'Where throngs of knights and barons bold,
In weeds of peace, high triumphs hold,
With store of ladies, whose bright eyes
Rain influence, and judge the prize
Of wit or arms, while both contend
To win her grace whom all commend.'--L'Allegro.
The whole of the two Courts had to be received in the capital of
Lorraine in full state under the beautiful old gateway, but as
mediaeval pageants are wearisome matters this may be passed over,
though it was exceptionally beautiful and poetic, owing to the
influence of King Rene's taste, and it perfectly dazzled the two
Scottish princesses--though, to tell the truth, they were
somewhat disappointed in the personal appearance of their
entertainers, who did not come up to their notion of royalty.
Their father had been a stately and magnificent man; their
mother a beautiful woman. Henry VI. was a tall, well-made,
handsome man, with Plantagenet fairness and regularity of
feature and a sweetness all his own; but both these kings were,
like all the house of Valois, small men with insignificant
features and sallow complexions. Rene, indeed, had a
distinction about him that compensated for want of beauty, and
Charles had a good-natured, easy, indolent look and gracious
smile that gave him an undefinable air of royalty. Rene's
daughters were both very lovely, but their beauty came from the
other side of the house, with the blood of Charles the Great,
through their mother, the heiress of Lorraine.
There was a curious contrast between the brothers-in-law,
Charles, when dismounting at the castle gate, not disguising his
weariness and relief that it was over, and Rene, eager and
anxious, desirous of making all his bewildering multitude of
guests as happy as possible, while the Dauphin Louis stood by,
half interested and amused, half mocking. He was really fond of
his uncle, though in a contemptuous superior sort of manner,
despising his religious and honourable scruples as mere
simplicity of mind.
Rene of Anjou has been hardly dealt with, as is often the case
with princes upright, religious, and chivalrous beyond the
average of their time, yet without the strength or the genius to
enforce their rights and opinions, and therefore thrust aside.
After his early unsuccessful wars his lands of Provence and
Lorraine were islands of peace, prosperity, and progress, and
withal he was an extremely able artist, musician, and poet,
striving to revive the old troubadour spirit of Provence, and
everywhere casting about him an atmosphere of refinement and
kindliness.
The hall of his hotel at Nanci was a beautiful place, with all
the gorgeous grace of the fifteenth century, and here his guests
assembled for supper soon after their arrival, all being placed
as much as possible according to rank. Eleanor found herself
between a deaf old Church dignitary and Duke Sigismund, on whose
other side was Yolande, the Infanta, as the Provencals called
the daughter of Rene; while Jean found the Dauphin on one side
of her and a great French Duke on the other. Louis amused
himself with compliments and questions that sometimes nettled
her, sometimes pleased her, giving her a sense that he might
admire her beauty, but was playing on her simplicity, and trying
to make her betray the destitution of her home and her purpose
in coming.
Eleanor, on the other hand, found her cavalier more simple than herself.
In fact, he properly belonged to the Infanta, but she
paid no attention to him, nor did the Bishop try to speak to the
Scottish princess. Sigismund's French was very lame, and
Eleanor's not perfect, but she had a natural turn for languages,
and had, in the convent, picked up some German, which in those
days had many likenesses to her own broad Scotch. They made one
another out, between the two languages, with signs, smiles, and
laughter, and whereas the subtilties along the table represented
the entire story of Sir Gawain and his Loathly Lady, she
contrived to explain the story to him, greatly to his
edification; and they went on to King Arthur, and he did his
best to narrate the German reading of Sir Parzival. The
difficulties engrossed them till the rose-water was brought in
silver bowls to wash their fingers, on which Sigismund, after
observing and imitating the two ladies, remarked that they had
no such Schwarmerci in Deutschland, and Yolande looked as if she
could well believe it, while Elleen, though ignorant of the
meaning of his word, laughed and said they had as little in
Scotland.
There was still an hour of daylight to come, and moon-rise would
not be far off, so that the hosts proposed to adjourn to the
garden, where fresh music awaited them.
King Rene was an ardent gardener. His love of flowers was
viewed as one of his weaknesses, only worthy of an old Abbot,
but he went his own way, and the space within the walls of his
castle at Nanci was lovely with bright spring flowers,
blossoming trees, and green walks, where, as Lady Suffolk said,
her grandfather could have mused all day and all night long, to
the sound of the nightingales.
But what the sisters valued it for was that they could ramble
away together to a stone bench under the wall, and there sit at
perfect ease together and pour out their hearts to one another.
Margaret, indeed, seemed to bask in their presence, and held
them as they leant against her as if to convince herself of
their reality, and yet she said that they knew not what they did
when they put the sea between themselves and Scotland, nor how
sick the heart could be for its bonnie hills.
'0 gin I could see a mountain top again, I feel as though I
could lay me down and die content. What garred ye come
daundering to these weary flats of France?'
'Ah, sister, Scotland is not what you mind it when our blessed
father lived!'
And they told her how their lives had been spent in being
hurried from one prison-castle to another.
'Prison-castles be not wanting here,' replied Margaret with a
sigh. Then, as Elleen held up a hand in delight at the thrill
of a neighbouring nightingale, she cried, 'What is yon sing-song,
seesaw, gurgling bird to our own bonnie laverock, soaring away
to the sky, without making such a wark of tuning his pipes, and
never thinking himself too dainty and tender for a wholesome
frost or two! So Jamie sent you off to seek for husbands here,
did he? Couldna ye put up with a leal Scot, like Glenuskie
there?'
'Lealty is a rare plant ony gate,' sighed Margaret, 'and where
sae little is recked of our Scots royalty, mayhap ye'll find
that tocherless lasses be less sought for than at hame. Didna
I see thee, Elleen, clavering with that muckle Archduke that
nane can talk with?'
'He is come here a-courting Madame Yolande, with his father's
goodwill, for Alsace and Tyrol be his, mountains that might be
in our ain Hielands, they tell me.'
'Methougnt,' said Eleanor, 'she scunnered from him, as Jeanie
does at--shall I say whom?'
'And reason gude,' said Margaret. 'She has a joe of her ain,
Count Ferry de Vaudemont, that is the heir male of the line, and
a gallant laddie. At the great joust the morn methinks ye'll
see what may well be sung by minstrels, and can scarce fail to
touch the heart of a true troubadour, as is my good uncle Rene.'
Margaret became quite animated, and her sisters pressed her to
tell them if she knew of any secret; but she playfully shook her
head, and said that if she did know she would not mar the
romaunt that was to be played out before them.
'Nay,' said Eleanor, 'we have a romaunt of our own. May I tell,
Jeanie?'
'Who recks?' replied Jean, with a little toss of her head.
Thus Eleanor proceeded to tell her sister what--since the
adventure of the goose--had gone far beyond a guess as to the
tall, red-haired young man-at-arms who had ridden close behind
David Drummond.
'Douglas, Douglas, tender and true,' exclaimed Margaret. 'He
loves you so as to follow for weeks, nay, months, in this guise
without word or look. Oh, Jeanie, Jeanie, happy lassie, did ye
but ken it! Nay, put not on that scornful mou'. It sorts you
not weel, my bairn. He is of degree befitting a Stewart, and
even were he not, oh, sisters, sisters, better to wed with a
leal loving soul in ane high peel-tower than to bear a broken
heart to a throne!' and she fell into a convulsive fit of choked
and bitter weeping, which terrified her sisters.
At the sound of a lute, apparently being brought nearer,
accompanied with footsteps, she hastily recovered herself, and
rose to her feet, while a smile broke out over her face, as the
musician, a slender, graceful figure, appeared on the path in
the moonlight.
'Answering the nightingales, Maitre Alain?' she said.
'This is the court of nightingales, Madame,' he replied. 'It
is presumption to endeavour to rival them even though the heart
be torn like that of Philomel.' Wherewith he touched his lute,
and began to sing from his famous idyll--
'Ainsi mon coeur se guermentait
De la grande douleur qu'il portait,
En ce plaisant lieu solitaire
Ou un doux ventelet venait,
Si seri qu'on le sentait
Lorsque la violette mieux flaire.'
Again, as Eleanor heard the sweet strains, and saw the long
shadows of the trees and the light of the rising moon, it was
like the attainment of her dreamland; and Margaret proceeded to
make known to her sisters Maitre Alain Chartier, the prince of
song, adding, 'Thou, too, wast a songster, sister Elleen, even
while almost a babe. Dost sing as of old?'
'Ah! I must hear it,' she cried with effusion. 'The harp. It
will be his voice again.'
'Madame! Madame! Madame la Dauphine. Out here! Ever reckless
of dew--ay, and of waur than dew.'
These last words were added in Scotch, as a tall, dark-cloaked
figure appeared on the scene from between the trees. Margaret
laughed, with a little annoyance in her tone, as she said, 'Ever
my shadow, good Madame, ever wearying yourself with care. Here,
sisters, here is my trusty and well-beloved Dame de Ste.
Petronelle, who takes such care of me that she dogs my footsteps
like a messan.'
'And reason gude,' replied the lady. 'Here is the muckle hall
all alight, and this King Rene, as they call him, twanging on
his lute, and but that the Seigneur Dauphin is talking to the
English Lord on some question of Gascon boundaries, we should
have him speiring for you. I saw the eye of him roaming after
you, as it was.'
'His eye seeking me!' cried Margaret, springing up from her
languid attitude with a tone like exultation in her voice, such
as evoked a low sigh from the old dame, as all began to move
towards the castle. She was the widow of a Scotch adventurer
who had won lands and honours in France; and she was now
attached to the service of the Dauphiness, not as her chief
lady--that post was held by an old French countess--but still
close enough to her to act as her guardian and monitor whenever
it was possible to deal with her.
The old lady, in great delight at meeting a compatriot, poured
out her confidences to Dame Lilias of Glenuskie. Infinitely
grieved and annoyed was she when, early as were the ordinary
hours of the Court of Nanci, it proved that the Dauphiness had
called up her sisters an hour before, and taken them across the
chace which surrounded the castle to hear mass at a convent of
Benedictine nuns.
It was perfectly safe, though only a tirewoman and a page
followed the Dauphiness, and only Annis attended her two
sisters, for the grounds were enclosed, and King Rene's domains
were far better ruled and more peaceful than those of the
princes who despised him. It was an exquisite spring morning,
with grass silvery with dew and enamelled with flowers, birds
singing ecstatically on every branch, squirrels here and there
racing up a trunk. Margaret was in joyous spirits, and almost
danced between her sisters. Eleanor was amazed at the luxuriant
beauty of the scene, and could not admire enough. Jean, though
at first a little cross at the early summons, could not but be
infected with their delight, and the three laughed and frolicked
together with almost childish glee in the delight of their
content.
The great, gentle-eyed, long-horned kine were being driven in at
the convent-yard to be milked by the lay-sisters; at another
entrance, peasants, beggars, and sick were congregating; the
bell from the lace-works spire rang out, and the Dauphiness led
the way to the gateway, where, at her knock on the iron-studded
door, a lay-sister looked through the wicket.
'Good sister, here are some early pilgrims to the shrine of St.
Scolastique,' she began.
'To the other gate,' said the portress hastily. Margaret's face
twinkled with fun. 'I wad fain take a turn with the
beggar crew,' she said to her sisters in Scotch; 'but it might
cause too great an outcry if I were kenned. Commend me to the
Mere St. Antoine,' she added in French, 'and tell her that the
Dauphiness would fain hear mass with her.'
The portress cast an anxious doubtful glance, but being
apparently convinced, cried out for pardon, while hastily
unlocking her door, and sending a message to the Abbess.
As they entered the cloistered quadrangle the nuns in black
procession were on their way to mass, but turned aside to
receive their visitors. Margaret knelt for a moment for the
blessing and kiss of the Abbess, then greeted the nun whom she
had mentioned, but begged for no further ceremony, and then was
led into church.
It was a brief festival mass, and was not really over before she,
with a restlessness of which her sisters began to be conscious,
began to rise and make her way out. A nun followed and
entreated her to stay and break her fast, but she would accept
nothing save a draught of milk, swallowed hastily, and with
signs of impatience as her sisters took their turn.
She walked quickly, rather as one guilty of an escapade, again
surprising her sisters, who fancied the liberty of a married
princess illimitable.
Jean even ventured to ask her why she went so fast, 'Would the
King of France be displeased?'
'He! Poor gude sire Charles! He heeds not what one does, good
or bad; no, not the murdering of his minion before his eyes,'
said Margaret, half laughing.
'Thy husband, would he be angered?' pressed on Jean.
'My husband? Oh no, it is not in the depth and greatness of is
thoughts to find fault with his poor worm,' said Margaret, a
strange look, half of exultation, half of pain, on her face.
'Ah! Jeanie, woman, none kens in sooth how great and wise my
Dauphin is, nor how far he sees beyond all around him, so that
he cannot choose but scorn them and make them his tools. When
he has the power, he will do more for this poor realm of France
than any king before him.'
'As our father would have done for Scotland,' said Eleanor.
'Me!' said Margaret, with the suffering look returning. 'How
should he talk to me, the muckle uncouthie wife that I am,
kenning nought but a wheen ballads and romaunts--not even able
to give him the heir for whom he longs,' and she wrung her hands
together, 'how can I be aught but a pain and grief to him!'
'Nay, but thou lovest him?' said Jean, over simply.
'Lassie!' exclaimed Margaret hotly, 'what thinkest thou I am
made of? How should a wife not love her man, the wisest,
canniest prince in Christendom, too! Love him! I worship him,
as the trouveres say, with all my heart, and wad lay down my
life if I could win one kind blush of his eye; and yet--
and yet--such a creature am I that I am ever wittingly or
unwittingly transgressing these weary laws, and garring him
think me a fool, or others report me such,' clenching her hands
again.
'She! Oh no! She is a true loyal Lindsay, heart and soul, dour
and wearisome; but she would guard me from every foe, and most
of all, as she is ever telling me, from mine ain self, that is
my worst enemy. Only she sets about it in such guise that, for
very vexation, I am driven farther! No, it is the Countess de
Craylierre, who is forever spiting me, and striving to put
whatever I do in a cruel light, if I dinna walk after her will--
hers, as if she could rule a king's daughter!'
And Margaret stamped her foot on the ground, while a hot flush
arose in her cheeks. Her sisters, young girls as they were,
could not understand her moods, either of wild mirth, eager
delight in poetry and music, childish wilfulness and petulant
temper or deep melancholy, all coming in turn with feverish
alternation and vehemence. As the ladies approached the castle
they were met by various gentlemen, among whom was Maitre Alain
Chartier, and a bandying of compliments and witticisms began
in such rapid French that even Eleanor could not follow it; but
there was something in the ring of the Dauphiness's hard laugh
that pained her, she knew not why.
At the entrance they found the chief of the party returning from
the cathedral, where they had heard mass, not exactly in state,
but publicly.
'Ha! ha! good daughter,' laughed the King, 'I took thee for a
slug abed, but it is by thy errant fashion that thou hast
cheated us.'
'I have been to mass at St Mary's,' returned Margaret, 'with my
sisters. I love the early walk across the park.'
'No wonder,' came from between the thin lips of the Dauphin, as
his keen little eye fell on Chartier. Margaret drew herself up
and vouchsafed not to reply. Jean marvelled, but Eleanor felt
with her, that she was too proud to defend herself from the
insult. Madame de Ste. Petronelle, however, stepped forward and
began: 'Madame la Dauphine loves not attendance. She made her
journey alone with Mesdames ses soeurs with no male company,
till she reached home.'
But before the first words were well out of the good lady's
mouth Louis had turned away, with an air of the most careless
indifference, to a courtier in a long gown, longer shoes, and a
jewelled girdle, who became known to the sisters as Messire
Jamet de Tillay. Eleanor felt indignant. Was he too heedless
of his wife to listen to the vindication.
Madame de Ste. Petronelle took the Lady of Glenuskie aside and
poured out her lamentations. That was ever the way, she said,
the Dauphiness would give occasion to slanderers, by her wilful
ways, and there were those who would turn all she said or did
against her, poisoning the ear of the Dauphin, little as he
cared.
'Is he an ill man to her?' asked Dame Lilias little prepossessed
by his looks.
'He! Madame, mind you an auld tale of the Eatin wi' no heart in
his body! I verily believe he and his father both were created
like that giant. No that the King is sair to live with either,
so that he can eat and drink and daff, and be let alone to take
his ease. I have seen him; and my gude man and them we kenned
have marked him this score of years; and whether his kingdom
were lost or won, whether his best friends were free or bound,
dead or alive, he recked as little as though it were a game of
chess, so that he can sit in the ingle neuk at Bourges and toy
with Madame de Beaute, shameless limmer that she is! and crack
his fists with yon viper, Jamet de Tillay, and the rest of the
crew. But he'll let you alone, and has a kindly word for them
that don't cross him--and there be those that would go through
fire and water for him. He is no that ill! But for his son, he
has a sneer and a spite such as never his father had. He is
never a one to sit still and let things gang their gate; hut he
has as little pity or compassion as his father, and if King
Charles will not stir a finger to hinder a gruesome deed,
Dauphin Louis will not spare to do it so that he can gain by it,
and I trow verily that to give pain and sting with that bitter
tongue of his is joy to him.'
'Then is there no love between him and our princess?'
'Alack, lady, there is love, but 'tis all on one side of the
house. I doubt me whether Messire le Dauphin hath it in him to
love any living creature. I longed, when I saw your maidens,
that my poor lady had been as bonnie as her sister Joanna; but
mayhap that would not have served her better. If she were as
dull as the Duchess of Brittany--who they say can scarce find a
word to give to a stranger at Nantes--she might even anger him
less than she does with her wit and her books and her verses,
sitting up half the night to read and write rondeaux, forsooth!'
'That may be; but how doth it suit a wife? It might serve here,
where every one is mad after poesy, as they call it; but such
ways are in no good odour with the French dames, who never put
eye to book, pen to paper, nor foot to ground if they can help
it; and when she behoves to gang off roaming afoot, as she did
this morn, there's no garring the ill-minded carlines believe
that there's no ill purpose behind.'
'Yet to hear her, 'tis such walking and wearing herself out that
keeps the life in her and alone gives her sleep. My puir bairn,
worshipping the very ground her man sets foot on, and never
getting aught but a gibe or a girn from him, and, for the very
wilfulness of her sair heart, ever putting herself farther from
him!'
Such was the piteous account that Madame de Ste. Petronelle
(otherwise Dame Elspeth Johnstone) gave, and which the Lady of
Glenuskie soon perceived to be only too true during the days
spent at Nanci. To the two young sisters the condition of things
was less evident. To Margaret their presence was such sunshine,
that they usually saw her in her highest, most flighty, and
imprudent spirits, taking at times absolute delight in shocking
her two duennas; and it was in this temper that, one hot noon
day, coming after an evening of song and music, finding Alain
Chartier asleep on a bench in the garden, she declared that she
must kiss the mouth from which such sweet strains proceeded, and
bending down, imprinted so light a kiss as not to waken him,
then turned round, her whole face rippling with silent laughter
at the amusement of Jean and Margaret of Anjou, Elleen's puzzled
gravity, and the horror and dismay of her elder ladies. But
Dame Lilias saw what she did not--a look of triumphant malice on
the face of Jamet de Tillay. Or at other times she would sit
listening, with silent tears in her eyes, to plaintive Scottish
airs on Eleanor's harp, which she declared brought back her
father's voice to her, and with it the scent of the heather, and
the very sight of Arthur's Seat or the hills of Perth. Elleen
had some sudden qualms of heart lest her sister's blitheness
should be covering wounds within; but she was too young to be
often haunted by such thoughts in the delightful surroundings in
which that Easter week was spent--the companionship of their
sister and of the two young Infantas of Anjou, as well as all
the charm of King Rene's graceful attention. Eleanor had opened
to her fresh stores of beauty, exquisite illuminations, books of
all kinds--legend, history, romance, poetry--all freely
displayed to her by her royal host, who took an elderly man's
delight in an intelligent girl; nor, perhaps, was the pleasure
lessened by the need of explaining to Archduke Sigismund, in
German ever improving, that which he could not understand.
There was a delightful freedom about the Court--not hard, rugged,
always on the defence, like that of Scotland; nor stiffly
ecclesiastical, as had been that of Henry of Windsor; but though
there was devotion every morning, there was for the rest of the
day holiday-making according to each one's taste--not hawking,
for the 'bon roi Rene' was merciful to the birds in nesting time,
for which he was grumbled and laughed at by the young nobles,
and it may be feared by Jean, who wanted to exhibit Skywing's
prowess; but there was riding at the ring, and jousting, or long
rides in the environs, minstrelsy in the gardens, and once a
graceful ballet of the King's own composition; and the evenings,
sometimes in-doors, sometimes out-of-doors, were given to song
and music. Altogether it was a land of enchantment to most,
whether gaily or poetically inclined.
Only there were certain murmurs by the rugged Scots and fierce
Gascons among the guests. George observed to David Drummond
that he felt as if this was a nest of eider-ducks, all down and
fluff. Davie responded that it was like a pasteboard town in a
mystery play, and that he longed to strike at it with his good
broadsword. The English squire who stood by, in his turn
compared it to a castle of flummery and blanc-manger. A French
captain of a full company declared that he wished he had the
plundering of it; and a fierce-looking mountaineer of the Vosges
of Alsace growled that if the harping old King of Nowhere
flouted his master, Duke Sigismund, maybe they should have a
taste of plunder.
There was actually to be a tournament on the Monday, the day
before the wedding, and a first tournament was a prodigious
event in the life of a young lady. Jean was in the utmost
excitement, and never looked at her own pretty face of roses and
lilies in the steel mirror without comparing it with those of
the two Infantas in the hope of being chosen Queen of Beauty;
but, to her great disappointment, King Rene prudently ordained
that there should be no such competition, but that the prizes
should be bestowed by his sister, the Queen of France.
The Marquess of Suffolk requested Sir Patrick to convey to young
Douglas a free offer of fitting him out for the encounter, with
armour and horse if needful, and even of conferring knighthood
on him, so that he might take his place on equal terms in the
lists.
'He would like to do it, the insolent loon!' was Geordie's grim
comment. 'Will De la Pole dare to talk of dubbing the Red
Douglas! When I bide his buffet, it shall be in another sort.
When I take knighthood, it shall be from my lawful King or my
father.'
'So I shall tell him,' replied Sir Patrick, 'and I deem you wise,
for there be tricks of French chivalry that a man needs to know
ere he can acquit himself well in the lists; and to see you fail
would scarce raise you in the eyes of your lady.'
'More like they would find too much earnest in the midst of
their sham?' returned Geordie. 'You had best tell your English
Marquis, as he calls himself, that he had better not trust a
lance in a Scotsman hand, if he wouldna have all the shams that
fret me beyond my patience about their ears.'
This was not exactly what Sir Patrick told the Marquis; though
he was far from disapproving of the resolution. He kept an eye
on this strange follower, and was glad to see that there was no
evil or licence in his conduct, but that he chiefly consorted
with David and a few other young squires to whom this week, so
delightful to the ladies, was inexpressibly wearisome.
Tournaments have been described, so far as the nineteenth
century can describe them, so often that no one wishes to hear
more of their details. These had nearly reached their
culmination in the middle of the fifteenth century. Defensive
armour had become highly ornamental and very cumbrous, so that
it was scarcely possible for the champions to do one another
much harm, except that a fall under such a weight was dangerous.
Thus it was only an exercise of skill in arms and horsemanship
on which the ladies gazed as they sat in the gallery around
Queen Marie, the five young princesses together forming, as the
minstrels declared, a perfect wreath of loveliness. The
Dauphiness, with a flush on her cheek and an eager look on her
face, her tall form, and dress more carefully arranged than
usual, looked well and princely; Eleanor, very like her, but
much developed in expression and improved in looks since she
left home, and a beauty of her own; but the palm lay between the
other three--Yolande, tall, grave, stately, and anxious, with
darker blue eyes and brown hair than her sister, who, with her
innocent childish face, showing something of the shyness of a
bride, sat somewhat back, as if to conceal herself between
Yolande and Jean, who was all excitement, her cheeks flushed,
and her sunny hair seeming to glow with a radiance of its own.
Duke Sigismund was among the defenders, in a very splendid suit
of armour, made in Italy, and embossed in that new taste of the
Cinquecento that was fast coming in.
The two kings began with an amicable joust, in which Rene had
the best of it. Then they took their seats, and as usual there
was a good deal of riding one against the other at the lists,
and shivering of lances; while some knights were borne backwards,
horse and all, others had their helmets carried off; but Rene,
who sat in great enjoyment, with his staff in hand, between his
sister and her husband, King Charles, had taken care that all
the weapons should be blunted. Sigismund, a tall, large,
strongly made man, was for some time the leading champion.
Perhaps there was an understanding that the Lion of Hapsburg
and famed Eagle of the Tyrol was to carry all before him and win,
in an undoubted manner, the prize of the tourney, and the hand
of the Infanta Yolande. Certainly the colour rose higher and
higher in her delicate cheek, but those nearest could see that
it was not with pleasure, for she bit her lip with annoyance,
and her eyes wandered in search of some one.
Presently, in a pause, there came forward on a tall white horse
a magnificently tall man, in plain but bright armour, three
allerions or beakless eagles on his breast, and on his shield a
violet plant, with the motto, Si douce est la violette. The
Dauphiness leant across her sister and squeezed Yolande's hand
vehemently, as the knight inclined his lance to the King, and
was understood to crave permission to show his prowess. Charles
turned to Rene, whose good-humoured face looked annoyed, but who
could not withhold his consent. The Dauphiness, whose vehement
excitement was more visible than even Yolande's, whispered to
Eleanor that this was Messire Ferry de Vaudemont, her true love,
come to win her at point of the lance.
History is the parent of romance, and romance now and then
becomes history. It is an absolute and undoubted fact that
Count Frederic or Ferry de Vaudemont, the male representative
of the line of Charles the Great, did win his lady-love, Yolande
of Anjou, by his good lance within the lists, and that thus the
direct descent was brought eventually back to Lorraine, though
this was not contemplated at the time, since Yolande had then
living both a brother and a nephew, and it was simply for her
own sake that Messire Ferry, in all the strength and beauty that
descended to the noted house of Guise, was now bearing down all
before him, touching shield after shield, only to gain the
better of their owners in the encounter. Yolande sat with a
deep colour in her cheeks, and her hands clasped rigidly
together without a movement, while the Lorrainer spectators,
with a strong suspicion who the Knight of the Violet really was,
and with a leaning to their own line, loudly applauded each
victory.
King Rene, long ago, had had to fight for his wife's inheritance
with this young man's father, who, supported by the strength of
Burgundy, had defeated and made him prisoner, so that he was
naturally disinclined to the match, and would have preferred the
Hapsburg Duke, whose Alsatian possessions were only divided from
his own by the Vosges; but his generous and romantic spirit
could not choose but be gained by the proceeding of Count Ferry,
and the mute appeal in the face and attitude of his much-loved
daughter.
He could not help joining in the applause at the grace and ease
of the young knight, till by and by all interest became
concentrated on the last critical encounter with Sigismund.
Every one watched almost breathlessly as the big heavy Austrian,
mounted on a fresh horse, and the slim Lorrainer in armour less
strong but less weighty, had their meeting. Two courses were
run with mere splintering of lance; at the third, while Rene
held his staff ready to throw if signs of fighting a l'outrance
appeared, Ferry lifted his lance a little, and when both steeds
recoiled from the clash, the azure eagle of the Tyrol was
impaled on the point of his lance, and Sigismund, though not
losing his saddle, was bending low on it, half stunned by the
force of the blow. Down went Rene's warder. Loud were the
shouts, 'Vive the Knight of the Violet! Victory to the
Allerions!'
The voice of Rene was as clear and exulting as the rest, as the
heralds, with blast of trumpet, proclaimed the Chevalier de la
Violette the victor of the day, and then came forward to lead
him to the feet of the Queen of France. His helmet was removed,
and at the face of manly beauty that it revealed, the applause
was renewed; but as Marie held out the prize, a splendidly
hilted sword, he bowed low, and said, 'Madame, one boon alone do
I ask for my guerdon.' And withal, he laid the blue eagle on
his lance at the feet of Yolande.
Rene was not the father to withstand such an appeal. He leapt
from his chair of state, he hurried to Yolande in her gallery,
took her by the hand, and in another moment Ferry had sprung
from his horse, and on the steps knight and lady, in their
youthful glory and grace, stood hand in hand, all blushes and
bliss, amid the ecstatic applause of the multitude, while the
Dauphiness shed tears of joy. Thus brilliantly ended the first
tournament witnessed by the Scottish princesses. Eleanor had
been most interested on the whole in Duke Sigismund, and had
exulted in his successes, and been sorry to see him defeated,
but then she knew that Yolande dreaded his victory, and she
suspected that he did not greatly care for Yolande, so that,
since he was not hurt, and was certainly the second in the field,
she could look on with complacency.
Moreover, at the evening's dance, when Margaret and Suffolk,
Ferry and Yolande stood up for a stately pavise together,
Sigismund came to Eleanor, and while she was thinking whether or
not to condole with him, he shyly mumbled something about not
regretting--being free--the Dauphin, her brother, enduring a
beaten knight. It was all in a mixture of French and German,
mostly of the latter, and far less comprehensible than usual,
unless, indeed, maidenly shyness made her afraid to understand
or to seem to do so. He kept on standing by her, both of them,
mute and embarrassed, not quite unconscious that they were
observed, perhaps secretly derided by some of the lookers-on.
The first relief was when the Dauphiness came and sat down by
her sister, and began to talk fast in French, scarce heeding
whether the Duke understood or answered her.
One question he asked was, who was the red-faced young man with
stubbly sunburnt hair, and a scar on his cheek, who had appeared
in the lists in very gaudy but ill-fitting armour, and with a
great raw-boned, snorting horse, and now stood in a corner of
the hall with his eyes steadily fixed on the Lady Joanna.
'So!' said Sigismund. 'That fellow is the Baron Rudiger von
Batchburg Der Schelm! How has he the face to show himself
here?'
'Is he one of your Borderers--your robber Castellanes?' asked
Margaret.
'Even so! His father's castle of Balchenburg is so cunningly
placed on the march between Elsass and Lothringen that neither
our good host nor I can fully claim it, and these rogues shelter
themselves behind one or other of us till it is, what they call
in Germany a Rat Castle, the refuge of all the ecorcheurs and
routiers of this part of the country. They will bring us both
down on them one of these days, but the place is well-nigh past
scaling by any save a gemsbock or an ecorcheur!'
Jean herself had remarked the gaze of the Alsatian mountaineer.
It was the chief homage that her beauty had received, and she
was somewhat mortified at being only viewed as part of the
constellation of royalty and beauty doing honour to the Infantas.
She believed, too, that if Geordie of the Red Peel had chosen,
he could have brought her out in as effective and romantic a
light as that in which Yolande had appeared, and she was in some
of her moods hurt and angered with him for refraining, while in
others she supposed sometimes that he was too awkward thus to
venture himself, and at others she did him the justice of
believing that he disdained to appear in borrowed plumes.
The wedding was by no means so splendid an affair as the
tournament, as, indeed, it was merely a marriage by proxy, and
Yolande and her Count of Vaudemont were too near of kin to be
married before a dispensation could be procured.
The King and Queen of France would leave Nanci to see the bride
partly on her way. The Dauphin and his wife were to tarry a day
or two behind, and the princesses belonged to their Court. Sir
Patrick had fulfilled his charge of conducting them to their
sister, and he had now to avail himself of the protection of the
King's party as far as possible on the way to Paris, where he
would place Malcolm at the University, and likewise meet his
daughter's bridegroom and his father.
Dame Lilias did not by any means like leaving her young cousins,
so long her charge, without attendants of their own; but the
Dauphiness gave them a tirewoman of her own, and undertook that
Madame de Ste. Petronelle should attend them in case of need, as
well as that she would endeavour to have Annis, when Madame de
Terreforte, at her Court as long as they were there. They also
had a squire as equerry, and George Douglas was bent on
continuing in that capacity till his outfit from his father
arrived, as it was sure to do sooner or later.
Margaret knew who he was, and promised Sir Patrick to do all in
her power for him, as truly his patience and forbearance well
deserved.
It was a very sorrowful parting between the two maidens and the
Lady of Glenuskie, who for more than half a year had been as a
mother to them, nay, more than their own mother had ever been;
and bad done much to mitigate the sharp angles of their
neglected girlhood by her influence. In a very few months more
she would see James, and Mary, and the 'weans'; and the three
sisters loaded her with gifts, letters, and messages for all.
Eleanor promised never to forget her counsel, and to strive not
to let the bright new world drive away all those devout feelings
and hopes that Mother Clare and King Henry had inspired, and
that Lady Drummond had done her best to keep up.
Duke Sigismund had communicated to Sir Patrick his intention of
making a formal request to King James for the hand of the Lady Eleanor.
He was to find an envoy to make his proposal in due form, who
would join Sir Patrick at Terreforte after the wedding was over,
so as to go with the party to Scotland.
Meantime, with many fond embraces and tears, Lady Drummond took
leave of her princesses, and they owned themselves to feel as if
a protecting wall had been taken away in her and her husband.
'It is folly, though, thus to speak,' said Jean, 'when we have
our sister, and her husband, and his father, and all his Court
to protect us.'
'We ought to be happy,' said Eleanor gravely. 'Outside
here at Nanci, it is all that my fancy ever shaped, and yet--and
yet there is a strange sense of fear beyond.'
'Oh, talk not that gate,' cried Jean, 'as thou wilt be having
thy gruesome visions!'
'No; it is not of that sort,' returned Eleanor. 'I trow not!
It may be rather the feeling of the vanity of all this world's
show.'
'Oh, for mercy's sake, dinna let us have clavers of that sort,
or we shall have thee in yon nunnery!' exclaimed Jean. 'See
this girdle of Maggie's, which she has given me. Must I not
make another hole to draw it up enough for my waist?'
'Jean herself was much disappointed when Margaret, with great
regret, told her that the Dauphin had to go out of his way to
visit some castles on his way to Chalons sur Marne, and that he
could not encumber his hosts with so large a train as the
presence of two royal ladies rendered needful. They were,
therefore, to travel by another route, leading through towns
where there were hostels. Madame de Ste. Petronelle was to go
with them, and an escort of trusty Scots archers, and all would
meet again in a fortnight's time.
All sounded simple and easy, and Margaret repeated, 'It will be
a troop quite large enough to defend you from all ecorcheurs;
indeed, they dare not come near our Scottish archers, whom
Messire, my husband, has told off for your escort. And you will
have your own squire,' she added, looking at Jean.
'Ah, Jeanie, Jeanie, thou mayst have to rue it if thou turn'st
lightly from a leal heart.'
'I'm not damsel-errant of romance, as thou and Elleen would fain
be,' said Jean.
'Nay,' said Margaret, 'love is not mere romance. And oh, sister,
credit me, a Scots lassie's heart craves better food than
crowns and coronets. Hard and unco' cold be they, where there
is no warmth to meet the yearning soul beneath, that would give
all and ten times more for one glint of a loving eye, one word
from a tender lip.' Again she had one of those hysteric bursts
of tears, but she laughed herself back, crying, 'But what is the
treason wifie saying of her gudeman--her Louis, that never yet
said a rough word to his Meg?'
Then came another laugh, but she gathered herself up at a
summons to come down and mount.
She was tenderly embraced by all, King Rene kissing her and
calling her his dear niece and princess of minstrelsy, who
should come to him at Toulouse and bestow the golden violet.
She rode away, looking back smiling and kissing her hand, but
Eleanor's eyes grew wide and her cheeks pale.
'Jean,' she murmured, low and hoarsely, 'Margaret's shroud is up
to her throat.'
'Hoots with thy clavers,' exclaimed Jeanie in return. 'I never
let thee sing that fule song, but Meg's fancies have brought the
megrims into thine head! Thou and she are pair.'
'That we shall be nae longer,' sighed Eleanor. 'I saw the
shroud as clear as I see yon cross on the spire.'