The Scottish Chiefs
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Miss Jane Porter >> The Scottish Chiefs
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Wallace regarded each with a look of tenderness. "It is my joy to love
you both like a brother, but Lady Helen must consider me as even more
than that to her. I am her father's representative, I am the voice of
grateful Scotland, thanking her for the preservation her generous
exertions yielded! And to you, my prince, I am your friend, your
subject--all that is devoted and true."
Thus enjoying the dear communion of hearts, the interchange of mind,
and mingling soul with soul, did these three friends journey toward the
gates of Paris. Every hour seemed an age of blessedness to Helen, so
gratefully did she enjoy each passing moment of a happiness that seemed
to speak of Paradise. Nature never before appeared so beautiful in her
eyes, the sky was more serene, the birds sung with sweeter notes, the
landscape shone in brighter charms; the fragrances of the flowers
bathed her senses in the softest balm; and the very air as it breathed
around her, seemed fraught with life and joy. But Wallace animated the
scene; and while she fancied that she inhaled his breath in every
respiration, she moved as if on enchanted ground. Oh! she could have
lingered there forever! and hardly did she know what it was to draw any
but sighs of bliss till she saw the towers of Paris embattling the
horizon. They reminded her that she was now going to be occasionally
divided from him; that when entered within those walls, it would no
longer be decorous for her to pass days and nights in listening to his
voice, in losing all of woman's love in the beautified affection of an
angel.
This passion of the soul (if such it may be called), which has its rise
in virtue and its aim the same, would be most unjustly degraded were it
classed with what the herd generally entitle love. The love which men
stigmatize, deride, and yet encourage, is a fancy, an infatuation,
awakened by personal attraction, by--the lover knows not what,
sometimes by gratified vanity, sometimes by idleness, and often by the
most debasing propensities of human nature. Earthly it is, and unto
earth it shall return! But love, true heaven-born love, that pure
affection which unites congenial spirits here, and with which the
Creator will hereafter connect in one blessed fraternity the whole
kindred of mankind, has but one cause--the universal unchangeableness
and immortality, a something so excellent that the simple wish to
partake its essence in the union of affection, to facilitate and to
share its attainment of true and lasting happiness, invigorates our
virtue and inspires our souls. These are the aims and joys of real
love. It has nothing selfish; in every desire it soars above this
earth; and anticipates, as the ultimatum of its joy, the moment when it
shall meet its partner before the throne of God. Such was the
sentiment of Helen toward Wallace. So unlike what she had seen in
others of the universal passion, she would hardly have acknowledged to
herself that what she felt was love, had not the anticipation of even
an hour's separation from him, whispered the secret to her heart.
CHAPTER LXV.
Paris.
When they were arrived within a short distance from Paris, Wallace
wrote a few lines to King Philip, informing him who were the companions
of his journey, and that he would rest near the Abbey of St. Genevieve
until he should receive his majesty's greetings to Bruce; also the
queen's granted protection for the daughter of the Earl of Mar.
Grimsby was the bearer of this letter. He soon returned with an escort
of honor, accompanied by Prince Louis himself. At sight of Wallace he
flew into his arms, and after embracing him again and again with all
the unchecked ardor of youthful gratitude, he presented to him a packet
from the king.
It expressed the satisfaction of Philip at the near prospect of his
seeing the man whom he had so long admired, and whose valor had wrought
him such service as the preservation of his son. He then added that he
had other matters to thank him for when they should meet, and subjects
to discuss which would be much elucidated by the presence of Bruce.
"According to your request," continued he, "the name of neither shall
be made public at my court. My own family only know who are to be my
illustrious guests. The queen is impatient to bid them welcome, and no
less eager to greet the Lady Helen Mar with her friendship and
protection."
A beautiful palfrey, superbly caparisoned, and tossing its fair neck
amid the pride of its gorgeous chamfraine, was led forward by a page.
Two ladies, also, bearing rich apparel for Helen, appeared in the
train. When their errand was made known to Wallace, he communicated it
to Helen. Her delicacy indeed wished to lay aside her page's apparel
before she was presented to the queen; but she had been so happy while
she wore it!
"Days have passed with me in these garments," said she to herself,
"which may never occur again!"
The laddies were conducted to her. They delivered a gracious message
from their royal mistress, and opened the caskets. Helen sighed; she
could urge nothing in opposition to their embassy, and reluctantly
assented to the change they were to make in her appearance. She stood
mute while they disarrayed her of her humble guise, and clothed her in
the robes of France. During their attendance, in the adulatory strains
of the court, they broke out in encomiums on the graces of her person;
but to all this she turned an inattentive ear--her mind was absorbed in
what she had enjoyed, in the splendid penance she might now undergo.
One of the women was throwing the page's clothes carelessly into a bag,
when Helen perceiving her, with ill-concealed eagerness, cried:
"Take care of that suit, it is more precious to me than gold or jewels."
"Indeed!" answered the attendant, more respectfully folding it; "it
does not seem of very rich silk."
"Probably not," returned Helen, "but it is valuable to me, and wherever
I lodge, I will thank you to put it into my apartment."
A mirror was now presented that she might see herself. She started at
the load of jewels with which they had adorned her, and while tears
filled her eyes, she mildly said:
"I am a mourner, and these ornaments must not be worn by me."
The ladies obeyed her wish to have them taken off, and with thoughts
divided between her father and her father's friend, she was conducted
toward the palfrey. Wallace approached her, and Bruce flew forward,
with his usual haste, to assist her; but it was no longer the beautiful
little page that met his view, the confidential and frank glance of a
youthful brother--it was a lovely woman arrayed in all the charms of
female apparel, trembling and blushing, as she again appeared as a
woman before the eyes of the man she loved. Wallace sighed as he
touched her hand, for there was something in her air which seemed to
say, "I am not what I was a few minutes ago." It was the aspect of the
world's austerity, the decorum of rank and situation--but not of the
heart--that had never been absent from the conduct of Helen; had she
been in the wilds of Africa, with no other companion than Wallace,
still would those chaste reserves which lived in her soul have been
there the guardian of her actions, for modesty was as much the
attribute of her person, as magnanimity the character of her mind.
Her more distant air at this time was the effect of reflections while
in the abbey where he had lodged her. She saw that the frank
intercourse between them was to be interrupted by the forms of a court,
and her manner insensibly assumed the demeanor she was so soon to wear.
Bruce looked at her with delighted wonder. He had before admired her
as beautiful, he now gazed on her as transcendently so. He checked
himself in his swift step--he paused to look on her and Wallace, and
contemplating them with sentiments of unmingled admiration, this
exclamation unconsciously escaped him:
"How lovely!"
He could not but wish to see two such perfectly amiable and perfectly
beautiful beings united as closely by the bonds of the altar as he
believed they were in heart, and he longed for the hour when he might
endow them with those proofs of his fraternal love which should class
them with the first of Scottish princes.
"But how," thought he, "can I ever sufficiently reward thee, Wallace,
for what thou hast done for me and mine? Thy services are beyond all
price; thy soul is above even empires. Then how can I show thee all
that is in my heart for thee?"
While he thus apostrophized his friend, Wallace and Helen advanced
toward him. Bruce held out his hand to her with a cordial smile.
"Lady Helen, we are still to be the same! Robes of no kind must ever
separate the affections born in our pilgrimage!"
She put her hand into his with a glow of delight.
"While Sir William Wallace allows me to call him brother," answered
she, "that will ever be a sanction to our friendship; but courts are
formal places, and I now go to one."
"And I will soon remove you to another," replied he, "where"--he
hesitated--looked at Wallace and then resumed: "where every wish of my
sister Helen's heart shall be gratified, or I be no king."
Helen blushed deeply and hastened toward the palfrey. Wallace placed
her on the embroidered saddle, and Prince Louis preceding the
cavalcade, it moved on.
As Bruce vaulted into his seat he said something to his friend of the
perfectly feminine beauty of Helen.
"But her soul is fairer!" returned Wallace.
The Prince of Scotland, with a gay but tender smile, softly whispered:
"Fair, doubly fair to you!"
Wallace drew a deep sigh.
"I never knew but one woman who resembled her, and she did indeed excel
all of created mold. From infancy to manhood I read every thought of
her angelic heart; I became the purer by the study, and I loved my
model with an idolatrous adoration. There was my error! But those
sympathies, those hours are past. My heart will never throb as it has
throbbed; never rejoice as it has rejoiced; for she who lived but for
me, who doubled all my joys, is gone! Oh, my prince, though blessed
with friendship, there are times when I feel that I am solitary!"
Bruce looked at him with some surprise.
"Solitary, Wallace! can you ever be solitary, and near Helen of Mar?"
"Perhaps more so then than at any other time; for her beauties, her
excellences, remind me of what were once mine, and recall every regret.
Oh, Bruce! thou canst not comprehend my loss! To mingle thought with
thought, and soul with soul, for years; and then, after blending our
very beings, and feeling as if indeed made one, to be separated--and by
a stroke of violence! This was a trial of the spirit which, but for
Heaven's mercy, would have crushed me. I live, but still my heart will
mourn, mourn her I have lost--and mourn that my rebellious nature will
not be more resigned to the judgments of its God."
"And is love so constant, so tenacious?" exclaimed Bruce; "is it to
consume your youth, Wallace? Is it to wed such a heart as yours to the
tomb? Ah! am I not to hope that the throne of my children may be
upheld by a race of thine?"
Wallace shook his head, but with a placid firmness replied:
"Your throne and your children's, if they follow your example, will be
upheld by Heaven; but should they pervert themselves, a host of mortal
supports would not be sufficient to stay their downfall."
In discourse like this, the youthful Prince of Scotland caught a
clearer view of the inmost thoughts of his friend than he had been able
to discern before; for war, or Bruce's own interests, having
particularly engaged them in all their former conversations, Wallace
had never been induced to glance at the private circumstances of his
history. While Bruce sighed in tender pity for the captivated heart of
Helen, he the more deeply revered, more intensely loved, his suffering
and heroic friend.
A few hours brought the royal escort to the Louvre; and through a train
of nobles, Helen was led by Prince Louis into the regal saloon. The
Scottish chiefs followed. The queen and the Count D'Evereux received
Bruce and Helen, while De Valois conducted Wallace to the king, who had
retired for the purpose of this conference to his closet.
At sight of the armor which he had sent to the preserver of his son,
Philip instantly recognized the Scottish hero, and rising from his
seat, hastened forward and clasped him in his arms. "Wonder not,
august chief," exclaimed he, "at the weakness exhibited in these eyes!
It is the tribute of nature to a virtue which loads even kings with
benefits. You have saved my son's life; you have preserved from taint
the honor of my sister!" Philip then proceeded to inform his auditor
that he had heard from a confessor of Queen Margaret's, just arrived
from England, all that had lately happened at Edward's court; and of
Wallace's letter, to clear the innocence of that injured princess.
"She is perfectly reinstated in the king's confidence," added Philip,
"but I can never pardon the infamy with which he would have overwhelmed
her; nay, it has already dishonored her, for the blasting effects of
slander no time nor labor can erase. I yield to the prayers of my too
gentle sister, not to openly resent this wrong, but in private he shall
feel a brother's indignation. I do not declare war against him, but
ask what you will, bravest of men, and were it to place the crown of
Scotland on your head, demand it of me, and by my concealed agency it
shall be effected."
The reply of Wallace was simple. He claimed no merit in the justice he
had done the Queen of England; neither in his rescue of Prince Louis,
but as a proof of King Philip's friendship, he gladly embraced his
offered services with regard to Scotland.
"Not," added he, "to send troops into that country against England.
Scotland is now free of its Southron invaders; all I require is that
you will use your royal influence with Edward to allow it to remain so.
Pledge your faith, most gracious monarch, with my master the royally
descended Bruce, who is now in your palace. He will soon assume the
crown that is his right; and with such an ally as France to hold the
ambition of Edward in check, we may certainly hope that the bloody
feuds between Scotland and England may at last be laid to rest."
Wallace explained to Philip the dispositions of the Scots, the nature
of Bruce's claims, and the transcendent virtues of his youthful
character. The monarch took fire at the speaker's enthusiasm, and,
giving him his hand, exclaimed:
"Wallace, I know not what manner of man you are! You seem born to
dictate to kings, while you put aside as things of no moment the crowns
offered to yourself. You are young and, marveling, I would say without
ambition, did I not know that your deeds and your virtues have set you
above all earthly titles. But to convince me that you do not disdain
the gratitude we pay, at least accept a name in my country; and know,
that the armor you wear, the coronet around your helmet, invest you
with the rank of a prince of France, and the title of Count of Gascony."
To have refused this mark of the monarch's esteem would have been an
act of churlish pride foreign from the character of Wallace. He
graciously accepted the offered distinction, and bowing his head,
allowed the king to throw the brilliant collar of Gascony over his neck.
This act was performed by Philip with all the emotions of disinterested
esteem. But when he had proposed it to his brother D'Evereux, as the
only way he could devise of rewarding Wallace for the preservation of
his son, and the honor of their sister, he was obliged to urge in
support of his wish, the desire he had to take the first opportunity of
being revenged on Edward by the reseizure of Guienne. To have Sir
William Wallace lord of Gascony would then be of the greatest advantage
as no doubt could be entertained of his arms soon restoring the sister
province to the French monarchy. In such a case, Philip promised to
bestow Guienne on his brother D'Evereux.
To attach this new count to France was now all the wish of Philip, and
he closed the conference with every expression of friendship which man
could deliver to man. Wallace lost not the opportunity of pleading for
the abdicated King of Scots; and Philip, eager as well to evince his
resentment to Edward as to oblige Wallace, promised to send immediate
orders to Normandy that De Valence should leave Chateau Galliard, and
Baliol be attended with his former state.
The king then led his guest into the royal saloon, where they found the
queen seated between Bruce and Helen. At sight of the Scottish chief
her majesty rose. Philip led him up to her; and Wallace, bending his
knee, put the fair hand extended to his lips.
"Welcome," said she, "bravest of knights; receive a mother's thanks."
Tears of gratitude stood in her eyes. She clasped the hand of her son
and his together, and added, "Louis, wherever our Count of Gascony
advises you to pledge this hand, give it."
"Then it will follow mine!" cried the king, putting his into that of
Bruce; "You are Wallace's acknowledged sovereign, young prince, and you
shall ever find brothers in me and my son! Sweet lady," added he,
turning to the glowing Helen, "thanks to your charms for having drawn
this friend of mankind to bless our shores!"
The court knew Wallace merely as Count of Gascony; and, to preserve an
equal concealment, Bruce assumed the name of the young De Longueville,
whom Prince Louis had, in fact, allowed to leave him on the road to
Paris to retire to Chartres, there to pass a year of mourning within
its penitential monastery. Only two persons ever came to the Louvre
who could recognize Bruce to be other than he seemed, and they were,
John Cummin, the elder twin brother of the present Regent of Scotland,
and James Lord Douglas. The former had remained in France, out of
dislike to his brother's proceedings, and as Bruce knew him in Guienne,
and believed him to be a blunt, well-meaning young man, he saw no
danger in trusting him. The brave son of William Douglas was
altogether of a nobler mettle, and both Wallace and his prince rejoiced
at the prospect of receiving him to their friendship.
Philip opened the affair to the two lords; and having declared his
designs in favor of Bruce, conducted them into t he queen's room, and
pointing where he stood, "There," cried he, "is the King of Scotland."
Douglas and Cummin would have bent their knees to their young monarch,
but Bruce hastily caught their hands, and prevented them:
"My friends," said he, "regard me as your fellow-soldier only, till you
see me on the throne of my fathers. Till then, that is our prince,"
added he, looking on Wallace; "he is my leader, my counselor, my
example! And, if you love me, he must be yours."
Douglas and Cummin turned toward Wallace at these words. Royalty did
indeed sit on his brow, but with a tempered majesty which spoke only in
love and honor. From the resplendent countenance of Bruce it smiled
and threatened, for the blaze of his impassioned nature was not yet
subdued. The queen looked from one to the other. The divinely
composed air of Wallace seemed to her the celestial port of some
heaven-descended being, lent awhile to earth to guide the steps of the
Prince of Scotland. She had read, in Homer's song, of the deity of
wisdom assuming the form of Mentor to protect the son of Ulysses, and
had it not been for the youth of the Scottish chief, she would have
said, here is the realization of the tale.
Helen had eyes for none but Wallace. Nobles, princes, kings, were all
involved in one uninteresting mass to her when he was present. Yet she
smiled on Douglas when she heard him express his gratitude to the
champion of Scotland for the services he had done a country for which
his own father had died. Cummin, when he paid his respects to Wallace,
told him that he did so with double pleasure, since he had two
unquestionable evidences of his unequaled merit--the confidence of his
father, the Lord Badenoch, and the hatred of his brother, the present
usurper of that title.
The king soon after led his guests to the council-room, where a secret
cabinet was to be held, to settle the future bonds between the two
kingdoms; and Helen, looking long after the departing figure of
Wallace, with a pensive step followed the queen to her apartment.
Chapter LXVI.
The Louvre.
These preliminaries of lasting friendship being arranged, and sworn to
by Philip, Wallace dispatched a messenger to Scotland, to Lord Ruthven,
at Huntingtower, informing him of the present happy dispositions with
regard to Scotland. He made particular inquiries respecting the state
of the public mind; and declared his intention not to introduce Bruce
amongst the cabals of his chieftains until he knew exactly how they
were all disposed. Some weeks passed before a reply to this letter
arrived. During the time, the health of Helen, which had been much
impaired by the sufferings inflicted on her by De Valence, gradually
recovered, and her beauty became as much the admiration of the French
nobles as her meek dignity was of their respect. A new scene of
royalty presented itself in this gay court to Wallace, for all was
pageant and chivalric gallantry; but it had no other effect on him than
that of exciting those benevolent affections which rejoiced in the
innocent gayeties of his fellow-beings. His gravity was not that of a
cynic. Though hilarity never awakened his mind to buoyant mirth, yet
he loved to see it in others, and smiled when others laughed.
With a natural superiority, which looked over these court pastimes to
objects of greater moment, Bruce merely endured them; but it was with
an urbanity congenial with his friend's, and while the princes of
France were treading the giddy mazes of the dance, or tilting at each
other in the mimic war of the tournament, the Prince of Scotland, who
excelled in all these exercises, left the field of gallantry
undisputed, and moved an uninterested spectator in the splendid scene,
talking with Wallace or with Helen on events which yet lay in fate, and
whose theater would be the field of his native land. So accustomed had
the friends now been to share their thoughts with Lady Helen, that they
imparted to her their plans, and listened with pleasure to her timid
yet judicious remarks. Her soul was inspired with the same zeal for
Scotland which animated their own breasts; like Bruce's it was ardent;
but, like Wallace's, it was tempered with a moderation which, giving
her foresight, freed her opinion from the hazard of rashness. What he
possessed by the suggestions of genius, or had acquired by experience,
she learned from love. It taught her to be careful for the safety of
Wallace; and while she saw that his life must often be put in peril for
Scotland, her watchful spirit, with an eagle's ken, perceived and gave
warning where his exposure might incur danger without adequate
advantage.
The winds of this season of the year being violent and often adverse.
Wallace's messenger did not arrive at his destined port in Scotland
till the middle of November, and the January of 1299 had commenced
before his returning bark entered the mouth of the Seine.
Wallace was alone, with Grimsby, opening the door, announced Sir Edwin
Ruthven. In a moment the friends were locked in each other's arms.
Edwin, straining Wallace to his heart, reproached him in affectionate
terms for having left him behind; but while he spoke, joy shone through
the tears which hung on his eyelids, and with the smiles of fraternal
love, again and again he kissed his friend's hand, and pressed it to
his bosom. Wallace answered his glad emotions with similar
demonstrations of affection, and when the agitations of their meeting
were subdued, he learned from Edwin that he had left the messenger at
some distance on the road, so impatient was he to embrace his friend
again, and to congratulate his dear cousin on her escape.
Edwin answered the anxious inquiries of Wallace respecting his country,
by informing him that Badenoch, having arrogated to himself the supreme
power in Scotland, had determined to take every advantage of the last
victory gained over King Edward. In this resolution he was supported
by the Lords Athol, Buchan, and Soulis, who were returned, full of
indignation from the Court of Durham. Edward removed to London; and
Badenoch, soon hearing that he was preparing other armies for the
subjugation of Scotland, sent embassadors to the Vatican to solicit the
Pope's interference. Flattered by this appeal, Boniface wrote a letter
to Edward, exhorting him to refrain from Further oppressing a country
over which he had no lawful power. Edward's answer was full of
artifice and falsehood, every good principle, and declaring his
determination to consolidate Great Britain into one kingdom, or to make
the northern part one universal grave.** Wallace sighed as he listened.
**Both these curious letters are extant in Hollingshed.
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