In what manner Wolsey
put his Scheme into Operation.
Foiled in his scheme of making Wyat
the instrument of Anne Boleyn’s overthrow, Wolsey
determined to put into immediate operation the plan
he had conceived of bringing forward a rival to her
with the king. If a choice had been allowed him,
he would have selected some high-born dame for the
purpose; but as this was out of the question and
as, indeed, Henry had of late proved insensible to
the attractions of all the beauties that crowded his
court except Anne Boleyn he trusted to the
forester’s fair granddaughter to accomplish his
object. The source whence he had received intelligence
of the king’s admiration of Mabel Lyndwood was
his jester, Patch a shrewd varlet who, under
the mask of folly, picked up many an important secret
for his master, and was proportionately rewarded.
Before executing the scheme, it was
necessary to ascertain whether the damsel’s
beauty was as extraordinary as it had been represented;
and with this view, Wolsey mounted his mule one morning,
and, accompanied by Patch and another attendant, rode
towards the forest.
It was a bright and beautiful morning,
and preoccupied as he was, the plotting cardinal could
not be wholly insensible to the loveliness of the
scene around him. Crossing Spring Hill, he paused
at the head of a long glade, skirted on the right
by noble beech-trees whose silver stems sparkled in
the sun shine, and extending down to the thicket now
called Cooke’s Hill Wood. From this point,
as from every other eminence on the northern side
of the forest, a magnificent view of the castle was
obtained.
The sight of the kingly pile, towering
above its vassal woods, kindled high and ambitious
thoughts in his breast.
“The lord of that proud structure
has been for years swayed by me,” he mused,
“and shall the royal puppet be at last wrested
from me by a woman’s hand? Not if I can
hold my own.”
Roused by the reflection, he quickened
his pace, and shaping his course towards Black Nest,
reached in a short time the borders of a wide swamp
lying between the great lake and another pool of water
of less extent situated in the heart of the forest.
This wild and dreary marsh, the haunt of the bittern
and the plover, contrasted forcibly and disagreeably
with the rich sylvan district he had just quitted.
“I should not like to cross
this swamp at night,” he observed to Patch,
who rode close behind him.
“Nor I, your grace,” replied
the buffoon. “We might chance to be led
by a will-o’-the-wisp to a watery grave.”
“Such treacherous fires are
not confined to these regions, knave,” rejoined
Wolsey. “Mankind are often lured, by delusive
gleams of glory and power, into quagmires deep and
pitfalls. Holy Virgin; what have we here?”
The exclamation was occasioned by
a figure that suddenly emerged from the ground at
a little distance on the right. Wolsey’s
mule swerved so much as almost to endanger his seat,
and he called out in a loud angry tone to the author
of the annoyance “Who are you, knave?
and what do you here?”
I am a keeper of the forest, an’t
please your grace, replied the other, doffing his
cap, and disclosing harsh features which by no means
recommended him to the cardinal, “and am named
Morgan Fenwolf. I was crouching among the reeds
to get a shot at a fat buck, when your approach called
me to my feet.”
“By St. Jude! this is the very
fellow, your grace, who shot the hart-royal the other
day,” cried Patch.
“And so preserved the Lady Anne
Boleyn,” rejoined the cardinal. “Art
sure of it, knave?”
“As sure as your grace is of
canonisation,” replied Patch. “That
shot should have brought you a rich reward, friend either
from the king’s highness or the Lady Anne,”
remarked Wolsey to the keeper.
“It has brought me nothing,” rejoined
Fenwolf sullenly.
“Hum!” exclaimed the cardinal. “Give
the fellow a piece of gold, Patch.”
“Methinks I should have better
earned your grace’s bounty if I had let the
hart work his will,” said Fenwolf, reluctantly
receiving the coin.
“How, fellow?” cried the cardinal, knitting
his brows.
“Nay, I mean no offence,”
replied Fenwolf; “but the rumour goes that your
grace and the Lady Anne are not well affected towards
each other.”
“The rumour is false,”
rejoined the cardinal, “and you can now contradict
it on your own experience. Harkee, sirrah! where
lies Tristram Lyndwood’s hut?”
Fenwolf looked somewhat surprised
and confused by the question.
“It lies on the other side of
yonder rising ground, about half a mile hence,”
he said. “But if your grace is seeking old
Tristram, you will not find him. I parted with
him, half-an-hour ago, on Hawk’s Hill, and he
was then on his way to the deer-pen at Bray Wood.”
“If I see his granddaughter
Mabel, it will suffice,” rejoined the cardinal.
“I am told she is a comely damsel. Is it
so?”
“I am but an indifferent judge
of beauty,” replied Fenwolf moodily.
“Lead my mule across this swamp,
thou senseless loon,” said the cardinal, “and
I will give thee my blessing.”
With a very ill grace Fenwolf complied,
and conducted Wolsey to the farther side of the marsh.
“If your grace pursues the path
over the hill,” he said, “and then strikes
into the first opening on the right, it will bring
you to the place you seek.” And, without
waiting for the promised blessing, he disappeared
among the trees.
On reaching the top of the hill, Wolsey
descried the hut through an opening in the trees at
a few hundred yards’ distance. It was pleasantly
situated on the brink of the lake, at the point where
its width was greatest, and where it was fed by a
brook that flowed into it from a large pool of water
near Sunninghill.
From the high ground where Wolsey
now stood the view of the lake was beautiful.
For nearly a mile its shining expanse was seen stretching
out between banks of varied form, sometimes embayed,
sometimes running out into little headlands, but everywhere
clothed with timber almost to the water’s edge.
Wild fowl skimmed over its glassy surface, or dipped
in search of its finny prey, and here and there a
heron might be detected standing in some shallow nook,
and feasting on the smaller fry. A flight of
cawing rooks were settling upon the tall trees on the
right bank, and the voices of the thrush, the blackbird,
and other feathered songsters burst in redundant melody
from the nearer groves.
A verdant path, partly beneath the
trees, and partly on the side of the lake, led Wolsey
to the forester’s hut. Constructed of wood
and clay, with a thatched roof, green with moss, and
half overgrown with ivy, the little building was in
admirable keeping with the surrounding scenery.
Opposite the door, and opening upon the lake, stood
a little boathouse, and beside it a few wooden steps,
defended by a handrail, ran into the water. A
few yards beyond the boathouse the brook before mentioned
emptied its waters into the lake.
Gazing with much internal satisfaction
at the hut, Wolsey bade Patch dismount, and ascertain
whether Mabel was within. The buffoon obeyed,
tried the door, and finding it fastened, knocked, but
to no purpose.
After a pause of a few minutes, the
cardinal was turning away in extreme disappointment,
when a small skiff, rowed by a female hand, shot round
an angle of the lake and swiftly approached them.
A glance from Patch would have told Wolsey, had he
required any such information, that this was the forester’s
granddaughter. Her beauty quite ravished him,
and drew from him an exclamation of wonder and delight.
Features regular, exquisitely moulded, and of a joyous
expression, a skin dyed like a peach by the sun, but
so as to improve rather than impair its hue; eyes
bright, laughing, and blue as a summer sky; ripe, ruddy
lips, and pearly teeth; and hair of a light and glossy
brown, constituted the sum of her attractions.
Her sylph-like figure was charmingly displayed by
the graceful exercise on which she was engaged, and
her small hands, seemingly scarcely able to grasp
an oar, impelled the skiff forwards with marvellous
velocity, and apparently without much exertion on her
part.
Unabashed by the presence of the strangers,
though Wolsey’s attire could leave her in no
doubt as to his high ecclesiastical dignity, she sprang
ashore at the landing-place, and fastened her bark
to the side of the boathouse.
“You are Mabel Lyndwood, I presume,
fair maiden?” inquired the cardinal, in his
blandest tones.
“Such is my name, your grace,”
she replied; “for your garb tells me I am addressing
Cardinal Wolsey.”
The cardinal graciously inclined his head.
“Chancing to ride in this part
of the forest,” he said, “and having heard
of your beauty, I came to see whether the reality equalled
the description, and I find it far transcends it.”
Mabel blushed deeply, and cast down her eyes.
“Would that Henry could see
her now!” thought the cardinal, “Anne
Boleyn’s reign were nigh at an end How
long have you dwelt in this cottage, fair maid?”
he added aloud.
“My grandsire, Tristram Lyndwood,
has lived here fifty years and more,” replied
Mabel, “but I have only been its inmate within
these few weeks. Before that time I lived at
Chertsey, under the care of one of the lay sisters
of the monastery there Sister Anastasia.”
“And your parents where
are they?” asked the cardinal curiously.
“Alas! your grace, I have none,”
replied Mabel with a sigh. “Tristram Lyndwood
is my only living relative. He used to come over
once a month to see me at Chertsey and
latterly, finding his dwelling lonely, for he lost
the old dame who tended it for him, he brought me to
dwell with him. Sister Anastasia was loth to
part with me and I was grieved to leave
her but I could not refuse my grandsire.”
“Of a surety not,” replied
the cardinal musingly, and gazing hard at her.
“And you know nothing of your parents?”
“Little beyond this,”
replied Mabel: “My father was a keeper
of the forest, and being unhappily gored by a stag,
perished of the wound for a hurt from a
hart’s horn, as your grace knows, is certain
death; and my mother pined after him and speedily
followed him to the grave. I was then placed
by my grandsire with Sister Anastasia, as I have just
related and this is all my history.”
“A simple yet a curious one,”
said Wolsey, still musing. “You are the
fairest maid of low degree I ever beheld. You
saw the king at the chase the other day, Mabel?”
“Truly, did I, your grace,”
she replied, her eyes brightening and her colour rising;
“and a right noble king he is.”
“And as gentle and winning as
he is goodly to look upon,” said Wolsey, smiling.
“Report says otherwise,” rejoined Mabel.
“Report speaks falsely,”
cried Wolsey; “I know him well, and he is what
I describe him.”
“I am glad to hear it,”
replied Mabel; “and I must own I formed the same
opinion myself for the smile he threw upon
me was one of the sweetest and kindliest I ever beheld.”
“Since you confess so much,
fair maiden,” rejoined Wolsey, “I will
be equally frank, and tell you it was from the king’s
own lips I heard of your beauty.”
“Your grace!” she exclaimed.
“Well, well,” said Wolsey,
smiling, “if the king is bewitched, I cannot
marvel at it. And now, good day, fair maiden;
you will hear more of me.”
“Your grace will not refuse
me your blessing?” said Mabel.
“Assuredly not, my child,”
replied Wolsey, stretching his hands over her.
“All good angels and saints bless you, and hold
you in their keeping. Mark my words: a great
destiny awaits you; but in all changes, rest assured
you will find a friend in Cardinal Wolsey.”
“Your grace overwhelms me with
kindness,” cried Mabel; “nor can I conceive
how I have found an interest in your eyes unless
Sister Anastasia or Father Anslem, of Chertsey Abbey,
may have mentioned me to you.”
“You have found a more potent
advocate with me than either Sister Anastasia or Father
Anselm,” replied Wolsey; “and now, farewell.”
And turning the head of his mule, he rode slowly away.
On the same day there was a great
banquet in the castle, and, as usual, Wolsey took
his station on the right of the sovereign, while the
papal legate occupied a place on the left. Watching
a favourable opportunity, Wolsey observed to Henry
that he had been riding that morning in the forest,
and had seen the loveliest damsel that eyes ever fell
upon.
“Ah! by our Lady! and who may
she be?” asked the king curiously.
“She can boast little in regard
to birth, being grandchild to an old forester,”
replied Wolsey; “but your majesty saw her at
the hunting party the other day.”
“Ah, now I bethink me of her,”
said Henry. “A comely damsel, in good sooth.”
“I know not where her match
is to be found,” cried the cardinal. “Would
your majesty had seen her skim over the lake in a fairy
boat managed by herself, as I beheld her this morning.
You would have taken her for a water-sprite, except
that no water-sprite was half so beautiful.”
“You speak in raptures, cardinal,”
cried Henry. “I must see this damsel again.
Where does she dwell? I have heard, but it has
slipped my memory.”
“In a hut near the great lake,”
replied Wolsey. “There is some mystery
attached to her birth, which I have not yet fathomed.”
“Leave me to unriddle it,” replied the
king laughingly.
And he turned to talk on other subjects
to Campeggio, but Wolsey felt satisfied that the device
was successful. Nor was he mistaken. As Henry
retired from the banquet, he motioned the Duke of Suffolk
towards him, and said, in an undertone “I
shall go forth at dusk to-morrow even in disguise,
and shall require your attendance.”
“On a love affair?” asked the duke, in
the same tone.
“Perchance,” replied Henry; “but
I will explain myself more fully anon.”
This muttered colloquy was overheard
by Patch, and faithfully reported by him to the cardinal.