When De la Foret and Angele saw the
Queen again it was in the royal chapel.
Perhaps the longest five minutes of
M. de la Foret’s life were those in which he
waited the coming of the Queen on that Trinity Sunday
which was to decide his fate. When he saw Elizabeth
enter the chapel his eyes swam, till the sight of
them was lost in the blur of colour made by the motions
of gorgeously apparelled courtiers and the people of
the household. When the Queen had taken her seat
and all was quiet, he struggled with himself to put
on such a front of simple boldness as he would wear
upon day of battle. The sword the Queen had given
him was at his side, and his garb was still that of
a gentleman, not of a Huguenot minister such as Elizabeth
in her grim humour, and to satisfy her bond with France,
would make of him this day.
The brown of his face had paled in
the weeks spent in the palace and in waiting for this
hour; anxiety had toned the ruddy vigour of his bearing;
but his figure was the figure of a soldier, and his
hand that of a strong man. He shook a little
as he bowed to her Majesty, but that passed, and when
at last his eye met that of the Duke’s Daughter
he grew steady; for she gave him as plainly as though
her tongue spoke, a message from Angele. Angele
herself he did not see she was kneeling
in an obscure corner, her father’s hand in hers,
all the passion of her life pouring out in prayer.
De la Foret drew himself up with an
iron will. No nobler figure of a man ever essayed
to preach the Word, and so Elizabeth thought; and she
repented of the bitter humour which had set this trial
as his chance of life in England and his freedom from
the hand of Catherine. The man bulked larger
in her eyes than he had ever done, and she struggled
with herself to keep the vow she had made to the Duke’s
Daughter the night that Angele had been found in De
la Foret’s rooms. He had been the immediate
cause, fated or accidental, of the destined breach
between Leicester and herself; he had played a significant
part in her own life. Glancing at her courtiers,
she saw that none might compare with him, the form
and being of calm boldness and courage. She sighed
she knew scarce why.
When De la Foret first opened his
mouth and essayed to call the worshippers to prayer,
no words came forth only a dry whisper.
Some ladies simpered, and more than one courtier laughed
silently. Michel saw, and his face flamed up.
But he laid a hand on himself, and a moment afterwards
his voice came forth, clear, musical, and resonant,
speaking simple words, direct and unlacquered sentences,
passionately earnest withal. He stilled the people
to a unison of sentiment, none the less interested
and absorbed because it was known that he had been
the cause of the great breach between the Queen and
the favourite. Ere he had spoken far, flippant
gallants had ceased to flutter handkerchiefs, to move
their swords idly upon the floor.
He took for his text: “Stand
and search for the old paths.” The beginning
of all systems of religion, the coming of the Nazarene,
the rise and growth of Christianity, the martyrdoms
of the early church, the invasion of the truth by
false doctrine, the abuses of the Church, the Reformation,
the martyrdom of the Huguenots for the return to the
early principles of Christianity, the “search
for the old paths,” he set forth in a tone generous
but not fiery, presently powerful and searching, yet
not declamatory. At the last he raised the sword
that hung by his side, and the Book that lay before
him, and said:
“And what matter which it is
we wield this steel that strikes for God,
or this Book which speaks of Him? For the Book
is the sword of the Spirit, and the sword is the life
of humanity; for all faith must be fought for, and
all that is has been won by strife. But the paths
wherein ye go to battle must be the old paths; your
sword shall be your staff by day, and the Book your
lantern by night. That which ye love ye shall
teach, and that which ye teach ye shall defend; and
if your love be a true love your teaching shall be
a great teaching, and your sword a strong sword which
none may withstand. It shall be the pride of
sovereign and of people; and so neither ’height,
nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to
separate us from the love of God.’”
Ere he had ended, some of the ladies
were overcome, the eyes of the Duke’s Daughter
were full of tears, and Elizabeth said audibly, when
he ceased speaking: “On my soul, I have
no bishop with a tongue like his. Would that
my Lord of Ely were here to learn how truth should
be spoke. Henceforth my bishops shall first be
Camisards.”
Of that hour’s joyful business
the Queen wrote thus to the Medici before the day
was done:
Cancelling all other letters on the
matter, this M. de la Foret shall stay in my kingdom.
I may not be the headsman of one of my faith as
eloquent a preacher as he was a brave soldier.
Abiding by the strict terms of our treaty with my
brother of France, he shall stay with us in peace,
and in our own care. He hath not the eloquence
of a Knox, but he hath the true thing in him, and
that speaks.
To the Duke’s Daughter the Queen
said: “On my soul, he shall be married
instantly, or my ladies will carry him off and murder
him for love.”
And so it was that the heart of Elizabeth
the Queen warmed again and dearly towards two Huguenot
exiles, and showed that in doing justice she also
had not so sour a heart towards her sex as was set
down to her credit. Yet she made one further
effort to keep De la Foret in her service. When
Michel, once again, declined, dwelt earnestly on his
duty towards the widow of his dead chief, and begged
leave to share her exile in Jersey, Elizabeth said:
“On my soul, but I did not think there was any
man on earth so careless of princes’ honours!”
To this De la Foret replied that he
had given his heart and life to one cause, and since
Montgomery had lost all, even life, the least Michel
de la Foret could do was to see that the woman who
loved him be not unprotected in the world. Also,
since he might not at this present fight for the cause,
he could speak for it; and he thanked the Queen of
England for having shown him his duty. All that
he desired was to be quiet for a space somewhere in
“her high Majesty’s good realm,”
till his way was clear to him.
“You would return to Jersey,
then, with our friend of Rozel?” Elizabeth said,
with a gesture towards Lempriere, who, now recovered
from his wound, was present at the audience.
De la Foret inclined his head.
“If it be your high Majesty’s pleasure.”
And Lempriere of Rozel said:
“He would return with myself your noble Majesty’s
friend before all the world, and Buonespoir his ship
the Honeyflower.”
Elizabeth’s lips parted in a
smile, for she was warmed with the luxury of doing
good, and she answered:
“I know not what the end of
this will be, whether our loyal Lempriere will become
a pirate or Buonespoir a butler to my Court; but it
is too pretty a hazard to forego in a world of chance.
By the rood, but I have never, since I sat on my father’s
throne, seen black so white as I have done this past
three months. You shall have your Buonespoir,
good Rozel; but if he plays pirate any more tell
him this from his Queen upon an English
ship, I will have his head, if I must needs send Drake
of Devon to overhaul him.”
That same hour the Queen sent for
Angele, and by no leave, save her own, arranged the
wedding-day, and ordained that it should take place
at Southampton, whither the Comtesse de Montgomery
had come on her way to Greenwich to plead for the
life of Michel de la Foret, and to beg Elizabeth to
relieve her poverty. Both of which things Elizabeth
did, as the annals of her life record.
After Elizabeth ever self-willed had
declared her way about the marriage ceremony, looking
for no reply save that of silent obedience, she made
Angele sit at her feet and tell her whole story again
from first to last. They were alone, and Elizabeth
showed to this young refugee more of her own heart
than any other woman had ever seen. Not by words
alone, for she made no long story; but once she stooped
and kissed Angele upon the cheek, and once her eyes
filled up with tears, and they dropped upon her lap
unheeded. All the devotion shown herself as a
woman had come to naught; and it may be that this
thought stirred in her now. She remembered how
Leicester and herself had parted, and how she was
denied all those soft resources of regret which were
the right of the meanest women in her realm.
For, whatever she might say to her Parliament and
people, she knew that all was too late that
she would never marry and that she must go childless
and uncomforted to her grave. Years upon years
of delusion of her people, of sacrifice to policy,
had at last become a self-delusion, to which her eyes
were not full opened yet she sought to
shut them tight. But these refugees, coming at
the moment of her own struggle, had changed her heart
from an ever-growing bitterness to human sympathy.
When Angele had ended her tale once more, the Queen
said:
“God knows, ye shall not linger
in my Court. Such lives have no place here.
Get you back to my Isle of Jersey, where ye may live
in peace. Here all is noise, self-seeking and
time-service. If ye twain are not happy I will
say the world should never have been made.”
Before they left Greenwich Palace M.
Aubert and Angele, De la Foret, Lempriere, and Buonespoir the
Queen made Michel de la Foret the gift of a chaplaincy
to the Crown. To Monsieur Aubert she gave a small
pension, and in Angele’s hands she placed a
deed of dower worthy of a generosity greater than
her own.
At Southampton, Michel and Angele
were married by royal license, and with the Comtesse
de Montgomery set sail in Buonespoir’s boat,
the Honeyflower, which brought them safe to St. Helier’s,
in the Isle of Jersey.