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<h2> CHAPTER XVII. </h2>
<p>Were every hair upon his head a life,<br/>
And every life were to be supplicated<br/>
By numbers equal to those hairs quadrupled,<br/>
Life after life should out like waning stars<br/>
Before the daybreak—or as festive lamps,<br/>
Which have lent lustre to the midnight revel,<br/>
Each after each are quench'd when guests depart!<br/>
OLD PLAY<br/></p>
<p>The entrance of Queen Berengaria into the interior of Richard's pavilion
was withstood—in the most respectful and reverential manner indeed,
but still withstood—by the chamberlains who watched in the outer
tent. She could hear the stern command of the King from within,
prohibiting their entrance.</p>
<p>"You see," said the Queen, appealing to Edith, as if she had exhausted all
means of intercession in her power; "I knew it—the King will not
receive us."</p>
<p>At the same time, they heard Richard speak to some one within:—"Go,
speed thine office quickly, sirrah, for in that consists thy mercy—ten
byzants if thou dealest on him at one blow. And hark thee, villain,
observe if his cheek loses colour, or his eye falters; mark me the
smallest twitch of the features, or wink of the eyelid. I love to know how
brave souls meet death."</p>
<p>"If he sees my blade waved aloft without shrinking, he is the first ever
did so," answered a harsh, deep voice, which a sense of unusual awe had
softened into a sound much lower than its usual coarse tones.</p>
<p>Edith could remain silent no longer. "If your Grace," she said to the
Queen, "make not your own way, I make it for you; or if not for your
Majesty, for myself at least.—Chamberlain, the Queen demands to see
King Richard—the wife to speak with her husband."</p>
<p>"Noble lady," said the officer, lowering his wand of office, "it grieves
me to gainsay you, but his Majesty is busied on matters of life and
death."</p>
<p>"And we seek also to speak with him on matters of life and death," said
Edith. "I will make entrance for your Grace." And putting aside the
chamberlain with one hand, she laid hold on the curtain with the other.</p>
<p>"I dare not gainsay her Majesty's pleasure," said the chamberlain,
yielding to the vehemence of the fair petitioner; and as he gave way, the
Queen found herself obliged to enter the apartment of Richard.</p>
<p>The Monarch was lying on his couch, and at some distance, as awaiting his
further commands, stood a man whose profession it was not difficult to
conjecture. He was clothed in a jerkin of red cloth, which reached scantly
below the shoulders, leaving the arms bare from about half way above the
elbow; and as an upper garment, he wore, when about as at present to
betake himself to his dreadful office, a coat or tabard without sleeves,
something like that of a herald, made of dressed bull's hide, and stained
in the front with many a broad spot and speckle of dull crimson. The
jerkin, and the tabard over it, reached the knee; and the nether stocks,
or covering of the legs, were of the same leather which composed the
tabard. A cap of rough shag served to hide the upper part of a visage
which, like that of a screech owl, seemed desirous to conceal itself from
light, the lower part of the face being obscured by a huge red beard,
mingling with shaggy locks of the same colour. What features were seen
were stern and misanthropical. The man's figure was short, strongly made,
with a neck like a bull, very broad shoulders, arms of great and
disproportioned length, a huge square trunk, and thick bandy legs. This
truculent official leant on a sword, the blade of which was nearly four
feet and a half in length, while the handle of twenty inches, surrounded
by a ring of lead plummets to counterpoise the weight of such a blade,
rose considerably above the man's head as he rested his arm upon its hilt,
waiting for King Richard's further directions.</p>
<p>On the sudden entrance of the ladies, Richard, who was then lying on his
couch with his face towards the entrance, and resting on his elbow as he
spoke to his grisly attendant, flung himself hastily, as if displeased and
surprised, to the other side, turning his back to the Queen and the
females of her train, and drawing around him the covering of his couch,
which, by his own choice, or more probably the flattering selection of his
chamberlains, consisted of two large lions' skins, dressed in Venice with
such admirable skill that they seemed softer than the hide of the deer.</p>
<p>Berengaria, such as we have described her, knew well—what woman
knows not?—her own road to victory. After a hurried glance of
undisguised and unaffected terror at the ghastly companion of her
husband's secret counsels, she rushed at once to the side of Richard's
couch, dropped on her knees, flung her mantle from her shoulders, showing,
as they hung down at their full length, her beautiful golden tresses, and
while her countenance seemed like the sun bursting through a cloud, yet
bearing on its pallid front traces that its splendours have been obscured,
she seized upon the right hand of the King, which, as he assumed his
wonted posture, had been employed in dragging the covering of his couch,
and gradually pulling it to her with a force which was resisted, though
but faintly, she possessed herself of that arm, the prop of Christendom
and the dread of Heathenesse, and imprisoning its strength in both her
little fairy hands, she bent upon it her brow, and united to it her lips.</p>
<p>"What needs this, Berengaria?" said Richard, his head still averted, but
his hand remaining under her control.</p>
<p>"Send away that man, his look kills me!" muttered Berengaria.</p>
<p>"Begone, sirrah," said Richard, still without looking round, "What wait'st
thou for? art thou fit to look on these ladies?"</p>
<p>"Your Highness's pleasure touching the head," said the man.</p>
<p>"Out with thee, dog!" answered Richard—"a Christian burial!" The man
disappeared, after casting a look upon the beautiful Queen, in her
deranged dress and natural loveliness, with a smile of admiration more
hideous in its expression than even his usual scowl of cynical hatred
against humanity.</p>
<p>"And now, foolish wench, what wishest thou?" said Richard, turning slowly
and half reluctantly round to his royal suppliant.</p>
<p>But it was not in nature for any one, far less an admirer of beauty like
Richard, to whom it stood only in the second rank to glory, to look
without emotion on the countenance and the tremor of a creature so
beautiful as Berengaria, or to feel, without sympathy, that her lips, her
brow, were on his hand, and that it was wetted by her tears. By degrees,
he turned on her his manly countenance, with the softest expression of
which his large blue eye, which so often gleamed with insufferable light,
was capable. Caressing her fair head, and mingling his large fingers in
her beautiful and dishevelled locks, he raised and tenderly kissed the
cherub countenance which seemed desirous to hide itself in his hand. The
robust form, the broad, noble brow and majestic looks, the naked arm and
shoulder, the lions' skins among which he lay, and the fair, fragile
feminine creature that kneeled by his side, might have served for a model
of Hercules reconciling himself, after a quarrel, to his wife Dejanira.</p>
<p>"And, once more, what seeks the lady of my heart in her knight's pavilion
at this early and unwonted hour?"</p>
<p>"Pardon, my most gracious liege—pardon!" said the Queen, whose fears
began again to unfit her for the duty of intercessor.</p>
<p>"Pardon—for what?" asked the King.</p>
<p>"First, for entering your royal presence too boldly and unadvisedly—"</p>
<p>She stopped.</p>
<p>"THOU too boldly!—the sun might as well ask pardon because his rays
entered the windows of some wretch's dungeon. But I was busied with work
unfit for thee to witness, my gentle one; and I was unwilling, besides,
that thou shouldst risk thy precious health where sickness had been so
lately rife."</p>
<p>"But thou art now well?" said the Queen, still delaying the communication
which she feared to make.</p>
<p>"Well enough to break a lance on the bold crest of that champion who shall
refuse to acknowledge thee the fairest dame in Christendom."</p>
<p>"Thou wilt not then refuse me one boon—only one—only a poor
life?"</p>
<p>"Ha!—proceed," said King Richard, bending his brows.</p>
<p>"This unhappy Scottish knight—" murmured the Queen.</p>
<p>"Speak not of him, madam," exclaimed Richard sternly; "he dies—his
doom is fixed."</p>
<p>"Nay, my royal liege and love, 'tis but a silken banner neglected.
Berengaria will give thee another broidered with her own hand, and rich as
ever dallied with the wind. Every pearl I have shall go to bedeck it, and
with every pearl I will drop a tear of thankfulness to my generous
knight."</p>
<p>"Thou knowest not what thou sayest," said the King, interrupting her in
anger. "Pearls! can all the pearls of the East atone for a speck upon
England's honour—all the tears that ever woman's eye wept wash away
a stain on Richard's fame? Go to, madam, know your place, and your time,
and your sphere. At present we have duties in which you cannot be our
partner."</p>
<p>"Thou hearest, Edith," whispered the Queen; "we shall but incense him."</p>
<p>"Be it so," said Edith, stepping forward.—"My lord, I, your poor
kinswoman, crave you for justice rather than mercy; and to the cry of
justice the ears of a monarch should be open at every time, place, and
circumstance."</p>
<p>"Ha! our cousin Edith?" said Richard, rising and sitting upright on the
side of his couch, covered with his long camiscia. "She speaks ever
kinglike, and kinglike will I answer her, so she bring no request unworthy
herself or me."</p>
<p>The beauty of Edith was of a more intellectual and less voluptuous cast
than that of the Queen; but impatience and anxiety had given her
countenance a glow which it sometimes wanted, and her mien had a character
of energetic dignity that imposed silence for a moment even on Richard
himself, who, to judge by his looks, would willingly have interrupted her.</p>
<p>"My lord," she said, "this good knight, whose blood you are about to
spill, hath done, in his time, service to Christendom. He has fallen from
his duty through a snare set for him in mere folly and idleness of spirit.
A message sent to him in the name of one who—why should I not speak
it?—it was in my own—induced him for an instant to leave his
post. And what knight in the Christian camp might not have thus far
transgressed at command of a maiden, who, poor howsoever in other
qualities, hath yet the blood of Plantagenet in her veins?"</p>
<p>"And you saw him, then, cousin?" replied the King, biting his lips to keep
down his passion.</p>
<p>"I did, my liege," said Edith. "It is no time to explain wherefore. I am
here neither to exculpate myself nor to blame others."</p>
<p>"And where did you do him such a grace?"</p>
<p>"In the tent of her Majesty the Queen."</p>
<p>"Of our royal consort!" said Richard. "Now by Heaven, by Saint George of
England, and every other saint that treads its crystal floor, this is too
audacious! I have noticed and overlooked this warrior's insolent
admiration of one so far above him, and I grudged him not that one of my
blood should shed from her high-born sphere such influence as the sun
bestows on the world beneath. But, heaven and earth! that you should have
admitted him to an audience by night, in the very tent of our royal
consort!—and dare to offer this as an excuse for his disobedience
and desertion! By my father's soul, Edith, thou shalt rue this thy life
long in a monastery!"</p>
<p>"My liege," said Edith, "your greatness licenses tyranny. My honour, Lord
King, is as little touched as yours, and my Lady the Queen can prove it if
she think fit. But I have already said I am not here to excuse myself or
inculpate others. I ask you but to extend to one, whose fault was
committed under strong temptation, that mercy, which even you yourself,
Lord King, must one day supplicate at a higher tribunal, and for faults,
perhaps, less venial."</p>
<p>"Can this be Edith Plantagenet?" said the King bitterly—"Edith
Plantagenet, the wise and the noble? Or is it some lovesick woman who
cares not for her own fame in comparison of the life of her paramour? Now,
by King Henry's soul! little hinders but I order thy minion's skull to be
brought from the gibbet, and fixed as a perpetual ornament by the crucifix
in thy cell!"</p>
<p>"And if thou dost send it from the gibbet to be placed for ever in my
sight," said Edith, "I will say it is a relic of a good knight, cruelly
and unworthily done to death by" (she checked herself)—"by one of
whom I shall only say, he should have known better how to reward chivalry.
Minion callest thou him?" she continued, with increasing vehemence. "He
was indeed my lover, and a most true one; but never sought he grace from
me by look or word—contented with such humble observance as men pay
to the saints. And the good—the valiant—the faithful must die
for this!"</p>
<p>"Oh, peace, peace, for pity's sake," whispered the Queen, "you do but
offend him more!"</p>
<p>"I care not," said Edith; "the spotless virgin fears not the raging lion.
Let him work his will on this worthy knight. Edith, for whom he dies, will
know how to weep his memory. To me no one shall speak more of politic
alliances to be sanctioned with this poor hand. I could not—I would
not—have been his bride living—our degrees were too distant.
But death unites the high and the low—I am henceforward the spouse
of the grave."</p>
<p>The King was about to answer with much anger, when a Carmelite monk
entered the apartment hastily, his head and person muffled in the long
mantle and hood of striped cloth of the coarsest texture which
distinguished his order, and, flinging himself on his knees before the
King, conjured him, by every holy word and sign, to stop the execution.</p>
<p>"Now, by both sword and sceptre," said Richard, "the world is leagued to
drive me mad!—fools, women, and monks cross me at every step. How
comes he to live still?"</p>
<p>"My gracious liege," said the monk, "I entreated of the Lord of Gilsland
to stay the execution until I had thrown myself at your royal—"</p>
<p>"And he was wilful enough to grant thy request," said the King; "but it is
of a piece with his wonted obstinacy. And what is it thou hast to say?
Speak, in the fiend's name!"</p>
<p>"My lord, there is a weighty secret, but it rests under the seal of
confession. I dare not tell or even whisper it; but I swear to thee by my
holy order, by the habit which I wear, by the blessed Elias, our founder,
even him who was translated without suffering the ordinary pangs of
mortality, that this youth hath divulged to me a secret, which, if I might
confide it to thee, would utterly turn thee from thy bloody purpose in
regard to him."</p>
<p>"Good father," said Richard, "that I reverence the church, let the arms
which I now wear for her sake bear witness. Give me to know this secret,
and I will do what shall seem fitting in the matter. But I am no blind
Bayard, to take a leap in the dark under the stroke of a pair of priestly
spurs."</p>
<p>"My lord," said the holy man, throwing back his cowl and upper vesture,
and discovering under the latter a garment of goatskin, and from beneath
the former a visage so wildly wasted by climate, fast, and penance, as to
resemble rather the apparition of an animated skeleton than a human face,
"for twenty years have I macerated this miserable body in the caverns of
Engaddi, doing penance for a great crime. Think you I, who am dead to the
world, would contrive a falsehood to endanger my own soul; or that one,
bound by the most sacred oaths to the contrary—one such as I, who
have but one longing wish connected with earth, to wit, the rebuilding of
our Christian Zion—would betray the secrets of the confessional?
Both are alike abhorrent to my very soul."</p>
<p>"So," answered the King, "thou art that hermit of whom men speak so much?
Thou art, I confess, like enough to those spirits which walk in dry
places; but Richard fears no hobgoblins. And thou art he, too, as I
bethink me, to whom the Christian princes sent this very criminal to open
a communication with the Soldan, even while I, who ought to have been
first consulted, lay on my sick-bed? Thou and they may content themselves—I
will not put my neck into the loop of a Carmelite's girdle. And, for your
envoy, he shall die the rather and the sooner that thou dost entreat for
him."</p>
<p>"Now God be gracious to thee, Lord King!" said the hermit, with much
emotion; "thou art setting that mischief on foot which thou wilt hereafter
wish thou hadst stopped, though it had cost thee a limb. Rash, blinded
man, yet forbear!"</p>
<p>"Away, away," cried the King, stamping; "the sun has risen on the
dishonour of England, and it is not yet avenged.—Ladies and priest,
withdraw, if you would not hear orders which would displease you; for, by
St. George, I swear—"</p>
<p>"Swear NOT!" said the voice of one who had just then entered the pavilion.</p>
<p>"Ha! my learned Hakim," said the King, "come, I hope, to tax our
generosity."</p>
<p>"I come to request instant speech with you—instant—and
touching matters of deep interest."</p>
<p>"First look on my wife, Hakim, and let her know in you the preserver of
her husband."</p>
<p>"It is not for me," said the physician, folding his arms with an air of
Oriental modesty and reverence, and bending his eyes on the ground—"it
is not for me to look upon beauty unveiled, and armed in its splendours."</p>
<p>"Retire, then, Berengaria," said the Monarch; "and, Edith, do you retire
also;—nay, renew not your importunities! This I give to them that
the execution shall not be till high noon. Go and be pacified—dearest
Berengaria, begone.—Edith," he added, with a glance which struck
terror even into the courageous soul of his kinswoman, "go, if you are
wise."</p>
<p>The females withdrew, or rather hurried from the tent, rank and ceremony
forgotten, much like a flock of wild-fowl huddled together, against whom
the falcon has made a recent stoop.</p>
<p>They returned from thence to the Queen's pavilion to indulge in regrets
and recriminations, equally unavailing. Edith was the only one who seemed
to disdain these ordinary channels of sorrow. Without a sigh, without a
tear, without a word of upbraiding, she attended upon the Queen, whose
weak temperament showed her sorrow in violent hysterical ecstasies and
passionate hypochondriacal effusions, in the course of which Edith
sedulously and even affectionately attended her.</p>
<p>"It is impossible she can have loved this knight," said Florise to
Calista, her senior in attendance upon the Queen's person. "We have been
mistaken; she is but sorry for his fate, as for a stranger who has come to
trouble on her account."</p>
<p>"Hush, hush," answered her more experienced and more observant comrade;
"she is of that proud house of Plantagenet who never own that a hurt
grieves them. While they have themselves been bleeding to death, under a
mortal wound, they have been known to bind up the scratches sustained by
their more faint-hearted comrades. Florise, we have done frightfully
wrong, and, for my own part, I would buy with every jewel I have that our
fatal jest had remained unacted."</p>
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