It seemed an unspeakable smallness
in a man of such high place in the State, whose hand
had tied and untied myriad knots of political and
court intrigue, that he should stoop to a game which
any pettifogging hanger-on might play-and reap scorn
in the playing. By insidious arts, Leicester
had in his day turned the Queen’s mind to his
own will; had foiled the diplomacy of the Spaniard,
the German and the Gaul; had by subterranean means
checkmated the designs of the Medici; had traced his
way through plot and counter-plot, hated by most, loved
by none save, maybe, his Royal mistress to whom he
was now more a custom than a cherished friend.
Year upon year he had built up his influence.
None had championed him save himself, and even from
the consequences of rashness and folly he had risen
to a still higher place in the kingdom. But such
as Leicester are ever at last a sacrifice to the laborious
means by which they achieve their greatest ends-means
contemptible and small.
To the great intriguers every little
detail, every commonplace insignificance is used and
must be used by them alone to further their
dark causes. They cannot trust their projects
to brave lieutenants, to faithful subordinates.
They cannot say, “Here is the end; this is the
work to be done; upon your shoulders be the burden!”
They must “stoop to conquer.” Every
miserable detail becomes of moment, until by-and-by
the art of intrigue and conspiracy begins to lose
proportion in their minds. The detail has ever
been so important, conspiracy so much second nature,
that they must needs be intriguing and conspiring when
the occasion is trifling and the end negligible.
To all intriguers life has lost romance;
there is no poem left in nature; no ideal, personal,
public or national, detains them in its wholesome
influence; no great purpose allures them; they have
no causes for which to die save themselves.
They are so honeycombed with insincerity and the vice
of thought, that by-and-by all colours are as one,
all pathways the same; because, whichever hue of light
breaks upon their world they see it through the grey-cloaked
mist of falsehood; and whether the path be good or
bad they would still walk in it crookedly. How
many men and women Leicester had tracked or lured to
their doom; over how many men and women he had stepped
to his place of power, history speaks not carefully;
but the traces of his deeds run through a thousand
archives, and they suggest plentiful sacrifices to
a subverted character.
Favourite of a Queen, he must now
stoop to set a trap for the ruin of as simple a soul
as ever stepped upon the soil of England; and his dark
purposes had not even the excuse of necessity on the
one hand, of love or passion on the other. An
insane jealousy of the place the girl had won in the
consideration of the Queen, of her lover who, he thought,
had won a still higher place in the same influence,
was his only motive for action at first. His
cruelty was not redeemed even by the sensuous interest
the girl might arouse in a reckless nature by her beauty
and her charm.
So the great Leicester the
Gipsy, as the dead Sussex had called him lay
in wait in Greenwich Park for Angele to pass, like
some orchard thief in the blossoming trees. Knowing
the path by which she would come to her father’s
cottage from the palace, he had placed himself accordingly.
He had thought he might have to wait long or come often
for the perfect opportunity; but it seemed as if Fate
played his game for him, and that once again the fruit
he would pluck should fall into his palm. Bright-eyed,
and elated from a long talk with the Duke’s Daughter,
who had given her a message from the Queen, Angele
had abstractedly taken the wrong path in the wood.
Leicester saw that it would lead her into the maze
some distance off. Making a detour, he met her
at the moment she discovered her mistake. The
light from the royal word her friend had brought was
still in her face; but it was crossed by perplexity
now.
He stood still as though astonished
at seeing her, a smile upon his face. So perfectly
did he play his part that she thought the meeting
accidental; and though in her heart she had a fear
of the man and knew how bitter an enemy he was of
Michel’s, his urbane power, his skilful diplomacy
of courtesy had its way. These complicated lives,
instinct with contradiction, have the interest of
forbidden knowledge. The dark experiences of
life leave their mark and give such natures that touch
of mystery which allures even those who have high instincts
and true feelings, as one peeps over a hidden depth
and wonders what lies beyond the dark. So Angele,
suddenly arrested, was caught by the sense of mystery
in the man, by the fascination of finesse, of dark
power; and it was womanlike that all on an instant
she should dream of the soul of goodness in things
evil.
Thus in life we are often surprised
out of long years of prejudice, and even of dislike
and suspicion, by some fortuitous incident, which might
have chanced to two who had every impulse towards each
other, not such antagonisms as lay between Robert
Dudley, Earl of Leicester, and this Huguenot refugee.
She had every cue to hate hum. Each moment of
her life in England had been beset with peril because
of him-peril to the man she loved, therefore peril
to herself. And yet, so various is the nature
of woman, that, while steering straitly by one star,
she levies upon the light of other stars. Faithful
and sincere, yet loving power, curious and adventurous,
she must needs, without intention, without purpose,
stray into perilous paths.
As Leicester stepped suddenly into
Angele’s gaze, she was only, as it were, conscious
of a presence in itself alluring by virtue of the
history surrounding it. She was surprised out
of an instinctive dislike, and the cue she had to
loathe him was for the moment lost.
Unconsciously, unintentionally, she
smiled at him now, then, realising, retreated, shrinking
from him, her face averted. Man or woman had found
in Leicester the delicate and intrepid gamester, exquisite
in the choice of detail, masterful in the breadth
of method. And now, as though his whole future
depended on this interview, he brought to bear a life-long
skill to influence her. He had determined to set
the Queen against her. He did not know not
even he that she had saved the Queen’s
life on that auspicious May Day when Harry Lee had
fought the white knight Michel de la Foret and halved
the honours of the lists with him. If he had
but known that the Queen had hid from him this fact this
vital thing touching herself and England, he would
have viewed his future with a vaster distrust.
But there could be no surer sign of Elizabeth’s
growing coldness and intended breach than that she
had hid from him the dreadful incident of the poisoned
glove, and the swift execution of the would-be murderer,
and had made Cecil her only confidant. But he
did know that Elizabeth herself had commanded Michel
de la Foret to the lists; and his mad jealousy impelled
him to resort to a satanic cunning towards these two
fugitives, who seemed to have mounted within a few
short days as far as had he in thrice as many years
to a high place in the regard of the Majesty of England.
To disgrace them both; to sow distrust
of the girl in the Queen’s mind; to make her
seem the opposite of what she was; to drop in her own
mind suspicion of her lover; to drive her to some
rash act, some challenge of the Queen herself that
was his plan. He knew how little Elizabeth’s
imperious spirit would brook any challenge from this
fearless girl concerning De la Foret. But to
convince her that the Queen favoured Michel in some
shadowed sense, that De la Foret was privy to a dark
compact so deep a plot was all worthy of
a larger end. He had well inspired the Court
of France through its ambassador to urge the Medici
to press actively and bitterly for De la Foret’s
return to France and to the beheading sword that waited
for him; and his task had been made light by international
difficulties, which made the heart of Elizabeth’s
foreign policy friendship with France and an alliance
against Philip of Spain. She had, therefore,
opened up, even in the past few days, negotiations
once again for the long-talked-of marriage with the
Duke of Anjou, the brother of the King, son of the
Medici. State policy was involved, and, if De
la Foret might be a counter, the pledge of exchange
in the game, as it were, the path would once more be
clear.
He well believed that Elizabeth’s
notice of De la Foret was but a fancy that would pass,
as a hundred times before such fancies had come and
gone; but against that brighter prospect there lay
the fact that never before had she shown himself such
indifference. In the past she had raged against
him, she had imprisoned him; she had driven him from
her presence in her anger, but always her paroxysms
of rage had been succeeded by paroxysms of tenderness.
Now he saw a colder light in the sky, a greyer horizon
met his eye. So at every corner of the compass
he played for the breaking of the spell.
Yet as he now bowed low before Angele
there seemed to show in his face a very candour of
surprise, of pleasure, joined to a something friendly
and protective in his glance and manner. His voice
insinuated that bygones should be bygones; it suggested
that she had misunderstood him. It pleaded against
the injustice of her prejudice.
“So far from home!” he said with a smile.
“More miles from home,”
she replied, thinking of never-returning days in France,
“than I shall ever count again.”
“But no, methinks the palace
is within a whisper,” he responded.
“Lord Leicester knows well I
am a prisoner; that I no longer abide in the palace,”
she answered.
He laughed lightly. “An
imprisonment in a Queen’s friendship. I
bethink me, it is three hours since I saw you go to
the palace. It is a few worthless seconds since
you have got your freedom.”
She nettled at his tone. “Lord
Leicester takes great interest in my unimportant goings
and comings. I cannot think it is because I go
and come.”
He chose to misunderstand her meaning.
Drawing closer he bent over her shoulder. “Since
your arrival here, my only diary is the tally of your
coming and going.” Suddenly, as though by
an impulse of great frankness, he added in a low tone:
“And is it strange that I should
follow you that I should worship grace
and virtue? Men call me this and that. You
have no doubt been filled with dark tales of my misdeeds.
Has there been one in the Court, even one, who, living
by my bounty or my patronage, has said one good word
of me? And why? For long years the Queen,
who, maybe, might have been better counselled, chose
me for her friend, adviser because I was
true to her. I have lived for the Queen, and
living for her have lived for England. Could
I keep I ask you, could I keep myself blameless
in the midst of flattery, intrigue, and conspiracy?
I admit that I have played with fiery weapons in my
day; and must needs still do so. The incorruptible
cannot exist in the corrupted air of this Court.
You have come here with the light of innocence and
truth about you. At first I could scarce believe
that such goodness lived, hardly understood it.
The light half-blinded and embarrassed; but, at last,
I saw! You of all this Court have made me see
what sort of life I might have lived. You have
made me dream the dreams of youth and high unsullied
purpose once again. Was it strange that in the
dark pathways of the Court I watched your footsteps
come and go, carrying radiance with you? No Leicester
has learned how sombre, sinister, has been his past,
by a presence which is the soul of beauty, of virtue,
and of happy truth. Lady, my heart is yours.
I worship you.”
Overborne for the moment by the eager,
searching eloquence of his words, she had listened
bewildered to him. Now she turned upon him with
panting breath and said:
“My lord, my lord, I will hear
no more. You know I love Monsieur de la Foret,
for whose sake I am here in England for
whose sake I still remain.”
“’Tis a labour of love
but ill requited,” he answered with suggestion
in his tone.
“What mean you, my lord?”
she asked sharply, a kind of blind agony in her voice;
for she felt his meaning, and though she did not believe
him, and knew in her soul he slandered, there was
a sting, for slander ever scorches where it touches.
“Can you not see?” he
said. “May Day why did the Queen
command him to the lists? Why does she keep him
here-in the palace? Why, against the will of
France, her ally, does she refuse to send him forth?
Why, unheeding the laughter of the Court, does she
favour this unimportant stranger, brave though he
be? Why should she smile upon him?... Can
you not see, sweet lady?”
“You know well why the Queen
detains him here,” she answered calmly now.
“In the Queen’s understanding with France,
exiles who preach the faith are free from extradition.
You heard what the Queen required of him that
on Trinity Day he should preach before her, and upon
this preaching should depend his safety.”
“Indeed, so her Majesty said
with great humour,” replied Leicester. “So
indeed she said; but when we hide our faces a thin
veil suffices. The man is a soldier a
soldier born. Why should he turn priest now?
I pray you, think again. He was quick of wit;
the Queen’s meaning was clear to him; he rose
with seeming innocence to the fly, and she landed him
at the first toss. But what is forward bodes
no good to you, dear star of heaven. I have known
the Queen for half a lifetime. She has wild whims
and dangerous fancies, fills her hours of leisure with
experiences an artist is the Queen.
She means no good to you.”
She had made as if to leave him, though
her eyes searched in vain for the path which she should
take; but she now broke in impatiently:
“Poor, unnoted though I am,
the Queen of England is my friend,” she answered.
“What evil could she wish me? From me she
has naught to fear. I am not an atom in her world.
Did she but lift her finger I am done. But she
knows that, humble though I be, I would serve her to
my last breath; because I know, my Lord Leicester,
how many there are who serve her foully, faithlessly;
and there should be those by her who would serve her
singly.”
His eyes half closed, he beat his
toe upon the ground. He frowned, as though he
had no wish to hurt her by words which he yet must
speak. With calculated thought he faltered.
“Yet do you not think it strange,”
he said at last, “that Monsieur de la Foret
should be within the palace ever, and that you should
be banished from the palace? Have you never seen
the fly and the spider in the web? Do you not
know that they who have the power to bless or ban,
to give joy or withhold it, appear to give when they
mean to withhold? God bless us all how
has your innocence involved your judgment!”
She suddenly flushed to the eyes.
“I have wit enough,” she said acidly,
“to feel that truth which life’s experience
may not have taught me. It is neither age nor
evil that teaches one to judge ’twixt black and
white. God gives the true divination to human
hearts that need.”
It was a contest in which Leicester
revelled simplicity and single-mindedness
against the multifarious and double-tongued. He
had made many efforts in his time to conquer argument
and prejudice. When he chose, none could be more
insinuating or turn the flank of a proper argument
by more adroit suggestion. He used his power now.
“You think she means well by
you? You think that she, who has a thousand ladies
of a kingdom at her call, of the best and most beautiful and
even,” his voice softened, “though you
are more beautiful than all, that beauty would soften
her towards you? When was it Elizabeth loved beauty?
When was it that her heart warmed towards those who
would love or wed? Did she not imprison me, even
in these palace grounds, for one whole year because
I sought to marry? Has she not a hundred times
sent from her presence women with faces like flowers
because they were in contrast to her own? Do
you see love blossoming at this Court? God’s
Son! but she would keep us all like babes in Eden
an’ she could, unmated and unloved.”
He drew quickly to her and leant over
her, whispering down her shoulder. “Do
you think there is any reason why all at once she should
change her mind and cherish lovers?”
She looked up at him fearlessly and firmly.
“In truth, I do. My Lord
Leicester, you have lived in the circle of her good
pleasure, near to her noble Majesty, as you say, for
half a lifetime. Have you not found a reason
why now or any time she should cherish love and lovers?
Ah, no, you have seen her face, you have heard her
voice, but you have not known her heart!”
“Ah, opportunity lacked,”
he said in irony and with a reminiscent smile.
“I have been busy with State affairs, I have
not sat on cushions, listening to royal fingers on
the virginals. Still, I ask you, do you
think there is a reason why from her height she should
stoop down to rescue you or give you any joy?
Wherefore should the Queen do aught to serve you?
Wherefore should she save your lover?”
It was on Angele’s lips to answer,
“Because I saved her life on May Day.”
It was on her lips to tell of the poisoned glove, but
she only smiled, and said:
“But, yes, I think, my lord,
there is a reason, and in that reason I have faith.”
Leicester saw how firmly she was fixed
in her idea, how rooted was her trust in the Queen’s
intentions towards her; and he guessed there was something
hidden which gave her such supreme confidence.
“If she means to save him, why
does she not save him now? Why not end the business
in a day not stretch it over these long
mid-summer weeks?”
“I do not think it strange,”
she answered. “He is a political prisoner.
Messages must come and go between England and France.
Besides, who calleth for haste? Is it I who have
most at stake? It is not the first time I have
been at Court, my lord. In these high places things
are orderly,” a touch of sarcasm
came into her tone, “life is not a
mighty rushing wind, save to those whom vexing passion
drives to hasty deeds.”
She made to move on once more, but
paused, still not certain of her way.
“Permit me to show you,”
he said with a laugh and a gesture towards a path.
“Not that this is the shorter.
I will take you to a turning which leads straight
to your durance and another which leads
elsewhere.”
She could not say no, because she
had, in very truth, lost her way, and she might wander
far and be in danger. Also, she had no fear of
him. Steeled to danger in the past, she was not
timid; but, more than all, the game of words between
them had had its fascination. The man himself,
by virtue of what he was, had his fascination also.
The thing inherent in all her sex, to peep over the
hedge, to skirt dangerous fires lightly, to feel the
warmth distantly and not be scorched that
was in her, too; and she lived according to her race
and the long predisposition of the ages. Most
women like her as good as she have
peeped and stretched out hands to the alluring fire
and come safely through, wiser and no better.
But many, too, bewildered and confused by what they
see as light from a mirror flashed into
the eye half blinds have peeped over the
hedge and, miscalculating their power of self-control,
have entered in, and returned no more into the quiet
garden of unstraying love.
Leicester quickly put on an air of
gravity. “I warn you that danger lies before
you. If you cross the Queen and you
will cross the Queen when you know the truth, as I
know it you will pay a heavy price for
refusing Leicester as your friend.”
She made a protesting motion and seemed
about to speak, but suddenly, with a passionate gesture,
Leicester added: “Let them go their way.
Monsieur de la Foret will be tossed aside before another
winter comes. Do you think he can abide here
in the midst of plot and intrigue, and hated by the
people of the Court? He is doomed. But more,
he is unworthy of you; while I can serve you well,
and I can love you well.” She shrank away
from him. “No, do not turn from me, for
in very truth, Leicester’s heart has been pierced
by the inevitable arrow. You think I mean you
evil?”
He paused with a sudden impulse continued:
“No! no! And if there be a saving grace
in marriage, marriage it shall be, if you will but
hear me. You shall be my wife Leicester’s
wife. As I have mounted to power so I will hold
power with you with you, the brightest spirit
that ever England saw. Worthy of a kingdom with
you beside me, I shall win to greater, happier days;
and at Kenilworth, where kings and queens have lodged,
you shall be ruler. We will leave this Court until
Elizabeth, betrayed by those who know not how to serve
her, shall send for me again. Here the
power behind the throne you and I will sway
this realm through the aging, sentimental Queen.
Listen, and look at me in the eyes I speak
the truth, you read my heart. You think I hated
you and hated De la Foret. By all the gods, it’s
true I hated him, because I saw that he would come
between me and the Queen. A man must have one
great passion. Life itself must be a passion.
Power was my passion power, not the Queen.
You have broken all that down. I yield it all
to you for your sake and my own. I
would steal from life yet before my sun goes to its
setting a few years of truth and honesty and clear
design. At heart I am a patriot a
loyal Englishman. Your cause the cause
of Protestantism did I not fight for it
at Rochelle? Have I not ever urged the Queen
to spend her revenue for your cause, to send her captains
and her men to fight for it?”
She raised her head in interest, and
her lips murmured: “Yes, yes, I know you
did that.”
He saw his advantage and pursued it.
“See, I will be honest with you honest,
at last, as I have wished in vain to be, for honesty
was misunderstood. It is not so with you you
understand. Dear, light of womanhood, I speak
the truth now. I have been evil in my day I admit
it evil because I was in the midst of evil.
I betrayed because I was betrayed; I slew, else I
should have been slain. We have had dark days
in England, privy conspiracy and rebellion; and I have
had to thread my way through dreadful courses by a
thousand blind paths. Would it be no joy to you
if I, through your influence, recast my life remade
my policy, renewed my youth pursuing principle
where I have pursued opportunity? Angele, come
to Kenilworth with me. Leave De la Foret to his
fate. The way to happiness is with me. Will
you come?”
He had made his great effort.
As he spoke he almost himself believed that he told
the truth. Under the spell of his own emotional
power it seemed as though he meant to marry her, as
though he could find happiness in the union.
He had almost persuaded himself to be what he would
have her to believe he might be.
Under the warmth and convincing force
of his words her pulses had beat faster, her heart
had throbbed in her throat, her eyes had glistened;
but not with that light which they had shed for Michel
de la Foret. How different was this man’s
wooing its impetuous, audacious, tender
violence, with that quiet, powerful, almost sacred
gravity of her Camisard lover! It is
this difference the weighty, emotional
difference between a desperate passion and
a pure love which has ever been so powerful in twisting
the destinies of a moiety of the world to misery,
who otherwise would have stayed contented, inconspicuous
and good. Angele would have been more than human
if she had not felt the spell of the ablest intriguer,
of the most fascinating diplomatist of his day.
Before he spoke of marriage the thrill the
unconvincing thrill though it was of a
perilous temptation was upon her; but the very thing
most meant to move her only made her shudder; for
in her heart of hearts she knew that he was ineradicably
false. To be married to one constitutionally
untrue would be more terrible a fate for her than to
be linked to him in a lighter, more dissoluble a bond.
So do the greatest tricksters of this world overdo
their part, so play the wrong card when every past
experience suggests it is the card to play. He
knew by the silence that followed his words, and the
slow, steady look she gave him, that she was not won
nor on the way to the winning.
“My lord,” she said at
last, and with a courage which steadied her affrighted
and perturbed innocence, “you are eloquent, you
are fruitful of flattery, of those things which have,
I doubt not, served you well in your day. But,
if you see your way to a better life, it were well
you should choose one of nobler mould than I. I am
not made for sacrifice, to play the missioner and
snatch brands from the burning. I have enough
to do to keep my own feet in the ribbon-path of right.
You must look elsewhere for that guardian influence
which is to make of you a paragon.”
“No, no,” he answered
sharply, “you think the game not worth the candle you
doubt me and what I can do for you; my sincerity, my
power you doubt.”
“Indeed, yes, I doubt both,”
she answered gravely, “for you would have me
believe that I have power to lead you. With how
small a mind you credit me! You think, too, that
you sway this kingdom; but I know that you stand upon
a cliff’s edge, and that the earth is fraying
’neath your tread. You dare to think that
you have power to drag down with you the man who honours
me with ”
“With his love, you’d
say. Yet he will leave you fretting out your soul
until the sharp-edged truth cuts your heart in twain.
Have you no pride? I care not what you say of
me say your worst, and I will not resent
it, for I will still prove that your way lies with
me.”
She gave a bitter sigh, and touched
her forehead with trembling fingers. “If
words could prove it, I had been convinced but now,
for they are well devised, and they have music too;
but such a music, my lord, as would drown the truth
in the soul of a woman. Your words allure, but
you have learned the art of words. You yourself oh,
my lord, you who have tasted all the pleasures of
this world, could you then have the heart to steal
from one who has so little that little which gives
her happiness?”
“You know not what can make
you happy I can teach you that. By
God’s Son! but you have wit and intellect and
are a match for a prince, not for a cast off
Camisard. I shall ere long be Lord Lieutenant
of these Isles-of England and Ireland. Come to
my nest. We will fly far ah, your
eye brightens, your heart leaps to mine I
feel it now, I ”
“Oh, have done, have done,”
she passionately broke in; “I would rather die,
be torn upon the rack, burnt at the stake, than put
my hand in yours! And you do not wish it you
speak but to destroy, not to cherish. While you
speak to me I see all those” she made
a gesture as though to put something from her “all
those to whom you have spoken as you have done to
me. I hear the myriad falsehoods you have told one
whelming confusion. I feel the blindness which
has crept upon them those poor women as
you have sown the air with the dust of the passion
which you call love. Oh, you never knew what
love meant, my lord! I doubt if, when you lay
in your mother’s arms, you turned to her with
love. You never did one kindly act for love,
no generous thought was ever born in you by love.
Sir, I know it as though it were written in a book;
your life has been one long calculation your
sympathy or kindness a calculated thing. Good-nature,
emotion you may have had, but never the divine thing
by which the world is saved. Were there but one
little place where that Eden flower might bloom within
your heart, you could not seek to ruin that love which
lives in mine and fills it, conquering all the lesser
part of me. I never knew of how much love I was
capable until I heard you speak today. Out of
your life’s experience, out of all that you
have learned of women good and evil, you for
a selfish, miserable purpose would put
the gyves upon my wrists, make me a pawn in your dark
game; a pawn which you would lose without a thought
as the game went on.
“If you must fight, my lord,
if you must ruin Monsieur de la Foret and a poor Huguenot
girl, do it by greater means than this. You have
power, you say. Use it then; destroy us, if you
will. Send us to the Medici: bring us to
the block, murder us that were no new thing
to Lord Leicester. But do not stoop to treachery
and falsehood to thrust us down. Oh, you have
made me see the depths of shame to-day! But yet,”
her voice suddenly changed, a note of plaintive force
filled it “I have learned much this
hour more than I ever knew. Perhaps
it is that we come to knowledge only through fire
and tears.” She smiled sadly. “I
suppose that sometime some day, this page of life would
have scorched my sight. Oh, my lord, what was
there in me that you dared speak so to me? Was
there naught to have stayed your tongue and stemmed
the tide in which you would engulf me?” He had
listened as in a dream at first. She had read
him as he might read himself, had revealed him with
the certain truth, as none other had done in all his
days. He was silent for a long moment, then raised
his hand in protest.
“You have a strange idea of
what makes offence and shame. I offered you marriage,”
he said complacently. “And when I come to
think upon it, after all that you have said, fair
Huguenot, I see no cause for railing. You call
me this and that; to you I am a liar, a rogue, a cut-throat,
what you will; and yet, and yet, I will have my way I
will have my way in the end.”
“You offered me marriage and
meant it not. Do I not know? Did you rely
so little on your compelling powers, my lord, that
you must needs resort to that bait? Do you think
that you will have your way to-morrow if you have
failed to-day?”
With a quick change of tone and a
cold, scornful laugh he rejoined: “Do you
intend to measure swords with me?”
“No, no, my lord,” she
answered quietly; “what should one poor unfriended
girl do in contest with the Earl of Leicester?
But yet, in very truth, I have friends, and in my
hour of greatest need I shall go seeking.”
She was thinking of the Queen. He guessed her
thought.
“You will not be so mad,”
he said urbanely again. “Of what can you
complain to the Queen? Tut, tut, you must seek
other friends than the Majesty of England!”
“Then, my lord, I will,”
she answered bravely. “I will seek the help
of such a Friend as fails not when all fails, even
He who putteth down the mighty from their seats and
exalteth the humble.”
“Well, well, if I have not touched
your heart,” he answered gallantly, “I
at least have touched your wit and intellect.
Once more I offer you alliance. Think well before
you decline.”
He had no thought that he would succeed,
but it was ever his way to return to the charge.
It had been the secret of his life’s success
so far. He had never taken a refusal. He
had never believed that when man or woman said no
that no was meant; and, if it were meant, he still
believed that constant dropping would wear away the
stone. He still held that persistence was the
greatest lever in the world, that unswerving persistence
was the master of opportunity.
They had now come to two paths in
the park leading different ways.
“This road leads to Kenilworth,
this to your prison,” he said with a slow gesture,
his eyes fixed upon hers. “I will go to
my prison, then,” she said, stepping forward,
“and alone, by your leave.”
Leicester was a good sportsman.
Though he had been beaten all along the line, he hid
his deep chagrin, choked down the rage that was in
him. Smiling, he bowed low.
“I will do myself the honour
to visit your prison to-morrow,” he said.
“My father will welcome you,
my lord,” she answered, and, gathering up her
skirt, ran down the pathway.
He stood unmoving, and watched her
disappear. “But I shall have my way with
them both,” he said aloud.
The voice of a singer sounded in the
green wood. Half consciously Leicester listened.
The words came shrilling through the trees:
“Oh,
love, it is a lily flower,
(Sing,
my captain, sing, my lady!)
The
sword shall cleave it,
Life
shall leave it
Who
shall know the hour?
(Sing,
my lady, still!)”
Presently the jingling of bells mingled
with the song, then a figure in motley burst upon
him. It was the Queen’s fool.
“Brother, well met most
happily met!” he cried. “And why well
met, fool?” asked Leicester. “Prithee,
my work grows heavy, brother. I seek another
fool for the yoke. Here are my bells for you.
I will keep my cap. And so we will work together,
fool: you for the morning, I for the afternoon,
and the devil take the night-time! So God be with
you, Obligato!”
With a laugh he leaped into the undergrowth,
and left Leicester standing with the bells in his
hand.