The Little Duke, Charlotte Mary Yonge [large screen ebook reader .TXT] 📗
- Author: Charlotte Mary Yonge
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the bed. All was still, the boys not daring to speak or move. There
came a longer breath—then they heard no more. He was, indeed, gone
to a happier home—a truer royalty than ever had been his on earth.
Then the boys’ grief burst out. Lothaire screamed for his mother,
and sobbed out that he should die too—he must go home. Richard
stood by the bed, large silent tears rolling down his cheeks, and his
chest heaving with suppressed sobs.
Fru Astrida led them from the room, back to their beds. Lothaire
soon cried himself to sleep. Richard lay awake, sorrowful, and in
deep thought; while that scene in St. Mary’s, at Rouen, returned
before his eyes, and though it had passed nearly two years ago, its
meaning and its teaching had sunk deep into his mind, and now stood
before him more completely.
“Where shall I go, when I come to die, if I have not returned good
for evil?” And a resolution was taken in the mind of the little
Duke.
Morning came, and brought back the sense that his gentle little
companion was gone from him; and Richard wept again, as if he could
not be consoled, as he beheld the screened couch where the patient
smile would never again greet him. He now knew that he had loved
Carloman all the more for his weakness and helplessness; but his
grief was not like Lothaire’s, for with the Prince’s was still joined
a selfish fear: his cry was still, that he should die too, if not
set free, and violent weeping really made him heavy and ill.
The little corpse, embalmed and lapped in lead, was to be sent back
to France, that it might rest with its forefathers in the city of
Rheims; and Lothaire seemed to feel this as an additional stroke of
desertion. He was almost beside himself with despair, imploring
every one, in turn, to send him home, though he well knew they were
unable to do so.
“Sir Eric,” said Richard, “you told me there was a Parlement to be
held at Falaise, between Count Bernard and the King of Denmark. I
mean to attend it. Will you come with me, or shall Osmond go, and
you remain in charge of the Prince?”
“How now, Lord Richard, you were not wont to love a Parlement?”
“I have something to say,” replied Richard. The Baron made no
objection, only telling his mother that the Duke was a marvellous
wise child, and that he would soon be fit to take the government
himself.
Lothaire lamented the more when he found that Richard was going away;
his presence seemed to him a protection, and he fancied, now Carloman
was dead, that his former injuries were about to be revenged. The
Duke assured him, repeatedly, that he meant him nothing but kindness,
adding, “When I return, you will see, Lothaire;” then, commending him
to the care and kindness of Fru Astrida, Osmond, and Alberic, Richard
set forth upon his pony, attended by Sir Eric and three men-at-arms.
Richard felt sad when he looked back at Bayeux, and thought that it
no longer contained his dear little friend; but it was a fresh bright
frosty morning, the fields were covered with a silvery-white coating,
the flakes of hoar-frost sparkled on every bush, and the hard ground
rung cheerily to the tread of the horses’ feet. As the yellow sun
fought his way through the grey mists that dimmed his brightness, and
shone out merrily in the blue heights of the sky, Richard’s spirits
rose, and he laughed and shouted, as hare or rabbit rushed across the
heath, or as the plover rose screaming above his head, flapping her
broad wings across the wintry sky.
One night they slept at a Convent, where they heard that Hugh of
Paris had passed on to join the conference at Falaise. The next day
they rode on, and, towards the afternoon, the Baron pointed to a
sharp rocky range of hills, crowned by a tall solid tower, and told
Richard, yonder was his keep of Falaise, the strongest Castle in
Normandy.
The country was far more broken as they advanced—narrow valleys and
sharp hills, each little vale full of wood, and interspersed with
rocks. “A choice place for game,” Sir Eric said and Richard, as he
saw a herd of deer dash down a forest glade, exclaimed, “that they
must come here to stay, for some autumn sport.”
There seemed to be huntsmen abroad in the woods; for through the
frosty air came the baying of dogs, the shouts and calls of men, and,
now and then, the echoing, ringing notes of a bugle. Richard’s eyes
and cheeks glowed with excitement, and he pushed his brisk little
pony on faster and faster, unheeding that the heavier men and horses
of his suite were not keeping pace with him on the rough ground and
through the tangled boughs.
Presently, a strange sound of growling and snarling was heard close
at hand: his pony swerved aside, and could not be made to advance;
so Richard, dismounting, dashed through some briars, and there, on an
open space, beneath a precipice of dark ivy-covered rock, that rose
like a wall, he beheld a huge grey wolf and a large dog in mortal
combat. It was as if they had fallen or rolled down the precipice
together, not heeding it in their fury. Both were bleeding, and the
eyes of both glared like red fiery glass in the dark shadow of the
rock. The dog lay undermost, almost overpowered, making but a feeble
resistance; and the wolf would, in another moment, be at liberty to
spring on the lonely child.
But not a thought of fear passed through his breast; to save the dog
was Richard’s only idea. In one moment he had drawn the dagger he
wore at his girdle, ran to the two struggling animals, and with all
his force, plunged it into the throat of the wolf, which, happily,
was still held by the teeth of the hound.
The struggles relaxed, the wolf rolled heavily aside, dead; the dog
lay panting and bleeding, and Richard feared he was cruelly torn.
“Poor fellow! noble dog! what shall I do to help you?” and he gently
smoothed the dark brindled head.
A voice was now heard shouting aloud, at which the dog raised and
crested his head, as a figure in a hunting dress was coming down a
rocky pathway, an extremely tall, well-made man, of noble features.
“Ha! holla! Vige! Vige! How now, my brave hound?” he said in the
Northern tongue, though not quite with the accent Richard was
accustomed to hear “Art hurt?”
“Much torn, I fear,” Richard called out, as the faithful creature
wagged his tail, and strove to rise and meet his master.
“Ha, lad! what art thou?” exclaimed the hunter, amazed at seeing the
boy between the dead wolf and wounded dog. “You look like one of
those Frenchified Norman gentilesse, with your smooth locks and
gilded baldrick, yet your words are Norse. By the hammer of Thor!
that is a dagger in the wolf’s throat!”
“It is mine,” said Richard. “I found your dog nearly spent, and I
made in to the rescue.”
“You did? Well done! I would not have lost Vige for all the plunder
of Italy. I am beholden to you, my brave young lad,” said the
stranger, all the time examining and caressing the hound. “What is
your name? You cannot be Southern bred?”
As he spoke, more shouts came near; and the Baron de Centeville
rushed through the trees holding Richard’s pony by the bridle. “My
Lord, my Lord!—oh, thank Heaven, I see you safe!” At the same
moment a party of hunters also approached by the path, and at the
head of them Bernard the Dane.
“Ha!” exclaimed he, “what do I see? My young Lord! what brought you
here?” And with a hasty obeisance, Bernard took Richard’s
outstretched hand.
“I came hither to attend your council,” replied Richard. “I have a
boon to ask of the King of Denmark.”
“Any boon the King of Denmark has in his power will be yours,” said
the dog’s master, slapping his hand on the little Duke’s shoulder,
with a rude, hearty familiarity, that took him by surprise; and he
looked up with a shade of offence, till, on a sudden flash of
perception, he took off his cap, exclaiming, “King Harald himself!
Pardon me, Sir King!”
“Pardon, Jarl Richart! What would you have me pardon?—your saving
the life of Vige here? No French politeness for me. Tell me your
boon, and it is yours. Shall I take you a voyage, and harry the fat
monks of Ireland?”
Richard recoiled a little from his new friend.
“Oh, ha! I forgot. They have made a Christian of you—more’s the
pity. You have the Northern spirit so strong. I had forgotten it.
Come, walk by my side, and let me hear what you would ask. Holla,
you Sweyn! carry Vige up to the Castle, and look to his wounds. Now
for it, young Jarl.”
“My boon is, that you would set free Prince Lothaire.”
“What?—the young Frank? Why they kept you captive, burnt your face,
and would have made an end of you but for your clever Bonder.”
“That is long past, and Lothaire is so wretched. His brother is
dead, and he is sick with grief, and he says he shall die, if he does
not go home.”
“A good thing too for the treacherous race to die out in him! What
should you care for him? he is your foe.”
“I am a Christian,” was Richard’s answer.
“Well, I promised you whatever you might ask. All my share of his
ransom, or his person, bond or free, is yours. You have only to
prevail with your own Jarls and Bonders.”
Richard feared this would be more difficult; but Abbot Martin came to
the meeting, and took his part. Moreover, the idea of their hostage
dying in their hands, so as to leave them without hold upon the King,
had much weight with them; and, after long deliberation, they
consented that Lothaire should be restored to his father, without
ransom but only on condition that Louis should guarantee to the Duke
the peaceable possession of the country, as far as St. Clair sur
Epte, which had been long in dispute; so that Alberic became,
indisputably, a vassal of Normandy.
Perhaps it was the happiest day in Richard’s life when he rode back
to Bayeux, to desire Lothaire to prepare to come with him to St.
Clair, there to be given back into the hands of his father.
And then they met King Louis, grave and sorrowful for the loss of his
little Carloman, and, for the time, repenting of his misdeeds towards
the orphan heir of Normandy.
He pressed the Duke in his arms, and his kiss was a genuine one as he
said, “Duke Richard, we have not deserved this of you. I did not
treat you as you have treated my children. We will be true lord and
vassal from henceforth.”
Lothaire’s last words were, “Farewell, Richard. If I lived with you,
I might be good like you. I will never forget what you have done for
me.”
When Richard once more entered Rouen in state, his subjects shouting
round him in transports of joy, better than all his honour and glory
was the being able to enter the Church of our Lady, and kneel by his
father’s grave, with a clear conscience, and the sense that he had
tried to
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