<h2><SPAN name="THE_FALCON-KING" id="THE_FALCON-KING"></SPAN>THE FALCON-KING.</h2>
<p class="h5">(<i>From one of Marie's Lays.</i>)</p>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">T</span><b>HERE</b>
lived once, in Britain, an old knight who
was lord of Caerwent, a city situated on the
River Douglas. He was wealthy and avaricious,
and the sole heir to his possessions, a lovely
daughter, he kept locked up in a high tower, under the
care of a cross governess. His one fear was that this
daughter would marry, and thus give some one the
right to lay claim to the gold that was dearer to him
than life itself. To prevent her from getting a husband,
the old knight used every method he could
think of to keep off visitors; and any stray caller at
the castle was set upon by fierce dogs, who would tear
one to pieces as soon as gnaw a beef-bone!<span class="pagenum">[318]</span></p>
<p>Day after day the father rode off to the hunt, the
governess told her beads, and the damsel moped within
the tower. One morning she was at her wheel, singing
a mournful ditty, and sighing from time to time,
as she glanced over the tree-tops at the roofs and spires
of the distant city, when suddenly the sky above her
window was darkened, and she heard a whirring noise,
as of mighty wings astir. A falcon of huge size and
noble mien flew in at the casement, and lit submissively
at her feet. The maiden stroked his proud head,
and at once the bird changed to a beautiful young
man, who, in a gentle voice, begged her to have no
fear of him, as he was not only a devoted lover but the
humblest of her slaves.</p>
<p>"Bid me go if you will," said the prince, "and
deeply as I should regret your command, you will see
how quickly I shall obey it. Long have I watched you
from afar, and dearly I love you. For your sake, I
have acquired the art of magic, enabling me to assume
this shape in order to reach your prison."</p>
<p>"Oh! but I <i>don't</i> want you to go!" cried the poor
little mewed-up damsel, who was tired to death of
having nobody to talk to.</p>
<p>As she had never seen a man younger than her<span class="pagenum">[319]</span>
father, it was a great astonishment to her to find that
the prince's hair was dark and his cheek unwrinkled
and rosy as a ripe peach.</p>
<p>What he meant by being a lover, she did not in the
least understand. Only, it was pleasant to hear him
talk in his kind, low voice; and praises were so rare to
her, that they sounded sweet as honey dropping from
his lips.</p>
<p>As a matter of course, the afternoon passed quickly;
but at last, startled by the noise of a key grating in
the lock of the door, the prince quickly assumed his
bird-shape, and promising to come again upon the
morrow, flew out of the window. The governess could
not imagine what had put her prisoner in such a silly
state of cheerfulness, as she thought it; and, boxing
the poor girl's ears for smiling, gave her a long piece
of poetry to learn by heart, and allowed her nothing
but bread and water for her tea.</p>
<p>Next day the falcon came again, and for many days
he continued his visits, until the girl grew to love him
as he loved her, and promised to be his wife. Once a
month the chaplain was accustomed to come to see
her, and to make her say a catechism the longest ever
heard of. When next the day came around for his<span class="pagenum">[320]</span>
visit, what was her surprise, instead of the stern chaplain,
to find a gentle and kind old priest, who, when
left alone with her, avowed himself to be a friend of
the falcon-prince.</p>
<p>"As your father is a wicked and unworthy son of
the church, and the prince a noble and devoted one, I
cannot but approve of the marriage between you and
your beloved," the old man said. "The ceremony will
now be performed, and may heaven's blessing rest upon
you both."</p>
<p>The falcon-prince arrived at the same moment, bearing
in his beak a wedding-ring of large bright diamonds.
The couple were married, and the prince
told his wife that, very soon, he would be able to furnish
her also with wings to leave the tower.</p>
<p>One day the governess, coming in unexpectedly,
found the girl toying with a beautiful ring, which she
hurriedly concealed in her mattress. Spite of all the
governess' efforts, she could not find the jewel; nor
could she succeed in drawing from her captive any explanation
of how she had come by it. The governess
told the father, who redoubled his precautions and set
spies to watch upon the outside of the tower. In a
few days, the spies reported to him that they had seen<span class="pagenum">[321]</span>
a bird of the largest size fly in at the maiden's window,
remain there for some hours, and then fly out again.</p>
<p>"I'll be a match for this carrier-pigeon of hers!"
said the old knight with malicious glee. That night a
trap was set upon the outside of the window, surrounded
by sharp knives, so that anything passing through it
would inevitably be caught or wounded grievously.
The young wife awaited her husband anxiously, for it
was the day fixed for her escape. Soon he arrived;
but as he touched the window the trap fell, and although
he managed to pass in, a long trail of blood was
left behind him.</p>
<p>"Lose no time, my beloved!" he said, in a voice
altered by pain. "Our enemies are upon us. Put
this bracelet on your arm, and spring into the air after
me, without fear."</p>
<p>She obeyed, and found herself upborne by magic
wings, which carried her more swiftly than the wind
over forest tops, shining river, and city spires and
domes. Glorious as was her airy flight, she could see
that her companion grew weaker. They arrived in a
country adjoining the one in which she had lived, and
stopped immediately above a splendid palace—alighting
in the marble balcony of a chamber furnished<span class="pagenum">[322]</span>
with the utmost magnificence. Here the falcon regained
his man's shape, and, with despair, his wife
saw that he was deathly pale, while the blood poured
from a wound beneath his heart.</p>
<p>"I am dying," he exclaimed. "Help me to my bed
yonder, and may heaven grant me strength to tell my
people that you are their lawful queen."</p>
<p>The poor wife aided her husband to lie down, but
when he would have spoken to her again, his voice
was gone—a moment more, and he was dead.</p>
<p>And now in what a mournful plight the pretty new
queen found herself! Soon the attendants would, no
doubt, come flocking into the room, to discover their
sovereign murdered in his bed, and a stranger cowering
by his side. Terror lent speed to her feet, and
hastening back to the balcony, she ran down a long
flight of stairs communicating with the outer court
and garden of the palace. Thence she escaped to
wander into the forest, and until day broke again she
never ceased to walk. For some days she remained
concealed in the forest, living upon fruit and berries,
until at last hunger drove her to the cottage of
a poor laborer. The wife of this man was very ill,
and the queen offered to stay and nurse her, which<span class="pagenum">[323]</span>
was gratefully accepted. So faithful and devoted an
attendant she proved that, when the woman of the
house got well, both husband and wife insisted their
stranger guest should make her home with them.
In this secluded retreat, where only a stray huntsman
now and then passed by, the queen remained until a
beautiful son was born to her. And now, she felt a
burning desire to have her boy educated in a manner
worthy of his father's rank; and poverty, that had
seemed so light a burden to herself, grew heavy when
it weighed on him. When the baby was three years
old, a gay hunting-party passed that way, among them
a rich and childless lady, who, charmed with the
beauty of the boy, offered to adopt him on the spot.</p>
<p>The poor queen wept so bitterly at thought of parting
with her treasure, that the lady, who was a kind-hearted
person, proposed she should accompany them
and serve in the capacity of the boy's governess.</p>
<p>To this plan the queen made no objection; and,
bidding an affectionate farewell to her humble friends,
she took her place with the boy in a travelling carriage
sent to fetch them.</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p>Years rolled on, and the child born in the forest had<span class="pagenum">[324]</span>
reached the age of twenty-one. He was a handsome,
manly youth, and skilled in all athletic exercises.
About this time, the family of his adopted mother was
invited to be present at a great religious ceremony in
an abbey upon the borders of a neighboring kingdom.
Among the many attendants of the nobles summoned
for the occasion, was the real mother, who came dressed
in deep mourning and wearing a veil over her face;
and one of the guests was the wicked old knight, her
father. The abbot of the monastery threw open the
doors of the chapel, that had long been sealed, and all
flocked into it. There, in the centre, stood a bier
covered with cloth of gold and surrounded by blazing
wax-lights, while about it knelt an hundred priests, at
prayer. After a mass had been sung, the abbot announced
that in yonder bier lay the remains of the late
king, their master, who, as all his faithful subjects
knew, was foully murdered twenty-one years before;
and that, by the terms of the king's will, found some
time after his death, the throne rightfully belonged to
a lady who had been married in secret by their sovereign,
and was by him commended to their truest love
and honor. "For many long years," added the good
abbot, "we have sought vainly for the widow of our<span class="pagenum">[325]</span>
lamented ruler; not the faintest trace of her has ever
been found, and we have resolved to meet here and
choose to-day a successor to our king."</p>
<p>"Here is a worthy successor to your king!" cried a
voice from the throng; and the unfortunate queen,
throwing back her veil, pointed to her astonished son.
"Behold the rightful heir! Who dares to say that he
is not the image of his father? <i>I</i> am the queen you
have so long sought, and this youth is, unknown to
himself, my son. In proof of it, here is the marriage
ring given me by the king."</p>
<p>"And in proof of it," exclaimed a venerable priest,
coming forward, "I attest that <i>I</i> performed the marriage
ceremony between our king and this poor lady.
Her appearance and her claim remove the seal from my
promise of secresy, and I unhesitatingly declare this
youth to be our lawful sovereign."</p>
<p>All eyes turned upon the young man, and all tongues
proclaimed his marvellous resemblance to the king.
The abbot knelt at the young man's feet and offered
him a golden crown carried on a velvet cushion. Loud
cries of joy and cheers filled the air, when suddenly
the unfortunate queen was seen to totter toward the
bier of her husband.<span class="pagenum">[326]</span></p>
<p>"I am glad to die on this spot," she said, snatching
up the sword that lay upon the tomb and placing it in
her son's hand; then, bidding him avenge the sad fate
of his parents, she immediately expired. At the same
moment, a white-haired knight tried to steal away from
the church; but when the ancient priest perceived him,
the fugitive was denounced as the murderer of their
king. Seized by the populace, the wretched old miser
was hurried to instant death; his grandson was carried
in triumph to the palace, and there installed as king.</p>
<p>The new monarch reigned long and wisely—an example
for all future sovereigns.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum">[329]</span></p>
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