, with that eccentricity
which had lifted her up yesterday, might cast her
down to-day, and she had good reason to fear the power
and influence of Leicester, whom she knew with a sure
instinct was intent on Michel’s ruin. Behind
all her nervous shrinking and her heart’s doubt,
the memory of the face of the stranger she had seen
last night with Sir Andrew Melvill tortured her.
She could not find the time and place where she had
seen the eyes that, in the palace, had filled her
with mislike and abhorrence as they looked upon the
Queen. Again and again in her fitful sleep had
she dreamt of him, and a sense of foreboding was heavy
upon her she seemed to hear the footfall
of coming disaster. The anxiety of her soul lent
an unnatural brightness to her eyes; so that more
than one enamoured courtier made essay to engage her
in conversation, and paid her deferential compliment
when the Queen’s eyes were not turned her way.
Come to the dais, she was placed not far from her
Majesty, beside the Duke’s Daughter, whose whimsical
nature found frequent expression in what the Queen
was wont to call “a merry volt.”
She seemed a privileged person, with whom none ventured
to take liberties, and against whom none was entitled
to bear offence, for her quips were free from malice,
and her ingenuity in humour of mark. She it was
who had put into the Queen’s head that morning
an idea which was presently to startle Angele and
all others.
Leicester was riding with the Knights
Tilters, and as they cantered lightly past the dais,
trailing their spears in obeisance, Elizabeth engaged
herself in talk with Cecil, who was standing near,
and appeared not to see the favourite. This was
the first time since he had mounted to good fortune
that she had not thrown him a favour to pick up with
his spear and wear in her honour, and he could scarce
believe that she had meant to neglect him. He
half halted, but she only deigned an inclination of
the head, and he spurred his horse angrily on with
a muttered imprecation, yet, to all seeming, gallantly
paying homage.
“There shall be doings ere this
day is done. ’Beware the Gipsy’!”
said the Duke’s Daughter in a low tone to Angele,
and she laughed lightly.
“Who is the Gipsy?” asked
Angele, with good suspicion, however.
“Who but Leicester,” answered
the other. “Is he not black enough?”
“Why was he so called?
Who put the name upon Who but the Earl of Sussex as
he died as noble a chief, as true a counsellor
as ever spoke truth to a Queen. But truth is
not all at Court, and Sussex was no flatterer.
Leicester bowed under the storm for a moment when Sussex
showed him in his true colours; but Sussex had no
gift of intrigue, the tide turned, and so he broke
his heart, and died. But he left a message which
I sometimes remember with my collects. ’I
am now passing to another world,’ said he, ’and
must leave you to your fortunes and to the Queen’s
grace and goodness; but beware the Gipsy, for he will
be too hard for all of you; you know not the beast
so well as I do.’ But my Lord Sussex was
wrong. One there is who knows him through and
through, and hath little joy in the knowing.”
The look in the eyes of the Duke’s
Daughter became like steel and her voice hardened,
and Angele realised that Leicester had in this beautiful
and delicate maid-of-honour as bitter an enemy as ever
brought down the mighty from their seats; that a pride
had been sometime wounded, suffered an unwarrantable
affront, which only innocence could feel so acutely.
Her heart went out to the Duke’s Daughter as
it had never gone out to any of her sex since her
mother’s death, and she showed her admiration
in her glance. The other saw it and smiled, slipping
a hand in hers for a moment; and then a look, half-debating,
half-triumphant, came into her face as her eyes followed
Leicester down the green stretches of the tilting-yard.
The trumpet sounded, the people broke
out in shouts of delight, the tilting began.
For an hour the handsome joust went on, the Earl of
Oxford, Charles Howard, Sir Henry Lee, Sir Christopher
Hatton, and Leicester challenging, and so even was
the combat that victory seemed to settle in the plumes
of neither, though Leicester of them all showed not
the greatest skill, while in some regards greatest
grace and deportment. Suddenly there rode into
the lists, whence, no one seemed to know, so intent
had the public gaze been fixed, so quickly had he come,
a mounted figure all in white, and at the moment when
Sir Henry Lee had cried aloud his challenge for the
last time. Silence fell as the bright figure
cantered down the list, lifted the gauge, and sat still
upon his black steed. Consternation fell.
None among the people or the Knights Tilters knew
who the invader was, and Leicester called upon the
Masters of the Ceremonies to demand his name and quality.
The white horseman made no reply, but sat unmoved,
while noise and turmoil suddenly sprang up around
him.
Presently the voice of the Queen was
heard clearly ringing through the lists. “His
quality hath evidence. Set on.”
The Duke’s Daughter laughed,
and whispered mischievously in Angele’s ear.
The gentlemen of England fared ill
that day in the sight of all the people, for the challenger
of the Knights Tilters was more than a match for each
that came upon him. He rode like a wild horseman
of Yucatan. Wary, resourceful, sudden in device
and powerful in onset, he bore all down, until the
Queen cried: “There hath not been such skill
in England since my father rode these lists.
Three of my best gentlemen down, and it hath been
but breathing to him. Now, Sir Harry Lee, it is
thy turn,” she laughed as she saw the champion
ride forward; “and next ’tis thine, Leicester.
Ah, Leicester would have at him now!” she added
sharply, as she saw the favourite spur forward before
the gallant Lee. “He is full of choler it
becomes him, but it shall not be; bravery is not all.
And if he failed” she smiled acidly “he
would get him home to Kenilworth and show himself
no more if he failed, and the White Knight
failed not! What think you, dove?” she
cried to the Duke’s Daughter. “Would
he not fall in the megrims for that England’s
honour had been over thrown? Leicester could
not live if England’s honour should be toppled
down like our dear Chris Hatton and his gallants yonder.”
The Duke’s Daughter curtsied.
“Methinks England’s honour is in little
peril your Majesty knows well how to ’fend
it. No subject keeps it.”
“If I must ’fend it, dove,
then Leicester there must not fight to-day. It
shall surely be Sir Harry Lee. My Lord Leicester
must have the place of honour at the last,”
she called aloud. Leicester swung his horse round
and galloped to the Queen.
“Your Majesty,” he cried
in suppressed anger, “must I give place?”
“When all have failed and Leicester
has won, then all yield place to Leicester,”
said the Queen drily. The look on his face was
not good to see, but he saluted gravely and rode away
to watch the encounter between the most gallant Knight
Tilter in England and the stranger. Rage was in
his heart, and it blinded him to the certainty of his
defeat, for he was not expert in the lists. But
by a sure instinct he had guessed the identity of
the White Horseman, and every nerve quivered with desire
to meet him in combat. Last night’s good
work seemed to have gone for naught. Elizabeth’s
humour had changed; and to-day she seemed set on humiliating
him before the nobles who hated him, before the people
who had found in him the cause why the Queen had not
married, so giving no heir to the throne. Perturbed
and charged with anger as he was, however, the combat
now forward soon chained his attention. Not in
many a year had there been seen in England such a
display of skill and determination. The veteran
Knight Tilter, who knew that the result of this business
meant more than life to him, and that more than the
honour of his comrades was at stake even
the valour of England which had been challenged fought
as he had never fought before, as no man had fought
in England for many a year. At first the people
cried aloud their encouragement; but as onset and
attack after onset and attack showed that two masters
of their craft, two desperate men, had met, and that
the great sport had become a vital combat between their
own champion and the champion of another land Spain,
France, Denmark, Russia, Italy? a hush
spread over the great space, and every eye was strained;
men gazed with bated breath.
The green turf was torn and mangled,
the horses reeked with sweat and foam, but overhead
the soaring skylark sang, as it were, to express the
joyance of the day. During many minutes the only
sound that broke the stillness was the clash of armed
men, the thud of hoofs, and the snorting and the wild
breathing of the chargers. The lark’s notes,
however, ringing out over the lists freed the tongue
of the Queen’s fool, who suddenly ran out into
the lists, in his motley and cap and bells, and in
his high trilling voice sang a fool’s song to
the fighting twain:
“Who would lie down and
close his eyes
While yet the lark sings o’er the dale?
Who would to Love make no replies,
Nor drink the nut-brown ale,
While throbs the pulse, and full ’s
the purse
And all the world ’s for sale?”
Suddenly a cry of relief, of roaring
excitement, burst from the people. Both horsemen
and their chargers were on the ground. The fight
was over, the fierce game at an end. That which
all had feared, even the Queen herself, as the fight
fared on, had not come to pass England’s
champion had not been beaten by the armed mystery,
though the odds had seemed against him.
“Though wintry blasts
may prove unkind,
When winter’s past we do forget;
Love’s breast in summer time is kind,
And all ’s well while life ’s
with us yet
Hey, ho, now the lark is mating,
Life’s sweet wages are in waiting!”
Thus sang the fool as the two warriors
were helped to their feet. Cumbered with their
armour, and all dust-covered and blood-stained, though
not seriously hurt, they were helped to their horses,
and rode to the dais where the Queen sat.
“Ye have fought like men of
old,” she said, “and neither had advantage
at the last. England’s champion still may
cry his challenge and not be forsworn, and he who
challenged goeth in honour again from the lists.
You, sir, who have challenged, shall we not see your
face or hear your voice? For what country, for
what prince lifted you the gauge and challenged England’s
honour?”
“I crave your high Majesty’s
pardon” Angele’s heart stood
still. Her love had not pierced his disguise,
though Leicester’s hate had done so on the instant “I
crave your noble Majesty’s grace,” answered
the stranger, “that I may still keep my face
covered in humility. My voice speaks for no country
and for no prince. I have fought for mine own
honour, and to prove to England’s Queen that
she hath a champion who smiteth with strong arm, as
on me and my steed this hath been seen to-day.”
“Gallantly thought and well
said,” answered Elizabeth; “but England’s
champion and his strong arm have no victory. If
gifts were given they must needs be cut in twain.
But answer me, what is your country? I will not
have it that any man pick up the gauge of England for
his own honour. What is your country?
“I am an exile, your high Majesty;
and the only land for which I raise my sword this
day is that land where I have found safety from my
enemies.”
The Queen turned and smiled at the
Duke’s Daughter. “I knew not where
my own question might lead, but he hath turned it to
full account,” she said, under her breath.
“His tongue is as ready as his spear. Then
ye have both laboured in England’s honour, and
I drink to you both,” she added, and raised
to her lips a glass of wine which a page presented.
“I love ye both in your high qualities,”
she hastened to add with dry irony, and her eye rested
mockingly on Leicester.
“My lords and gentlemen and
all of my kingdom,” she added in a clear voice,
insistent in its force, “ye have come upon May
Day to take delight of England in my gardens, and
ye are welcome. Ye have seen such a sight as
doeth good to the eyes of brave men. It hath pleased
me well, and I am constrained to say to you what,
for divers great reasons, I have kept to my own counsels,
labouring for your good. The day hath come, however,
the day and the hour when ye shall know that wherein
I propose to serve you as ye well deserve. It
is my will and now I see my way to its
good fulfilment that I remain no longer
in that virgin state wherein I have ever lived.”
Great cheering here broke in, and
for a time she could get no further. Ever alive
to the bent of the popular mind, she had chosen a perfect
occasion to take them into her confidence however
little or much she would abide by her words, or intended
the union of which she spoke. In the past she
had counselled with her great advisers, with Cecil
and the rest, and through them messages were borne
to the people; but now she spoke direct to them all,
and it had its immediate reward the acclamations
were as those with which she was greeted when she first
passed through the streets of London on inheriting
the crown.
Well pleased, she continued:
“This I will do with expedition and weightiest
judgment, for of little account though I am, he that
sits with the Queen of England in this realm must needs
be a prince indeed.... So be ye sure of this
that ye shall have your heart-most wishes, and there
shall be one to come after me who will wear this crown
even as I have worn, in direct descent, my father’s
crown. Our dearest sister, the Queen of the Scots,
hath been delivered of a fair son; and in high affection
the news thereof she hath sent me, with a palfry which
I shall ride among you in token of the love I bear
her Majesty. She hath in her time got an heir
to the throne with which we are ever in kinship and
alliance, and I in my time shall give ye your heart’s
desire.”
Angele, who had, with palpitating
heart and swimming head, seen Michel de la Foret leave
the lists and disappear among the trees, as mysteriously
as he came, was scarce conscious of the cheers and
riotous delight that followed Elizabeth’s tactful
if delusive speech to the people. A few whispered
words from the Duke’s Daughter had told her that
Michel had obeyed the Queen’s command in entering
the lists and taking up the challenge; and that she
herself, carrying the royal message to him and making
arrangements for his accoutrement and mounting, had
urged him to obedience. She observed drily that
he had needed little pressure, and that his eyes had
lighted at the prospect of the combat. Apart
from his innate love of fighting, he had realised that
in the moment of declining to enter the Queen’s
service he had been at a disadvantage, and that his
courage was open to attack by the incredulous or malicious.
This would have mattered little were it not that he
had been given unusual importance as a prisoner by
the Queen’s personal notice of himself.
He had, therefore, sprung to the acceptance, and sent
his humble duty to the Queen by her winsome messenger,
who, with conspicuous dramatic skill, had arranged
secretly, with the help of a Gentleman Pensioner and
the Master of the Horse, his appearance and his exit.
That all succeeded as she had planned quickened her
pulses, and made her heart still warmer to Angele,
who, now that all was over, and her Huguenot lover
had gone his mysterious ways, seemed lost in a troubled
reverie.
It was a troubled reverie indeed,
for Angele’s eyes were on the stranger who was
present with Sir Andrew Melvill the night before.
Her gaze upon him now became fixed and insistent,
for the sense of foreboding so heavy on her deepened
to a torturing suspense. Where had she seen this
man before? To what day or hour in her past did
he belong? What was there in his smooth, smiling,
malicious face that made her blood run cold? As
she watched him, he turned his head. She followed
his eyes. The horse which Mary Queen of Scots
had sent with the message of the birth of her son
was being led to the Queen by the dark browed, pale-faced
churl who had brought it from Scotland. She saw
a sharp dark look pass between the two.
Suddenly her sight swam, she swayed
and would have fainted, but resolution steadied her,
and a low exclamation broke from her lips. Now
she knew!
The face that had eluded her was at
last in the grasp of horrified memory. It was
the face of one who many years ago was known to have
poisoned the Due de Chambly by anointing the pommel
of his saddle with a delicate poison which the rider
would touch, and touching would, perhaps, carry to
his nostrils or mouth as he rode, and die upon the
instant. She herself had seen the Due de Chambly
fall; had seen this man fly from Paris for his life;
and had thereafter known of his return to favour at
the court of Mary and Francis, for nothing could be
proved against him. The memory flashed like lightning
through her brain. She moved swiftly forward
despite the detaining hand of the Duke’s Daughter.
The Queen was already mounted, her hand already upon
the pommel of the saddle.
Elizabeth noted the look of anguished
anxiety in Angele’s eyes, her face like that
of one who had seen souls in purgatory; and some swift
instinct, born of years upon years of peril in old
days when her life was no boon to her enemies, made
her lean towards the girl, whose quick whispered words
were to her as loud as thunder. She was, however,
composed and still. Not a tremor passed through
her.
“Your wish is granted, mistress,”
she said aloud, then addressed a word to Cecil at
her side, who passed on her command. Presently
she turned slowly to the spot where Sir Andrew Melvill
and the other sat upon their horses. She scanned
complacently the faces of both, then her eyes settled
steadily on the face of the murderer. Still gazing
intently she drew the back of her gloved fingers along
the pommel. The man saw the motion, unnoted and
unsignificant to any other save Angele, meaningless
even to Melvill, the innocent and honest gentleman
at his side; and he realised that the Queen had had
a warning. Noting the slight stir among the gentlemen
round him, he knew that his game was foiled, that there
was no escape. He was not prepared for what followed.
In a voice to be heard only at small
distance, the Queen said calmly:
“This palfry sent me by my dear
sister of Scotland shall bear me among you, friends;
and in days to come I will remember how she hath given
new life to me by her loving message. Sir Andrew
Melvill, I shall have further speech with you; and
you, sir,” speaking to the sinister
figure by his side “come hither.”
The man dismounted, and with unsteady
step came forward. Elizabeth held out her gloved
hand for him to kiss. His face turned white.
It was come soon, his punishment. None knew save
Angele and the Queen the doom that was upon him, if
Angele’s warning was well-founded. He knelt,
and bent his head over her hand.
“Salute, sir,” she said in a low voice.
He touched his lips to her fingers.
She pressed them swiftly against his mouth. An
instant, then he rose and stepped backwards to his
horse. Tremblingly, blindly, he mounted.
A moment passed, then Elizabeth rode
on with her ladies behind her, her gentlemen beside
her. As she passed slowly, the would-be regicide
swayed and fell from his horse, and stirred no more.
Elizabeth rode on, her hand upon the
pommel of the saddle. So she rode for a full
half-hour, and came back to her palace. But she
raised not her gloved right hand above the pommel,
and she dismounted with exceeding care.
That night the man who cared for the
horse died secretly as had done his master, with the
Queen’s glove pressed to his nostrils by one
whom Cecil could trust. And the matter was hidden
from the Court and the people; for it was given out
that Melvill’s friend had died of some heart
trouble.