Not far from the palace, in a secluded
place hidden by laburnum, roses, box and rhododendrons,
there was a quaint and beautiful retreat. High
up on all sides of a circle of green the flowering
trees and shrubs interlaced their branches, and the
grass, as smooth as velvet, was of such a note as
soothed the eye and quieted the senses. In one
segment of the verdant circle was a sort of open bower
made of poles, up which roses climbed and hung across
in gay festoons; and in two other segments mossy banks
made resting-places. Here, in days gone by, when
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, first drew the eyes
of his Queen upon him, Elizabeth came to listen to
his vows of allegiance, which swam in floods of passionate
devotion to her person. Christopher Hatton, Sir
Henry Lee, the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Sussex,
a race of gallants, had knelt upon this pleasant sward.
Here they had declared a devotion that, historically
platonic, had a personal passion which, if rewarded
by no personal requital, must have been an expensive
outlay of patience and emotion.
But those days had gone. Robert
Dudley had advanced far past his fellows, had locked
himself into the chamber of the Queen’s confidence,
had for long proved himself necessary to her, had mingled
deference and admiration with an air of monopoly,
and had then advanced to an air of possession, of
suggested control. Then had begun his decline.
England and England’s Queen could have but one
ruler, and upon an occasion in the past Elizabeth
made it clear by the words she used: “God’s
death, my Lord, I have wished you well; but my favour
is not so locked up for you that others shall not
partake thereof; and, if you think to rule here, I
will take a course to see you forthcoming. I will
have here but one mistress and no master.”
In these words she but declared what
was the practice of her life, the persistent passion
of her rule. The world could have but one sun,
and every man or woman who sought its warmth must
be a sun-worshipper. There could be no divided
faith, no luminaries in the sky save those which lived
by borrowed radiance.
Here in this bright theatre of green
and roses poets had sung the praises of this Queen
to her unblushing and approving face; here ladies
thrice as beautiful as she had begged her to tell them
the secret of her beauty, so much greater than that
of any living woman; and she was pleased even when
she knew they flattered but to gain her smile it
was the tribute that power exacts. The place
was a cenotaph of past romance and pleasure.
Every leaf of every tree and flower had impressions
of glories, of love, ambition and intrigue, of tears
and laughter, of joyousness and ruin. Never a
spot in England where so much had been said and done,
so far reaching in effect and influence. But its
glory was departed, its day was done, it was a place
of dreams and memories: the Queen came here no
more. Many years had withered since she had entered
this charmed spot; and that it remained so fine was
but evidence of the care of those to whom she had
given strict orders seven years past, that in and
out of season it must be ever kept as it had erstwhile
been. She had never entered the place since the
day the young Marquis of Wessex, whom she had imprisoned
for marrying secretly and without her consent, on
his release came here, and, with a concentrated bitterness
and hate, had told her such truths as she never had
heard from man or woman since she was born. He
had impeached her in such cold and murderous terms
as must have made wince even a woman with no pride.
To Elizabeth it was gall and wormwood. When he
at last demanded the life of the young wife who had
died in enforced seclusion, because she had married
the man she loved, Elizabeth was so confounded that
she hastily left the place, saying no word in response.
This attack had been so violent, so deadly, that she
had seemed unnerved, and forbore to command him to
the Tower or to death.
“You, in whose breast love never
stirred, deny the right to others whom God blessed
with it,” he cried. “Envious of mortal
happiness that dare exist outside your will or gift,
you sunder and destroy. You, in whose hands was
power to give joy, gave death. What you have sown
you shall reap. Here on this spot I charge you
with high treason, with treachery to the people over
whom you have power as a trust, which trust you have
made a scourge.”
With such words as these he had assailed
her, and for the first time in her life she had been
confounded. In safety he had left the place, and
taken his way to Italy, from which he had never returned,
though she had sent for him in kindness. Since
that day Elizabeth had never come hither; and by-and-by
none of her Court came save the Duke’s Daughter,
and her fool, who both made it their resort. Here
the fool came upon the Friday before Trinity Day,
bringing with him Lempriere and Buonespoir, to whom
he had much attached himself.
It was a day of light and warmth,
and the place was like a basket of roses. Having
seen the two serving-men dispose, in a convenient place,
the refreshment which Lempriere’s appetite compelled,
the fool took command of the occasion and made the
two sit upon a bank, while he prepared the repast.
Strangest of the notable trio was
the dwarfish fool with his shaggy black head, twisted
mouth, and watchful, wandering eye, whose foolishness
was but the flaunting cover of shrewd observation and
trenchant vision. Going where he would, and saying
what he listed, now in the Queen’s inner chamber,
then in the midst of the Council, unconsidered, and
the butt of all, he paid for his bed and bounty by
shooting shafts of foolery which as often made his
listeners shrink as caused their laughter. The
Queen he called Delicio, and Leicester, Obligato as
one who piped to another’s dance. He had
taken to Buonespoir at the first glance, and had frequented
him, and Lempriere had presently been added to his
favour. He had again and again been messenger
between them, as also of late between Angele and Michel,
whose case he viewed from a stand-point of great cheerfulness,
and treated them as children playing on the sands as,
indeed, he did the Queen and all near to her.
But Buonespoir, the pirate, was to him reality and
the actual, and he called him Bono Publico. At
first Lempriere, ever jealous of his importance, was
inclined to treat him with elephantine condescension;
but he could not long hold out against the boon archness
of the jester, and he collapsed suddenly into as close
a friendship as that between himself and Buonespoir.
A rollicking spirt was his own fullest
stock-in-trade, and it won him like a brother.
So it was that here, in the very bosom
of the forest, lured by the pipe the fool played,
Lempriere burst forth into song, in one hand a bottle
of canary, in the other a handful of comfits:
“Duke
William was a Norman
(Spread
the sail to the breeze!)
That
did to England ride;
At
Hastings by the Channel
(Drink
the wine to the lees!)
Our
Harold the Saxon died.
If
there be no cakes from Normandy,
There’ll
be more ale in England!”
“Well sung, nobility, and well
said,” cried Buonespoir, with a rose by the
stem in his mouth, one hand beating time to the music,
the other clutching a flagon of muscadella; “for
the Normans are kings in England, and there’s
drink in plenty at the Court of our Lady Duchess.”
“Delicio shall never want
while I have a penny of hers to spend,” quoth
the fool, feeling for another tune. “Should
conspirators prevail, and the damnedest be, she hath
yet the Manor of Rozel and my larder,” urged
Lempriere, with a splutter through the canary.
“That shall be only when the
Fifth wind comes it is so ordained, Nuncio!”
said the fool blinking. Buonespoir set down his
flagon. “And what wind is the Fifth wind?”
he asked, scratching his bullethead, his child-like,
widespread eyes smiling the question.
“There be now four winds the
North wind and his sisters, the East, the West, and
South. When God sends a Fifth wind, then conspirators
shall wear crowns. Till then Delicio shall
sow and I shall reap, as is Heaven’s will.”
Lempriere lay back and roared with
laughter. “Before Belial, there never was
such another as thou, fool. Conspirators shall
die and not prevail, for a man may not marry his sister,
and the North wind shall have no progeny. So
there shall be no Fifth wind.”
“Proved, proved,” cried
the fool. “The North wind shall go whistle
for a mate there shall be no Fifth wind.
So, Delicio shall still sail by the compass,
and shall still compass all, and yet be compassed by
none; for it is written, Who compasseth Delicio
existeth not.”
Buonespoir watched a lark soaring,
as though its flight might lead him through the fool’s
argument clearly. Lempriere closed his eye, and
struggled with it, his lips outpursed, his head sunk
on his breast. Suddenly his eyes opened, he brought
the bottle of canary down with a thud on the turf.
“’Fore Michael and all angels, I have it,
fool; I travel, I conceive. De Carteret of St.
Ouen’s must have gone to the block ere conceiving
so. I must conceive thus of the argument.
He who compasseth the Queen existeth not, for compassing,
he dieth.”
“So it is by the hour-glass
and the fortune told in the porringer. You have
conceived like a man, Nuncio.”
“And conspirators, I conceive,
must die, so long as there be honest men to slay them,”
rejoined the Seigneur.
“Must only honest men slay conspirators?
Oh, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego!” wheezed
Buonespoir with a grin. He placed his hand upon
his head in self-pity. “Buonespoir, art
thou damned by muscadella?” he murmured.
“But thou art purged of the
past, Bono Publico,” answered the fool.
“Since Delicio hath looked upon thee she
hath shredded the Tyburn lien upon thee thou
art flushed like a mountain spring; and conspirators
shall fall down by thee if thou, passant, dost fall
by conspirators in the way. Bono Publico, thou
shalt live by good company. Henceforth contraband
shall be spurned and the book of grace opened.”
Buonespoir’s eyes laughed like
a summer sky, but he scratched his head and turned
over the rose-stem in his mouth reflectively.
“So be it, then, if it must be; but yesterday
the Devon sea-sweeper, Francis Drake, overhauled me
in my cottage, coming from the Queen, who had infused
him of me. ‘I have heard of you from a high
masthead,’ said he. ’If the Spanish
main allure you, come with me. There be galleons
yonder still; they shall cough up doubloons.’
‘It hath a sound of piracy,’ said I.
’I am expurgated. My name is written on
clean paper now, blessed be the name of the Queen!’
‘Tut, tut, Buonesperado,’ laughed he, ’you
shall forget that Tyburn is not a fable if you care
to have doubloons reminted at the Queen’s mint.
It is meet Spanish Philip’s head be molted to
oblivion, and Elizabeth’s raised, so that good
silver be purged of Popish alloy.’ But
that I had sworn by the little finger of St. Peter
when the moon was full, never to leave the English
seas, I also would have gone with Drake of Devon this
day. It is a man and a master of men that Drake
of Devon.”
“’Tis said that when a
man hath naught left but life, and hath treated his
honour like a poor relation, he goes to the Spanish
main with Drake and Grenville,” said Lempriere.
“Then must Obligato go, for
he hath such credentials,” said the fool, blowing
thistle-down in the air. “Yesterday was
no Palm Sunday to Leicester. Delicio’s
head was high. ‘Imperial Majesty,’
quoth Obligato, his knees upon the rushes, ’take
my life but send me not forth into darkness where
I shall see my Queen no more. By the light of
my Queen’s eyes have I walked, and pains of
hell are my Queen’s displeasure.’
‘Methinks thy humbleness is tardy,’ quoth
Delicio. ’No cock shall crow by my
nest,’ said she. ’And, by the mantle
of Elijah, I am out with sour faces and men of phlegm
and rheum. I will be gay once more. So get
thee gone to Kenilworth, and stray not from it on
thy peril. Take thy malaise with thee, and I
shall laugh again.’ Behold he goeth.
So that was the end of Obligato, and now cometh another
tune.”
“She hath good cheer?”
asked Lempriere eagerly. “I have never seen
Delicio smile these seven years as she smiled
to-day; and when she kissed Amicitia I sent for my
confessor and made my will. Delicio hath
come to spring-time, and the voice of the turtle is
in her ear.”
“Amicitia and who
is Amicitia?” asked Lempriere, well flushed with
wine.
“She who hath brought Obligato
to the diminuendo and finale,” answered the
fool; “even she who hath befriended the Huguenottine
of the black eyes.”
“Ah, she, the Duke’s Daughter v’la,
that is a flower of a lady! Did she not say that
my jerkin fitted neatly when I did act as butler to
her adorable Majesty three months syne? She hath
no mate in the world save Mademoiselle Aubert, whom
I brought hither to honour and to fame.”
“To honour and fame, was it but
by the hill of desperandum, Nuncio,” said the
fool, prodding him with his stick of bells.
“‘Desperandum’!
I know not Latin; it amazes me,” said Lempriere,
waving a lofty hand.
“She the Huguenottine was
a-mazed also, and from the maze was played by Obligato.”
“How so! how so!” cried
the Seigneur, catching at his meaning. “Did
Leicester waylay and siege? ’Sblood, had
I known this, I’d have broached him and swallowed
him even on crutches.”
“She made him raise the siege,
she turned his own guns upon him, and in the end hath
driven him hence.” By rough questioning
Lempriere got from the fool by snatches the story
of the meeting in the maze, which had left Leicester
standing with the jester’s ribboned bells in
his hand. Then the Seigneur got to his feet,
and hugged the fool, bubbling with laughter.
“By all the blood of all the
saints, I will give thee burial in my own grave when
all’s done,” he spluttered; “for
there never was such fooling, never such a wise fool
come since Confucius and the Khan. Good be with
you, fool, and thanks be for such a lady. Thanks
be also for the Duke’s Daughter. Ah, how
she laid Leicester out! She washed him up the
shore like behemoth, and left him gaping.”
Buonespoir intervened. “And
what shall come of it? What shall be the end?
The Honeyflower lies at anchor there be
three good men in waiting, Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego, and ”
The Seigneur interrupted. “There’s
little longer waiting. All’s well!
Her high hereditary Majesty smiled on me when she gave
Leicester congé and fiery quittance. She
hath me in favour, and all shall be well with Michel
and Angele. O fool, fool, fantastic and flavoured
fool, sing me a song of good content, for if this
business ends not with crescendo and bell-ringing,
I am no butler to the Queen nor keep good company!”
Seating themselves upon the mossy
bank, their backs to the westward sun, the fool peered
into the green shadows and sang with a soft melancholy
an ancient song that another fool had sung to the first
Tudor:
“When blows the wind and
drives the sleet, And all the trees droop
down; When all the world is sad, ’tis
meet Good company be known: And in
my heart good company Sits by the fire and
sings to me.
“When
warriors return, and one
That
went returns no more;
When
dusty is the road we run,
And
garners have no store;
One
ingle-nook right warm shall be
Where
my heart hath good company.
“When
man shall flee and woman fail,
And
folly mock and hope deceive,
Let
cowards beat the breast and wail,
I’ll
homeward hie; I will not grieve:
I’ll
draw the blind, I’ll there set free
My
heart’s beloved boon company.
“When
kings shall favour, ladies call
My
service to their side;
When
roses grow upon the wall
Of
life, with love inside;
I’ll
get me home with joy to be
In
my heart’s own good company!”
“Oh, fool, oh, beneficent fool,
well done! ’Tis a song for a man ’twould
shame De Carteret of St. Ouen’s to his knees,”
cried Lempriere.
“Oh, benignant fool, well done!
’twould draw me from my meals,” said a
voice behind the three; and, turning hastily about,
they saw, smiling and applausive, the Duke’s
Daughter. Beside her was Angele.
The three got to their feet, and each
made obeisance after his kind-Buonespoir ducking awkwardly,
his blue eyes bulging with pleasure, Lempriere swelling
with vanity and spreading wide acknowledgment of their
presence, the fool condescending a wave of welcome.
“Oh! abundant Amicitia!” cried the fool
to the Duke’s Daughter, “thou art saved
by so doing. So get thee to thanksgiving and
God’s mercy.”
“Wherefore am I saved by being
drawn from my meals by thy music, fool?” she
asked, linking her arm in Angele’s.
“Because thou art more enamoured
of lampreys than of man; and it is written that thou
shalt love thy fellow man, and he that loveth not is
lost: therefore thou art lost if thou lingerest
at meals.”
“Is it so, then? And this
lady what thinkest thou? Must she also
abstain and seek good company?”
“No, verily, Amicitia, for she
is good company itself, and so she may sleep in the
larder and have no fear.”
“And what think you shall
she be happy? Shall she have gifts of fate?”
“Discriminately so, Amicitia.
She shall have souvenirs and no suspicions of Fate.
But she shall not linger here, for all lingerers in
Delicio’s Court are spied upon not
for their soul’s good. She shall go hence,
and ”
“Ay, princely lady, she shall
go hence,” interposed Lempriere, who had panted
to speak, and could bear silence no longer. “Her
high Majesty will kiss her on the brow, and in Jersey
Isle she shall blossom and bloom and know bounty or
never more shall I have privilege and perquage.”
He lumbered forward and kissed Angele’s
hand as though conferring distinction, but with great
generosity. “I said that all should go well,
and so it shall. Rozel shall prevail. The
Queen knows on what rock to build, as I made warrant
for her, and will still do so.”
His vanity was incorrigible, but through
it ran so child-like a spirit that it bred friendship
and repulsed not. The Duke’s Daughter pressed
the arm of Angele, who replied:
“Indeed it has been so according
to your word, and we are I am shall
ever be beholden. In storm you have been with
us, so true a pilot and so brave a sailor; and if
we come to port and the quiet shore, there shall be
spread a feast of remembrance which shall never grow
cold, Seigneur.”
“One
ingle-nook right warm shall be
Where
my heart hath good company,”
sang the fool, and catching by the
arm Buonespoir, who ducked his head in farewell, ran
him into the greenwood. Angele came forward as
if to stay Buonespoir, but stopped short reflectively.
As she did so, the Duke’s Daughter whispered
quickly into Lempriere’s ear.
Swelling with pride he nodded, and
said: “I will reach him and discover myself
to him, and bring him, if he stray, most undoubted
and infallible lady,” and with an air of mystery
he made a heavily respectful exit.
Left alone, the two ladies seated
themselves in the bower of roses, and for a moment
were silent. Presently the Duke’s Daughter
laughed aloud.
“In what seas of dear conceit
swims your leviathan Seigneur, heart’s-ease?”
Angele stole a hand into the cool
palm of the other. “He was builded for
some lonely sea all his own. Creation cheated
him. But God give me ever such friends as he,
and I shall indeed ‘have good company’
and fear no issue.” She sighed.
“Remains there still a fear?
Did you not have good promise in the Queen’s
words that night?”
“Ay, so it seemed, and so it
seemed before on May Day, and yet ”
“And yet she banished you, and
tried you, and kept you heart-sick? Sweet, know
you not how bitter a thing it is to owe a debt of love
to one whom we have injured? So it was with her.
The Queen is not a saint, but very woman. Marriage
she hath ever contemned and hated; men she hath desired
to keep her faithful and impassioned servitors.
So does power blind us. And the braver the man,
the more she would have him in her service, at her
feet, the centre of the world.”
“I had served her in a crisis,
an hour of peril. Was naught due me?”
The Duke’s Daughter drew her
close. “She never meant but that all should
be well. And because you had fastened on her feelings
as never I have seen another of your sex, so for the
moment she resented it; and because De la Foret was
yours ah, if you had each been naught to
the other, how easy it would have run! Do you
not understand?”
“Nay, then, and yea, then and
I put it from me. See, am I not happy now?
Upon your friendship I build.”
“Sweet, I did what I could.
Leicester filled her ears with poison every day, mixed
up your business and great affairs with France, sought
to convey that you both were not what you are; until
at last I countermarched him.” She laughed
merrily. “Ay, I can laugh now, but it was
all hanging by a thread, when my leech sent his letter
that brought you to the palace. It had grieved
me that I might not seek you, or write to you in all
those sad days; but the only way to save you was by
keeping the Queen’s command; for she had known
of Leicester’s visits to you, of your meeting
in the maze, and she was set upon it that alone, all
alone, you should be tried to the last vestige of your
strength. If you had failed ”
“If I had failed ”
Angele closed her eyes and shuddered. “I
had not cared for myself, but Michel ”
“If you had failed, there had
been no need to grieve for Michel. He then had
not grieved for thee. But see, the wind blows
fair, and in my heart I have no fear of the end.
You shall go hence in peace. This morning the
Queen was happier than I have seen her these many years:
a light was in her eye brighter than showeth to the
Court. She talked of this place, recalled the
hours spent here, spoke even softly of Leicester.
And that gives me warrant for the future. She
has relief in his banishment, and only recalls older
and happier days when, if her cares were no greater,
they were borne by the buoyancy of girlhood and youth.
Of days spent here she talked until mine own eyes
went blind. She said it was a place for lovers,
and if she knew any two lovers who were true lovers,
and had been long parted, she would send them here.”
“There be two true lovers, and
they have been long parted,” murmured Angele.
“But she commanded these lovers
not to meet till Trinity Day, and she brooks not disobedience
even in herself. How could she disobey her own
commands? But” her eyes were
on the greenwood and the path that led into the circle “but
she would shut her eyes to-day, and let the world
move on without her, let lovers thrive, and birds be
nesting without heed or hap. Disobedience shall
thrive when the Queen connives at it and
so I leave you to your disobedience, sweet.”
With a laugh she sprang to her feet,
and ran. Amazed and bewildered Angele gazed after
her. As she stood looking she heard her name called
softly.
Turning, she saw Michel. They were alone.