The night was hot in Paris. Breathless
heat had brooded over the city all Saturday, the 23rd
of August, 1572. It was the eve of Saint Bartholomew.
The bell of Saint Germain l’Auxerrois had just
clashed out the signal. The Louvre was one blaze
of lights. Men with lanterns and poleaxes, as
if going to the shambles to kill oxen, hurried along
the streets.
Only in the houses in which were lodged
the great Huguenot gentlemen, come to the city for
the marriage of the King’s sister Marguerite
to the King of Navarre, there were darkness and silence.
None had warned them or, at least, they
had taken no warning. If any suspected, the word
of a King, his sworn oaths and multitudinous safe-conducts,
lulled them back again into security.
In one chamber, high above the courtyard,
a light burned faint and steady. It was that
beside the bed of the great Admiral Coligny.
He had been treacherously wounded by the arquebuse
of one of the guard of the King’s brother Monsieur
de France, Henry Duke of Anjou, afterwards to be known
to history as Henry III., the favourite son of Catherine
de Medici, the cunningest, and the most ungrateful.
There watched by that bedside many
grave men, holding grave discourse with each other
and with the sick man, concerning the high mysteries
of the religion, pure and reformed, of the state of
France, and their hopes of better days for the Faith
as it had been delivered to the saints.
And at the bed-foot, with towels,
bandages, and water in a silver salver ready for service,
one young lad, a student of Geneva, fresh from Calvin
and Beza, held his tongue and opened wide his ears.
“Pray, Merlin de Vaux,”
said the wounded Admiral to his aged pastor, “pray
for life if such be God’s will, that we may use
it better for death (the which He will
give us in any case), that the messenger may not find
us unprepared.”
And Merlin prayed, the rest standing
up, stern, grave, prepared men, with bowed and reverent
heads. And the Genevan Scot thought most of his
dead master Calvin, whom, in the last year of his life,
he had often seen so stand, while his own power rocked
under him in the city of his adoption, and the kingdoms
of the earth stormed about him like hateful waves
of the sea.
And somewhat thus-wise prayed good Merlin.
“Thou, O Lord, hast put down
the mighty from their seats and has exalted them of
low degree! Clay are all men in Thy hands potter’s
clay, broken shards or vessels fit for altar-service.
Yet Thou has sent us, Thy servants, into the wild,
where we have seen things, and thought things, and
given us many warnings, so that when Thou standest
at the door and knockest, we may be ready for Thy
coming!”
Then at these words, prompt as an
echo, the house leaped under the heavy noise of blows
delivered upon the outer door. And the Admiral
of France, sitting up in his bed, yet corpse-pale
from his recent wound, lifted his hand and said, “Hush,
be still my Lord standeth without!
For dogs and murderers, false kings and queens forsworn,
are but instruments in His hand. It is God who
calls us to His holy rest. For me, I have long
been ready. I go with no more thought than if
my chariot waited me at the door.”
Then he turned to the Huguenot gentlemen
who were grouped about his bed. This one and
that other had tried to catch a glimpse of the assailants
from the windows. But in vain. For the door
was in a recess which hid all but the last of the
guard which the King had set about the house.
“It is only Cosseins and his
men,” said one; “they will hold us safe.
We have the King’s word. He placed the
guard himself.”
“The hearts of Kings are unsearchable,”
said the Admiral. “Put not your trust in
princes, but haste ye to the garret, where is a window
that gives upon the roof. There is no need that
young and valiant men should perish with a wounded
man and an old. Go and fight for the remnant that
shall be preserved. If it be the Lord’s
will, He shall yet take vengence by your arms!”
“Ay, go,” said Merlin
the pastor, casting back his white hair; “for
me, I am old, and I stay. Only yester-night I
saw an angel stand in the sun, crying to all souls
that did fly through the midst of heaven, ’Come,
gather yourselves to the Supper of the Great God.’
But when, thinking myself called, I would have drawn
nearer, lo! between me and the table spread, on which
was the wine ready poured out, I saw the Beast, the
kings of the earth, and their warriors gathered together
to make war against the Lamb. And I heard a voice
that said, ’Nay, but first thou must pass through
the portal of death ere it be given thee to eat of
the marriage supper of the Lamb.’ So to
me it spake. The message was not for you ye
heard not the Voice. I will stay, for I am weary,
and am minded to fall on sleep to find
rest after many years.”
And to this Pare, the wise and skilled
surgeon, who was ever beloved by Admiral Coligny,
likewise adhered, saying, “I have not heard the
voice of the angel. But I hear well enough that
of false Cosseins who is sent by the King to murder
us. I have looked from the window, and though
I saw no vision of Beast, I saw clearly my Lord Duke
of Guise stand without calling to them to slay and
make an end! So I also will remain for the love
I bear to my lord, and because it is my duty as a good
physician so to do.”
And the lad John Stirling, the Scot
from Geneva, the pupil of Calvin, ventured no word,
being young. But, though the others would have
carried him with them, he shook them off, and abode
where he was. For his vision, and the purpose
of it, were yet to be.
And so it came to pass that this young
man from Geneva saw the killing of the great Admiral,
and heard the words in which he forgave his assassins,
telling them how that he was ready to die, and that
at the most they had but shortened his life by some
short count of days or hours!
And ever through the brief turmoil
of the killing, the voice of the Duke of Guise mounted
impatiently up the stairway asking if the Admiral were
not yet dead, and hounding on his dogs to make an end
of that noble quarry.
And even when they assured him he
would not believe, but desired to look on the face
of his own and his father’s enemy.
“Open the window and throw him down!”
he cried.
So they cast him out. But the
aged prince, with the life still in his body, clutched
by instinct at the sill of the window as he fell.
The young Duke, first ordering up a couple of flambeaux,
deliberately wiped the blood from the face of his
enemy with his kerchief, and cried out, “It
is even he I know him well. So perish
all the enemies of the King and of the Catholic League!”
Then, as his men still called from
the window, the Duke looked up, angry to be disturbed
in his gloating over his arch-foe.
“There is also a lad here,”
they cried, “one from Geneva, who says he is
of the Admiral’s opinion. What shall we
do with him?”
“What is that to me?”
said the Duke of Guise haughtily; “throw him
after his master.”
And that is the reason why a certain
John Stirling, a Scot of Geneva, went through life
lame, wearing a countenance twisted like a mask at
a fair, and loved not the Duke Henry of
Guise.
Moreover, though he saw the Duke spurn
his dead enemy with his foot, the boy felt not at
the time the kicks with which the scullions imitated
their master, but lay in a swoon on the body of Coligny.
He came to himself, however, being cast aside as of
no account, when they came to drag the Admiral’s
body to the gallows. After a while the spray of
a fountain that played in the courtyard roused him.
The lad washed his hands and crawled forth. He
had lain all the terrible Sunday in the bloody court
of Coligny’s lodgings, under the shadow of the
trembling acacias, which cast flecks of light
and dark on the broad irregular stains of the pavement.
But when the evening had come again, and the angry
voices shouting “Kill! kill!” had died
away, the lame boy hobbled painfully out. Somehow
or other he passed through an unguarded gate, to find
himself sustained by a fellow-countryman carrying a
child, a little maid of four years. He must have
been a strong man, that chance-met Scot, for he had
an arm to spare for John Stirling. He spoke, also,
words of hope and comfort to the boy. But these
fell on deaf ears. For through the dull ache
of his bones and the sharp nip of his wounds, undressed
save for the blood that had dried upon them, the heart
of the cripple remained with Henry of Guise.
“No,” he said over and
over to himself, repeating the Duke’s words,
“the work is not yet finished!” It had,
indeed, scarce begun.
And he registered a vow.