ANNA, LADY BAXBY
By the Colonel
It was in the time of the great Civil
War if I should not rather, as a loyal
subject, call it, with Clarendon, the Great Rebellion.
It was, I say, at that unhappy period of our history,
that towards the autumn of a particular year, the
Parliament forces sat down before Sherton Castle with
over seven thousand foot and four pieces of cannon.
The Castle, as we all know, was in that century owned
and occupied by one of the Earls of Severn, and garrisoned
for his assistance by a certain noble Marquis who
commanded the King’s troops in these parts.
The said Earl, as well as the young Lord Baxby, his
eldest son, were away from home just now, raising
forces for the King elsewhere. But there were
present in the Castle, when the besiegers arrived
before it, the son’s fair wife Lady Baxby, and
her servants, together with some friends and near relatives
of her husband; and the defence was so good and well-considered
that they anticipated no great danger.
The Parliamentary forces were also
commanded by a noble lord for the nobility
were by no means, at this stage of the war, all on
the King’s side and it had been observed
during his approach in the night-time, and in the
morning when the reconnoitring took place, that he
appeared sad and much depressed. The truth was
that, by a strange freak of destiny, it had come to
pass that the stronghold he was set to reduce was the
home of his own sister, whom he had tenderly loved
during her maidenhood, and whom he loved now, in spite
of the estrangement which had resulted from hostilities
with her husband’s family. He believed,
too, that, notwithstanding this cruel division, she
still was sincerely attached to him.
His hesitation to point his ordnance
at the walls was inexplicable to those who were strangers
to his family history. He remained in the field
on the north side of the Castle (called by his name
to this day because of his encampment there) till
it occurred to him to send a messenger to his sister
Anna with a letter, in which he earnestly requested
her, as she valued her life, to steal out of the place
by the little gate to the south, and make away in
that direction to the residence of some friends.
Shortly after he saw, to his great
surprise, coming from the front of the Castle walls
a lady on horseback, with a single attendant.
She rode straight forward into the field, and up
the slope to where his army and tents were spread.
It was not till she got quite near that he discerned
her to be his sister Anna; and much was he alarmed
that she should have run such risk as to sally out
in the face of his forces without knowledge of their
proceedings, when at any moment their first discharge
might have burst forth, to her own destruction in
such exposure. She dismounted before she was
quite close to him, and he saw that her familiar face,
though pale, was not at all tearful, as it would have
been in their younger days. Indeed, if the particulars
as handed down are to be believed, he was in a more
tearful state than she, in his anxiety about her.
He called her into his tent, out of the gaze of those
around; for though many of the soldiers were honest
and serious-minded men, he could not bear that she
who had been his dear companion in childhood should
be exposed to curious observation in this her great
grief.
When they were alone in the tent he
clasped her in his arms, for he had not seen her since
those happier days when, at the commencement of the
war, her husband and himself had been of the same mind
about the arbitrary conduct of the King, and had little
dreamt that they would not go to extremes together.
She was the calmest of the two, it is said, and was
the first to speak connectedly.
‘William, I have come to you,’
said she, ’but not to save myself as you suppose.
Why, oh, why do you persist in supporting this disloyal
cause, and grieving us so?’
‘Say not that,’ he replied
hastily. ’If truth hides at the bottom
of a well, why should you suppose justice to be in
high places? I am for the right at any price.
Anna, leave the Castle; you are my sister; come away,
my dear, and save thy life!’
‘Never!’ says she.
’Do you plan to carry out this attack, and level
the Castle indeed?’
‘Most certainly I do,’
says he. ’What meaneth this army around
us if not so?’
’Then you will find the bones
of your sister buried in the ruins you cause!’
said she. And without another word she turned
and left him.
‘Anna abide with
me!’ he entreated. ’Blood is thicker
than water, and what is there in common between you
and your husband now?’
But she shook her head and would not
hear him and hastening out, mounted her horse, and
returned towards the Castle as she had come.
Ay, many’s the time when I have been riding
to hounds across that field that I have thought of
that scene!
When she had quite gone down the field,
and over the intervening ground, and round the bastion,
so that he could no longer even see the tip of her
mare’s white tail, he was much more deeply moved
by emotions concerning her and her welfare than he
had been while she was before him. He wildly
reproached himself that he had not detained her by
force for her own good, so that, come what might,
she would be under his protection and not under that
of her husband, whose impulsive nature rendered him
too open to instantaneous impressions and sudden changes
of plan; he was now acting in this cause and now in
that, and lacked the cool judgment necessary for the
protection of a woman in these troubled times.
Her brother thought of her words again and again,
and sighed, and even considered if a sister were not
of more value than a principle, and if he would not
have acted more naturally in throwing in his lot with
hers.
The delay of the besiegers in attacking
the Castle was said to be entirely owing to this distraction
on the part of their leader, who remained on the spot
attempting some indecisive operations, and parleying
with the Marquis, then in command, with far inferior
forces, within the Castle. It never occurred
to him that in the meantime the young Lady Baxby,
his sister, was in much the same mood as himself.
Her brother’s familiar voice and eyes, much
worn and fatigued by keeping the field, and by family
distractions on account of this unhappy feud, rose
upon her vision all the afternoon, and as day waned
she grew more and more Parliamentarian in her principles,
though the only arguments which had addressed themselves
to her were those of family ties.
Her husband, General Lord Baxby, had
been expected to return all the day from his excursion
into the east of the county, a message having been
sent to him informing him of what had happened at home;
and in the evening he arrived with reinforcements
in unexpected numbers. Her brother retreated
before these to a hill near Ivell, four or five miles
off, to afford the men and himself some repose.
Lord Baxby duly placed his forces, and there was
no longer any immediate danger. By this time
Lady Baxby’s feelings were more Parliamentarian
than ever, and in her fancy the fagged countenance
of her brother, beaten back by her husband, seemed
to reproach her for heartlessness. When her husband
entered her apartment, ruddy and boisterous, and full
of hope, she received him but sadly; and upon his
casually uttering some slighting words about her brother’s
withdrawal, which seemed to convey an imputation upon
his courage, she resented them, and retorted that
he, Lord Baxby himself, had been against the Court-party
at first, where it would be much more to his credit
if he were at present, and showing her brother’s
consistency of opinion, instead of supporting the
lying policy of the King (as she called it) for the
sake of a barren principle of loyalty, which was but
an empty expression when a King was not at one with
his people. The dissension grew bitter between
them, reaching to little less than a hot quarrel,
both being quick-tempered souls.
Lord Baxby was weary with his long
day’s march and other excitements, and soon
retired to bed. His lady followed some time after.
Her husband slept profoundly, but not so she; she
sat brooding by the window-slit, and lifting the curtain
looked forth upon the hills without.
In the silence between the footfalls
of the sentinels she could hear faint sounds of her
brother’s camp on the distant hills, where the
soldiery had hardly settled as yet into their bivouac
since their evening’s retreat. The first
frosts of autumn had touched the grass, and shrivelled
the more delicate leaves of the creepers; and she thought
of William sleeping on the chilly ground, under the
strain of these hardships. Tears flooded her
eyes as she returned to her husband’s imputations
upon his courage, as if there could be any doubt of
Lord William’s courage after what he had done
in the past days.
Lord Baxby’s long and reposeful
breathings in his comfortable bed vexed her now, and
she came to a determination on an impulse. Hastily
lighting a taper, she wrote on a scrap of paper:
‘Blood is thicker than water,
dear William I will come;’
and with this in her hand, she went to the door of
the room, and out upon the stairs; on second thoughts
turning back for a moment, to put on her husband’s
hat and cloak not the one he was daily wearing that
if seen in the twilight she might at a casual glance
appear as some lad or hanger-on of one of the household
women; thus accoutred she descended a flight of circular
stairs, at the bottom of which was a door opening upon
the terrace towards the west, in the direction of
her brother’s position. Her object was
to slip out without the sentry seeing her, get to the
stables, arouse one of the varlets, and send
him ahead of her along the highway with the note to
warn her brother of her approach, to throw in her lot
with his.
She was still in the shadow of the
wall on the west terrace, waiting for the sentinel
to be quite out of the way, when her ears were greeted
by a voice, saying, from the adjoining shade
‘Here I be!’
The tones were the tones of a woman.
Lady Baxby made no reply, and stood close to the
wall.
‘My Lord Baxby,’ the voice
continued; and she could recognize in it the local
accent of some girl from the little town of Sherton,
close at hand. ’I be tired of waiting,
my dear Lord Baxby! I was afeard you would never
come!’
Lady Baxby flushed hot to her toes.
‘How the wench loves him!’
she said to herself, reasoning from the tones of the
voice, which were plaintive and sweet and tender as
a bird’s. She changed from the home-hating
truant to the strategic wife in one moment.
‘Hist!’ she said.
’My lord, you told me ten o’clock,
and ‘tis near twelve now,’ continues the
other. ’How could ye keep me waiting so
if you love me as you said? I should have stuck
to my lover in the Parliament troops if it had not
been for thee, my dear lord!’
There was not the least doubt that
Lady Baxby had been mistaken for her husband by this
intriguing damsel. Here was a pretty underhand
business! Here were sly manoeuvrings! Here
was faithlessness! Here was a precious assignation
surprised in the midst! Her wicked husband, whom
till this very moment she had ever deemed the soul
of good faith how could he!
Lady Baxby precipitately retreated
to the door in the turret, closed it, locked it, and
ascended one round of the staircase, where there was
a loophole. ’I am not coming! I,
Lord Baxby, despise ye and all your wanton tribe!’
she hissed through the opening; and then crept upstairs,
as firmly rooted in Royalist principles as any man
in the Castle.
Her husband still slept the sleep
of the weary, well-fed, and well-drunken, if not of
the just; and Lady Baxby quickly disrobed herself
without assistance being, indeed, supposed
by her woman to have retired to rest long ago.
Before lying down, she noiselessly locked the door
and placed the key under her pillow. More than
that, she got a staylace, and, creeping up to her
lord, in great stealth tied the lace in a tight knot
to one of his long locks of hair, attaching the other
end of the lace to the bedpost; for, being tired herself
now, she feared she might sleep heavily; and, if her
husband should wake, this would be a delicate hint
that she had discovered all.
It is added that, to make assurance
trebly sure, her gentle ladyship, when she had lain
down to rest, held her lord’s hand in her own
during the whole of the night. But this is old-wives’
gossip, and not corroborated. What Lord Baxby
thought and said when he awoke the next morning, and
found himself so strangely tethered, is likewise only
matter of conjecture; though there is no reason to
suppose that his rage was great. The extent
of his culpability as regards the intrigue was this
much; that, while halting at a cross-road near Sherton
that day, he had flirted with a pretty young woman,
who seemed nothing loth, and had invited her to the
Castle terrace after dark an invitation
which he quite forgot on his arrival home.
The subsequent relations of Lord and
Lady Baxby were not again greatly embittered by quarrels,
so far as is known; though the husband’s conduct
in later life was occasionally eccentric, and the vicissitudes
of his public career culminated in long exile.
The siege of the Castle was not regularly undertaken
till two or three years later than the time I have
been describing, when Lady Baxby and all the women
therein, except the wife of the then Governor, had
been removed to safe distance. That memorable
siege of fifteen days by Fairfax, and the surrender
of the old place on an August evening, is matter of
history, and need not be told by me.
The Man of Family spoke approvingly
across to the Colonel when the Club had done smiling,
declaring that the story was an absolutely faithful
page of history, as he had good reason to know, his
own people having been engaged in that well-known
scrimmage. He asked if the Colonel had ever
heard the equally well-authenticated, though less martial
tale of a certain Lady Penelope, who lived in the
same century, and not a score of miles from the same
place?
The Colonel had not heard it, nor
had anybody except the local historian; and the inquirer
was induced to proceed forthwith.