A. E. W. Mason.
March 16, 1936.
CHAPTER I. A Knot of Ribbons for Robin Aubrey
THROUGH TWO DROWSY hours of a golden afternoon the scholars of the foundation droned their Latin odes in the lower school; and the Queen’s Grace sat upright in her high chair and listened. The door stood open to the disturbing invitations of summer: an oblong of sunlight on the dark floor, the clear notes of birds, a rustle of wind in the trees, the distant cries of labourers in the fields, the scent of hay. But the queen had neither eye nor ear for them. She sat with her great farthingale spread about her, her bodice of blue and silver with the open throat and the high collar at the back all slashed and puffed and sewn with pearls the size of beans; and she bore with schoolboys’ Alcaics and Sapphics and dicolons and distrophons and monoclons as though July were her favourite month for such diversions. A dragonfly buzzed into the long room, a noisy, angry flash of green and gold beat fiercely against the walls and was gone again. The queen never so much as turned her head.
This was the year 1581 and Elizabeth’s third visit to the school at Eton, and the odes to do her honour were her appointed occupation for the day. So she gave her whole mind to it. Also she enjoyed it; which is more than can be said for her court behind her, with the exception perhaps of her secretary, Sir Francis Walsingham, who had a passion for learning. At one moment the voice of a boy cracked as he recited his piece and ran up into a squeak. The queen caught the eye of another boy in the second row and exchanged the glimmer of a smile with him as though the pair of them had a little private joke of their own, and so made him her slave for life. This was the last of the recitations, and when it was finished the provost stepped forward in his scarlet gown. He made a little speech, he too using his best Latin, and presented Her Grace with a printed copy of the odes bound in covers with ornaments of scarlet and gold. Elizabeth raised her hand to take the book, and her arm caught upon the carving of her chair. A knot of silk ribbon with a gold button in the middle of it was half torn from her sleeve and hung dangling. Anywhere else she would have sworn a good round trooper’s oath, but today she was in her most gracious mood, and, seeing the look of agony on the provost’s face, she burst out laughing.
“Nay, good Doctor, you shall keep that look for my funeral. If I leave a bow behind me, you have twenty-five pretty scholars here who will string it for me at my need.”
Readiness is the better half of wit, and the little quip served its turn. A full-throated yell of applause rewarded her. She rose to her feet with the book still in her hands and addressed the school.
“There was a day when I could have bartered verses with you and perhaps not had the worst of it. But the business of government has so rusted my Latin and abolished my Greek that you can have nothing but my mother tongue from me. Ah, if only I had the leisure I once enjoyed!” And she closed her eyes and fondled the book and sighed.
There had been an occasion when Philip’s ambassador had complained to her that she had stolen all the wages of his master’s troops on their way up the Channel. She had sighed disconsolately then and answered that if only she could sit in a nun’s cell and tell her beads quietly for the rest of her days she would be happy. The ambassador had been neither impressed nor amused. He had written off angrily to his master that she was a woman possessed of a hundred thousand devils. However, she had an easier audience in the scholars of Eton. They believed in her yearning for the simple life. Little murmurs of sympathy broke out. Not one but would have given years to ease the load of government from her shoulders.
“But you will forgive me my lack of scholarship,” she continued, “if I ask in plain English for a holiday for you to commemorate the day.” And as the cheers burst out again she turned to Dr Thomas, the school’s master, who could do nothing but bow his consent.
“I thought that would commend me to your hearts,” she added drily, and indeed holidays were shining rarities in those days at Eton. “Yet with no less warmth take this old saying of Demosthenes to your bosoms. The words of scholars are the books of the unlearned. So persist in your studies for the good of those less fortunate than you.”
And so, having delivered her little necessary tag of erudition, she handed the book to a maid of honour and stepped down from her dais.
In the court outside the school a very different scene greeted her eyes. Gone were the frieze gowns and sober habiliments of the scholars. Her coaches, her lackeys, her red halberdiers waited, and slanting outwards from the door like the spokes of a painted wheel, the oppidans were ranged to speed her on her going. They had no place that day in the lower school. It was only by a breach in the old charter that they got their education there at all. They lived in appointed houses in the village under the tutelage of dames or hostesses, as they were called then. Now, with their private tutors amongst them, they stood gracious in their youth and eagerness, and glowing in silks and velvets and the bravery of their best attire. Elizabeth’s eyes shone and her heart quickened as she looked at them — the buds, lusty and colourful, on that tree of England whose growth she had tended with such jealous care for three-and-twenty years. It is true that she pruned a bough here and there with a sharp axe when she needs must, but for the most part she watched that it grew, its bark untapped, spaciously and freely and turbulently to its own shape. All the scraping and paring that her people might not be taxed, all her long vigils with her statesmen, all the delicate, perilous corantos she trod — now with the emperor, now with the Valois in Paris, now with Philip in Madrid — here in the sunlit yard were proved to her well worth the while even if she had not enjoyed every minute of them. These lads, tall and sturdy, with the shining eyes, as she was their glory, were her prop and her pride.
She looked along the row to her right, and a movement stayed her eyes. A tutor was thrusting one boy forward into the front of the line and dragging another boy back out of it.
“Stand you back, Robin, behind me,” he said in an impatient whisper which reached the queen’s ears. “And you, Humphrey, in your proper place in front.”
A favourite pupil was being set where he might catch the queen’s eye if he were fortunate, and that favourite pupil was smiling contentedly with little doubt that he would be so favoured.
The other lad, Robin, fell back without a struggle and without a sign of resentment. He was used to the second place, but not because he was stupid or dull or inferior or the worse-looking of the two. A single glance at his face proved that. But for him humiliation would have lain in making a to-do over an affair so small. He fell back, eager to see rather than to be seen. The great queen who held their hearts in her hand was to pass them by on her way to her coach. To watch her as she went was contentment enough, and he watched with shining eyes and parted lips a goddess rather than a woman.
But a woman she was, and very much of a woman. She had no taste for busy and officious people who must be giving orders when they should be standing modestly in their places. A grim little smile tightened her mouth. She would put that forward tutor in his place. Moreover, she liked beauty and straight limbs and the clean look of race; and all those qualities were plain to see in the young oppidan now forced back and half hidden behind the tutor. She turned to the master with a smile.
“Call me out that young dorado, good master,” she said.
Her voice in ordinary talk was thin, but it reached across the yard to the tutor, and that unhappy man rushed upon his undoing.
“It’s you, Humphrey, whom Her Grace calls,” he said, pushing his favourite forward from the line. “Be quick! It’s you,” he urged excitedly, and the queen’s voice rang out, strong now and alarming, whilst her black eyes widened and hardened till the tutor drooped his head and quailed before them.
“No, it is not!” she cried. “What! You will hold out against me, will you? And expound my meaning to me like a lawyer? Know, Mr Ferret — —” She had a pretty gift for nicknames, and she could have invented none apter than this one. The tutor was a thin, long crea
ture, with small, twinkling, reddish eyes and a little nibbling mouth ridiculous in a man; and what with a steep sloping forehead and a sharp receding chin, his face seemed to be drawn to a point at the end of a long nose.— “Mr Ferret” — Elizabeth repeated the name with relish, and a ripple of laughter ran along the ranks of the boys. Even the provost and the master smiled. The tutor’s face was bent towards the ground, so that no one could see the malignant fury which swept across it. But he was never to forgive her the phrase and never to forgive one, at all events, of those boys for the gust of joyous laughter which welcomed it.
“ — Know, Mr Ferret, that in this realm it’s I who say which one shall stand forward and which one stand behind. God’s wounds! Dr Provost, there are tutors at Eton who need a stiffer schooling than your pupils, and let Mr Ferret see to it that I don’t take the cane in hand myself.”
She could play tricks like a tomboy on her courtiers, she could exchange a jest with any peasant in the fields, but she could be right King Harry when she chose, and she chose now. The tutor cringed before her. His mortification was drowned in a wave of fear. She was terrifying, and there was no one to gainsay her. The sweat gathered upon his forehead; his knees shook. She had made a public fool of him. She could set him in the stocks like a rogue if she would.
But she was content with the lesson she had given him. She looked again towards the master.
“Call me out that brown lad.”
“Robin Aubrey,” cried the master, and the ranks parted and Mr Ferret, with a gasp of relief, stood aside. But he kept his head still lowered, lest his eyes might be seen even in their fear to hold a threat.
Robin Aubrey himself was hardly in a happier state. A boy of fourteen years, he was made up of one clear purpose and great dreams, and at the heart of those dreams the great queen was enshrined. Now she had chosen him from amongst his companions. She had called him out from them. He would never be able to cross that patch of sunlit ground to her, he felt sure. His heart so clamoured within his breast that he would stifle before he had gone half the way. His tears so blinded him that he would never see her. The most that he could hope for was that he would swoon and die at her feet. Yet by some magic — how he could never explain — he was there on his knees before her. He dared not lift his eyes to her face, but he felt her slim hand upon his shoulder and heard her voice — oh, miracle! just a woman’s voice, but very warm and friendly — in his ears.
“Robin Aubrey,” she said slowly, relishing the English sound of the name.
“Of Abbot’s Gap in the County of Dorset.”
Was it really his voice he heard so clear and steady? Someone started as he spoke, a pale, black-bearded, sickly man who stood a couple of paces behind the queen and at one side.
“What!” she cried gaily. “My good Moor knows you. Were you his page at the court of the emperor?”
Her good Moor was her principal secretary, Sir Francis Walsingham; he was more fortunate in his nickname than Sir Christopher Hatton, her vice-chamberlain, who was her “mutton,” but he did not relish it overmuch. He smiled without any amusement.
“Your Majesty, Mr Aubrey’s father was my friend,” he said sedately, and Robin knew who he was.
“Robin Aubrey,” Elizabeth repeated. “Mere English, then!”
“And on my knees to England.”
Had Robin sat up of nights for a twelvemonth conning phrases he could have lit upon none which could so delight his queen as this one spoken in an honest burst of passion. That she was mere English was her pride, and no doubt she owed something of the witchcraft with which she drew so many hearts to her kinship with her people, her liking for their sports, her share in their homely humour.
“These lads, Sir Francis,” she said with a sigh of pleasure. “And how old are you, boy Robin?”
“Fourteen, Your Majesty,” and then in a hurry: “But I shall be fifteen next month.”
“God bless my soul, a man!” cried she. “And whither go you from Eton?”
“To Oxford.”
Perhaps Elizabeth had had enough of scholarship for one day. Perhaps she saw in Robin a page who would set off her presence chamber pleasantly. He was of the make she liked. Brown waving hair, a white, broad forehead, brown eyes set wide apart, the nostrils fine, the chin firm, the hands and feet long and slim — lady-faced a little, perhaps, but without weakness; one who had lived amongst dreams, but with spirit and strength enough to make of his dreams a living truth. Something of the dandy, too, in his fine doublet and breeches of cloth of gold, his long stockings of white silk, his cloak of deep-blue velvet slung from his shoulders and the flat scarlet cap which he held in his hand. Certainly, as Elizabeth looked down at him, she thought he would make a shapely figure at Whitehall.
“Oxford!” she said with a little grimace. “To put your eyes out with a book.”
“Nay, Your Majesty, I shall hope to keep my eye in with a sword and use it in the Queen’s service.”
“No doubt,” she returned drily. “You’ll conquer a world and hand it as a Christmas present to a poor woman who wants nothing but to live in peace and amity with her neighbours. You would do better, after all, to write me an ode bidding me marry and have a mort of children, like the scholars in the Hall.”
“Your Grace,” and Robin threw back his head as he knelt and cried, “were I a grown man and a great prince besides, I would have written one already which would have outscholared all the scholars.”
Again he marvelled. Was this he, Robin Aubrey, exchanging pleasantries with so bold a face and so free and joyous a voice, and exchanging them with the world’s wonder and paragon! And they came to his lips unrehearsed! He was in that tense mood which duplicates a person so that one self acts and speaks whilst the other stands at his side, notes each gesture and word and accent, and criticizes or approves. How would Her Grace take his audacity? Would she give him a taste of Mr Ferret? He held his breath. Her Grace laughed roundly and patted his shoulder.
“A courtier!” she cried, well pleased. “Monsieur d’Alençon has a rival and must look to himself,” and as her hand fondled his shoulder that plaguy knot of ribbon dangling on her sleeve caught her eye. Well, she had made many of the incommodities of life serve her turn in the great matters, now she would use one of them in the small. She snatched the knot quite off her sleeve.
“Boy Robin, if you tire of Oxford and your swordplay there, you shall bring this knot to me at Whitehall, and poor though I am, I shall make shift to find a place for you.”
Robin took the knot reverently and kissed the hand which gave it to him.
“Up with you, lad, for on my troth your knees must be growing sore with these pebbles for their cushion, and wait upon me to my coach.”
She took her leave of the provost and the master and mounted into her great litter, with her ladies in attendance. “God bless you, boy Robin,” she cried, waving her hand to the lad, and so drove off between cheering throngs up the hill to Windsor Castle. There she spoke a shrewd word or two to her Moor about Robin and straightway forgot him for many a day. But she left a boy behind her with his brain in a whirl — and a shameful recognition that the purpose to which his life was dedicated had suddenly grown unsubstantial as a shadow.
Elizabeth was forty-seven years old in this year of 1581, and though she had lived through perils and anxieties intricate enough to age an archangel, she had retained a superb look of youth and strength. She had run neither to angles nor to fat. She was majestical and homely; a great prince with her sex at her fingers’ ends; she was more English than she knew. For she was English of our day — English in her distaste for cruelty, English in her inability to nourish rancour against old enemies, English in her creed that poverty needed more than the empty help of kindly words. Enemies enough she had, even amongst those who most pretended their loyalty. But to the honest youth of her times she was the nonpareil. It is no wonder that Robin’s thoughts were drawn after her as by a magnet. Service to her would be a song upon the lips; death
for her would be a golden door.
“What said she?”
“What did you answer?”
“You’ll be for the court tomorrow.”
“Aye, and for the Tower the day after.”
Robin found himself the centre of a group of his companions. Questions rained upon him, questions friendly and questions envious. Robin dusted his knees and clapped his scarlet hat on the top of his thick brown hair.
“We had some private talk,” he said with a magnificent indifference, and laughed as he spoke. But he looked about him eagerly, and his laughter stopped and a shadow dimmed the brightness of his face.
“Where’s Humphrey?” he asked.
But Humphrey Bannet and the Ferret, otherwise Mr Charles Stafford, of Jesus College, Cambridge, had crept away to their house at the end of the village.
Robin was a little disturbed. Because of him his friend had been put to a stinging humiliation, and in the face of the school.
“I shall have to make my peace with Humphrey at supper,” he reflected, and he added ruefully, “though with Mr Stafford at his elbow it will not be easy.”
Meanwhile he had a little battle to fight with himself. Little, perhaps, but still more serious than he had ever imagined that such a tussle could be until this afternoon. However, there it was upon him. It had got to be met, fought through, won and finished with, before he took his place at the supper table tonight.
CHAPTER II. The Rehearsal
HUMPHREY WAS THE only son of the widowed Sir Robert Bannet, who lived in great state and magnificence at his big house of Hilbury Melcombe midway between Dorchester and Wareham and a little to the north of both of those towns. He was of an old Catholic family, but in these years suffered little disability on that account. More difficult times were to come. But the wise woman who sat upon the throne of England, looking over Europe torn with wars, was determined that in her realm, at all events, religion should not be the dividing line of politics.
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