It was nine o’clock in the evening. Darnley, left alone,
carefully shut the doors within, and retired to rest, though in readiness to
rise to let in the servant who should come to spend the night with him.
Scarcely was he in bed than the same noise that he had heard the night
before recommenced; this time Darnley listened with all the attention
fear gives, and soon he had no longer any doubt but that several men
were walking about beneath him. It was useless to call, it was dangerous
to go out; to wait was the only course that remained to the king. He
made sure again that the doors were well fastened, put his sword under
his pillow, extinguished his lamp for fear the light might betray him,
and awaited in silence for his servant’s arrival; but the hours passed
away, and the servant did not come. At one o’clock in the morning,
Bothwell, after having talked some while with the queen, in the presence of
the captain of the guard, returned home to change his dress; after
some minutes, he came out wrapped up in the large cloak of a German
hussar, went through the guard-house, and had the castle gate opened.
Once outside, he took his way with all speed to Kirk of Field, which
he entered by the opening in the wall: scarcely had he made a step in
the garden than he met James Balfour, governor of the castle.
"Well,"
he said to him, "how far have we got?
"Everything is ready," replied
Balfour, "and we were waiting for you to set fire to the fuse". "That is
well," Bothwell answered—"but first I want to make sure that he is in his
room."
At these words, Bothwell opened the pavilion door with a false
key, and, having groped his way up the stairs; he went to listen at
Darnley’s door. Darnley, hearing no further noise, had ended by going to
sleep; but he slept with a jerky breathing which pointed to his
agitation. Little mattered it to Bothwell what kind of sleep it was, provided
that he was really in his room. He went down again in silence, then, as
he had come up, and taking a lantern from one of the conspirators, he
went himself into the lower room to see if everything was in order: this
room was full of barrels of powder, and a fuse ready prepared wanted but
a spark to set the whole on fire. Bothwell withdrew, then, to the end
of the garden with Balfour, David, Chambers, and three or four
others, leaving one man to ignite the fuse. In a moment this man rejoined
them.
There ensued some minutes of anxiety, during which the five men
looked at one another in silence and as if afraid of themselves; then,
seeing that nothing exploded, Bothwell impatiently turned round to
the engineer, reproaching him for having, no doubt through fear, done
his work badly. He assured his master that he was certain everything was
all right, and as Bothwell, impatient, wanted to return to the
house himself, to make sure, he offered to go back and see how things
stood. In fact, he went back to the pavilion, and, putting his head through
a kind of air-hole, he saw the fuse, which was still burning. Some
seconds afterwards, Bothwell saw him come running back, making a sign that
all was going well; at the same moment a frightful report was heard,
the pavilion was blown to pieces, the town and the firth were lit up with
a clearness exceeding the brightest daylight; then everything fell
back into night, and the silence was broken only by the fall of stones
and joists, which came down as fast as hail in a hurricane.
Next day
the body of the king was found in a garden in the neighbourhood: it had been
saved from the action of the fire by the mattresses on which he was lying,
and as, doubtless, in his terror he had merely thrown himself on his bed
wrapped in his dressing-gown and in his slippers, and as he was found thus,
without his slippers, which were flung some paces away, it was believed that
he had been first strangled, then carried there; but the most probable
version was that the murderers simply relied upon powder—an auxiliary
sufficiently powerful in itself for them to have no fear it would fail
them.
Was the queen an accomplice or not? No one has ever known save
herself, Bothwell, and God; but, yes or no, her conduct, imprudent this time
as always, gave the charge her enemies brought against her, if
not substance, at least an appearance of truth. Scarcely had she heard
the news than she gave orders that the body should be brought to her,
and, having had it stretched out upon a bench, she looked at it with
more curiosity than sadness; then the corpse, embalmed, was placed the
same evening, without pomp, by the side of Rizzio’s.
Scottish
ceremonial prescribes for the widows of kings retirement for forty days in a
room entirely closed to the light of day: on the twelfth day Mary had the
windows opened, and on the fifteenth set out with Bothwell for Seaton, a
country house situated five miles from the capital, where the French
ambassador, Ducroc, went in search of her, and made her remonstrances which
decided her to return to Edinburgh; but instead of the cheers which usually
greeted her coming, she was received by an icy silence, and a solitary woman
in the crowd called out, "God treat her as she deserves!"
The names of
the murderers were no secret to the people. Bothwell having brought a
splendid coat which was too large for him to a tailor, asking him to remake
it to his measure, the man recognised it as having belonged to the king.
"That’s right," said he; "it is the custom for the executioner to inherit
from the-condemned". Meanwhile, the Earl of Lennox, supported by the people’s
murmurs, loudly demanded justice for his son’s death, and came forward as the
accuser of his murderers. The queen was then obliged, to appease paternal
clamour and public resentment, to command the Earl of Argyll, the Lord Chief
Justice of the kingdom, to make investigations; the same day that this order
was given, a proclamation was posted up in the streets of Edinburgh, in which
the queen promised two thousand pounds sterling to whoever would make
known the king’s murderers. Next day, wherever this letter had been
affixed, another placard was found, worded thus:
"As it has been
proclaimed that those who should make known the king’s murderers should have
two thousand pounds sterling, I, who have made a strict search, affirm that
the authors of the murder are the Earl of Bothwell, James Balfour, the priest
of Flisk, David, Chambers, Blackmester, Jean Spens, and the queen
herself."
This placard was torn down; but, as usually happens, it had
already been read by the entire population.
The Earl of Lennox accused
Bothwell, and public opinion, which also accused him, seconded the earl with
such violence, that Mary was compelled to bring him to trial: only every
precaution was taken to deprive the prosecutor of the power of convicting the
accused. On the 28th March, the Earl of Lennox received notice that the 12th
April was fixed for the trial: he was granted a fortnight to collect
decisive proofs against the most powerful man in all Scotland; but the Earl
of Lennox, judging that this trial was a mere mockery, did not
appear. Bothwell, on the contrary, presented himself at the court,
accompanied by five thousand partisans and two hundred picked fusiliers, who
guarded the doors directly he had entered; so that he seemed to be rather a
king who is about to violate the law than an accused who comes to submit
to it. Of course there happened what was certain to happen—that is to
say, the jury acquitted Bothwell of the crime of which everyone, the
judges included, knew him to be guilty.
The day of the trial, Bothwell
had this written challenge placarded:
"Although I am sufficiently cleared
of the murder of the king, of which I have been falsely accused, yet, the
better to prove my innocence, I am, ready to engage in combat with whomsoever
will dare to maintain that I have killed the king."
The day after,
this reply appeared:
"I accept the challenge, provided that you select
neutral ground."
However, judgment had been barely given, when rumours of
a marriage between the queen and the Earl of Bothwell were abroad. However
strange and however mad this marriage, the relations of the two lovers were
so well known that no one doubted but that it was true. But as
everyone submitted to Bothwell, either through fear or through ambition, two
men only dared to protest beforehand against this union: the one was
Lord Herries, and the other James Melville.
Mary was at Stirling when
Lord Herries, taking advantage of Bothwell’s momentary absence, threw himself
at her feet, imploring her not to lose her honour by marrying her husband’s
murderer, which could not fail to convince those who still doubted it that
she was his accomplice. But the queen, instead of thanking Herries for this
devotion, seemed very much surprised at his boldness, and scornfully signing
to him to rise, she coldly replied that her heart was silent as regarded the
Earl of Bothwell, and that, if she should ever re-marry, which was not
probable, she would neither forget what she owed to her people nor what she
owed to herself.
Melville did not allow himself to be discouraged by
this experience, and pretended, to have received a letter that one of his
friends, Thomas Bishop, had written him from England. He showed this letter
to the queen; but at the first lines Mary recognised the style, and above
all the friendship of her ambassador, and giving the letter to the Earl
of Livingston, who was present, "There is a very singular letter,"
said she. "Read it. It is quite in Melvine’s manner."
Livingston
glanced through the letter, but had scarcely read the half of it when he took
Melville by the hand, and drawing him into the embrasure of a
window,
"My dear Melville," said he, "you were certainly mad when you
just now imparted this letter to the queen: as soon as the Earl of Bothwell
gets wind of it, and that will not be long, he will have you
assassinated. You have behaved like an honest man, it is true; but at court
it is better to behave as a clever man. Go away, then, as quickly as
possible; it is I who recommend it."
Melville did not require to be
told twice, and stayed away for a week. Livingston was not mistaken: scarcely
had Bothwell returned to the queen than he knew all that had passed. He burst
out into curses against Melville, and sought for him everywhere; but he could
not find him.
This beginning of opposition, weak as it was, none the less
disquieted Bothwell, who, sure of Mary’s love, resolved to make short work
of things. Accordingly, as the queen was returning from Stirling
to Edinburgh some days after the scenes we have just related,
Bothwell suddenly appeared at the Bridge of Grammont with a thousand
horsemen, and, having disarmed the Earl of Huntly, Livingston, and Melville,
who had returned to his mistress, he seized the queen’s horse by the
bridle, and with apparent violence he forced Mary to turn back and follow him
to Dunbar; which the queen did without any resistance—a strange thing
for one of Mary’s character.
The day following, the Earls of Huntly,
Livingston, Melville, and the people in their train were set at liberty;
then, ten days afterwards, Bothwell and the queen, perfectly reconciled,
returned to Edinburgh together.
Two days after this return, Bothwell
gave a great dinner to the nobles his partisans in a tavern. When the meal
was ended, on the very same table, amid half-drained glasses and empty
bottles, Lindsay, Ruthven, Morton, Maitland, and a dozen or fifteen other
noblemen signed a bond which not only set forth that upon their souls and
consciences Bothwell was innocent, but which further denoted him as the most
suitable husband for the queen. This bond concluded with this sufficiently
strange declaration:
"After all, the queen cannot do otherwise, since
the earl has carried her off and has lain with her."
Yet two
circumstances were still opposed to this marriage: the first, that Bothwell
had already been married three times, and that his three wives were living;
the second, that having carried off the queen, this violence might cause to
be regarded as null the alliance which she should contract with him: the
first of these objections was attended to, to begin with, as the one most
difficult to solve.
Bothwell’s two first wives were of obscure birth,
consequently he scorned to disquiet himself about them; but it was not so
with the third, a daughter of that Earl of Huntly who been trampled beneath
the horses’ feet, and a sister of Gordon, who had been
decapitated. Fortunately for Bothwell, his past behaviour made his wife long
for a divorce with an eagerness as great as his own. There was not
much difficulty, then, in persuading her to bring a charge of
adultery against her husband. Bothwell confessed that he had had
criminal intercourse with a relative of his wife, and the Archbishop of
St. Andrews, the same who had taken up his abode in that solitary house
at Kirk of Field to be present at Darnley’s death, pronounced the
marriage null. The case was begun, pushed on, and decided in ten
days.
As to the second obstacle, that of the violence used to the queen,
Mary undertook to remove it herself; for, being brought before the court,
she declared that not only did she pardon Bothwell for his conduct
as regarded her, but further that, knowing him to be a good and
faithful subject, she intended raising him immediately to new honours. In
fact, some days afterwards she created him Duke of Orkney, and on the 15th
of the same month—that is to say, scarcely four months after the death
of Darnley—with levity that resembled madness, Mary, who had petitioned
for a dispensation to wed a Catholic prince, her cousin in the third
degree, married Bothwell, a Protestant upstart, who, his
divorce notwithstanding, was still bigamous, and who thus found himself in
the position of having four wives living, including the queen.
The
wedding was dismal, as became a festival under such outrageous auspices.
Morton, Maitland, and some base flatterers of Bothwell alone were present at
it. The French ambassador, although he was a creature of the House of Guise,
to which the queen belonged, refused to attend it.
Mary’s delusion was
short-lived: scarcely was she in Bothwell’s power than she saw what a master
she had given herself. Gross, unfeeling, and violent, he seemed chosen by
Providence to avenge the faults of which he had been the instigator or the
accomplice. Soon his fits of passion reached such a point, that one day, no
longer able to endure them, Mary seized a dagger from Erskine, who was
present with Melville at one of these scenes, and would have struck herself,
saying that she would rather die than continue living unhappily as she did;
yet, inexplicable as it seems, in spite of these miseries, renewed without
ceasing, Mary, forgetting that she was wife and queen, tender and submissive
as a child, was always the first to be reconciled with
Bothwell.
Nevertheless, these public scenes gave a pretext to the nobles,
who only sought an opportunity for an outbreak. The Earl of Mar, the
young prince’s tutor, Argyll, Athol, Glencairn, Lindley, Boyd, and even
Morton and Maitland themselves, those eternal accomplices of Bothwell,
rose, they said, to avenge the death of the king, and to draw the son
from hands which had killed the father and which were keeping the
mother captive. As to Murray, he had kept completely in the background
during all the last events; he was in the county of Fife when the king
was assassinated, and three days before the trial of Bothwell he had
asked and obtained from his sister permission to take a journey on
the Continent.
The insurrection took place in such a prompt and
instantaneous manner, that the Confederate lords, whose plan was to surprise
and seize both Mary and Bothwell, thought they would succeed at the first
attempt.
The king and queen were at table with Lord Borthwick, who
was entertaining them, when suddenly it was announced that a large body
of armed men was surrounding the castle: Bothwell and Mary suspected
that they were aimed at, and as they had no means of resistance,
Bothwell dressed himself as a squire, Mary as a page, and both immediately
taking horse, escaped by one door just as the Confederates were coming in
by the other. The fugitives withdrew to Dunbar.
There they called
together all Bothwell’s friends, and made them sign a kind of treaty by which
they undertook to defend the queen and her husband. In the midst of all this,
Murray arrived from France, and Bothwell offered the document to him as to
the others; but Murray refused to put his signature to it, saying that it was
insulting him to think he need be bound by a written agreement when it was a
question of defending his sister and his queen. This refusal having led to
an altercation between him and Bothwell, Murray, true to his system
of neutrality, withdrew into his earldom, and let affairs follow
without him the fatal decline they had taken.
In the meantime the
Confederates, after having failed at Borthwick, not feeling strong enough to
attack Bothwell at Dunbar, marched upon Edinburgh, where they had an
understanding with a man of whom Bothwell thought himself sure. This man was
James Balfour, governor of the citadel, the same who had presided over the
preparation of the mine which had blown up Darnley, and whom Bothwell had,
met on entering the garden at Kirk of Field. Not only did Balfour deliver
Edinburgh Castle into the hands of the Confederates, but he also gave them a
little silver coffer of which the cipher, an "F" crowned, showed that it
had belonged to Francis II; and in fact it was a gift from her
first husband, which the queen had presented to Bothwell. Balfour stated
that this coffer contained precious papers, which in the
present circumstances might be of great use to Mary’s enemies. The
Confederate lords opened it, and found inside the three genuine or spurious
letters that we have quoted, the marriage contract of Mary and Bothwell,
and twelve poems in the queen’s handwriting. As Balfour had said,
therein lay, for her enemies, a rich and precious find, which was worth
more than a victory; for a victory would yield them only the queen’s
life, while Balfour’s treachery yielded them her
honour.
CHAPTER IV
Meanwhile Bothwell had levied
some troops, and thought himself in a position to hold the country:
accordingly, he set out with his army, without even waiting for the
Hamiltons, who were assembling their vassals, and June 15th, 1567, the two
opposed forces were face to face. Mary, who desired to try to avoid
bloodshed, immediately sent the French ambassador to the Confederate lords to
exhort them to lay aside their arms; but they replied "that the queen
deceived herself in taking them for rebels; that they were marching not
against her, but against Bothwell." Then the king’s friends did what they
could to break off the negotiations and give battle: it was already too late;
the soldiers knew that they were defending the cause of one man, and that
they were going to fight for a woman’s caprice, and not for the good of the
country: they cried aloud, then, that "since Bothwell alone was aimed at, it
was for Bothwell to defend his cause". And he, vain and blustering as
usual, gave out that he was ready to prove his innocence in person
against whomsoever would dare to maintain that he was guilty.
Immediately everyone with any claim to nobility in the rival camp accepted
the challenge; and as the honour was given to the bravest, Kirkcaldy
of Grange, Murray of Tullibardine, and Lord Lindsay of Byres defied
him successively. But, be it that courage failed him, be it that in
the moment of danger he did not himself believe in the justice of his
cause, he, to escape the combat, sought such strange pretexts that the
queen herself was ashamed; and his most devoted friends murmured.
Then
Mary, perceiving the fatal humour of men’s minds, decided not to run the risk
of a battle. She sent a herald to Kirkcaldy of Grange, who was commanding an
outpost, and as he was advancing without distrust to converse with the queen,
Bothwell, enraged at his own cowardice, ordered a soldier to fire upon him;
but this time Mary herself interposed, forbidding him under pain of death to
offer the least violence. In the meanwhile, as the imprudent order given by
Bothwell spread through the army, such murmurs burst forth that he clearly
saw that his cause was for ever lost.
That is what the queen thought
also; for the result of her conference with Lord Kirkcaldy was that she
should abandon Bothwell’s cause, and pass over into the camp of the
Confederates, on condition that they would lay down their arms before her and
bring her as queen to Edinburgh. Kirkcaldy left her to take these conditions
to the nobles, and promised to return next day with a satisfactory answer.
But at the moment of leaving Bothwell, Mary was seized again with that fatal
love for him that she was never able to surmount, and felt herself
overcome with such weakness, that, weeping bitterly, and before everyone,
she wanted Kirkcaldy to be told that she broke off all
negotiations; however, as Bothwell had understood that he was no longer safe
in camp, it was he who insisted that things should remain as they were;
and, leaving Mary in tears, he mounted, and setting off at full speed, he
did not stop till he reached Dunbar.
Next day, at the time appointed,
the arrival of Lord Kirkcaldy of Grange was announced by the trumpeters
preceding him. Mary mounted directly and went to meet him; them, as he
alighted to greet her, "My lord;" said she, "I surrender to you, on the
conditions that you have proposed to me on the part of the nobles, and here
is my hand as a sign of entire confidence". Kirkcaldy then knelt down,
kissed, the queen’s hand respectfully; and, rising, he took her horse by the
bridle and led it towards the Confederates’ camp.
Everyone of any rank
in the army received her with such marks of respect as entirely to satisfy
her; but it was not so at all with the soldiers and common people. Hardly had
the queen reached the second line, formed by them, than great murmurs arose,
and several voices cried, "To the stake, the adulteress! To the stake, the
parricide!" However, Mary bore these outrages stoically enough but a more
terrible trial yet was in store for her. Suddenly she saw rise before her a
banner, on which was depicted on one side the king dead and stretched out in
the fatal garden, and on the other the young prince kneeling, his hands
joined and his eyes raised to heaven, with this inscription, "O Lord! judge
and revenge my cause!" Mary reined in her horse abruptly at this sight,
and wanted to turn back; but she had scarcely moved a few paces when
the accusing banner again blocked her passage. Wherever she went, she
met this dreadful apparition. For two hours she had incessantly under
her eyes the king’s corpse asking vengeance, and the young prince her
son praying God to punish the murderers. At last she could endure it
no longer, and, crying out, she threw herself back, having completely
lost consciousness, and would have fallen, if someone had not caught hold
of her. In the evening she entered Edinburgh, always preceded by the
cruel banner, and she already had rather the air of a prisoner than of
a queen; for, not having had a moment during the day to attend to
her toilet, her hair was falling in disorder about her shoulders, her
face was pale and showed traces of tears; and finally, her clothes
were covered with dust and mud. As she proceeded through the town,
the hootings of the people and the curses of the crowd followed her.
At last, half dead with fatigue, worn out with grief, bowed down
with shame, she reached the house of the Lord Provost; but scarcely had
she got there when the entire population of Edinburgh crowded into
the square, with cries that from time to time assumed a tone of
terrifying menace. Several times, then, Mary wished to go to the window,
hoping that the sight of her, of which she had so often proved the
influence, would disarm this multitude; but each time she saw this banner
unfurling itself like a bloody curtain between herself and the people—a
terrible rendering of their feelings.
However, all this hatred was
meant still more for Bothwell than for her: they were pursuing Bothwell in
Darnley’s widow. The curses were for Bothwell: Bothwell was the adulterer,
Bothwell was the murderer, Bothwell was the coward; while Mary was the weak,
fascinated woman, who, that same evening, gave afresh proof of her
folly.
In fact, directly the falling night had scattered the crowd and a
little quiet was regained, Mary, ceasing to be uneasy on her own
account, turned immediately to Bothwell, whom she had been obliged to
abandon, and who was now proscribed and fleeing; while she, as she believed,
was about to reassume her title and station of queen. With that
eternal confidence of the woman in her own love, by which she
invariably measures the love of another, she thought that Bothwell’s
greatest distress was to have lost, not wealth and power, but to have
lost herself. So she wrote him a long letter, in which, forgetful of
herself, she promised him with the most tender expressions of love never
to desert him, and to recall him to her directly the breaking up of
the Confederate lords should give her power to do so; then, this
letter written, she called a soldier, gave him a purse of gold, and charged
him to take this letter to Dunbar, where Bothwell ought to be, and if
he were already gone, to follow him until he came up with him.
Then
she went to bed and slept more calmly; for, unhappy as she was, she believed
she had just sweetened misfortunes still greater than hers.
Next day the
queen was awakened by the step of an armed man who entered her room. Both
astonished and frightened at this neglect of propriety, which could augur
nothing good, Mary sat up in bed, and parting the curtains, saw standing
before her Lord Lindsay of Byres: she knew he was one of her oldest friends,
so she asked him in a voice which she vainly tried to make confident, what he
wanted of her at such a time.
"Do you know this writing, madam?" Lord
Lindsay asked in a rough voice, presenting to the queen the letter she had
written to Bothwell at night, which the soldier had carried to the
Confederate lords, instead of taking to its address.
"Yes, doubtless,
my lord," the queen answered; "but am I already a prisoner, then, that my
correspondence is intercepted? or is it no longer allowed to a wife to write
to her husband?"
"When the husband is a traitor," replied Lindsay, "no,
madam, it is no longer allowed to a wife to write to her husband—at least,
however, if this wife have a part in his treason; which seems to me, besides,
quite proved by the promise you make to this wretch to recall him to
you."
"My lord," cried Mary, interrupting Lindsay, "do you forget that
you are speaking to your queen."
"There was a time, madam," Lindsay
replied, "when I should have spoken to you in a more gentle voice, and
bending the knee, although it is not in the nature of us old Scotch to model
ourselves on your French courtiers; but for some time, thanks to your
changing loves, you have kept us so often in the field, in harness, that our
voices are hoarse from the cold night air, and our stiff knees can no longer
bend in our armour: you must then take me just as I am, madam; since to-day,
for the welfare of Scotland, you are no longer at liberty to choose
your favourites."
Mary grew frightfully pale at this want of respect,
to which she was not yet accustomed; but quickly containing her anger, as far
as possible—
"But still, my lord," said she, "however disposed I may be
to take you as you are, I must at least know by what right you come here.
That letter which you are holding in your hand would lead me to think it
is as a spy, if the ease with which you enter my room without being
asked did not make me believe it is as a gaoler. Have the goodness, then,
to inform me by which of these two names I must call you."
"Neither by
one nor the other, madam; for I am simply your fellow-traveller, chef of the
escort which is to take you to Lochleven Castle, your future residence. And
yet, scarcely have I arrived there than I shall be obliged to leave you to go
and assist the Confederate lords choose a regent for the
kingdom."
"So," said Mary, "it was as prisoner and not as queen that I
surrendered to Lord Kirkcaldy. It seems to me that things were agreed
upon otherwise; but I am glad to see how much time Scotch noblemen need
to betray their sworn undertakings".
"Your Grace forgets that these
engagements were made on one condition," Lindsay answered.
"On which?"
Mary asked.
"That you should separate for ever from your husband’s
murderer; and there is the proof," he added, showing the letter, "that you
had forgotten your promise before we thought of revoking ours."
"And
at what o’clock is my departure fixed?" said Mary, whom this discussion was
beginning to fatigue.
"At eleven o’clock, madam."
"It is well, my
lord; as I have no desire to make your lordship wait, you will have the
goodness, in withdrawing, to send me someone to help me dress, unless I am
reduced to wait upon myself."
And, in pronouncing these words, Mary made
a gesture so imperious, that whatever may have been Lindsay’s wish to reply,
he bowed and went out. Behind him entered Mary
Seyton.
CHAPTER V
At the time appointed the queen
was ready: she had suffered so much at Edinburgh that she left it without any
regret. Besides, whether to spare her the humiliations of the day before, or
to conceal her departure from any partisans who might remain to her, a litter
had been made ready. Mary got into it without any resistance, and after two
hours’ journey she reached Duddington; there a little vessel was waiting for
her, which set sail directly she was on board, and next day at dawn she
disembarked on the other side of the Firth of Forth in the county of
Fife.
Mary halted at Rosythe Castle only just long enough to breakfast,
and immediately recommenced her journey; for Lord Lindsay had declared
that he wished to reach his destination that same evening. Indeed, as the
sun was setting, Mary perceived gilded with his last rays the high towers
of Lochleven Castle, situated on an islet in the midst of the lake of
the same name.
No doubt the royal prisoner was already expected at
Lochleven Castle, for, on reaching the lake side, Lord Lindsay’s equerry
unfurled his banner, which till then had remained in its case, and waved it
from right to left, while his master blew a little hunting bugle which
he wore hanging from his neck. A boat immediately put off from the
island and came towards the arrivals, set in motion by four vigorous
oarsmen, who had soon propelled it across the space which separated it from
the bank. Mary silently got into it, and sat down at the stern, while
Lord Lindsay and his equerry stood up before her; and as her guide did
not seem any more inclined to speak than she was herself to respond, she
had plenty of time to examine her future dwelling.
The castle, or
rather the fortress of Lochleven, already somewhat gloomy in its situation
and architecture, borrowed fresh mournfulness still from the hour at which it
appeared to the queen’s gaze. It was, so far as she could judge amid the
mists rising from the lake, one of those massive structures of the twelfth
century which seem, so fast shut up are they, the stone armour of a giant. As
she drew near, Mary began to make out the contours of two great round towers,
which flanked the corners and gave it the severe character of a state prison.
A clump of ancient trees enclosed by a high wall, or rather by a rampart,
rose at its north front, and seemed vegetation in stone, and completed
the general effect of this gloomy abode, while, on the contrary, the
eye wandering from it and passing from islands to islands, lost itself
in the west, in the north, and in the south, in the vast plain of
Kinross, or stopped southwards at the jagged summits of Ben Lomond,
whose farthest slopes died down on the shores of the lake.
Three
persons awaited Mary at the castle door: Lady Douglas, William Douglas her
son, and a child of twelve who was called Little Douglas, and who was neither
a son nor a brother of the inhabitants of the castle, but merely a distant
relative. As one can imagine, there were few compliments between Mary and her
hosts; and the queen, conducted to her apartment, which was on the first
floor, and of which the windows overlooked the lake, was soon left with Mary
Seyton, the only one of the four Marys who had been allowed to accompany
her.
However, rapid as the interview had been, and short and measured
the words exchanged between the prisoner and her gaolers, Mary had had
time, together with what she knew of them beforehand, to construct for
herself a fairly accurate idea of the new personages who had just mingled in
her history.
Lady Lochleven, wife of Lord William Douglas, of whom we
have already said a few words at the beginning of this history, was a woman
of from fifty-five to sixty years of age, who had been handsome enough in
her youth to fix upon herself the glances of King James V, and who had had
a son by him, who was this same Murray whom we have already seen
figuring so often in Mary’s history, and who, although his birth
was illegitimate, had always been treated as a brother by the
queen.
Lady Lochleven had had a momentary hope, so great was the king’s
love for her, of becoming his wife, which upon the whole was possible,
the family of Mar, from which she was descended, being the equal of the
most ancient and the noblest families in Scotland. But, unluckily,
perhaps slanderously, certain talk which was circulating among the
young noblemen of the time came to James’s ears; it was said that
together with her royal lover the beautiful favourite had another, whom she
had chosen, no doubt from curiosity, from the very lowest class. It
was added that this Porterfeld, or Porterfield, was the real father of
the child who had already received the name of James Stuart, and whom
the king was educating as his son at the monastery of St. Andrews.
These rumours, well founded or not, had therefore stopped James V at
the moment when, in gratitude to her who had given him a son, he was on
the point of raising her to the rank of queen; so that, instead of
marrying her himself, he had invited her to choose among the nobles at court;
and as she was very handsome, and the king’s favour went with the
marriage, this choice, which fell on Lord William Douglas of Lochleven, did
not meet with any resistance on his part. However, in spite of this
direct protection, that James V preserved for her all his life, Lady
Douglas could never forget that she had fingered higher fortune; moreover,
she had a hatred for the one who, according to herself, had usurped
her place, and poor Mary had naturally inherited the profound animosity
that Lady Douglas bore to her mother, which had already come to light in
the few words that the two women had exchanged. Besides, in ageing,
whether from repentance for her errors or from hypocrisy, Lady Douglas
had become a prude and a puritan; so that at this time she united with
the natural acrimony of her character all the stiffness of the new
religion she had adopted.
William Douglas, who was the eldest son of
Lord Lochleven, on his mother’s side half-brother of Murray, was a man of
from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age, athletic, with hard and strongly
pronounced features, red-haired like all the younger branch, and who had
inherited that paternal hatred that for a century the Douglases cherished
against the Stuarts, and which was shown by so many plots, rebellions,
and assassinations. According as fortune had favoured or deserted
Murray, William Douglas had seen the rays of the fraternal star draw near
or away from him; he had then felt that he was living in another’s
life, and was devoted, body and soul, to him who was his cause of greatness
or of abasement. Mary’s fall, which must necessarily raise Murray, was
thus a source of joy for him, and the Confederate lords could not have
chosen better than in confiding the safe-keeping of their prisoner to
the instinctive spite of Lady Douglas and to the intelligent hatred of
her son.
As to Little Douglas, he was, as we have said, a child of
twelve, for some months an orphan, whom the Lochlevens had taken charge of,
and whom they made buy the bread they gave him by all sorts of harshness.
The result was that the child, proud and spiteful as a Douglas, and
knowing, although his fortune was inferior, that his birth was equal to his
proud relatives, had little by little changed his early gratitude into
lasting and profound hatred: for one used to say that among the Douglases
there was an age for loving, but that there was none for hating. It
results that, feeling his weakness and isolation, the child was
self-contained with strength beyond his years, and, humble and submissive
in appearance, only awaited the moment when, a grown-up young man, he
could leave Lochleven, and perhaps avenge himself for the proud protection
of those who dwelt there. But the feelings that we have just expressed
did not extend to all the members of the family: as much as from the
bottom of his heart the little Douglas detested William and his mother, so
much he loved George, the second of Lady Lochleven’s sons, of whom we
have not yet spoken, because, being away from the castle when the
queen arrived, we have not yet found an opportunity to present him to
our readers.
George, who at this time might have been about
twenty-five or twenty-six years old, was the second son of Lord Lochleven;
but by a singular chance, that his mother’s adventurous youth had caused Sir
William to interpret amiss, this second son had none of the characteristic
features of the Douglases’ full cheeks, high colour, large ears, and red
hair. The result was that poor George, who, on the contrary, had been given
by nature pale cheeks, dark blue eyes, and black hair, had been
since coming into the world an object of indifference to his father and
of dislike to his elder brother. As to his mother, whether she were
indeed in good faith surprised like Lord Douglas at this difference in
race, whether she knew the cause and inwardly reproached herself, George
had never been, ostensibly at least, the object of a very lively
maternal affection; so the young man, followed from his childhood by a
fatality that he could not explain, had sprung up like a wild shrub, full of
sap and strength, but uncultivated and solitary. Besides, from the time
when he was fifteen, one was accustomed to his motiveless absences, which
the indifference that everyone bore him made moreover perfectly
explicable; from time to time, however, he was seen to reappear at the
castle, like those migratory birds which always return to the same place but
only stay a moment, then take their way again without one’s knowing
towards what spot in the world they are directing their flight.
An
instinct of misfortune in common had drawn Little Douglas to George. George,
seeing the child ill-treated by everyone, had conceived an affection for him,
and Little Douglas, feeling himself loved amid the atmosphere of indifference
around him, turned with open arms and heart to George: it resulted from this
mutual liking that one day, when the child had committed I do not know what
fault, and that William Douglas raised the whip he beat his dogs with to
strike him, that George, who was sitting on a stone, sad and thoughtful, had
immediately sprung up, snatched the whip from his brother’s hands and had
thrown it far from him. At this insult William had drawn his sword, and
George his, so that these two brothers, who had hated one another for twenty
years like two enemies, were going to cut one another’s throats, when Little
Douglas, who had picked up the whip, coming back and kneeling before
William, offered him the ignominious weapon, saying,
"Strike, cousin;
I have deserved it."
This behaviour of the child had caused some minutes’
reflection to the two young men, who, terrified at the crime they were about
to commit, had returned their swords to their scabbards and had each gone
away in silence. Since this incident the friendship of George and Little
Douglas had acquired new strength, and on the child’s side it had
become veneration.
We dwell upon all these details somewhat at length,
perhaps, but no doubt our readers will pardon us when they see the use to be
made of them.
This is the family, less George, who, as we have said,
was absent at the time of her arrival, into the midst of which the queen had
fallen, passing in a moment from the summit of power to the position of
a prisoner; for from the day following her arrival Mary saw that it was
by such a title she was an inmate of Lochleven Castle. In fact,
Lady Douglas presented herself before her as soon as it was morning, and
with an embarrassment and dislike ill disguised beneath an appearance
of respectful indifference, invited Mary to follow her and take stock
of the several parts of the fortress which had been chosen beforehand
for her private use. She then made her go through three rooms, of which
one was to serve as her bedroom, the second as sitting-room, and the
third as ante-chamber; afterwards, leading the way down a spiral
staircase, which looked into the great hall of the castle, its only outlet,
she had crossed this hall, and had taken Mary into the garden whose trees
the queen had seen topping the high walls on her arrival: it was a
little square of ground, forming a flower-bed in the midst of which was
an artificial fountain. It was entered by a very low door, repeated in
the opposite wall; this second door looked on to the lake and, like all
the castle doors, whose keys, however, never left the belt or the pillow
of William Douglas, it was guarded night and day by a sentinel. This
was now the whole domain of her who had possessed the palaces, the
plains, and the mountains of an entire kingdom.
Mary, on returning to
her room, found breakfast ready, and William Douglas standing near the table
he was going to fulfil about the queen the duties of carver and
taster.
In spite of their hatred for Mary, the Douglases would have
considered it an eternal blemish on their honour if any accident should
have befallen the queen while she was dwelling in their castle; and it was
in order that the queen herself should not entertain any fear in
this respect that William Douglas, in his quality of lord of the manor,
had not only desired to carve before the queen, but even to taste first
in her presence, all the dishes served to her, as well as the water and
the several wines to be brought her. This precaution saddened Mary more
than it reassured her; for she understood that, while she stayed in
the castle, this ceremony would prevent any intimacy at table. However,
it proceeded from too noble an intention for her to impute it as a crime
to her hosts: she resigned herself, then, to this company, insupportable
as it was to her; only, from that day forward, she so cut short her
meals that all the time she was at Lochleven her longest dinners barely
lasted more than a quarter of an hour.
Two days after her arrival,
Mary, on sitting down to table for breakfast, found on her plate a letter
addressed to her which had been put there by William Douglas. Mary recognised
Murray’s handwriting, and her first feeling was one of joy; for if a ray of
hope remained to her, it came from her brother, to whom she had always been
perfectly kind, whom from Prior of St. Andrew’s she had made an earl in
bestowing on him the splendid estates which formed part of the old earldom of
Murray, and to whom, which was of more importance, she had since pardoned,
or pretended to pardon, the part he had taken in Rizzio’s
assassination.
Her astonishment was great, then, when, having opened the
letter, she found in it bitter reproaches for her conduct, an exhortation to
do penance, and an assurance several times repeated that she should
never leave her prison. He ended his letter in announcing to her that,
in spite of his distaste for public affairs, he had been obliged to
accept the regency, which he had done less for his country than for his
sister, seeing that it was the sole means he had of standing in the way of
the ignominious trial to which the nobles wished to bring her, as author,
or at least as chief accomplice, of Darnley’s death. This imprisonment
was then clearly a great good fortune for her, and she ought to thank
Heaven for it, as an alleviation of the fate awaiting her if he had
not interceded for her.
This letter was a lightning stroke for Mary:
only, as she did not wish to give her enemies the delight of seeing her
suffer, she contained her grief, and, turning to William Douglas—
"My
lord," said she, "this letter contains news that you doubtless know already,
for although we are not children by the same mother, he who writes to me is
related to us in the same degree, and will not have desired to write to his
sister without writing to his brother at the same time; besides, as a good
son, he will have desired to acquaint his mother with the unlooked-for
greatness that has befallen him."
"Yes, madam," replied William, "we know
since yesterday that, for the welfare of Scotland, my brother has been named
regent; and as he is a son as respectful to his mother as he is devoted to
his country, we hope that he will repair the evil that for five years
favourites of every sort and kind have done to both."
"It is like a
good son, and at the same time like a courteous host, to go back no farther
into the history of Scotland," replied Mary Stuart, "and not to make the
daughter blush for the father’s errors; for I have heard say that the evil
which your lordship laments was prior to the time to which you assign it, and
that King James V. also had formerly favourites, both male and female. It is
true that they add that the ones as ill rewarded his friendship as the others
his love. In this, if you are ignorant of it, my lord, you can be instructed,
if he is still living, by a certain. Porterfeld or Porterfield, I don’t know
which, understanding these names of the lower classes too ill to retain
and pronounce them, but about which, in my stead, your noble mother
could give you information."
With these words, Mary Stuart rose, and,
leaving William Douglas crimson with rage, she returned into her bedroom, and
bolted the door behind her.
All that day Mary did not come down,
remaining at her window, from which she at least enjoyed a splendid view over
the plains and village of Kinross; but this vast extent only contracted her
heart the more, when, bringing her gaze back from the horizon to the castle,
she beheld its walls surrounded on all sides by the deep waters of the lake,
on whose wide surface a single boat, where Little Douglas was fishing,
was rocking like a speck. For some moments Mary’s eyes mechanically
rested on this child, whom she had already seen upon her arrival, when
suddenly a horn sounded from the Kinross side. At the same moment Little
Douglas threw away his line, and began to row towards the shore whence
the signal had come with skill and strength beyond his years. Mary, who
had let her gaze rest on him absently, continued to follow him with
her eyes, and saw him make for a spot on the shore so distant that the
boat seemed to her at length but an imperceptible speck; but soon
it reappeared, growing larger as it approached, and Mary could then
observe that it was bringing back to the castle a new passenger, who, having
in his turn taken the oars, made the little skiff fly over the
tranquil water of the lake, where it left a furrow gleaming in the last rays
of the sun. Very soon, flying on with the swiftness of a bird, it was
near enough for Mary to see that the skilful and vigorous oarsman was a
young man from twenty-five to twenty-six years of age, with long black
hair, clad in a close coat of green cloth, and wearing a Highlander’s
cap, adorned with an eagle’s feather; then, as with his back turned to
the window he drew nearer, Little Douglas, who was leaning on his
shoulder, said a few words which made him turn round towards the
queen: immediately Mary, with an instinctive movement rather than with
the dread of being an object of idle curiosity, drew back, but not
so quickly, however, but that she had been able to see the handsome pale face
of the unknown, who, when she returned to the window, had disappeared behind one
of the corners of the castle. |
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