Everything is a cause of conjecture to a prisoner: it seemed to
Mary that this young man’s face was not unknown to her, and that he had
seen her already; but though great the care with which she questioned
her memory, she could not recall any distinct remembrance, so much so
that the queen ended in thinking it the play of her imagination, or that
some vague and distinct resemblance had deceived her.
However, in
spite of Mary, this idea had taken an important place in her mind: she
incessantly saw this little boat skimming the water, and the young man and
the child who were in it drawing near her, as if to bring her help. It
followed that, although there had been nothing real in all these captive’s
dreams, she slept that night a calmer sleep than she had yet done since she
had been in Lochleven Castle.
Next day, on rising, Mary ran to her
window: the weather was fine, and everything seemed to smile on her, the
water, the heavens and the earth. But, without being able to account for the
restraining motive, she did not want to go down into the ga den before
breakfast. When the door opened, ’she turned quickly round: it was, as on the
day before, William Douglas, who came to fulfil his duty as
taster.
The breakfast was a short and silent one; then, as soon as
Douglas had withdrawn, Mary descended in her turn: in crossing the courtyard
she saw two horses ready saddled, which pointed to the near departure of
a master and a squire. Was it the young man with the black hair
already setting out again? This is what Mary did not dare or did not wish
to ask. She consequently went her way, and entered the garden: at the
first glance she took it in in its full extent; it was deserted.
Mary
walked there a moment; then, soon tiring of the promenade, she went up again
to her room: in passing back through the courtyard she had noticed that the
horses were no longer there. Directly she returned into her apartment, she
went then to the window to see if she could discover anything upon the lake
to guide her in her conjectures: a boat was in fact receding, and in this
boat were the two horses and the two horsemen; one was William Douglas, the
other a simple squire from the house.
Mary continued watching the boat
until it had touched the shore. Arrived there, the two horsemen got out,
disembarked their horses, and went away at full gallop, taking the same road
by which the queen had come; so that, as the horses were prepared for a long
journey, Mary thought that William Douglas was going to Edinburgh. As to the
boat, scarcely had it landed its two passengers on the opposite shore than it
returned towards the castle.
At that moment Mary Seyton announced to
the queen that Lady Douglas was asking permission to visit her.
It was
the second time, after long hatred on Lady Douglas’s part and contemptuous
indifference on the queen’s, that the two women were face to face; therefore
the queen, with that instinctive impulse of coquetry which urges women, in
whatever situation they find themselves, to desire to be beautiful, above all
for women, made a sign to Mary Seyton, and, going to a little mirror fastened
to the wall in a heavy Gothic frame, she arranged her curls, and readjusted
the lace of her collar; then; having seated herself in the pose most
favourable to her, in a great arm-chair, the only one in her sitting-room,
she said smilingly to Mary Seyton that she might admit Lady Douglas, who was
immediately introduced.
Mary’s expectation was not disappointed: Lady
Douglas, in spite of her hatred for James Vs daughter, and mistress of
herself as she thought she as, could not prevent herself from showing by a
movement of surprise the impression that this marvelous beauty was making on
her: she thought she should find Mary crushed by her unhappiness, pallid from
her fatigues, humbled by captivity, and she saw hers calm, lovely, and
haughty as usual. Mary perceived the effect that she was producing, and
addressing herself with an ironical smile partly to Mary Seyton, who was
leaning on the back of her chair, and partly to her who was paying her
this unforeseen visit.
"We are fortunate to-day," said she, "for we
are going as it seems to enjoy the society of our good hostess, whom we thank
besides for having kindly maintained with us the empty ceremony of announcing
herself—a ceremony with which, having the keys of our apartment, she could
have dispensed."
"If my presence is inconvenient to your grace,"
replied Lady Lochleven, "I am all the more sorry for it, as circumstances
will oblige me to impose it twice daily, at least during the absence of my
son, who is summoned to Edinburgh by the regent; this is of what I came to
inform your grace, not with the empty ceremonial of the court, but with
the consideration which Lady Lochleven owes to everyone who has
received hospitality in her castle."
"Our good hostess mistakes our
intention," Mary answered, with affected good-nature; "and the regent himself
can bear witness to the pleasure we have always had in bringing nearer to us
the persons who can recall to us, even indirectly, our well-beloved father,
James V. It will be therefore unjustly that Lady Douglas will interpret in a
manner disagreeable to herself our surprise at seeing her; and the
hospitality that she offers us so obligingly does not promise us, in spite of
her goodwill, sufficient distractions that we should deprive ourselves
of those that her visits cannot fail to procure us."
"Unfortunately,
madam," replied Lady Lochleven, whom Mary was keeping standing before her,
"whatever pleasure I myself derive from these visits, I shall be obliged to
deprive myself of, except at the times I have mentioned. I am now too old to
bear fatigue, and I have, always been too proud to endure
sarcasms."
"Really, Seyton," cried Mary, seeming to recollect herself,
"we had not dreamed that Lady Lochleven, having won her right to a stool at
the court of the king my father, would have need to preserve it in
the prison of the queen his daughter. Bring forward a seat, Seyton, that
we be not deprived so soon, and by a failure of memory on our part, of
our gracious hostess’s company; or even," went on Mary, rising and
pointing out her own seat to Lady Lochleven, who was making a motion to
withdraw, "if a stool does not suit you, my lady, take this easy-chair: you
will not be the first member of your family to sit in my place."
At
this last allusion, which recalled to her Murray’s usurpation, Lady Lochleven
was no doubt about to make some exceedingly bitter reply, when the young man
with the dark hair appeared on the threshold, without being announced, and,
advancing towards Lady Lochleven, without saluting Mary—
"Madam," said
he, bowing to the former, "the boat which took my brother has just returned,
and one of the men in it is charged with a pressing charge that Lord William
forgot to make to you himself."
Then, saluting the old lady with the same
respect, he immediately went out of the room, without even glancing at the
queen, who, hurt by this impertinence, turned round to Mary Seyton, and, with
her usual calm—
"What have they told us, Seyton, of injurious rumours
which were spread about our worthy hostess apropos of a child with a pale
face and dark hair? If this child, as I have every reason to believe, has
become the young man who just went out of the room, I am ready to affirm to
all the incredulous that he is a true Douglas, if not for courage, of which
we cannot judge, then for insolence, of which he has just given us
proofs. Let us return, darling," continued the queen, leaning on Mary
Seyton’s arm; "for our good hostess, out of courtesy, might think herself
obliged to keep us company longer, while we know that she is impatiently
awaited elsewhere."
With these words, Mary went into her bedroom;
while the old lady, still quite stunned with the shower of sarcasms that the
queen had rained on her, withdrew, murmuring, "Yes, yes, he is a Douglas, and
with God’s help he will prove it, I hope."
The queen had had strength
as long as she was sustained by her enemy’s presence, but scarcely was she
alone than she sank into a chair, and no longer having any witness of her
weakness than Mary Seyton, burst into tears. Indeed, she had just been
cruelly wounded: till then no man had come near her who had not paid homage
either to the majesty of her rank or to the beauty of her countenance. But
precisely he, on whom she had reckoned, without knowing why, with instinctive
hopes, insulted her at one and the same time in her double pride of queen and
woman: thus she remained shut up till evening.
At dinner-time, just as
Lady Lochleven had informed Mary, she ascended to the queen’s apartment, in
her dress of honour, and preceding four servants who were carrying the
several dishes composing the prisoner’s repast, and who, in their turn, were
followed by the old castle steward, having, as on days of great ceremony, his
gold chain round his neck and his ivory stick in his hand. The servants’
placed the dishes on the table, and waited in silence for the moment when it
should please the queen to come out of her room; but at this moment the door
opened, and in place of the queen Mary Seyton appeared.
"Madam," said
she on entering, "her grace was indisposed during the day, and will take
nothing this evening; it will be useless, then, for you to wait
longer."
"Permit me to hope," replied Lady Lochleven, "that she will
change her decision; in any case, see me perform my office."
At these
words, a servant handed Lady Lochleven bread and salt on a silver salver,
while the old steward, who, in the absence of William Douglas, fulfilled the
duties of carver, served to her on a plate of the same metal a morsel from
each of the dishes that had been brought; then, this transaction
ended.
"So the queen will not appear to-day?" Lady Lochleven
inquired.
"It is her Majesty’s resolve," replied Mary Seyton.
"Our
presence is then needless," said the old lady; "but in any case the table is
served, and if her grace should have need of anything else, she would have
but to name it."
With these words, Lady Lochleven, with the same
stiffness and the same dignity with which she had come, withdrew, followed by
her four servants and her steward.
As Lady Lochleven had foreseen, the
queen, yielding to the entreaties of Mary Seyton, came out of her room at
last, towards eight o’clock in the evening, sat down to table, and, served by
the only maid of honour left her, ate a little; then, getting up, she went to
the window.
It was one of those magnificent summer evenings on which the
whole of nature seems making holiday: the sky was studded with stars, which
were reflected in the lake, and in their midst, like a more fiery star,
the flame of the chafing-dish shone, burning at the stern of a little
boat: the queen, by the gleam of the light it shed, perceived George
Douglas and Little Douglas, who were fishing. However great her wish to
profit by this fine evening to breathe the pure night air, the sight of
this young man who had so grossly insulted her this very day made such a
keen impression on her that she shut her window directly, and, retiring
into her room, went to bed, and made her companion in captivity read
several prayers aloud; then, not being able to sleep, so greatly was
she agitated, she rose, and throwing on a mantle went again to the
window the boat had disappeared.
Mary spent part of the night gazing
into the immensity of the heavens, or into the depths of the lake; but in
spite of the nature of the thoughts agitating her, she none the less found
very great physical alleviation in contact with this pure air and in
contemplation of this peaceful and silent night: thus she awoke next day
calmer and more resigned. Unfortunately, the sight of Lady Lochleven, who
presented herself at breakfast-time, to fulfil her duties as taster, brought
back her irritability. Perhaps, however, things would have gone on
smoothly if Lady Lochleven, instead of remaining standing by the sideboard,
had withdrawn after having tasted the various dishes of the courses;
but this insisting on remaining throughout the meal, which was at bottom
a mark of respect, seemed to the queen unbearable tyranny.
"Darling,"
said she, speaking to Mary Seyton, "have you already forgotten that our good
hostess complained yesterday of the fatigue she felt inn standing? Bring her,
then, one of the two stools which compose our royal furniture, and take care
that it is not the one with the leg broken". "If the furniture of Lochleven
Castle is in such bad condition, madam," the old lady replied, "it is the
fault of the kings of Scotland: the poor Douglases for nearly a century have
had such a small part of their sovereigns’ favour, that they have not been
able to keep up the splendour of their ancestors to the level of that of
private individuals, and because there was in Scotland a certain musician, as
I am informed, who spent their income for a whole year in one
month."
"Those who know how to take so well, my lady," the queen
answered, "have no need of being given to: it seems to me the Douglases have
lost nothing by waiting, and there is not a younger son of this noble
family who might not aspire to the highest alliances; it is truly
vexatious that our sister the queen of England has taken a vow of virginity;
as is stated."
"Or rather," interrupted Lady Lochleven, "that the
Queen of Scotland is not a widow by her third husband. But," continued the
old lady, pretending to recollect herself, "I do not say that to reproach
your grace. Catholics look upon marriage as a sacrament, and on this
head receive it as often as they can."
"This, then," returned Mary,
"is the difference between them and the Huguenots; for they, not having the
same respect for it, think it is allowed them to dispense with it in certain
circumstances."
At this terrible sarcasm Lady Lochleven took a step
towards Mary Stuart, holding in her hand the knife which she had just been
using to cut off a piece of meat brought her to taste; but the queen rose up
with so great a calm and with such majesty, that either from involuntary
respect or shame of her first impulse, she let fall the weapon she was
holding, and not finding anything sufficiently strong in reply to express
her feelings, she signed to the servants to follow her, and went out of
the apartment with all the dignity that anger permitted her to summon to
her aid.
Scarcely had Lady Lochleven left the room than the queen sat
down again, joyful and triumphant at the victory she had just gained, and ate
with a better appetite than she had yet done since she was a prisoner,
while Mary Seyton deplored in a low tone and with all possible respect
this fatal gift of repartee that Mary had received, and which, with
her beauty, was one of the causes of all her misfortunes; but the queen
did nothing but laugh at all her observations, saying she was curious to
see the figure her good hostess would cut at dinnertime.
After
breakfast, the queen went down into the garden: her satisfied pride had
restored some of her cheerfulness, so much so that, seeing, while crossing
the hall, a mandolin lying forgotten on a chair, she told Mary Seyton to take
it, to see, she said, if she could recall her old talent. In reality the
queen was one of the best musicians of the time, and played admirably, says
Brantome, on the lute and viol d’amour, an instrument much resembling the
mandolin.
Mary Seyton obeyed.
Arrived in the garden, the queen sat
down in the deepest shade, and there, having tuned her instrument, she at
first drew from it lively and light tones, which soon darkened little by
little, at the same time that her countenance assumed a hue of deep
melancholy. Mary Seyton looked at her with uneasiness, although for a long
time she had been used to these sudden changes in her mistress’s humour, and
she was about to ask the reason of this gloomy veil suddenly spread over her
face, when, regulating her harmonies, Mary began to sing in a low voice, and
as if for herself alone, the following verses:
"Caverns, meadows,
plains and mounts, Lands of tree and stone, Rivers, rivulets and
founts, By which I stray alone, Bewailing as I go, With
tears that overflow, Sing will I The miserable woe That
bids me grieve and sigh.
Ay, but what is here to lend Ear to
my lament? What is here can comprehend My dull
discontent? Neither grass nor reed, Nor the ripples
heed, Flowing by, While the stream with speed Hastens
from my eye.
Vainly does my wounded heart Hope, alas, to
heal; Seeking, to allay its smart, Things that cannot
feel. Better should my pain Bitterly complain, Crying
shrill, To thee who dost constrain My spirit to such
ill.
Goddess, who shalt never die, List to what I
say; Thou who makest me to lie Weak beneath thy sway, If
my life must know Ending at thy blow, Cruellest! Own it
perished so But at thy behest.
Lo! my face may all men
see Slowly pine and fade, E'en as ice doth melt and flee
Near a furnace laid. Yet the burning ray Wasting me away
Passion's glow, Wakens no display Of pity for my
woe.
Yet does every neighbour tree, Every rocky
wall, This my sorrow know and see; So, in brief, doth
all Nature know aright This my sorry plight; Thou
alone Takest thy delight To hear me cry and moan.
But if it be thy will, To see tormented still Wretched
me, Then let my woful ill Immortal be."
This last verse
died away as if the queen were exhausted, and at the same time the mandolin
slipped from her hands, and would have fallen to the ground had not Mary
Seyton thrown herself on her knees and prevented it. The young girl remained
thus at her mistress’s feet for some time, gazing at her silently, and as she
saw that she was losing herself more and more in gloomy reverie—
"Have
those lines brought back to your Majesty some sad remembrance?" she asked
hesitatingly.
"Oh, yes," answered the queen; "they reminded me of the
unfortunate being who composed them."
"And may I, without
indiscretion, inquire of your grace who is their author?"
"Alas! he
was a noble, brave, and handsome young man, with a faithful heart and a hot
head, who would defend me to-day, if I had defended him then; but his
boldness seemed to me rashness, and his fault a crime. What was to be done? I
did not love him. Poor Chatelard! I was very cruel to him."
"But you
did not prosecute him, it was your brother; you did not condemn him, the
judges did."
"Yes, yes; I know that he too was Murray’s victim, and that
is no doubt the reason that I am calling him to mind just now. But I was able
to pardon him, Mary, and I was inflexible; I let ascend the scaffold a
man whose only crime was in loving me too well; and now I am astonished
and complain of being abandoned by everyone. Listen, darling, there is
one thing that terrifies me: it is, that when I search within myself I
find that I have not only deserved my fate, but even that God did not
punish me severely enough."
"What strange thoughts for your grace!"
cried Mary; "and see where those unlucky lines which returned to your mind
have led you, the very day when you were beginning to recover a little of
your cheerfulness."
"Alas!" replied the queen, shaking her head and
uttering a deep sigh, "for six years very few days have passed that I have
not repeated those lines to myself, although it may be for the first time
to-day that I repeat them aloud. He was a Frenchman too, Mary: they have
exiled from me, taken or killed all who came to me from France. Do you
remember that vessel which was swallowed up before our eyes when we came out
of Calais harbour? I exclaimed then that it was a sad omen: you all wanted
to reassure me. Well, who was right, now, you or I?"
The queen was in
one of those fits of sadness for which tears are the sole remedy; so Mary
Seyton, perceiving that not only would every consolation be vain, but also
unreasonable, far from continuing to react against her mistress’s melancholy,
fully agreed with her: it followed that the queen, who was suffocating, began
to weep, and that her tears brought her comfort; then little by little she
regained self-control, and this crisis passed as usual, leaving her firmer
and more resolute than ever, so that when she went up to her room again it
was impossible to read the slightest alteration in her
countenance.
The dinner-hour was approaching, and Mary, who in the
morning was looking forward impatiently to the enjoyment of her triumph over
Lady Lochleven, now saw her advance with uneasiness: the mere idea of
again facing this woman, whose pride one was always obliged to oppose
with insolence, was, after the moral fatigues of the day, a fresh
weariness. So she decided not to appear for dinner, as on the day before: she
was all the more glad she had taken this resolution, that this time it
was not Lady Lochleven who came to fulfil the duties enjoined on a member
of the family to make the queen easy, but George Douglas, whom his
mother in her displeasure at the morning scene sent to replace her. Thus,
when Mary Seyton told the queen that she saw the young man with dark
hair cross the courtyard on his way to her, Mary still further
congratulated herself on her decision; for this young man’s insolence had
wounded her more deeply than all his mother’s haughty insults. The queen was
not a little astonished, then, when in a few minutes Mary Seyton returned
and informed her that George Douglas, having sent away the servants,
desired the honour of speaking to her on a matter of importance. At first
the queen refused; but Mary Seyton told her that the young man’s air
and manner this time were so different from what she had seen two
days before, that she thought her mistress would be wrong to refuse
his request.
The queen rose then, and with the pride and majesty
habitual to her, entered the adjoining room, and, having taken three steps,
stopped with a disdainful air, waiting for George to address her.
Mary
Seyton had spoken truly: George Douglas was now another man. To-day he seemed
to be as respectful and timid as the preceding day he had seemed haughty and
proud. He, in his turn, made a step towards the queen; but seeing Mary Seyton
standing behind her—
"Madam," said he, "I wished to speak with your
Majesty alone: shall I not obtain this favour?"
"Mary Seyton is not a
stranger to me, Sir: she is my sister, my friend; she is more than all that,
she is my companion in captivity."
"And by all these claims, madam, I
have the utmost veneration for her; but what I have to tell you cannot be
heard by other ears than yours. Thus, madam, as the opportunity furnished now
may perhaps never present itself again, in the name of what is dearest to
you, grant me what I ask."
There was such a tone of respectful prayer
in George’s voice that Mary turned to the young girl, and, making her a
friendly sign with her hand—
"Go, then, darling," said she; "but be easy,
you will lose nothing by not hearing. Go."
Mary Seyton withdrew; the
queen smilingly looked after her, till the door was shut; then, turning to
George—
"Now, sir," said she, "we are alone, speak."
But George,
instead of replying, advanced to the queen, and, kneeling on one knee, drew
from his breast a paper which he presented to her. Mary took it with
amazement, unfolded it, glancing at Douglas, who remained in the same
posture, and read as follows:
We, earls, lords, and barons, in
consideration that our queen is detained at Lochleven, and that her faithful
subjects cannot have access to her person; seeing, on the other hand, that
our duty pledges us to provide for her safety, promise and swear to employ
all reasonable means which will depend on us to set her at liberty again on
conditions compatible with the honour of her Majesty, the welfare of the
kingdom, and even with the safety of those who keep her in prison, provided
that they consent to give her up; that if they refuse, we declare that we
are prepared to make use of ourselves, our children, our friends,
our servants, our vassals, our goods, our persons, and our lives, to
restore her to liberty, to procure the safety of the prince, and to
co-operate in punishing the late king’s murderers. If we are assailed for
this intent, whether as a body or in private, we promise to defend
ourselves, and to aid one another, under pain of infamy and perjury. So may
God help us.
"Given with our own hands at Dumbarton,
"St.
Andrews, Argyll, Huntly, Arbroath, Galloway, Ross, Fleming, Herries,
Stirling, Kilwinning, Hamilton, and Saint-Clair, Knight."
"And Seyton!"
cried Mary, "among all these signatures, I do not see that of my faithful
Seyton."
Douglas, still kneeling, drew from his breast a second paper,
and presented it to the queen with the same marks of respect. It
contained only these few words:
"Trust George Douglas; for your
Majesty has no more devoted friend in the entire kingdom.
"SEYTON."
Mary lowered her eyes to Douglas with an expression which was
hers only; then, giving him her hand to raise him—
"Ah!" said she,
with a sigh more of joy than of sadness, "now I see that God, in spite of my
faults, has not yet abandoned me. But how is it, in this castle, that you, a
Douglas.... oh! it is incredible!"
"Madam," replied George, "seven years
have passed since I saw you in France for the first time, and for seven years
I have loved you". Mary moved; but Douglas put forth his hand and shook his
head with an air of such profound sadness, that she understood that she might
hear what the young man had to say. He continued: "Reassure yourself, madam;
I should never have made this confession if, while explaining my conduct to
you, this confession would not have given you greater confidence in me.
Yes, for seven years I have loved you, but as one loves a star that one
can never reach, a madonna to whom one can only pray; for seven years I
have followed you everywhere without you ever having paid attention to
me, without my saying a word or making a gesture to attract your notice.
I was on the knight of Mevillon’s galley when you crossed to Scotland;
I was among the regent’s soldiers when you beat Huntly; I was in
the escort which accompanied you when you went to see the sick king
at Glasgow; I reached Edinburgh an hour after you had left it
for Lochleven; and then it seemed to me that my mission was revealed to
me for the first time, and that this love for which till then, I
had reproached myself as a crime, was on the contrary a favour from God.
I learned that the lords were assembled at Dumbarton: I flew thither.
I pledged my name, I pledged my honour, I pledged my life; and I
obtained from them, thanks to the facility I had for coming into this
fortress, the happiness of bringing you the paper they have just signed.
Now, madam, forget all I have told you, except the assurance of my
devotion and respect: forget that I am near you; I am used to not being
seen: only, if you have need of my life, make a sign; for seven years my
life has been yours."
"Alas!" replied Mary, "I was complaining this
morning of no longer being loved, and I ought to complain, on the contrary,
that I am still loved; for the love that I inspire is fatal and mortal. Look
back, Douglas, and count the tombs that, young as I am, I have already left
on my path—Francis II, Chatelard, Rizzio, Darnley.... Oh to attach one’s
self to my fortunes more than love is needed now heroism and devotion
are requisite so much the more that, as you have said, Douglas, it is
love without any possible reward. Do you understand?"
"Oh, madam,
madam," answered Douglas, "is it not reward beyond my deserts to see you
daily, to cherish the hope that liberty will be restored to you through me,
and to have at least, if I do not give it you, the certainty of dying in your
sight?"
"Poor young man!" murmured Mary, her eyes raised to heaven, as if
she were reading there beforehand the fate awaiting her new
defender.
"Happy Douglas, on the contrary," cried George, seizing the
queen’s hand and kissing it with perhaps still more respect than love,
"happy Douglas! for in obtaining a sigh from your Majesty he has
already obtained more than he hoped."
"And upon what have you decided
with my friends?" said the queen, raising Douglas, who till then had remained
on his knees before her.
"Nothing yet," George replied; "for we scarcely
had time to see one another. Your escape, impossible without me, is difficult
even with me; and your Majesty has seen that I was obliged publicly to fail
in respect, to obtain from my mother the confidence which gives me the
good fortune of seeing you to-day: if this confidence on my mother’s or
my brother’s part ever extends to giving up to me the castle keys, then
you are saved! Let your Majesty not be surprised at anything, then: in
the presence of others, I shall ever be always a Douglas, that is an
enemy; and except your life be in danger, madam, I shall not utter a word,
I shall not make a gesture which might betray the faith that I have
sworn you; but, on your side, let your grace know well, that present
or absent, whether I am silent or speak, whether I act or remain inert,
all will be in appearance only, save my devotion. Only," continued
Douglas, approaching the window and showing to the queen a little house
on Kinross hill,—"only, look every evening in that direction, madam, and
so long as you see a light shine there, your friends will be keeping
watch for you, and you need not lose hope."
"Thanks, Douglas, thanks,"
said the queen; "it does one good to meet with a heart like yours from time
to time—oh! thanks."
"And now, madam," replied the young man, "I must
leave your Majesty; to remain longer with you would be to raise suspicions,
and a single doubt of me, think of it well, madam, and that light which is
your sole beacon is extinguished, and all returns into night."
With
these words, Douglas bowed more respectfully than he had yet done, and
withdrew, leaving Mary full of hope, and still more full of pride; for this
time the homage that she had just received was certainly for the woman and
not for the queen.
As the queen had told him, Mary Seyton was informed of
everything, even the love of Douglas, and, the two women impatiently awaited
the evening to see if the promised star would shine on the horizon. Their
hope was not in vain: at the appointed time the beacon was lit. The
queen trembled with joy, for it was the confirmation of her hopes, and
her companion could not tear her from the window, where she remained
with her gaze fastened on the little house in Kinross. At last she yielded
to Mary Seyton’s prayers, and consented to go to bed; but twice in
the night she rose noiselessly to go to the window: the light was
always shining, and was not extinguished till dawn, with its sisters the
stars.
Next day, at breakfast, George announced to the queen the return
of his brother, William Douglas: he arrived the same evening; as to
himself, George, he had to leave Lochleven next morning, to confer with
the nobles who had signed the declaration, and who had immediately
separated to raise troops in their several counties. The queen could not
attempt to good purpose any escape but at a time when she would be sure
of gathering round her an army strong enough to hold the country; as
to him, Douglas, one was so used to his silent disappearances and to
his unexpected returns, that there was no reason to fear that his
departure would inspire any suspicion.
All passed as George had said:
in the evening the sound of a bugle announced the arrival of William Douglas;
he had with him Lord Ruthven, the son of him who had assassinated Rizzio, and
who, exiled with Morton after the murder, died in England of the sickness
with which he was already attacked the day of the terrible catastrophe in
which we have seen him take such a large share. He preceded by one day Lord
Lindsay of Byres and Sir Robert Melville, brother of Mary’s former ambassador
to Elizabeth: all three were charged with a mission from the regent to
the queen.
On the following day everything fell back into the usual
routine, and William Douglas reassumed his duties as carver. Breakfast passed
without Mary’s having learned anything of George’s departure or
Ruthven’s arrival. On rising from the table she went to her window: scarcely
was she there than she heard the sound of a horn echoing on the shores
of the lake, and saw a little troop of horsemen halt, while waiting for
the boat to came and take those who were going to the castle.
The
distance was too great for Mary to recognise any of the visitors; but it was
clear, from the signs of intelligence exchanged between the little troop and
the inhabitants of the fortress, that the newcomers were her enemies. This
was a reason why the queen, in her uneasiness, should not lose sight for a
moment of the boat which was going to fetch them. She saw only two men get
into it; and immediately it put off again for the castle.
As the boat
drew nearer, Mary’s presentiments changed to real fears, for in one of the
men coming towards her she thought she made out Lord Lindsay of Byres, the
same who, a week before, had brought her to her prison. It was indeed he
himself, as usual in a steel helmet without a visor, which allowed one to see
his coarse face designed to express strong passions, and his long black beard
with grey hairs here and there, which covered his chest: his person was
protected, as if it were in time of war, with his faithful suit of armour,
formerly polished and well gilded, but which, exposed without ceasing to rain
and mist, was now eaten up with rust; he had slung on his back, much as one
slings a quiver, a broadsword, so heavy that it took two hands to manage it,
and so long that while the hilt reached the left shoulder the point
reached the right spur: in a word, he was still the same soldier, brave
to rashness but brutal to insolence, recognising nothing but right
and force, and always ready to use force when he believed himself in
the right.
The queen was so much taken up with the sight of Lord
Lindsay of Byres, that it was only just as the boat reached the shore that
she glanced at his companion and recognised Robert Melville: this was some
consolation, for, whatever might happen, she knew that she should find in him
if not ostensible at least secret sympathy. Besides, his dress, by which
one could have judged him equally with Lord Lindsay, was a perfect
contrast to his companion’s. It consisted of a black velvet doublet, with a
cap and a feather of the same hue fastened to it with a gold clasp; his
only weapon, offensive or defensive, was a little sword, which he seemed
to wear rather as a sign of his rank than for attack or defence. As to
his features and his manners, they were in harmony with this
peaceful appearance: his pale countenance expressed both acuteness
and intelligence; his quick eye was mild, and his voice insinuating;
his figure slight and a little bent by habit rather than by years, since
he was but forty-five at this time, indicated an easy and
conciliatory character.
However, the presence of this man of peace,
who seemed entrusted with watching over the demon of war, could not reassure
the queen, and as to get to the landing-place, in front of the great door of
the castle, the boat had just disappeared behind the corner of a tower, she
told Mary Seyton to go down that she might try to learn what cause brought
Lord Lindsay to Lochleven, well knowing that with the force of character
with which she was endowed, she need know this cause but a few
minutes beforehand, whatever it might be, to give her countenance that calm
and that majesty which she had always found to influence her
enemies.
Left alone, Mary let her glance stray back to the little house
in Kinross, her sole hope; but the distance was too great to
distinguish anything; besides, its shutters remained closed all day, and
seemed to open only in the evening, like the clouds, which, having covered
the sky for a whole morning, scatter at last to reveal to the lost sailor
a solitary star. She had remained no less motionless, her gaze
always fixed on the same object, when she was drawn from this
mute contemplation by the step of Mary Seyton.
"Well, darling?" asked
the queen, turning round.
"Your Majesty is not mistaken," replied the
messenger: "it really was Sir Robert Melville and Lord Lindsay; but there
came yesterday with Sir William Douglas a third ambassador, whose name, I am
afraid, will be still more odious to your Majesty than either of the two I
have just pronounced."
"You deceive yourself, Mary," the queen
answered: "neither the name of Melville nor that of Lindsay is odious to me.
Melville’s, on the contrary, is, in my present circumstances, one of those
which I have most pleasure in hearing; as to Lord Lindsay’s, it is doubtless
not agreeable to me, but it is none the less an honourable name,
always borne by men rough and wild, it is true, but incapable of
treachery. Tell me, then, what is this name, Mary; for you see I am calm
and prepared."
"Alas! madam," returned Mary, "calm and prepared as you
may be, collect all your strength, not merely to hear this name uttered, but
also to receive in a few minutes the man who bears it; for this name is that
of Lord Ruthven."
Mary Seyton had spoken truly, and this name had a
terrible influence upon the queen; for scarcely had it escaped the young
girl’s lips than Mary Stuart uttered a cry, and turning pale, as if she were
about to faint, caught hold of the window-ledge.
Mary Seyton,
frightened at the effect produced by this fatal name, immediately sprang to
support the queen; but she, stretching one hand towards her, while she laid
the other on her heart—
"It is nothing," said she; "I shall be better in
a moment. Yes, Mary, yes, as you said, it is a fatal name and mingled with
one of my most bloody memories. What such men are coming to ask of me must be
dreadful indeed. But no matter, I shall soon be ready to receive my
brother’s ambassadors, for doubtless they are sent in his name. You,
darling, prevent their entering, for I must have some minutes to myself: you
know me; it will not take me long."
With these words the queen
withdrew with a firm step to her bedchamber.
Mary Seyton was left alone,
admiring that strength of character which made of Mary Stuart, in all other
respects so completely woman-like, a man in the hour of danger. She
immediately went to the door to close it with the wooden bar that one passed
between two iron rings, but the bar had been taken away, so that there was no
means of fastening the door from within. In a moment she heard someone coming
up the stairs, and guessing from the heavy, echoing step that this must be
Lord Lindsay, she looked round her once again to see if she could find
something to replace the bar, and finding nothing within reach, she passed
her arm through the rings, resolved to let it be broken rather than allow
anyone to approach her mistress before it suited her. Indeed, hardly had
those who were coming up reached the landing than someone knocked
violently, and a harsh voice cried:
"Come, come, open the door; open
directly."
"And by what right," said Mary Seyton, "am I ordered thus
insolently to open the Queen of Scotland’s door?"
"By the right of the
ambassador of the regent to enter everywhere in his name. I am Lord Lindsay,
and I am come to speak to Lady Mary Stuart."
"To be an ambassador,"
answered Mary Seyton, "is not to be exempted from having oneself announced in
visiting a woman, and much more a queen; and if this ambassador is, as he
says, Lord Lindsay, he will await his sovereign’s leisure, as every Scottish
noble would do in his place."
"By St. Andrew!" cried Lord Lindsay, "open,
or I will break in the door."
"Do nothing to it, my lord, I entreat
you," said another voice, which Mary recognised as Meville’s. "Let us rather
wait for Lord Ruthven, who is not yet ready."
"Upon my soul," cried
Lindsay, shaking the door, "I shall not wait a second". Then, seeing that it
resisted, "Why did you tell me, then, you scamp," Lindsay went on, speaking
to the steward, "that the bar had been removed?
"It is true," replied
he.
"Then," returned Lindsay, "with what is this silly wench securing
the door?"
"With my arm, my lord, which I have passed through the
rings, as a Douglas did for King James I, at a time when Douglases had dark
hair instead of red, and were faithful instead of being
traitors."
"Since you know your history so well," replied Lindsay, in a
rage," you should remember that that weak barrier did not hinder Graham,
that Catherine Douglas’s arm was broken like a willow wand, and that James
I was killed like a dog."
"But you, my lord," responded the courageous
young girl, "ought also to know the ballad that is still sung in our
time—
"’Now, on Robert Gra’am, The king’s destroyer, shame! To Robert
Graham cling Shame, who destroyed our king.’"
"Mary," cried the queen,
who had overheard this altercation from her bedroom,—"Mary, I command you to
open the door directly: do you hear?"
Mary obeyed, and Lord Lindsay
entered, followed by Melville, who walked behind him, with slow steps and
bent head. Arrived in the middle of the second room, Lord Lindsay stopped,
and, looking round him— |
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