A haughty smile flitted for a moment over the proud young face of Isabel Nevile; but the softer Anne blushed, and drew bashfully behind her sister.
As yet these girls, born for the highest and fated to the most wretched fortunes, were in all the bloom of earliest youth; but the difference between their characters might be already observable in their mien and countenance. Isabel; of tall and commanding stature, had some resemblance to her father, in her aquiline features, rich, dark hair, and the lustrous brilliancy of her eyes; while Anne, less striking, yet not less lovely, of smaller size and slighter proportions, bore in her pale, clear face, her dove-like eyes, and her gentle brow an expression of yielding meekness not unmixed with melancholy, which, conjoined with an exquisite symmetry of features, could not fail of exciting interest where her sister commanded admiration. Not a word, however, from either did Marmaduke abstract in return for his courtesies, nor did either he or the earl seem to expect it; for the latter, seating himself and drawing Anne on his knee, while Isabella walked with stately grace towards the table that bore her fathers warlike accoutrements, and played, as it were, unconsciously with the black plume on his black burgonet, said to Nevile,
Well, thou hast seen enough of the Lancastrian raptrils to make thee true to the Yorkists. I would I could say as much for the king himself, who is already crowding the court with that venomous faction, in honour of Dame Elizabeth Gray, born Mistress Woodville, and now Queen of England. Ha, my proud Isabel, thou wouldst have better filled the throne that thy father built!
And at these words a proud flash broke from the earls dark eyes, betraying even to Marmaduke the secret of perhaps his earliest alienation from Edward IV. Isabella pouted her rich lip, but said nothing. As for thee, Anne, continued the earl, it is a pity that monks cannot marry,thou wouldst have suited some sober priest better than a mailed knight. Fore George, I would not ask thee to buckle my baldrick when the war-steeds were snorting, but I would trust Isabel with the links of my hauberk.
Nay, Father, said the low, timid voice of Anne, if thou wert going to danger, I could be brave in all that could guard thee!
Why, thats my girl! kiss me! Thou hast a look of thy mother now,so thou hast! and I will not chide thee the next time I hear thee muttering soft treason in pity of Henry of Windsor.
Is he not to be pitied?Crown, wife, son, and Earl Warwicks stout arm lostlost!
No! said Isabel, suddenly; no, sweet sister Anne, and fie on thee for the words! He lost all, because he had neither the hand of a knight nor the heart of a man! For the restMargaret of Anjou, or her butchers, beheaded our fathers father.
And may God and Saint George forget me, when I forget those gray and gory hairs! exclaimed the earl; and putting away the Lady Anne somewhat roughly, he made a stride across the room, and stood by his hearth. And yet Edward, the son of Richard of York, who fell by my fathers sidehe forgets, he forgives! And the minions of Rivers the Lancastrian tread the heels of Richard of Warwick.
At this unexpected turn in the conversation, peculiarly unwelcome, as it may be supposed, to the son of one who had fought on the Lancastrian side in the very battle referred to, Marmaduke felt somewhat uneasy; and turning to the Lady Anne, he said, with the gravity of wounded pride, I owe more to my lord, your father, than I even wist of,how much he must have overlooked to
Not so! interrupted Warwick, who overheard him,not so; thou wrongest me! Thy father was shocked at those butcheries; thy father recoiled from that accursed standard; thy father was of a stock ancient and noble as my own! But, these Woodvilles!tush! my passion overmasters me. We will go to the king,it is time.
Warwick here rang the hand-bell on his table, and on the entrance of his attendant gentleman, bade him see that the barge was in readiness; then beckoning to his kinsman, and with a nod to his daughters, he caught up his plumed cap, and passed at once into the garden.
Anne, said Isabel, when the two girls were alone, thou hast vexed my father, and what marvel? If the Lancastrians can be pitied, the Earl of Warwick must be condemned!
Unkind! said Anne, shedding tears; I can pity woe and mischance, without blaming those whose hard duty it might be to achieve them.
In good sooth cannot I! Thou wouldst pity and pardon till thou leftst no distinction between foeman and friend, leife and loathing. Be it mine, like my great father, to love and to hate!
Yet why art thou so attached to the White Rose? said Anne, stung, if not to malice, at least to archness. Thou knowest my fathers nearest wish was that his eldest daughter might be betrothed to King Edward. Dost thou not pay good for evil when thou seest no excellence out of the House of York?
Saucy Anne, answered Isabel, with a half smile, I am not raught by thy shafts, for I was a child for the nurses when King Edward sought a wife for his love. But were I chafedas I may be vain enough to know myselfwhom should I blame?Not the king, but the Lancastrian who witched him!
She paused a moment, and, looking away, added in a low tone, Didst thou hear, sister Anne, if the Duke of Clarence visited my father the forenoon?
Ah, Isabel, Isabel!
Ah, sister Anne, sister Anne! Wilt thou know all my secrets ere I know them myself?and Isabel, with something of her fathers playfulness, put her hands to Annes laughing lips.
Meanwhile Warwick, after walking musingly a few moments along the garden, which was formed by plots of sward, bordered with fruit-trees, and white rose-trees not yet in blossom, turned to his silent kinsman, and said, Forgive me, cousin mine, my mannerless burst against thy brave fathers faction; but when thou hast been a short while at court, thou wilt see where the sore is. Certes, I love this king! Here his dark face lighted up. Love him as a king,ay, and as a son! And who would not love him; brave as his sword, gallant, and winning, and gracious as the noonday in summer? Besides, I placed him on his throne; I honour myself in him!
The earls stature dilated as he spoke the last sentence, and his hand rested on his dagger hilt. He resumed, with the same daring and incautious candour that stamped his dauntless, soldier-like nature, God hath given me no son. Isabel of Warwick had been a mate for William the Norman; and my grandson, if heir to his grandsires soul, should have ruled from the throne of England over the realms of Charlemagne! But it hath pleased Him whom the Christian knight alone bows to without shame, to order otherwise. So be it. I forgot my just pretensions,forgot my blood, and counselled the king to strengthen his throne with the alliance of Louis XI. He rejected the Princess Bona of Savoy, to marry widow Elizabeth Gray; I sorrowed for his sake, and forgave the slight to my counsels. At his prayer I followed the train of his queen, and hushed the proud hearts of our barons to obeisance. But since then, this Dame Woodville, whom I queened, if her husband mated, must dispute this roiaulme with mine and me,a Nevile, nowadays, must vail his plume to a Woodville! And not the great barons whom it will suit Edwards policy to win from the Lancastriansnot the Exeters and the Somersetsbut the craven varlets and lackeys and dross of the campfalse alike to Henry and to Edwardare to be fondled into lordships and dandled into power. Young man, I am speaking hotlyRichard Nevile never lies nor conceals; but I am speaking to a kinsman, am I not? Thou hearest,thou wilt not repeat?
Sooner would I pluck forth my tongue by the roots.
Enough! returned the earl, with a pleased smile. When I come from France, I will speak more to thee. Meanwhile be courteous to all men, servile to none. Now to the king.
So speaking, he shook back his surcoat, drew his cap over his brow, and passed to the broad stairs, at the foot of which fifty rowers, with their badges on their shoulders, waited in the huge barge, gilt richly at prow and stern, and with an awning of silk, wrought with the earls arms and cognizance. As they pushed off, six musicians, placed towards the helm, began a slow and half Eastern march, which, doubtless, some crusader of the Temple had brought from the cymbals and trumps of Palestine.
CHAPTER II. KING EDWARD THE FOURTH
The Tower of London, more consecrated to associations of gloom and blood than those of gayety and splendour, was, nevertheless, during the reign of Edward IV., the seat of a gallant and gorgeous court. That king, from the first to the last so dear to the people of London, made it his principal residence when in his metropolis; and its ancient halls and towers were then the scene of many a brawl and galliard. As Warwicks barge now approached its huge walls, rising from the river, there was much that might either animate or awe, according to the mood of the spectator. The kings barge, with many lesser craft reserved for the use of the courtiers, gay with awnings and streamers and painting and gilding, lay below the wharfs, not far from the gate of St. Thomas, now called the Traitors Gate. On the walk raised above the battlemented wall of the inner ward, not only paced the sentries, but there dames and knights were inhaling the noonday breezes, and the gleam of their rich dresses of cloth-of-gold glanced upon the eye at frequent intervals from tower to tower. Over the vast round turret, behind the Traitors Gate, now called The Bloody Tower, floated cheerily in the light wind the royal banner. Near the Lions Tower, two or three of the keepers of the menagerie, in the kings livery, were leading forth, by a strong chain, the huge white bear that made one of the boasts of the collection, and was an especial favourite with the king and his brother Richard. The sheriffs of London were bound to find this grisly minion his chain and his cord, when he deigned to amuse himself with bathing or fishing in the river; and several boats, filled with gape-mouthed passengers, lay near the wharf, to witness the diversions of Bruin. These folks set up a loud shout ofA Warwick! a Warwick! The stout earl, and God bless him! as the gorgeous barge shot towards the fortress. The earl acknowledged their greeting by vailing his plumed cap; and passing the keepers with a merry allusion to their care of his own badge, and a friendly compliment to the grunting bear, he stepped ashore, followed by his kinsman. Now, however, he paused a moment; and a more thoughtful shade passed over his countenance, as, glancing his eye carelessly aloft towards the standard of King Edward, he caught sight of the casement in the neighbouring tower, of the very room in which the sovereign of his youth, Henry the Sixth, was a prisoner, almost within hearing of the revels of his successor; then, with a quick stride, he hurried on through the vast court, and, passing the White Tower, gained the royal lodge. Here, in the great hall, he left his companion, amidst a group of squires and gentlemen, to whom he formally presented the Nevile as his friend and kinsman, and was ushered by the deputy-chamberlain (with an apology for the absence of his chief, the Lord Hastings, who had gone abroad to fly his falcon) into the small garden, where Edward was idling away the interval between the noon and evening meals,repasts to which already the young king inclined with that intemperate zest and ardour which he carried into all his pleasures, and which finally destroyed the handsomest person and embruted one of the most vigorous intellects of the age.
The garden, if bare of flowers, supplied their place by the various and brilliant-coloured garbs of the living beauties assembled on its straight walks and smooth sward. Under one of those graceful cloisters, which were the taste of the day, and had been recently built and gayly decorated, the earl was stopped in his path by a group of ladies playing at closheys (ninepins) of ivory; [Narrative of Louis of Bruges, Lord Grauthuse. Edited by Sir F. Madden, Archaelogia, 1836.] and one of these fair dames, who excelled the rest in her skill, had just bowled down the central or crowned pin,the king of the closheys. This lady, no less a person than Elizabeth, the Queen of England, was then in her thirty-sixth year,ten years older than her lord; but the peculiar fairness and delicacy of her complexion still preserved to her beauty the aspect and bloom of youth. From a lofty headgear, embroidered with fleur-de-lis, round which wreathed a light diadem of pearls, her hair, of the pale yellow considered then the perfection of beauty, flowed so straight and so shining down her shoulders, almost to the knees, that it seemed like a mantle of gold. The baudekin stripes (blue and gold) of her tunic attested her royalty. The blue courtpie of satin was bordered with ermine, and the sleeves, sitting close to an arm of exquisite contour, shone with seed pearls. Her features were straight and regular, yet would have been insipid, but for an expression rather of cunning than intellect; and the high arch of her eyebrows, with a slight curve downward of a mouth otherwise beautiful, did not improve the expression, by an addition of something supercilious and contemptuous, rather than haughty or majestic.
My lord of Warwick, said Elizabeth, pointing to the fallen closhey, what would my enemies say if they heard I had toppled down the king?
They would content themselves with asking which of your Graces brothers you would place in his stead, answered the hardy earl, unable to restrain the sarcasm.
The queen blushed, and glanced round her ladies with an eye which never looked direct or straight upon its object, but wandered sidelong with a furtive and stealthy expression, that did much to obtain for her the popular character of falseness and self-seeking. Her displeasure was yet more increased by observing the ill-concealed smile which the taunt had called forth.
Nay, my lord, she said, after a short pause, we value the peace of our roiaulme too much for so high an ambition. Were we to make a brother even the prince of the closheys, we should disappoint the hopes of a Nevile.
The earl disdained pursuing the war of words, and answering coldly, The Neviles are more famous for making ingrates than asking favours. I leave your Highness to the closheysturned away, and strode towards the king, who, at the opposite end of the garden, was reclining on a bench beside a lady, in whose ear, to judge by her downcast and blushing cheek, he was breathing no unwelcome whispers.
Mort-Dieu! muttered the earl, who was singularly exempt, himself, from the amorous follies of the day, and eyed them with so much contempt that it often obscured his natural downright penetration into character, and never more than when it led him afterwards to underrate the talents of Edward IV.,Mort-Dieu! if, an hour before the battle of Towton, some wizard had shown me in his glass this glimpse of the gardens of the Tower, that giglet for a queen, and that squire of dames for a king, I had not slain my black destrier (poor Malech!), that I might conquer or die for Edward Earl of March.
But see! said the lady, looking up from the enamoured and conquering eyes of the king, art thou not ashamed, my lord?the grim earl comes to chide thee for thy faithlessness to thy queen, whom he loves so well.